
Imagine owning a mutual fund with big losses and then being forced to pay capital gains on that mutual fund because of sales in the fund. Suzanne Woolley reports how just that is happening to some investors. She writes:
Owning a mutual fund thatโsย down 20% or 30%ย is bad enough. Now, holders of many money-losing investments will be asked to pay capital gains taxes too.
The gains come from managers buying and selling securities inside the portfolio over the past year. If they sold a stock theyโd owned for a long time, they may have a big gain on it โ even if that stock, and the broader fund, are down this year.
Say aย fund bought a stake in Meta Platforms Inc. in 2014, back when it wasย known as Facebook and was trading in the $50s. The stock now trades around $111, so if the fund sold that long-held positionย it would still have a capital gain, even though Meta has fallen by about two-thirdsย this year.
As a result, many funds that are down double-digits this year will be distributing capital gains to shareholders, with some as high as 40% or more of the net asset value of the portfolio.
If investors donโt have losses in their own portfolios to offset the fundโs distribution, and holdย the fund in a taxable account rather thanย a 401(k) or IRA, theyโll most likely wind up paying theย long-term capital gains tax rate of 15%. (Some gains may be short-term, which means they were held for less than a year, and are taxed at ordinary income tax rates.) Tax is owed on gains even if they are reinvested in the fund.
โTough to Stomachโ
โItโs definitely tough to stomach if youโre down overall, and the market is down 20%, and you still get these capital gains distributions,โ said Stephen Welch, a manager research analyst at Morningstarย who is tracking capital gains distributions. While funds are putting up notices aboutย distributions on their websites now, payouts start in late November and run into late December.
Read more here.