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Topic: [2017-06-21] Op Ed: How Cryptocurrency Holders Can Diversify While Deferring Tax (Read 5008 times)

legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1094
Learning the troll avoidance button :)
I'm glad someone put up a tax article in Press one of the ongoing questions is how to maximize the amount of money people make while reducing their tax burdens, a good example is someone who earns a salary or a lot from commissions and doesn't want to raise their tax bracket when withdrawing from their crypto holdings.
A trust is a neat idea could always leave a bit for seansoutpost or some other crypto charities.
newbie
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Merit: 0
Your tax article is interesting and thoughtful.  With the extreme increase in virtual currency  tax planning from diversifying investments out of virtual currency will avoid an extremely high tax bill.  The two conditions of significant unrealized gain and the possibility that virtual currency exchanges could begin 3rd party tax reporting to the IRS could result in large unexpected tax bills without proper tax planning occurring.

Here is an article about the IRS and bitcoin.

http://fortune.com/2017/03/19/irs-bitcoin-lawsuit/.

 Charitable gift annuity provide a similar opportunity for virtual currency tax avoidance.  They have advantages in that charities handle all the administration  and annual tax reporting.  Charitable gift annuities also place all the investment risk on the charity.  The donor does have to negotiate the best deal but the transaction can be much faster than a charitable remainder trust.  The donor does give up control at the time of the gift.

 Here is an article on charitable gift annuities.

 http://bitcointaxblog.weebly.com/bitcointax-blog






legendary
Activity: 1073
Merit: 1000
With the historic rally in Bitcoin and Ethereum, there are more investors than ever seeking to diversify their newly expanded cryptocurrency holdings. Whether this diversification involves exchanging cryptocurrency for fiat, other cryptocurrencies or a mix of both, the downside can be capital gains tax exposure.

Capital gains (if the underlying property has been held for over a year) are taxed at 15 percent, 18.8 percent or 23.8 percent, dependent upon the amount of income received during the year. One common method of tax reduction is to spread sales/exchanges over multiple years, in order to "soak up" the maximum amount of income into the 15 percent and 18.8 percent brackets.

If you're seeking to diversify, it's really only practical to spread sales over a few years at most. But what if there were a way to sell immediately while still deferring this capital gains income over a much longer period, such as 20 years or even a lifetime? And what if this method were able to also provide some benefit to charity, with a corresponding charitable deduction?
Enter the Charitable Remainder Trust

This can actually be done with a quasi-charitable trust, namely a charitable remainder trust. With a charitable remainder trust, you contribute some amount of your cryptocurrency to a trust before selling. The trust then sells the cryptocurrency (or otherwise diversifies) on a completely tax-free basis. The proceeds of sale stay within the trust, where they can be reinvested in stocks, bonds, mutual funds, other cryptocurrency or almost any other investment asset.

In exchange for your contribution of cryptocurrency, the trust makes a payment to you each year for so long as you are alive. (You can alternatively choose to have the payment made for the joint lives of you and your spouse, or some shorter fixed term of years.) You choose the amount of this annual payment at the time you create the trust.

The whole process is sort of like receiving an annuity in exchange for your cryptocurrency. This payment can be a fixed amount, or it can be expressed as a fluctuating percentage of trust assets each year. When you pass away, whatever is left passes to a charity of your choice.

There are numerous tax benefits:

    The sale or exchange of cryptocurrency is completely tax-free.

    You personally only pay tax each year on the annual payment you receive from the trust. So if you use a charitable remainder trust to sell $5M of Bitcoin in 2017, but your annual payment for the rest of your life is $250,000 per year, then you only pay tax on $250,000 in 2017. This payment would be taxed at favorable capital gains rates. Depending on the amount of your other annual income, this strategy will likely keep you in the lower capital gains brackets.

    In the year of trust creation, you receive an income tax deduction equal to the actuarial value of the charity's projected gift. This actuarial value is a calculation done by your attorney-CPA. The smaller the payment you select, the larger the charitable deduction. Assuming you choose an appropriate charity, the deduction can be used to reduce up to 30 percent of your income in a given year, and any unusable amount carries forward for up to five future years. For example, if a 42-year-old man were to contribute $2.5M of cryptocurrency to a charitable remainder trust in 2017 and selected an annual payment equal to 5 percent of trust assets, he would receive a charitable deduction of approximately $480,000 (at current IRS rates). That deduction could be used against his taxable income in 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021.

You can even reserve the right to serve as trustee of the trust and to change the charitable remainder beneficiary whenever you please.

There are of course many technical caveats that need to be complied with. Most important, the IRS requires that the actuarial value of the charity's share must be at least 10 percent of the assets contributed to the trust. Be sure to consult with appropriate counsel to ensure you meet the 10 percent rule and other technical requirements.

If you are looking to reduce and defer income taxes while keeping a guaranteed income for life and doing some good in the process, a charitable remainder trust can be the way to go.

http://www.nasdaq.com/article/how-cryptocurrency-holders-can-diversify-while-deferring-taxes-cm806250
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