Loss Offsetting Isn’t as Simple as It Looks

23/04/2626

Loss Offsetting Isn’t as Simple as It Looks And it’s where many tax reports quietly go wrong 📉 

On paper, loss offsetting sounds straightforward:

You make a gain. You have a loss. You offset one against the other.

Done.

In reality, it’s one of the most misunderstood areas in cross-border tax reporting.

Because losses are never just “losses”. They are always tied to rules.

Let’s take a simple example

A client sells:

  • 🇩🇪 German equities → capital gain
  • 🇫🇷 French fund → capital loss

From a portfolio perspective, the result is clear:

👉 Net result: close to zero

But tax-wise, the situation is very different.

Now the system has to answer:

👉 Are these assets even in the same tax category?
👉 Can losses from funds be offset against equity gains?
👉 Do domestic and foreign rules differ?
👉 Is the loss usable in the same year — or at all?
👉 Does the client need to carry it forward?

And the key point:

👉 The answer depends entirely on the jurisdiction.

What we often see in practice:

  • Losses are offset across categories where it’s not allowed
  • Foreign assets are treated like domestic ones
  • Carryforward rules are ignored
  • Reports show a “net result” that is not legally valid

The consequence?

👉 Incorrect tax positions
👉 Advisors reworking the report
👉 Clients potentially overpaying — or taking risk

Why this is so complex

Loss offsetting is not just arithmetic.It depends on:

  • Asset class
  • Jurisdiction
  • Tax year
  • Local restrictions
  • Reporting format

Two identical portfolios can produce different results depending on where the client is taxed.A proper system must:

✔ Separate asset classes correctly
✔ Apply jurisdiction-specific offset rules
✔ Handle carryforward logic
✔ Reflect restrictions in the final report
✔ Make the result understandable for advisors

Loss offsetting is one of those areas where reports can look correct — but aren’t. Because the logic behind the numbers matters more than the numbers themselves.

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