IRS

IRS reminds taxpayers of crypto income reporting ahead of 2022 filing

The IRS’s recommendation to check “Yes” boils down to receiving, earning, transferring or selling cryptocurrencies for any monetary benefit, including mining and staking.

With the deadline approaching for filing the 2022 federal income tax return, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) — an enforcement agency of United States federal tax laws — released a list of reporting requirements for the general public dealing with cryptocurrencies.

Until 2021, the IRS used the term “virtual currencies” in income tax-related reporting forms, which have been updated to “digital assets.” All U.S. citizens must answer questions about cryptocurrencies “regardless of whether they engaged in any transactions involving digital assets.”

The question about digital asset income features in three forms — 1040, Individual Income Tax Return; 1040-SR, U.S. Tax Return for Seniors; and 1040-NR, the U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return, which asks:

“At any time during 2022, did you: (a) receive (as a reward, award or payment for property or services); or (b) sell, exchange, gift or otherwise dispose of a digital asset (or a financial interest in a digital asset)?”

While all tax filers are required to answer the above question with a yes or no, the IRS provided nine instances when one must check “Yes,” as shown below:

IRS checklist of declarations related to cryptocurrency. Source: irs.gov

The above recommendations boil down to receiving, earning, transferring or selling cryptocurrencies for any monetary benefit, including mining and staking. In addition to checking “yes,” eligible taxpayers are required to report all income related to their digital asset transactions.

Revised 2022 instructions for Form 1040 (and 1040-SR). Source: irs.gov

The only instances when one can check “No” in the filing is if they have been purely holding the crypto assets, transferred assets between wallets they own or purchased cryptocurrencies against fiat currencies.

Related: US authorities to intensify scrutiny of crypto industry in 2023

A bill recently pitched during the first session of the Arizona State Senate in 2023 proposed having Arizona residents decide on amending the state’s constitution in regard to property taxes.

As Cointelegraph reported, the SCR 1007 bill went through two readings as part of the state Senate’s calendar, on Jan. 19 and Jan. 23.

US authorities to intensify scrutiny of crypto industry in 2023

The Securities and Exchange Commission, Financial Accounting Standards Board and Internal Revenue Service are working to tighten crypto regulations and expand industry oversight.

Fourteen years after Bitcoin’s genesis block launched a profound disruption in financial services and other industries through the rise of blockchain technology, United States authorities are finally becoming more interested in cryptocurrencies’ future and economic impact.

On Dec. 14, the Financial Accounting Standards Board discussed new accounting and disclosure requirements for entities holding crypto assets in financial statements, following an agenda consultation with investors — the first in five years. The proposed rules are expected to be issued in the first half of 2023.

A few days earlier, the Securities and Exchange Commission delivered a sample letter regarding the recent developments in the crypto markets, asking companies to consider in their disclosures “the need to address crypto asset market developments in their filings generally, including in their business descriptions, risk factors, and management’s discussion and analysis.”

Related: Crypto regulation world: How laws for digital assets changed in 2022

The changes are set to be felt by many players in the crypto and financial services industries, according to legal specialists. “It should have a multi-pronged and ultimately profound macro and micro impact on financial markets generally and the crypto industry specifically,” said Mark Kornfeld, securities and financial fraud shareholder at the law firm Buchanan Ingersol and Rooney. He told Cointelegraph:

“First, the Commission, much like it did after the Madoff Ponzi scheme was disclosed to the world at large, will be aggressively monitoring and doing full-blown regulatory examinations of in time thousands (if not more) conducting business in and around this space. All in the market should reasonably anticipate and fully expect a sizable uptick in regulatory enforcement proceedings by the Commission, and, continued legal challenges to, the Commission’s jurisdictional authority.”

Cryptocurrency is also reportedly becoming a focus of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), with its Criminal Investigation division hiring hundreds of new agents to work on digital assets and cybercrime. Along with its own data scientists, the IRS is hoping to cooperate with crypto firms, aiming to create a “symbiotic relationship” to fight financial crime.

Legislators in the United States are also under pressure to set a new regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies after last November’s dramatic collapse of crypto exchange FTX, ​​setting the stage for upcoming scrutiny in the crypto market in 2023.

There are, however, some who believe the outcomes will be positive in the long term. “The net result should prove to be a more regulated and transparent climate, increased market stability, and much-improved investor and consumer protection in a space that has until recently operated in an environment fairly characterized as relatively secretive and opaque,” said Kornfeld.

The outcome of SBF’s prosecution could determine how the IRS treats your FTX losses

Will your losses to FTX be classified as capital losses or as a “theft loss” that involved a Ponzi scheme? Either way, you’ll probably win.

