Proceeds From Broker and Bater Exchange Transactions

Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions

1099-B-instr

Proceeds From Broker and Bater Exchange Transactions

OMB: 1545-0715

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2013

Instructions for Form 1099-B
Section references are to the Internal Revenue Code unless
otherwise noted.

Future Developments

For the latest information about developments related to
Form 1099-B and its instructions, such as legislation enacted
after they were published, go to www.irs.gov/form1099b.

What's New
Truncating recipient's identification number on paper
payee statements. Pursuant to proposed regulations
§ 301.6109-4 (REG-148873-09), all filers of this form may
truncate a recipient’s identification number (social security
number (SSN), individual taxpayer identification number
(ITIN), or adoption taxpayer identification number (ATIN)) on
payee statements. See part M in the 2013 General
Instructions for Certain Information Returns.

Reminder

In addition to these specific instructions, you should also use
the 2013 General Instructions for Certain Information
Returns. Those general instructions include information
about the following topics.
Backup withholding.
Electronic reporting requirements.
Penalties.
Who must file (nominee/middleman).
When and where to file.
Taxpayer identification numbers.
Statements to recipients.
Corrected and void returns.
Other general topics.
You can get the general instructions from www.irs.gov/
form1099b or by calling 1-800-TAX-FORM
(1-800-829-3676).

Specific Instructions

A broker or barter exchange must file Form 1099-B,
Proceeds From Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions,
for each person:
For whom the broker has sold (including short sales)
stocks, bonds, commodities, regulated futures contracts,
foreign currency contracts (pursuant to a forward contract or
regulated futures contract), forward contracts, debt
instruments, etc., for cash,
Who received cash, stock, or other property from a
corporation that the broker knows or has reason to know has
had its stock acquired in an acquisition of control or had a
substantial change in capital structure reportable on Form
8806, or
Who exchanged property or services through a barter
exchange.

Brokers

A broker is any person who, in the ordinary course of a trade
or business, stands ready to effect sales to be made by
others. A broker may include a U.S. or foreign person or a
governmental unit and any subsidiary agency.
Jun 12, 2013

Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service

You are considered a broker if:
You are an obligor that regularly issues and retires its own
debt obligations or
You are a corporation that regularly redeems its own stock.
However, for a sale, redemption, or retirement at an office
outside the United States, only a U.S. payer or U.S.
middleman is a broker. See Regulations sections
1.6045-1(g)(1) and 1.6049-5(c)(5).
You are not considered a broker if:
You are a corporation that purchases odd-lot shares from
its stockholders on an irregular basis (unless facts indicate
otherwise),
You manage a farm for someone else, or
You are an international organization that redeems or
retires its own debt. See Regulations section 1.6045-1(a)(1).

Reporting
How many transactions to report on each form. Report
each transaction (other than regulated futures or foreign
currency contracts) on a separate Form 1099-B. Report
transactions involving regulated futures or foreign currency
contracts on an aggregate basis.
How many forms to file for each transaction. Report
sales of each of the following types of securities on a
separate Form 1099-B, even if all three types were sold in a
single transaction:
Covered securities (defined later) with short-term gain or
loss,
Covered securities with long-term gain or loss, and
Noncovered securities (securities that are not covered
securities) if you choose to check box 6a when reporting their
sale.
Substitute statements. Brokers that use substitute
statements may be able to report customer transactions
(stock sales (Form 1099-B), interest earned (Forms
1099-INT and OID), dividends (Form 1099-DIV), foreign
taxes paid (Forms 1099-B, DIV, and INT)) for the year on a
single substitute statement. For details, see Pub. 1179,
General Rules and Specifications for Substitute Forms 1096,
1098, 1099, 5498, and Certain Other Information Returns,
which provides the rules for substitute forms.
Additional information required for covered securities.
For each sale of a covered security for which you are
required to file Form 1099-B, report the date of acquisition
(box 1b), whether the gain or loss is short-term or long-term
(box 1c), cost or other basis (box 3), and amount of loss
disallowed due to a wash sale (box 5). When selling a
noncovered security, you may check box 6a and leave boxes
1b, 1c, 3, and 5 blank. You may choose to report the
information requested in boxes 1b, 1c, 3, and 5 and will not
be subject to penalties under section 6721 or 6722 for failure
to report this information correctly, as long as you check
box 6a.
Example. Your customer Mary bought shares of stock in
ABC Corporation in April 1995, April 2012, and August 2012.
The shares of stock bought in 2012 are covered securities.
The shares of stock bought in April 1995 are noncovered

Cat. No. 64171A

other numbered boxes blank. File a complete Form 1099-B
for the year the short sale is closed, as described above, but
do not include the backup withholding amount on this Form
1099-B.
In the case of a short sale, you can take backup
withholding either:
From the gross proceeds when the short sale is opened,
or
From any gain when the short sale is closed if you expect
to be able to determine the gain on the short sale at that time.

securities. In June 2013, Mary sells all of the stock in a single
transaction. Even though the stock was sold in a single
transaction, you will have to report the sale of the covered
securities on two separate 2013 Forms 1099-B (one for the
securities bought in April 2012 with long-term gain or loss
and one for the securities bought in August 2012 with
short-term gain or loss). You may report the sale of the
noncovered securities bought in April 1995 either on a third
Form 1099-B or on the Form 1099-B reporting the sale of the
covered securities bought in April 2012 (reporting long-term
gain or loss). You must report the sale of the noncovered
securities on a third Form 1099-B if you want to leave boxes
1b, 1c, 3, and 5 blank or if you want to report this information
and not be subject to penalties under section 6721 or 6722
for failing to report this information correctly. In either case,
you must check box 6a.

