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Capital Acumen Issue 30

Harvesting Losses For Tax-Advantaged Investing

A thoughtful approach aims to enhance after-tax returns.

Labyrinth of hedges

As the saying goes, it’s not what you earn; it’s what you keep.

Pretax investment returns are great, but the only returns we get to keep are after-tax returns. And while we know that taxes can take a bite out of gains, many people are less aware of how big that bite can actually be. In fact, taxes can be one of the largest detractors of performance of actively managed portfolios. Lipper mutual fund return data shows that taxable investors historically gave up an average of 0.98% to 2.5% in annual return to taxes.1 And erosion of wealth because of taxes compounded over time can have an even greater negative impact on wealth accumulation.

For example, assume an equity market price return of 6% and no dividend distribution, and a short term capital gains tax of 40%. Compounding a $1 million investment for 10 years, a taxable investor can lose over $320,000 compared to a portfolio with no tax frictions. This scenario assumes the portfolio’s taxable turnover is 50%. The loss grows if the taxable turnover is higher.

Clearly, considering the tax efficiency of your investments is important — especially now that the higher returns after the financial crisis have been realized. For the rest of the market cycle, we’re expecting lower returns from almost all asset classes, and deeper and more frequent bouts of volatility as central banks around the world return to more normal monetary policies. At the same time, taxes are likely to be more burdensome on a federal level and, for many, on a state level. 

In a challenging, lower-return environment, preserving as much as possible of your investment returns after taxes is crucial.

Headshot of Joseph Curtin

Photograph by Andy Ryan

 

 

Loss harvesting can work reliably regardless of prevailing market conditions.

Maximizing After-Tax Wealth 

U.S. Trust’s recently launched Tax Advantaged Strategies (TAS) is designed to enhance after-tax returns. The key to this is what is called loss harvesting.

Erosion of wealth by capital gain taxes can be managed or potentially eliminated through loss harvesting. Systematic loss harvesting — selling a portfolio’s losing stocks — can help offset gains realized from other investments, which improves the after-tax return of the total portfolio.

Various academic studies have shown that loss harvesting can improve a portfolio’s after-tax returns by as much as 1.9% a year. That’s a meaningful improvement, especially when pretax portfolio returns are lower. Over longer periods, the compound benefit can add substantially to wealth.

In addition, loss harvesting can work reliably regardless of prevailing market conditions. Although the stock market generally rises over time, it really never does so in a straight line — volatility always exists. Even in rising markets, some stocks have negative returns over periods of time. U.S. Trust’s Tax Advantaged Strategies take advantage of volatility to systematically harvest losses while maintaining exposure to the market. The goal is to track an index — whichever one the client and portfolio manager determine is most appropriate — on a pretax basis, but outperform the index on an after-tax and after-fees basis.

To be more specific, TAS portfolio managers don’t invest in every single security in an index; they choose a representative set of securities with the goal of closely mirroring the performance of the index over time. In investment jargon, they try to reduce tracking error. Since there are bound to be short periods when some of the portfolio’s individual securities will decline below their purchase price, TAS managers will sell some, or all, of those holdings, book a short-term loss, and then replace them with securities that have similar characteristics. By doing so, the portfolio should continue to behave like the index, seeking to achieve the index return on a pretax basis. But the real benefit is to use those short-term capital losses to offset short-term capital gains in other parts of the portfolio, including, for example, hedge funds or active trading strategies, both of which are generally considered to be much less tax efficient.  

It’s not the same as owning an exchange-traded fund (ETF) or an index fund. As with an ETF or an index fund, a TAS portfolio tries to replicate the performance characteristics of an index. With TAS, you own the individual stocks in the portfolio, rather than shares of an ETF or mutual fund. This allows the TAS managers greater control when it comes to managing a client’s tax situation. When the client’s situation, or the market, changes, they are able to sell and buy individual securities as needed, as opposed to having to sell everything outright. This leads to booking tax losses that offset taxable gains elsewhere, allowing clients to keep more of their return.

Is TAS Appropriate for You? 

If you prefer passive management, U.S. Trust’s Tax Advantaged Strategies may be an effective approach for an entire equity portfolio, providing exposure to a broad index and the additional benefits of potential tax-loss harvesting.

Taxable investors could benefit from tax-loss harvesting and the TAS approach.

On the other hand, if you prefer active management, the TAS approach could be particularly effective as a core portfolio component because it would allow for the use of loss harvesting to offset gains from other — non-TAS — investments.

TAS and tax-loss harvesting can also be helpful if you need to diversify out of a large position in a single stock with a very low cost basis, replace an underperforming active manager or if you have a large amount of short-term gains in your portfolio. The fact is that taxable investors could benefit from tax-loss harvesting and the TAS approach. And because it is a separately managed account, it can be tailored to fit the needs of each individual investor.

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