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has received official criminal charges after the collapse of his cryptocurrency exchange, which is more than just a moral victory for the exchange’s roughly 1 million individual investors. While not locked in yet, things appear to be on track for these investors to take a more favorable tax position as SBF’s fate continues to unravel.

What kinds of losses can FTX investors claim on their taxes?

Earlier this fall, it appeared that assets lost in the FTX collapse would be considered a capital loss under the United States tax code for the tax year 2022. This capital loss can be used to offset capital gains. But in a year in which the crypto market took a beating as a whole, most investors will not have capital gains to offset in 2022.

A capital loss can also be used to offset “ordinary income,” such as money earned from a business or job — up to $3,000 per year. The loss is carried forward indefinitely, but if your loss in the FTX collapse was substantial, it could take quite a while to claim all of it.

Related: Biden is hiring 87,000 new IRS agents — and they’re coming for you

A much more favorable scenario for many investors would be to claim a theft-loss deduction, which can offset ordinary income without any limit. Claiming a theft loss is normally a fairly difficult task that can attract scrutiny from the Internal Revenue Service. But the tax code for theft loss contains a “safe harbor” for Ponzi schemes. For the most part, if an investor is able to demonstrate a loss in a Ponzi scheme, the IRS won’t require additional documentation.

Was FTX a Ponzi scheme?

Because investor assets were illegally diverted to Alameda Research, SBF’s hedge fund, it seems likely that the IRS will ultimately view FTX as a Ponzi scheme. To activate the safe harbor, FTX or its “lead figure” SBF has to be charged with fraud matching this description in the tax guidance:

“A specified fraudulent arrangement is an arrangement in which a party (the lead figure) receives cash or property from investors; purports to earn income for the investors; reports income amounts to the investors that are partially or wholly fictitious; makes payments, if any, of purported income or principal to some investors from amounts that other investors invested in the fraudulent arrangement; and appropriates some or all of the investors’ cash or property.”

The charges the SEC leveled against SBF focus on equity investors, not retail investors. But the SEC does specifically mention “the undisclosed diversion of FTX customers’ funds to Alameda Research.” While not an official green light for the safe harbor, it’s very close — closer than we may have expected we’d see in 2022.

Outside of criminal charges, a criminal complaint coupled with a confession activates the Ponzi scheme safe harbor as well. While he has been very vocal following the FTX collapse, SBF has given no indication he plans to confess to anything.

What should FTX investors and their tax professionals do?

With the individual tax-filing deadline of April 18, 2023, investors who lost assets on FTX have some time to see how this plays out. It seems very possible that the SEC will bring additional charges against SBF or FTX that would clear up any doubt around the Ponzi scheme safe harbor.

The IRS may also weigh in on if the existing charges are enough to trigger the safe harbor, and hopefully, 2022 is the year to take it. The theft loss could also be claimed in a future year, but most FTX investors will likely be eager to recoup some of their losses by offsetting income on their taxes as soon as possible.

Related: Before ETH drops further, set some money aside for surprise taxes

For investors who lost assets on FTX, planning on claiming the capital loss at this point would likely be unwise. Even if, by some miracle, an investor has capital gains to offset from 2022, the tax rate on ordinary income is much higher. The only scenario in which this might make sense is if an individual had no ordinary income but did have capital gains in 2022.

Basis for comparison

In both of these scenarios — capital loss or a Ponzi scheme safe harbor — it’s important to note that the amount of allowable loss is the cost basis of the asset. Assuming the value you were able to extract from FTX following the collapse is zero, you can claim the full amount you originally paid for the asset.

From an IRS point of view, your theft loss includes not only the total cost basis you paid — you also receive a kicker for income you paid taxes on. If you made trades on the exchange or had an income stream and had recognized income for these in earlier tax returns, and hadn’t withdrawn from the exchange before the collapse, you would account for these in figuring out cost basis. Your certified public accountant and/or coin trading software will likely come in handy here.

For some investors, the basis is likely to be more than the asset was worth when FTX went down in flames — potentially quite a bit more. That may be a bit of a silver lining here. And while it seemed like investors would have to wait for 2023 to see if charges were brought in this matter, the SEC appears to have handed them an early Christmas present.

Justin Wilcox is a partner at the Connecticut accounting and advisory firm Fiondella, Milone & LaSaracina. He founded the firm’s cryptocurrency practice in 2018, providing tax and advisory services to Web3 organizations and crypto investors. He mines and trades cryptocurrencies.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

IRS prepares for an increase in crypto cases in the upcoming tax season

The criminal investigation division of the IRS says it is preparing hundreds of crypto-related cases for the upcoming tax season.

The United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS) criminal investigation division is ramping up for tax season with its sights set on the crypto community.

According to a report from Bloomberg Law, the division chief Jim Lee said they are preparing “hundreds” of crypto-involved cases, many of which will soon be available to the public.

