Sunday, May 25, 2014

Capital Gains Tax Gets More Complicated

you deal with the new capital gains rates hinges on your tax bracket. The strategies to deal with capital gains differ for each level.
Capital gains taxes became very confusing last year. Before 2013, there were only two capital gains rates for assets held for more than a year. Now you may pay one of at least four different rates on market earnings, depending on how much income and gain you see in any year. But through strategic planning, you can chip away at even the harshest tax rates.
When you sell certain assets, such as stocks and bonds, you may incur capital gains. A capital asset also includes most property you own and use for personal or investment purposes. If the original purchase price of the asset plus associated expenses (collectively called the “cost basis”) is less than the proceeds you receive from the sale, you incur a capital gain.
If you’re in the 10% or 15% federal income tax bracket, you are eligible for the 0% capital gains rate. You can realize capital gains equal to the difference between the top of the 15% income tax bracket and your current adjusted gross income without incurring additional tax. However, if you realize too many gains all in one year, you must pay a 15% tax on the amount.
Most middle-income taxpayers pay the 15% rate. Trying to avoid paying this rate is not always worthwhile.
For example, when you sell $20,000 of stock with a cost basis (original value) of $10,000, you pay capital gains on the $10,000 of gain. If you are in the 15% bracket, you owe federal tax of $1,500 plus your state tax. In Virginia, that’s an additional 5.75%, or $575, for a total tax of $2,075.
If you made the sale to rebalance your portfolio, this tax leaves you with only $17,925 of your original $20,000 to reinvest. When you reinvest, your new cost basis starts at $17,925 instead of $10,000. Since you have less to reinvest and earn a return, you need to earn a little more to make up for the loss from taxes. The extra amount you have to earn to break even is called the “growth hurdle.” The size of the hurdle can be calculated using the percentage of appreciation and the amount of time you hold the new investment.
Any new investment you choose will need to overcome the hurdle. It can sometimes be accomplished by purchasing an investment with a lower expense ratio than the one you sold.
Should your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceed $250,000 (for married filing jointly) or $200,000 (for single filing), you owe an additional 3.8% beyond the tax rate of 15% thanks to the Affordable Care Act (ACA). This created the new rate of 18.8%.
This tax rate always applies to the 35% federal bracket, those earning under $457,601 (if married filing jointly) or $406,751 (single) annually. This surtax may also apply to the brackets below it. MAGI can be significantly larger than taxable income because it is not reduced by “below-the-line deductions.”
The same surtax will also always apply to the topmost bracket as well. In the 39.6% federal tax bracket and making over $457,601 (married filing jointly) or $406,751 (single), you are subject to a 20% capital gains tax. Since your MAGI is automatically high, you are also subject to the 3.8% ACA tax, hiking your total capital gains tax to 23.8%.
Because of the ACA surtax, two financially successful people have little incentive to marry or remain married. A cohabiting couple each earning $200,000 can avoid the 3.8% surtax, whereas their married counterparts will face the full 18.8% rate in addition to other federal income tax penalties.
The tax rates, and therefore the growth hurdle, are higher for married couples simply because their incomes or the business profits stack on each other, pushing them into a higher bracket.
Some hurdle rates are so high, it is not worth selling well-performing appreciated investments. However, two options other than selling are available.

First, if you are charitably inclined, you can use your highly appreciated stock as gifts to the charities you support. You get the full deduction of the donation. The charity, as a nonprofit, does not have to pay the capital gains when it is sold.
Second, if you are charitable to your family, you can gift highly appreciated stock to family members who might be in a lower capital gains tax bracket. Children do not get a step up in cost basis, but selling the investment in their lower bracket may mean retaining more of the value.
Each donor can gift up to $14,000 per year per recipient without paying gift tax.
Thus a couple could gift $28,000 of highly appreciated stock to each of their children. If the sum of $28,000 and the child’s income was below $36,900, the child would pay no capital gains tax. For a married child, you could gift $56,000, each spouse gifting the maximum to each spouse. If the sum was below $73,800, the child’s family would pay no capital gains tax.
That all being said, the tax code leaves persons who are not charitably inclined or need the investment’s value without a clear way to retain the value of their investments when rebalancing their portfolio or liquidating a part of their wealth.
Paying capital gains tax at rates of 18.8% and 23.8% hurts, especially after adding in your top state tax rate. In Virginia that top rate is 5.75%, but elsewhere it is much higher (e.g., California at 13.3%). Hurdle rates become particularly important for decisions regarding realizing capital gains.
Careless transactions in large portfolios can have huge tax consequences. It shouldn’t be only those with a savvy financial advisor who are able to dodge this tax bullet. It would be far preferable if we had a capital gains rate of 0% for everyone.
Posted on 7:59 AM | Categories:

Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

 

Over at Bogleheads we came across the following discussion: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments
Postby chabil » Sat May 24, 2014 6:29 pm
Please comment on our taxable portfolio. other than a one bond fund and the stocks all are in Vanguard. i worry that we have too many funds for no good reason. i also would like to make sure this is tax efficient. we contribute most if not all of the RMW from the retirement accounts into this fund but only to a few of them:
the total stock market, the inter-term tax exempt, small cap, med cap, and Ftse.
thank you for any advice, comment.

Taxable Holding
1 Total Stock Mkt Index 14%
2 500 Index Fund 7%
3 Mid-Cap Index 1%
4 Small-cap index 1%
5 Extended Mkt 6%
6 FTSE All World Ex US 2%
6 Company stocks 19%
7 Growth Index Fund 2%
7 Wellsley Income 3%
8 Wellington Fund 8%
9 Total Bond mkt index 2%
10 Tax_exempt (Dom Income Fund) 19%
11 Inter- Term Tax Exempt Fund 9%
12 Lifestrategy Growth fund 2%
13 REIT Index 3%
14 Cash 2%

TOTAL TAXABLE 100%

should we consolidate
Posts: 27
Joined: 14 Feb 2012
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Re: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

Postby Grt2bOutdoors » Sat May 24, 2014 6:34 pm
chabil wrote:Please comment on our taxable portfolio. other than a one bond fund and the stocks all are in Vanguard. i worry that we have too many funds for no good reason. i also would like to make sure this is tax efficient. we contribute most if not all of the RMW from the retirement accounts into this fund but only to a few of them:
the total stock market, the inter-term tax exempt, small cap, med cap, and Ftse.
thank you for any advice, comment.

Taxable Holding
1 Total Stock Mkt Index 14%
2 500 Index Fund 7%
3 Mid-Cap Index 1%
4 Small-cap index 1%
5 Extended Mkt 6%
6 FTSE All World Ex US 2%
6 Company stocks 19%
7 Growth Index Fund 2%
7 Wellsley Income 3%
8 Wellington Fund 8%
9 Total Bond mkt index 2%
10 Tax_exempt (Dom Income Fund) 19%
11 Inter- Term Tax Exempt Fund 9%
12 Lifestrategy Growth fund 2%
13 REIT Index 3%
14 Cash 2%

TOTAL TAXABLE 100%

should we consolidate

What is your tax bracket?
What jumps out at me as possible the most in-efficient holdings: Wellesley Fund, Lifestrategy Growth, Reit Index, Total Bond Market Index, Company Stock.
If you already own extended market, why do you also own Mid and Small Cap Index as well? What are your gains/losses in each of the holdings? It may not pay to consolidate just yet, if the holdings gains are substantial potentially impacting your taxes come 2015 when you file.
"Luck is not a strategy" Asking Portfolio Questions
Posts: 9466
Joined: 5 Apr 2007
Location: New York
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Re: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

Postby retiredjg » Sat May 24, 2014 7:48 pm
You do have too many funds and it appears to be for no good reason. But you have to compare the cost to "fix" it to just leaving it as is. It seems likely that these holdings have gains - is it worth it to pay tax to make the account more tax-efficient?

Also, it is meaningless to discuss whether your allocation is right if you don't show the rest of your portfolio. I agree with Grt2bOutdoors on which funds are not tax-efficient, but I don't entirely understand why he/she included Company stock.

