Closing the Books - Part 1
Today we'll begin the actual process to close the club's books for 2006. The procedures presented below are not the only way to close the club's books, but are the way that I have done them for the clubs I handle. If you have other suggestions, please post them as part of the message thread. In particular, I have no experience with bivio's AccountSync so there may be significant procedural differences that apply to clubs using that service.
Preparation
We need to gather the information necessary to close the books. Collect copies of all of the bank, broker and DRP statements for the year. If you've done your treasurer's tasks correctly throughout the year, you'll only need to refer to the December statements, but it's always useful to have everything close at hand. Since you won't have the December statements until sometime in January, you can't really begin your year-end tasks until then. In fact, I find that this week (the third week in January) is ideal for a first pass at the yearend tasks. On the other hand, you might want to wait even longer – until you receive your tax reporting documents from your bank, broker, DRPs, etc. These should be mailed to you by January 31, and should arrive in early February.
IMPORTANT NOTE: In recent years, many clubs have received corrected tax reporting documents from their brokers. These corrected documents usually don't arrive until late February or early March, so you may want to wait before filing your taxes. (We'll discuss this in the tax session.)
Reconciliation of Cash Balances and Security Holdings
The first thing to do is generate a valuation statement for December 31. You want to compare each of the cash balances on the report to the cash balances reported by your bank/broker. If there are any discrepancies, you need to identify and reconcile them.
Perhaps there's an outstanding check or a deposit in transit, but if there are errors, now is the time to find them and correct them. Generate a report of all of the club's transactions for the year.
CA3: Reports>Transaction Summary. Set the dates to 1/1/06 to 12/31/06 and check the box for Subtotal Tax Allocations
CAO: Reports>Transaction Summary. Set the dates to 1/1/06 to 12/31/06.
bivio: Accounting>Reports>Transaction History. Set the date to 12/31/2006.
I would look for missing dividend or interest entries first. Companies usually pay dividends quarterly, so there should be four entries for each company you've owned for the whole year. Interest is usually paid monthly, so there should be twelve interest entries. If your club uses margin, make sure your margin interest is entered as an expense and not as income. (More on that tomorrow).
After you've finished with the cash entries, compare your December 31 valuation statement against your yearend broker and DRP statements to confirm that your records show the same number of shares of each security as your broker/DRP. Don't worry if the closing price per share is different as that isn't important for our purposes.
If you find a difference, review your transaction report for a missing or doubled entry. If your club reinvests dividends, the most likely source of error is a dividend that was mistakenly recorded as a cash dividend and not a reinvested dividend. You can see this in the transaction summary/history report.
At this point, I also would not worry about reconciling the amount of dividends or interest reported on your year-end statements with your club records as brokers often report these amounts one way on the monthly statements and then reclassify them on the tax reporting documents.
Reconciliation of Income and Expense, Gain and Loss
Within a week or so, your tax documents should arrive from your bank, broker, DRPs, etc. There are six types of tax reporting documents your club may receive:
· 1099-B - Proceeds from Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions
· 1099-DIV - Dividends and Distributions
· 1099-INT - Interest Income
· 1099-MISC - Miscellaneous Income
· 1099-OID - Original Issue Discount
· Schedule K-1 (Form 1065) - Partner's Share of Income, Credits, Deductions, etc.
The first three are common and most clubs can expect to receive them; the other three are rare. You would receive a 1099-MISC if your club's shares were lent by your broker to another investor to sell short and you received payments from that investor in lieu of the dividends/interest you should have received. You would receive a 1099-OID if you invest in certain types of securitized loans such as REMICs, and CMOs. You would receive a Schedule K-1 if your club invested in another partnership and/or certain natural resource royalty trusts. If your club receives one of these three forms, you will have to take additional steps to close your books and prepare your taxes that are beyond the scope of this workshop.
We'll need to look at a few other reports to reconcile the tax documents against the club's records: a tax allocation report and a capital gains report. Before you generate these reports, you may need to confirm that each of your club's investments is correctly classified within the accounting software.
CA3: 1) Securities, Double-click on each security and choose among Common Stock, REIT, Other Publicly Traded, Mutual Fund or Fixed Income Investment, or
Tools>Year-End Tasks and go through the wizard. You will encounter a screen where you can review and change all of the security settings.
2) Tools>Allocate Income and Expenses. Select 2006.
3) Reports>Club Capital Gains. Click the Prev. Full Year button.
4) Reports>Allocation of Income and Expenses. Choose 12/31/2006.
CAO: 1) Securities>Update Security Settings. Click on the edit link for each security and choose among Stock (common, reit or other), Mutual Fund or Other.
