Background
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, commonly referred to as Dodd-Frank, is a U.S. law enacted in July of 2010, the purpose of which is to prevent the recurrence of events which lead to the 2008 financial crisis. Its principal goals are to:
- Promote U.S. financial stability by improving accountability and transparency within the financial system;
- Protect taxpayers from future bailouts of institutions deemed “too big to fail”; and
- Protect consumers from financial services practices considered abusive.
For additional information, please review the following sections:
- Dodd-Frank reforms
- Dodd-Frank and your IB Account
Dodd-Frank Reforms
To accomplish its goals, Dodd-Frank proposed the following reforms:
- Enhanced oversight and supervision of financial institutions through the creation of Financial Stability Oversight Council
- Creation of a new agency responsible for implementing and enforcing compliance with consumer financial laws (Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection)
- Implementation of more stringent regulatory capital requirements
- Changes in the regulation of over the counter derivatives including restrictions upon access to Federal credit by swaps entities, establishment of regulatory oversight and mandatory trading and clearing requirements
- Enhanced regulation of credit rating agencies intended to eliminate exemptions from liability, enhance rating agency disclosure, establish prohibited activities and impose standards for independent Board governance
- Changes to corporate governance and executive compensation practices
- Incorporation of the Volcker Rule which imposes restrictions upon the speculative proprietary trading activities of banking entities
- Mandating studies intended to reform investor protection rules
- Changes to the securitization market including requirements that mortgage bankers retain a % of risky loans.
Dodd-Frank and Your IB Account
Perhaps most visible to IB account holders of all the Dodd-Frank regulations are those relating to money transfers. Here, Section 1073 of the Act introduces consumer protections designed to increase transparency with respect to the costs, timing and the right to repudiate cross-border transactions.
For purpose of Section 1073, a cross-border transaction is defined as an electronic transfer of money from a consumer in the United States to a person or business in a foreign country. As IB LLC is a U.S. based broker, all its account holders regardless of whether they are domiciled in the U.S. or not, benefit from this protection and it covers withdrawals denominated in a currency other than the U.S. dollar as well as USD denominated withdrawals sent to a non-U.S. bank. Account holders submitting a withdrawal which is covered by this regulation will be provided with a disclosure after confirming the request within Account Management. This disclosure will include the following information:
- The name and address of the sender and recipient
- The amount to be deducted from the sender’s IB account
- The amount projected to be credited to the recipient’s bank account including an estimate of fees which the receiving bank's correspondent bank(s) may charge. Note that these correspondent bank fees are not set by nor is any part of them earned by IB.
- A disclaimer that additional fees and foreign taxes may apply.
- Notice of the sender’s right to cancel the transfer request for a full refund within 30 minutes of it being authorized.
- Regulatory contact information in the event of questions or complaints.
When estimating correspondent bank transfer fees, IB takes into consideration information collected from past customer transactions in addition to data made available by our agent banks. We encourage our customers to review and consider this information when making decisions regarding cross-border transactions.
The Interactive Brokers Year End Reports provide an activity review for US persons and US entities. The various account statements provide the transaction details as the basis for each report. Each of the standard reports spans the time period from January 1 through December 31.
Some reports, such as the Gain/Loss Summary Worksheet, may consolidate transactions and calculations. For the sake of conserving volume, trade activity may be combined. The account statements include all activity. For your convenience and to assist with your reconcilation, customized statements permit activity displays suitable for your personal needs (see the tab "Customized Templates" for details).
All US tax reports include the total figures as required under the US tax laws.
Non-US Persons and Entities
Income paid from US sources to non-US persons and entities may find this comparison helpful. IB is required to withhold US taxes at a rate of 30% on payments of US source stock dividends and substitute payments in lieu. Both the withholding and the income is reported on the US tax Form 1042-S.
For additional information about how IB handles non-US persons and entities, select this Tax Information and Reporting link and choose the tab Non-US Persons and Entities.
Year End Reports (For Trading) Comparison shown below identifies the most common transaction types which appear on the year end reports. Not all activity is included on each report.
Year End Reports | Stock | Bond | Equity & Index Option | Single Stock Futures | Futures | Forex |
Form 1099 | Sell | Sell | - | - | Gain/Loss | - |
Form 1042-S | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Annual Statement | Buy/Sell Gain/Loss | Buy/Sell Gain/Loss | Buy/Sell Gain/Loss |
Buy/Sell Gain/Loss |
Buy/Sell Gain/Loss |
Buy/Sell Gain/Loss |
Gain/Loss Worksheet |
Cost/Sell Gain/Loss | Cost/Sell Gain/Loss | Cost/Sell1 Gain/Loss1 | Cost/Sell Gain/Loss | - | - |
1256 Worksheet |
- | - | Gain/Loss5 | - | Gain/Loss | - |
NOTES: (1) Only cash settled; (2) Gain/Loss Worksheet was first published by IB with tax year 2007. Worksheets for prior years are not available. IB did provide gain and loss data on the Annual Statements; (3) The 1256 Worksheet was first published by IB with tax year 2008; (4) Option transactions are not 1099 or 1042-S reportable transactions. In accordance with the IRS guidelines, IB excludes the activity from the tax reports; (5) Only broad-sed index options appear on the 1256 Worksheet
Year End Reports (For Income) Comparison shown below identifies the most common types of income which appear on the year end reports. Not all income is reportable on a 1099 or Dividend Summary.
