In general, you keep investment records for any of the following reasons:
Reason 1: You want to track interest and dividend income.
Reason 2: You want to track realized and unrealized capital gains and losses.
Reason 3: You want to measure or grade the profitability of an investment by calculating its annual return or yield.
Obviously, all three of the tasks in the preceding list sound worthwhile, but many investors won't need to use Quicken's record-keeping tools to get this sort of information.
Tracking Investment Income
If your investing is done using tax-deferred accounts, such as individual retirement accounts, 401(k)s, and other similar investment containers, you don't need to track the investment's income. The income from tax-deferred investments stored is not currently taxable. The money you contribute to one of these tax-deferred accounts can be counted as a deduction when the money is transferred into the account. Any money you ultimately withdraw from one of these accounts can be counted as income when you move money out of the account and into your regular checking account.
For example, if you contribute money to an individual retirement account by writing a check on your regular bank account, you can categorize the check as “IRA contribution” when you write the check. This categorization lets you easily track the IRA contribution deduction you will need to report on your tax return. Similarly, if you withdraw money from an IRA account, all you need to do is categorize the deposit as IRA income. This lets you keep track of the IRA withdrawals you will also need to report on your tax return.
Tracking Capital Gains
As mentioned earlier, realized and unrealized capital gains are often the second reason for using Quicken for investment record keeping. In the case of a regular taxable investment account, any time you buy and then later sell an investment, you experience a capital gain or loss that needs to be reported on your tax return. Because capital gains and losses are important for your tax return, when you keep records of taxable investments you want to track these items. You even want to track potential, or unrealized, capital gains and losses.
However, while tracking unrealized and realized capital gains and losses is important for taxable investment accounts, you don't need to do this for tax-deferred investment accounts like individual retirement accounts and 401(k) accounts. The reason is simple. For tax-deferred investment accounts, gains and losses aren't taxable. Just as is the case with investment income, inside a tax-deferred investment account, gains and losses have no effect on taxable income. Again, the only tax effect comes from money you move into and out of the account.
In general, money you move into the account is a deduction for purposes of calculating your taxable income. Money you move out of your account is an income amount for purposes of calculating your income tax return.
The general rule described in the preceding paragraph—that money moved into and out of a tax-deferred investment account is what produces a tax deduction or taxable income amount—is true. However, predictably, some tax-deferred investment accounts don't work this way. There are, for example, nondeductible IRA and Roth IRA accounts.
A nondeductible IRA account doesn't give the taxpayer a deduction merely for moving money into the account. Also, a Roth IRA account doesn't actually produce any taxable income just because you move money out of the account.
The primary benefit of a Roth IRA is that you get to withdraw money from the IRA without including the withdrawal on your tax return. However, in spite of the fact that money moved into certain types of IRAs or out of certain types of IRAs doesn't trigger a tax deduction or taxable income, the general rules described here still apply. Even for nondeductible IRAs or Roth IRAs, you don't need to track investment income, dividend income, capital gains, and capital losses for tax record-keeping using Quicken.
Measuring Investment Performance
As identified earlier, the third reason for investment record keeping concerns investment performance measurement. In general, one of the things you want to do when you become serious about your investing is calculate how good or how bad an investment performs. Complete and accurate investment records force you to honestly evaluate your investing.
One of the ways you measure investment performance is by calculating the annual return, or yield, produced by the investment. For example, if you buy a stock for $12 a share and later sell it for $18 a share, you should calculate the annual return on the stock.
An annual return, or yield, resembles an interest rate. By comparing the return a stock earns to the return provided by other investments, you gain a frame of reference and get a better idea of whether a particular investment makes sense.
While calculating returns obviously makes sense, note that one of the tasks your mutual funds management company does is calculate annual returns. Therefore, you don't need to duplicate this effort. In effect, one of the services you are already paying the mutual funds management company for is the calculation of this important performance measure.
Mutual fund management companies calculate returns on an annual basis—typically using the calendar year as the period for which returns are calculated. Your investment holding period may not match the period for which the return was calculated. For example, if you hold an investment for one year but your year runs from July 1 to June 30, a return measure provided by the mutual fund company may not be useful if the return is from January 1 to December 31.
Nevertheless, if you use the prudent mutual fund investment strategy—which is simply to invest for longer periods, to buy and then hold—the mutual fund management company's performance measurements do give you the information you need.
How To Invest Mutual Fund
As I have said many times in this series, active management would be palatable and worth the outsized fees charged by mutual fund companies if they consistently delivered superior performance compared to a pre-defined benchmark, but they do not. Less than forty percent of actively managed funds beat their benchmarks in any one year. Over several years, that percentage becomes infinitesimal. The point of this article is to outline the vehicles that enable you to get these results. While I admit that I am biased, I will attempt to be balanced in the discussion by explaining the drawbacks.