Widely held fixed investment trusts (WHFITs). Trustees
and middlemen must report the amount of non pro-rata
partial principal payments (as defined in Regulations section
1.671-5(b)(13)), trust sales proceeds (as defined in
Regulations section 1.671-5(b)(21)), redemption asset
proceeds (as defined in Regulations section 1.671-5(b)(14)),
redemption proceeds (as defined in Regulations section
1.671-5(b)(15)), the sales asset proceeds (as defined in
Regulations section 1.671-5(b)(17)), and the sales proceeds
(as defined in Regulations section 1.671-5(b)(18)) that are
attributable to a trust interest holder (TIH) for the calendar
year on Form 1099-B.
To determine the amount of each item of proceeds to be
reported on Form 1099-B, see generally Regulations section
1.671-5. If the trustee provides WHFIT information using the
safe harbor rules in Regulations section 1.671-5(f)(1) or (g)
(1), the trustee or middleman must determine the amounts
reported on Forms 1099 under Regulations section
1.671-5(f)(2) or (g)(2), as appropriate.
Check box 6a and leave boxes 1b, 1c, 3, and 5 blank if:
You are a broker reporting the sale of a security held by a
WHFIT to the WHFIT trustee, or
You are a trustee or middleman of a WHFIT reporting non
pro-rata partial principal payments, trust sale proceeds,
redemption asset proceeds, redemption proceeds, sales
asset proceeds, and sales proceeds to a TIH.
Requirement to furnish a tax information statement to
TIH. A tax information statement that includes the
information provided to the IRS on Form 1099-B, as well as
additional information identified in Regulations section
1.671-5(e), must be provided to TIHs. The written tax
information statement furnished to the TIH for 2013 is due on
or before March 17, 2014. The amount of an item of a trust
expense that is attributable to a TIH must be included on the
tax information statement provided to the TIH and is not
required to be included in box 5 on the Form 1099-DIV. See
Regulations section 1.671-5(e) for a complete list of the items
of information that must be included in the statement to the
TIH.

Short sales of securities. Do not report a short sale
entered into after 2010 until the year a customer delivers a
security to satisfy the short sale obligation. Disregard
sections 1259 (constructive sales) and 1233(h) (short sales
of property that becomes worthless). Report the short sale on
a single Form 1099-B unless:
You are reporting both short-term and long-term gain or
loss from a short sale closed by delivery of covered securities
(as just explained under How many forms to file for each
transaction),
The securities delivered to close the short sale include
both covered securities and noncovered securities (as
explained under How many forms to file for each
transaction), or
There was backup withholding and other conditions apply
(see below).
Report on Form 1099-B the relevant information about the
security sold to open the short sale, with the exceptions
described in the following paragraphs.
In box 1a, report the date the security was delivered to
close the short sale.
In box 1b, report the acquisition date of the security
delivered to close the short sale.
In box 1c, report whether any gain or loss on the closing of
the short sale is short-term or long-term based on the
acquisition date of the security delivered to close the short
sale. Apply section 1233(d), if applicable.
In box 1e, report the quantity of the security delivered to
close the short sale.
In box 3, report the adjusted basis of the security delivered
to close the short sale.
If the short sale is closed by delivery of a noncovered
security, you may check box 6a. In this case, you do not have
to complete boxes 1b, 1c, 3, and 5. However, if you choose
to report the information in those boxes and check box 6a,
you will not be subject to the penalties under sections 6721
and 6722 for failure to report that information correctly.
If a short sale obligation is satisfied by delivery of a
security transferred into a customer's account accompanied
by a transfer statement indicating the security was borrowed,
see Regulations section 1.6045-1(c)(3)(xi)(C).
If backup withholding was taken from the gross proceeds
when a short sale was opened in 2013 but the short sale was
not closed by the end of 2013, file a 2013 Form 1099-B.
Report the tax withheld in box 4. In box 8, enter a brief
description of the transaction (for example, “$5,000 short
sale of 100 shares of ABC stock not closed”). Leave the

Acquisition of control or substantial change in capital
structure. File Form 1099-B for each customer who
received cash, stock, or other property from a corporation
that you know, or have reason to know based on readily
available information, must recognize gain under section
367(a) from the transfer of property to a foreign corporation in
an acquisition of control or substantial change in capital
structure reportable on Form 8806. Readily available
information includes information from a clearing organization,
such as the Depository Trust Company (DTC), or from
information published on the IRS website.

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Go to IRS.gov and enter keyword “Form 8806” in the
upper right corner to find information on the IRS
website.
Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

Proc. 2002-50, which is on page 173 of Internal Revenue
Bulletin 2002-29 at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb02-29.pdf.