Year End Reports | Dividends | Credit Interest | Debit Interest | Accruals | Pay In Lieu Credit | Pay In Lieu Debits | Fees |
Form 1099 | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No |
Form 1042-S | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No |
Annual Statement | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Dividend Summary | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No |
Gain/Loss Worksheet | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
1256 Worksheet | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
NOTES: (1) US Tax Form 1042-S is provided to non-US persons/entities, along with the Dividend Summary. The Tax Form reports interest, dividends, substitute payments in lieu, and US tax withholding from US securities; (2) For US persons/entities, the Dividend Summary may list dividends as potentially eligible for treatment as “Qualified” based on the holding period. IB does not report this on the 1099-DIV or to the Internal Revenue Service; (3) Debit transactions are not 1099 or 1042-S reportable transactions. In accordance with the IRS guidelines, IB excludes the activity from the tax reports; (4) Exchange, market data, and activity fees
It should be noted that certain exchange fees as well as IB commission rates are established at levels beneath that of the smallest increment by which a given currency is defined (e.g. $0.01 in the case of the USD). In the event a customer incurs a fee having an extended value below this minimum increment, the fee will be calculated at its extended value and then rounded up or down to the nearest whole minimum increment of that currency.
This rounding process may result in occurrences where the aggregate rounded commission charge as reflected in the cash balance section of the Activity Statement on a given day is $0.01 higher than the sum of the rounded charge reflected on a line item basis in the trades section. An example of this may occur for a sample series of option trades for a given day is provided below.
EXAMPLE:
Action | Calculated Fee (extended) | Statement - Trades Section (rounded at a line item level) | Statement - Cash Balance Section (rounded at an aggregate level) |
Customer buys one U.S. securities option, incurring a minimum commission charge of $1.00 plus an exchange Option Regulatory Fee of $0.014 | $1.014 | $1.01 | N/A |
Customer buys one U.S. securities option, incurring a minimum commission charge of $1.00 plus an exchange Option Regulatory Fee of $0.014 | $1.014 | $1.01 | N/A |
Totals | $2.028 | $2.02 | $2.03 |
Important Note: The Worksheet has been prepared using IRS guidelines for information purposes only. It is not intended to replace any official IRS tax forms or schedules; and should not be regarded as an IRS Form Schedule D.
Interactive Broker's 2009 Gain/Loss Summary Worksheet ("Worksheet") provides the capital gains and losses for your account's year-end review. Investors of a limited number of securities will find the pairing of 2009 sell trades useful. Designed to aid with your year end reconciliation, the following securities and trades are included: Bonds, Equity Options, Fractional Shares, Index Futures*, Mutual Funds, Short Sale, T-Bills, Tender Offers, and WHIFITs.
A general explanation of the Worksheet is organized below by Parts, Columns, and Totals.
*Only cash-settled
The Worksheet is divided into two parts. The period in which you held the position determines whether or not Short-Term or Long-Term applies.
Part 1 - Short Term Capital Gains and Losses - Assets Held One Year or Less
Part 2 - Long Term Capital Gains and Losses - Assets Held More Than One Year
Each section contains the following seven columns to identify your trades.
(a) Description of property | (b) Date acquired | (c) Date sold | (d) Sales price | (e) Cost or other basis | (f) Gain or (loss) | Codes |
1. (a) Description of property...shows the security symbol, name, quantity, and other information to identify the asset sold.
Example: 500 sh. DB - DEUTSCHE BANK AG-REGISTERED
2. (b) Date acquired...shows the trade date of your security's purchase.
Asset Transfers: IB has entered the date supplied by you through Position Transfer Basis. If an update was not received by year-end, then the asset transfer settlement date appears. See your monthly or annual summary for details.
Short Sales: The box is left blank if the closing trade has not been completed. For short sales included on a prior year Worksheet or 1099-B, the code ADJ is entered.
3. (c) Date sold...shows the trade date of your security's sale.
4. (d) Sales price...shows the gross security sale price, net of commissions.
Option Adjustments: For exercised call options, the writer's sale proceeds have been increased by the amount received for the call. For exercised put options, the holder's sale proceeds have been reduced by the cost of the put. See IRS Pub. 550, page 57, for details. For expired options, an amount of 0.00 is entered, followed by the Code "Ep".
