Some investors engage in transactions called "Selling Short Against the Box". For all practical purposes, the effect is that the investor actually sells stock before he buys it. The objective is to deliver a profit to an investor who is confident the stock will fall in price and thus he can buy cheaper.
Yes, this actually DOES happen, in spite of the heuristic impossibility. Of course the broker has various deposits/committments, etc. to insure against all manner of wierd results.
My question is how our software deals with this. I haven't had to report such a thing but will have to do so in 2011. Will the software intercept a sale dated prior to the buy and give us a hard edit? How do such transactions appear on a 1099-B?
Yes, this actually DOES happen, in spite of the heuristic impossibility. Of course the broker has various deposits/committments, etc. to insure against all manner of wierd results.
My question is how our software deals with this. I haven't had to report such a thing but will have to do so in 2011. Will the software intercept a sale dated prior to the buy and give us a hard edit? How do such transactions appear on a 1099-B?
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