For bitcoin investors, tax misery ahead

Sean McAuliffe doesn't have much background in investing, aside from a couple of retirement accounts. But over Thanksgiving, as the price of bitcoin blew past $8,000 as part of a monthslong rally, the 54-year-old construction manager decided to take the plunge. Like many Americans, he'd read enough about bitcoin on the Internet to feel confident buying a stake in the digital currency and several similar alternatives.

McAuliffe's investment paid off almost immediately: Within a month, the price of bitcoin had more than doubled to over $19,000. Encouraged, McAuliffe bought some more. Now, he figures he executes at least one trade a day -- and on paper, he's made about $7,000.

"I've had some dramatic wins and some dramatic losses," he said in an interview.

But McAuliffe is also looking ahead to what could be a big headache for him: Doing his taxes when he sells. Although McAuliffe doesn't intend to exchange his virtual currency back into dollars anytime soon, other investors have -- and many tax professionals have noticed an uptick in questions this year.

"It's going to be a nightmare for people who are worried about doing the right thing," Andrew Schaefer, a federally licensed tax expert in Florida who represents taxpayers before the Internal Revenue Service, said. At stake this year could be tens of billions in profit -- and perhaps more, Schaefer said, judging by the surge of interest in bitcoin. A significant chunk of that could be subject to federal and state taxes based on how many people sold their assets.

"2016 saw some questions come up," said Lisa Greene-Lewis, a lead certified public accountant at TurboTax. "As people are doing their taxes [this year] we may see more because more people have been trading and selling."

The IRS' most recent guidance on the matter is from 2014, when it said taxpayers should treat their virtual currency like stocks and bonds. Under that ruling, taxpayers must declare any profit, also known as capital gains, or losses they take when they sell bitcoins at a different price from when they bought them. The same policy applied to purchases of real-world goods; for example, suppose someone tried to buy a cup of coffee with bitcoins. That would technically count as a sale of the bitcoins. The person might owe capital-gains tax if the bitcoins paid at the cash register had increased in value from the time it was first acquired. The IRS declined to comment for this article, referring the Post back to that 2014 guidance.

With shares of stock, brokerage firms such as Vanguard and Charles Schwab typically help investors track their gains and losses with a year-end tax document, Form 1099. But companies such as Gemini that handle virtual currencies, which haven't been around as long, face more ambiguous reporting obligations, leaving it mostly up to individual investors to crunch the numbers themselves -- a monumental task for many that demands a facility for numbers and an exacting level of attention. Things get even thornier for U.S. employees who work for bitcoin-related companies and may receive the digital currency as part of their salaries; that money is taxed as regular income, not investment income.

But not everyone makes the effort, or is even aware he may owe money to the government, tax experts say. According to the IRS, from 2013 to 2015 only 800 to 900 people a year declared their bitcoin earnings.

The agency has indicated it could go after investors who fail to report those gains. In a recent court battle, the IRS successfully forced Coinbase, one of the largest U.S.-based exchanges where consumers can buy bitcoins for dollars, to provide taxpayer information on more than 14,000 customers. The IRS did not single out any customer for suspicion in the suit, but did say it believed gains from virtual currency "are underreported."

Coinbase said in a blog post at the time that the ruling was a partial victory for its side, in that it denied the IRS from accessing an even broader set of data covering 480,000 customers. In a question-and-answer page on its website, Coinbase said it will distribute Form 1099 to investors on its platform who have made more than $20,000 in gains "related to at least 200 transactions in a calendar year." The page urges investors to "keep your own records for best results and update the report accordingly."

That covers high-volume traders and big-time players, but offers little guidance to average investors, said McAuliffe, who invested around $3,000 in virtual currencies last year.

"Coinbase sent out -- I'll call it a boilerplate on taxes," he said, which consisted of a link to the question-and-answer page. "Did they send out a tax report like you'd get from TD Ameritrade? No. Only, like, a flag of 'pay your taxes!' and guidance on statutes to look up ... It's all sort of 'Wild West' sort of stuff."

Coinbase declined the Post's requests for an interview. Other exchanges, such as Gemini and Bitstamp, did not respond to requests for an interview.

Business on 01/12/2018

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