Reading 9 Taxes and Private Wealth Management in a Global Context Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Reading 9 Taxes and Private Wealth Management in a Global Context Deck (23)
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1
Q

Why most modern portfolio theory is grounded in a pretax framework?

A

This phenomenon is understandable because most institutional and pension portfolios are tax-exempt

2
Q

three primary categories of taxes

A

1. Taxes on income

  • paid by individuals, corporations, and other legal entities on various types of income including wages, interest, dividends, and capital gains.

2. Wealth-based taxes

  • paid on the value of assets held and on wealth transfers.

3. Taxes on consumption

  • sales taxes: paid by consumer
  • value-added taxes: paid at each intermediate production step according to the amount of value added at the step; ultimately borne be the consumer (added into the purchase price)
3
Q

marginal tax rate, definition

A

the tax rate paid on the very last (highest) dollar of income

4
Q

Seven global tax regimes

A
5
Q

Common Progressive Income Tax Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Progressive
  • Interest Income: Some interest taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Dividends: Some dividends taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Capital Gains: Some capital gains taxed favorably or exempt
6
Q

Heavy Dividend Tax Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Progressive
  • Interest Income: Some interest taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Dividends: Taxed at ordinary rates
  • Capital Gains: Some capital gains taxed favorably or exempt
7
Q

Heavy Capital Gain Tax Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Progressive
  • Interest Income: Some interest taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Dividends: Some dividends taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Capital Gains: Taxed at ordinary rates
8
Q

Heavy Interest Tax Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Progressive
  • Interest Income: Taxed at ordinary rates
  • Dividends: Some dividends taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Capital Gains: Some capital gains taxed favorably or exempt
9
Q

Light Capital Gain Tax Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Progressive
  • Interest Income: Taxed at ordinary rates
  • Dividends: Taxed at ordinary rates
  • Capital Gains: Some capital gains taxed favorably or exempt
10
Q

Flat and Light Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Flat
  • Interest Income: Some interest taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Dividends: Some dividends taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Capital Gains: Some capital gains taxed favorably or exempt
11
Q

Flat and Heavy Regime

A
  • Ordinary Tax Rate Structure: Flat
  • Interest Income: Some interest taxed at favorable rates or exempt
  • Dividends: Taxed at ordinary rates
  • Capital Gains: Taxed at ordinary rates
12
Q

Accrual Taxes on Interest and Dividends

A

FVIFi = [1 + r(1 – ti)]n

r - pretax return

t - tax

Three important relationships:

  1. Tax drag % > tax rate
  2. As investment horizon increases -> tax drag $ and tax drag % increase
  3. As investment return increase -> tax drag $ and tax drag % increase
13
Q

Deferred Capital Gains Taxes.

A

FVIFcg = (1 + r)n(1 – tcg) + tcg

tcg - tax on capital gain

Relationships:

  1. Tax drag % = tax rate
  2. As the investment horizon increases => tax drag is unchanged
  3. As the investment return increases => tax drag is unchanged
  4. As investment horizon increases => the value of tax deferral increases
  5. As the investment return increases => the value of the tax deferral increases
14
Q

Cost basis and its influence on capital gain taxes

A

In taxation, cost basis is generally the amount that was paid to acquire an asset.

FVIFcgb = (1 + r)n(1 – tcg) + tcgB

15
Q

Wealth-Based Taxes

A

FVIFw = [(1 + r)(1 – tw)]n

Wealt-Based Taxes vs. Accrual Taxes:

  • as with accrual taxes - tax drag $ and tax drag % increase with investment horizon
  • unlike accrual taxes - when investment return increases, tax drag % decreases

Relationships:

  1. Tax drag % > Tax rate
  2. As investment horizon increases => tax drag % and tax drag $ increase
  3. As investmnet return increases => tax drag $ increases; tax drag % decreases
16
Q

Blended Taxing Environments

A

r* = r(1 – piti – pdtd – pcgtcg)

T* = tcg(1 – pi – pd – pcg)/(1 – piti – pdtd – pcgtcg)

FVIFTaxable = (1 + r*)n(1 – T*) + T* – (1 – B)tcg

17
Q

Accrual Equivalent Returns and Tax Rates

A

Conceptually, an accrual equivalent after-tax return is the tax-free return that, if accrued annually, produces the same after-tax accumulation as the taxable portfolio.

