Vanguard Evaluates Tax-Loss Harvesting Strategy to Offset Capital Gains: Is It Worth It?

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Tax-loss harvesting can be valuable, potentially significantly so, to the right investor.

This is the takeaway from a recent study released by Vanguard. The firm looked at the practice of tax-loss harvesting (TLH) to determine when this practice is most useful for an investor’s portfolio. Specifically, the authors analyzed how this can help maximize a portfolio’s value for minimal cost. The value, they found, can vary significantly, but it can be quite useful based on the situation.

They found that for the right investors, tax-loss harvesting can potentially boost a portfolio’s value by anywhere from around 0.5% to around 4% over the long run. The most likely value is around a 1% increase in overall portfolio gains.

As we start to wind down 2024, with only a few weeks left to manage your annual capital gains, here’s what you should know. Consider speaking with a financial advisor about your own tax strategy.

Tax-loss harvesting is the practice of selling assets in your portfolio for a capital loss in order to reduce your overall taxable earnings, either capital gains or income. Typically, in this practice, an investor will then reinvest the money from the sale in a broadly similar asset or asset class. The result is an overall tax reduction that allows you to maintain your target asset allocation.

You can offset capital gains by any amount of capital losses you took during the same year. In most cases there is no limit to this practice, allowing you to reduce your taxable gains down to zero if you had equivalent losses. You can also offset up to $3,000 of earned income annually with capital losses. In order to do this, you must have no remaining taxable capital gains for the year (either no gains at all, or no remaining gains after offsetting losses).

For example, say that you earned $75,000 this year. This would give you federal taxes of around $8,761. However, say that you also have shares of stock in ABC Co. that are steadily losing value. You sell those shares for $5,000, posting a $2,500 loss from when you first purchased them. This gives you a capital loss of $2,500.

You can use this harvested loss to offset some of your taxable income, reducing it to $72,500. This would reduce your federal taxes to around $8,211, saving you about $550 in taxes. You can then take both the $5,000 proceeds from your stock sale and your $550 in tax savings and reinvest the total $5,550 in a company with a profile similar to ABC Co., but one that might perform better in the long run. This allows you to keep your desired asset classes, ditch a value-losing investment and reduce your taxes all in the same transaction.

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