nswd



Rents and rates and tithes and taxes

Christopher DeVocht, a carpenter from Vancouver Island, Canada, says he started out like a lot of day traders. After work, he’d read about trading on forums. His favorite things to trade were options on Tesla Inc. stock. […]

At the end of 2019, his account, with the brokerage division of Royal Bank of Canada, was worth C$88,000. Within two years, he’d turned that into C$415 million ($306 million), he says.

Some people would have cashed out. DeVocht didn’t. And when Tesla stock fell in 2022, he lost it all. […]

DeVocht now claims that the advice he received, geared mainly toward minimizing taxes, was negligent […] [Royal Bank of Canada] advised him to incorporate a company, roll all of his securities into it and conduct trades within the company “with a strategy of accumulating as many Tesla shares as possible and holding them for as long as possible,” DeVocht claims in the lawsuit. The idea was to convince Canadian tax authorities to view it as an investment holding company, not an active trading business, because he’d pay lower taxes that way.

{ Bloomberg | Continue reading }





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