Are trades in an IRA reported? (EVER?)

IB does not actually allow margin borrowing in their "margin IRA".

Again, does anyone know of a brokerage that does actually grant margin (i.e. loaning you money against a stock position) in an IRA?
 
Quote from efficiency:

There is NO margin availability toward an IRA account. Concerning equities, call up a full commission broker and see IF they'll accomodate you. You already know the discounts won't.

Per Reg T, it's CASH. Consequently, you have no benefit (or detriment) of leverage and trades must SETTLE. In effect, you can only trade 1/3 of your account each day, and not to the frequency your fantacizing about if you want activiity each day. Of the one third of the dollars available, each dollar has just one "opportunity"
Doesn't IB's definition of margin trading permissions that I posted earlier contradict your statement that trades must settle in an IRA account?

I've only had the IB IRA account open one week so I have not had the chance to test the theory yet.
 
The Dealio - An IRA must have a custodian that is a bank. No custodian on gods green earth wants to take the risk of allowing margin on an IRA. So...what to do? Roll your IRA's into a self directed profit sharing, etc. You can even do a profit sharing 401K combo. So , say you knock out 50K. You can pay yourself a 40K salary and tax defer 15K of that into your 401k and then match 25% of your 40K with your profit sharing which is another 10K. So out of 50K you dont pay taxes on 25K. Pretty nifty huh? Here is the good part...you are the trustee and beneficiary of this plan and hence no broker gives a rat's ass what you do in it since it in not a liability to them since they are not the custodian. Here is the bad part, you are the trustee (instead of the custodian) and hence you are responsible for maintaining the plan. So you need to work with a law firm to form and maintain this plan which is maybe 3K upfront and only a K a year or so to maintain it (find a firm with a strong ERISA practice). Also, the minute you start borrowing you end up causing UBTI (Unrelated Business Taxable Income) which is difficult to calculate correctly and basically requires the use of a very sophisticated accounting firm (out of the realm of many of the smaller firms). Also, if you have enough to get in with a big bulge bracket broker they all have offshore leveraged products which basically allow US entities to leverage without incurring UBTI and also circumvent reg T.

good luck!
 
Well.....can someone with IB "margin" IRA account please confirm if you would have to wait 3 days for settlement period or not? My IRA is currently with TDAmerirade, and they do have this 3-day wait for settlement before the next trade can be placed.

Thank you!
 
Her is an extract from the IB site. I think it makes things pretty clear. I've added some bolding inside the quote.
US resident customers may open cash or margin Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA). IRA margin accounts may never borrow, but are afforded all the other benefits of a margin account such as the ability to day trade, and the ability to trade multiple currencies and multiple currency products. IRA accounts may be opened in any base currency, but when trading in a non-base currency product (margin accounts only) a currency trade must first be executed as you cannot borrow currencies. Customers are advised to consult a tax specialist for further details on IRA rules and regulations.

Hope that helps.

Jack
 
Quote from Toonces:

I'm thinking about daytrading an IRA, and the biggest pitfall to a successful trader would be having the IRS declare that your trades are taxable right now, and then penalize you in addition. (Do they do that too?) But I'm wondering, how would they ever know that you're trading too often for a retirement account? Do they ever see those trades? Do they sometimes do audits on retirement accounts?

This has been an unanswered question on EliteTrader as long as I have been a member. Some people have claimed that high frequency trading in an IRA will eventually be flagged by the IRS and will be treated as UBTI - Unrelated Business Taxable Income. Other people have said that the IRA is the ultimate trading vehicle and that until there is a court case pertaining to this issue, it can be assumed that hyper-trading in an IRA is fine. My question is, who the hell is right? Show me some evidence.

I also know that if the IRS were to declare hyper-trading taxable in an IRA, that a lot of people would be screwed over not only in late taxes but interest on that tax.

Does someone have definitive proof on either side of the issue?
 
Quote from JackR:

Her is an extract from the IB site. I think it makes things pretty clear. I've added some bolding inside the quote.


Hope that helps.

Jack

From what I remember -

The 'loan' only works to get around the 3 day waiting period. So you can go ahead and rotate your cash around as you please, but you just can't exceed your cash value at any time...

But, I'm hung over today so don't take my word on it :D
 
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