Dear Clients & Friends,
Last Wednesday, the Federal Reserve Bank’s Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted 8-0 to keep its target range for the Federal funds rate at 1.5% to 1.75%. In the statement, the FOMC said that its target rate of 2.0% for core inflation was close to being met at the current 1.88% for March. The Fed also reiterated that it expects the federal funds rate to remain lower than expectations for some time. Also, last Friday, investors liked the jobs report enough to provide an upside to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the NASDAQ. So the volatility continues.
As we discussed in the past, short-term volatility provides us with some great opportunities to selectively invest in specific stocks of companies that are in specific industries that fits our investment strategy. In addition, it provides us an opportunity to evaluate our taxable portfolios for purposes of making them more tax-efficient. Many investments apply to both taxable and non-taxable accounts. However, this Special Investment Update focuses primarily on taxable accounts.
Most common stocks, taxable bonds as well as stock and bond funds ideally should be held in tax-free accounts to limit or defer income tax liabilities. One exception to that is foreign common stocks, depending on the tax treaty between that company’s home nation and the United States. Many treaties provide exemption from withholding taxes for shares held in retirement accounts – but others do not. In that case, it makes sense to hold the stock in a taxable account, which will allow you to deduct foreign taxes paid on your income tax return. Tax – advantaged investments like our REITS, MLPs and Municipal bond funds should be held in taxable accounts to maximize the benefits of limiting or eliminating income tax liability that would be lost in tax free accounts. In addition, tax shielded investments like pass throughs and some REITS held inside a tax-deferred account such as an IRA, Roth IRA, SEP, 401K or 403b can cause a tax issue if too much in net taxable dividends is earned in a given year. If the net taxable dividends in such an account exceed $1,000 in a specific year, then that income would become taxable under IRS’s Unrelated Business Taxable Income (UBTI) rules. To avoid having non-taxable dividends becoming taxable, it is best for us to have them held in personal taxable accounts.
Also, volatility provides us an opportunity to review your prior year’s tax status for purposes of doing some tax selling throughout the year in an effort to make your taxable portfolios more tax efficient. The tax selling is performed without changing the asset – allocation mix of the portfolios. In addition, we prepare tax projections on all of our firms’ tax clients for purposes of tax and financial planning.
Even as the stock market continues to churn, the underlying U.S. economy is faring quite well. Conditions are positive for us to use this opportunity to put our cash to work by buying great companies at great prices. Also, while many fear the pressures of the bond market in this rising-rate environment, we feel there is value in some closed-end municipal bond funds that are trading at deep discounts and yielding big dividends.
Let us start with banks, which have been in a very bad spot in the post-2008 market. With a series of compliance rule rollbacks by the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve, including rollbacks on capital requirements, the businesses of banking is now making a comeback. Banks are already reaping huge tax savings that are falling right on their bottom lines due to the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of December 2017.
We expect many other industries to benefit from this type of economy including Real Estate Limited Partnerships (RELP), Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT) as well as Master Limited Partnership (MLP) units of petroleum pipeline infrastructure companies. There was a market sell-off of these “pass through” entities following the tax cut in December 2017. As individual investors, the pass through qualities of MLP’s, GP’s, LP’s and LLC’s offer dividend distributions that are “passed through” directly to shareholders that are largely or completely shielded from current income tax liabilities because tax deductions such as depreciation are also “passed through”. In addition, with inflation low and U.S. Treasury yields still at lower and less appealing levels, the municipal bond market is providing great yields that in many cases pay us more than U.S. Treasuries, even before the impact of their tax-free status.
Overall, we should continue to see expanding revenues and profit margins in many industries and business segments for the remainder of the year.
We want to thank all of you for giving our firm the opportunity to serve you. We thank you very much for the trust and confidence you have placed in our firm as it is always appreciated. Please contact us should you have any questions or comments.
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