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To record accrued interest on a zero coupon
bond, record bond interest that accrues in the normal way. In other
words, whatever amount shows as being accrued—this should appear on
the statement from your broker—record it as bond interest income.
After you record the bond interest that’s
accrued, you need to record a return of capital transaction that
adds this accrued interest back to the value of the bond. The amount
of this capital transaction, obviously, needs to equal the accrued
interest amount. But there is a twist here: You need to specify the
return of capital amount as a negative value. For example, if you
accrue $100 of interest on a zero coupon bond, you also need to
record a return of capital transaction for the bond equal to –$100.
By recording the return of capital
transaction, you in effect transfer the bond interest money from the
associated cash account and add it back to the zero coupon bond’s
value. In this way the associated cash account shows the correct
cash balance and the zero-coupon bond shows the correct cost basis.
The zero coupon bond’s cash basis equals the original purchase price
plus all the accrued interest that’s been recorded to date.
Derivatives
Derivatives are securities that derive their
value from some underlying security. For example, an option to sell
a stock, called a put, is a derivative. It derives its value from
the underlying security. Another derivative is an option to buy a
stock, called a call. You can use Money to keep records of
derivatives, such as puts and calls you buy.
In general, derivative record-keeping is quite
straightforward. If you buy a derivative, say a put or a call, and
later sell the derivative, you simply have a normal investment
transaction. You treat the purchase and later the sale in the same
way that you treat the purchase and sale of any stock. If you make
money, you realize a gain. If you lose money, you realize a loss.
If you buy or sell a put or call and hold the
option until it expires, things work almost the same way. However,
in this special case, you do need to record a Final Sale
transaction, and the sales price is zero. Obviously, if you hold a
put or call until it expires, you don’t actually sell the
derivative. But you need to record a sale transaction to reflect the
fact that the option is no longer worth anything.
These are the basic techniques you need to
know for put and call record keeping—and record keeping for similar
derivatives—but there are two special circumstances in which more
complicated record keeping is required.
Selling Puts and Calls
If you sell puts and calls—note that the
earlier discussion involves you in investing puts and calls—you need
to record the option as a regular buy or sell transaction. In other
words, if you sell a put and the person to whom you sell it
exercises the put, you record this transaction as a regular sales
transaction. Similarly, if you sell a call, you record the
transaction as a regular buy transaction.
If you sell a put or call option and the
option never gets exercised, you record the amount of money the
buyer pays you as Other Income.
Exercising Puts and Calls
Typically, individual investors don’t actually
exercise puts and calls that they buy. Instead, they simply sell the
option back to the broker. However, you might end up exercising a
put or call, and in this case, you need to perform special record
keeping.
To record the exercise of a put option, record
the sale of the put option at a price equal to zero. This zero-value
sale is how you record the expiration of the option. After you have
recorded the expiration of the option, you record the sale of the
stock in the same way that you record the sale of any stock.
Remember that a put is an option to sell stock.
To record the exercise of a call option,
record the sale of the call option at a price equal to zero. This
zero-value price lets you record the expiration of the option. After
you have recorded the expiration, you record a regular buy
transaction. Remember that a call option is an option to buy a
security.
Precious metals and commodities
You can treat investments in gold and other
precious metals, gold coins, agricultural items, and other
commodities in the same way that you treat shares of stock. Rather
than entering a share price, you enter a price per ounce or a price
per bushel. And rather than recording a specific number of shares,
you enter a specific number of whatever unit of measure is used to
describe the commodity. In the case of gold, for example, you might
enter the number of ounces. In the case of an agricultural item, you
might enter the number of bushels.
You can treat options to buy or sell
commodities in the same way that you treat options to buy or sell
securities. The earlier discussion on handling call and put options
discusses the techniques you use for this record keeping.
Seattle certified public accountant & author
Stephen L. Nelson wrote Quicken for Dummies and more than
100 other books as well. Nelson holds an MBA in Finance and an MS in
taxation. His web site is
http://www.stephenlnelson.com/ |