You are not required to file a second Form 1099-B for a
customer who received only cash for stock acquired in an
acquisition of control if you report the cash as proceeds from
a sale on another Form 1099-B. You also are not required to
file Form 1099-B for a customer who is an exempt recipient
(under Regulations sections 1.6045-1(c)(3)(i) or 1.6043-4(b)
(5)). For a list of exempt recipients, see the 2013 Instructions
for Form 1099-CAP.
Enter in box 2a the aggregate amount of cash and the fair
market value of any stock and other property received in
exchange for stock held in your custody. Also, check box 2b.
In box 8, show the corporation's name and the number of
shares of the corporation's stock you held that were
exchanged. Also enter the class or classes of stock (for
example, preferred, common, etc.) that were exchanged,
whether for cash or other property. Abbreviate the class to fit
the entry. For example, enter “C” for common stock, “P” for
preferred, or “O” for other. Also abbreviate any subclasses.
Leave the other numbered boxes and the CUSIP number
box blank unless you are required to file a Form 1099-B to
report proceeds you paid to the customer from the
acquisition of control or substantial change in capital
structure and you choose to file and furnish one Form 1099-B
for amounts reported under both Regulations sections
1.6045-1 and 1.6045-3. If you choose to combine the
reporting for both, do not combine other transactions the
customer may have had during the year with the reporting of
the acquisition of control or change in capital structure. Also,
in box 3, report the total basis of the customer's stock. Do not
enter an amount in box 3 that is greater than the amount
entered in box 2a.

Partnership sale. Form 8308, Report of a Sale or Exchange
of Certain Partnership Interests, does not have to be filed if,
under section 6045, a return is required to be filed by a
broker on Form 1099-B for the transfer of the partnership
interest.
Exceptions. Brokers are not required to file, but may file,
Form 1099-B for the following.
1. Sales for exempt recipients, including the following.
a. Charitable organizations.
b. IRAs.
c. Archer MSAs and health savings accounts (HSAs).
d. The United States or any state or a political subdivision
of the United States or any state.
e. Corporations. However, see Identifying a corporation,
later, for instructions about how to know whether a customer
is a corporation for this purpose. Also, you must file Form
1099-B for the sale of a covered security (defined later) by an
S corporation if the S corporation acquired the covered
security after 2011.
2. Sales initiated by dealers in securities and financial
institutions.
3. Sales by custodians and trustees, provided the sale is
reported on a properly filed Form 1041, U.S. Income Tax
Return for Estates and Trusts.
4. Sales at issue price of interests in certain regulated
investment companies.
5. Obligor payments on:
a. Nontransferable obligations, such as savings bonds or
CDs.
b. Obligations for which gross proceeds are reported on
other Forms 1099, such as stripped coupons issued before
July 1, 1982.
c. Retirement of short-term obligations with original issue
discount that is reported on Form 1099-INT, Interest Income.
However, Form 1099-B is required for the retirement of
short-term state obligations having no original issue discount.
d. Callable demand obligations that have no premium or
discount.
6. Sales of foreign currency unless under a forward or
regulated futures contract that requires delivery of foreign
currency.
7. Sales of fractional shares of stock if gross proceeds
are less than $20.
8. Retirements of book-entry or registered form
obligations if no interim transfers have occurred.
9. Sales for exempt foreign persons as defined in
Regulations section 1.6045-1(g)(1).
10. Sales of Commodity Credit Corporation certificates.
11. Spot or forward sales of agricultural commodities. See
below.
12. Some sales of precious metals. See Sales of precious
metals, later.
13. Grants or purchases of options, exercises of call
options, or entering into contracts that require delivery of
personal property or an interest therein.

Cash on delivery account. For a sale of securities through
a “cash on delivery” or similar account, only the broker that
receives the gross proceeds from the sale against delivery of
the securities sold is required to report the sale. However, if
such broker's customer is a “second-party broker” that is an
exempt recipient, only the second-party broker is required to
report the sale.
Foreign currency. If the purchase amount or sales
proceeds are paid in foreign currency, you must report the
amount of foreign currency in U.S. dollars. Generally, you
must determine the reportable amount as of the date you
receive, credit, or make the payment, whichever applies, at
the spot rate or by following a reasonable spot rate
convention, such as a month-end spot rate or a monthly
average spot rate. When reporting the purchase or sale of a
security traded on an established securities market, you must
determine the U.S. dollar amounts to be reported as of the
settlement date, at the spot rate or by following a reasonable
spot rate convention. See Regulations section 1.6045-1(d)
(8).
Substitute payments. Do not report substitute payments in
lieu of dividends and tax-exempt interest on Form 1099-B.
Instead, report these payments in box 8 of Form 1099-MISC,
Miscellaneous Income. See section 6045(d) and the
Instructions for Form 1099-MISC.
Stock options granted in connection with the performance of services. If an employee, former employee, or
other service provider, in connection with the performance of
services, obtains substantially vested shares of stock from
the exercise of a stock option, and sells that stock through a
broker on the same day, then the broker may not be required
to report the sale on Form 1099-B. For details, see Rev.
Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

Identifying a corporation. For sales of covered
securities (defined later) that were acquired after 2011, you
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so as a recipient that is not exempt. See part J in the 2013
General Instructions for Certain Information Returns for more
information.

cannot rely on Regulations section 1.6049-4(c)(1)(ii)(A) to tell
whether a customer is a corporation. However, for sales of all
securities, you can treat a customer as an exempt recipient if
one of the following statements is true.
1. The name of the customer contains the term
“insurance company,”“indemnity company,”“reinsurance
company,” or “assurance company.”
2. The name of the customer indicates it is an entity listed
as a per se corporation under Regulations section
301.7701-2(b)(8)(i).
3. You receive a properly completed exemption
certificate on Form W-9 that shows the customer is not an S
corporation.
4. You receive a Form W-8 that includes a certification
that the person whose name is on the form is a foreign
corporation.

