Week 2 discussion Dq1 At-risk Rules and At-risk Limitations Before the passage of the 1986 Act,…

Week 2 discussion Dq1 At-risk Rules and At-risk Limitations Before the passage of the 1986 Act,…

Week 2 discussion
Dq1
At-risk Rules and At-risk Limitations
Before the passage of the 1986 Act, Congress attempted to impose restrictions on the abuses associated with the at-risk provisions of 1976 as set out in Code Section 465. In summary, the at-risk rules disallowed losses in excess of the investment. Discuss the at-risk limitations relating to individuals and closely held corporations.
Dq2
So You Want to Own and Rent Real Estate?
Admit it. You've watched that late-night infomercial describing how you can become a multimillionaire virtually overnight by leveraging your good looks and sparkling personality (and little else…) to invest in real estate. All joking aside, investing in real estate does present some opportunity for the creation of wealth, much like any other investment does. Taxation of rental real estate, however, does present some unique rules, and these rules can have a dramatic impact on the investor's realized gain or loss from the real-estate rental activity. Let's begin outlining the tax consequences by describing the various capacities in which an individual can own and rent real estate. Asked differently, are there distinctions in the tax law that depend on the manner in which the property is held or used, such as between those who rent real estate as a full-time business and those who merely rent a vacation home? What are the rules that we follow in telling one type of rental property or rental ownership from another?