Separately Managed Accounts (SMA's)
At First Sustainable, this is the vehicle we recommend for investors with $50,000 or more to invest. An SMA is an account that is set up by your investment advisor, which allows you to hold your own portfolio of well diversified instruments. The advisory makes its money by either charging a fee as a percentage of assets under management, a flat fee per year, or an hourly fee for the advisor's time. Trading commissions are either nominal or free. Your adviser should take into account your needs and then arrive at a portfolio that is, for lack of a better term, the ?YOU? Index.
Benefits. I love this vehicle, and here is why:
1) Your portfolio is completely tailored to your needs. You do not need to study every prospectus that comes to your door to see if a fund's strategy has changed without your knowledge. Periodic rebalancing is all that is required when your financial situation changes.
2) You and your adviser can be patient. Because the adviser is getting paid from assets under management, there is no incentive to churn your account, which as I've demonstrated, destroys portfolios.
3) At least with First Sustainable, you can buy fractional shares of individual equities, enabling your portfolio to be spread among dozens, if not hundreds, of instruments. This factor accounts for why this vehicle is only now catching on. Until technology enabled this feature, an SMA only made sense for the very wealthy.
4) The above factor means that you can still invest periodically without messing up your asset allocation. Before, indexing in an SMA was only good for investing a lump sum. Now, you can set up a disciplined savings program.
5) Because your turnover should be lessened, your annual tax bill should be decreased.
Drawbacks. Your adviser will likely not have a published track record. Even if one was available, it would not necessarily be an adequate measure of your adviser's competence. This account should be tailored to your specific needs, and thus, not comparable to anybody else's portfolio, thereby making a comparison useless. At First Sustainable, we overcome this aspect by making available indexes that we subscribe to. These indexes do have track records and professional oversight.
What to Watch Out For. Do not let your adviser place you in this account if he is going to, in turn, recommend vehicles that also have high expenses. For instance, paying the SMA fee for the privilege of getting placed in other actively managed funds is not a good deal, as you are paying twice. Advisory firms get paid twice this way, and it should be outlawed. Yet, this is a common practice among our less dutiful competitors. The ONLY time this would be an acceptable practice is if your portfolio is small enough that the adviser recommends VERY LOW COST index funds or ETF's. Even then, you should insist on a reduced SMA fee.
Index Funds
As investors have awakened to all the drawbacks of active management, these funds have exploded in popularity. They are essentially mutual funds that attempt to mirror the performance of an index. The most common indexes are the S&P 500, Russell 3000, Dow Jones Industrials, and a Total Market Index comprising all of these indexes. However, there are dozens of indexes for which funds are created. It is important that you and your adviser are capable of assessing the suitability of this index for your situation.
Benefits.
1) These funds have the lowest expense ratios around. The largest funds have expense ratios in the .05 percent range (that is .0005). A typical actively managed fund charges 3500 percent more.
2) They offer instant diversification
They require less research up front and less ongoing research.
3) They are ideal for investors who are just starting out with a small, disciplined savings plan.
Because indexes do not have high turnover, they are usually more tax efficient than actively managed funds.
Drawbacks. Not all index funds are created equally. First, some funds still claim to be low cost, but still charge well more than the stingiest funds. Many S&P 500 funds still get away with charging .5 percent, or ten times what the largest funds charge. Second, most indexes are created on a market capitalization basis. This means that their weighting is based on the company's total market value. This could lead to an overweighting of the high PE stocks that are most likely to retreat in a correction.
Exchange Traded Funds (ETF)
An ETF is a closed-end fund that is comprised of an index and trades like a stock on an exchange. Like their open-ended counterparts, there are dozens of alternative indexes than the most popular Spiders (S&P 500), Diamonds (Dow Jones Industrials), and QQQ (Nasdaq 100).
Benefits. Because they trade on an exchange, they are continuously priced. Most open ended funds are priced once a day. This allows an investor to take advantage of short term moves. Some (including me) would say this is a drawback.
Drawbacks. Closed end funds still carry an expense ratio. Theoretically, this should be less since the management company does not have to deal with inflows and outflows. The largest ETF's are less expensive for the most part. The less famous ETF's still carry a high expense ratio, which is not as well disclosed.
Both Stephen Nelson & Mark Brandon are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Mark Brandon has sinced written about articles on various topics from Best Mutual Funds. Mark Brandon is the managing partner of First Sustainable (), a registered investment advisory catering to socially responsible invest. Mark Brandon's top article generates over 3600 views. to your Favourites.
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