Lot Relief Method

  

Categories: Trading, Tax

It's basically prunes, pushing, or an enema for giant blocks or lots of stock you want to sell.

Lot Relief Method refers to techniques used to calculate the cost basis of a lot (group) of shares, which is then used to pick out which of your lots to sell off first. The cost basis is the original cost or purchase price of the asset, and will determine what tax will be charged upon the sale.

There are multiple ways to calculate the cost basis of the lot, and depending on which is used, the tax due on the sale will vary. Two methods go in purchase order: Last In, First Out sells the last shares that were purchased first. The First In, First Out Method sells shares in the order they were purchased (the first to be bought and brought into the portfolio are the first to be sold).

The Dollar Value LIFO (Last In, First Out) groups shares by performance. Average Cost uses, well, the average of a whole group of assets or lots. Lastly, the Specific ID method lets the investor identify the shares they want.

As you may have noticed, the names are pretty clear cut, but choosing the method is less so. It's based partly on the rules applying to that asset, the method used to calculate previously, and the anticipated performance of that share in the future.

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Finance: What is a Round Lot?7 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what is around a lot Well here's

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a square lot and no there really isn't such a

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things a square lots of don't write us so what's

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around lot Well it's one hundred shares of stock and

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or it can be any form or subset of shares

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easily divisible by one hundred Why does this matter Because

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one hundred years ago computers well they weren't even a

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thing and brokerages manually did math on abacus is says

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or abba chi or just you know on that graph

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paper that grandpa has with this thing called a pencil

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Yeah people actually use those things one hundred years ago

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Well the odds of making a mistake from a non

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round lot when shares were split or divided or sliced

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and diced in some julian fry kind of way well

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they were really high so the brokerages wanted to encourage

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investors to buy and sell in round lots to make

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both their jobs easier and to mitigate the risk of

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errors Well historically brokerages would have to bundle non round

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loss together such that they would truncate However many odd

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shares were left after evenly dividing by one hundred in

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order to do business with each other as they were

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in disparate form all around the country in the world

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and telecommunications was basically you know a guy shouting in

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the street asking for buyers like check out this picture

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of wall street's or you know nineteen twelve So what

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is it called when someone wants to sell one hundred

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thirty four point three shares it's a mixed lot Yeah

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there's one unit of around a lot of one hundred

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shares there and then there's thirty four point three shares

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truncated or leftover as an odd lot and generally speaking

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for a long time investors selling odd lots were punished

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in the form of much higher commission rates that they

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would pay in order to execute the trades of those

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odd lots And eventually with computers and regulatory concern the

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commission's minimized because if you think about it the people

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paying the much higher commission rates were generally the poor

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or disenfranchised or uneducated Otherwise they'd have enough dough to

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just buy round lots right And after enough of them

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got taken while the world finally figured out how to

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smash that square peg into that round hole you know 00:02:18.04 --> [endTime] It works

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Finance: What is Odd Lot Theory?
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