What's wrong with this assumption.
You start a single owner LLC (investment LLC) in 2008.
You do an owner contribution of e.g. 20k.
You open a trading account for the LLC and trade.
You blow 10k within 2 month
You close the LLC still in 2008.
Income/Losses are passed through to your personal tax return.
Can you deduct the 10k losses of your LLC contribution immediately (2008 tax return), and therefore avoid the 3k/year limitation you'd have as an individual investor?
If not, why not?
Is there any place you can find more info about this?
Thanks.
You start a single owner LLC (investment LLC) in 2008.
You do an owner contribution of e.g. 20k.
You open a trading account for the LLC and trade.
You blow 10k within 2 month
You close the LLC still in 2008.
Income/Losses are passed through to your personal tax return.
Can you deduct the 10k losses of your LLC contribution immediately (2008 tax return), and therefore avoid the 3k/year limitation you'd have as an individual investor?
If not, why not?
Is there any place you can find more info about this?
Thanks.