Lemon Thrower wrote:Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:as for the original article, what the guy is doing is basically trading $1000 FV of silver coins to the dealer for the car. the "clever" part is that he doesn't sell the coins, he has the dealer sell the coins.
but what is clear is that he is realizing $24,000 differential in value by trading the coins for the car. While this may not be a sale under a narrow definition of that term, it is the realization of of $24,000 in taxable income according to how the IRS interprets Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code. So in my view its really not all that "clever."
i buy pms so i can sleep at night; cheating the IRS frustrates my goal of being able to sleep at night.
I think the IRS position is wrong and even unconstitutional based on how the founders defined a "dollar," but i'm not willing to fight the IRS over it.
I know I am a little slow, so help me out. Given the extreme price fluctuation of 90% silver coin in the past 12 years, it's true "value" is very subjective. If the IRS now sees 90% as a commodity, not money, then wasn't the exchange of 90% silver for the car a zero sum gain? Value for value was exchanged. How is that taxable?
I don't know the IRS rules for bartering. If 90% is a commodity and the car is a commodity, too. This is a barter exchange, is it not?
you get a $25,000 car for $1000 in coin; IRS would say you have taxable income of $24,000. the only thing that is debatable is the the value of the car, but on the facts above its difficult to argue that it is more than a few hundred bucks different than $25,000.
doug wrote:To the IRS you bought the car for $1000. Now if you sell next year for $20000 then you will have to pay capital gain tax on $19000.
barrytrot wrote:capitol gains most likely.
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