Lee said in the last three years, there has been a major shift in digital asset investigations conducted by the IRS. Previously these investigations were mostly money-laundering related, whereas now tax-related cases make up nearly half.

This includes what is often called “off-ramping” transactions where digital assets are exchanged for a fiat currency, along with not reporting crypto payments.

In a different report released by the agency on Nov. 3, the IRS reported that in 2022 the 2,077 special agents of the division spent nearly 70% of their time investigating tax-related crimes like tax evasion and tax fraud. While the other 30% was spent on money laundering and drug trafficking cases.

The division chief said following the money is nothing new and they’re ready to pivot into new realms, including Web3:

“We’ve been doing it for more than 100 years, and we’ve followed criminals into the dark web and now into the metaverse.”

The report cited a crypto-related case as an example, which involved tracing billions of dollars in Bitcoin stolen from Bitfinex after its 2016 hack and led to the arrest of two individuals.

Related: 74% of public agencies feel under-equipped for crypto investigations: Report

This comes after the IRS introduced a broader “Digital Assets” category ahead of the upcoming tax season. It grouped cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and nonfungible tokens (NFTs) all together under a new “Digital Asset” category.

As decentralized financial technologies and assets become more mainstream, regulators are reacting, therefore enforcing more reporting requirements.

Binance has been actively holding workshops for global regulators to better understand digital assets and their implications. These activities increased after the exchange hired a prominent IRS cybercrime investigator to lead its anti-crime unit.

A new definition of crypto comes from the IRS — Law Decoded, Oct. 17–24

IRS broadens the classification of crypto, Ripple gets another point in a case against SEC and Hong Kong considers its own regulatory framework in opposition to China.

No matter how much attention the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or Commodity Futures Trading Commission gets in the crypto industry, for individual traders and investors, it often comes down to the Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) position — and how much tax one owes.

Last week, the IRS last week released a draft bill featuring a well-defined digital assets section that outlines if and how taxpayers will account for the use of cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and nonfungible tokens (NFTs).

Page 16 of the draft defines digital assets as any digital representations of the value recorded on a “cryptographically secured distributed ledger or any similar technology.” 2021’s tax form required taxpayers to indicate whether they had received, sold or exchanged in “virtual currency” — with this term changing in the yet-to-issued 1040 tax form for 2022.

Taxpayers are required to answer the digital assets section of their income tax return whether or not they have engaged in digital asset transactions during the tax year. A number of situations will require American taxpayers to indicate yes to the question on digital assets of Form 1040 or 1040-SR. This includes receiving as a reward, award or payment for property or services or sold, exchanged, gifted or disposed of a digital asset in 2022.

New amendment provides regulation for crypto activities in the U.K. 

An amendment to the Financial Services and Markets Bill now before the United Kingdom’s parliament could extend the law’s powers to regulate financial promotion and other activities to crypto assets. According to the explanatory statement accompanying the amendment, the new bill would “clarify that the powers relating to financial promotion and regulated activities can be relied on to regulate cryptoassets and activities relating to cryptoassets.” In a letter from Aug. 9, the Financial Conduct Authority stated that it would publish final rules for the promotion of crypto assets once the Treasury formalizes legislation to bring these into its remit. 

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Hong Kong reportedly wants to legalize crypto trading

Hong Kong is taking action to regain its status as a global cryptocurrency hub by launching several legal initiatives related to the crypto industry. The government of Hong Kong is considering introducing its own bill to regulate crypto in its own China-free way, according to Elizabeth Wong, head of the fintech unit at the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC). One of the SFC’s initiatives is allowing retail investors to “directly invest into virtual assets,” which would mark a significant shift from the SFC’s stance over the past four years. 

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Ripple continues to gain points in case against SEC

Ripple seems to be inching closer to victory in its ongoing battle with the SEC. The company’s general counsel, Stuart Alderoty, confirmed on Twitter that the firm finally has a set of elusive documents after “18 months and 6 court orders,” though noted they remain confidential at the SEC’s insistence. “It was well worth the fight to get them,” he said, adding: “I’ve always felt good about our legal arguments, and I feel even better now. I always felt bad about the SEC’s tactics, and I feel even worse about them now.”

The fought-over documents relate to a 2018 speech by former SEC division director William Hinman regarding the status of Ether (ETH), with the financial regulator seemingly pulling out all the stops to keep the documents under wraps.

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IRS introduces broader ‘Digital Assets’ category ahead of 2022 tax year

An early draft of the 2022 IRS tax form sees cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and nonfungible tokens grouped under a new “Digital Asset” category.

American taxpayers will find a broader, more defined category encompassing cryptocurrencies and nonfungible tokens (NFTs) in their 2022 IRS tax forms. The draft bill released by the Internal Revenue Service features a well-defined Digital Assets section that outlines if and how taxpayers will account for the use of cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and NFTs.

