Direct Indexing Decoded: A Must-Know for Financial Advisors Maneuvering Through Tax Season

Executive summary:

  • Tax Day can often be painful for investors who receive income from their portfolios
  • Over the past 20 years, U.S. equity mutual funds have generated an average of 7% of Net Asset Value in capital gains, regardless of the U.S. market’s performance
  • Direct Indexing can help investors manage their tax liabilities by allowing them to apply tax losses against gains in their portfolio or other sources of income

April 15 is undoubtedly one day that is not enthusiastically celebrated by most people. It is safe to say that the discomfort around Tax Day likely ranks right up there with your annual physical or renewing your driver’s license.

One area of fiscal pain that many investors dread every April is the taxes owed on their investments from the dividends, interest income, and/or capital gains realized. Some of these command a higher tax rate than others, and one of the biggest sources of “tax drag” on a portfolio is often on realized capital gains – or the difference in the price between what someone paid for an investment and what they sold it for. Most portfolio managers – whether for a typical mutual fund or a Separately Managed Account (SMA) – do not consider taxes in their investment process. Unless a portfolio manager or financial advisor conducts regular tax-loss harvesting, it’s likely that the fund or SMA will generate capital gains.

Over the past 20 years, actively managed U.S. equity funds have distributed an average of 7% of their Net Asset Value (NAV) in capital gains annually. (See chart below). Many SMA managers have the potential to generate capital gains that are higher than this. Moreover, there seems to be no clear correlation between the market’s performance and the average capital gains distribution. Just consider what your clients would be feeling if they experienced a year like 2008 and then had to pay a tax bill as well!