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Selling Mutual Funds: Know These Tax Tips and
Rules
Mutual funds are an easy way for people to get involved in the
stock market, especially when they are new to investing or
don't feel confident enough to judge market trends on their
own. Mutual funds allow you turn your money over to a team of
professionals, who invest in various stocks for you and manage
them on your behalf. They also allow you to mitigate some of
the risks of investing by compiling a portfolio of slow
growing, yet solid stocks, combined with high risk, high return
stocks. You can have any combination of the two you like, so
your solid stocks can carry you through periods of loss on your
more risky stocks.
Despite all of the upfront ease of mutual funds, they have a
definite downside. Mutual funds are notoriously difficult to
manage when tax time rolls around; many people don't even know
where to begin. The process doesn't have to be scary, though.
Take some time to learn the rules, and you'll be able to tackle
your mutual fund taxes with confidence.
If you're investing in mutual funds, there is one mantra you
should be repeating to yourself over and over again: "keep
records, keep records." Your record keeping can make or break
you at tax time. Because mutual funds involve many trades of
many different stocks every month, it is imperative for you to
have a record of what stock was bought, sold, or traded when,
and for how much. Most people make the mistake of believing
that any income for a stock trade or sale, no matter if it is
immediately reinvested, counts as income that must be claimed
on your tax return. This is not so. If you keep records
correctly, you can mitigate the taxes on this income, so long
as it is reinvested into other stock immediately.
To keep your records in tact, you have to use a recognized
accounting method for your mutual fund and stick to it. If you
use the "First In, First Out" (FIFO) method, then you are
saying the stocks you are selling are being sold in the order
in which you bought them. Aside from FIFO, there are two other
methods of keeping records. With the "Single Category" method,
you calculate the purchase cost of your shares and then divide
that cost by your total number of share. The "Multiple
Category" works in much the same way, but you repeat the steps
after you have divided you shares by category.
Many mutual fund companies will tell you which record keeping
method you should use, and if you're just starting out in
investing, it may be best to take their advice. However, once
you have locked into a method, you are stuck with it for the
length of your mutual fund. If you have more experience with
investing, or have a financial advisor who can help you
through, then you take closer look at the method you have been
assigned and make sure it maximizes your tax deduction
potential.
For novice traders and experienced traders alike, mutual funds
can be a tax time nightmare. You can contact the IRS to get
their booklets 550 and 564 for more information, but even with
these resources, it is best to keep a few things in mind.
Always plan ahead for tax time so you can get all the
deductions available to you, and when you tax situation is
complex, let a tax expert get you through the process. The
investment in expert advice can pay dividends when it comes
time to make out that check to Uncle Sam.
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