A Managed Account Offers Optimization and Tax Efficiency (2024)

Editor’s note: This is part two of a five-part series on supplemental income streams in retirement. Part one, Could Supplemental Income Strategies Work for Your Retirement?, is an introduction to the series. Part three is Annuities Provide Peace of Mind and Lifetime Income. Part four is Three Investments That Put Your Money to Work With Less Risk. Part five is That Cash in Your Emergency Fund Doesn't Have to Be Idle.

There may be no greater financial comfort than the ability to sit back and have your money work for you. But as you approach retirement, there’s special emphasis on making sure you have predictable income to support the lifestyle for which you’ve worked.

Investing in managed accounts may be an option for supplementing income from a retirement account or Social Security and can consist of a portfolio of investments in stocks, bonds, professionally managed models or liquid/illiquid alternative investments such as private equity, private credit, hedge funds or real assets.

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Managed accounts are designed to help meet your specific investment and income goals with risk tolerance in mind. The name comes from the professionally managed approach — often involving multiple teams dedicated to areas like researching underlying investments, constructing the overall portfolio or servicing your account. Typically, the manager will have discretion to purchase and sell assets with a fiduciary obligation to act in your best interest, including rebalancing the account periodically.

As with other investments, a managed account may not be right for all individuals. There are associated benefits, risks and costs to keep in mind. For example, ongoing fees are charged regardless of performance and are likely to be higher than a buy-and-hold investment strategy. Notably, this type of investing typically involves market risk, which means returns may vary across different time periods, due to factors such as economic conditions.

Managed accounts can help provide growth and income

Your financial adviser can help determine if a managed account is right for you and what kind of investment mix may be most beneficial. The mix likely will be diversified across a wide variety of asset classes to optimize the risk and return characteristics of the investments in the context of your risk appetite. Your financial adviser may further personalize the portfolio to your specific preferences or objectives, such as generating higher yield or aligning to your values.

Importantly, managed accounts can be set up to help provide growth and income, both of which depend on the performance of investments in the account. Distributions of dividends or interest generated from the underlying investments can be used as supplemental income or reinvested back into the program to purchase additional assets.

In addition, the principal investment and any potential gains are typically available and often used as part of a total return strategy, whereby systematic withdrawals from the account balance are used to help satisfy income needs.

Furthermore, transactions in a managed account are often timed by the fund manager at specific intervals to help limit tax consequences, with more customized strategies coordinating your income needs with your tax concerns across a variety of accounts.

Managed accounts can be particularly attractive if you have a higher risk tolerance in retirement, as capital appreciation can be a significant factor in supporting your future cash flow needs, particularly when considering the effect inflation can have on your purchasing power. When funds perform well, you may be able to sustain higher distributions over your lifetime.

Conversely, more aggressive managed accounts that may rely more heavily on stock performance, can be riskier investments in periods of economic volatility — presenting short-term money losses for investors based on market conditions.

Poor returns early on can have adverse effects

The potential for an investment like a managed account to produce poor returns in the near term while you are drawing income from it may harm your overall rate of return in the future, even if the investments appreciate over time. This is because the money withdrawn won’t participate when markets turn around. This is known as sequence of returns risk, and the size of your withdrawals plays a role in how this risk may affect your retirement spending goals.

While investing your retirement assets in a managed account may be an effective way to outpace inflation, a financial adviser can help you determine if you’ll have the cash to be able to support your lifestyle in the event of short-term losses referenced above.

More personalized managed account programs often come with services like financial planning, which can include an analysis of your situation whereby a financial adviser may consider sequence of returns among other risks in modeling different market conditions with your retirement spending objectives and other unique circ*mstances.

To summarize, the advantages of managed accounts include:

  • Professional investment selection and account management
  • Asset allocation and diversification to help balance risk and return opportunities
  • Potential for higher returns based on account performance and market conditions
  • Active advice personalized to the investor’s specific risk tolerance and needs such as income or tax management
  • Automated rebalancing to help ensure that the investments align with your risk appetite, goals and objectives

The potential drawbacks of managed accounts include:

  • Susceptibility to market conditions (depending on the investment mix)
  • Ongoing fees may be higher than a one-time commission over time

As a stand-alone, total return approach or in tandem with other accounts, a managed account may help increase the potential for your retirement assets to meet your retirement goals. With a little homework and help from a financial adviser, you can consider whether a managed account is an effective way to supplement your income in retirement.

The other articles in this series:
Part one:
Could Supplemental Income Strategies Work for Your Retirement?
Part three: Annuities Provide Peace of Mind and Lifetime Income
Part four: Three Investments That Put Your Money to Work With Less Risk
Part five: That Cash in Your Emergency Fund Doesn't Have to Be Idle

RELATED CONTENT

  • Don’t Let Sequence of Returns Risk Cook Your Goose
  • Five Reasons You’ll Blow Up Your Retirement Plan
  • In Retirement Planning, What’s Your Retirement Personality?
  • During Market Volatility, Avoid These Common Investing Pitfalls

Disclaimer

This article was written by and presents the views of our contributing adviser, not the Kiplinger editorial staff. You can check adviser records with the SEC or with FINRA.

