Client had an Traditional IRA that was funded by rollovers from two former employer's 401k plans.
He then treated it as a "brokerage account" buying and selling capital assets.
By 2017, he had lost most of the original rollover amount and decided to cash out the IRA in order to claim the losses on his tax return.
He ASSUMED these loses would go against the capital gains he had outside of the Traditional IRA. (not happy when I said they would be on Schedule A subject to a 2% AGI hurdle, if allowed at all)
He has completely cashed out and only had the one Traditional IRA.
Is the difference between the rollover amounts that funded the Traditional IRA and the amount he recovered in the distribution of the IRA the "unrecoverd basis" of the Traditional IRA?
(referring to page 4-28 of the Deluxe Edition of the Tax Book- Loss on Traditional IRA)
Thank you for assistance with this clarification.
He then treated it as a "brokerage account" buying and selling capital assets.
By 2017, he had lost most of the original rollover amount and decided to cash out the IRA in order to claim the losses on his tax return.
He ASSUMED these loses would go against the capital gains he had outside of the Traditional IRA. (not happy when I said they would be on Schedule A subject to a 2% AGI hurdle, if allowed at all)
He has completely cashed out and only had the one Traditional IRA.
Is the difference between the rollover amounts that funded the Traditional IRA and the amount he recovered in the distribution of the IRA the "unrecoverd basis" of the Traditional IRA?
(referring to page 4-28 of the Deluxe Edition of the Tax Book- Loss on Traditional IRA)
Thank you for assistance with this clarification.
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