Fidelity Year End Tax statements DISCREPANCIES

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  #16  
Old 03-21-2022, 09:22 AM
Stu from NYC Stu from NYC is offline
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Originally Posted by collie1228 View Post
A former GE finance guy here too. My favorite tactic at GE was when a vendor offered an early payment discount, GE would pay it late and take the discount too. Don't remember any of those vendors complaining (usually small guys who couldn't afford to take on GE). Sad.
Companies like GE would demand 90 day terms so that their vendors could finance their business at no cost to GE.

Whirlpool purchased one of my customers some years ago and demanded 90 day terms and a 10% discount because they were Whirlpool. Fortunately for me was able to wave bye bye.
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Old 05-28-2022, 10:25 AM
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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
Made a customer care fidelity rep spend an hour plus on a saturday afternoon proving out that there is an issue, and it may be systemic. $72.15 higher on the 1099 MISC than the actual cash payments and external documentation. However, every month is wrong and more than one company is wrong, so its possible to be a systemic issue, which I told the very junior weekend warrior.

Yeah, I am a small time investor, but i make sure that all the numbers going into the tax return are correct on the revenue top line. . . . there is no allowance for discrepancies for income.

So if you have Fidelity and have Royalty payments from royalty trusts, please check your 1099 MISC versus the actual company supplied documentation.

And this time, first time, I took the turbo tax premiere audit defense as I am not thinking that fidelity will come back with corrected statements in time.

and yes, with finance, what number do you want the answer to be?
What is the point? Fidelity, SATURDAY, "jr. staff person," esoteric problem. The other brokerages are mon-fri 9-5. There is a contact person on your account. You can bet a difference between the Fidelity statement and the tax you pay will result in an inquiry, AN AUDIT, by the IRS.
  #18  
Old 05-28-2022, 10:34 AM
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Originally Posted by Stu from NYC View Post
Companies like GE would demand 90 day terms so that their vendors could finance their business at no cost to GE.

Whirlpool purchased one of my customers some years ago and demanded 90 day terms and a 10% discount because they were Whirlpool. Fortunately for me was able to wave bye bye.
Fair is a concept. Reality is what is. A small customer, you owe us five dollars and twenty cents and we are no shipping your order till you pay it. A big customer, who is say 20% of your total sales. Check lost in the mail, ok send me another one. I've asked customers how it is the post office looses checks but bills always seem to arrive on time.
  #19  
Old 05-28-2022, 10:39 AM
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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
Yes, the Fidelity year end tax statement detail does not agree to their monthly statements of distribution, and does not agree with the Royalty distributions statements from the two oil and gas company statements directly received from them.

And then Turbo tax can't keep the two different royalty company statements separate, I have entered them twice, and The Turbo Tax Schedule C isn't a direct entry but more of a rube goldberg set of questions.

The detail needed to file for public royalty trusts in the oil and gas industry is just rube goldbergish. . all this for a $37 royalty payment from one company which i owned for 15 days as a trade, which was supposed to be a long term hold.

So yes, turbo tax sucks for complex tax filings, and i am waiting to talk to fidelity to see what they say on Monday, as they have over $100 more in distributions than i actually received, and that the LP said i should have received

So yeah, you don't need a CPA to see the different amounts from two different sources, but why I hate accounting.

finance guy, not accounting guy, but we know the same things
Similar reason why I recommended it’s not worth the hassle to invest in ETF’s in a taxable account.
  #20  
Old 05-28-2022, 10:47 AM
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This made me chuckle. I got my MBA in Finance and my primary finance professor taught Michael Milken everything he knew. Someone asked him what the difference was between a finance and accounting major:

"If you ask an accounting major what two plus two is, he will answer, 'Four'. You ask a finance major, it'll be 'What do you want it to be?' "
There’s another big difference between the two professions, which is pay. That’s why I decided to get my MBA in Finance and Economics rather than accounting. Bean counters are a dime a dozen and are required to think systematically, not creatively. Therefore their earnings upside is capped. Finance professionals are constantly challenged to find undiscovered ways to creatively add value and earnings potential is almost unlimited if they are good at what they do.
  #21  
Old 07-14-2022, 11:52 AM
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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
Made a customer care fidelity rep spend an hour plus on a saturday afternoon proving out that there is an issue, and it may be systemic. $72.15 higher on the 1099 MISC than the actual cash payments and external documentation. However, every month is wrong and more than one company is wrong, so its possible to be a systemic issue, which I told the very junior weekend warrior.