Transfer Statement
Any person that transfers custody of a specified security
(defined later) to a broker after 2010 (after 2011 if the stock is
in a regulated investment company) must give the broker a
written transfer statement within 15 days after the date of
settlement for the transfer.
The transferor must furnish a separate statement for each
security and, if transferring custody of the same security
acquired on different dates or at different prices, for each
acquisition. However, a separate statement is not required
for:
Noncovered securities, and
Securities acquired more than 5 years before the transfer
for which basis is determined using an average basis
method.

Spot or forward sales of agricultural commodities.
Agricultural commodities include grain, feed, livestock, meat,
oil seed, timber, and fiber. A spot sale is a sale that results in
almost immediate delivery of a commodity. A forward sale is
a sale under a forward contract. However, sales and
exchanges of timber for lump-sum payments must be
reported on Form 1099-S.
Report sales of agricultural commodities under a
regulated futures contract, sales of derivative interests in
agricultural commodities, and sales of receipts for agricultural
commodities issued by a designated warehouse on Form
1099-B. A designated warehouse is a warehouse,
depository, or other similar entity designated by a commodity
exchange in which or out of which a particular type of
agricultural commodity is deliverable to satisfy a regulated
futures contract. Sales of warehouse receipts issued by any
other warehouse are not reportable.
Sales of precious metals. A sale of a precious metal
(gold, silver, platinum, or palladium) in any form for which the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has not
approved trading by regulated futures contract (RFC) is not
reportable. Further, even if the sale is of a precious metal in a
form for which the CFTC has approved trading by RFC, the
sale is not reportable if the quantity, by weight or by number
of items, is less than the minimum required quantity to satisfy
a CFTC-approved RFC.
For example, a broker selling a single gold coin does not
need to file Form 1099-B even if the coin is of such form and
quality that it could be delivered to satisfy a CFTC-approved
RFC if all CFTC-approved contracts for gold coins currently
call for delivery of at least 25 coins.
Sales of precious metals for a single customer during a
24-hour period must be aggregated and treated as a single
sale to determine if this exception applies. This exception
does not apply if the broker knows or has reason to know that
a customer, either alone or with a related person, is engaging
in sales to avoid information reporting.

These rules apply to:
Any broker,
Anyone that acts as a custodian of securities in the
ordinary course of a trade or business,
Any issuer of securities,
Any trustee or custodian of an individual retirement plan,
or
Any agent of the above.
These rules do not apply to:
The beneficial owner of a security or any agent substituted
for an undisclosed beneficial owner,
Any governmental unit or any agency or instrumentality of
a governmental unit holding escheated securities, or
Any organization that holds and transfers obligations
among members as a service to its members.
Information required. Each transfer statement must
include:
Date the statement is furnished,
Name, address, and telephone number of the person
furnishing the statement,
Name, address, and telephone number of the broker
receiving custody of the security,
Name of the customer(s) for the account from which the
security is transferred,
Account number for the transferring account and, if
different, the receiving account,
CUSIP number of the transferred security,
Number of shares or units,
Type of security (such as stock),
Date the transfer was initiated and settlement date of the
transfer (if known), and
The security's total adjusted basis, original acquisition
date, and, if applicable, the holding period adjustment under
section 1091.
The adjusted basis, original acquisition date, and holding
period adjustment are not required if the transfer statement
identifies the security as a noncovered security.
If the names of the customer(s) for the transferring and
receiving accounts are not the same, the transfer statement
must also include the name of the customer(s) for the
account to which the security is transferred. However, if the
transfer is to or from an account for which a broker,

No reporting on Form 1099-B will be required for
securities futures contracts (SFCs) unless guidance
issued after Notice 2003-8, which is on page 310 of
Internal Revenue Bulletin 2003-4 at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/
irb03-04.pdf, imposes such a reporting obligation.

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Exemption certificate. A broker may require an exempt
recipient to file a properly completed Form W-9, Request for
Taxpayer Identification Number and Certification, or similar
form. A broker may treat an exempt recipient that fails to do
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Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

is deemed to furnish to you, unless the issuer statement is
incomplete or you know it is incorrect. Take into account only
those organizational actions taken by the issuer of the
security during the period you held custody of the security
(not including the settlement date on which you received a
transferred security). If you receive or are deemed to receive
an issuer statement after filing Form 1099-B, you must file a
corrected Form 1099-B within 30 days of receiving the issuer
statement. But you do not have to file a corrected Form
1099-B if you receive the issuer statement more than 3 years
after you filed the original Form 1099-B. If you receive or are
deemed to receive an issuer statement after furnishing a
transfer statement for a covered security, you must furnish a
corrected transfer statement within 15 days of receiving the
issuer statement. But you do not have to furnish a corrected
transfer statement if you receive the issuer statement more
than 18 months after you furnished the original transfer
statement.

custodian, or other person subject to the transfer reporting
rules is the customer, the transfer statement must treat the
beneficial owner or, if applicable, an agent substituted by an
undisclosed beneficial owner, as the customer for both
accounts, and the broker receiving the transfer statement
should treat the security as held for the beneficial owner or
the beneficial owner's agent regardless of the customer listed
for the broker's account.
The person giving and the broker receiving the transfer
statement can agree to combine the information in any
format or to use a code in place of one or more required
items. Determine the adjusted basis and other information to
be reported as explained in these instructions. If the basis of
the transferred security is determined using an average basis
method, any securities acquired more than 5 years prior to
the transfer may be reported on a single statement on which
the original acquisition date is reported as “various,” but only
if the other information reported applies to all the securities.

