By Anne Steele and Ashlea Ebeling, The Wall Street Journal, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: Or if you resold tickets to just about anything, from concerts to sports events, if your proceeds were at least $600. Starting this year, the IRS is requiring ticket reselling platforms to file form 1099-K for users who sell at least $600 worth of tickets, ensnaring individual resellers into tax reporting that was once reserved for professional brokers. Similar to the rules kicking in for people who receive money via online payment systems, the goal is to catch more unreported taxable income, but the reality is it is more likely to cause confusion and headaches over what is and isn’t taxable—and how to report it. So if you sold tickets this year and are among the 44 million people expected to receive a 1099-K, here is some helpful info in advance of more formal IRS guidance to follow: “Sellers will only need to pay taxes if they made a profit—if they sold a ticket for more than they paid for it. If an individual sells tickets at a loss, that loss isn’t deductible, and resellers can’t offset gains on some transactions with losses on others. Sellers may still have to report the loss on their tax return if they receive a 1099-K.” Additionally: “Users will have to rely on their own records to calculate what they paid for tickets and what they earned from reselling them. … The tax individual resellers pay will depend on factors including the price they paid, the sale price minus selling fees, the time period between the purchase and resale, and their tax bracket.” If you read this and suspect the IRS treats this income as a short-term capital gain, you are correct. Your gain is your sale price minus seller’s fees minus what you paid. “Happy” filing. Happy. Harrumph.
US Auto Workers Strike Escalates as UAW President Calls on 38 More Plants to Join
By Michael Sainato, The Guardian, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: With negotiations between the United Auto Workers and the Big Three US automakers continuing, the union looks set to expand the partial work stoppage from 3 plants to 41. As always, MarketMinder is neutral on labor disputes and politics, which is increasingly intertwined with this strike—we favor neither side nor any political party and assess this situation for its potential economic and market impact only. To that end, while expanding the strike will broaden the impact to more communities—and we empathize with those directly affected—the broader economic impact still looks minimal to us. The Big Three alone run over 250 plants in the US, per the American Automotive Policy Council, and international automakers add a bunch more. So it will still be true that only a fraction of domestic production is going offline, which likely won’t be enough to move the needle on inflation or factory output—especially because auto strikes tend to be short. For more, see last week’s commentary, “Into Perspective: The US Auto Labor Dispute and Recession Worries.”
Retail Sales Rebound in August After July Washout
By Melissa Lawford, The Telegraph, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: The main takeaway here? Economic data are volatile from month to month. In July, UK retail sales volumes (which are inflation-adjusted) fell -1.1%, with statisticians blaming unusually wet weather for the decline. August brought a partial recovery, with sales up 0.4% m/m as the sun brought folks back to the shops. Interestingly, higher gas prices apparently led Brits to cut fuel consumption (gas station sales volumes fell -1.2%) rather than discretionary spending, which is an encouraging sign for consumption looking forward. With real wages still rising, consumers should have plenty of firepower from here, which should help support spending (and the UK economy) over the foreseeable future even with the ups and downs along the way.
By Anne Steele and Ashlea Ebeling, The Wall Street Journal, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: Or if you resold tickets to just about anything, from concerts to sports events, if your proceeds were at least $600. Starting this year, the IRS is requiring ticket reselling platforms to file form 1099-K for users who sell at least $600 worth of tickets, ensnaring individual resellers into tax reporting that was once reserved for professional brokers. Similar to the rules kicking in for people who receive money via online payment systems, the goal is to catch more unreported taxable income, but the reality is it is more likely to cause confusion and headaches over what is and isn’t taxable—and how to report it. So if you sold tickets this year and are among the 44 million people expected to receive a 1099-K, here is some helpful info in advance of more formal IRS guidance to follow: “Sellers will only need to pay taxes if they made a profit—if they sold a ticket for more than they paid for it. If an individual sells tickets at a loss, that loss isn’t deductible, and resellers can’t offset gains on some transactions with losses on others. Sellers may still have to report the loss on their tax return if they receive a 1099-K.” Additionally: “Users will have to rely on their own records to calculate what they paid for tickets and what they earned from reselling them. … The tax individual resellers pay will depend on factors including the price they paid, the sale price minus selling fees, the time period between the purchase and resale, and their tax bracket.” If you read this and suspect the IRS treats this income as a short-term capital gain, you are correct. Your gain is your sale price minus seller’s fees minus what you paid. “Happy” filing. Happy. Harrumph.
US Auto Workers Strike Escalates as UAW President Calls on 38 More Plants to Join
By Michael Sainato, The Guardian, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: With negotiations between the United Auto Workers and the Big Three US automakers continuing, the union looks set to expand the partial work stoppage from 3 plants to 41. As always, MarketMinder is neutral on labor disputes and politics, which is increasingly intertwined with this strike—we favor neither side nor any political party and assess this situation for its potential economic and market impact only. To that end, while expanding the strike will broaden the impact to more communities—and we empathize with those directly affected—the broader economic impact still looks minimal to us. The Big Three alone run over 250 plants in the US, per the American Automotive Policy Council, and international automakers add a bunch more. So it will still be true that only a fraction of domestic production is going offline, which likely won’t be enough to move the needle on inflation or factory output—especially because auto strikes tend to be short. For more, see last week’s commentary, “Into Perspective: The US Auto Labor Dispute and Recession Worries.”
Retail Sales Rebound in August After July Washout
By Melissa Lawford, The Telegraph, 9/22/2023
MarketMinder’s View: The main takeaway here? Economic data are volatile from month to month. In July, UK retail sales volumes (which are inflation-adjusted) fell -1.1%, with statisticians blaming unusually wet weather for the decline. August brought a partial recovery, with sales up 0.4% m/m as the sun brought folks back to the shops. Interestingly, higher gas prices apparently led Brits to cut fuel consumption (gas station sales volumes fell -1.2%) rather than discretionary spending, which is an encouraging sign for consumption looking forward. With real wages still rising, consumers should have plenty of firepower from here, which should help support spending (and the UK economy) over the foreseeable future even with the ups and downs along the way.