Cost basis is important for tax purposes because it is part of the calculation used to determine the amount of capital gain or loss when an investment in a nonqualified account is sold. The IRS requires us to track the cost basis, holding period, and certain other tax information for most securities and report this information for the tax year in which they are sold.
“Covered” is a term used to identify investments that are subject to required tracking and reporting of cost basis and holding period information under tax law and IRS regulations. If covered investments are transferred to another custodian, this information must be provided to that firm. See below for information about “What will be reported on my tax documents when I sell or dispose of investments in nonqualified accounts?”
Securities are considered covered based on the investment type and the date purchased. This means that investments you purchase on or after the phase-in date for that type of investment are covered by the requirements. However, any tax lots purchased prior to the phase-in date for that investment type will remain noncovered. Additionally, certain investment types are non-covered regardless of acquisition date (see Which investments are not subject to cost basis reporting regulations?)
This table provides a description of the investment types and the dates they are considered covered under guidance of the law and IRS regulations.
For definitions of the various types of investments listed above see the next questions.
1 See “What should I know about cost basis and gain/loss information on securities acquired prior to cost basis reporting requirements?” below.
2 If a shareholder elected to NOT participate in a dividend reinvestment program (DRP), these securities were covered as of Jan. 1, 2011. If they are part of a DRP, they became covered in 2012.
What is the cost basis reporting for options and "less complex" covered bonds under IRS reporting regulations beginning on Jan. 1, 2014?
The cost basis regulations divide debt instruments into two categories, generally based on the complexity of the tax rules applicable to different types of bonds and debt instruments, for cost basis reporting purposes: “less complex” bonds and “more complex” bonds. “Less complex” bonds are generally debt instruments with a fixed yield and maturity. These regulations do not affect which investments FINRA or other regulators may deem to be a complex security or product.
Most option closing transactions have cost basis and holding period reported to you and the IRS on Form 1099-B. Option premium will be reported as an adjustment to basis or gross proceeds, depending on the option (put or call) and the taxpayer’s position in the option (writer/short or holder/long).
The tables below provide details about the less complex debt instruments and options that are covered beginning with purchases in 2014.
Bonds
Options
What are the "more complex" bonds that are subject to the cost basis reporting regulations starting with Jan. 1, 2016 purchases?
The IRS defines debt instruments as “more complex” if they are not “less complex” (as defined above) or excluded from cost basis reporting. Generally, a debt instrument is “more complex” if the applicable tax rules are more complicated. These regulations do not affect which investments FINRA or other regulators may deem to be a complex security or product.
The tables below provide details about the more complex debt instruments that are covered beginning with purchases in 2016 and their tax reporting implications.
Investment type | Description | Examples |
---|---|---|
Variable rate (and stepped rate) debt instrument (VRDI) | Bonds and debt instruments with an interest rate that changes (or could change) over time. | Examples: Floating rate bonds |
Convertible bonds | Bonds that can be converted into stock or into cash or other property of equal value. | Examples: Mandatory exchangeable securities |
Stripped bonds and stripped coupons | Bonds where one person holds the right to receive principal payments and another person holds the right to receive interest payments. | Example: US Treasury STRIPS |
Contingent payment debt instruments (CPDI) | Debt with one or more contingent payments. | Examples: Bonds and CDs with payments determined by reference to the value of an asset or index. Ameriprise ® Stock Market Certificates |
Inflation indexed bonds | Debt that adjusts principal for inflation or deflation. | Example: TIPS (Treasury Inflation Protected Securities) |
Payment in-kind bonds (PIK) | Bonds that pay “interest” with additional bonds instead of cash | |
Tax credit bonds | A debt instrument that, at one or more times in the future, entitles the holder or issuer to a tax credit | Build America Bonds |
Foreign issued bonds or bonds paying in a foreign currency | A payment of interest or principal in a currency other than the U.S. dollar | Example: Bonds making interest payments in Euros |
Physical certificates | Bond evidenced by a physical certificate unless such certificate is held by a securities depository or by a clearing organization | Example: Bearer bonds |
Certain Preferred securities | Preferred securities taxable as debt in the prospectus | Example: Preferred securities that trade with the accrued interest |
A debt instrument that is issued as part of an investment unit | Debt issued together with other property or embedded derivatives such as options, stock rights, or warrants | Example: Reverse convertible securities |
Debt without a prospectus, offering memorandum, or other description of the debt’s terms & conditions | A debt instrument for which the terms of the instrument are not reasonably available to the broker within 90 days of the date the debt instrument was acquired by the customer | Example: Private debt |
“Noncovered” investments are exempt from cost basis tracking and reporting requirements. These may be investments purchased prior to the regulation phase-in date for the specific type of investment (see above) or investments currently excluded from cost basis reporting regulations (see below).
While we may provide you with cost basis and holding period information for noncovered securities, if we have it available, it is for informational purposes only and we will not report it to the IRS.
