| Tax
Sheltering Index Funds
By Jim Wiandt
April 19, 2000 |
|
While it may seem counterintuitive, your retirement fund may
well be the best place to hold the riskier end of your portfolio.
Many of us think of retirement accounts as a place for conservative
assets, because we want to be certain of having a minimum of retirement
funds. At the same time we often look to the high risk, high gain
part of the market for short-term income. Placing your more volatile
growth investments in a tax shelter over the long term can be
advantageous because you save money on taxes. In addition, because
your retirement account is more likely to consist of long-term
investments, you decrease your susceptibility to short-term market
fluctuations.
The riskier asset classes (such as technology) often also have
higher long-term returns that can gain more from tax sheltering
in a retirement fund. This tax savings effect is most pronounced
over long periods of time and so has more relevance to younger
professionals. If 20 or more years remain until you plan to draw
on your retirement accounts, long-term investment in volatile
growth sectors of the market will not only save you taxes but
will help even out the tremendous short-term risks you face in
buying and selling these stocks over the near term.
Short-term volatility often leaves even professionals in a losing
position against the broader market in the near term. Even if
you do manage to rapidly increase the value of your portfolio
through active buying and selling, stocks that are turned over
in less than a year are taxed as ordinary income, taking a large
bite out of your short-term gains.
Investing in higher risk growth stocks using Roth IRA accounts
can eliminate tax consequences on short-term gains, notes Eric
Weir of Weir Capital Management. The downside of this strategy,
he says, is that you are unable to write off any losses that your
retirement account incurs.
Why choose index funds to play the more risky, high growth
end of the market? For the same reason you would choose index
funds in general. That is, you will reap the benefits of both
lower fees and of holding a stake in stocks with a potentially
explosive upside.
If you place your portfolio's higher-growth index funds in a
tax shelter, you will decrease your tax bill over the long haul.
In the charts that follow, you will notice the significant gain
that can be reaped by sheltering your higher returning funds and
using your taxable account to invest in more conservative funds.

