The
Investment Interest Deduction: |
The Internal Revenue Code allows individuals to borrow money to make an investment, and to deduct that interest to the extent of their net investment income. The deduction is limited, in any particular year, to one's net investment income.
The new "problem" is that Qualified Dividend Income (those dividends given preferential tax treatment and taxed at 15%) is no longer considered investment income, unless you elect to pay tax at ordinary income tax rates on those dividends. What generally constitutes investment income? Property held for investment is generally defined as:
Tax planning will be key should you no longer have enough investment income, without considering your qualified dividends. You must consider whether in future years you will have sufficient investment income to recoup the investment interest. If not, you may wish to consider electing to treat part of your qualified dividends as investment income. The IRS cautions, however, that once you have made this election you must have IRS consent to revoke it.
Margin Accounts — Interest Tracing Rules If you have a margin account and have borrowed funds on it, you should be aware of the interest tracing rules. Margin interest expense is not automatically deducted as investment interest expense. It depends on what you did with the money.
Margin Accounts — The Big Surprise According to an article in "Investment News," the week of January 5, 2004, if investors hold stock in margin accounts, and the broker lends those shares, you are not technically receiving dividends on those shares during the period they are loaned. The investor receives an "in-lieu payment" equal to the actual dividend payment. The "in-lieu payment" is NOT Qualified Dividend Income and will NOT receive the benefit of the 15% qualified dividend rate. According to this article, if you have a "margin account," rather than what is called a "cash account," whether you have borrowed on it or not, you have given explicit permission to the broker to lend your shares. (They lend your shares to hedge funds and short sellers.) Apparently the only means for determining if your shares were loaned is to wait for the 1099-DIV to arrive by the end of January and see if you have received Qualified Dividends. If you have a margin account for the "convenience" of short term borrowing or "emergencies," I strongly suggest that you get a home equity line of credit for this purpose and move your assets to a cash account. It appears that many brokers automatically open margin accounts for their clients. You may not even know that you will be paying higher taxes than you planned to pay this year. If you do not know what kind of account you have, you should call your broker to check the status of your account. If you would like any further information regarding this issue as well as any other tax related issue, please contact The Henssler Financial Group Tax & Accounting Division at 770-428-4025. |
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