As investors prepare for year-end taxes after a volatile 2025, many are exploring ways to reduce their tax burden through strategies like tax loss harvesting and structural portfolio adjustments. Active ETFs, according to T. Rowe Price’s Kevin Signorelli and Chris Murphy, can play a key role in minimizing tax impacts.
ETFs inherently generate fewer taxable events than mutual funds due to their creation and redemption mechanism, which limits capital gains distributions. Active ETFs add further efficiency, often operating at lower costs while maintaining flexibility to manage holdings strategically.
They also offer effective vehicles for tax loss harvesting, allowing investors to shift from underperforming funds into more promising active strategies, such as international or tech-focused ETFs.
Finsum: As active ETFs continue to expand, they provide investors with more tools to optimize portfolios for both performance and tax efficiency.