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February 22, 2024
Question

Celsius distributions

  • February 22, 2024
  • 1 reply
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So my situation is this: Let's say I had 500 USDC, 0.005 BTC, and 0.07 ETH at Celsius. I received 0.006 BTC and 0.09 ETH in the settlement, probably because the majority of my Celsius holdings were USDC. So I actually received a little bit more BTC and ETH in the settlement. I'm still thinking to do a manual transfer for each, and then the extra BTC and ETH amounts marked as income? Or marked as conversion from USDC as "Realized Profit/Loss"?

 

Or should I just treat the USDC, BTC, ETH as investment loss, and then the new BTC and ETH that I received in PayPal as income?

 

I would be interested to know which is better way. Thanks again for any insights that you may have!

1 reply

February 29, 2024

When an investment becomes worthless (or almost worthless in this case) you can take the loss as soon as you are certain that it is done.  Sometimes that means the court case finishes or you get a report in the mail.  In your case that means you received a final settlement and you're done.  

 

So what you will need to do in this case is figure out the value of what you had in Celcius (not what it was worth, what you actually paid for it).  And then you will enter the transactions as -

 

Date purchased - actual purchase date

Amount paid - what you actually paid for the crypto

Date sold - the date that you received the settlement

Amount sold - the value of the crypto you received on that date

 

You could lump it all in in one transaction and call it the Celsius settlement or you could do it in three s\transactions based on those three types of currency that you listed.  If you do it the second way then it sounds like two of them would have a profit and one would be a total loss which probably offsets everything.  But that's up to you.

 

Lastly, you'll be left with cryptocurrency that you'll be carrying forward.  That will have a purchase date of the date you received the settlement and a basis or cost equal to the amount you entered for it's value an the date that you received it.  That will be information to file away for when you sell it.

 

@alkaloid 

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alkaloidAuthor
March 2, 2024

@RobertB4444 Thank you for your info!  One more clarification - so as you said below:

 

Lastly, you'll be left with cryptocurrency that you'll be carrying forward.  That will have a purchase date of the date you received the settlement and a basis or cost equal to the amount you entered for it's value an the date that you received it.  That will be information to file away for when you sell it.

 

So the BTC and ETH that I received in PayPal, they can be treated as purchases, not income?  Does that mean if treated as purchases, don't need to pay tax as income?

 

Thanks again for your help!!

 

March 7, 2024

They ARE income, but you're using that income against the Celsius losses that you took.  So you aren't paying taxes on receiving them now.  You WILL pay taxes on any profit you make when you sell them so you need to keep records of what they were worth on the day that you received them so you know the basis of the currency when you sell it.

 

@alkaloid 

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