Raise your hand, if you can relate to the following scenario.
Following the time-honored investment rule of “buy low, and sell high,” you acquired the publicly traded Acme Building Supplies stock in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. These days, the Acme Building stock is doing very well, prompting you to consider selling it for a tidy profit.
When you approach your CPA sister-in-law for advice, she tells you that selling might be a good idea. Then she reminds you to watch out for the capital gains taxes on the profits of that sale. Those taxes, she points out, could take a bite out of your gains.
We’ve written a great deal about capital gains taxes -- on the sale of property held for business or investment purposes. But selling that real estate asset isn’t the only way to generate capital gains (or the ensuing taxation).
As such:
Let’s say you shell out $2,000 to acquire 100 shares of Acme Building Supplies at $20 per share. Investment in Acme Building Supplies is brisk, and you end up selling those 100 shares at $30 per share. Your capital gain is the profit from that sale, less any additional brokers’ fees or commission.
Once upon a time, you could have deferred capital gains taxes from the sale of that stock through use of a 1031 exchange. However, the Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA), which took effect on Jan. 1, 2018, eliminated personal property assets (such as stamp collections, art, and yes, your stocks) from like-kind exchange treatment. This means only capital gains from the sale of real estate for investment or business purposes are eligible for this tax-deferral strategy.
But you can use the following strategies to manage, or possibly defer capital gains from the sale of your stock.
Longer hold periods. The IRS divides its capital gains tax methods between short-term (less than a year) and long-term (one year, or longer). If you sell your Acme Building stock within six months, the IRS will tax your gain as ordinary income. Depending on your income bracket, this tax could be as high as 37%.
Qualified Opportunity Zones. Another outgrowth from the TCJA is the Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) program, which allows you to defer capital gains taxes from your Acme Building stock sale, by rolling that profit into a Qualified Opportunity Fund. The QOF then funnels your gains (and those of others) into federally designated, lower-income areas. In addition to helping lower-income communities, the process means you can defer capital gains taxes until 2026.
While the IRS does require you to pay taxes on any profits earned from your stock sale, there are ways in which you can help lessen the impact. Taking advantage of tax-management strategies -- as suggested by your sister-in-law, the CPA, or any other tax expert -- can help reduce the taxation bite.
For more information about potential tax management strategies, contact Realized Holdings by logging on to www.realized1031.com, or calling 877.797.1031.