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Transaction costs and the effects of taxes and inflation can greatly reduce
the real returns on your investments. Transaction cost comes in many forms: brokerage commissions when you execute a trade; sales loads, 12b-1 fees, and redemption fees when you purchase or sell a mutual fund; and yearly asset management fees paid to a mutual fund, stockbroker, or investment adviser. Transaction costs can significantly decrease the returns on your investment portfolio. It should be every investor’s mission to reduce her transaction costs to the lowest possible level. A stockbroker or financial planner can tell you what stocks to buy, how to allocate your investments among asset classes, and how to make your investment program tax efficient. If you benefit from his advice and services, be prepared to pay a reasonable commission or fee. However, if you purchase a mutual fund and pay a 5.25-percent commission to an investment advisor, you have wasted a huge chunk of your money. You have paid far too much for handholding. You can purchase a similarly managed no-load fund with no sales charge. If you make your own investment and asset allocation decisions, you should search for the lowest brokerage fees or investment management charges available from reputable financial institutions. We own individual stocks. When we buy a stock based on our own analysis, we execute the trade through a well-known online broker at a low fixed fee. When we purchase a stock based on a recommendation from a full-service broker, we execute the trade through his firm at a negotiated fixed commission. We own no-load domestic index funds and international stock mutual funds, no-load REIT funds, and no-load intermediate bond funds. We also invest in a hedge fund with a very specialized market niche and pay the manager of the hedge fund a substantial management fee for his expertise. We understand the difference in experience, services provided, and fees charged, and are willing to pay for performance. However, we despise paying any unnecessary costs. You should also. Make it your goal to minimize transactions costs! Taxes and inflation are also enemies. Exhibit 2-6 shows the longterm effect of taxes and inflation on investment returns for common stocks, long-term government bonds, Treasury bills, and municipal bonds over 1926-1999. The results are dramatic. Common stocks provided a 5.0 percent compounded annual return after taxes and inflation. However, taxes and inflation wiped out the returns on Government bonds and Treasury bills. Given their exemption from federal The 10 Principles of Finance and How to Use Them 37 income taxes, municipal bonds provided a 2.5-percent positive return after inflation. As shown in Exhibit 2-6, taxes can have a negative effect on investment performance. Each year when you receive dividends, interest income, and short-term capital gains, you pay a portion of that income to Uncle Sam at current Federal income tax rates of up to 39.9 percent. Long-term capital gains are taxed at rates up to 20 percent. Tax payments greatly decrease the after-tax return on your investments, if they are held in a taxable account. Investors can establish tax-advantaged accounts to accumulate retirement assets. Three types of accounts are individual retirement accounts (IRAs), Roth IRAs, and 401(k) retirement accounts. An investor’s annual contribution to an IRA is tax deductible, if the investor’s taxable income does not exceed a certain level. The current maximum tax-deductible contribution to an IRA is $2000 (which is scheduled to increase to $5000 over time). Tax on the income received on the IRA is deferred until money is withdrawn. Such moneys are then taxed as current income. Contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax deductible, but the Roth IRA allows dividend, interest, and capital gains on the investments to |
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