2) Accounting>Utilities>Allocate Income and Expenses. Select 2006.
3) Reports>Club Capital Gains. Set the dates from 1/1/06 to 12/31/06.
4) Reports>Allocation of Income and Expenses. Choose 2006.
bivio: 1) Reports>Member Tax Allocations. Choose 2006.
2) Reports>Capital Gains and Losses. Choose 2006.
Interest
Compare the interest reported on your 1099-INT (box 1 and/or box 3) with the totals reported on either the transaction report or the allocation report. If your club received any tax-exempt interest, it will not be reported on the 1099-INT, but it will appear in your club reports. In CA3 and CAO, it will be included in the "Cash Income and Expenses" section of the transaction report in the "Income" column. In bivio, you will have to subtract the tax-exempt interest from the interest total in the transaction report. Tax-exempt interest is reported separately on all allocation reports.
Dividends
Compare the ordinary dividends reported on your 1099-DIV (box 1a) with the total dividends reported on either the transaction report or the allocation report. Sources of differences could be missing entries (though we should have caught them in the earlier reconciliation of cash balances and stock holdings), and/or foreign taxes which weren't entered correctly in the software.
Next compare the qualified dividends reported on your 1099-DIV (box 1b) with the qualified dividends reported on the allocation report. If you find differences, make sure that you entered the ex-dividend dates correctly. In bivio, you get a chance to review the ex-dividend dates when you go through the tax interview. In CA3/CAO, you can review your entries by preparing a Security Dividends report.
CA3: Reports>Security Dividends. Set the dates from 1/1/06 to 12/31/06. Check Include inactive securities. Then click on Select all securities.
CAO: Reports>Security Dividends. Set the dates from 1/1/06 to 12/31/06. Choose both Active and Inactive securities.
Another source of errors is REIT and mutual fund distributions that were entered incorrectly. REIT and mutual fund distributions are nonqualified dividends by default, but some dsitributions may actually be "qualified". In CA3 and CAO, you will have been asked to enter the qualified amount when you generated the Allocation report. I have to confess that I'm not sure of the best way to do this in bivio. You could split the distributions between qualified and nonqualified when received by using different Distribution Type entries. I don't recall if bivio asks for this information as part of the tax return preparation process. Perhaps someone with relevant experience can post the answer.
Similarly, entries in boxes 2a, 2b, or 3 of your 1099-DIV can point you to other errors associated with REIT/mutual fund distributions. Check your software entries to see that they accurately reflect the nature of the REIT/mutual fund distributions as follows.
Capital gains distributions (Form 1099-DIV, box 2a) should be entered as:
CA3: Transactions>Enter New>Select Transaction Type:(Reinvested) Dividend or Distribution>Type:Long term capital gain
CAO: Accounting>Securities>Cash Dividend (or Reinvest)>Type:Long term capital gain
bivio: Accounting>Investments>Income or Reinvest>Distribution Type:Long-term Capital Gain. NOTE: If there is an entry in box 2b of Form 1099-DIV, you must subtract this amount before entering the long-term capital gain distribution in bivio.
Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain (Form 1099-DIV, box 2b) is entered in the tax programs in CA3 and CAO (to be discussed in the tax session). In bivio, you will enter it as:
bivio: Accounting>Investments>Income or Reinvest>Distribution Type:Unrecaptured Section 1250 Gain
Non-dividend distributions (return of capital, Form 1099-DIV, box 3) should be entered as:
CA3: Transactions>Enter New>Select Transaction Type:(Reinvested) Dividend or Distribution>Type:Return of capital
CAO: Accounting>Securities>Cash Dividend (or Reinvest)>Type:Return of capital
bivio: Accounting>Investments>Income or Reinvest>Distribution Type:Return of Capital
Capital Gains
Compare the sales proceeds on the capital gains report to the total proceeds reported on Form 1099-B. One possible source of differences is cash-in-lieu received from the sale of fractional shares of stock that were recorded either in your software or by the broker as a dividend. These are correctly reported as sale proceeds. There are also some brokers who don't report cash-in-lieu at all on a 1099 form if the amount is less than $10. While the total sales proceeds in the capital gains report should match the 1099-B, you only need to worry if the total sales proceeds shown on your report are less than that shown on the 1099-B. The IRS won't care if you over-report your sales.
Other Income
Most clubs should not have any other sources of income. If your transaction summary report shows any other form of income, you should review the specific entries and determine if you have made them correctly. You might want to ask here or on the club-treasurers list for assistance in making this determination.
Since this is getting long, we'll save the analysis and closing of the expense side of the books for tomorrow's session. |