What Is Tax Management?

Taxes can have a major impact on the long-term growth of a portfolio. Find out how continuous, thoughtful tax management can help investors maximize their wealth.

How did your portfolio do after taxes? I suspect many investors have absolutely no idea. Everywhere we look, taxable investors seem to be focused on pretax returns. But at Parametric, we think it’s after-tax returns that matter.

Tax management is a way to make sure that when investors pay taxes, they don’t give up more return than they have to. But not all tax management is the same. Let’s look at how this approach works in direct indexing portfolios.

What should investors know about taxes?

Just to review, here are some key features of the US tax code that may influence good tax management practices.

  • Taxable event. Investors get a tax bill only if they sell a security for more than they paid for it. The tax is applied to the difference and owed in the tax year of the sale. Unrealized gains aren’t subject to tax.
  • Tax-rate differential. Securities sold less than a year after purchase are taxed at a higher rate than those held for longer than a year.
  • Treatment of losses. If an investor sells a security at a loss, they don’t get a check from the IRS, but they can use the loss to offset capital gains elsewhere in their holdings. Any excess losses can be carried over to future years.

Although these rules may be subject to change, they’ve endured over time. And they act in concert—that is, even if one rule evolves, the others still offer plenty of value to tax management.

What does tax management involve?

Tax management means being careful about realizing gains and strategic about realizing losses, using four primary techniques:

1. Holding securities long enough to qualify for a lower tax rate on long-term gains.

2. Selecting loss-maximizing or gain-minimizing tax lots for trades.

3. Moving securities into or out of a portfolio in kind, instead of liquidating.

4. Avoiding purchases that would disallow losses according to IRS wash-sale rules.

While not as exciting as trying to predict the price of oil or anticipating the next big tech stock, being savvy about the tax consequences of trading can help preserve wealth in a portfolio. This gives investors more dollars to put to work in the market, and that can really add up over the long run. Third-party research has shown that tax management may have the potential to add 1%–2% in after-tax excess returns.1

These techniques are available to any investor, yet they may be an afterthought for many—addressed only once a year, if at all. Tax management might be at odds with the alpha-seeking goals of the manager selected by the investor. Passive index-based mutual funds or ETFs may be relatively tax efficient, but they can’t produce any additional tax benefits for the investor. For that, we believe a tax-managed direct indexing portfolio could be the solution.