Displaying items by tag: tax
How Indexing Gives a Tax Advantage
Direct indexing allows investors to access the individual stocks in their portfolio, providing opportunities for tax-loss harvesting. Unlike index funds, direct indexing offers the performance and diversification benefits of an index but with the ability to customize holdings.
This strategy enables investors to manage exposure to specific companies or sectors and capitalize on market dips for tax-loss opportunities. While index funds offer simplicity and tax efficiency, direct indexing takes these benefits a step further by allowing more personalized portfolio adjustments.
However, setting up a direct indexing account can be costly and involves higher fees due to its active management. Despite this, the customization and tax benefits can be worthwhile for certain investors, especially those in higher tax brackets or with concentrated stock positions.
Finsum: With fees and minimums getting lower and lower, direct indexing is becoming an option for a wider audience.
Tax Targeting Index Solutions from BNY Mellon
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation (BK) has introduced customized tax solutions and expanded its direct indexing suite, BNY Mellon Precision Direct Indexing. These offerings aim to help advisors align strategies with clients' investment goals, featuring tax transition management and tax overlay management through BNY Mellon Pershing X’s Wove platform.
Advisors can now manage portfolio migrations and apply ongoing tax overlay management to a customized set of assets. Stephanie Hill, head of Index at Mellon, emphasized that these enhancements aim to bring institutional-quality index management to retail investors in a tax-efficient manner.
This initiative complements BNY Mellon’s long-term growth strategy, which includes launching new services, digitizing operations, and strategic acquisitions. The company has recently formed significant partnerships and made strategic divestitures to strengthen its market position.
Finsum: Built in features to explicitly manage tax efficiency can help advisors leverage the full potential of this underused technology.
The Alpha Edge in Direct Indexing
Unlike mutual funds or ETFs, personalized indexing permits harvesting losses at the security level, offering more opportunities for ultra-high-net-worth investors to capture additional tax advantages. Tax-loss harvesting involves selling an investment at a loss and reinvesting the proceeds into another asset, a key benefit of direct indexing.
Direct indexing strategies involve selling stocks below their cost basis and instantly repurchasing correlated replacements to avoid wash-sale rule violations. Since investors own individual stocks in their portfolios, losses can be captured even when the index gains value. DI experts exemplifies this strategy by selling underperforming securities during market gains, using harvested losses to offset capital gains and taxable income up to $3,000 annually, with the option to carry over losses to future years.
Maximizing tax alpha depends on the frequency of portfolio scans for harvesting opportunities, with daily scanning potentially improving after-tax returns by 1% to 2% or more. Commitment to direct indexing underscores its importance in tax-efficient investing.
Finsum: The frequency through which a portfolio can be scanned for tax-loss harvesting is making the case extremely compelling for direct indexing.
7 Ways to Limit Capital Gains on Real Estate Properties
Buying and selling real estate properties can be quite lucrative for investors, but incurring capital gains taxes can weaken profits. What if there were ways to limit capital gains taxes on properties? In a recent article in SmartAsset, Ashley Kilroy suggested a few different ways for investors to limit their capital gains on real estate properties. The first to employ tax-deferred funds. For instance, you don't have to buy real estate with cash. You can use your IRA or 401(k). By depositing profits in your account, it allows your money to grow tax-free. Second, you can make the property your primary residence. The IRS exempts primary residence sales from capital gains taxes up to $500,000 for married filers and $250,000 for single filers. Third, employing tax-loss harvesting can help you avoid capital gains, assuming you are selling one property for a loss and another for a profit. Fourth, utilizing the 1031 Exchange allows you to use the income from the sale of one property to purchase another property of equal or greater value. In this scenario, you wouldn’t have to pay taxes on prior depreciation deductions. Fifth, the IRS allows rental property owners to deduct an annual depreciation amount from their income. Sixth, you can deduct the costs of managing property through itemized deductions, which lowers your tax burden. Seventh, improving your property boosts your property basis which can shrink your capital gains taxes and increase your property value.
Finsum:A recent article on SmartAsset provided seven different ways investors can limit their capital gains taxes on their real estate properties.
Biden Tax Destroys Buy-Backs
Dems are including a 1% tax on share buybacks in Biden’s climate and tax bill which is being pitched as an inflation bill. The tax was included to get Arizona Senator Krysten Sinema on board with the legislation. Most analysts say this will raise tensions with Wallstreet as investors will be apprehensive about the impact immediately and what it opens the door to moving forward. Many companies have recently engaged in massive buybacks using the excess profits to reinvest in their own companies. Experts say this could generate a lot of revenue, more than the carried interest which is expected to bring in $14 billion.
Finsum: Buy back boogeyman at it again. This legislation stops companies from doing the most responsible thing they can with excess cash.