Realistically, what do you do to come up with the cost basis of a mutual fund that has been held for 40+ years, dividends and interest reinvested every year? I called the mutual fund company and they can't come up with a cost basis because it is held far longer than their records go back (old data wasn't entered into the computer system). All distributions have been taxed over the years so we aren't talking a MASSIVE capital gain figure.
Hypothetically speaking, the shares were valued at:
$90,000 on 12/31/2006
They sold for $75,000 in November of 2007
Anything we come up with is an estimate. If the brokerage firm wrote a letter with a best estimate guess of what their cost basis should be, would that be sufficient? There is unrealized capital gains in any fund and that's the part we are trying to figure out I guess.
Hypothetically speaking, the shares were valued at:
$90,000 on 12/31/2006
They sold for $75,000 in November of 2007
Anything we come up with is an estimate. If the brokerage firm wrote a letter with a best estimate guess of what their cost basis should be, would that be sufficient? There is unrealized capital gains in any fund and that's the part we are trying to figure out I guess.
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