lurk@l0t
Active Member
I have heard two viewpoints on this:
1. you have to treat the swap as a full-on sale of the silver first and foremost and therfore pay tax on the so-called "paper profit" made, and then with what's left over you can buy your gold. Not much of a "swap" if you ask me!
2. Somewhere i read that one can under certain circumstances swap out silver for gold (or vice versa) if the idea behind the swap is to facilitate ease/cost of storage etc..
I mean if one looks at this objectively there really should be no tax payable on this kind of swap out... can anybody comment about this and give me some guidance here?
thanks
1. you have to treat the swap as a full-on sale of the silver first and foremost and therfore pay tax on the so-called "paper profit" made, and then with what's left over you can buy your gold. Not much of a "swap" if you ask me!
2. Somewhere i read that one can under certain circumstances swap out silver for gold (or vice versa) if the idea behind the swap is to facilitate ease/cost of storage etc..
I mean if one looks at this objectively there really should be no tax payable on this kind of swap out... can anybody comment about this and give me some guidance here?
thanks