RAE = (FVT/PV)1/n-1

*the difference between pretax return and the AE after-tax return is a measure of the tax drag on the portfolio

The accrual equivalent tax rate is derived from the accrual equivalent return. It is the hypothetical tax rate, TAE, that produces an after-tax return equivalent to the accrual equivalent return. In our example, it is found by solving for TAE in the following expression:

r(1 – TAE) = RAE or TAE = 1-RAE/R

The accrual equivalent tax rate can be used in several ways:

  1. it can be used to measure the tax efficiency of different asset classes or portfolio management styles.
  2. it illustrates to clients the tax impact of lengthening the average holding periods of stocks they own.
  3. it can be used to assess the impact of future tax law changes.

*the lower the accrual equivalent tax rate, the more tax efficient the investment; likewise, allocating heavily to tax-inefficient assets speeds up tax payments and increases the AE tax rate

  • !!! AE tax rate decreases as B increases
  • !!! AE tax rate decreases as the investment horizon increases
18
Q

Types of investment accounts

A

Most types of investment accounts can be classified into three categories:

  • Taxable accounts. Investments to these accounts are made on an after-tax basis and returns can be taxed in a variety of ways as discussed in the previous section.
  • Tax-deferred accounts, or TDAs. Contributions to these accounts may be made on a pretax basis (i.e., tax-deductible), and the investment returns accumulate on a tax-deferred basis until funds are withdrawn at which time they are taxed at ordinary rates. As such, these accounts are sometimes said to have front-end loaded tax benefits.

FVIFTDA = (1 + r)n(1 – Tn)

!!! there is no “+ BTn” here

  • A third class of accounts has back-end loaded tax benefits. These accounts can be called tax-exempt (at least on a forward-looking basis) because although contributions are not deductible, earnings accumulate free of taxation even as funds are withdrawn, typically subject to some conditions.

FVIFTaxEx = (1 + r)n

! The only potenial difference between accumulations in TDA and TEA accounts depends on whether the current and future tax rates are equal. Any contributions to a tax-exempt account are made with after-tax funds.

! A different result can arise if regulations limit the amount of deposit and the limit is the same for both TDA and TEA accounts. Even if the current and future rates are equal, the TEA can be superior.

19
Q

Tax alpha, definition

A

The value created by using investment techniques that effectively manage tax liabilities is sometimes called tax alpha

20
Q

Asset location decision

A

An interaction exists between deciding what assets to own and in which accounts they should be held. The choice of where to place specific assets is called the asset location decision. It is distinct from the asset allocation decision.

Taxes not only reduce an investor’s returns, but also absorb some investment risk

21
Q

Four types of equity investors

A
  1. Traders - due to frequent trading, traders forgo the tax advantages assosiated with equity. All gains are short term and are thus taxed on an annual basis.
  2. Active investors - active investors trade less frequently than traders so that many of their gains are longer term in nature and taxed at lower rates.
  3. Passive investors - passive investors buy and hold equity so that gains deferred long term and taxed at preferential rates.
  4. Exempt investors - exempt investors hold all their stock in tax-exempt accounts, thereby avoiding taxation altogether.

Active managers must earn greater pretax alphas than passive managers to offset the tax drag of active trading

22
Q

Tax Loss Harvesting

A

While jurisdictions allow realized capital losses to offset realized capital gains, limitations are often placed on the amount of net losses that can be recognized or the type of income it can offset.

The practice of realizing a loss to offset a gain or income—and thereby reducing the current year’s tax obligation—is called tax loss harvesting.

Selling a security at a loss and reinvesting the proceeds in a similar security effectively resets the cost basis to the lower market value, potentially increasing future tax liabilities. In other words, taxes saved now may be simply postponed. The value of tax loss harvesting is largely in deferring the payment of tax liabilities.

A subtle benefit of tax loss harvesting is that recognizing an already incurred loss for tax purposes increases the amount of net-of-tax money available for investment. Realizing a loss saves taxes in the current year, and this tax savings can be reinvested. This technique increases the amount of capital the investor can put to use.

A concept related to tax loss harvesting is using highest-in, first-out (HIFO) tax lot accounting to sell a portion of a position. When positions are accumulated over time, lots are often purchased at different prices. Depending on the tax system, investors may be allowed to sell the highest cost basis lots first, which defers realizing the tax liability associated with lots having a lower cost basis. HIFO allows tax savings to be reinvested earlier, creating a tax alpha that compounds through time.

LIFO, lowest-in/first-out accounting - it could be beneficial for the investor to liquidate a lower cost basis stock and recognize capital gain now

23
Q

Taxes and mean-variance optimization

A

Pretax efficient frontiers may not be reasonable proxies for after-tax efficient frontiers

Ideally, the efficient frontier should be viewed on ana after-tax basis.

The mean-variance optimization should optimally allocate and determine the optimal asset location for each asset. Accrual equivalent after-tax returns would be sustituted for before-tax returns, and risk on an after-tax basis would be substituted fore before-tax risk.

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