Friday, February 13, 2009

How the wash sale rule works with Simply Track

Wash Sale

A Wash Sale occurs if you sell stock at a loss, and buy substantially identical securities with in 30 days before or after the sale.

Simply Track is a wash sales / schedule d program that calculates wash sales between what the IRS refers to as "substantially identical" stock or securities. So if you trade options, or stocks and options on the same underlying stock or security and incur losses, you may have a wash sale problem.

According to the IRS you should report all wash sales as well, meaning those transactions where you buy substantially identical securities within 30 days before or 30 days after the sale. Losses resulting from wash sale transactions may not immediately be claimed for tax purposes. The one good thing about wash sales is that you may get to claim the loss in a later tax year if you do not have substantial gains. The disallowed amount is always added to the cost of the repurchased stock, so the wash sale loss can be claimed when the security is later sold.

Simply Track generates wash sale reports with a click of the mouse to make sure you get the correct tax credit allowed from wash sale adjustments. For the sample trades discussed in previous post you get the following report obviating some really complex computations:





How trade matching works


Trade Matching


Trade Matching is nightmare for unequal number of shares, especially if an active trader trades same stock repeatedly

Example


Let us assume an active trader made the following trades Buys 500 shares of ABC Corp. for $20 per share on 03/12

Sells 234 shares of ABC Corp for $18 per share on 03/14

Buys 300 shares of ABC Corp for $16 per share on 03/15

Sells 66 Shares of ABC Corp for $19 per share on 03/16

Sells 250 Shares of ABC Corp for $22 per share on 03/19

Sells 150 Shares of ABC Corp for $20 per share on 03/1
9

Buys 200 shares of ABC Corp for $18 per share on 03/21

Sells 300 Shares of ABC Corp for $22 per share on 03/22



Based on the above transactions can you tell which sell orders correspond to which buy orders? What if you have 1000 such transactions? According to the IRS, in most circumstances you should use First In First Out (FIFO) order matching. In the above example FIFO requires matching Trades 2, 4 and 5 with Trade 1. The remainder (50 shares) of Trade 5 is then applied to Trade 3 along with all of Trade 6 and 100 shares of Trade 8. Not so easy!

Moreover, most Brokerage firms don't even provide stock purchase transaction information when they send Form 1099, consequently forcing you to use your trade history to figure out the cost basis for each trade. Do you have time to do all these mappings and compute the cost basis for each trade? With Simply Track you can do it with a click of the mouse.




New Version of Simply Track is released



Product highlights:

  • Simply Track 3.0 is completely rewritten to overcome short falls of ST 2.0. This new Simply Track runs extremely fast compare to older versions.
  • Accurately calculates wash sales.
  • Supports many online brokers. Most cases it is a direct import from your broker account. No need for reformatting your trade history.
  • Handles an unlimited number of transactions (unlike other stock tracking programs).
  • Adjusts your stock splits automatically so that you don't need to do this by hand.
  • Automatically does FIFO trade matching to satisfy IRS wash sale requirements
  • Automatically creates a Schedule D-1 attachment and prints this IRS form for submitting along with your other Federal forms.
Please download and install the product from this link

http://www.vbssol.com/cgi-bin/download.pl?file=22

Download product manual

http://www.vbssol.com/Simply_Track_Manual.pdf

Also make sure you watch Simply Track demo from here


http://www.vbssol.com/st_new_demo1106.swf.html