[Daily Discussion] Saturday, March 02, 2019 Bitcoin Markets |
- [Daily Discussion] Saturday, March 02, 2019
- [Altcoin Discussion] Saturday, March 02, 2019
- Helpful tax filing hints
- Margin Trading Crypto: Explanation & Strategy
- Bitmex Tax
[Daily Discussion] Saturday, March 02, 2019 Posted: 01 Mar 2019 08:06 PM PST Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
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[Altcoin Discussion] Saturday, March 02, 2019 Posted: 01 Mar 2019 08:06 PM PST Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
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Posted: 01 Mar 2019 07:10 PM PST I'm not a CPA or accountant Helpful hint if you are too cheap to hire a CPA. Buy TurboxTax, the cheapest version. Go through all their interactive 'we'll guide you' stuff until you you are asked about 'Investment Income', 1099B or broker statements. It will ask you all kinds of questions, play close attention and answer correctly. There are three basic scenarios: 1) You get 1099B from your brokerage, and that represents ALL of your crypto taxable events 2) You don't get a 1099B from your brokerage, and you have crypto taxable events 3) You get a 1099B from your brokerage, and you have additional, unreported crypto taxable events. The best way to determine if you did things correctly is to review your return after it's done. If you did things correctly your tax return will contain one or more 8949 forms. Scenario 1 and 2, you should have one form 8949 in your return Scenario 3 you should have TWO form 8949s in your return. Good luck [link] [comments] |
Margin Trading Crypto: Explanation & Strategy Posted: 01 Mar 2019 03:50 PM PST I recently interviewed Jon Stead, a CPA who specializes in cryptocurrency margin trading. Figured this would be a good place to post the interview, as well as some highlights for anyone who prefers reading to listening. He offers a simplified explanation of margin trading, as well as some strategies for being successful at margin trading. Full disclosure, I work for BitcoinTaxes and the link below links to our podcast page. Highlights: Margin trading can be a complex concept to those unfamiliar with it. [03:17] Jon: Margin trading is the process whereby you take a speculative position using a loan. So if you want to make a bet that Bitcoin is going to go up in value, for instance, instead of clearing out your savings account to buy Bitcoin, you would take out a loan and use the loan to buy the Bitcoin. That's the difference between ordinary trading and margin trading - you are doing it with somebody else's money. Most of the time if you want to trade on margin, you need to have an account with a broker. In the case of a cryptocurrency margin, you need only have an account with a particular exchange that supports trading on margin. There's going to be requirements for collateral. Just like in any loan, there's going to be an interest expense. When trading on margin, there are long positions and short positions. [04:52] Jon: In plain English, if you want to take out a long position on margin: let's say you think Bitcoin will go up - you borrow $1,000 from a bank and buy one Bitcoin that is trading at $1000. Then wait three months. At the end of three months, you have one Bitcoin and you owe $1,000 plus interest at the end of three months. Let's say Bitcoin is now trading at $2,000 - you sell the Bitcoin and now you have $2,000 in cash and you owe $1,000 plus interest. You payback your thousand dollars, you pay the interest, and you keep the change. Short positions are much more fun and much more dangerous. So let's imagine that you want to short Bitcoin and Bitcoin is trading at 1000 bucks today. You borrow one Bitcoin. So now you're holding one Bitcoin and you owe one Bitcoin. You sell the one Bitcoin for 1000 bucks and then hold the cash and then wait three months. At the end of three months you are holding $1,000 cash and you owe one Bitcoin, plus interest denominated in bitcoin. So let's say that Bitcoin is now trading for 500 bucks. You take your thousand dollars cash and buy, let's say 1.1 bitcoin for 550 - you pay back the one Bitcoin that you owe, pay back the 0.1 Bitcoin in interest and keep 440 US dollars. That's a short position - you've borrowed what you think will go down, sold it for USD and wait, buy it back cheaper, pay back your interest and keep the change. Understanding your margin trades becomes a lot easier if you can understand the resulting ledgers. [11:09] Jon: The one that I that I find the easiest is the Kraken ledger. So I'll use this as the example. All of the other exchanges that do margin trading are roughly similar. When you export a Kraken Ledger, it's going have every transaction that you did. Now the trades are going to come up in two pieces and the category is going to be called "trade". Let's say you bought 1 ETH for 1000 bucks - it'll say "trade", "ETH", "1". The next line down will say "trade", "USD", "-1000". Now on the margin side, there are two categories that will show up. One of them