Help with REG question relating to Partnership Taxation…

  • Creator
    Topic
  • #173176
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Wiley online Testbank question PTAX-0027 says…

    Doris and Lydia are equal partners in the capital and profits of Agee & Nolan, but are otherwise unrelated. The following information pertains to 300 shares of Mast Corp. stock sold by Lydia to Agee & Nolan:

    Year of Purchase 2009

    Year of Sale 2012

    Basis (cost) $9,000

    Sales price (equal to fair market value) $4,000

    The amount of long-term capital loss that Lydia recognized in 2012 on the sale of the stock was…

    a. $0

    b. $5,000

    c. $2,500

    d. $3,000

    I put $3,000 b/c I thought capital losses for individuals were limited to $3,000 per year. However, the correct answer is $5,000. Am I missing something here or do you think this could be a mistake in the test bank? Thanks!

Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
  • Author
    Replies
  • #542954
    Rebecca_AZ
    Member

    The loss RECOGNIZED is $5,000. You are thinking too far ahead. If Lydia didn't have any capital gains to offset the capital loss, then she would only be able to deduct $3,000 but she RECOGNIZES $5,000. The remaining $2,000 carries over to the next year.

    I passed in 2012!

    BEC - PASSED - I'M DONE!!!
    AUD - PASSED (finally!!)
    REG - PASSED (Twice - lost credit first time)
    FAR - PASSED!

    #542983
    Rebecca_AZ
    Member

    The loss RECOGNIZED is $5,000. You are thinking too far ahead. If Lydia didn't have any capital gains to offset the capital loss, then she would only be able to deduct $3,000 but she RECOGNIZES $5,000. The remaining $2,000 carries over to the next year.

    I passed in 2012!

    BEC - PASSED - I'M DONE!!!
    AUD - PASSED (finally!!)
    REG - PASSED (Twice - lost credit first time)
    FAR - PASSED!

    #542956
    jokami
    Member

    It is the actual amount recognized, not the amount deducted in the Individual Tax return…

    B - 62, 70, 72, 79!!!
    A - 68, 81
    R - 70, 82
    F - 84

    "The limit to your abilities is where you place them" - Fortune Cookies

    #542985
    jokami
    Member

    It is the actual amount recognized, not the amount deducted in the Individual Tax return…

    B - 62, 70, 72, 79!!!
    A - 68, 81
    R - 70, 82
    F - 84

    "The limit to your abilities is where you place them" - Fortune Cookies

    #542958
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Ahhh… that makes sense now. I do recall reading something about recognized vs. realized gains, so I better look over that again. Thanks a bunch for your help, Rebecca!!

    ETA: Thanks for your help, too Jokami! We must have been typing at the same time 🙂

    #542987
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Ahhh… that makes sense now. I do recall reading something about recognized vs. realized gains, so I better look over that again. Thanks a bunch for your help, Rebecca!!

    ETA: Thanks for your help, too Jokami! We must have been typing at the same time 🙂

    #542960
    calicpa
    Participant

    A loss is realized immediately after you sell an asset for a loss. A loss is recognized when the loss may be applied against your taxes. Most sales create a realized and recognized loss at the same time, immediately after the sale. The IRS delays the tax impact of certain transactions. These transactions are specifically listed in the tax code. If a sale has a delayed tax impact, it will create a realized loss but not a recognized loss. The loss will only be recognized when the tax impact is recognized by the IRS.

    Isn't the realized loss 5,000 and recognized loss 3,000 since that is what they are recognizing on their tax return?

    BEC - 84, 4/6/13
    AUD - 77, 5/28/13
    REG - 83, 4/12/14
    FAR - 83, 10/3/13

    Ethics - 90% 4/24/13

    150 unit education requirement met!
    Work experience met!

    #542989
    calicpa
    Participant

    A loss is realized immediately after you sell an asset for a loss. A loss is recognized when the loss may be applied against your taxes. Most sales create a realized and recognized loss at the same time, immediately after the sale. The IRS delays the tax impact of certain transactions. These transactions are specifically listed in the tax code. If a sale has a delayed tax impact, it will create a realized loss but not a recognized loss. The loss will only be recognized when the tax impact is recognized by the IRS.

    Isn't the realized loss 5,000 and recognized loss 3,000 since that is what they are recognizing on their tax return?

    BEC - 84, 4/6/13
    AUD - 77, 5/28/13
    REG - 83, 4/12/14
    FAR - 83, 10/3/13

    Ethics - 90% 4/24/13

    150 unit education requirement met!
    Work experience met!

    #542962

    The $5,000 loss is both realized and recognized. While the loss is limited to $3,000, at this point you don't know if she has additional capital gains to report on her return.

    GR: If it's not specifically excluded from recognition (HIDEIT or WRaP), it's recognized on the return!

    AUD - 68, 77
    REG - 84* (Expired)
    FAR - 83
    BEC - 74, 74, 72, 72, 84

    #542991

    The $5,000 loss is both realized and recognized. While the loss is limited to $3,000, at this point you don't know if she has additional capital gains to report on her return.

    GR: If it's not specifically excluded from recognition (HIDEIT or WRaP), it's recognized on the return!

    AUD - 68, 77
    REG - 84* (Expired)
    FAR - 83
    BEC - 74, 74, 72, 72, 84

Viewing 10 replies - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.