Five Towns Jewish Home - 2-17-22

Page 132

132 14

FEBRUARY 17, 2022 | The Jewish Home OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home

Your

Money

Odds are Good By Allan Rolnick, CPA

L

ife is full of mysteries that we may never solve. Nature or nurture? Growth or value? “Tastes great” or “less filling”? But last month, one fortunate gambler proved it’s better to be lucky than smart. He started with a $20 credit on the FanDuel betting site – house money! He bet that the underdog Cincinnati Bengals would beat the hometown Kansas City Chiefs by 27-24, and the favored Los Angeles Rams would beat the visiting San Francisco 49ers by 2017. Amazingly, he called both games, and turned that $20 credit into $579,020. Who needs smart when you’ve got that kind of luck? The Rams were 4.5-point favorites to win this weekend’s Super Bowl. But savvy gamblers know the point spread isn’t supposed to predict the winner. It’s there to balance the action, so that bettors wager equal amounts on each team. That way, the bookies get to line up in the neutral zone and walk away with their 10% vig on everything. As any stat geek can tell you, the best way to win is to be the house. The fans at the IRS are delighted our lucky bettor’s win, too. They’ll take a big chunk of that payoff even though they took none of the risk.

But if you look a little closer, you’ll see that the folks who write our tax laws have given the IRS an unfair advantage in a lot of situations where taxpayers take the risk. Start with the rules for gambling. Winnings are taxable as ordinary income. But losses are deductible only up to the amount you win. If you lose more than you win,

bookie might buy you a beer to cry in – but he’s still going to break your knees if you don’t pay.) That’s not the only situation where Uncle Sam has an unfair edge. If you invest in rental real estate, which is comically treated as a “passive” activity no matter how many hours you spend on your back under the kitchen sink, your income

As any stat geek can tell you, the best way to win is to be the house.

which happens enough that Las Vegas is a thing, those excess losses are nondeductible. You can’t even carry them forward like you can with business net operating losses, capital losses, or charitable gifts. Watch your kicker split the uprights as the clock winds down and the IRS cheers with you. Watch your quarterback throw an interception in overtime, and you lose alone. (Your

is fully taxable. But if you lose money on your property, your losses are deductible only up to the amount of passive income you earn from other activities. Any remaining losses get “suspended” until your property starts making money, you sell it in a fully taxable transaction or (*checks notes*) you die. The same principle applies with capital gains. If you make a for-

tune in crypto and get out before the market collapses, as it seems to do fairly regularly, your gains are fully taxable. But if you buy before the collapse, your net losses are deductible only up to $3,000/ year. Anything more than that gets carried forward to future years and future gains. And if you die with a boatload of carryover losses waiting to eat up gains that never come, well, you know what they say: “You can’t take it with you.” Sports gambling is legal in 30 states now, with online betting available in 18. And sites like FanDuel do something Bernie the Bookie down at the corner tavern never did – they send out W-2Gs to report winnings. So we know the IRS was celebrating Sunday’s Super Bowl results, no matter who won. Here’s hoping you got to celebrate a win, too!

Allan J Rolnick is a CPA who has been in practice for over 30 years in Queens, NY. He welcomes your comments and can be reached at 718-896-8715 or at allanjrcpa@aol.com.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Some New Instructions by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

3min
pages 134-136

Your Money

3min
pages 132-133

The Old Guard by Avi Heiligman

6min
pages 124-125

Hail to the Commies by Marc A. Thiessen

3min
pages 122-123

Does Putin Want a Diplomatic Solution in Ukraine? by David Ignatius

3min
page 120

Political Infighting Could Complicate War with Russia by David Ignatius

4min
page 121

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 116-119

The Aussie Gourmet: Vietnamese Spring Rolls

2min
pages 114-115

JWOW

3min
pages 112-113

Healthy Heart Month by Cindy Weinberger, MS RD CDN

3min
pages 108-109

Parenting Pearls

10min
pages 110-111

Testing Positive by Rafi Sackville

5min
pages 90-91

Living Life by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

3min
pages 106-107

FDR’s Jewish Problem – And Its Japanese Link by Rafael Medoff

6min
pages 92-93

A Bridge Between Two Worlds: Yisroel Katzover

14min
pages 94-99

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

5min
pages 88-89

The “Final” Stage of the Challenge by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

7min
pages 84-87

National

21min
pages 28-39

Centerfold

6min
pages 76-77

Raising Holy Tablet Breakers by Rav Moshe Weinberger

8min
pages 82-83

Israel News

7min
pages 22-27

That’s Odd

6min
pages 40-41

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 78-81

Community Happenings

6min
pages 42-45
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.