Investors shouldn’t ignore the benefits of tax-loss harvesting on the fixed-income side either.
Thanks to the shift in rates and rising inflation, investors may have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to gain some significant tax benefits in their bond portfolios. And with rates still rising, there’s plenty of ability to keep the tax-loss harvesting party going with bonds.
Don’t forget to check our Fixed Income Channel to learn more about generating income in the current market conditions.
A Quick Tax-Loss Harvesting Primer
Tax-loss harvesting involves selling those stocks, funds or assets that are currently showing a ‘paper’ loss in your portfolio. That may be difficult to do psychologically, but it makes a lot of sense overall. For example, if you own shares of a former high-flier like Shopify (SHOP) and you are down around $1,000 on the position, you could sell the stock.
The benefit is that those losses can be used to offset booked gains in other positions. Even better is that if your capital losses exceed the gains or if you have no capital gains in a year, $3,000 worth of those losses can be used to reduce your ordinary income. And if you lose more than $3,000 on a stock, the excess can be pushed into the future to offset capital gains and ordinary income later on.
Thanks to zero cost commissions, new rules requiring brokerages to keep track of gains/losses, automated harvesting programs, and the ability to sell a single stock and buy an ETF that tracks the same sector immediately after, tax-loss harvesting has become a great way for investors to generate alpha in their portfolios.
Big Bond Losses
Thanks to the surge in inflation, the Federal Reserve (Fed) has started to ratchet up interest rates. Back in June, the central bank increased rates by a whopping 0.75%. This was the biggest jump since 1994 and follows a 0.25% increase in March and a 0.50% rise conducted in May.
The problem is bonds and interest rates have an inverse correlation with each other. So, when rates rise, bond prices fall. That’s because newly issued bonds of the same credit quality and maturity will come to market having higher interest rates. This is just what has happened as the Fed has tried to curtail inflation.
According to investment manager State Street, more than 92% of fixed income ETFs are trading at a loss for the year. Those losses are pretty steep as well. Roughly 77% of all bond ETFs are down more than 4% from their one-year highs, while just over half are down by 6%. Long-dated government bonds have performed the worst, dropping by more than 9% this year. The longer a bond’s maturity, the more sensitive it is to changes in interest rate policy. All in all, State Street estimates that across all timeframes, roughly $1.2 trillion worth of fixed-income assets are now sitting at paper losses.
For investors, this is a particularly interesting environment for tax-loss harvesting on the fixed income side. This is unprecedented given the size and sheer number of bonds trading at losses.
Don’t Forget Fixed Income
Additionally, investors may consider a ‘harvest & swap’ transaction. If they own an individual bond that’s now trading at a loss, they could sell it and then buy an ETF covering the same sector. For example, if you own a bond from Coca-Cola (KO), which is still investment grade/of good quality, it happens to be at a paper loss. You could sell it, book the losses for tax purposes, and immediately buy a vehicle like the iShares 5-10 Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF (IGIB), which includes KO’s bonds as well as similar investment-grade bonds. Investors get the tax benefits, a reset cost basis, and ability to stay invested in a similar asset.
Even better is the recent losses in equity positions, which may have some investors looking to sell long-term winners—particularly in the tech sector—to lock in gains. Pairing losses on fixed income investments with the gains of these long-term positions can be a powerful tax win this year.
Be sure to check our Portfolio Management Channel to learn more about different portfolio rebalancing strategies.
The Bottom Line
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