Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Economics and Investing
- This topic has 175 replies, 15 voices, and was last updated 18 years ago by
p-dude.
-
AuthorPosts
-
December 11, 2007 at 11:20 PM #114979December 11, 2007 at 11:28 PM #114791
hipmatt
ParticipantThis leads me to a question of taxes and currencies….
Say an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
Does he need to pay taxes on that?
Is this considered an investment?December 11, 2007 at 11:28 PM #114916hipmatt
ParticipantThis leads me to a question of taxes and currencies….
Say an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
Does he need to pay taxes on that?
Is this considered an investment?December 11, 2007 at 11:28 PM #114952hipmatt
ParticipantThis leads me to a question of taxes and currencies….
Say an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
Does he need to pay taxes on that?
Is this considered an investment?December 11, 2007 at 11:28 PM #114958hipmatt
ParticipantThis leads me to a question of taxes and currencies….
Say an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
Does he need to pay taxes on that?
Is this considered an investment?December 11, 2007 at 11:28 PM #114994hipmatt
ParticipantThis leads me to a question of taxes and currencies….
Say an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
Does he need to pay taxes on that?
Is this considered an investment?December 11, 2007 at 11:56 PM #114806Nonbeliever
ParticipantI am going to agree with p-dude. When you are up 10-15% get out. You may see it raise higher, but be safe. Think long term. There are a lot of short term swings. No comment (hence no analysis on the Canadian dollar) on p-dude’s sentiment on the loonie. Conserve capital. Be safe.
December 11, 2007 at 11:56 PM #114931Nonbeliever
ParticipantI am going to agree with p-dude. When you are up 10-15% get out. You may see it raise higher, but be safe. Think long term. There are a lot of short term swings. No comment (hence no analysis on the Canadian dollar) on p-dude’s sentiment on the loonie. Conserve capital. Be safe.
December 11, 2007 at 11:56 PM #114967Nonbeliever
ParticipantI am going to agree with p-dude. When you are up 10-15% get out. You may see it raise higher, but be safe. Think long term. There are a lot of short term swings. No comment (hence no analysis on the Canadian dollar) on p-dude’s sentiment on the loonie. Conserve capital. Be safe.
December 11, 2007 at 11:56 PM #114973Nonbeliever
ParticipantI am going to agree with p-dude. When you are up 10-15% get out. You may see it raise higher, but be safe. Think long term. There are a lot of short term swings. No comment (hence no analysis on the Canadian dollar) on p-dude’s sentiment on the loonie. Conserve capital. Be safe.
December 11, 2007 at 11:56 PM #115009Nonbeliever
ParticipantI am going to agree with p-dude. When you are up 10-15% get out. You may see it raise higher, but be safe. Think long term. There are a lot of short term swings. No comment (hence no analysis on the Canadian dollar) on p-dude’s sentiment on the loonie. Conserve capital. Be safe.
December 12, 2007 at 12:33 AM #114816Eugene
ParticipantSay an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
It’s fairly complicated.
My understanding is, if you do the buying and selling yourself (as an individual), 0.50 constitute capital gains and you have to pay taxes on them, either as short-term or as long-term, depending on how long you held Canadian dollars. In addition, you don’t have to pay tax if your gains from this transaction are less than $200. Finally, if you have a lot of short-term gains, under some circumstances you may elect to have your proceeds taxed under section 1256 (60% long-term / 40% short-term).
If you don’t buy and sell Canadian dollars yourself but rather hold them indirectly via a foreign currency ETF (FXC), consult the prospectus of your ETF. You may have to pay taxes because of transactions made by its managers “behind your back”, even if you don’t sell the ETF.
I am not a paid tax professional and this does not constitute professional advice.
December 12, 2007 at 12:33 AM #114941Eugene
ParticipantSay an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
It’s fairly complicated.
My understanding is, if you do the buying and selling yourself (as an individual), 0.50 constitute capital gains and you have to pay taxes on them, either as short-term or as long-term, depending on how long you held Canadian dollars. In addition, you don’t have to pay tax if your gains from this transaction are less than $200. Finally, if you have a lot of short-term gains, under some circumstances you may elect to have your proceeds taxed under section 1256 (60% long-term / 40% short-term).
If you don’t buy and sell Canadian dollars yourself but rather hold them indirectly via a foreign currency ETF (FXC), consult the prospectus of your ETF. You may have to pay taxes because of transactions made by its managers “behind your back”, even if you don’t sell the ETF.
I am not a paid tax professional and this does not constitute professional advice.
December 12, 2007 at 12:33 AM #114977Eugene
ParticipantSay an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
It’s fairly complicated.
My understanding is, if you do the buying and selling yourself (as an individual), 0.50 constitute capital gains and you have to pay taxes on them, either as short-term or as long-term, depending on how long you held Canadian dollars. In addition, you don’t have to pay tax if your gains from this transaction are less than $200. Finally, if you have a lot of short-term gains, under some circumstances you may elect to have your proceeds taxed under section 1256 (60% long-term / 40% short-term).
If you don’t buy and sell Canadian dollars yourself but rather hold them indirectly via a foreign currency ETF (FXC), consult the prospectus of your ETF. You may have to pay taxes because of transactions made by its managers “behind your back”, even if you don’t sell the ETF.
I am not a paid tax professional and this does not constitute professional advice.
December 12, 2007 at 12:33 AM #114983Eugene
ParticipantSay an investor bought Canadian dollars for .65 on the dollar a while back, and recently converted them back to USD at 1.05, making himself a decent profit..
It’s fairly complicated.
My understanding is, if you do the buying and selling yourself (as an individual), 0.50 constitute capital gains and you have to pay taxes on them, either as short-term or as long-term, depending on how long you held Canadian dollars. In addition, you don’t have to pay tax if your gains from this transaction are less than $200. Finally, if you have a lot of short-term gains, under some circumstances you may elect to have your proceeds taxed under section 1256 (60% long-term / 40% short-term).
If you don’t buy and sell Canadian dollars yourself but rather hold them indirectly via a foreign currency ETF (FXC), consult the prospectus of your ETF. You may have to pay taxes because of transactions made by its managers “behind your back”, even if you don’t sell the ETF.
I am not a paid tax professional and this does not constitute professional advice.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
