Personal Finance & Money Asked by spac splitter on March 12, 2021
I bought 400 shares of IPOB.U at $11.84/unit. Each unit can be split into 1 share + 1/3 warrant when the holder desires (after the stock and warrants start trading freely, but not before.)
I called my broker a few months later to split the units into stock (IPOB) and warrants (IPOB.WS) and I ended up with 400 shares and 133 warrants. However the broker (e-Trade) set the cost basis for these new shares post reorganization to $0, and left it up to me to calculate the appropriate basis.
Here are my questions:
In my opinion following is applicable in your case.
The acquisition price you received on original share must be spread evenly on new securities. This means the new share should get a cost basis $8.88 and the warrant should get cost basis of $2.96. My justification will be that when you got the original share split into 2, that transaction didn’t result in any gain and your investment price didn’t change too. Hence, the original cost basis should also be retained.
When you trade either the new share or the new warrant, capital gain calculation must have the start date as of the original acquisition date. Again, the investment you made has not returned any gain since the acquisition of original share.
Some investment firms or the company release fair market values for a big corporate action. Most US companies doesn’t have complicated FMV drivers. Some countries request share holder to apply average price of last 30 days for gain calculation.
Answered by Abs on March 12, 2021
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