Look for tax professionals in your area that are familiar with the rules for traders of securities (as opposed to investors). You may need to call a few and ask them their experience with stock traders.Anyone here does taxes for day trader person?
Actually, if you qualify as a trader, it does as it allows you the option to elect mark to market treatment, something that investors cannot do.Day trading doesn't give you any special tax treatment...
Did you bother to read my entire post, or are you just in a snippy mood. You quoted a subset of my post to make the same statement that the second sentence of my paragraph did.Actually, if you qualify as a trader, it does as it allows you the option to elect mark to market treatment, something that investors cannot do.
I'm not a lawyer, not an investor and not a financial arbitrator. Wash rules are how much detergent and bleach I put in my laundry and I wouldn't know mark to market from Marky Maypo.Did you bother to read my entire post, or are you just in a snippy mood. You quoted a subset of my post to make the same statement that the second sentence of my paragraph did.
Oh, but I'm not a lawyer. I'm just an investor and financial arbitrator.
What is up with YOUR mood? Yes I read your entire post. I don't agree that what I said was a subset of your second paragraph, but assuming it was, then your second paragraph, IMO, is contrary to what you wrote in your first paragraph.Did you bother to read my entire post, or are you just in a snippy mood. You quoted a subset of my post to make the same statement that the second sentence of my paragraph did.
Oh, but I'm not a lawyer. I'm just an investor and financial arbitrator.
And exactly how was my partial quote "incorrect and condescending? You made the statement that being a day trader "doesn't give you any special tax treatment (other than it's unlikely you qualify for long term capital gains treatment)." I simply responded that "Actually, if you qualify as a trader, it does as it allows you the option to elect mark to market treatment, something that investors cannot do." I said that because, IMO, being able to elect mark to market is indeed something special - it can significantly change the timing and computation of your gains and losses. Now, what exactly did I say that was incorrect? Do you disagree about my statement that traders can elect mark to market? Because that is the only FACTUAL thing I said, and thus the only thing that could be incorrect.TM's partial quote was incorrect and condescending.
I think that snarky comment was uncalled for. I did not attack you or your knowledge, or suggest that being a lawyer necessarily makes me any better or more knowledgeable than you. So where that is coming from, I don't know. Perhaps if you had slept in your own bed last night instead sleeping at a Holiday Inn Express you might not have reacted the same way?Oh, but I'm not a lawyer. I'm just an investor and financial arbitrator.
I agree. Just because one might be eligible to make the election doesn't necessarily mean that it's a good choice. The individual circumstances of the trader involved matter in making that decision.I'll just say that WHAT is being traded is equally as important as whether or not the activity falls into trader vs investor status. I would not blindly make a MTM election simply because there is sufficient activity to be a trader.