I need the cost basis on 32 shares of MetLife stock. Distribution rate 1 for 11. Brighthouse Financial, Fractional Share 0.909091 Cash in Lieu Rate 58.707848 Gross amount 53.37 are the actual numbers. Computershare does not provide cost basis. If I enter zero as cost basis do I just pay taxes on the $53.37. Seems much easier than driving myself nuts over calculations.
Also really need to know about the date acquired as I inherited the stock when my mother passed away.
Thank you in advance for your response.
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"I need the cost basis on 32 shares of MetLife stock"
Look up the closing price of MetLife on your mother's date of death and multiply that by the 32 shares. That's your basis in the 32 shares of MetLife.
Then multiply the total MetLife basis by 10.3635%. That's the basis allocated to the 2.909091 shares of Brighthouse you received. (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0ahUKEwismpCb8PnYAhXqq1QKHYx1DI4...)
Then multiply that total basis of Brighthouse by (.909091/2.909091) - .3125 - and that's the basis in the fractional shares you sold
Using the "Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Other" interview enter the sales date, the description of what was sold, the $53.37 as the proceeds, and whatever the above math dictates as the basis. In the date acquired field enter "inherited." That will make the gain or loss "long term", which it is according to tax law.
Tom Young
"I need the cost basis on 32 shares of MetLife stock"
Look up the closing price of MetLife on your mother's date of death and multiply that by the 32 shares. That's your basis in the 32 shares of MetLife.
Then multiply the total MetLife basis by 10.3635%. That's the basis allocated to the 2.909091 shares of Brighthouse you received. (https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0ahUKEwismpCb8PnYAhXqq1QKHYx1DI4...)
Then multiply that total basis of Brighthouse by (.909091/2.909091) - .3125 - and that's the basis in the fractional shares you sold
Using the "Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Other" interview enter the sales date, the description of what was sold, the $53.37 as the proceeds, and whatever the above math dictates as the basis. In the date acquired field enter "inherited." That will make the gain or loss "long term", which it is according to tax law.
Tom Young
For MetLife and Brighthouse Financial 1099-B tax info, I received the following information from Computershare for filling out the tax forms on Turbo Tax:
The date acquired is listed on the 1099-B as Distribution Date.
The Cost Basis is 0.
The type of transaction is Short-Tern Non-Covered.
This helped me. I hope it helps someone else.
This doesn't apply to you. Cost basis and date of acquisition will only come into play when you sell the stock. A capital gains distribution is an amount that you have received on the value of the stock, but the stock is still an asset that has not lost it's basis. So actually you are correct in reporting all of the $53.37 as a capital gain, which will receive a more favorable tax treatment on your return since it is a long-term gain (more than one year held).
But you do want to know the acquisition date and the cost basis for when you do sell the stock. You certainly will not want to report zero as the stock's basis because that would make the entire amount taxable. Your cost basis was the value of the stock when you inherited it. However, your acquisition date is when your mother purchased it.
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