marriedwithfear
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? California
I have stock in a company I acquired prior to getting married. I did not ask my partner to sign a pre-nup. I'm considering selling my stock (post-marriage) and looking to buy other securities. I'm thinking I may do this every other year or maybe a few times a year. My understanding is that separate property stays separate property... unless there's active appreciation. My understanding of active appreciation is when one spouse puts in "work" or "marital time" to enhance the value of the property versus passive appreciation where it stays as is without "hands on" work to appreciation (real estate that gains in value as an example).
However, I'm struggling to realize what is active appreciation when it comes to stocks? There's a case in Florida I ready where the husband traded 700 times over the course of 4-6 years. In addition, the benchmark was using the S&P 500 to see if if his efforts in beating the market measured. in which the judge decided all of the appreciation was marital (Mathers v. Brown, Florida).
My question is, how many times does one trade before it becomes maritial? Is 100 trades per year "safe"? Is 50? Is 10? I realize it's hard to quantify and completely up to the court or bench judge or jury to decide. If my stock 'beats' the SP 500, is it at risk then?
I have stock in a company I acquired prior to getting married. I did not ask my partner to sign a pre-nup. I'm considering selling my stock (post-marriage) and looking to buy other securities. I'm thinking I may do this every other year or maybe a few times a year. My understanding is that separate property stays separate property... unless there's active appreciation. My understanding of active appreciation is when one spouse puts in "work" or "marital time" to enhance the value of the property versus passive appreciation where it stays as is without "hands on" work to appreciation (real estate that gains in value as an example).
However, I'm struggling to realize what is active appreciation when it comes to stocks? There's a case in Florida I ready where the husband traded 700 times over the course of 4-6 years. In addition, the benchmark was using the S&P 500 to see if if his efforts in beating the market measured. in which the judge decided all of the appreciation was marital (Mathers v. Brown, Florida).
My question is, how many times does one trade before it becomes maritial? Is 100 trades per year "safe"? Is 50? Is 10? I realize it's hard to quantify and completely up to the court or bench judge or jury to decide. If my stock 'beats' the SP 500, is it at risk then?