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Taxes
Have a Role in Asset Allocation
Most of us pay heed to
the basics of asset allocation -- placing your investments in a
variety of different assets, such as large company stocks, small
company stocks, bonds and real estate, to maximize returns and
minimize risk.
But chances are you haven't given much thought to the location of
your investments. Namely, whether they sit in your tax-sheltered
401(k) and IRA, or reside in taxable accounts with a brokerage house
or mutual fund.
Three professors of finance have given the issue serious
consideration. They've concluded that putting bonds in tax-sheltered
retirement accounts and stocks in taxable accounts can over time
boost your portfolio by as much as 15% to 20%.
"You're not taking on more risk, you're just putting things in the
right place," says co-author Robert Dammon, professor of financial
economics at the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon
University.
The study, co-authored by Chester Spatt, Mellon Bank professor of
finance and director of the Center for Financial Markets at Tepper,
and Harold Zhang, associate professor of finance at Kenan-Flagler
Business School at the University of North Carolina, appeared in a
recent issue of the Journal of Finance.
Here's their rationale. Using asset allocation, investors should
have some bonds in their portfolio. Many investment advisers
recommend that the proportion of bonds increase as investors age and
approach retirement.
Bonds pay interest, which is taxed at ordinary income rates that
range from 25% to 35% for middle- to high-income earners. By
comparison, stocks don't generate taxes until they are sold,
producing capital gains, currently at 15% for the top four tax
brackets and 5% for the lowest two brackets. Some stocks pay
dividends, and these are also taxed at the 15% and 5% rates.
"The tax rate on equities is much lower than the tax rate on bonds,"
says Dammon. So, as long as you need bonds in your portfolio, they
should be in your tax-deferred accounts, where their interest
payments won't generate an annual tax bill.
Source:
THE STREET |