My client received a k-1 for an investment which i believe is from an oil company. This is inside his ira. My understanding is this is a not a reporting event since it is in his ira. My guess is there are investors that own a piece of this investment in a regular investment account therefore the company issues k-1s. Any thoughts?
k-1 in an IRA
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The trustee
of the IRA will need to deal with the K1 information. It is sent to your client for information purposes. -
My client received a k-1 for an investment which i believe is from an oil company. This is inside his ira. My understanding is this is a not a reporting event since it is in his ira. My guess is there are investors that own a piece of this investment in a regular investment account therefore the company issues k-1s. Any thoughts?Comment
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Your client is supposed to send the K1 to the broker in the event the UBTI is over $1000 (box 20V) on the K1. While the broker is required to file the 990-T I understand this year that some brokers are sending the 990 to the client to prepare and have them return to the broker for filing.Comment
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An IRA is most likely to be taxed when it earns unrelated business taxable income (UBTI). The UBTI rules apply to all qualified retirement plans, not just traditional IRAs. If an IRA earns UBTI exceeding $1,000 it must pay income taxes on that income. The IRA might have to file Forms 990-T or 990-W. It also must pay estimated income taxes during the year if the UBTI exceeds $500.Comment
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Here's a discussion related to this issue from 3+ years ago. There are others - just search on "UBTI".
"The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth GalbraithComment
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@Burke
you are right. there are two k1s and under part two identifying number, neither one has their ss numbers. in box F it reads:
ira FBO and then his name
abc company llc(example)
roth account
my clients address
second one reads:
edward jones co custodian
fbo, then my client's name
address.
btw, they are both losses.Comment
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