capital gain

noun

Definition of capital gain

: the increase in value of an asset (such as stock or real estate) between the time it is bought and the time it is sold

Examples of capital gain in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

Indexing capital gains to inflation would slash tax bills on the sale of assets such as stock or real estate by adjusting the original purchase price so no tax is paid on appreciation tied to inflation. Laura Davison Bloomberg, Los Angeles Times, "Trump floats a tax cut, then calls it unneeded and not imminent," 20 Aug. 2019 For example, nearly one-third of all Connecticut state income tax receipts come from quarterly filings, which are heavily influenced by capital gains and dividends. Keith M. Phanuef, courant.com, "New report shows Connecticut still lags the nation in personal income growth," 13 Aug. 2019 The real solution is to raise the capital gains rates. NBC News, "Democratic debate transcript: July 30, 2019," 31 July 2019 His plan calls for taxing capital gains and dividends at the same levels as employment income. Stephanie Ramirez, CBS News, "Kamala Harris releases "Medicare for all" proposal ahead of second Democratic debate," 29 July 2019 People who will hate this candidate: Climate science deniers, fossil-fuel industry executives, wealthier individuals opposed to his capital gains tax proposals in Washington state. Quartz Staff, Quartz, "Meet all the Democratic candidates in the crowded 2020 race," 24 June 2019 Others may want to take crypto losses up to the amount of their taxable capital gains, either from crypto or other assets. Laura Saunders, WSJ, "Make The Most of Your Failed Bitcoin Gamble: Sell Now," 21 Dec. 2018 First, to say that capital gains taxes ignore inflation is a lie. Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, "Column: Incredibly, GOP senators are demanding billions more in tax cuts for the rich," 30 July 2019 Some multimillionaires also would lose certain capital gains tax advantages. Bill Barrow, chicagotribune.com, "Joe Biden is aggressively defending Obamacare — even against Democrats," 15 July 2019

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'capital gain.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

See More

First Known Use of capital gain

1921, in the meaning defined above

Keep scrolling for more

Keep scrolling for more

More Definitions for capital gain

capital gain

noun

Financial Definition of capital gain

What It Is

A capital gain is an increase in the value of an investment. It is the difference between the purchase price (the basis) and the sale price of an asset.

How It Works

The formula for capital gain is:

Sale Price - Purchase Price = Capital Gain

Note that this formula assumes the sale price is higher than the purchase price. If an investor sells an asset for less than he or she paid, this is called a capital loss.

Let's assume you purchase 100 shares of XYZ Company for $1 per share. After three months, the share price increases to $5. This means the value of the investment has increased from $100 to $500, for a capital gain of $400.

Why It Matters

Capital gains are taxable, but only when they are realized. That is, they only become taxable when the asset is sold. Until that point, any gains are considered unrealized and are not taxable. The IRS considers nearly every asset owned by individuals and companies as capital assets and thus they are subject to capital gains taxes.

Taxpayers report capital gains on IRS Schedule D, but these gains are subject to different tax rates depending on whether they are short term or long term (and in some cases depending on the type of asset). In the example above, if you sold the XYZ Company shares after a year, the IRS would consider your $400 profit a long-term capital gain and would tax it at one of several lower, flat rates. However, if you sold the XYZ Company shares after just three months, the IRS would consider your $400 profit a short-term capital gain and tax that $400 at your ordinary income tax rate, which is generally higher than the long-term capital gains tax rate. This system encourages long-term investing, but there are many reasons an investor might want to sell an asset before a year has passed.

Some retirement vehicles, such as 401(k)s and IRAs, allow investors to buy and sell assets within these vehicles without becoming subject to capital gains tax. This tax deferral effectively gives investors a larger balance on which to compound interest or returns, with capital gains tax applying only when the investor begins to make withdrawals.

An investor's capital losses sometimes will offset all or a portion of his or her capital gains, lowering the investor's tax bill. There is a limit, however, to how much the investor can offset. Note also that the IRS does not treat the distributions of net realized long-term capital gains, like those from a mutual fund, as capital gains. The IRS treats those as ordinary dividends.

Source: Investing Answers

capital gain

Legal Definition of capital gain

see gain