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I buy and sell stocks as a day trader using an online brokerage firm. Can I treat this as a business and report my gains and losses on Schedule C?

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I buy and sell stocks as a day trader using an online brokerage firm. Can I treat this as a business and report my gains and losses on Schedule C?

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A business is generally an activity carried on for a livelihood or in good faith to make a profit. Rather than defined in the tax code, exactly what activities are considered business activities has long been the subject of court cases. The facts and circumstances of each case determine whether or not an activity is a trade or business. Basically, if your day trading activity goal is to profit from short-term swings in the market rather than from long-term capital appreciation of assets, if your income is primarily from the sale of securities rather than from dividends and interest paid on securities, and if you expect this income to be your primary income for meeting your personal living expenses, i.e. you do not have another regular job, then your trading activity might be a business. For details about not-for-profit activities, refer to Publication 535, Business Expenses. That chapter explains how to determine whether your activity is carried on to make a profit and how to figure th

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