is called "rollover", and the other one is simply called "margin". Let's take roll over first. If you are trading on margin and you don't cash out your position, you're essentially letting it ride. So if you go long on Bitcoin and you win, and now you've got 0.2 Bitcoin in your exchange and you want to let it ride and bet again, you're going to be charged a rollover fee. The rollover fee is usually going to be denominated in crypto and there's just going to be a giant ledger full of them. The other thing that you'll see is just simply called "margin". The margin category is going to have a quantity value - the quantity value will either be positive or negative and it'll have a denominator. So if you look in your Kraken ledger and it says "margin", "2", "BTC", that means that you took out a margin position, you won your bet, and your winnings from that bet is 2 BTC. Obviously the reverse is true here. If it says "margin", "-2", "BTC", you lost your futures position. If you want to be successful at margin trading crypto, Jon says four factors come into play [21:50] Jon: If you're going to trade on margin, and your approach is just to throw money at it and hopefully something sticks, you're going to lose your money. But there's another approach. And the other approach is to take it like a poker player. Now a poker player needs four things in play, and all of them need to work to win. The first thing you need is a strategy. And the strategy has to actually be good. If your strategy isn't going to work, it doesn't matter. You're going to lose money. The second thing you need in order to win on margin, when you're approaching it like a poker player, is discipline. Anybody can write down a strategy and believe it, but when things start getting difficult, a lot of people second guess themselves. You have to have your strategy and it has to be the one you work all the way through your trade. When your trade doesn't work, use the feedback and reorient your strategy. Don't go reorienting your strategy mid-trade. That's like trying to reorient your golf swing in the middle of the swing - it's not the right time for that. The third aspect that you need is patience. If you don't have any patience, you should not be trading on margin. And that's because if you don't have patience, you're going to go doubling down on your bet while it's still alive. Not a good idea, right? You need to have a long-term strategy approach, approach it with discipline, and also let the strategy work in real time and be patient about it. The last thing that you need is liquidity, which is to say you need cash to backup your gain. The example from poker would be if you're a good poker player, you have your proper strategy, you're a disciplined, cool headed poker player and you have patience, - but you also need the chips to ride out a bad poker player's lucky streak. Any bad poker player can hit a pot once or twice - it's going to happen. If you are a good poker player and you don't have the chips to ride that out, it doesn't matter that you're right in the long-term...you're not going to be able to ride it out in the short-term. Jon utilizes his expertise with our previous guest, Alex Kugelman. If you want to reach out to Jon, the best way to do so is to get in touch with Alex. [38:14] Jon: I work for Alex Kugelman. In the case that you want to talk to me, you've got to call or email Alex at Alex@KugelmanLaw.com. He's also on Bitcoin.Tax if I'm not mistaken. Reach out to Alex, set it up through Alex, and he'll put it together. The benefit of that is then the attorney-client privilege extends to me, through Alex. If you would like to request a topic for an interview, or have any questions related to this podcast, you are welcome to reach out to me at podcast@bitcoin.tax. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 01 Mar 2019 01:38 PM PST Hi everyone, I am one of the many US residents who created an account to trade on Bitmex using VPN. In the past year, I have made a great deal of profit, around 68 BTC. Just yesterday, I have completed all my withdrawl to Coinbase. My question is do I need to report all the transactions on Bitmex? I did some search in the past days and cannot conclude on what I should do. Some people said I only need to report the capital gains on Coinbase when I sell my BTC. However, since it's a large amount of money being added to my income, I'm afaird that IRS will ask where did these BTCs come from? Now let's say I need to report all these transactions which is impossible for me, because I have over 13 accounts on Bitmex and 6 of them were closed when I accidentally used U.S. IP to log in. these transactions are locked in the account too. Also, most of my profits were made through scalping, and there are too many transactions to report. Current tool like cointracker.io and bitcoin.tax don't support them. If anyone has the same experience, then I would really like to hear your options on what I should do from here. [link] [comments] |
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