T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
191.1 | How did he defer ten years ago? | TLE::JBISHOP | | Fri May 08 1992 18:18 | 12 |
| How was it possible to avoid capital gain taxes on the original
sale? The IRS doesn't care what other finanical arrangements
(e.g. loans) you may make at the time you buy or sell.
In this case, they saw your father buy for $X and sell for $(X+Y)
and I'd think they would have wanted their cut right then, unless
it was an installment sale or some other method whereby the legal
ownership wasn't transfered.
If there's a method, I'd sure like to know it!
-John Bishop
|
191.2 | The gain was deferred. | PSDVAX::SCALA | | Mon May 11 1992 16:22 | 7 |
| Since he held the mortage, its accounted for as an installment sale.
So the capital gain has been pro-rated over that time. Since the early
payments are mostly interest, the the gain was small. Of course there
was the interest income, but this was offset by interest expense
on another property purchased.
So the incomes washed leaving little tax liability. until now....
|
191.3 | Time to pay the piper! | TALLIS::KOCH | DTN226-6274 ... If you don't look good, DEC doesn't look good. | Wed May 13 1992 10:16 | 7 |
| Well, he realized a gain and now he has to pay the tax on it. Whats
the big deal? I believe the only way to actually avoid, rather than defer,
a gain, is to die. Then the basis of real assets is 'stepped up' to
their value when you die. It doesn't do the owner of the assets much
good, but its a better deal for the inheritors. [Is estate tax due on the
stepped up basis rather than the original basis? In that case there is no
escape.]
|
191.4 | | NOVA::EASTLAND | | Sat May 16 1992 13:57 | 7 |
|
Hmm, when I bought a property from someone who gave me a 50k second
mortgage, his tax advisor told him he still had to pay capital gains on
the whole amount, including the 50K note amount. He was quite upset at
the time as he thought the 50K part of the gain was tax deferred. I'd
see a CPA or tax attorney who specializes in real estate.
|
191.5 | rat holes. | PSDVAX::SCALA | | Mon May 18 1992 13:37 | 11 |
| RE .3 There are many people in this country who earn 10 times what
the average person earns and pay little or no taxes.
If there is a legal way to avoid or defer the tax, why not take
advantage of it?
RE. 4 Interesting that the seller paid a tax on the full amount.
A CPA set up the structure of the note and prepares the
tax return each year. So far, there have been on legal issues
with this tax reporting. Perhaps its timing, this was set up in
1980. The laws may have changed since then.
|
191.6 | Let us reason together | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Mon May 18 1992 17:13 | 8 |
| > RE .3 There are many people in this country who earn 10 times what
> the average person earns and pay little or no taxes.
Surely there are "some" people for whom this applies. On the other hand
the top 5% income earners pay 46% of all income tax. The bottom 50%
earners pay 10% of all income tax. (Source: _The Economist_, May 1992)
John
|
191.7 | But how much do they earn? | TPSYS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Mon May 18 1992 17:20 | 11 |
| Re. .6
> Surely there are "some" people for whom this applies. On the other
> hand the top 5% income earners pay 46% of all income tax. The bottom
> 50% earners pay 10% of all income tax. (Source: _The Economist_,
> May 1992)
But what percentage of the total income belongs to the top 5%? And what
to the bottom 50%? If the top 5% earners earn more than 46% of the
total income reported, then the above rhetoric does not hold. Ditto
for the bottom 50%.
|
191.8 | Various notions of fairness | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Mon May 18 1992 21:54 | 11 |
| .7> But what percentage of the total income belongs to the top 5%?
Good point, I'll see if I can get those figures.
On a related note, 56% of all federal housing subsidies go to the top
20% of all income earners, mostly in the form of mortgage deductions
at that income level. That may seem patently unfair, 56% of the money
going to 20% of the richest, but as .7 notes that may be WELL under
the proportion of income earned at the top.
John
|
191.9 | Installment sale. | CSC32::B_HIBBERT | When in doubt, PANIC | Fri May 22 1992 02:39 | 11 |
| RE: .4
I think that the mortgage has to be the first mortgage for it to be
considered an installment sale (and qualify for tax deferal). The second
mortgage is considered a normal loan.
Brian
P.S. I am not an accountant. Check with a professional if you need to
find out what actually makes it an installment sale.
|
191.10 | Mr Statistics Answers | JURAN::SORRELLS | Is iced tea in season yet? | Mon Jun 01 1992 16:40 | 4 |
| RE: .7
According to the Statistical Abstract of the US (1990), in 1987 the top 5%
paid 43% of all taxes while earning 25.6% of adjust gross income.
|
191.11 | Adjusted gross income = adjusted statistics | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Mon Jun 01 1992 20:14 | 10 |
| Re .10
> According to the Statistical Abstract of the US (1990), in 1987 the top 5%
> paid 43% of all taxes while earning 25.6% of adjust gross income.
25.6% of adjusted gross income is a meaningless statistic. What adjustments
were made? To be truly meaningful, it has to be gross income, no adjustments.
Are they giving out that statistic?
