Dear Investors and Friends,
The impact of taxes on portfolio performance is an important but not exclusive consideration when making investment decisions. Unfortunately, like so much else that we see when clients bring us their current portfolios for analysis, their existing advisors have often either ignored taxes completely or, conversely, become so focused on taxes that they made suboptimal investment decisions purely in the name of reducing taxes. Not surprisingly, the best approach is more nuanced than either extreme and, like so much else, we believe the importance of taxes as a variable in decision making is fundamentally a question of time and time horizon. The purpose of this month’s letter is to provide a simple example to help provide some structure for how to think about taxes and your portfolio.
Isolating the Impact of Tax Rate on After-Tax Returns
From a tax perspective, investment income and long-term capital gains are distinct categories with different taxation rules. The highest marginal tax rate for income and capital gains is 40.8% and 23.8%, respectively, including 3.8% for Medicare in both. Income taxes are paid annually, and long-term capital gains can either be short term or long term and paid when the gain is realized.
Accounting for the impact of taxes on a portfolio performance can get very complex very quickly. So, to keep our discussion from straying too far from the big picture, we are going to consider one relatively simple example that assumes an investor starts with $1,000, receives an annual pre-tax return of 8% for 30-years and pays taxes in 1 of 3 different ways:
The chart below shows the impact of each tax-regime on profit over a 30-year period.
While the investor in each tax-regime receives the same pre-tax return of 8%, as the last two lines in the numerical summary below indicate, the impact of the tax-regime cannot be understated.
Key Take Aways
RCM’s Approach
While the above analysis is deeply compelling, it would be a mistake to conclude that one should exclusively invest in financial instruments that are likely to be taxed at capital gains rates and allow for the deferral of taxes. Different financial instruments have different risk and reward characteristics, and it is critical that one match their assets with the financial instrument(s) that are most likely to achieve their goals.
Sound asset allocation and financial planning segments assets into different buckets by objective. Broadly speaking, each entity or individual should have an “offense” bucket and a “defense” bucket. The offense bucket comprises assets that have a meaningful probability of achieving higher after-tax returns over the long term but will likely experience greater risk (i.e., drawdown and volatility) in the short term. The defense bucket comprises assets that have a meaningful probability of experiencing lower risk at the cost of achieving lower after-tax returns. The mix between offense and defense is a function of one’s particular circumstances.
Please don't hesitate to reach out with any questions or comments. Thank you for entrusting RCM with your capital; it's a privilege to serve you.
Warm Regards,
David and Mike
Disclaimer
Roosevelt Capital Management LLC is a registered investment adviser. Information presented is for educational purposes only and does not intend to make an offer or solicitation for the sale or purchase of any specific securities, investments, or investment strategies. Investments involve risk and are not guaranteed. Be sure to first consult with a qualified financial adviser and/or tax professional before implementing any strategy discussed herein.
Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Principal value and investment return will fluctuate. No guarantees or assurances that the target returns will be achieved, or objectives will be met are implied. Future returns may differ significantly from past returns due to many different factors. Investments involve risk and the possibility of loss of principal.
While all the values used in this report were obtained from sources believed to be reliable, all calculations that underly numbers shown in this report believed to be accurate, and all assumptions made in this report believed to be reasonable, Roosevelt Capital Management LLC neither represents nor warrants the values, calculations or assumptions and encourages each prospective investor to conduct their own review of the audits, values, calculations and assumptions.