My client just received a CP2000 notice in which transactions in all 3 stocks he sold had the income reported in his return explained as insufficient because the numbers from the "cost or other basis" column on Schedule D were copied into that notice as the income reported on the return. Since he had a gain on each of those 3 stocks, each of which he sold in one transaction each on a different date, there was therefore a good amount of unreported income according to the CP2000.
A small amount of additional background: the client had self-prepared his originally filed return with that software whose name I just cannot utter. He came to me when he received an earlier CP2000 which reminded him that he hadn't included sales of stock connected with stock options exercises. Therefore, I prepared him an amendment in response to the earlier CP2000, with the stock options transactions added to the Schedule D and incidentally with the $20 brokerage commission he had neglected added into his cost or other basis on the other 3 stock transactions. The latest (second) CP2000 evidently came in response to that 1040X inasmuch as the numbers from the additional transactions connected with the stock option exercise were correctly copied into the latest CP2000.
My question is this: how would the entire column of "cost or other basis" end up copied into a CP2000 notice instead of the other column "gross proceeds of sale, or amount of income shown on the return"? The 1040X included a copy of the return as originally filed, and the changed Schedule D. I confirmed that all the numbers on both of those Schedules D had been correctly shown, other than a $20 increase in the cost basis on account of the brokerage commission he had paid on each of the three stocks.
A small amount of additional background: the client had self-prepared his originally filed return with that software whose name I just cannot utter. He came to me when he received an earlier CP2000 which reminded him that he hadn't included sales of stock connected with stock options exercises. Therefore, I prepared him an amendment in response to the earlier CP2000, with the stock options transactions added to the Schedule D and incidentally with the $20 brokerage commission he had neglected added into his cost or other basis on the other 3 stock transactions. The latest (second) CP2000 evidently came in response to that 1040X inasmuch as the numbers from the additional transactions connected with the stock option exercise were correctly copied into the latest CP2000.
My question is this: how would the entire column of "cost or other basis" end up copied into a CP2000 notice instead of the other column "gross proceeds of sale, or amount of income shown on the return"? The 1040X included a copy of the return as originally filed, and the changed Schedule D. I confirmed that all the numbers on both of those Schedules D had been correctly shown, other than a $20 increase in the cost basis on account of the brokerage commission he had paid on each of the three stocks.
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