Yeah, I am a small time investor, but i make sure that all the numbers going into the tax return are correct on the revenue top line. . . . there is no allowance for discrepancies for income.

So if you have Fidelity and have Royalty payments from royalty trusts, please check your 1099 MISC versus the actual company supplied documentation.

And this time, first time, I took the turbo tax premiere audit defense as I am not thinking that fidelity will come back with corrected statements in time.

and yes, with finance, what number do you want the answer to be?
Suggestion-I think it is a plus that Fidelity is opened on Saturday and you can reach a HUMAN 24 hours a day seven days a week. However, with complex issues it is wise to use normal mon-fri 9-5 when more staff is available.

As far as finance,"What do you want the number to be," perhaps the question is what will the IRS accept. Our tax code is ONLY 180,000 pages.
  #22  
Old 07-17-2022, 06:14 PM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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Just an update finally:

1) i got incomplete tax statements in the mail the first time around
2) i got a second tax statement in the mail that said "There are no changes to the first tax statement"
3) I found the correct tax statement on line, downloaded it, and it was changed from the prior year's format, so I misread the statement. ie, they put the information from the income statement distributed from the oil and gas trust in the filing on the next to last page, and the distributions to my account on the last page. (never before had they put the Oil and Gas revenue prior to distributions on my account tax statement, and I read it as my distributions, which was my miss reading. ie they are trying to be everything to me by including non distribution information, Little Miss helpful, but they could NOT perform points 1 and 2 correctly.)

Admission:
I was so irritated on points 1 and 2 that I wasn't correctly reading on point 3 with the little time remaining to file.

So 66% Fidelity at fault for the first two points
I am 33% at fault for the third point

In my advancing age, i get more easily irritated at professionals who underperform
and to whom I am paying money.

yes, I am human.

Last edited by CoachKandSportsguy; 07-17-2022 at 06:20 PM.
  #23  
Old 07-17-2022, 06:32 PM
RVJim RVJim is offline
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Originally Posted by CoachKandSportsguy View Post
Just an update finally:

1) i got incomplete tax statements in the mail the first time around
2) i got a second tax statement in the mail that said "There are no changes to the first tax statement"
3) I found the correct tax statement on line, downloaded it, and it was changed from the prior year's format, so I misread the statement. ie, they put the information from the income statement distributed from the oil and gas trust in the filing on the next to last page, and the distributions to my account on the last page. (never before had they put the Oil and Gas revenue prior to distributions on my account tax statement, and I read it as my distributions, which was my miss reading. ie they are trying to be everything to me by including non distribution information, Little Miss helpful, but they could NOT perform points 1 and 2 correctly.)

Admission:
I was so irritated on points 1 and 2 that I wasn't correctly reading on point 3 with the little time remaining to file.

So 66% Fidelity at fault for the first two points
I am 33% at fault for the third point

In my advancing age, i get more easily irritated at professionals who underperform
and to whom I am paying money.

