Exchange-traded fund investors are taking advantage of “a regulatory gray area of U.S. tax law” that gives the products an edge over index mutual funds, according to a new study.
“The paper shows that the tax efficiency of the ETF comes from not only owning it but also trading it,” the study said. “Owning an ETF helps investors track the index closely, while trading ETFs allows investors to reduce the taxable income of the whole portfolio, making ETFs more valuable than the index. Through buying and selling highly correlated ETFs, investors effectively avoid the wash-sale rule that disallows tax deduction with trades only for tax purposes.”
Reducing capital gains through tax-loss harvesting has emerged as a key element
While “nothing in this study contradicts that direct indexing in general will be superior,” Smartleaf President Jerry Michael has “never seen a quantitative measure of how the market reacts to the availability of a better substitute,” he said in an interview. His software and asset management firm provides automated systems for portfolio personalization and tax optimization to firms such as SEI Investment Management, Hightower, Altruist, Apex Clearing and AdvisorEngine.
“The study is a study of what people actually do in the real world. There may be all this theory about how you should do tax-loss harvesting. What do they actually do?” Michael said. “If there’s a better substitute, we see more loss harvesting.”
Holders of mutual funds and their financial advisor “should be aware of the pending capital gains associated with that fund” toward the end of the year and consider taking steps to offset them, said Brad McMillan, the chief investment officer of
“It’s a regulatory arbitrage where you’re gathering that tax loss, you’re gaining that tax alpha,” McMillan said. “It’s largely a matter of cost. You’ve already seen ETFs eat a large part of the passive market simply because of lower cost.”
The additional trading volume that Li uncovered for the paired ETFs using a statistical technique called a “
“It is unfair to tax investors of ETFs and individual stocks differently,” the paper concluded. “Since the wash-sale rule can be avoided using paired ETFs, the current tax policy effectively subsidizes ETFs. Besides, the current tax code treats index mutual funds and ETFs differently. An index ETF and an index mutual fund serve the same purpose — facilitating investors to hold a diversified portfolio with a relatively low transaction cost, but they have different tax treatments.”
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