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What tax law loophole is Buffett referring to?

Personal Finance & Money Asked by jldugger on April 10, 2021

In a recent op-ed, Warren Buffett made a claim about investment managers:

Others own stock index futures for 10 minutes and have 60 percent of their gain taxed at 15 percent, as if they’d been long-term investors.

Now I thought capital gains required you to hold for a year and a day. What trick is Buffett referring to here?

One Answer

A Section 1256 contract is any:

  1. Regulated futures contract
  2. Foreign currency contract
  3. Non-equity option

Non-equity options include debt options, commodity futures options, currency options, and broad-based stock index options. A broad-based stock index is based upon the value of a group of diversified stocks or securities (such as the Standard and Poor's 500 index).

60% of the capital gain or loss from Section 1256 Contracts is deemed to be long-term capital gain or loss and 40% is deemed to be short-term capital gain or loss. What this means is a more favorable tax treatment of 60% of your gains.

https://www.tradelogsoftware.com/resources/filing-taxes/futures/

It's a really weird rule (arbitrary 60% designation, so broad, etc), but section 1256 contracts get preferential tax treatment and that's what Buffett's talking about.

Correct answer by BlackJack on April 10, 2021

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