Tax loss harvesting

=Introduction=

Tax Loss Harvesting takes advantage of the fact that the IRS allows you to deduct up to $3,000 a year of net capital losses against ordinary income {offset first against any realized capital gains) by temporarily selling holdings to book the losses, then either repurchasing the funds after 31 days, or immediately purchasing similar funds. Net losses greater than $3,000 can be carried over to subsequent years to offset first, any realized capital gains, and then offset ordinary income. =How it works=

January 2008: You invest $10,000 in Total Stock Market.

February 2008: The balance drops to $9,000. You sell it.

March 2008: You put $9,000 back into Total Stock Market. (Suppose that the share price is the same as in February, 2008 for simplicity.)

February 2009: You do your 2008 tax return. Since you have lost $1,000, you can reduce your ordinary income by $1,000, assuming you don't have any capital gains. If you are in the 25% bracket for example, you reduce your tax liability by $250 back. So, you invest the saving, $250, in Total Stock Market.

Suppose Total Stock Market keeps growing 8% year for 10 years after February, 2008.

January 2018: $10,000, which dropped to $9,000 in 2008, becomes $19,430..32 (= $9,000 * 1.08^10). $250 becomes $499.75 (= 250 * 1.08^9). Both of these combined, you have $19,930.07. You sell all shares and pay 15% tax on long-term capital gains. You end up with

$9,000+($19,930.07-$9,000)*85%+$250+($499.75-$250)*85% = $18,328.05

What if you didn't sell Total Stock Market in February, 2008? Note that you don't get $250 back in your 2008 tax return in 2009, so you end up with:

$10,000+($19,430.32-$10,000)*85% = $18,015.77

Notice the $312.38 difference. This is what you get by investing $250 doing a tax loss harvesting. Obviously, the longer you hold shares you purchased with the $250 refund, the more benefit you get.

In this example, you get both interest-free loan and free money from the IRS. You deducted the $1,000 loss at the 28% rate. When you sold the shares, you had $1,000 more capital gains on the $9,000 investment compared to the case without tax loss harvesting. However, you paid 15% on the capital gains. So, 15% of $1,000, which is $150 is an interest-free loan, and 13% (= 28% - 15%) of $1,000, which is $130, is free money from the IRS.

In reality, things are a bit more complicated. In the above example, I completely ignored dividends from Total Stock Market. Also, the share price may change between February 2008 and March 2008.

Now, some people speculate that the tax rates may go up in the future. Tax loss harvesting still works as long as the increase is reasonable. Specifically, as long as the tax you pay on the $1,000 extra capital gains ($10,000 - $9,000) is less than the amount $250 grows to, you benefit from tax loss harvesting. Suppose the long-term capital gain tax rate goes up to 30%. Then you would pay $300 on the $1,000 extra capital gains. However, $250 grows to $499.75, so you are not losing money yet. =Fine points about tax loss harvesting=


 * Wash sale. If you sell Total Stock Market with losses and buy back the same fund within 30 days before or after the sale, that would be called a wash sale, and you cannot claim the losses on your 2008 tax return.  The definition of a wash sale is a bit more complicated than that.  Before you do tax loss harvesting, be sure to familiarize yourself with the wash sale rule.
 * Reinvestment of dividends and capital gains. If you automatically reinvest dividends and capital gains, you may accidentally trigger a wash sale.  If you plan to do tax loss harvesting, it's generally safer to take dividends and capital gains in cash.
 * Cost basis accounting. Use Specific Identification of Shares instead of average cost basis to sell shares with losses.
 * Put volatile investments in your taxable account. For example, an international fund has larger ups and downs because of political and currency risks.  This makes it more likely for you to be able to do tax loss harvesting.
 * Commissions and bid-ask spreads. If you are doing tax loss harvesting on ETFs and/or individual stocks, you may have to pay commissions and bid-ask spreads, and they reduce the amount of money you get from tax loss harvesting.  For this reason, you may want to do tax loss harvesting on a sizable loss, say $1,000 or so.
 * Mutual funds. You don't have a problem with commissions or bid-ask spreads.  However, some mutual funds have redemptions fees for a certain period after the purchase.  Vanguard's Tax-Managed funds are prime examples of the redemption fees.  Another problem is that you could try to realize a small loss in a mutual fund position, but the loss may disappear by the time the redemption is processed.  For this reason, you may want to do tax loss harvesting on a sizable loss, say $1,000 or so.
 * Frequent-trading restrictions. Vanguard does not allow you to sell most funds and buy back into the same fund electronically within 60 days.  If you plan to buy the fund back in 31 days, one of the two transactions must be done by mail.
 * Qualified dividends. If you hold shares less than 61 days and receive qualified dividends from those shares, they are not qualified dividends even though the fund company may claim to be qualified dividends. You can read more about qualified dividends at http://www.fairmark.com/mutual/ordinary.htm.
 * Volatility of investment. In the real world, a tax loss harvester waiting  31 days to reinvest will see volatility in the investment. If the price of the investment goes up while the investor is on the sidelines she is disadvantaged; if the price goes down, she is advantaged. One might expect that over a long period of tax harvesting these volatility effects might wash out (if random) or perhaps, if there is a short term momentum effect, a slight advantage to the loss harvester over the long haul. This volatility of reinvestment risk can be mitigated if one immediately purchases a similar, but not identical investment, but this comes with a higher degree of complexity especially if one is swapping fractional lots of the original fund.