DiscoverTax Section OdysseyDigital asset playbook: Part 2 — The loss ledger
Digital asset playbook: Part 2 — The loss ledger

Digital asset playbook: Part 2 — The loss ledger

Update: 2024-02-22
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The tax treatment for digital asset losses can be a complex area. Not to mention, misleading information can cause confusion for tax practitioners and taxpayers alike. Learn more about the intricacies of how realized digital asset losses are reported and why it likely makes sense to avoid having the digital asset be considered worthless or abandoned based on the current tax treatment. 

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Transcript

April Walker: Hello everyone and welcome to the AICPA's Tax Section Odyssey podcast. Where we offer thought leadership on all things tax facing the profession. I'm April Walker, a lead manager from the Tax Section, and I'm here today with Annette Nellen. Annette is a professor and director of the MST program at San Jose State University. She's also a wonderful AICPA volunteer and has been on the podcast before. Welcome back, Annette.

Annette Nellen: Thank you.

Walker: This episode is Part 2 in a three-part series that we're focusing on digital assets here on the Tax Section Odyssey, a journey through digital assets, if you will.

Today's episode is going to focus on a common question that we get in this space, and that is how our losses on digital assets treated for tax purposes. A second underlying question as you're listening to this might be, what are the misconceptions? What are the things that you hear people saying…you read on the Internet about this topic that might or might not be correct.

Annette is going to really help us dig in to those. Annette let's start off at a basic level and remind our listeners, just basic digital asset 101. What do we know about digital assets in general, and what does that mean for the treatment of digital asset losses?

Nellen: Well, thank you April, the key guidance here came out in 2014. That is [IRS] Notice 2014-21, where the takeaway was digital assets. That notice actually just talks about convertible virtual currency. That is before we were using the term digital assets because that was actually added to the law in November 2021 with the infrastructure investment and jobs act.

But the notice talks about treat this virtual currency cryptocurrency treated as property. It is not treated as foreign currency for tax purposes. They answered several questions in the notice. Some were pretty obvious like if you're paid by your employer in a virtual currency, is that taxable? Yes, of course it's taxable. That's fair market value at the time they receive it.

But the key takeaway and what they said [if] something isn't addressed here. Basically go to the rules on the taxation of property transactions and that probably will answer your questions. Now it doesn't always because there are some unique features of how virtual currency, digital assets operate that other ones do not operate in that way.

For example, a virtual currency could have something called a hard fork. I'm not aware of any other property that really has a hard fork with something just breaks off from it and continues on its own. Doesn't have a good analogy there. We do occasionally run into situations where [it’s] not real clear.

That's a lot of ones where the AICPA Digital Asset Tax Task Force is trying to address those and seeking guidance from the IRS if they can point out. Because this is a question people have, what do you think the answer is? We can all be on the same page here.

Walker: Yeah, that brings up several good topics. I generally have converted to saying digital assets. We can also say virtual currency. We could say cryptocurrency, all of those being, at least in general, the same thing. If Annette says a different word or I say a different word, that's all what we're meaning.

Then also that there's some really tricky things that can happen with this type of property that's way different than some of the really complex investment type property. That's why we have to be on top of this and learn.

That was our message in Part 1. We cannot escape this. We can't just bury our head in the sand and pretend like it doesn't exist.

Annette let's take this a step further. What if a client comes to you and says, I had digital assets. This is probably a pretty common thing that happened in 2023. “I had these digital assets in this wallet and it dropped tremendously in value — like right now it's only worth $0.30 or something like that. Did I have a realized loss? And if so, how do I treat that realized loss?

Nellen: Well, that is a good question. It seems to be one that the IRS was getting as well because in January of 2023, they issued a Chief Counsel Advice 202302011. It had a few reminders in there, but doesn't address every type of loss that people might encounter with their digital assets or cryptocurrency.

The fact pattern at Chief Counsel Advice was that the person had purchased a cryptocurrency at $1 per unit, and by the end of the year, it was trading for less than $0.01. That's something also unique about this virtual currency or cryptocurrency. It can certainly be trading for far less than one penny. That itself raises an interesting question because tax we're usually rounding everything up to $1. If something's worth less than a penny, does that mean it's worthless? Probably not.

Now, in that fact pattern though, where that cryptocurrency had dropped to below $0.01 It also was still, of course, owned by the taxpayer. They hadn't done anything to have a realization event. It was still actually being traded on at least one cryptocurrency exchange. It was still possible that they could have sold that in what would have been actually an on chain transaction.

Now, the Chief Counsel Advice does not go into doesn't matter if you sell it on chain, meaning you go through the normal like the blockchain transaction, actually get that completely transferred to somebody else versus I had the code for this. I'll write it down on the piece of paper and sell it to somebody. But then technically you still arguably have the code. You could have even memorized it. It didn't go into that, but it did state that with this fact pattern — worth less than a penny, you still owned it and it was still traded at least one exchange, you did not have a realized loss. They also said it wasn't worthless and that arguably makes sense. It's not worthless because you could still actually trade it. There's some place you could get somebody to buy that from you. Of course it's not abandoned, you actually still own it.

This Chief Counsel Advice did tell us that it's not a realization event, you don't have a loss. It does talk a little bit about the general rules on worthlessness and abandonment, but it doesn't talk about how would you know if a cryptocurrency had become worthless? How do you abandon a cryptocurrency? But I do want to state and I'll probably state this more than once.

Today, you don't want to have worthless or abandoned cryptocurrency because that results in an ordinary loss because there's no sale or exchange of a capital asset. You don't have a capital gain or loss, you have an ordinary loss.

But remember deductions and losses are matter of legislative grace. If you can't point to a code section allowing you to claim that loss, you cannot claim it. If you look at Code Section 62

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Digital asset playbook: Part 2 — The loss ledger

Digital asset playbook: Part 2 — The loss ledger