Sadly, I do not have an Excel spreadsheet program on my computer. I do have Microsoft Works and it has some sort of spreadsheet but I could not make heads or tails of it. I will try to explain where I am at and if anyone has suggestions I would appreciate it.
At this point, I have listed (by hand) all the "buys" (without commission
) and then added up all the commission charges on both the buy and sell sides (they were 9.99--maybe it is different with a margin account?), the sales fees
and the interest charged by Ameritrade to the margin account. Adding these brings me to a figure that is the total cost basis for all the stocks bought and sold in 2002. Good news is that the account was opened in May 2002 and all "buys" were "sold" in 2002 except for 4000 shares in one stock that were not sold in 2002. I deducted the "buy" amount for these from the total since there was no corresponding sell.
I have taken the total "sold" amount and added the interest paid to the account by Ameritrade which amounts to the total "gain".
These numbers show a "gain" of about $7200.00 (I don't think he started getting creamed until 2003 but honestly I paid little attention). Since he worked for approximately 2/3 of 2002 at another job but traded regularly for 7 months of the year should I make him a "trader" or an "investor" for IRS purposes? Can I just attach a copy of the detailed (7 pages) account history to the return with a summary of the figures or do I need to document gain/loss on each transaction? The numbers come out the same either way.
Technically, married filing separate would be worse for me because I had most of the income and I am still liable for what he owes anyway. I asked attorney this last year at the beginning and that was his response.
Thanks again to all of your assistance
I can not fathom why anyone would do this type of work for a living.