Can You Turn Investment Losses into Tax Gains? BML Wealth Management

When markets take a spill, especially when it comes to your retirement investments, it’s harder to find ways to meet your financial goals. If you were relying on IRA or 401(k) withdrawals to cover your expenses, doing so when markets are down would decrease the lifespan of your savings. And if you’re nearing retirement, market losses may provide cause to push back the time you enter retirement.

While all these concerns are legitimate, there is a hidden benefit to selling your losing investments at a loss. Using a strategy called tax-loss harvesting, you can earn capital gains tax credits on your investment losses.

What is Tax-Loss Harvesting?

Selling stocks, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), and other investments carry a loss to offset gains from other investments sold. Essentially, you can sell investments at a loss to cancel out investments you sold at a gain or for on personal income.  It’s crucial to know that tax-loss harvesting only defers your capital gains taxes, it does not eliminate them. But if an investor has no capital gains to offset in the year the capital loss was “harvested,” the loss can be carried over to offset future gains or future income – there is no expiration date.[1]

When is the Right Time for Tax-Loss Harvesting?

This strategy is beneficial if you have a year in which your income or investment gains are abnormally high. Usually, around the time you retire, you will be adjusting how you cover your costs from external income to your own savings and investments. Doing so can create large, realized investment gains or abnormal personal income amounts on your tax returns. If this will be the case for you, engaging in tax loss harvesting may help you save on taxes in a sensible, legal way.

When it comes to tax-loss harvesting, timing is key. Knowing what tax years to make your asset adjustments is an important component of properly offsetting losses. But be sure to know other rules that make come with performing the tax-loss harvesting strategy. The Wash-Sale rule is a highly important rule to know to execute this strategy well. This rule prohibits you from claiming investment losses if you reinvested your assets in a similar or identical asset within 30 days of selling your previous one.[2]

Key Takeaway

Advocates of this strategy say that tax-loss harvesting is a shrewd way to turn a negative into a positive. Critics warn that tax-loss harvesting requires expertise and that the strategy can easily backfire, even when done professionally.[3] So, it’s generally a poor decision to sell an investment, even one with a loss, solely for tax reasons. However, tax-loss harvesting can be a useful part of your overall financial planning and investment strategy if the situation calls for it. But executing such a strategy is not easy to do on your own.

 

 

[1]https://www.investopedia.com/articles/taxes/08/tax-loss-harvesting.asp
[2] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/w/washsalerule.asp
[3] https://www.investopedia.com/articles/taxes/08/tax-loss-harvesting.asp

The commentary on this blog reflects the personal opinions, viewpoints, and analyses of BML Wealth Management’s employees providing such comments and should not be regarded as a description of advisory services provided by West Wealth Group, LLC.  The views reflected in the commentary are subject to change at any time without notice. Nothing on this blog constitutes investment advice.  Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. Investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. No investment strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against loss in periods of declining values. Past performance is no guarantee of future returns.

Investment advisory services through West Wealth Group, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Adviser. BML Wealth Management and West Wealth Group, LLC are affiliated entities. Insurance Services are offered through BML Wealth & Insurance Services, California Insurance License #0M15550.

We do not provide tax or legal advice. All individuals are encouraged to seek guidance from qualified professionals regarding their personal situation. Any references to protection benefits or steady and reliable income streams in this guide refer only to fixed insurance products. They do not refer, in any way, to securities or investment advisory products.


The commentary on this blog reflects the personal opinions, viewpoints, and analyses of BML Wealth Management’s employees providing such comments and should not be regarded as a description of advisory services provided by West Wealth Group, LLC. The views reflected in the commentary are subject to change at any time without notice. Nothing on this blog constitutes investment advice. Any mention of a particular security and related performance data is not a recommendation to buy or sell that security. Investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. No investment strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against loss in periods of declining values. Past performance is no guarantee of future returns.

Investment advisory services through West Wealth Group, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Adviser. BML Wealth Management and West Wealth Group, LLC are affiliated entities. Insurance Services are offered through BML Wealth & Insurance Services, California Insurance License #0M15550.

We do not provide tax or legal advice. All individuals are encouraged to seek guidance from qualified professionals regarding their personal situation. Any references to protection benefits or steady and reliable income streams in this guide refer only to fixed insurance products. They do not refer, in any way, to securities or investment advisory products.