Asset location

Asset location (AL) is a term used in personal finance to refer to how investors distribute their investments across savings vehicles including taxable accounts, tax-exempt accounts (e.g., TFSA, Roth IRA, ISAs, TESSAs), tax-deferred accounts (e.g., Canadia RRSP, American 401(k) and IRAs, British SIPPs, Irish Personal Retirement Savings Accounts (RPSA), and German Riester pensions), trust accounts (e.g., grantor retainer annuity trusts, generation-skipping trusts, charitable remainder trusts, charitable lead trusts), variable life insurance policies, foundations, and onshore vs. offshore accounts.[1]

While asset allocation (AA) determines what assets to own and in what proportions, AL determines where those assets are held. While the objective of AA is to create portfolios with the greatest return for a level of risk, and to optimize individuals' risk exposure according to their risk tolerance, goals and investment time frame, the objective of AL is to maximize the benefits of different account-types - usually to minimize taxes. There are other objectives that can be personal (e.g., the liquidity of the wealth, the expected use of the funds, privacy, etc.).

In the discussion below the effective tax rate for any asset depends on a personal tax bracket, different countries' treatment of different types of income, personal frequency of realizing the tax liability (e.g. capital gains only taxable when sold after a multi-year holding period), the mix of income-types generated by an asset, and the net tax effect that includes both tax debits and credits (e.g. the treatment of dividend income in Canada and Great Britain).[2]

Optimal Portfolio Choice

Tax Rates

Although there is no academic support, it is common (now declining) to hear that assets with the highest effective tax rates should be prioritized in tax-shelter accounts. This will have been broadly appropriate over the 30 years from the 1980s to the 2000s in North America, as interest rates declined and debt's total returns matched the returns of equity. The rules is dependent on the assumption that total returns from different asset-types are equal. When interest rates are low and expected to rise that assumption will not be valid.

Tax Efficiency

Another common metric to decide which assets should be prioritized is tax-efficiency.[3] This equals the dollars of tax payable per principal invested - the multiple of the asset's rate of return by its effective tax rate. Another way to look at the same metric is as the difference between the asset's nominal rate of return and its after-tax rate of return.

This metric measures the tax-sheltering benefits of the first year only. Reed [4] finds that this metric fails over the life of the accounts. Given two assets with the same tax-efficiency, the asset with the larger rate of return will always create larger benefits in tax-exempt accounts. Even when a high-return asset has a lower tax-efficiency, given enough time it creates more benefits.

It is only when the effective tax rate is very low that its importance relative to the rate of return is equally strong or stronger.

Cumulative Benefit

Reed calculates the actual cumulative benefit of the tax-shelter accounts equal to the difference between its ending value and the value if the asset were held in a taxable account. This is the difference between the future value of the investment compounded at the nominal rate of return, and the future value compounded at the after-tax rate of return. The measurement of the cumulative benefit over the expected life of the account, assuming no re-balancing, is a valid proxy for the relative benefit with yearly re-balancing. But this metric fails when the time span considered is relatively short.

Reed considers separately the bonus/penalty created by tax-deferred accounts when the tax rate for withdrawal is lower/higher than for contribution. The objective of AL is to maximize bonuses and minimize penalties. When a bonus is expected the general rule to prioritize high-return assets stays the same. When a higher tax is expected on withdrawal it may be that the low-return assets should get priority.

The conclusion that 'it all depends' means that general rules of thumb for asset-types are not valid.

Asset Types

Common advice is to locate tax-inefficient assets (such as bonds and real estate investment trusts) in the tax-advantaged accounts.[5] This is to fully utilize any long-term capital gain, or capital gains allowances available in taxable accounts. Place income-generating investments into tax-deferred or non-taxable accounts, and place equity investments into taxable accounts. The deciding factor is apparently the effective tax rate on the asset's income.

For the same reason, tax-exempt bonds, national savings certificates and other similar tax-privileged securities are best located in fully taxable accounts.[6] Shoven and Sialm[7] provided an analysis of the decision point when income producing equities should be sheltered and optimal portfolio choice for each type of account. Individual stocks, passive index funds, or exchange-traded funds are generally regarded as tax-efficient and, consequently, better placed in taxable accounts, when more heavily taxed income generating assets, such as bonds, real estate investment trusts, and so on, are available for secretion in a tax sheltered location.

Actively managed mutual funds or unit trusts may also prove to be better located in tax-sheltered vehicles, because equities held through financial intermediaries tend to be taxed more, due to high turnover, than individual equities held by an investor for the long term, who has the opportunity to plan the realization of gains and offset losses. Siegel and Montgomery[8] demonstrate conclusively that taxes and inflation substantially dampen compound returns especially for equity investors.

