Tag Archives: tax loss harvesting

BMO ETFs: Tax Loss Harvesting

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With volatile markets, rising inflation and a potential economic slowdown, 2022 has proven to be a challenging year for investors. Exchange traded funds (ETFs) are effective tools for investors to help navigate these uncertain markets and can be used to help crystallize losses from a tax perspective. As 2022-year end approaches, this article provides trade ideas to help you harvest tax savings from under-performing securities.

What is Tax-Loss Harvesting?

By disposing of securities with accrued capital losses, investors can help offset taxes otherwise payable from securities that were sold at a capital gain. The proceeds from the sale of these securities can then be reinvested in different securities with similar exposures to the securities that were sold, in order to maintain market exposure.

  • Realized capital gains from previous transactions can be offset by selling securities, which are trading at a lower price than their adjusted cost base.
  • Investors can then use the proceeds from the security that is sold to invest in a different security, i.e. BMO Exchange Traded Funds (ETF).
  • In addition to common shares, tax-loss harvesting can also be applied in respect of other financial instruments that are on capital account, such as bonds, preferred shares, ETFs, mutual funds, etc.

Considerations:

If capital gains are not available in the current year, the realized losses may be carried back for three years to shelter gains realized in those years or carried forward to reduce capital gains in upcoming years.

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By James Gauthier, CIO, Justwealth

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

When investors run out of contribution room in their tax-sheltered investment accounts such as RRSPs and TFSAs, they often continue investing in a non-registered account that does not have the same automatic benefit of avoiding or deferring taxes. Managing investments in a taxable portfolio then becomes a much more complicated exercise: one that attempts to maximize wealth on an after-tax basis instead of a pre-tax basis, which is how investments would be structured in a registered account.

Any investment income that is earned in a non-registered account is subject to taxation annually and can therefore be thought of as a “fee,” similar to the annual fees charged by your financial institution or advisor. As a robo-advisor that provides low-cost investment options for investors, we devote much time and resources to educating investors about the negative impact that investment management fees can have on their overall wealth. But unlike management fees, which are generally easy to identify and compare amongst different investment options, it is virtually impossible to find after-tax rates of returns for making apples-to-apples comparisons between various products and providers.

Most investment providers, including robo-advisors, use the exact same portfolio recommendations for their clients’ non-registered accounts as they do for their registered accounts, as long as the “risk” level is deemed to be the same. To illustrate the true cost of tax inefficiency, we can show how altering a portfolio recommendation, without materially altering the risk level or other characteristics of the portfolio, can improve the after-tax return of the portfolio.

Consider an investor in the top marginal tax bracket who is considered to have an “average” risk tolerance and is invested in a Balanced portfolio of 40% bonds, 20% Canadian equity, 20% U.S. equity and 20% international equity. A reasonable long-term expected annual rate of return on this portfolio, on a pre-tax basis, is 5.6%. Applying tax rates to the interest, dividends (Canadian and foreign) and a conservative estimate for capital gains, the after-tax return on the portfolio is reduced to 4.0%.

By making some minor changes to the portfolio’s asset allocation, such as emphasizing asset classes that receive more favourable tax treatment and finding investment vehicles (ETFs in our case) that are innovatively structured to receive more favourable tax treatment, we can create a new portfolio that is very similar from a high-level asset allocation and risk perspective. The expected pre-tax return on this new, tax-efficient portfolio is slightly lower at 5.5%, but after taxes are applied, the return is a more favourable 4.5%.

 

The difference of 0.50% in after-tax returns should be considered the MINIMUM cost of tax inefficiency, since we have not yet addressed any other tax-inefficient practices. Extending the analysis across our entire range of investor risk tolerances (from Conservative to Aggressive) shows that the cost of tax inefficiency can vary from a low of 0.40% up to 1.00%. In most cases, the cost exceeds our 0.50% management fee, meaning that you would be better off paying our fee rather than having your assets managed for FREE at any another institution that does not use tax-efficient portfolios!

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