5. (e) Cost or other basis...shows the total price paid for your security, plus commissions.
Corporate Actions: Adjustments have not been made for any stock splits or non-dividend distributions. See IRS Pub. 550, page 44, for details.
Mutual Funds: IB does not use an average basis for mutual funds. The First In, First Out (FIFO) method is used.
Original Issue Discount: The basis has not been increased by the amount of OID included in your income. See IRS Pub. 550, page 13, for details.
Option Adjustments: For exercised put options, the writer's basis has been increased by the amount received for the put. For exercised call options, the holder's basis has been increased by the cost of the call. See IRS Pub. 550, page 57, for details.
6. (f) Gain or (loss)...shows the calculation for each security using the tax execution methods First-In, First Out (FIFO), Last In, First Out (LIFO), or Maximize Losses (ML).
Loss: Negative amounts are identified in parentheses. For example, a loss of $2,000.00 displays as (2,000.00).
Tax Method: If no code appears in the Codes column, then FIFO applies. The other methods are noted by either LI = LIFO or ML = Maximize Losses.
7. Codes...shows various trade designations, such as: corporate actions, asset transfers, or option assignments.
Codes and Meanings Table: The last page of the Worksheet contains a table to identify each non-security symbol used.
1. Subtotal adjustment from option assignment...shows the total amount of all sale proceeds increases or decreases made from option assignments to the assigned stock sale proceeds (see Cost or other basis details above).
The adjustments, in accordance with IRS guidelines, are added or subtracted in order for the next Subtotal line to equal the amount reported by IB on the 1099-B, box 2. Please keep in mind that IB does not report any option proceeds or adjustments to sales proceeds from assignments on the 1099s.
2. Subtotal for stocks, bonds and T-bills...shows the total non-adjusted proceeds reported for each trade under column (d) Sales price for stocks, bonds, and T-bills only. This amount should equal the 1099-B, box 2, amount.
1099-B, box 2: In general, this 1099 figure should equal the combined Parts 1 & 2 Subtotal for stocks, bonds and T-bills figure.
3. Total...shows the combined proceeds for all trades under column (d) Sales price, including option sale proceeds.
Total Option Sale Proceeds: Subtract the Total amount of column (d) from the Subtotal for stocks, bonds and T-bills of column (d) to obtain the total proceeds from all option sales.
Click here to go back to the main 2009 Worksheet article.
Note: Securities classified by the IRS as IRC Section 1256 contracts are included on the Gain/Loss Worksheet for 1256 Contracts.
IRS Circular 230 Notice: These statements are provided for information purposes only, are not intended to constitute tax advice which may be relied upon to avoid penalties under any federal, state, local or other tax statutes or regulations, and do not resolve any tax issues in your favor.
Select Gain/Loss Summary Worksheet: Considerations for details about the new features.
Click here to go back to the main 2009 Worksheet article.
IRS Circular 230 Notice: These statements are provided for information purposes only, are not intended to constitute tax advice which may be relied upon to avoid penalties under any federal, state, local or other tax statutes or regulations, and do not resolve any tax issues in your favor.
IMPORTANT NOTE: This article has been customized for use by individual US taxpayers investing in securities for information purposes only. Persons are encouraged to consult a qualified tax professional with the preparation of tax returns. IB does not provide tax advice. Traders or dealers in securities, for whom other tax treatment applies, may find the worksheet helpful. The methodology used to determine the yearly gain or loss, however, differs. Traders electing the mark-to-market accounting method may consult IRS Instructions for Form 4797, page 2.
The 2009 Gain/Loss Summary Worksheet calculates the gain or loss for your securities bought and sold from January 1 through December 31 utilizing the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidelines. Every sell trade executed appears, including short sells, on a trade-date basis. Not all securities, however, are eligible for inclusion. For additional information, see the following article categories.
IRS Circular 230 Notice: These statements are provided for information purposes only, are not intended to constitute tax advice which may be relied upon to avoid penalties under any federal, state, local or other tax statutes or regulations, and do not resolve any tax issues in your favor.
The prices which IB uses to mark U.S. listed securities options as of the close of business each day (both TWS and statements) originate from the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). As the sole clearinghouse for these option products, OCC generates a closing price for each option contract in order to calculate the margin required of its members on whose behalf it clears transactions (e.g., IB) and also to supply the risk arrays used by brokers carrying portfolio margin accounts.
Its important to note that the prices generated by OCC are edited and therefore may not reflect the closing price as disseminated by any of its participant exchanges. They are edited primarily due to the fact that there is no consolidated quote provided for options, most of which are multiply listed and fungible across all seven exchanges (i.e., there may be seven different prices to choose from each day). As a result, OCC creates a single price as of the close which is theoretically consistent across all exchanges and reviewed to ensure that there are no arbitrage conditions across strikes or time.