More information. For more information, see Form 8937
and its instructions and Regulations section 1.6045B-1.

Effect on Form 1099-B and other transfer statements.
In preparing Form 1099-B or a transfer statement for
securities you transfer to someone else, you must take into
account all the information (other than securities
classifications) reported on a transfer statement you receive,
unless the statement is incomplete or you know it is incorrect.
If you do not receive a required transfer statement by the due
date, you must request one from the transferor. If a complete
transfer statement is not furnished, you may treat the security
as noncovered. However, you must file a corrected Form
1099-B within 30 days of receiving a transfer statement
indicating that the security is a covered security. You do not
have to file a corrected Form 1099-B if you receive the
statement more than 3 years after you filed the original Form
1099-B. You must also furnish a corrected transfer statement
within 15 days of receiving a transfer statement indicating
that a security is a covered security if you transferred the
security transferred to you. You do not have to furnish a
corrected transfer statement if you receive the transfer
statement more than 18 months after you furnished your
transfer statement.

Barter Exchanges

A barter exchange is any person or organization with
members or clients that contract with each other (or with the
barter exchange) to jointly trade or barter property or
services. The term does not include arrangements that
provide solely for the informal exchange of similar services
on a noncommercial basis. Persons who do not contract with
a barter exchange but who trade services do not file Form
1099-B. However, they may have to file Form 1099-MISC.
Transactional/aggregate reporting. Barter exchanges
involving noncorporate members or clients must report each
transaction on a separate Form 1099-B. Transactions
involving corporate members or clients of a barter exchange
may be reported on an aggregate basis.
Member information. In the recipient area of Form 1099-B,
enter information about the member or client that provided
the property or services in the exchange.
Exceptions. Barter exchanges are not required to file Form
1099-B for:
1. Exchanges through a barter exchange having fewer
than 100 transactions during the year,
2. Exempt foreign persons as defined in Regulations
section 1.6045-1(g)(1), or
3. Exchanges involving property or services with a fair
market value of less than $1.00.

More information. For more information about transfer
statements, including definitions, exceptions, rules for gift
transfers, transfers from a decedent's estate, and transfers of
borrowed securities, see Regulations section 1.6045A-1.

Issuer Returns for Actions Affecting Basis
An issuer of a specified security (defined later) that takes an
organizational action that affects the basis of the security
must file an issuer return on Form 8937. This applies to
organizational actions after 2010 (after 2011 if the stock is in
a regulated investment company). The return is due on or
before the 45th day following the organizational action or, if
earlier, January 15 of the next calendar year.

Statements to Recipients
If you are required to file Form 1099-B, you must provide a
statement to the recipient. For more information about the
requirement to furnish a statement to the recipient, see part
M in the 2013 General Instructions for Certain Information
Returns.

An issuer is not required to file this return if, by the due
date, the issuer posts the return with the required information
in a readily accessible format in an area of its primary public
website dedicated to this purpose and, for 10 years, keeps
the return accessible to the public on its primary public
website or the primary public website of any successor
organization.

2nd TIN Not.
You may enter an “X” in this box if you were notified by the
IRS twice within 3 calendar years that the payee provided an
incorrect taxpayer identification number (TIN). If you mark
this box, the IRS will not send you any further notices about
this account. However, if you received both IRS notices in the
same year, or if you received them in different years but they
both related to information returns filed for the same year, do

Effect on Form 1099-B and transfer statements. In
preparing Form 1099-B or a transfer statement, you must
take into account all the information reported by the issuer of
the security on a statement that the issuer furnishes to you or
Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

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(mark-to-market method of accounting for marketable stock
in a passive foreign investment company), 852(b)(4)(A),
857(b)(8), 852(b)(4)(B) (regulated investment company and
real estate investment trust adjustments), and Regulations
section 1.1221-2(b) (hedging transactions).

not check the box at this time. For purposes of the
two-notices-in-3-years rule, you are considered to have
received one notice, and you are not required to send a
second “B” notice to the taxpayer upon receipt of the second
notice. See part N in the 2013 General Instructions for
Certain Information Returns for more information.

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Box 1d. Stock or Other Symbol

For more information on the TIN Matching System
offered by the IRS, see the 2013 General
Instructions for Certain Information Returns.

Enter the stock or other symbol of securities sold.

Box 1e. Quantity Sold

CUSIP Number

Enter the quantity sold.

For transactional reporting by brokers, enter the CUSIP
(Committee on Uniform Security Identification Procedures)
number of the security or other applicable identifying number.

