Buying and Selling Mutual Fund Shares: Avoid These Tax Pitfalls
If you invest in mutual funds, be aware of some potential pitfalls involved in buying and selling shares.
Surprise salesÂ
You may already have made taxable âsalesâ of part of your mutual fund investment without knowing it.
One way this can happen is if your mutual fund allows you to write checks against your fund investment. Every time you write a check against your mutual fund account, youâve made a partial sale of your interest in the fund. Thus, except for funds such as money market funds, for which share value remains constant, you may have taxable gain (or a deductible loss) when you write a check. And each such sale is a separate transaction that must be reported on your tax return.
Hereâs another way you may unexpectedly make a taxable sale. If your mutual fund sponsor allows you to make changes in the way your money is invested â for instance, lets you switch from one fund to another fund â making that switch is treated as a taxable sale of your shares in the first fund.
RecordkeepingÂ
Carefully save all the statements that the fund sends you â not only official tax statements, such as Forms 1099-DIV, but the confirmations the fund sends you when you buy or sell shares or when dividends are reinvested in new shares. Unless you keep these records, it may be difficult to prove how much you paid for the shares, and thus, you wonât be able to establish the amount of gain thatâs subject to tax (or the amount of loss you can deduct) when you sell.
You also need to keep these records to prove how long youâve held your shares if you want to take advantage of favorable long-term capital gain tax rates. (If you get a year-end statement that lists all your transactions for the year, you can just keep that and discard quarterly or other interim statements. But save anything that specifically says it contains tax information.)
Recordkeeping is simplified by rules that require funds to report the customerâs basis in shares sold and whether any gain or loss is short-term or long-term. This is mandatory for mutual fund shares acquired after 2011, and some funds will provide this to shareholders for shares they acquired earlier, if the fund has the information.
Timing purchases and sales
If youâre planning to invest in a mutual fund, there are some important tax consequences to take into account in timing the investment. For instance, an investment shortly before payment of a dividend is something you should generally try to avoid. Your receipt of the dividend (even if reinvested in additional shares) will be treated as income and increase your tax liability. If youâre planning a sale of any of your mutual fund shares near year-end, you should weigh the tax and the non-tax consequences in the current year versus a sale in the next year.
Identify shares you sellÂ
If you sell fewer than all of the shares that you hold in the same mutual fund, there are complicated rules for identifying which shares youâve sold. The proper application of these rules can reduce the amount of your taxable gain or qualify the gain for favorable long-term capital gain treatment.
Contact us if youâd like to find out more about tax planning for buying and selling mutual fund shares.
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