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    Usar "capital gains" en una oración

    capital gains oraciones de ejemplo

    capital gains


    1. d) Capital gains from the sale of shares


    2. I don’t think there’ll be any capital gains involved, but I’ll check with one of our taxation experts


    3. Thus: As of 2010, the richest one per cent of Americans paid forty per cent of all capital gains and income taxes


    4. These taxes include, however are not limited to, consumer taxes, school and property taxes, ―sin‖ taxes, egregious taxes on inheritance or the ―death tax‖ and capital gains taxes whose earnings are taxed twice, no less


    5. Capital gains tax rates are frozen for 2 more years…you can assume they wil run with


    6. Capital gains tax rates are frozen for 2 more years


    7. long-term capital gains and topping out at 15% through December 31, 2012


    8. extension, capital gains were slated to rise to a high of 20% – something that may now occur in


    9. The rest of the governmental mechanism is funded by other taxation such as VAT, capital gains tax, excise duty, etc


    10. 718 capital gains (totaling over 5T)

    11. Capital gains of $1


    12. 2T of interest, and/or capital gains and/or rents and/or dividends on our 43T+3


    13. The principal of the nations financial wealth remains intact and produces most of the “other income” interest, rents, capital gains, etc


    14. In Chapter 2 we estimated the distribution of capital gains in lump sums for the


    15. Government through reduction and eventual abolishment of the estate tax will be recouped by capital gains taxes that your heirs will have to pay if and when they dispose of the property bequeathed to them


    16. Prior to 2001, heirs automatically received a “full basis step-up” to fair market value on inherited property and did not have to pay capital gains tax when they sold the property


    17. The son or daughter sells the land for $200,000 in 2006 and has to pay capital gains tax on $140,000, or the difference between what you paid for it at the time of purchase and the fair market value at the time it was sold


    18. increasing the flow of earnings toward shareholders - mostly through capital gains


    19. to pay capital gains taxes on that amount because it is considered


    20. However, IF the money is “withdrawn,” then all the gains within the policy (the amount earned in addition to the total premiums paid) will be taxed as income and not as capital gains

    21. Let’s say you sold your business, paid all the capital gains taxes on the proceeds of the sale, and are now left with a cool million dollars


    22. Portfolio Income: Money made through capital gains, such as trading stocks, or selling a house that appreciated after you bought it


    23. be treated as income or capital gains depending on the way in which the


    24. strategies, trusts, capital gains and options


    25. six months or more and the profit was subject to the long-term capital gains tax


    26. There would also be a tax on capital gains for stock sales


    27. A 20% tax will be imposed on all capital gains from stock trading on the Athens stock exchange


    28. Later, he receives capital gains after the reinvests it somewhere, thus the person does not have to pay for capital gains taxes


    29. The active contrarian strategies described in this chapter will subject the investor to capital gains taxes when employed in a taxable investment account


    30. Mutual funds must distribute capital gains to their shareholders on a yearly basis (i

    31. By comparison, investors in ETFs generally only realize capital gains when they sell shares


    32. This gives them a bit more control over when they realize capital gains and have to pay taxes on them


    33. It could be argued earnings compound faster since no taxes are owed on reinvested dividends and capital gains, but this is a fairly hollow distinction


    34. Thus paying taxes on reinvested dividends and capital gains in a taxable account may make your pocketbook lighter, but it does not generally inhibit the compounding of the investments themselves


    35. You cannot use unearned income such as interest, dividends, capital gains, rental property income, pensions, or social security benefits


    36. One may focus on capital gains, where the purpose is price appreciation, whereas another may specialize in income investing by buying assets, such as bonds, that generate an income stream


    37. Over the years, the tax savings will have a huge impact, because at some point you will hit Capital Gains Tax (CGT) and that hurts your returns badly


    38. Shareholders may then find it hard to calculate the cost of the holding for capital gains tax when they sell


    39. The choice is then cluttered with other considerations such as whether one wants those shares, whether the valuation of the buyer’s equity is fair or realistic, and whether selling might crystallize an unwelcome capital gains tax liability


    40. It is galling that the government takes another slice on dividends and capital gains after it has already charged additional tax on investing taxed income

    41. Many of the companies that state their primary aim is for capital gains concentrate on the purchase of the so-called “growth stocks,” and they often have the word “growth” in their name


    42. Its emphasis was, of course, on capital gains


    43. Short-term capital gains and losses are merged to obtain net short-term capital gain or loss


    44. Long-term capital gains and losses are merged to determine your net long-term capital gain or loss


    45. If there is a net long-term capital gain, it is taxed at the favorable capital gains rate, generally 20%—which will fall to 18% for investments purchased after December 31, 2000, and held for more than five years


    46. When we view this long-range experience in perspective we find another set of paradoxes in the investor’s changing attitude toward capital gains as contrasted with income


    47. It seems a truism to say that the old-time common-stock investor was not much interested in capital gains


    48. We assume here a top tax bracket for the typical investor of 40% applicable to dividends and 20% applicable to capital gains


    49. He must also be capable of curbing any tendencies toward greed in his investment: He cannot attempt to buy precisely at the bottom of the market or to maximize capital gains over short periods


    50. Normal fees might range from 1 percent of assets under management (AUM) to 2 percent of AUM plus 20 percent of annual realized or unrealized capital gains (after a bogey of, say, 6 percent paid or accrued to limited partners)














































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