Page 16 of the draft defines Digital Assets as any digital representations of the value recorded on a “cryptographically secured distributed ledger or any similar technology.” 2021’s tax form required taxpayers to indicate whether they had received, sold or exchanged in “virtual currency” — with this term changing in the yet-to-issued 1040 tax form for 2022.

Taxpayers are required to answer the Digital Assets section of their income tax return whether or not they have engaged in digital asset transactions during the tax year.

A number of situations will require American taxpayers to indicate yes to the question on Digital Assets of Form 1040 or 1040-SR. This includes receiving as a reward, award or payment for property or services or sold, exchanged, gifted or disposed of a digital asset in 2022.

Related: IRS to summon users who don’t report and pay tax on crypto transactions

This would include instances where an individual received digital assets as payment for property or services provided or as a result of a reward or award. Receiving new digital assets through mining or staking also falls under this category, as does transacting digital assets in exchange for goods or services as well as exchanging or trading digital assets.

Holding cryptocurrencies, stablecoins or NFTs as well as staking tokens is also clearly addressed in the draft tax form:

“You have a financial interest in a digital asset if you are the owner of record of a digital asset, or have an ownership stake in an account that holds one or more digital assets, including the rights and obligations to acquire a financial interest, or you own a wallet that holds digital assets.”

The Digital Assets explainer also outlined conditions that do not require taxpayers to check Yes on their tax forms. If an individual holds a digital asset in a wallet or account, transfers digital assets from a wallet or account to another wallet or account owned by themselves or acquires digital assets using United States dollars or other fiat currencies through electronic platforms like PayPal.

Digital asset transactions can be clearly classed in either capital gains or income sections of the 2022 tax return.

If an individual disposed of any digital asset during the year which was held as a capital asset, they are expected to calculate their capital gain or loss and report on Schedule D of the tax return.

If individuals received digital assets as payment for services or sold digital assets to customers in a trade or business, this would need to be reported as income in its specific category.

Tax on income you never earned? It’s possible after Ethereum’s Merge

IRS rules weren’t ready for the Ethereum upgrade. It’s unlikely to become the fiasco that taxpayers experienced when Bitcoin forked in 2017, but there are measures they can take to prepare for whatever the IRS decides.

After much buildup and preparation, the Ethereum Merge went smoothly this month. The next test will come during tax season. Cryptocurrency forks, such as Bitcoin Cash, have created headaches for investors and accountants alike in the past.

While there has been progress, the United States Internal Revenue Service rules still weren’t ready for something like the Ethereum network upgrade. Nonetheless, there seems to be an interpretation of IRS rules that tax professionals and taxpayers can adopt to achieve simplicity and avoid unexpected tax bills.

How Bitcoin Cash broke 2017 tax returns

Because of a disagreement over block size, Bitcoin forked in 2017. Everyone who held Bitcoin received an equal amount of the new forked currency, Bitcoin Cash (BCH). But when they received it caused some issues.

Bitcoin Cash was first issued in the fall but didn’t hit Coinbase or other major exchanges until December. By that time, it had gone up significantly in value. For tax purposes, receiving free coins is income. Suddenly, many investors had a lot of income to claim that they hadn’t anticipated.

Related: Get ready for a swarm of incompetent IRS agents in 2023

Many crypto-savvy accountants advised clients to claim the value of Bitcoin Cash when it was issued, not when it finally arrived in their exchange accounts. No IRS guideline explicitly said this was OK — in fact, it runs contrary to the accounting principle of dominion and control — but it seemed like the only reasonable way to handle the issue.

Airdropped proof-of-work ETH is another gray area

As a result of the problems with reporting income from Bitcoin Cash, the IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2019-24 to address the treatment of blockchain forks. According to the ruling, forks that result in the airdrop of a new currency to an existing holder are taxable accessions to wealth. While not the usage of “airdrop” most investors are used to, the IRS uses the term to describe when the holder of an existing cryptocurrency receives a new currency from a fork.

The potential confusion with the Ethereum upgrade is that assigning the forked and original currency based on the ruling alone is unclear. One can easily see how the IRS could take the position that, following the upgrade, the Ether (ETH) tokens held in wallets and exchanges across the world is a new coin, and that Ethereum proof-of-work (PoW) — which continues on the legacy network — is the original.

Cryptocurrencies, IRS, Taxes, Tax reduction, United States, Law, Ethereum 2.0

While the argument makes logical sense, this position would also result in chaos. Every U.S. taxpayer who held ETH — or assets such as nonfungible tokens (NFTs) based on Ethereum smart contracts — on Sept. 15 would have to claim its value as ordinary income. Though it’s using the old technology, Ethereum PoW is clearly the “new” coin.

