I read an article this morning which reminded me of a problem we've all dealt with in the past, but it may hit especially hard this upcoming tax season. During the financial meltdown, many panicked investors bailed out, forcing mutual funds managers to sell shares to raise cash to meet cash calls. This means many of these funds will likely be reporting larger than usual Capital Gains Distributions, including large short-term gains and non-qualified dividends taxable at ordinary income rates.
It's not very hard to explain CGD's in good times. When the client asks why they're being taxed on money they didn't receive, it's easy enough to show them that they now own more shares without paying out any more money, plus the value of their fund went up. But it's much harder to explain to someone that they are paying more tax than usual on their CGD's this year and at the same time their mutual fund is worth 20, 30, 40% less than it was last year. This could be a long tax season.
It's not very hard to explain CGD's in good times. When the client asks why they're being taxed on money they didn't receive, it's easy enough to show them that they now own more shares without paying out any more money, plus the value of their fund went up. But it's much harder to explain to someone that they are paying more tax than usual on their CGD's this year and at the same time their mutual fund is worth 20, 30, 40% less than it was last year. This could be a long tax season.
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