Value of an Advisor: T Is for Tax-Smart Planning and Investing

Executive summary:

  • When it comes to investing, it's not about how much a client earns from their portfolio but how much they get to keep.
  • A tax-smart advisor can help their clients minimize the tax burden on their portfolio by considering both the obvious taxes on investments and the hidden ones generated by typical fund activities.
  • Active tax management is one of the most important activities advisors can do to bring value to their clients.

Taxes may be the biggest fee your tax-sensitive clients are paying on their investment portfolios. And neither they nor you, their advisor, may be aware of just how big that fee is.

There are the obvious taxes – those that are paid on dividends, interest and capital gains.

But there are also hidden tax costs. These are a little bit like a tax "iceberg" hiding beneath the surface: taxes generated by rebalancing or changes in asset allocation, managers, or funds in a portfolio, among other activities. More on that soon.

How much do all these taxes add up to? According to Morningstar, active U.S. equity funds gave up on average 1.72% of returns to taxes every year in the five years ending December 2023.1 That means a mutual fund with a 10% pre-tax, three-year annualized return actually would have had an annual return of only 8.28% on an after-tax basis. This tax "drag" is significantly larger than the total fee most advisors charge. That tax drag represents money that is no longer available to invest and compound. And that can add up to be real money for real people living real lives.