The assets of the investor haven’t changed — rather, the underlying consensus mechanism was upgraded. Plus, unlike Bitcoin Cash, which stemmed from a disagreement with two legitimate sides, the Ethereum upgrade had widespread support and was only opposed by self-interested miners.

Related: Biden is hiring 87,000 new IRS agents — And they’re coming for you

Another example would be when EOS froze the Ethereum-based EOS token and moved the holders to the EOS mainnet. The continuation of the coin on the EOS network was not viewed as taxable, as rights were simply teleported to another chain with the same ticker symbol. (Crypto exchange traders probably didn’t even notice.)

Is the “new coin” always the lesser adopted coin? Is a coin its technology or its community? The IRS likely won’t rule on this before Tax Day in April, so taxpayers and advisors will just have to make the call. But it seems like the choice is clear.

Additional considerations for investors and developers

Tax-savvy Ethereum holders may want to wait and see if Ethereum PoW is adopted before they attempt to access the coins. Accepting them will guarantee taxable income without leaving room for an argument that the fork is a half-hearted fork/farce/scam, like many of the derivative Bitcoin forks in 2017–2018, which had thinly traded values on remote exchanges.

If the value of Ethereum PoW drops before an investor sells, it can mean a tax bill that exceeds the value of the asset. (Bitcoin Cash dropped from over $2,500 in value to under $100 in 2018, save for a short-lived spike in 2021). On the other hand, Grayscale Ethereum Trust’s Sept. 16 press release indicates it will claim, sell or distribute proceeds related to the ETH POW coin, so there may be some value to report at the end of the day.

Related: Post-Merge ETH has become obsolete

It takes some doing to claim Ethereum POW that is worth less than 1% of the corresponding quantity of Ethereum. Early adopters often have an advantage in crypto, but a fork is one case where patience could be prudent.

Any crypto developers considering a fork should bear in mind that forks always create tax headaches, the severity of which varies based on the rationale for and execution of the fork. Assuming the IRS follows the lead of the crypto tax community again, the Ethereum upgrade provides an example of how to do it right.

Justin Wilcox is a partner at the Connecticut accounting and advisory firm Fiondella, Milone & LaSaracina. He founded the firm’s cryptocurrency practice in 2018, providing tax and advisory services to Web3 organizations and crypto investors. He mines cryptocurrencies like DOGE (though he still supported the Ethereum Merge). He holds various cryptocurrencies and NFTs, including coins mentioned in this article.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Get ready for a swarm of incompetent IRS agents in 2023

The IRS is hiring 87,000 agents, thanks to President Joe Biden’s 2021 infrastructure package, but they won’t be fully trained for three years.

The Internal Revenue Service is hiring 87,000 new agents, but taxpayers will not feel the pain for another two to three years. That’s how long it will take the agency to hire and train agents. Few have discussed the extent of this pain. Still, it’s something to think about when you consider the majority of coming audits will be conducted by new agents, many of whom will have been hastily hired and operating with minimal supervision.

Playing the audit lottery will not be smart in future tax years. Taxpayers should protect themselves now, especially when profiting from statutory gray areas — such as cryptocurrency staking, investing through decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) and other decentralized finance (DeFi) products.

When I started my career in the mid-2000s, business audits were standard, and the new agents were always the worst with which to deal. You had to explain everything in detail to them like little children, and they still would write up non-factual summaries or incorrect legal opinions. That required escalating cases for a manager to review or file an appeal. New agents were also often uber-aggressive, fighting over small changes to build a reputation for always having major tax increases in the audits they took on.

Don’t get me wrong. The IRS needs to hire agents. The situation for the last few years has been nothing short of a nightmare. Good luck reaching an agent to resolve a tax issue! In 2021, the IRS received 282 million telephone calls. Customer service representatives only answered 32 million, or 11 percent, of those calls. The IRS certainly needs to hire more staff to answer phones and resolve issues within a reasonable time.

Related: Biden is hiring 87,000 new IRS agents — and they’re coming for you

The trouble at the IRS dates back to 2011, when major budgetary cuts led to a hiring freeze across the board. The total number of workers at the IRS has fallen massively, from 94,711 agents in 2010 to 78,661 full-time equivalent employees in 2021. This means that adding 87,000 revenue agents will more than double the size of the current IRS!

Add to this the roughly 20,000 agents eligible to retire at the IRS right now, and the IRS will need to hire more than 107,000 agents in the next few years. Thus, two out of three IRS employees will be total newbies in three years. In a perfect world, this could lead to a startup-like culture at the IRS, with innovations and a culture of making a difference. Yeah, right. This is the government. They won’t run things efficiently. And these agents who are tracked on their performance will go for the low-hanging fruit with taxpayers they can bully into big changes on examination, meaning a big increase in small business and individual audits.

