I am reading up a few threads but thought would start a thread to get people talking.
So from what i can tell, for a prop trader who gets a K-1, taxes are pretty straight forward. Its all ordinary income. So taxes are kind of straight forward. Any comments?
Losses:
If you have losses in other retail accounts you can deduct $3000 for the current year and carry over the rest; but if you have chosen MTM and trader status you can write off more if you have.
Profits:
As for profits, its all ordinary income. I think its a good thing in certain cases; for example if you are in a lower tax bracket instead of paying short term capital taxes rate (say around 35%), you are paying your lower ordinary taxes rate (say around 15-20%).
Also very frequently i read threads on complex tax matters and it ends with - get in touch with a good tax attorney. How do you find good ones for prop traders without breaking the bank..
-gariki
So from what i can tell, for a prop trader who gets a K-1, taxes are pretty straight forward. Its all ordinary income. So taxes are kind of straight forward. Any comments?
Losses:
If you have losses in other retail accounts you can deduct $3000 for the current year and carry over the rest; but if you have chosen MTM and trader status you can write off more if you have.
Profits:
As for profits, its all ordinary income. I think its a good thing in certain cases; for example if you are in a lower tax bracket instead of paying short term capital taxes rate (say around 35%), you are paying your lower ordinary taxes rate (say around 15-20%).
Also very frequently i read threads on complex tax matters and it ends with - get in touch with a good tax attorney. How do you find good ones for prop traders without breaking the bank..
-gariki
. I recently started trading prop and was just looking for advise or what others do.