I swear I'm not making this up folks. I honestly considered posting this as a joke of the day, except for the fact that it's true.
I'm going over the paperwork that a client just dropped off and ran across a note from their investment adviser I just HAD to share (after I stopped laughing).
Not surprisingly, in 2008 they had several tens of thousands of losses on mutual fund & stock sales and so we have a sizable capital loss carryforward. Among the written recommendations the investment advisor gave them was the following, word-for-word:
"And remember to use some of the 2008 Long-Term Capital Losses we captured for you against income for last year...that should be very helpful".
So all this time I though a loss was a bad thing, but today I discovered that a loss is something for a savy invesment advisor to CAPTURE in order to be helpful to their client. What's the deal here - are the losses going to get away or somehow escape if they're not captured? I guess I need to learn more about investment advising and forget what I think I know about investing itself.
I'm going over the paperwork that a client just dropped off and ran across a note from their investment adviser I just HAD to share (after I stopped laughing).
Not surprisingly, in 2008 they had several tens of thousands of losses on mutual fund & stock sales and so we have a sizable capital loss carryforward. Among the written recommendations the investment advisor gave them was the following, word-for-word:
"And remember to use some of the 2008 Long-Term Capital Losses we captured for you against income for last year...that should be very helpful".
So all this time I though a loss was a bad thing, but today I discovered that a loss is something for a savy invesment advisor to CAPTURE in order to be helpful to their client. What's the deal here - are the losses going to get away or somehow escape if they're not captured? I guess I need to learn more about investment advising and forget what I think I know about investing itself.
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