Sources of federal tax revenue in billions, 2000-2021. Source: Cato Institute

However, we won’t see much of an increase in audits for a couple of years. It will take a while for the IRS to find enough hires though to fill all those seats. The hiring freeze was lifted in 2019, but because of the pandemic, actual net hiring has not yet occurred. In 2021, the IRS lost 14,500 employees due to retirement or separation but gained only 12,500 external hires.

This failure in hiring wasn’t from a lack of trying. In 2021, I was inundated with Facebook ads and recruiter messages, but they still couldn’t even hire enough agents to fill the seats of those who were retiring. So one certainly has to ask, how will they find over 100,000 new agents? And will their hiring standards drop substantially to get enough warm bodies in chairs?

Then it will take even more time before we see these agents in the field. Once a revenue agent is hired, there is another one to two years of training before they are unleashed on the public.

The most likely agent you will meet, a “Small Business/Self-Employed Revenue Agent in Field Examination,” requires 1,888 hours of training. At 40 hours per week, this amounts to 47.2 weeks, which is almost a year after vacation and personal time. A “Special Agent for Criminal Investigations” requires 3,904 hours of training, or closer to two years, to get up to speed. Even a “Customer Service Representative” needs 1,500 hours of training, or more than nine months — to answer the phone lines!

While the IRS has been dwindling in size and struggling to replace retiring agents, the tax laws and technology-based financial transactions have become increasingly complex. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) in 2017 was the first major overhaul of the tax system since the Tax Reform Act of 1986. Five years after passing the TCJA, not all the provisions have been implemented yet. Who knows what strange memos might start coming out in these not-yet-interpreted areas? Then there are all the gray areas created by different types of cryptocurrency transactions, staking, DAOs and DeFi, with many unique fact patterns for which the relevant laws have yet to be interpreted by the tax courts.

The antiquated IRS computer system further adds to the challenges faced. The IRS still runs on a mainframe computer system from the 1960s that is coded in Cobol. Few current programmers know Cobol, and the IRS has struggled to modify its systems. During the pandemic, a revenue agent admitted to me on a call that the IRS did not have the code to pause the system that mails out automated delinquency notices to taxpayers.

For the last 20 years, the U.S. Treasury has been spending billions a year to develop a new tax computer system, but there never seems to be a clear timeline of when this system will be released. It always seems about five years out with the ever-floating deadline. Because of this lack of decent computer systems, a lot of tasks at the IRS are still performed manually. The IRS has about 60 case management systems that are not interconnected; each function’s employees must transcribe or import information from other electronic systems and mail or fax it to other departments.

Related: Tips to claim tax losses with the US Internal Revenue Service

Despite all these challenges, the IRS is already signaling that they intend to start doing substantial business audits in future years. It has been years since the Coinbase John Doe summons, and the IRS still has not done the expected bulk audits, so with staffing increases, these will probably start increasing.

Since the pandemic, transfer pricing audits have ground to a halt but will surely pick up again soon — and I expect many crypto businesses to be the target of these audits as well, especially those in DeFi with cross-border lending transactions. And then for R&D, the IRS has issued two memos in the last year requiring full due diligence and documentation to be done before preparing the tax return, but the R&D credit mills predatorily targeting startups have yet to change their business practices, so I expect to see audits of R&D credits en masse once enough agents are ready.

Most of the tax accountants I worked with early in my career have long since retired. The new generation of so-called “experts” didn’t get this business audit experience in their early careers and are utterly unprepared for what is on the horizon at the IRS. Because of this, there is a lot of incorrect information floating around in the tax world. Many advisors who have been playing the audit lottery for years successfully are in line to get both themselves and their clients burned in the coming audit storm.

When should taxpayers be afraid? Considering the two- to three-year timeline to get staffed and the three-year statute of limitations for auditing most tax returns, the tax years that will be most at risk for audit are 2021 and onwards. Per 2019 IRS statistics, individuals with taxable income between $25,000 and $500,000 only have a roughly 0.2% chance of being audited each year, with those reporting $0 income or a net loss for the year at 1.1%.

Audit Rates by Taxable Income Bracket in 2019. Source: Government Accountability Office

Back in 2010, mid-range incomes were only at a 0.7% risk. If $0 or less of income was reported, there was a 20.6% chance of an audit — meaning those playing it conservatively will likely still be OK. However, those taking aggressive positions were at far greater risk, likely running that 1-in-5 risk of audit.

Because of this, I recommend choosing your advisors carefully. Aggressive tax positions should be avoided right now unless the benefit outweighs the risk regarding the cost of litigation. The biggest fallacies I hear in consult calls every week tend to come from Reddit threads, and trust me, Reddit is not a credible source. Be sure to look up your advisors and make sure they are licensed and experienced, as this, at least, will give some grounds to have penalties waived if an aggressive tax position is questioned.