No, several of those funds are not tax efficient. But that may or may not be important depending on things you did not mention. Your tax bracket. If you are spending the dividends.
Posts: 16389
Joined: 10 Jan 2008
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Re: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

Postby Duckie » Sat May 24, 2014 9:29 pm
chabil wrote:Please comment on our taxable portfolio.
Taxable Holding
1 Total Stock Mkt Index 14%
2 500 Index Fund 7%
3 Mid-Cap Index 1%
4 Small-cap index 1%
5 Extended Mkt 6%
6 FTSE All World Ex US 2%
6 Company stocks 19%
7 Growth Index Fund 2%
7 Wellsley Income 3% <-- Contains taxable bonds. Better in tax-sheltered.
8 Wellington Fund 8% <-- Contains taxable bonds. Better in tax-sheltered.
9 Total Bond mkt index 2% <-- Contains taxable bonds. Better in tax-sheltered.
10 Tax_exempt (Dom Income Fund) 19%
11 Inter- Term Tax Exempt Fund 9%
12 Lifestrategy Growth fund 2% <-- Contains taxable bonds. Better in tax-sheltered.
13 REIT Index 3% <-- Kicks out large taxable dividends. Better in tax-sheltered.
14 Cash 2%

TOTAL TAXABLE 100%

should we consolidate

Yes. But you need to consider the tax hit.
Posts: 2175
Joined: 8 Mar 2007
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Re: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

Postby anil686 » Sat May 24, 2014 9:47 pm
I would also add #3,4,5 have higher turnover which will lead (necessarily) to ST capital gains - IMO. Of course your allocation to such areas are very low and so it may not mean a great tax hit but it may also dampen the effect you are looking for.
Posts: 25
Joined: 8 May 2014
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Re: Tax Efficiency of Taxable Investments

Postby grabiner » Sat May 24, 2014 11:50 pm
chabil wrote:1 Total Stock Mkt Index 14%
2 500 Index Fund 7%
3 Mid-Cap Index 1%
4 Small-cap index 1%
5 Extended Mkt 6%

There is overlap in the US stocks, but it doesn't hurt keeping your existing holdings; these are all tax-efficient, and there isn't much lost holding separate large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap funds rather than Total stock Market. I wouldn't sell any of these unless you can sell for a small capital gain or need the money.

6 FTSE All World Ex US 2%

As with the US stocks, this is fine, although you might want to switch to Total International to get small caps if you can do it cheaply.

6 Company stocks 19%

If this is your own company, it must go; 19% of your portfolio in company stock is too much. If it is a diversified portfolio of individual company stocks, you can keep it, as it will behave much like a large-cap index fund.

7 Growth Index Fund 2%

This is tax-efficient but may not fit your investment needs; do you have a value fund in your IRA or 401(k)? If the fund doesn't fit your investment needs, sell it as soon as any gains are long-term.

7 Wellsley Income 3%
8 Wellington Fund 8%

These two are tax-inefficient; their actively managed stocks generate capital gains, and you may not want to hold their corporate bonds. They should be sold.

9 Total Bond mkt index 2%
10 Tax_exempt (Dom Income Fund) 19%
11 Inter- Term Tax Exempt Fund 9%

Thexe three can't all be right. You don't want both taxable and municipal bonds. If your tax bracket is over 25%, you probably want municipal bonds. (And you may not want any of these if you can hold bond in tax-deferred accounts instead.)

I don't know what the "Dom Income Fund" is; you may want to sell that fund and switch to something lower-cost. Selling bond funds will not result in significant capital gains.

12 Lifestrategy Growth fund 2%

This is a mixture of stock and bond index funds; it's not bad to keep (as long as you don't mind the taxable bonds), but it will be an annoyance in managing your portfolio.

13 REIT Index 3%

This is very tax-inefficient; if you want to hold a REIT fund, hold it in your IRA.

14 Cash 2%

Cash is fine in a taxable account, where it probably has some purpose such as an emergency fund. Yes, the returns on your cash will be taxable, but they are low and thus there isn't much to lose to taxes. (Right now, cash returns nearly zero, but even if rates rise, you don't lose much to taxes on bank accounts or money-market funds.)

Posted on 7:59 AM | Categories: