
<p>An Eastman Kodak Co. stock certificate from August 1992.(Photo: Staff file photo)</p><p>Eastman Kodak Co.'s Chapter 11 bankruptcy ended last year with shareholders seeing their stock disappear in an instant.</p><p>But there's a way for shareholders to make at least some lemonade out of those lemons by writing off their losses from their 2013 income tax returns.</p><p>Generally, when a stock becomes worthless, investors are entitled to a worthless stock deduction on Schedule B of their tax forms, said Thomas R. Bruckel, a partner with accounting and tax firm the Bonadio Group.</p><p><a href="http://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/money/business/2014/01/24/upside-of-kodak-stock-woes-nice-irs-deduction/4839377/">Keep reading...</a></p>