IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
The basis of stocks or bonds you own generally is the purchase
price plus the costs of purchase, such as commissions and recording or
transfer fees. If you get stocks or bonds other than by purchase, your
basis is usually determined by the FMV or the previous owner's
adjusted basis, as discussed earlier.
You must adjust the basis of stocks for certain events that occur
after purchase. For example, if you get additional stock from
nontaxable stock dividends or stock splits, reduce the basis of your
original stock. Also reduce your basis when you get nontaxable
distributions. They are a return of capital.
Example.
In 1996 you bought 100 shares of XYZ stock for $1,000 or $10 a
share. In 1997 you bought 100 shares of XYZ stock for $1,600 or $16 a
share. In 1998 XYZ declared a 2-for-1 stock split. You now have 200
shares of stock with a basis of $5 a share and 200 shares with a basis
of $8 a share.
Other basis.
There are other ways to figure the basis of stocks or bonds
depending on how you acquired them. For detailed information, get
Publication 550.
Identifying shares.
If you buy and sell securities at different times in varying
quantities and you cannot definitely identify the securities you sell,
figure the basis of those sold under the first-in, first-out
method--that is, the first securities you acquired are the first
sold. For more information about identifying securities you sell, see
Stocks and Bonds under Basis of Investment Property
in chapter 4 of Publication 550.
Mutual fund shares.
You can choose to use the average basis of shares you own in a
regulated investment company (mutual fund) if you acquired the shares
at various times and prices. For more information about figuring the
basis of mutual fund shares, see Publication 564.
Bond premiums.
If you buy a taxable bond at a premium and choose to amortize the
premium, reduce the basis of the bond by the amortized premium you
deduct each year. See Bond Premium Amortization in chapter 3 of Publication 550
for more information. Although you cannot take a
deduction for the premium on tax-exempt bonds, you must amortize the
premium each year and reduce your basis in the bonds by the amortized
amount.
Original issue discount (OID) on debt instruments.
You must increase your basis in an OID debt instrument by the OID
you include in income for that instrument. See Original Issue
Discount in chapter 8.
Tax-exempt bonds.
OID on tax-exempt bonds is not taxable. However, there are special
rules for figuring basis on these bonds issued after September 3,
1982, and acquired after March 1, 1984. See chapter 4 of Publication 550.
Previous | First | Next
Publication 17 | 1998 Tax Year Archives | Tax Help Archives | Home