An Alternate Model

William Reichenstein [9] proposes an alternate model. He ignores completely the tax-sheltering benefits of tax-deferred and tax-exempt accounts. His AL objective is not to maximize those benefits. He uses the AL to fine-tune the AA decision using mean-variance optimization (MVO) of Modern portfolio theory. MVO uses the means, variances, and co-variance matrix of all assets, along with a utility function to manage risk tolerances.

When assets are held in taxable accounts their after-tax means and variances will be smaller than for those in tax-shelter accounts. Reichenstein considers each asset-type to have a taxable variant and an tax-free variant, with their different metrics. The MVO process results in an optimal AA for both the taxable and the tax-free asset. The AL falls out from this conclusion.

Patterns of Behavior

Surveys of households have shown that there is often a gulf between where assets are located and where some people think they ought to be, to provide an optimal tax outcome. Reed's re-balancing model rarely shows a difference of more than 10% after 30 years, unless withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts are at lower rates. So it may be that households are correct. Amromin [10] argues that job income insecurity, penalties and restrictions on withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts explain why people are tax-inefficient with their investments. Employers’ matches in defined contribution retirement plans and the structure of the social security system also play a part in driving low tax equity investments into sheltered accounts.[11]

Bodie and Crane[12] studied TIAA-CREF participants and concluded that investors chose similar asset allocations in their taxable and tax-deferred accounts, with little apparent regard for the benefits of tax efficient asset location. Barber and Odean[13] surveyed brokerage records and found that more than half of the households held taxable bonds in their taxable accounts, despite available alternatives, and that the preference for holding equity mutual funds in retirement accounts appeared to be stronger than that for holding taxable bonds.

Other commentators suggest decisions concerning the use of home equity and mortgage debt as a substitute for consumer debt have driven choice of portfolio location.[14] An idealized example shows that over a 25-year interval, the difference between extreme asset location choices yielded a compounded 18% differential in return.[15]

See also

References

  1. Brunel, Jean. 2001. “Asset Location—The Critical Variable: A Case Study.” Journal of Wealth Management, vol. 4, no. 1 (Summer):27–43.
  2. Robert M. Dammon, Chester S. Spatt and Harold H. Zhang, “Optimal Asset Location and Allocation with Taxable and Tax-Deferred Investing”, Journal Of Finance, Vol. LIX, No. 3 June 2004.
  3. Boglehead Wiki, “Principles of Tax-Efficient Fund Placement”
  4. C.Reed, “Rethinking Asset Location - between tax-deferred, tax-exempt and taxable accounts”, August 2013.
  5. William W. Jennings and William Reichenstein, “The Literature of Private Wealth Management”, The Research Foundation of CFA Institute, 2006.
  6. James Poterba, John Shoven & Clemens Sialm, “Asset Location for Retirement Savers”, Chapter 10, Private Pensions and Public Policies
  7. John B. Shoven and Clemens Sialm, “Asset Location in Tax-Deferred and Conventional Savings Accounts”, NBER Working Paper No. 7192, June 1999, JEL No. G11,G23,H24
  8. Laurence B. Siegel and David Montgomery, “Stocks, Bonds, and Bills after Taxes and Inflation.” Journal of Portfolio Management, vol. 21, no. 2 (Winter 1995):17–25.
  9. William Reichenstein, “Asset Allocation and Asset Location Decisions Revisited”, Journal of Wealth Management, Summer 2001
  10. Gene Amromin, “Precautionary Savings Motives and Tax Efficiency of Household Portfolios:An Empirical Analysis”, in Tax Policy and the Economy, Volume 22, University of Chicago Press, July 2008
  11. Zhe Li, “Retirement Savings and Portfolio Choices in Taxable and Tax-Deferred Accounts”, Stony Brook University, September 2009
  12. Bodie, Zvi, and Dwight B. Crane. 1997. “Personal Investing: Advice, Theory and Practice.” Financial Analysts Journal, vol. 53, no. 6 (November/December):13–22
  13. Brad M. Barber and Terrance Odean, “Are Individual Investors Tax Savvy? Evidence from Retail and Discount Brokerage Accounts”, Forthcoming: Journal of Public Economics, October 2002.
  14. Dean Maki, “Portfolio Shuffling and Tax Reform”, National Tax Journal, Vol 49 no. 3 (September 1996) pp. 317-329.
  15. Daniel Bergstresser and James Poterba, “Asset Allocation and Asset Location: Household Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances”, NBER Working Paper No. 9268, October 2002, JEL No. H2, G2

External links

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