Asked by Sydney Ghanayem on Apr 27, 2024

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Oliver purchased the following stock of Doggie Treats Inc. , 201510 shares@ $10201610 shares @ $12201720 shares @ $14\begin{array}{ll}2015 & 10 \text { shares@ } \$ 10 \\2016 & 10 \text { shares @ } \$ 12 \\2017 & 20 \text { shares @ } \$ 14\end{array}20152016201710 shares@ $1010 shares @ $1220 shares @ $14 If Oliver sold 25 shares of stock in 2017 for $265,what is the loss on the sale of the stock? Assume the shares purchased in 2015 and 2016 were held for more than one year.

A) $9.50 short-term loss and $38.00 long-term loss.
B) $9.50 long-term loss and $38.00 short-term loss.
C) $8.00 short-term loss and $17.00 long-term loss.
D) $8.00 long-term loss and $17.00 short-term loss.

Short-term Loss

A loss realized on the sale or exchange of an asset held for one year or less.

Long-term Loss

The loss realized from the sale of an asset held for more than one year, which can offset long-term gains for tax purposes.

  • Master the understanding of capital gains and losses along with their recognition process.
  • Identify the consequences of combining short-term and long-term gains and losses on tax obligations.
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TO
Trevor OuimetApr 30, 2024
Final Answer :
D
Explanation :
To calculate the loss, we first determine the cost basis for the shares sold. Oliver bought 10 shares at $10 in 2015 and 10 shares at $12 in 2016, which are considered long-term holdings. The 20 shares bought in 2017 at $14 are short-term since they were sold within the same year.For the 25 shares sold:- Assume the 20 shares from 2017 are sold first: 20 shares * $14 = $280- The remaining 5 shares are from the long-term holdings (either 2015 or 2016, but it doesn't change the calculation for long-term vs. short-term loss). Let's use the 2015 purchase for simplicity: 5 shares * $10 = $50Total cost basis for the 25 shares = $280 (short-term) + $50 (long-term) = $330He sold these 25 shares for $265, leading to a total loss of $330 - $265 = $65.To break down the loss:- Short-term: He sold the 2017 shares (which cost $280) as part of the $265 sale, so the short-term loss is $280 - $265 (since he didn't recover the full cost with the sale, but we'll allocate the entire sale to this first, leaving a shortfall on the long-term portion).- Long-term: The remaining loss is attributed to the long-term shares, which is the total loss ($65) minus any short-term loss calculated. However, since we've allocated all the sale proceeds to cover the short-term shares first, the long-term loss is simply the cost basis of the long-term shares sold ($50) minus the remaining sale proceeds ($0 since we've allocated all to short-term), which isn't quite right according to the options provided.Given the options, it seems there's a misunderstanding in the calculation explanation based on the provided choices. The correct approach to distributing the sale proceeds between the short-term and long-term shares would directly affect the calculation of losses. However, without specific guidance on how to allocate the sale proceeds (since all were allocated to short-term in this explanation), the correct answer based on the options and typical tax treatment (selling shares on a first-in, first-out basis unless specified otherwise) would involve calculating the actual loss based on specific identification or another method that would lead to the losses specified in one of the choices. Given the misunderstanding in the explanation, the correct answer should reflect the actual calculation based on the provided options and typical methods for determining the cost basis and allocating sale proceeds, which isn't accurately captured in the explanation above. The correct answer, based on the typical first-in, first-out method and the options provided, would likely involve a detailed calculation not fully explored here.