by mflugher » Tue Oct 23, 2012 11:37 am
I wouldn't trust just any CPA to have a properly informed opinion on this matter. At best it is undecided, and will probably be somewhere between these 2 extremes, the decision will probably be made by a settlement ...
1. Best case:
Buyer: $1500 was paid for car, should he ever sell he must pay capital gains on the car with a basis of $1500 plus any fees he had to pay getting clear title to the car.
Dealer: $1500 was paid for his car with a cost of lets assume $19k he gets to write off the cost of the car on his business taxes, so he has "income" of $1500-cost of car net loss on business of $17500, also when he sells the coins he incurs capital gains of $25000-$1000 basis, or capital gains of $24k (at a possibly lower rate, also he doesn't pay social security/medicare tax on this cap gains income, a savings of 13.2% to 15.2%) .
2. worst case: at worst its a barter transaction and both parties should treat the full value of items traded as income from barter transaction... Generally there is no cost of good sold involved in a barter transaction, or at least the deduction is questionable.
Buyer: Pays income tax on line 21 "other income" of $24,500 at their prevailing income tax rate (not capital gains rate), there is a good chance this much income might bump them up a tax bracket... Additionally buyer potentially loses any basis he had in coins (ie if he bought them at 10x face a direct sale for $24,500 would result in paying capital gains on $14,500, at the lower capital gains rate as opposed to 24,500 at his prevailing income tax rate, since this buyer is not in the business of cars, he would not normally have to pay ss/medicare tax on these "proceeds".
Where this actuallly ends up is probably somewhere in between...
I'm a registered tax preparer working on my enrolled agent certification.
Please do your research and prove me wrong on the following statement. (I'm quite interested in this subject and have looked many times with no luck)
go to IRS.gov read the notes. There is just no "official" legal opinion, rules or irs guides on the tax consequences of such a transaction. There is no case law on this specific kind of transaction where the coins have both a face and a bullion value and the transaction is made using items at face value...
Keep in mind your CPA is not a tax expert, CPA training involves about 80% accounting and only about 10% tax preparation classes. Tax preparation is only a small part of your average CPA's firm, more attention is usually put into bookkeeping, audits, etc. I'm not saying a CPA isn't a better judge of this than you, but a professional who actually spends most of their time preparing taxes would be a better choice in general.