Author

Topic: FATCA, Japan and MtGox (Read 1927 times)

legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1010
he who has the gold makes the rules
November 02, 2013, 01:54:17 PM
#5
its crazy how governments still seek a way to make a decentralized people-level matter into official , government issue...

indeed... but it's only to prove their usefulness...
newbie
Activity: 23
Merit: 0
November 02, 2013, 03:30:38 AM
#4
its crazy how governments still seek a way to make a decentralized people-level matter into official , government issue...
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1010
he who has the gold makes the rules
October 31, 2013, 03:36:21 AM
#3
i think they extended this deadline but...

https://tax.thomsonreuters.com/blog/onesource/japan-signs-fatca-implementation-agreement/

http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/treaties/Documents/FATCA-Statement-Japan-6-11-2013.pdf

 The participating Japanese financial institutions will request the U.S. taxpayer identification number of their U.S. account holders, and the consent of account holders for reporting. Annually, the financial institutions will report aggregate information about non-consenting U.S. account holders. Subsequent to receiving direct reports from the participating Japanese financial institutions, the U.S. may make group requests to the Japanese Ministry of Finance for information on recalcitrant account holders (non-consenting U.S. accounts and foreign reportable amounts paid to nonparticipating financial institutions that the reporting Japanese financial institution would have reported had it obtained customer consent).

This is the prelude to FBAR enforcement.
http://bitcoinmagazine.com/5481/real-compliance-getting-your-way-by-giving-in/

All those MTGOX accounts held by US Taxpayers with >US$10K of "value" may have up to 50% of that value moved into the US Treasury department.  To add insult to injury, not being able to get that value out of MTGOX and having it keep going up until you are over the 10K means filing the FBAR is going to matter.

Perhaps the US wants to be the largest state holder of bitcoins?

Hah forgot about this part.

I do not think we have yet even see scale of the world of pain federal authorities may inflict on some miners and other US linked folks in the coming years. 

Just a hunch... better act appropriately
legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
Gresham's Lawyer
October 31, 2013, 12:33:57 AM
#2
i think they extended this deadline but...

https://tax.thomsonreuters.com/blog/onesource/japan-signs-fatca-implementation-agreement/

http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/treaties/Documents/FATCA-Statement-Japan-6-11-2013.pdf

 The participating Japanese financial institutions will request the U.S. taxpayer identification number of their U.S. account holders, and the consent of account holders for reporting. Annually, the financial institutions will report aggregate information about non-consenting U.S. account holders. Subsequent to receiving direct reports from the participating Japanese financial institutions, the U.S. may make group requests to the Japanese Ministry of Finance for information on recalcitrant account holders (non-consenting U.S. accounts and foreign reportable amounts paid to nonparticipating financial institutions that the reporting Japanese financial institution would have reported had it obtained customer consent).

This is the prelude to FBAR enforcement.
http://bitcoinmagazine.com/5481/real-compliance-getting-your-way-by-giving-in/

All those MTGOX accounts held by US Taxpayers with >US$10K of "value" may have up to 50% of that value moved into the US Treasury department.  To add insult to injury, not being able to get that value out of MTGOX and having it keep going up until you are over the 10K means filing the FBAR is going to matter.

Perhaps the US wants to be the largest state holder of bitcoins?
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1010
he who has the gold makes the rules
October 21, 2013, 01:56:18 PM
#1
i think they extended this deadline but...

https://tax.thomsonreuters.com/blog/onesource/japan-signs-fatca-implementation-agreement/

http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/treaties/Documents/FATCA-Statement-Japan-6-11-2013.pdf

 The participating Japanese financial institutions will request the U.S. taxpayer identification number of their U.S. account holders, and the consent of account holders for reporting. Annually, the financial institutions will report aggregate information about non-consenting U.S. account holders. Subsequent to receiving direct reports from the participating Japanese financial institutions, the U.S. may make group requests to the Japanese Ministry of Finance for information on recalcitrant account holders (non-consenting U.S. accounts and foreign reportable amounts paid to nonparticipating financial institutions that the reporting Japanese financial institution would have reported had it obtained customer consent).
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