-- Andrew
|
191.12 | re: .11 | JURAN::SORRELLS | Is iced tea in season yet? | Tue Jun 02 1992 10:14 | 13 |
| AGI is wages and salaries (90% of AGI for the middle class, 48% of
income for the rich) plus interest, dividends, pensions, annuities,
NET business income, rents, royalties & capital gains, less adjustments
for IRA's, Keough's, alimony, etc.
This number seems to reflect the full income of most people, except
of course for those who report large capital losses, etc. However,
in 1986, for example, the average rich person reported $62,000 in
sales of property & other assest, net gain less loss.
But, the AGI should not include interest income in Fed-tax-free investments.
Mr. Statistics, 1986
|
191.13 | | MR4DEC::GREEN | | Tue Jun 02 1992 11:00 | 7 |
|
AGI is a meaningful figure. Most of the tax-advantaged deductions which
distort income figures come after the AGI calculation. The notable
exception is real-estate deductions, which come from schedule E, and
appear on page 1 of the 1040 as losses. These depreciation-related
losses distort AGI, but other than that AGI is meaningful.
|
191.14 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Jun 02 1992 12:43 | 3 |
| re .13:
And, as .12 points out, investments that provide tax-free income (e.g. munis).
|
191.15 | p.s., Mr. Statistics is really Joe Bob | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Thu Jun 04 1992 13:26 | 9 |
| Per .10, it thus appears the richest 5% of the country earn 25% of the
income and pay 43% of the taxes.
So much for the Helmsley theory ("rich people don't pay taxes").
Must have been a real eye-opener for the Looney Lefties, who probably
figured the rich to earn 43% of the income and pay 5% of the taxes.
John
|
191.16 | | MR4DEC::GREEN | | Fri Jun 05 1992 13:39 | 8 |
|
And this shift toward more progressiveness occurred by LOWERING
tax rates!
This is the great hidden truth that no one in the media wants to
publicized. LOWER Tax Rates cause the rich to pay more in taxes
(collectivly). I guess it doesn't sell newspapers.
|
191.17 | So what? | CASDOC::MEAGHER | George Heavy Waffler Bush | Fri Jun 12 1992 17:53 | 20 |
| >>> And this shift toward more progressiveness occurred by LOWERING
>>> tax rates!
>>> This is the great hidden truth that no one in the media wants to
>>> publicized. LOWER Tax Rates cause the rich to pay more in taxes
>>> (collectivly). I guess it doesn't sell newspapers.
I don't understand this statement.
If we lower the tax rate enough, only the rich will pay taxes.
Suppose we lower the tax rate so that only households with, say, $200,000 in
annual income pay taxes. Then those people (let's call them "the rich") will
pay taxes. That means the rich will pay 100% of the tax burden. Since I'm not
rich, I won't have to pay anything.
Everyone should be happy, right? The rich are paying more in taxes
(collectively). In fact, they're paying for everything!
Vicki Meagher
|
191.18 | House/Gain vs Motorhome loss? | MRKTNG::REED_V | | Wed Dec 30 1992 12:35 | 13 |
| Gains vs Loss...
I plan to sell my house in 1993....
I will turn 55 in Sept. '93 so I would like to defer the closing until then.
However, if I can not orchestrate that, and have a good/firm offer well before
then that I don't want to lose, I wonder if I can also sell my motorhome (our
"2nd home" for tax purposes) and incur a capital loss to offset some of the
house's gain?
If so...., how would that effect a purchase of a newer/costlier motorhome?
|
191.19 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Wed Dec 30 1992 12:42 | 17 |
|
Re: .18
I'm reading between the lines here, but I take it that you don't
have any offers outstanding right now and that maybe you haven't even
put the house on the market yet? If so, given how long the average
piece of real estate is sitting before being sold, it might be until
Spring (or maybe even the Summer) before you get an offer. Add the
traditional 6-8 weeks before closing and you might end up missing the
September date by just a couple of months. If you have a lot of profit
wrapped up in the house and the buyers are really eager to move in, how
about just renting the house to them for the month or two it takes to
push the closing into September? Sheeze, even renting it to them for
$1/month could be a big win for you if you can get the closing pushed
into the $125K exclusion zone.
-craig
|
191.20 | Renting is out | MRKTNG::REED_V | | Wed Dec 30 1992 12:55 | 19 |
|
Craig, I agree that it would likely take some time to sell the
place, so I do plan to put it up for sale early. But I am also
concerned that someone will come along "early" and make me an
offer.
I only briefly considered "renting" until the close. I have
heard many stories about "adjustments" to the sale that the new
tenents want as they live in the house and notice shortcomings.
Also, once in the house, I can play hell getting them out if they
elect NOT to close. They can make all kinds of demands upon me
to obfuscate my evbiction efforts.
Hence, my question... can I play the motorhomes capital loss off
against the homes gain? We're not talking King Kong bucks here,
but since this will be a big part of my retirement plans I'd like
to know my options.
|
191.21 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Wed Dec 30 1992 13:09 | 10 |
|
Re: .20
Yeah, true, it could be messy. My apologies for not answering the
question that you actually asked... I can't actually answer it,
however, since I don't know if there are any special rules dealing with
the capital gains/losses of things officially classed as second homes.