Investments currently excluded from cost basis regulations:
Cost basis reporting affects nonqualified accounts subject to reporting on Form 1099-B, Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions. This includes all nonqualified accounts owned by:
If you purchased a bond at a premium or discount on or after Jan. 1, 2014, you can make elections related to these bonds which may affect the earnings on your bonds and the character of your bond income. Elections also affect your cost basis and tax reporting. These elections are:
When to recognize accrued market discount
Which accrual calculation method is used for market discount
Whether or not to amortize bond premium (does not apply to tax exempt debt)
Each bond election has an associated due date by which it must be made. Once you choose an election (as opposed to the default) it is generally irrevocable 4 .
After the election due date, you will be locked in to either the default or your election. Your Ameriprise financial advisor can help answer questions regarding election due dates.
An IRS required broker default will be used whenever you do not make an alternate election.
3 The IRS required broker default market discount accrual method was changed to constant yield for bonds purchased as of Jan. 1, 2015. Constant yield was also the broker default accrual method we used for bonds purchased prior to Jan. 1, 2014. Only bonds purchased in 2014 used straight line accrual default method, per IRS rules.
4 Some elections may be revoked with written approval from the IRS Commissioner.
What will be reported on my tax documents when I sell or dispose of investments in nonqualified accounts?
Your tax package will include a Form 1099-B, Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, for any account that has a sale or redemption of securities (other than money market mutual funds) during the year.
Transactions will be reported on Form 1099-B in one or more of the following sections, based on holding period and covered/noncovered indicator combinations:
The table below illustrates reporting requirements for covered vs noncovered investments with short, long or undetermined holding periods:
Covered indicator and holding period
IRS reporting requirements
Covered Investments:
Reported to the IRS:
Noncovered Investments:
Not reported to the IRS:
Reported to the IRS:
5 We are not able to determine cost basis and/or holding period information for transactions in the “Undetermined” holding period section based on our records to classify the tax lots as short-term or long-term. These will typically include principal payments, commodity/royalty trusts or tax lots for which we do not have cost basis information. For these transactions you will need to use your personal records to complete your tax returns.
What’s the difference between short-term, long-term, and ordinary gain/loss?Gain or loss from a sale or disposition of an investment in your nonqualified account may be treated as short-term or long-term capital gain or loss, depending on the length of time you own the investment (holding period), with some exceptions.
6 AEIS is a subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. and is the clearing broker responsible for trade execution, settlement, record keeping and reporting for nonqualified Ameriprise brokerage accounts.
What if I sold both securities that were held long-term and securities that were held short-term within the same sale transaction?
Why is the cost basis information for tax lots sold with a disallowed loss different on Form 1099-B, Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, from what I see on my financial statement and on ameriprise.com?
In situations where you have a sale impacted by a wash sale, the cost basis information on your tax document may be different from what is on ameriprise.com because the IRS requires the basis to be reported separately from the wash sale loss disallowed adjustment for sales of covered securities. The wash sale loss is calculated in the IRS Form 8949. For more information see the “Wash sale” section below.
How is Ameriprise reporting redemptions from floating rate institutional money market funds?The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) money market fund reform rules state that institutional money market funds are now required to have a floating Net Asset Value (NAV) 7 . This means that they are now more likely to have gains and losses resulting from share redemptions in nonqualified accounts.
What this means to you:
Consult your financial advisor to determine how the money market rules affect your money market fund investments, and work with your tax advisor to track cost basis and wash sales and to report gains and losses, if applicable.
7 Government and retail money market funds will generally maintain a stable $1 NAV.
8 NAV method requests must be submitted in writing to your financial advisor.
Why did I receive a Form 1099-DIV for a dividend I didn’t receive and how does it affect my cost basis?
A tax lot is the number of shares or units of a security that you purchased on the same day at the same price. You have multiple tax lots if you purchased the same security on multiple dates. Certain information is linked to each tax lot for covered securities, such as date of purchase, cost basis (unless average cost basis applies), and holding period.
The tax lot method determines which tax lots will be assigned to the sale of investments if you are not selling the entire position.
What is the default tax lot method for various investments?When determining cost basis and holding period for the sale of investments in your account, you have the option to use a default tax lot method based on account type or you may be able to select a different tax lot method.
To determine which tax lots to sell first, we follow default tax lot methods based on account type and investment types unless we get other instructions from you.
Critical: The assigned tax lots for the sale of a covered security cannot be changed once the trade settles.
The table below provides the default tax lot methods by Ameriprise product and account type.
