Originally posted by MrDinky
It's a fun town to be single in and it's nice to have friends who are strippers but the drinking and gambling is getting old. God, did I just say that? Maybe I'm getting old. Well, I'll see you at the Pimp n' Ho ball this weekend.
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Originally posted by regough
Just a reminder,
A close friend of mine(& mentor) who is a VERY successful trader likes to say paying more taxes each year is a good thing because that simply means he is making more trading(Of course, he or no one else wants to pay any more than absolutely necessary!)
I can hardly wait until I have to pay a million dollars in taxes on my trading profits(not there, just yet)
But just something to keep in mind. . . . . . . .
Originally posted by Traden4Alpha
Just be careful as some of the Active Trader/Tech Analysis of Stocks & Commodities magazine articles that I have read mention that some tax preparers don't know how to handle trader's taxes and will lump cap gains into ordinary income (and don't even ask most of them about becoming a mark-to-market trader).
Originally posted by stock777
Here's something to keep you up at night. I recall reading that you are not supposed to use an IRA type account in the course of conducting a business.
If you do (and they notice) , there are some special taxes that kick in.
Heavy duty trading in a Keogh MAY be problematic, at least in theory.
YIKES!:eek: It sounds like you might be talking about what is called UBI, UBIT or UBTI (Unrelated Business Taxable Income). UBTI occurs when a tax-exempt entity tries to hide the taxable gains of activities that are not directly tied to the entity's tax-exempt mission. It usually impacts charities and educational institutions that run de facto for-profit subsidiaries (e.g. a university book store). It can impact IRAs that have gains from "unrelated debt-financed income" (most often associated with real estate partnerships, publicly traded partnerships, or using margin borrowing). (As I was Googling around on this this issue, I found comments that suggest that owning listed options or derivatives in a retirement account might also generate UBTI or what are called "prohibited transactions.")Originally posted by stock777
Here's something to keep you up at night. I recall reading that you are not supposed to use an IRA type account in the course of conducting a business.
If you do (and they notice) , there are some special taxes that kick in.
Heavy duty trading in a Keogh MAY be problematic, at least in theory.
about tax issues is that NOBODY knows the answer to so many questions, not even the IRS -- its all fuzzy gray lines, subjective litmus tests, ambiguous language, conflicting regs, etc. If you are not a joe-average income earner that can use the 1040-EZ, then chances are that you are painfully close to one of the these ugly little gray lines. The tax code is all part of this country's "Accountant's and Lawyer's Full Employment Act" in my opinion.
I too, would love a flat-tax system, but I fear that complexity is inevitable.Originally posted by regough
How about this- just addup ALL your income, wages, interest, cap gains, trading, all of it and just take a percents- 10, 15 18, 20, 25(whatever is necessary to generate the same level of receipts) and mail it.
understatementOriginally posted by Traden4Alpha
I too, would love a flat-tax system, but I fear that complexity is inevitable.
If they tried to create a truly simplified tax code, people would immediately want all their well-intentioned tax-breaks back. And who can argue against encouraging retirement savings (IRA tax code), home ownership (mortgage deduction), non-regressive tax-code (low tax rates for lower-income people), charity (deductions for giving), deductions for very sick people (medical expense deduction), etc. etc. But then, you get people that try to scam the system by loading up on a bunch of taxbreaks. So then you need a bunch of rules to define what counts and what does not (and all the documentation to prove it). But, still you get upper-income people who try to wrangle their way into lower tax bracket. So then you decide to implement the Alternative Minimum Tax code.
Between the bleeding-heart liberals and money-grubbing tax cheats ....puts us right back where we started.