Box 2a. Stocks, Bonds, etc.
Enter the aggregate gross cash proceeds from all
dispositions of securities (including short sales),
commodities, or forward contracts. Show a loss, such as one
from a closing transaction on a forward contract, as a
negative amount by enclosing it in parentheses.

Account Number
The account number is required if you have multiple
accounts for a recipient for whom you are filing more than
one Form 1099-B. Additionally, the IRS encourages you to
designate an account number for all Forms 1099-B that you
file. See part L in the 2013 General Instructions for Certain
Information Returns.

For sales before 2014, you may, but are not required to,
reduce gross proceeds by commissions and transfer taxes, if
that is consistent with your books. For securities sold
because of the exercise of an option granted or acquired
before 2014, you may, but are not required to, take into
account option premiums in determining gross proceeds if
that is consistent with your books. If you reduce gross
proceeds by commissions, transfer taxes, or option
premiums, check the second box in box 2a. Otherwise,
check the first box.

Box 1a. Date of Sale or Exchange
For broker transactions, enter the trade date of the sale or
exchange. For short sales, see Short sales of securities,
earlier. For barter exchanges, enter the date that cash,
property, a credit, or scrip is actually or constructively
received.

Do not include amounts shown in boxes 9 through 12.

Box 1b. Date of Acquisition

If identical stock is sold at separate times on the same
calendar day by a single trade order and a single
confirmation is given that reports to the customer an
aggregate price or an average price per share, you can
determine gross proceeds by averaging the proceeds for
each share. However, do not do this if the customer notifies
you in writing of an intent to determine the proceeds from the
sale by the actual proceeds per share and you receive that
notification by January 15 of the calendar year following the
year of the sale. You may extend the January 15 deadline but
not beyond the due date for filing Form 1099-B.

Enter the acquisition date of any securities sold. Leave this
box blank if:
The securities sold were acquired on a variety of dates, or
You check box 6a and do not choose to complete box 1b.
For short sales, see Short sales of securities, earlier.

Box 1c. Type of Gain or Loss
Determine whether the gain or loss is short-term or long-term
under section 1222. In making the determination, you must
do the following.
Consider any information reported on a transfer statement.
Consider any information reported on Form 8937.
Apply the rules for stock acquired from a decedent.
Apply the rules for stock acquired as a gift.
If a customer acquired securities that caused a loss from a
sale of other securities to be both nondeductible under
section 1091 and reported in box 5 of an earlier Form
1099-B, use the rules in section 1223(3) to determine the
holding period of the acquired securities.
In the case of a short sale, report whether any gain or loss
on the closing of the short sale is short-term or long-term
based on the acquisition date of the security delivered to
close the short sale. Apply the rule in section 1233(d), if
applicable.
You are not required to consider other transactions,
elections, or events occurring outside the account when
determining whether the gain or loss on the sale is short-term
or long-term. You are also not required to apply section 1259
(constructive sales), 475 (mark-to-market method of
accounting), 1092 (straddles), 1233(b)(2) (short sales), 1296

Do not include any accrued interest on bonds sold
between payment dates (or on a payment date) in this box.
Instead, report, this accrued interest on Form 1099-INT.
For reporting an acquisition of control or substantial
change in capital structure, see page 2.

Box 2b. Check If Loss Not Allowed Based on
Amount in Box 2a
See Acquisition of control or substantial change in capital
structure, earlier.

Box 3. Cost or Other Basis
Enter the adjusted basis of any securities sold unless the
security is not a covered security and you check box 6a. If
you check box 6a and are not reporting basis, leave box 3
blank. Enter “0” in box 3 only if the securities sold actually
had a basis of zero.
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Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

the customer leaves the shares with a custodian or agent in
an account and acquires identical shares of stock at different
prices in the account.
Stock in most mutual funds or other regulated investment
companies.
Stock acquired after 2010 in connection with a dividend
reinvestment plan that meets the requirements of
Regulations section 1.1012-1(e)(6).
Compute basis using the average basis method if:
The customer elects that method, or
You choose the average basis method as your default
method, and the customer does not give you any other
instructions.
Generally, determine the average basis of a share of stock
by dividing the aggregate basis of all shares of identical stock
in an account by the total number of shares, regardless of
holding period. But see Regulations section 1.1012-1(e) for
details.

Covered security. A covered security is any of the
following.
A specified security (defined next) acquired for cash in an
account after 2010, except stock for which the average basis
method is available.
Stock for which the average basis method is available and
that is acquired for cash in an account after 2011.
A specified security transferred to an account if the broker
or other custodian of the account receives a transfer
statement (explained earlier) reporting the security as a
covered security.
A security acquired due to a stock dividend, stock split,
reorganization, redemption, stock conversion,
recapitalization, corporate division, or other similar action, if
the basis of the acquired security is determined from the
basis of a covered security.
Specified security. A specified security is any share of
stock (or any interest treated as stock, such as an American
Depositary Receipt) in an entity organized as, or treated for
federal tax purposes as, a corporation (foreign or domestic).
For this purpose, a security classified as stock by the issuer
is treated as stock. If the issuer has not classified the
security, the security is not treated as stock unless the broker
knows that the security is reasonably classified as stock
under general federal tax principles.

