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capital gain
(redirected from Capital gains)

   Also found in: Financial, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

capital gain

Increase in the value of capital assets, such as houses or stocks and shares, between purchase and sale. The capital gain is nominally the sale price less the purchase price. Individuals are liable to Capital Gains Tax on gains above a specified level (although in the UK no tax is payable on a person's principal residence). In the case of corporations, capital gains are listed in the shareholders' funds on the balance sheet.

Tax is payable by individuals on profits (the capital gain) made when assets, including securities and real property, are sold at higher prices than they were bought for. Most countries tax capital gain, although the tax is payable on realized rather than accrued income. Critics of capital gains tax point out that only monetary, rather than real, gain is taxed, and so may be distorted in times of high inflation.



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The federal government's Budget 2006 proposals to eliminate capital gains tax on donations of publicly-traded securities to public charities, has been welcomed whole heartily by the charitable sector.
643(b)-1 explains that it will respect state statutes that provide for a reasonable apportionment between the income and remainder beneficiaries of a trust's total return for the year, including ordinary and tax-exempt income, capital gains and appreciation.
That's why the Section 1031 exchange, a method of protecting capital gains on real estate from unnecessary tax liability that was made popular by California property owners, is increasingly in favor here in New York as property values continue soaring.
 
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