Sorry.
-craig
|
191.22 | Sell "personal use property": no matter what you do, the IRS says, "You lose." | SUFRNG::WSA118::SOVEREIGN_S | ...once a knight is enough(?) | Thu Dec 31 1992 09:15 | 35 |
| Unfortunately, a "capital loss" on personal use property is never
deductible. The only time there is a tax consequence from the sale of
personal use property is when you sell it at a gain.
First home, second home, car, boat - whatever. If you make money on the
sale, the IRS is there with its hand out. If you lose money, then (just
maybe) they might feel bad for you but they don't allow the loss as an
event on your tax return.
For a capital loss to be deductible, it has to be from the sale of
*investment* property. You can also deduct losses from the sale of
business use property, but IRS classifies those transactions in a
different category entirely...
On the birthday date issue:
I don't think that the actual date of your birthday and the actual date
of the closing matter, as long as they fall in the same tax year. As
best I recall, the question on the form is worded something like:
"Is the taxpayer at least 55 years of age in the year of sale?"
I would have to check to make sure, but (maybe) your concerns about the
closing date are unfounded. I will try to dig out the rulebooks and
see how this works...unless somebody else reading this knows for sure?
On the final part of .18:
I don't recall there being any rules about rolling profits from "second
homes" into replacement second homes. I think that only applies to your
primary residence. Again, I'll have to check to make sure, but I think
if you sell your "second home" at a gain, you have to handle that event
in the year of occurance. So, I don't think that the sale of your
motorhome at a "loss" will have any effect on your taxes *or* your next
purchase of another motorhome.
SteveSov
|
191.23 | Hope so... | MRKTNG::REED_V | | Sun Jan 03 1993 08:53 | 14 |
|
> On the birthday date issue:
>I don't think that the actual date of your birthday and the actual date
>of the closing matter, as long as they fall in the same tax year. As
>best I recall, the question on the form is worded something like:
>"Is the taxpayer at least 55 years of age in the year of sale?"
>I would have to check to make sure, but (maybe) your concerns about the
>closing date are unfounded. I will try to dig out the rulebooks and
>see how this works...unless somebody else reading this knows for sure?
If that's true, I'd be a happy buckeroo!
|
191.24 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Jan 04 1993 10:57 | 13 |
| >>I don't think that the actual date of your birthday and the actual date
>>of the closing matter, as long as they fall in the same tax year. As
>>best I recall, the question on the form is worded something like:
>>"Is the taxpayer at least 55 years of age in the year of sale?"
>>I would have to check to make sure, but (maybe) your concerns about the
>>closing date are unfounded. I will try to dig out the rulebooks and
>>see how this works...unless somebody else reading this knows for sure?
>
>If that's true, I'd be a happy buckeroo!
Don't count on this.
My understanding differs, but I'm not sure.
Call the IRS or get info from a knowledgable tax professional.
|
191.25 | no joy | MRKTNG::REED_V | | Tue Jan 05 1993 07:25 | 18 |
| <<< Note 191.24 by VMSDEV::HAMMOND "Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684" >>>
>>>I don't think that the actual date of your birthday and the actual date
>>>of the closing matter, as long as they fall in the same tax year. As
>>>best I recall, the question on the form is worded something like:
>>>"Is the taxpayer at least 55 years of age in the year of sale?"
>>>I would have to check to make sure, but (maybe) your concerns about the
>>>closing date are unfounded. I will try to dig out the rulebooks and
>>>see how this works...unless somebody else reading this knows for sure?
>>
>>If that's true, I'd be a happy buckeroo!
> Don't count on this.
> My understanding differs, but I'm not sure.
> Call the IRS or get info from a knowledgable tax professional.
Lasiter (sp) sez I must be 55 or over when the deal is closed.
|
191.26 | any news on treatment of capital gains? | NAC::OFSEVIT | card-carrying member | Wed Sep 29 1993 17:55 | 13 |
| The problem: I bought a 2-family house in 1981 and lived it half
of it until 1986. I then bought my current (single-family) house and
kept the 2-family as an investment. A few months later the 1986 tax
law changed the capital gain tax rules and my potential tax on selling
the 2-family almost doubled. After retiring the mortgage, I'd have
little left.
Is there anything in the 1993 budget/tax changes that would make a
difference? I had heard that there would be some favorable treatment
of long-held capital gains, but no specifics. Or was this just wishful
thinking?
David
|
191.27 | How about age 53? | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Wed Mar 23 1994 09:33 | 20 |
|
- 191.24
Couldn't the birthdate be 53 years for $125,000 exclusion -
that is, 53 + 2 (years grace period to roll-over to next
primary residence purchase)? Of course, you have to wait
the 2 years until you reach age 55.
This is the scenario that my husband and I face (he turns 53
this May). If we sell our house this year, we want to rent
for awhile. We do not know if we want buy another house or take
the exclusion at age (his) 55. Or, we may want to take the ex-
clusion when he turns 55 and later on buy a house.
I would appreciate any info. on this.
Thanks,
Eleanor
|