Quote from Chagi:
This one is tricky, I plan on sitting down with an accountant once I reach the point of trading more frequently, trading options and/or trading futures. If you trade infrequently as a part-time thing, you will probably have no problem reporting your trading as capital gains for equities (that's how I currently handle my own reporting). Infrequent long options trading is apparently subject to the same treatment, though i'm not sure which line number they get reported on.
Some general guidelines regarding trading being business income appears to be the following types of stuff:
- If you spend a very significant amount of time trading (i.e. kind of like trading as a full-time occupation)
- If you short-sell equities
- If you trade on margin
I am not a tax professional, so please don't rely on any of the above as some form of professional advice. I also agree that our tax system is a bit obscure when it comes to trading, but like I said, I plan on further investigating this once I reach the point in time where I am doing higher volume trading.
P.S. An easy way around much of this is to trade equities in a self-directed RRSP account, since you are then free of having to bother tracking/reporting all this stuff. For example, I would be hesitant to buy and hold units of an income trust outside of a tax-sheltered account, because income reporting would likely be a big pain in the ass. Of course the disadvantage of doing so is that you are then highly restricted in the types of trading you can do.