Same Day Sale is when an individual performs two actions regarding Stock Options at the same time. The first is the sale of the stock on a stock exchange and the second is the exercise of the stock option. The advantage of the Same Day Sale is that the individual does not have to actually pay for the exercise of his stock option. Part of the money the individual receives from the sale of the stock is used to pay for the exercise of the option.
Same Day Sale has tax ramifications that should be reviewed with an individuals tax adviser or CPA.
please tell about what happened in case any body one day buy a stock in nse and by mistake sale in bse same day. this way it is short sale in bse and you will get delivery in nse which is not covered in same day, so may be penalty charge by exchange? the exchange cover them from auction market
Lush's Boxing Day sale only lasts until their stock pile runs out!!!
Stock option charts is for you to see how the stocks are doing each day. It helps you to decide wether or not to invest in them. Through this, you may get lucky.
CostumeSupercenter.com has an adult strawberry costume in stock on sale for $79.97. The regular price is $179.97. They offer same day shipping on order placed before 3pm.
Day traders who didn't lose money on their trades are taxed at normal income tax rates, or the same rate that a short-term capital gain would be taxed. One thing to note is that day traders are sometimes subjected to the wash-sale rule because they trade the same stock over and over again. This rule means that a trader must delay their tax loss on a losing trade if they bought the same stock again within 30 days of the sale. See for further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wash_sale
A wash sale is where you sell stock at a loss, then buy a substantially identical security to replace it during a 61-day time period starting 30 days before the sale and ending 30 days after it. If you do this, you can't deduct the loss. Three things happen in a wash sale from a tax standpoint--you can't deduct the loss on the wash sale, the loss is added to the basis of the replacement stock, and the holding period of the replacement stock is set to the holding period of the washed stock. The first one is the reason for the wash sale rule. The reason for the rule should be obvious: too many people were saving too much on their taxes by unloading stock, deducting the tax loss, then buying it back the same day because it's good stock and it's really cheap now. The second one is nice: if you bought stock for $100, sold it for $40 and bought it back a day later for $39, the IRS allows you to adjust your new stock's basis to $99--$39 stock price plus the $60 in disallowed loss. (The reason it's nice is it reduces your capital gain--or increases your loss--when you sell the replacement securities.) The third could screw you up depending on how long you held the stock in the first place: if you owned Acme for 20 years and dumped it in a wash sale, the IRS says you owned the replacement shares for 20 years. There are two ways to get around the wash sale rule: wait 31 days before buying the new stock, or buy stock in another company.
In most cases, yes. Macys department stores in the US often have a "one day sale" but will hold a preview day the day before, where you can take advantage of the same sale prices.
It is the process of buying stocks of a particular company from the stock market. The number of stocks that can be acquired in a particular day would depend on the number of stocks that are available for sale on that trading day.
i request pl give me one day free stock optiontip,s
A wash sale is where you sell stock at a loss, then buy a substantially identical security to replace it during a 61-day time period starting 30 days before the sale and ending 30 days after it. If you do this, you can't deduct the loss. Three things happen in a wash sale from a tax standpoint--you can't deduct the loss on the wash sale, the loss is added to the basis of the replacement stock, and the holding period of the replacement stock is set to the holding period of the washed stock. The first one is the reason for the wash sale rule. The reason for the rule should be obvious: too many people were saving too much on their taxes by unloading stock, deducting the tax loss, then buying it back the same day because it's good stock and it's really cheap now. The second one is nice: if you bought stock for $100, sold it for $40 and bought it back a day later for $39, the IRS allows you to adjust your new stock's basis to $99--$39 stock price plus the $60 in disallowed loss. (The reason it's nice is it reduces your capital gain--or increases your loss--when you sell the replacement securities.) The third could screw you up depending on how long you held the stock in the first place: if you owned Acme for 20 years and dumped it in a wash sale, the IRS says you owned the replacement shares for 20 years. There are two ways to get around the wash sale rule: wait 31 days before buying the new stock, or buy stock in another company.
A day trader implies that an investor trades in the market on a daily basis. The investor can be an individual or a broker. Daily trades are within the same stock, meaning that these stocks are bought and sold on the same day.
It varies day to day but generally stays the same depending on events