Hi everyone, I have a question that seems fairly complicated but maybe the answer is pretty simple. I day traded the Chinese / Cayman Islands company ILAG for a nice gain during the last market session. Since it's an IPO, I received the prospectus from my broker via email. When I read through it (out of curiosity, I'm no longer holding), there was a section on PFIC tax rules. It was stated in the prospectus that there is a high chance the company will be classified as a Passive Foreign Investment Company for the current year, and that if this happens there are special tax implications from being a US holder of the stock. So what isn't clear to me is, have I created a potentially large tax hassle and tax bill from just holding ILAG for 20 minutes when I day traded it one time? It's unclear to me if I actually need to take special measures with how I file and pay taxes on this trade, or if I can just treat it as a regular short term capital gain like any other trade. It never occurred to me that it could create headaches or liabilities with the IRS to just scalp trade a foreign company's stock and it sounds incredibly stupid if true, given that day trading such a stock has nothing to do with "investment" lol.
It would also imply that as a day trader I would have to be constantly aware of whether a ticker is for a foreign or domestic company, when obviously I wouldn't know that a lot of the time when just playing technical setups off range and liquidity without knowing or caring what the company is like.
I have asked in a few discord channels and no one knows the answer. The really professional traders seem to less frequently trade this kind of garbage ticker (ILAG was running as a sympathy to MEGL; probably everyone that traded HKD or any of its sympathies needs an answer to this question), whereas the more amateur groups seem to be people who are not concerned with getting their taxes right. I was told to ask a CPA but I'm overseas for a few months and local CPAs won't know the answer to this. Would greatly appreciate if anyone can shed insight into this topic
It would also imply that as a day trader I would have to be constantly aware of whether a ticker is for a foreign or domestic company, when obviously I wouldn't know that a lot of the time when just playing technical setups off range and liquidity without knowing or caring what the company is like.
I have asked in a few discord channels and no one knows the answer. The really professional traders seem to less frequently trade this kind of garbage ticker (ILAG was running as a sympathy to MEGL; probably everyone that traded HKD or any of its sympathies needs an answer to this question), whereas the more amateur groups seem to be people who are not concerned with getting their taxes right. I was told to ask a CPA but I'm overseas for a few months and local CPAs won't know the answer to this. Would greatly appreciate if anyone can shed insight into this topic
