Investing for growth in retirement
Separately Managed Accounts
Here's verbiage from a large company's site that offers separate
accounts:
Your separately managed account is a customized portfolio of stocks and/or
bonds and cash that is guided by a professional investment manager. The manager
buys and sells stock and/or bonds for your portfolio on your behalf.
Because you directly own the securities within your account, you have the
option to specify investment restrictions (e.g., no alcohol or tobacco stocks),
and you may request tax-loss selling.
One all-inclusive fee arrangement covers all the services we provide. Therefore,
regardless of the number of trades in your account, the management cost does
not increase. A portion of the annualized fee, based on the total value of
your portfolio, is charged to your account each quarter.
Here's my experience—
You get the same portfolio as 50,000 other people. They do not
design a custom portfolio for you. It's no different than
being in a mutual fund. However, your account is separate
so if other investors want to sell, the manager is not forced
to sell at the wrong time in your portfolio. This is an
advantage over a mutual fund. There are other tax advantages
(see below). You may also be told that the managers who
manage these separate accounts typically only manage portfolios
of $5 million or more to make you feel important. That's
great—but what's more important is if they out-perform
the markets.
So you want to know:
- Why is this better than investing in a mutual fund
- How will I learn more
- What are the fees compared to a fund
- Why is this better than just investing in an index fund—-show
me the historical comparison
Tax Advantages of Separately Managed Accounts
Individual Cost Basis
Courtesy of technological advances, money-management firms
have been able to reduce significantly their minimum investment
requirements to well below the traditional $1 million mark.
Instead of pooling their assets with those of other investors,
a much larger audience of affluent investors can now access
the benefits of customized portfolio management via separate
accounts.
The ability to have individual cost basis on the securities in your portfolio
is the key to those benefits. To understand its significance, consider the nature
of the mutual fund. In its most basic form, a mutual fund is a company that
invests in other companies by purchasing the stocks and bonds issued by those
companies. When you purchase shares of a mutual fund, you have shared ownership
of the underlying securities with all of the other investors in the fund. You
do not have individual cost basis on those securities. Consider the following
example:
ACME Mutual Fund holds shares of two companies: Company 1 and Company 2. You
purchase 100 shares of ACME Mutual Fund. While you own those 100 shares of ACME
Mutual Fund, you do not own any shares of Company 1 or Company 2. Those shares
are owned by the ACME Mutual Fund company. Since you are an investor in ACME
Mutual Fund company, you can buy or sell shares of ACME Mutual Fund company,
but you have no ability to control Acmes decision to buy or sell shares
of Company 1 or Company 2.
If this seems a bit confusing, take a look at your personal mutual fund holdings.
Pick a fund and find out the name of the largest single holding in your fund.
If you call the fund company and tell them that you want to sell that holding,
your request will be denied. The fund makes decisions on behalf of all shareholders,
not based on the needs of a single investor.
To avoid the "mutual" nature of mutual funds, you could choose to
purchase individual stocks and bonds to build your own portfolio, but that is
a time-consuming proposition and lacks the benefit of professional portfolio
management - which is the primary reason most investors put their money in mutual
funds. To obtain the benefits of professional portfolio management without the
hindrance of mutual ownership of the underlying securities, an increasing number
of investors are turning toward separate accounts.
Putting the "Separate" in Separate Account
Separate accounts are similar to mutual funds in that a money manager develops
a model portfolio specializing in a particular aspect of the market (such as
large-cap, growth, small-cap or value) and purchases or sells securities in
an effort to generate positive returns. The key difference between mutual funds
and separate accounts is that, in a separate account, the money manager is purchasing
the securities in the portfolio on behalf on the investor, not on behalf of
the fund.
In our earlier example, we explained that investors in ACME Mutual Fund do
not own any shares of the underlying securities in that fund. In a separate
account, the investor does own those shares. If a separate account portfolio
model includes shares of Company 1 and shares of Company 2, when you invest
in that model portfolio, the money manager purchases shares of each of those
companies on your behalf. Your account is "separate" and distinct
from that of any other investor in that model, which (unlike mutual funds) gives
you the ability to direct the money manager to customize the portfolio based
on your personal needs. While it would defeat the purpose of hiring a professional
manager if you attempted to micro-manage every buy/sell decision made in the
portfolio, there are areas where it can be of significant value to make your
voice heard.
The Benefits of Individual Cost Basis
One of the most popular benefits of separate accounts involves tax gain/loss
harvesting, which is a technique for minimizing capital gains tax liability
through the selective realization of gains and losses in your separate account
portfolio. This can be a significant benefit for affluent investors. Consider,
for example, a separate-account portfolio in which two securities have been
purchased at similar prices. Over time, one of the securities has doubled in
value while the other has fallen by half. By instructing the money manager to
sell both securities, the gains generated by the security that has doubled in
value are offset by the losses in the other security, eliminating any capital-gains
tax liability. The proceeds from the sale can be reinvested, maintaining the
balance in your account. In a similar fashion, if you sold some real estate,
art or other investments at a gain, but have unrealized losses in your separate
account, you can realize the losses and use them to offset the gains from the
sale of your other investments.
Another tax benefit of individual cost basis is the lack
of embedded capital gains. Again, a comparison to mutual
funds demonstrates this issue. Mutual funds must pay out
all capital gains once per year. Since mutual funds are
"mutual," all investors share the tax liability
on the gains. So, for example, if the fund doubled in value
from January through November, investors purchasing into
the fund in December did not get the benefit of any of those
gains, but they do inherit the tax liability because the
gains are embedded in the portfolio. Separate account investors,
thanks to individual cost basis on the underlying securities,
would not be liable for capital gains generated prior to
the day they invested in the portfolio.
Another major advantage of individual cost basis is the
ability to customize the portfolio by choosing to avoid
investing in certain stocks or certain economic sectors
(technology, sin stocks, etc). This is an important option
if, for example, you work for a technology firm and your
portfolio is already heavy with your employers stock,
or you have strong personal convictions against investing
in certain companies (say, gambling, alcohol or land-mine
producers).
To maximize the benefits separate accounts offer, most investors work with
a professional investment advisor. The advisor provides assistance with asset-allocation
decisions, money-manager selection, as well as coordination of portfolio customization
and gain/loss harvesting. |