My 1099-B has 1 transactions that I do not know how to enter
In the "Additional Information" section this transaction states - MERGER
Transactions
I found details of when I first purchased this transaction on my account which highlights the following:
My account has multiple Transactions associated with Reorg
10/11/2022:
10/11/2022
10/11/2022
10/11/2022
10/11/2022
10/14/2022 – This transaction is listed on my 1099-B with all details to enter it and in the additional comment it states CASH IN LIEU
I would appreciate some help on how to actually capture this transactions as part of my 1099-B or if there is another form I need to complete this information on.
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From @DavidD66:
Cash in lieu amounts are usually insignificant, so I recommend you simply report the payment on Form 8949, with a zero cost basis using category C.
This would be a long-term gain based on the dates that you have provided.
Wouldn’t that show the as a gain?
Based on what I paid and what was cashed out post merger is at a loss, not a gain.
Yes, if you enter $0 as your basis on all of these transactions, the entire proceeds would be a gain.
For your first transaction, go ahead and insert the information about the date acquired and the price paid. This transaction will show a loss.
The last transaction should be reported with a basis of $0. You should have actually received this amount. This will show a small gain.
I am assuming that the multiple "Transactions associated with Reorg" are not actually on your 1099-B, but rather on a statement providing more details. If that is the case, you can disregard them.
Correct, the transactions under “Transactions associated with Reorg” are not on the 1099-B, I provided this information because I was not sure if it was useful or relevant.
This transaction, is not listed on the 1099-B
Only these two are on the 1099-B:
1. Merger Transaction
2. MASTEC INC Transaction
Do I enter the transaction that isn’t listed on the 1099-B?
What information should I enter for the merger transaction?
Yes, enter the transaction that is missing from your 1099-B. It appears that you have everything you need for this transaction, i.e. you have the quantity, basis, sales price, dates. Thus, this missing transaction appears to be straightforward.
The merger transaction is much less clear. You have a date sold, a quantity, and a negative proceeds amount reflecting a loss. However, there is no basis, or date purchased. Let's follow the advice from @JulieS, and report what you have. For the date purchased, you might consider "various" if TurboTax requires that you enter a date.
I just want to make sure I under correctly, even though the transaction is not listed on the 1099-b provided by E-trade I can still enter it on my taxes?
With regards to the incomplete transaction - It's reflecting as positive proceeds, not negative (please reference the photo). I'm I understanding the guidance correctly that I should proceed with an incomplete transaction?
Yes, you can certainly list a transaction that was carried out in 2022. Keep in mind the trade date is what is used so if you are close to the end of the year the trade date may occur in 2023 and dictates when the sale is to be reported.
You must enter a date acquired (Various will work as pointed out by our Tax Expert @GeorgeM777, if you don't have one date).
Long term is a holding period of more than one year and receives capital gain tax treatment (0%, 10%, 15%, 20% depending on your regular rate of tax)
Short term is a holding period of one year or less and receives ordinary gain tax treatment (your regular rate)
I understand how to enter the transaction that isn't 1099-B, but I am still confused on how to enter the incomplete transcation.
For the incomplete transaction if I enter a cost basis of $0 then it would appear as though I made a $500+ profit, which is not accurate as I actually lost $287 on this particular transaction due to the merger.
You need to enter the missing info that the broker didn't have ... that is how you complete the entry of this sale.
I am sorry but that answer does not make sense
First of all, here is how you will report the information on you 1099 B sale.
Now after reporting this, you net loss should be $459. Your 1099B mentions $288 because the cost of the shares was 52 X 13.7603=716 Thus your loss under this reporting is $288 (rounded off).
I am not sure how your broker reached the sale proceed amount of $546 unless there were expenses of the merger that reduced the actual proceed amount reported of $716. Those details may be included in the supplementary disclosure statement included with your 1099B composite.
Let us know if this helps.
Here is the information that they shared with me:
@DaveF1006does the above info help with how this should be reported?
For the energy Alternative INC Comm Stock, the cost basis should be $1004 unless i'm missing something. in this case $1004-546= $458 should be your loss. Now, he two shares valued at $135, were these resold as well or do you still own them?
@DaveF1006I still own the shares that are valued at $135
Is it correct to report a loss of $458 when the overall transaction netted a loss of 287.98? Wouldn't I be claiming a higher loss?
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