Thanks for such a detailed reply! Very interesting to see how...

  1. 2,311 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 534
    Thanks for such a detailed reply! Very interesting to see how you do it, I think I'm convinced I'll start using a new sheet for every FY rather that trying to keep it all in one place (gets too messy with EOFY valuations).

    Not sure about all those tables though, surely you could achieve the same using one table? My columns are very similar to yours but in one table and my approach differs slightly - The columns I have all under one table are;

    Columns (bold = section): Ticker, Buys (date, ID, $value, SP, $brokerage, $total[inc. brokerage]), Sells (As per buy columns), totals (close price [to be picked up instead of sell value for EOFY reporting, manually updated], days open, P&L, Taxable P&L, pips, win/lose indicator [as pr above screenshot]).

    So when I open a trade, I populate the ticker and 5 buy columns (Total = auto), and then when I sell I populate the 5 sell side columns (again total = auto calc) and the 'totals' area is all auto populated as soon as the sell values are entered.

    The only issue I face is if I buy say 100 BHP but decide to only sell 50 BHP let's say, so I have to duplicate the buy row and create two batches, balance out the buy volume for each trade so that I can match the sell batch and leave one batch open, add "/2" to the brokerage (or /3, /4, etc. depending how many times you split a buy batch).

    The bonus is at the end I have all of the COGS etc. calculations automatically adding up on the one table so accountant has everything he needs right in front of him totaled.


    So I think I'll continue to use this strategy but start breaking it out for each FY using the valuation methods you mentioned - so thank you for the detailed responses! very informative and has helped me make heads and tails of my issue
 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.