Crystal Stranger is a federally-licensed tax EA and the chief operating officer at GBS Tax. She worked previously as a software developer in San Francisco.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Biden is hiring 87,000 new IRS agents — and they’re coming for you

The Internal Revenue Service is hiring a fleet of new agents. And they’re probably coming for you — regardless of your income level.

The Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law this month by President Joe Biden, empowers the IRS with nearly $80 billion in new funds. The world’s most powerful tax collection agency is using the money to go on a hiring spree to fuel much tougher enforcement efforts.

It is widely assumed that the audits will be brutal and widespread. Taxes start with tax returns, which must be signed under penalties of perjury. The Biden administration has said that the audits on steroids are for fat cats who have escaped having to pay their fair share for too long. The administration has suggested the IRS would perform no new audits on anyone making less than $400,000 annually. Republicans tried to include that in the law, but every Senate Democrat voted against the amendment, as well as IRS audit protection for those earning less than $400,000.

In other words, American taxpayers at every income level are fair game regardless of income. So buckle up, and think about whether your taxes — and records — are vulnerable. How would they look under a microscope? Tax returns must be signed under penalties of perjury. What’s more, if you try to change that language, the IRS says it doesn’t count as a tax return — which means your statute of limitations on an audit never begins. You can be audited forever.

Related: US govt delays enforcement of crypto broker reporting requirements

Speaking of perjury, the IRS asks on every individual tax return, “At any time during 2021, did you receive, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of any financial interest in any virtual currency?”

The 2022 version of that question is even more intrusive as we’ll see. The IRS says that all taxpayers filing Form 1040, Form 1040-SR or Form 1040-NR must check one box answering either “Yes” or “No” to the virtual currency question. The question must be answered by all taxpayers, not just those who engaged in a virtual currency transaction in 2021.

In the tax world, a simple yes or no question can be a surprisingly big deal — if you answer wrong. But can you check “No?” Taxpayers who merely owned virtual currency at any time in 2021 can check the “No” box when they have not engaged in any transactions involving virtual currency during the year or limited their activities to:

  • Holding virtual currency in their wallet or account;
  • Transferring virtual currency between their wallets or accounts;
  • Purchasing virtual currency using real currency, including purchases using real currency on electronic platforms such as PayPal and Venmo; and
  • Engaging in a combination of holding, transferring or purchasing virtual currency as described above.

But many people must check “Yes.” Just think about these everyday transactions in crypto, all of which would require checking the “Yes” box:

  • The receipt of virtual currency as payment for goods or services provided;
  • The receipt or transfer of virtual currency for free (without providing any consideration) that does not qualify as a bona fide gift;
  • The receipt of new virtual currency as a result of mining and staking activities;
  • The receipt of virtual currency as a result of a hard fork;
  • An exchange of virtual currency for property, goods or services;
  • An exchange/trade of virtual currency for another virtual currency;
  • A sale of virtual currency; and
  • Any other disposition of a financial interest in virtual currency.

Just answering yes or no isn’t hard, but one thing it’s meant to do is tip you off that you have a taxable event, which usually means paying some tax. So you also have to report the gain or income. As if the crypto community wasn’t nervous enough, get ready for more since the tax stakes are going up again. For 2022 tax returns, the IRS has modified the crypto question asked on IRS Form 1040, the tax form used for individuals. A draft of the 2022 IRS Form 1040 asks:

“At any time during 2022, did you: (a) receive (as a reward, award, or compensation); or (b) sell, exchange, gift, or otherwise dispose of a digital asset (or a financial interest in a digital asset)?”

That casts the net wider than did the prior version. The IRS gift and estate tax people are generally distinct from IRS income tax personnel. But the expansion of the crypto tax question may herald more to come, more crypto audits, more IRS scrutiny on crypto and crypto taxpayers and more money being poured into IRS compliance generally. The so-called Inflation Reduction Act is supposed to fund the hiring of 87,000 new IRS agents and add nearly $79 billion to the IRS, a vast $45 billion of which is being directed solely into IRS “enforcement.”

Related: How to navigate cryptocurrency tax implications amidst the CPA shortage

Crypto is one of the IRS’s big targets. The new law says the IRS will pursue “digital asset monitoring and compliance activities,” apart from general tax enforcement. What can the IRS do with $80 billion of taxpayer money?

