Brighthouse Financial shares and cash-in-lieu of shares were issued to Metlife stockholders on August 7, 2017. I acquired the original shares of Metlife in 2009. The Brighthouse shares represent 10.36% of the cost basis. Would I need to include Schedule D and Form 8949 if the net profit on the fractional share is only $19 ?
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The "cash in lieu" is simply the "proceeds" from the sale of the fractional share. You'll enter your own calculation of the basis. And yes, the holding period is long term.
You use the "Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Other" interview and tell TurboTax that a 1099-B was received.
Tom Young
The "cash in lieu" is simply the "proceeds" from the sale of the fractional share. You'll enter your own calculation of the basis. And yes, the holding period is long term.
You use the "Stocks, Mutual Funds, Bonds, Other" interview and tell TurboTax that a 1099-B was received.
Tom Young
Yes, you should report it on Form 8949 even though the amount is small. You can report it using your cost. Otherwise, report it just as it is on the 1099-B.
Even if there was no 1099-B you are still required to report income, but the way it was reported will tell you that it is income and not a nontaxable distribution.
In this instance, the entire amount of sales proceeds is taxable because if you read the explanation on the Brighthouse Financial 1099-B, the number of MetLife shares that you own did not change. Therefore, you received "free" shares of Brighthouse Financial stock and "free" fractional shares that were paid out to you in cash. The cost basis of the fractional shares is zero and should be reported as such on Form 8949. My gut tells me that this is a short-term capital gain, but I'm not 100% sure on this.
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