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HiPOS Tax Treatment

A few years ago, we published an article about the Tax Treatment for ZEGA’s HiPOS strategy. Some advisors found this especially helpful for newer clients going in to see their tax preparers. So below is a copy of the original piece with some additions and edits.

Since the original article, ZEGA has added a few other strategies including our (ZBIG) ZEGA Buffered Indexed Growth strategy to our Buy and Hedge family of offerings. So here are a few bullet points for reference:

  1. Tax Treatment: While the trades executed in a HiPOS account are all short-term in nature, the options used get special tax treatment. Options on SPX, NDX, and RUT are all Section 1256 contracts. Section 1256 positions held for less than a year and closed at a profit are NOT treated as 100% short-term gains. Instead, section 1256 contract gains are taxed at 60% long-term rate and 40% short-term rate.
  2. 1099s: Last year, TD Ameritrade’s 1099 categorized the HiPOS positions in the Section 1256 Contracts section. Here is a link to a hypothetical example.
  3. Form 6781: When submitting tax returns, Form 6781 is usually required along with the filing. While we recommend consulting a tax expert, here is a link to a sample 6781 form.  
  4. You can see that in Part 1, the 40% and 60% treatment are identified. Note that none of the boxes on the top of the page are checked, as none apply.

In our opinion, one of the best things about the HiPOS strategy is the tax treatment. First, you get the LT cap gain rate for 60% of a trade that was clearly short in duration. And second, come tax season, you do not even have to report all of the individual trades that ZEGA did in your account. Instead, you get to just report the 4-line items from the 1099. Input them into your tax prep software and the taxes are calculated for you! Time saved compared to most actively traded strategies!