Quote from Maverick74:
I'll quote this post since smilinsynic has you on ignore.
I'll add that the spirit of the law was not to tax hedgers. The futures markets were born out of the necesity to hedge and lawmakers felt one should not be taxed on any profits incurred from a hedge since the tax would usually be collected from the gain on the product that was being hedged.
Talk about double taxation. Tax an airline on their ticket revenues then tax them when they go to hedge their fuel costs. Yeah, that makes total sense.
By this backass logic, we should also pay capital gains on our car and house insurance if we ever receive a settlement.
Yes, I do have the Blue Ribbon jabroni on ignore, as I do all fundamentalists, permabulls, permabears, racists, and the mentally unstable. Regarding Pa(b)st, he's 2 out of 5. Not bad.
If lawmakers decided to give futures a special tax status because it could be used as a "hedge", gee, that's poor logic. Anything can be a "hedge"--gold, other currencies, other stocks, options, even certain collectables (so claimed one baseball card collector who collected Nolan Ryan rookie cards).
Short term gains should be taxed short term, and long term gains should be taxed long term. Or make them all the same--my preference.