IRS Guidance on Trader Taxation
What you need to know about what the IRS says about trader
taxation.
For many years there was no guidance available from the IRS on the
subject of trader taxation. In 2000 the tax agency recognized the
explosion of interest in the subject and published a limited amount of
guidance in three forms:
- They provide some answers in the Frequently
Asked Questions section of their web site.
- Instructions for Schedule
D and Form
4797 now cover the bare outline of tax rules for traders.
(Acrobat Reader required for these links.)
- IRS Publication 550 now includes a short section on traders, with
essentially the same information you'll find in the tax return
instructions. (Download or read Pub 550 using links on this
page.
I applaud the IRS for recognizing the need for guidance in this area
and making the effort to answer these questions. Still, I have a few
complaints about statements that appear in their guidance.
Factors Indicating
Trader Status
In both Publication 550 and the instructions for Schedule D, the IRS
provides a list of facts and circumstances that should be considered in
determining whether your trading activity is a business:
- Typical holding periods for securities bought and sold.
- The frequency and dollar amount of your trades during the year.
- The extent to which you pursue the activity to produce income
for a livelihood.
- The amount of time you devote to the activity.
My complaint about this list is perhaps a little subtle, but still an
important one. In the tax law, whenever there is a list of facts and
circumstances like this, it should be true that being strong on one of
them can make up for being weak on another one. That's true for the last
three items in the list above. For example, if you seem to be a
borderline case when we look at your trading volume, you might
strengthen your case by showing that you devote a great deal of time to
your trading activity.
The first item, your typical holding period, is
important in determining trader status. Still, it doesn't belong on this
list because it's part of an entirely separate test for trader status.
The length of your holding periods for securities bought and sold is
used to determine whether you pass the trading activity test. If you
fail that test, the other three factors on the list won't save you.
The best case to illustrate this is Estate of
Yaeger (889 F.2d 29, 2d Cir. 1989). In that case, the last three
factors on the list were as strong as possible: the taxpayer made over a
thousand trades per year; this was his sole livelihood; and he spent all
his time on the activity. Yet he wasn't a trader because his typical
holding period was long, indicating that he pursued this activity for
capital appreciation rather than to capture short-term market swings. In
other words, he failed the trading activity test.
The IRS guidance would be clearer and more accurate
if it indicated that your typical holding period is a factor in
determining whether you pass the trading activity test, and the other
three factors in their list apply in determining whether you pass the
substantial activity test.
Part-Time Traders
The IRS' Frequently Asked Questions about trader status includes the
following statement:
"Basically, if your day trading activity goal is
to profit from short-term swings in the market rather than from
long-term capital appreciation of investments, and is expected to be
your primary income for meeting your personal living expenses, i.e.
you do not have another regular job, your trading activity might be a
business."
That seems to imply that you can't be a trader if you have another
regular job, which is plainly incorrect. It's firmly established that
you can have a part-time activity that's recognized as a "trade or
business" under the tax law, and there's no reason to suppose that
the business of trading securities is different from all other
businesses in this regard. Naturally, if your activity is part-time you
will have a greater burden in showing that it was substantial enough to
qualify as a business, but having a different full-time job doesn't
prevent you from qualifying as a trader.
Consent to Change
Accounting Method
This point is a quibble. The FAQ says you need the consent of the
Commissioner to change to the mark-to-market method of accounting. The
law plainly states that consent is not required. (Internal Revenue Code
section 475(f)(3)). That's merely a technicality because the law also
gives the IRS authority to determine the time and manner of making the
election, and the IRS automatically grants consent when you follow those
procedures.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7 8
9 10
11 |