Your account type: | Open-ended mutual funds | Closed-ended mutual funds, Equities 9 , bonds and options |
---|---|---|
Ameriprise Brokerage, Strategic Portfolio Services (SPS) Advantage or Strategic Portfolio Services (SPS) Advisor 10 | Average cost 11 | First In — First Out (FIFO) 12 |
Ameriprise Select Separate 10 | Highest In — First Out (HIFO) | HIFO 13,14 |
Ameriprise Active Portfolios investment, Vista Separate, Investor Unified and Access Accounts 10 | Average cost 11 | HIFO 13,14 |
9 Equities include stock, preferred stock (convertible to common stock), real estate investment trusts (REITs) and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
10 Only the SPS Advantage and SPS Advisor accounts within Managed Products have the option to use the specific identification tax lot method. The specific identification tax lot method is not available for all other Managed Accounts (e.g. Active Portfolios, Select Separate Accounts, etc.) For certain accounts clients may advise the investment manager that they generally wish to tax harvest gains or losses.
11 Average cost is the default method for mutual funds and is calculated separately for the noncovered, covered, and/or gifted shares (if any). Gifted shares are not allowed on average cost if they are gifted depreciated since the cost is not know until the time of sale.
12 If the FIFO method is used, we will redeem the older noncovered shares before the newer covered shares. For SPS Advisor accounts, FIFO applies by default to manual trades, while the loss/gain utilization method applies by default to automated trades (systematic rebalancing).
13 For certain separately managed accounts where the money manager has discretionary authority; the sponsor has chosen to use the Highest In — First Out method as their default.
14 For non-discretionary accounts, you can use the Ameriprise “default tax lot method” based on the assets you own, elect to designate a default tax lot method that is different from the Ameriprise default or at the point of any sell trade, designate the specific tax lots you are choosing to sell.
15 Average cost is available as an election for dividend reinvestment programs.
16 When a mutual fund account has both covered and noncovered shares, average cost will be calculated separately for the noncovered and covered shares. A third calculation can be done for shares that were acquired as a gift.
17 Only the Strategic Portfolio Service (SPS) accounts within Managed Accounts investments have the option to use the specific identification tax lot method. All other Managed Accounts investments must use the default method shown in the table above.
18 Special rules apply if you’re using average cost method for stocks with dividend reinvestment.
How can I change my tax lot method for mutual funds?19 Historical information may not be accurate depending on how and when the account was established.
Note: A broker may have to make multiple purchases in one day to fill a large order. Wash sale rules don’t apply, in this scenario, or if only one purchase price is quoted.
For more information, consult a qualified tax professional or IRS publication 550 (Investment Income and Expenses), which is available on the IRS website.
What are the requirements for brokers to track wash sales?Example: If you own two separate brokerage accounts and you sell a security at a loss in one account and purchase the identical security in the other account within 30 days you will need to track the wash sale, as these will not be tracked by AEIS. Not only are separate brokerage accounts different accounts, but a regular nonqualified brokerage account is a different account from an IRA qualified brokerage account.
20 See “What investments are covered by cost basis rules and when?” in the General Information section for information.
21 See the FAQ below that describes when Ameriprise Financial applies the wash sale rules across certain covered/noncovered mutual funds.
22 As defined in the statute a securities dealer is generally someone who regularly purchases securities from or sells securities to customers in the ordinary course of trade or business.
Short sales can result in wash sales in some situations:
Short-against-the-box:
A short sale of securities that you hold in your account results in a wash sale if you close the short sale (buy-to-close) at a loss and within 30 days of the sell-to-open transaction you purchase identical or substantially identical securities.
Other short sales
Short sales of securities that you DO NOT hold in your account result in a wash sale if you close the short sale (buy-to-close) at a loss and within 30 days you either:
For information about tracking wash sales within the same or different accounts see “What are the requirements for brokers to track wash sales?” above.
How is the wash sale rule applied for investments acquired through gifting, inheritance or tax-free exchange?
For information about tracking wash sales within the same or different accounts see “What are the requirements for brokers to track wash sales?” above.
For more information, please refer to instructions for Form 1099-B, Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, and IRS Publication 550, Investment Income and Expenses, available on irs.gov, or speak with a tax advisor.
Example: You open a short sale on December 23, 2020, selling 1,000 shares of ABC Corp. for $28,000.00. You close the short sale on April 9, 2021, by purchasing 1,000 shares of ABC Corp. for $26,000.00. You will receive Form 1099-B for tax year 2021 to report the closing transaction, including the information required to be reported for a covered security (see What will be reported on my tax documents when I sell or dispose of investments in nonqualified accounts?)
Note: Short positions in options (written options) are not considered short sales for these purposes and are subject to different tax reporting rules.
“We”, “our” and “us” mean Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. (“Introducing Broker” or “Ameriprise Financial”) and/or American Enterprise Investment Services, Inc. (“Clearing Broker” or “AEIS”).
All securities transactions are cleared by American Enterprise Investment Services, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Ameriprise Financial, Inc. American Enterprise Investment Services is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), and Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC).
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. and its affiliates do not offer tax or legal advice. Consumers should consult with their qualified tax professional or attorney regarding their specific situation.
Investment advisory products and services are made available through Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC., a Registered Investment Advisor.