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What is a placeholder entry?

Quicken enters a placeholder entry if you're missing part of your transaction history. For any given security, if the total number of shares bought or added in your transaction list doesn't equal the number of shares in your account, then Quicken enters a placeholder entry to make up the difference. Placeholder entries are shown in the Placeholder Entries section under the investment register of the account.

Placeholder entries can only occur in an investment transaction list. Each placeholder entry identifies the security name and number of shares added to or subtracted from the account (for example, 50 shares of Intuit). It does not include a purchase date or price, which Quicken needs to provide performance reporting or use tax planning tools. You need to resolve placeholder entries if you want to use these tools, but not if you want to track holdings-only information in Quicken.

How does Quicken know I am missing transactions?

Every time you download transactions from your brokerage or financial institution, Quicken also downloads holdings information for your account. For example, if your transaction list had 200 shares of Intuit, and you downloaded a buy transaction for 70 more, then in your transaction list the total number of shares of Intuit would be 270. But if during the same download your broker's records say you hold 300 shares of Intuit, then Quicken will add a placeholder to make up for the missing 30 shares.

When should I add missing transactions?

Because it doesn't represent an actual historical transaction, a placeholder entry identifies only the security name and number of shares added to or subtracted from the account (for example, 30 shares of Intuit). It doesn't include a purchase date or price, which Quicken needs in order to provide performance reporting or tax planning tools.

Why am I missing transactions?

Here are some scenarios where Quicken would add a placeholder entry to your transaction list:

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