Which cost basis system (UK or US) are you guys using to calculate the UK capital gain when (a) you are UK resident, (b) selling US held shares held in a US brokerage, and (c)
the shares were bought over time rather than all at once?
The US tracks the cost basis of each share bought, and matches up sales to specific purchases. The UK just tracks the average cost (adjusting the average up or down as additional purchases are made), and any sale uses the current average.
I tried asking HMRC, they just pointed me to docs that didn't help, so I figured I'd ask what people are actually doing.
Here's a worked example under the two systems:
1. On Jan 1st 2000, I buy Lot#1 :100 shares of DaveSoft LLC at $1 per share. Exchange rate at the time: $1 = £1
2. On Jan 1st 2010, I buy Lot #2: 100 shares of DaveSoft LLC at $10 per share. Exchange rate at the time: $1 = £2
3. Today, I sell Lot #1: 100 shares of DaveSoft LLC at $5 per share. Exchange rate is $1 = £3
Option 1: Treat the US stock sale like the sale of a generic US held assetUK Capital Gain = Sale price - Purchase Price
Sale price = 100 * $5 * £3 = £1,500
Purchase price = 100 * $1 * £1 = £100
-> Capital Gain = Sale price - Purchase price = £1,400
Option 2: Calculate as if it were UK stock being bought and sold in the UKAverage per-share cost basis = ((100 * $1 * £1) + (100 * $10 * £2)) / 200 = (100 + 2000) / 200 = £10.50
UK Capital Gain = Sale price - Purchase Price
Sale price = 100 * $5 * £3 = £1,500
Purchase price = 100 * £10.50
-> Capital Gain = Sale price - Purchase price = £1,500 - £1,050 = £450
Option 3: It's neither of the above, I've got hold of the wrong end of the stick, and it's something completely different.In which case
My brain / Google-Fu has failed me, because I can't find anything discussing this, yet alone a worked example. But it's something folk must be running into regularly. I initially thought it would be option #2, but if that was true, I'd expect Google to returning lots of articles and blog posts from folks complaining about having to track two cost basis for their investments.
* edit: Fixed exchange rate math as pointed out by @durhamlad