yes, I am human.
You received the final correct information but somehow Fidelity is 66% at fault for your misreading the documents? That’s priceless logic.
  #24  
Old 07-18-2022, 07:30 AM
Robbb Robbb is offline
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Originally Posted by collie1228 View Post
A former GE finance guy here too. My favorite tactic at GE was when a vendor offered an early payment discount, GE would pay it late and take the discount too. Don't remember any of those vendors complaining (usually small guys who couldn't afford to take on GE). Sad.
Yea that's why many of us vendors stopped that practice and switched to discounts given upon the receipt of pre pay. Never extend terms to a company who you know will not honor an agreement.
  #25  
Old 07-18-2022, 08:15 AM
Haggar Haggar is offline
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Originally Posted by tophcfa View Post
There’s another big difference between the two professions, which is pay. That’s why I decided to get my MBA in Finance and Economics rather than accounting. Bean counters are a dime a dozen and are required to think systematically, not creatively. Therefore their earnings upside is capped. Finance professionals are constantly challenged to find undiscovered ways to creatively add value and earnings potential is almost unlimited if they are good at what they do.
Your comment is self-important about finance degrees, I got my accounting degree a long time ago. I've been the CFO of two public companies and the President of a cruise line. I got the jobs by thinking outside of the box using my background.

I've been in private practice as a CPA for 31 years now. Most "bean counters" as you call us are keyed upon giving the best tax advice we can but also consult and advise on matters of sales, expansion, pricing, equipment acquisition , mergers and acquisitions, buy sell agreements, retirement planning, etc. Not just "bean counters"!

On the subject the original poster brought up the problem Fidelity has and the other investments advisors have is they are waiting on information from the companies you invest in as to how "dividends" are broken up - into ordinary dividends, qualified dividends, Sec 1231 dividends, return of capital, non taxable dividends. This breakdown can change depending their own year end financial statements which aren't completed until months after 12/31/xx. They're a pain because returns are prepared based upon broker's preliminary tax statements and the returns cannot be filed because we have to wait and see if there are revisions. In years before 2021 we got two revisions to some of the original statements.
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Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence. John Adams

Last edited by Haggar; 07-18-2022 at 03:57 PM.
  #26  
Old 07-18-2022, 09:42 AM
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Likely we can blame this ALL on the ever changing tax laws coming out of the Deep State.
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Old 07-18-2022, 11:35 AM
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Likely we can blame this ALL on the ever changing tax laws coming out of the Deep State.
I think you can blame ALL of this on some old guy whose is past his prime that didn’t wait for his final information documents to be delivered. So he went on a crusade to prove he is still relevant to TOTV readers and some poor Fidelity customer service rep working the weekend shift. The movie Secondhand Lions comes to mind after reading this thread.
  #28  
Old 07-19-2022, 09:04 PM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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I think you can blame ALL of this on some old guy whose is past his prime that didn’t wait for his final information documents to be delivered. So he went on a crusade to prove he is still relevant to TOTV readers and some poor Fidelity customer service rep working the weekend shift. The movie Secondhand Lions comes to mind after reading this thread.
not great comprehension as there wasn't one coming in the mail, which would have the correct information, which was the point of the irritation of mailed document two which did not contain the missing information from the first document, but said there were no changes.

Accurately, the final information was available in early April.

Small comprehension issue with uncommon tax situations, but that's ok. .

the only correct interpretation you made from reading the post,

Quote:
some old guy whose is past his prime


If i had the means to have health insurance and not care for an elderly parent, I might just be living there and golfing everyday, and not filing any tax statements.

  #29  
Old 07-19-2022, 09:25 PM
CoachKandSportsguy CoachKandSportsguy is offline
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I've been in private practice as a CPA for 31 years now. Most "bean counters" as you call us are keyed upon giving the best tax advice we can but also consult and advise on matters of sales, expansion, pricing, equipment acquisition , mergers and acquisitions, buy sell agreements, retirement planning, etc. Not just "bean counters"!
yes, but managing corporate finances is way different than managing a portfolio of unlimited choices against a benchmark of a frictionless index. Most accountants I have worked don't have the intuitive business valuation of a good decision or poor decision. They know the processes and legal requirements.

They advise, but don't decide. they know the cost of everything, but the value of nothing. . .

And we can debate this all day long, and neither of us will change our opinions.

The future is much more uncertain that the past accounting.
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