In creating prices, OCC will start by taking the mid-point of the highest bid and lowest ask price across all listing exchanges, determining the implied volatility and then smoothing that implied volatility curve (for a given option class, type and expiration) through an iterative process which, in turn, adjusts the option mark prices. There are also rules enforced to cap volatility for certain deep in and deep out-of-the-money options. The resultant edited price is extended out to six decimal places. Due to the operational overhead of computing edited prices for the complete universe of option series, this process is performed only once per day as of the market close.
Account holders maintaining positions in American Depository Receipts (ADRs) should note that such securities are subject to periodic fees intended to compensate the agent bank providing custodial services on behalf of the ADR. These services typically, include inventorying the foreign stocks underlying the ADR and managing all registration, compliance and record-keeping services.
Historically, the agent banks were only able to collect the custody fees by subtracting them from the ADR dividend, however, as many ADRs do not regularly pay dividends, these banks have been unable to collect their fees. As a result, in 2009, the Depository Trust Company (DTC) received SEC approval to begin collecting these custody fees on behalf of the banks for ADRs which do not pay periodic dividends. DTC collects these fees from its participant brokers (such as IB) who hold the ADRs for their clients. These fees are referred to as pass-through fees as they are designed to be then collected by the broker from its clients.
If you hold a position in a dividend paying ADR, these fees will be deducted from the dividend as they have in the past. If you hold a position in an ADR which does not pay a dividend, this pass-through fee will be reflected on the monthly statement of the record date in which it is assessed. Similar to the treatment of cash dividends, IB will attempt to reflect upcoming ADR fee allocations within the Accruals section of the account statements as well. Once charged, the fee will be reflected in the Deposits & Withdrawals section of the statement with the description 'Adjustments - Other' along with the symbol of the particular ADR it is associated with.
While the amount of this fee will generally range from $0.01 - $0.03 per share, the amounts may differ by ADR and it is recommended that you refer to your ADR prospectus for specific information. An on-line search for the prospectus may be conducted through the SEC's EDGAR Company Search tool.
We provide the ability to download your Activity Statements into the following software:
In addition to the above download solutions, a number of other third-party providers offer portfolio management and tax reporting packages that integrate with our HTML downloads. Please contact the provider for further detail.
Step 1: | If you do not already have an IB Investment account in Quicken or Money, please create one and manually load your current positions. Enable the account for Online Access. |
Step 2: | Log in to Account Management through our Home Page and choose Activity Downloads (Report Management). |
Step 3: | Select accounts, dates and a format (Tradelog, Quicken or MS Money) and click the View/Download button. |
Step 4: | Map the download to your IB Investment Account. |
Step 5: | Go to the IB Investment Account within Tradelog, Quicken or Money and accept the transactions. |
For complete instructions how to import your statement to Tradelog, please visit http://www.armencomp.com/tradelog/interactive_brokers.shtml.
Intuit and Money do not support multiple currencies at this time.
Step 1: | Log in to Account Management section of the web site and choose the Activity Statements menu item (Report Management). |
Step 2: | Choose accounts, dates and a format of HTML/Web, and click the View/Download button. |
Step 3: | Once the complete statement has loaded in the page, go to the File menu of your browser and choose Save As. This will prompt you to save the file locally on your computer. |
Step 4: | Enter a file name and choose a location to save your statement. |
Step 5: | Upload the saved HTML file into MS Excel or MS Word. |
If you would like to import your IB statement into Captools Professional please visit http://www.captools.net/ to see the latest import instructions. (Please note that you will need the Captools Broker/Dealer Interface from Captools before you can follow the steps mentioned below. Contact Captools at http://www.captools.net/ for the interface details.): |
Log into
and choose Tax Forms (Report Management). Select TurboTax TXF Format from the drop down menu and click View Report.
Please note that the TXF import is only available on the TurboTax desktop product.
In addition to posting Activity Statements to Client Portal, IBKR provides clients with the option of receiving statements via email (unsecured) by choosing this option from the Reports > Statements - Statement Delivery menu item in Client Portal.
There have been instances where certain clients who have elected this option receive the email but are unable to open the attachment containing the statement. Once the email has been sent the handling of these attachments is administered not by IBKR but rather by the client's email service provider and/or their desktop security settings. Oftentimes, a service provider will block access to email attachments in order to minimize the threat of a virus or malware being introduced or perhaps to manage bandwidth and internal disk space. If this is the case, clients may wish to contact their service provider for assistance or change their email address.
Alternatively, clients are encouraged to access statements by logging in to the secure Client Portal from the website and selecting the Reports > Statements menu options.