Adjusted basis. The adjusted basis is:
The initial basis (defined next) as of the date the security is
acquired in an account, plus
The commissions and transfer taxes related to the sale to
the extent not accounted for in gross proceeds.
In reporting the adjusted basis, take into account all
information, other than the classification of the security (such
as stock), reported on a transfer statement or issuer return
furnished to you or deemed furnished to you, unless that
statement or return is incomplete or you know it is incorrect.
See Transfer Statement and Issuer Return for Actions
Affecting Basis, earlier. Also, treat Form 2439 as an issuer
return and take into account the effects of undistributed
capital gains reported to you on the form by a regulated
investment company or real estate investment trust.
You are not required to consider other transactions,
elections, or events occurring outside the account when
determining basis.
You are also not required to apply section 1259
(constructive sales), section 475 (mark-to-market method of
accounting), and section 1296 (mark-to-market method of
accounting for marketable stock in a passive foreign
investment company).

Noncovered security. A noncovered security is any
security that is not a covered security.
The following securities are not covered securities.
Stock acquired in 2011 that was transferred in 2011 to a
dividend reinvestment plan that meets the requirements of
Regulations section 1.1012-1(e)(6). However, a covered
security acquired in 2011 and transferred to a dividend
reinvestment plan after 2011 remains a covered security. For
purposes of this rule, stock is considered transferred to a
dividend reinvestment plan if it is held in a plan that is not a
dividend reinvestment plan and the plan amends its plan
documents to become a dividend reinvestment plan. The
stock is considered transferred as of the effective date of the
plan amendments.
A security acquired due to a stock dividend, stock split,
reorganization, redemption, stock conversion,
recapitalization, corporate division, or other similar action, if
the basis of the acquired security is determined from the
basis of a noncovered security.
A security that, when acquired, did not have to be reported
on Form 1099-B because it was acquired from an exempt
recipient or an exempt foreign person as defined in
Regulations section 1.6045-1(g)(1).
A security for which reporting is required by Regulations
section 1.6049-5(d)(3)(ii) (certain securities owned by a
foreign intermediary or flow-through entity).

Initial basis. If a customer paid cash for a security, the initial
basis is:
1. The total cash paid by the customer or credited
against the customer's account, plus
2. The commissions and transfer taxes to buy the
security.
You may, but do not have to:
Take option premiums into account to determine the initial
basis of securities acquired by exercising an option granted
or acquired before 2014, or
Increase initial basis for income recognized upon the
exercise of a compensatory option or the vesting or exercise
of other equity-based compensation arrangements granted
or acquired before 2014.
You must report the basis of identical stock by averaging
the basis of each share if:
The stock was purchased at separate times on the same
calendar day in executing a single trade order, and
The broker executing the trade provides a single
confirmation to the customer that reports an aggregate total
price or an average price per share.

Identification of securities. If the customer has acquired
securities on different dates or at different prices and sells
less than the entire position in the security, report the sale
according to the customer's adequate and timely
identification of the security to be sold. If no identification is
provided, report the sale in this order.
1. Any shares for which the acquisition date is unknown.
2. The shares that were acquired first, whether they are
covered or noncovered securities.
Average basis method. Generally, the average basis
method is available for either of the following types of stock if
Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

-7-

account with respect to covered securities with the same
CUSIP number. You are permitted, but are not required, to
report in box 5 all loss disallowed under section 1091. For
example, you may report a disallowed loss even though a
security is sold in one account and repurchased in a different
account. Increase the adjusted basis of the acquired
securities by the amount of the disallowed loss reported in
box 5.

However, do not average the basis if the customer timely
notifies you in writing of an intent to determine basis by the
actual cost per share.
The initial basis of a security transferred to an account is
generally the basis reported on the transfer statement. If a
transfer statement indicates that the security is acquired as a
gift, you must apply the relevant basis rules for property
acquired by gift in determining the initial basis, except you do
not have to adjust the basis for gift tax. Treat the initial basis
as equal to the gross proceeds from the sale if:
Neither gain or loss is recognized because of the basis
rules for gift property, or
The initial basis depends on fair market value as of the
date of the gift and you neither know nor can readily
ascertain this value.

You also do not have to apply the wash sale rules if:
The purchased security is transferred to another account
before the wash sale,
The purchased security was purchased in another account
and later transferred into the account from which securities
were sold,
The securities are treated as held in separate accounts, or
The customer has notified you in writing (including in an
electronic format) that he or she has made a valid and timely
mark-to-market election under section 475 and identifies the
account from which the securities were sold as containing
only securities subject to the election.

Short sales. In the case of a short sale, report the adjusted
basis of the security delivered to close the short sale.
Wash sales. If a customer acquired securities that caused a
loss from a sale of other securities to be both nondeductible
under section 1091 and reported in box 5 of an earlier Form
1099-B, increase the adjusted basis of the acquired
securities by the amount of the disallowed loss.

For more details, see Regulations section 1.6045-1(d)(6)
(iii).

Corporate mergers. Report only the net reduction in basis
between stock exchanged and stock received when
reporting the payment of cash paid as part of a corporate
merger, reorganization, or similar event that is taxable only to
the extent that cash or property other than stock or securities
(“boot”) is received and for which no loss can be recognized.
Enter only the amount of the reduction attributable to the
amount reported in box 2a. Enter the amount as a positive
number. However, do not apply this rule, and instead report
adjusted basis as described earlier, for any stock considered
to have been redeemed or sold, for example, fractional
shares of stock resulting from the merger that are only paid in
cash.