The new law says the IRS is supposed to use the money in these ways:

  • Taxpayer services: $3,181,500,000;
  • Enforcement: $45,637,400,000;
  • Operations support: $25,326,400,000;
  • Business systems modernization: $4,750,700,000;
  • Task force to design free, direct e-file system: $15,000,000;
  • Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration: $403,000,000;
  • Treasury Office of Tax Policy: $104,533,803;
  • Tax Court: $153,000,000; and
  • Treasury Departmental offices for oversight and implementation support to help the IRS implement the IRA: $50,000,000.

Enforcement is the biggest line item, and Congress wants results too. Congress has already projected that adding IRS enforcement dollars is going to pay off. They project the new funding will add a whopping $124 billion more in increased collections over 10 years.

The bill is vague on how the IRS can spend $45 billion on “enforcement,” though ominously, it does mention legal and litigation support, and enforcement of criminal statutes regarding tax law violations. The bill also specifies “digital asset monitoring and compliance activities” and investigative technology for criminal investigations as items on which the IRS should spend the money. Any way you slice it, you can expect more IRS attention on crypto, more scrutiny on tax reporting, and above all, more audits.

Robert W. Wood is a tax attorney representing clients worldwide from his offices at Wood LLP in San Francisco. He handles a broad range of tax planning and tax controversies and has served as an expert witness on cases including tax matters in civil cases, class actions, and disputes over independent contractor or employee classifications. He formerly served as an instructor at the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law.

The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Options data shows Bitcoin’s short-term uptrend is at risk if BTC falls below $23K

BTC’s $335 million options expiry has become a death trap for bulls, and increased legal action by the SEC and IRS against crypto companies is adding to the sell pressure.

Bitcoin (BTC) briefly broke above $25,000 on Aug. 15, but the excitement lasted less than an hour and was followed by a 5% retrace in the next five hours. The resistance level proved to be tougher than expected but may have given bulls false hope for the upcoming $335 million weekly options expiry.

Investors’ fleeting optimism reverted to a sellers’ market on Aug. 17 after BTC dumped and tested the $23,300 support. The negative move took place hours before the release of the Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) minutes from its July meeting. Investors expect some insights on whether the Federal Reserve will continue raising interest rates.

The negative newsflow accelerated on Aug. 16 after a federal court in the United States authorized the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to force cryptocurrency broker SFOX to reveal the transactions and identities of customers who are U.S. taxpayers. The same strategy was used to obtain information from Circle, Coinbase and Kraken between 2018 and 2021.

This movement explains why betting on Bitcoin price above $25,000 on Aug. 19 seemed like a sure thing a couple of days ago, and this would have incentivized bullish bets.

Bears didn’t expect BTC to move above $24,000

The open interest for the Aug. 19 options expiry is $335 million, but the actual figure will be lower since bears were overly-optimistic. These traders might have been fooled by the short-lived dump to $22,700 on Aug. 10 because their bets for Aug’s options expiry extend down to $15,000.

Bitcoin options aggregate open interest for Aug. 19. Source: Coinglass

The 1.29 call-to-put ratio shows the difference between the $188 million call (buy) open interest and the $147 million put (sell) options. Currently, Bitcoin stands near $23,300, meaning most bullish bets are likely to become worthless.

If Bitcoin’s price moves below $23,000 at 8:00 am UTC on Aug. 19, only $1 million worth of these call (buy) options will be available. This difference happens because a right to buy Bitcoin at $23,000 is useless if BTC trades below that level on expiry.

There’s still hope for bulls, but $25,000 seems distant

Below are the three most likely scenarios based on the current price action. The number of options contracts available on Aug. 19 for call (bull) and put (bear) instruments varies, depending on the expiry price. The imbalance favoring each side constitutes the theoretical profit:

  • Between $21,000 and $23,000: 30 calls vs. 2,770 puts. The net result favors the put (bear) instruments by $60 million.
  • Between $23,000 and $25,000: 940 calls vs. 1,360 puts. The net result is balanced between bulls and bears.
  • Between $25,000 and $26,000: 3,330 calls vs. 100 puts. The net result favors the call (bull) instruments by $80 million.

This crude estimate considers the put options used in bearish bets and the call options exclusively in neutral-to-bullish trades. Even so, this oversimplification disregards more complex investment strategies.

For example, a trader could have sold a put option, effectively gaining positive exposure to Bitcoin above a specific price, but unfortunately, there’s no easy way to estimate this effect.

Related: Former Goldman Sachs banker explains why Wall Street gets Bitcoin wrong

Bears will try to pin Bitcoin below $23,000

Bitcoin bulls need to push the price above $25,000 on Aug. 19 to profit $80 million. On the other hand, the bears’ best case scenario requires pressure below $23,000 to maximize their gains.

Bitcoin bulls just had $144 million in leveraged futures long positions liquidated on Aug. 16, so they should have less margin to drive the price higher. With this said, bears have the upper hand to suppress BTC below $23,000 ahead of the Aug. 19 options expiry.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.