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by otoburb
3014 days ago
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Thanks for the clarification. To whit, the few retail equity US and Canadian trading platforms I've used (Schwab's, Interactive Brokers, Scottrade before they became TD Ameritrade, Questrade) also do not provide an explicit feature that purports to calculate capital gains, so Coinbase seems to be exhibiting feature parity with equity retail exchanges. Coinbase and other retail equity trading platforms do provide an easy to calculate gains/losses made from your trades, but as we are both saying, gains/losses shown in the accounts may not necessarily correspond to the actual capital gains at the end of the year in certain situations. >>This is a solved problem, cryptocurrency is not special. If they have the cost basis they can tell you, if not, they can leave it blank. We're in agreement - this is a solved problem that the retail investor or their accountant needs to calculate manually via aggregation of the entire lifecycle of the asset(s) to properly account for capital gains (or losses). |
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You should probably call the IRS tipline and say "I think [Schwab] isn't filing their 1099-Bs, you know the thing which reports cost bases and short-term/long-term capital gains for retail investors, and accordingly they're on the hook for billions of dollars of penalties, but to keep the math easy just write me a check for a billion dollars rather than what the law actually says you owe me for this hot tip."
Or, in the alternative, you could look again.