Example. Your customer Joe buys 100 shares of
covered securities for $1,000 in September 2013. In October
2013, he sells them for $600. Within 30 days of the sale, he
buys 75 shares with the same CUSIP number in the same
account. Since his loss is $400 ($1,000 minus $600) but the
loss on 75 shares is disallowed, his disallowed loss is $300.
Report the $600 gross proceeds from the sale in box 2a,
$1,000 basis in box 3, and $300 wash sale disallowed in
box 5.

Box 6a. Check If a Noncovered Security
You may check the box if reporting the sale of a noncovered
security. Do not check this box if reporting the sale of a
covered security.

Example. Your customer Fred buys 100 shares of
covered stock in MNO Corporation for $5,000 in February
2013. MNO Corporation merges with PQR Corporation in
December 2013. The merger is taxable only to the extent that
boot is received. Fred receives 100 shares of PQR stock with
a value of $4,700 and $800 cash boot in exchange for his
MNO stock. Fred's resulting basis in the PQR stock is
$4,700. Report the $800 cash boot in box 2a, and report
$300 in box 3 to reflect the net reduction in basis from $5,000
(for the MNO stock) to $4,700 (for the PQR stock).

If you check this box, you do not have to complete boxes
1b, 1c, 3, and 5, and you do not have to check box 6b. If you
check box 6a and choose to complete boxes 1b, 1c, 3, and
5, you are not subject to penalties under section 6721 or
6722 for failure to report boxes 1b, 1c, 3, and 5 correctly. If
you do not check box 6a, you are subject to penalties under
sections 6721 and 6722 for failure to report boxes 1b, 1c, 3,
and 5 correctly even if you are reporting the sale of a
noncovered security.

Box 4. Federal Income Tax Withheld
Enter backup withholding. For example, persons who have
not furnished their TIN to you in the manner required are
subject to withholding on certain amounts required to be
reported on this form. This is called backup withholding. For
more information on backup withholding, including the rate,
see part N in the 2013 General Instructions for Certain
Information Returns.

Box 6b. Check If Basis Reported to IRS

Use Form W-9 to request the TIN of the recipient. For
foreign recipients, request the recipient complete the
appropriate Form W-8. See the Instructions for the Requester
of Forms W-8BEN, W-8ECI, W-8EXP, and W-8IMY.

Enter the gross amounts received by a member or client of a
barter exchange. This includes cash received, the fair market
value of any property or services received, and the fair
market value of any trade credits or scrip credited to the
member's or client's account. However, do not include
amounts received by a member or client in a subsequent
exchange of credits or scrip. Do not report negative amounts.

Check this box if:
You are not checking box 6a, or
You are checking box 6a but are reporting basis to the IRS
in box 3 anyway.

Box 7. Bartering

Box 5. Wash Sale Loss Disallowed
Report any loss disallowed under section 1091 only if both
the sale and purchase transactions occur in the same
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Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

Box 8. Description

Box 10. Unrealized Profit or (Loss) on Open
Contracts—12/31/2012

Enter a brief description of the disposition item (for example,
100 shares of XYZ Corp. stock). If necessary, abbreviate the
description so that it fits within box 8. Also, enter the class or
classes of stock (for example, preferred, common, etc.) that
were exchanged, whether for cash or other property.
Abbreviate the class to fit the entry. For example, enter “C”
for common stock, “P” for preferred, or “O ” for other. Also
abbreviate any subclasses.

Enter the unrealized profit or (loss) on open regulated futures
or foreign currency contracts at the end of 2012.

Box 11. Unrealized Profit or (Loss) on Open
Contracts—12/31/2013
Enter the unrealized profit or (loss) on open regulated futures
or foreign currency contracts at the end of 2013.

For bartering transactions, describe the services or
property provided.

Box 12. Aggregate Profit or (Loss) on Contracts

For regulated futures contracts and forward contracts,
enter “RFC” or other appropriate description.

Enter the aggregate profit or (loss) for the year from regulated
futures or foreign currency contracts. Use boxes 9, 10, and
11 to figure the aggregate profit or (loss).

See Acquisition of control or substantial change in capital
structure, earlier, for the information to enter in box 8 for that
type of transaction.

Box 13. State
Enter the two-letter postal abbreviation of the state for which
state income taxes are being withheld.

Regulated Futures Contracts (Boxes 9 Through
12)—Brokers Only:

If you complete boxes 9 through 12, do not complete any
other numbered box except box 8 and, if applicable, box 4.

Box 14. State Identification No.

Box 9. Profit or (Loss) Realized in 2013 on Closed
Contracts

Box 15. State Tax Withheld

Enter the payer's state identification number.

Enter the state income tax withheld.

Enter the profit or (loss) realized by the customer on closed
regulated futures or foreign currency contracts in 2013.

Instructions for Form 1099-B (2013)

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File Typeapplication/pdf
File Title2013 Instructions for Form 1099-B
SubjectInstructions for Form 1099-B
AuthorW:CAR:MP:FP
File Modified2013-09-16
File Created2013-06-12

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