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Old 03-31-2023, 01:10 AM
BobC BobC is offline
Bob C.
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Ohio
Posts: 3,275
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mark17 View Post
Bob,
Suppose I trade you a green T206 Cobb and a monster box of 1988 Fleer Jefferies. I paid $3,000 for the Cobb and $25,000 for the Jefferies. My total cost basis is $28,000.

I receive from you a lower grade green Cobb, current market value $18,000, plus $10,000 cash. From a tax perspective, isn't that a break-even deal for me?
Mark,

I see what you're trying to do, hopefully bundle a couple items together as one combined tax basis to take advantage of the taxable loss on part of what you are looking to trade. Technically, the IRS would still view the Cobb and Jeffries cards as separate collectibles items, which should then be reported on your tax return as separate sales, even though you traded them both together for something else. You'd end up allocating the sales price, which would be the current FMV of the card(s) you traded for, based on the then current FMV of the items you are trading. Or at least that is what you should be doing.

Now if you were to try listing the Cobb and Jeffries cards together as though they were just one item being sold on your tax return, say you called it "sports card collection" as the item being sold, and listed the tax basis as the $28K in your example, you might be able to get away with it if the IRS doesn't come calling for clarification on what is in the card collection? You basically end up playing what is commonly referred to in the tax world as the IRS "audit lottery". You file a knowingly false return, and pray you don't get caught/picked and audited by the IRS. I would never recommend or advise anyone to be doing that. But I also know that many, many people do just that kind of thing on their tax returns all the time.

Last edited by BobC; 03-31-2023 at 12:39 PM.
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