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OK - I never understood options. No idea if the fears are warranted. Thought maybe some here might be able to explain the thinking behind the theory. There has been a lot of volatility this week. I think the writers figured that with all the current volatility, the option expiration for JHEQX might be the “straw that breaks the camel’s back” so to speak. Of course, you can’t believe everything you read in the press.@hank, the fund AUM is much lower now than at the end of 2021. We have seen multiple quarterly resets since the end of 2021. Not sure why Bloomberg thought this is news now, unless it has been raising this red flag all this time and I had not seen it before.
Thanks Yogi.WisdomTree presentaion isn't very user-friendly. But from your link (repeated below), Fund Reports & Schedule/Tax Supplement Reports, you can Download "WisdomTree Fund Distribution 2022 - Tax Supplement". Then in the Secondary Layout tab, Col 11, you will find % from Treasury obligations. For USFR, that was 99.666489% in 2022. Unfortunately, this info isn't in 1099 and you have to hunt for it at fund websites.
https://www.wisdomtree.com/investments/resource-library/fact-sheets-reports#tab-EFFF2124-78F5-46F4-B816-6D4252E4BC97
I have always received a statement on foreign taxes paid from the various funds that had any exposure. There was no place to put it on the 1040-SR last year. Too lazy to look at older returns from the days when we could itemize.PS - My understanding is that if you own a mutual fund having part or all of its assets in these countries, the tax paid by the fund is hidden away in “other expenses” so that most investors probably don’t realize they’re paying it. No free lunch.
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