A Managed Account Offers Optimization and Tax Efficiency (2024)

FAQs

A Managed Account Offers Optimization and Tax Efficiency? ›

An account managed by a financial professional can supplement your retirement income, but beware of ongoing fees that could be higher than other investment strategies.

How do you optimize tax efficiency? ›

A good way to maximize tax efficiency is to put investments in the right account. In general, investments that lose less earnings to taxes are better suited for taxable accounts. Conversely, investments that tend to lose more of their returns to taxes are good candidates for tax-advantaged accounts.

Why are SMAs more tax-efficient? ›

Because you directly own each stock in an SMA, your advisor knows the “cost basis” used to calculate gains and losses when stocks are sold. They can use this information to better control the taxes you might owe on your investments each year.

Are tax-managed accounts worth it? ›

Tax-managed investing can help reduce the bite that taxes take out of a portfolio. Investment taxes are triggered by different types of gains, income and distributions.

What is a tax-efficient account? ›

Tax efficiency is when an individual or business pays the least amount of taxes required by law. A taxpayer can open income-producing accounts that are tax-deferred, such as an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) or a 401(k) plan. Tax-efficient mutual funds are taxed at a lower rate relative to other mutual funds.

What do you mean by tax efficiency? ›

Tax efficiency is when a person or a business lawfully pays the least in tax that they need to. It is not the same as tax evasion. It tends to be a type of financial arrangement that allows you to lawfully pay either no tax or less than usual.

How do I optimize my tax return? ›

Key Takeaways

Identifying and claiming tax deductions will reduce your taxable income. Exploring tax credits can significantly increase tax refunds. Maximizing contributions to retirement accounts can increase tax benefits. Consider adjusting withholding to optimize tax refunds.

Are Fidelity SMAs worth it? ›

SMAs offer a high degree of transparency because you can track individual positions and prices intraday and can also provide individualized tax management. Unlike mutual funds or ETFs, SMAs can be customized: You can pick a limited number of investments to exclude.

What are the benefits of an SMA account? ›

The benefits of investing in an SMA include personalized portfolio management, greater transparency, direct ownership of assets, potential tax efficiency, and the ability to exclude certain investments based on personal preferences or ethical considerations.

What are the pros and cons of SMAs? ›

It allows for flexibility, control, transparency, and tax deductions. However, SMAs also tend to have high investment minimums and complicated fees and require more work.

Are SMAs better than ETFs? ›

ETFs provide greater liquidity, transparency, and cost efficiency, making them a good choice for investors seeking flexibility. SMAs, on the other hand, offer personalized solutions tailored to individual needs, making them an attractive option for high-net-worth investors with specific requirements.

Should I put money in a managed account? ›

Managed money accounts can be appropriate for many retail investors as long as they have a high enough level of assets under management to make the annual fees worthwhile. Particularly for active traders, the annual fee on this type of account may be less expensive than paying a fee for every transaction.

How much should I pay for a managed account? ›

‍Advisor (Management) Fees

The industry typically refers to this as an investment management fee and averages between 1-2% of assets (i.e. A $100,000 investment could cost you between $1,000 - $2,000 annually).

Are SMA's tax-efficient? ›

With SMAs, there are no embedded capital gains to worry about. Since the underlying securities are purchased directly, end investors will only pay taxes on gains they've received a direct benefit from, making SMAs a more tax-efficient vehicle compared to mutual funds.

Which fund is most tax-efficient? ›

Index mutual funds & ETFs

Index funds—whether mutual funds or ETFs (exchange-traded funds)—are naturally tax-efficient for a couple of reasons: Because index funds simply replicate the holdings of an index, they don't trade in and out of securities as often as an active fund would.

How to build a tax-efficient portfolio? ›

Choosing investments with built-in tax efficiencies, such as index funds—including certain mutual funds and ETFs (exchange-traded funds)—is one way to minimize the tax drag on your returns. ETFs may offer an additional tax advantage. The way their transactions settle allows them to avoid triggering some capital gains.

What makes a tax system efficient? ›

A good tax system should meet five basic conditions: fairness, adequacy, simplicity, transparency, and administrative ease.

What are two criteria for making a tax efficient? ›

What are two criteria for making a tax efficient? Easy to administer and successful at generating revenue. What is the benefit principle of taxation? Taxes should be paid according to benefits received regardless of income.

How do you optimize tax loss harvesting? ›

The three steps in the tax-loss harvesting process are: 1) Sell securities that have lost value; 2) Use the capital loss to offset capital gains on other sales; 3) Replace the exited investments with similar (but not too similar) investments to maintain the desired investment exposure.

How do you solve for effective tax rate? ›

Your effective tax rate is your total tax divided by your taxable income. In our example, your tax bill is $11,017 and your taxable income is $70,000. Your effective tax rate would be $11,017 divided by $70,000, or 15.7%.

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