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Published byJoella Chandler Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 16 Investment and Personal Financial Planning
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Computing net capital gains and losses Net the gains and losses in each class (net ST, net LT) If taxpayer has a net gain in one class and a net loss in the other, net those as well. Otherwise, they remain separate. Examples—taxpayer has following gains and losses: Example No.Long-termShort-termCombined 1Gains$40,000$15,000 No further netting Losses(10,000)(8,000) Net$30,000$7,000 2Gains$50,000$6,000 Net LTCG = $23,000 Losses(16,000)(17,000) Net$34,000($11,000)
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Computing the Tax on Capital Gains and Losses Net long-term capital gains taxed at following rates: Net short-term capital gains taxed at ordinary rates Taxpayer’s marginal rate on taxable income ignoring preferential LTCG rate: Rate on NLTCG between 0-15%→0% between 25-35%→15% marginal rate = 39.6%→20% Unrecaptured Section 1250 gain (depreciation)→25% Collectibles (art, etc.)→28%
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ExampleExample Taxpayer, single filing status, has taxable income of $200,000, including $10,000 net short-term capital gain and $20,000 net long-term capital gain. Marginal rate (2015) = 33% Thus, LTCG rate = 20% Tax calculation: Ordinary income ($180,000)→$43,471.25 net LTCG (20,000 * 20%)→ $ 4,000.00 Total income tax liability→$47,471.25
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Net Investment Income / Medicare Tax Net Investment Income tax Enacted as part of the Affordable Care Act Is levied on net investment income : taxable interest income, dividends, annuities, royalties, rents, net capital gains, and net passive income Tax Rate 3.8% (levied in addition to income tax) Applies to MFJ taxpayers with AGI > $250K, Single individuals with AGI > $200K Additional Medicare tax on wages and self employment income: 0.9% on wages / net self employment income. Thresholds same as above
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