At the beginning of 2003, many observers argued that the vaunted tax efficiency of exchange traded funds was likely to be unimportant for the foreseeable future. Large conventional mutual funds, particularly those that had taken in significant new assets during the late 1990s, had net realized and unrealized losses in their portfolios, reducing the probability of large capital gains distributions. To put the magnitude of taxable capital gains distributions in perspective, the Investment Company Institute calculated that U.S. mutual funds distributed only $5 billion in taxable capital gains to households in 2002, down from a record $96 billion in 2000. The sharp market recovery in 2003 erased many funds' accumulated losses, making fund tax efficiency significant again, especially for taxpayers who doubt the longevity of the current 15% capital gains tax rate.
In any sector fund tax-loss harvesting program, a tax-efficient fund is highly desirable. Tax efficiency is important in tax-loss harvesting since some of the fund positions in a tax-oriented investment program should perform well and become long-term holdings with embedded capital gains and diversification over the sector. Our interest, however, is not just with the tax efficiency of sector funds, but rather with all the characteristics of a sector fund that may allow an investor to generate tax-deferred returns more successfully and efficiently. For example, high volatility, low expenses, and good performance are highly desirable in a sector ETF used for tax-loss harvesting.
In principle, tax-loss harvesting relies on the fact that while most stocks go up and down together, individual securities and sectors have significant movements that are independent of the direction of the overall market. An investor who owns a diversified equity fund will have average pre-tax performance similar to the average performance of the portfolio of sector funds in the tax-loss harvesting program. However, the holder of a single broad market fund will not have a dependable source of tax losses. In fact, the investor in broad market funds will generally find that he has either more realizable tax losses than he needs to harvest, or no tax losses at all. If some stocks or market sectors are down when the overall market is up, the investor with diversified separate investments will have opportunities for tax-loss harvesting.
Prior to the introduction of sector ETFs, most tax-loss harvesting programs used separate portfolios of individual stocks. While separate stock portfolios may be able to generate more tax-loss opportunities than a diversified portfolio of sector funds, a separate stock portfolio will also incur higher tax management, trading, and administrative costs compared with a program using sector funds. Sector ETFs provide an efficient alternative to individual stock tax-loss strategies.
Using sector funds for tax-loss harvesting and portfolio management takes advantage of the fact that sector funds, in contrast to a diversified portfolio of several hundred individual securities, offer both a more broadly diversified portfolio in the aggregate and much lower management and trading costs. To be specific on the latter point, the cost to trade sector ETFs should be much smaller than the transaction costs associated with harvesting tax losses from a group of individual securities.
An admittedly extreme ETF-versus-individual-stock-trading cost comparison might come from the Nasdaq 100. The cost of trading the individual securities in the Nasdaq 100 can be as much as several percentage points for a round trip (buy and sell) trade. In contrast, it usually costs only a few cents a share to trade the QQQs, the Nasdaq 100 ETF.
Apart from commissions, which are negotiable (and small in any event), the bid-ask spread on the Nasdaq 100 for retail investors is rarely more than a penny or two a share. Even Microsoft and Intel among the Nasdaq 100 component securities usually have wider bid-ask spreads than the QQQs. Most sector ETFs will be less costly for investors to trade than baskets of the ETF's component stocks, but the savings will be less than the relative savings from trading the Nasdaq 100.
Using individual securities in a tax-loss harvesting investment program is also more labor intensive than using sector funds. To the extent that an investor employs an investment advisor to handle the tax-loss harvesting portfolio, the advisor's charge to use individual stocks is often several percent of assets per year. In contrast, the expense ratios on the sector funds range from 28 basis points on the Sector SPDRs and VIPERs to 60 basis points on iShares.
If an advisor is needed to handle the tax program, the total fees are still likely to be significantly less when using sector ETFs than the fees for a separate stock portfolio. Furthermore, the sector funds provide a higher degree of diversification, both individually and in the aggregate. A portfolio of sector funds will have a greater degree of diversification under virtually all circumstances than any separately managed portfolio of individual stocks is likely to attain, unless it consists of, say, 500 stocks, an untenable number for most separate account managers, let alone a do-it-yourself investor. Most investors will find tax management and tax-loss harvesting with sector funds to be simpler, less risky, and lower in cost.
Choosing the Right Family
The tables that appear on pages 58 and 60 following may be of help in selecting an appropriate family of sector funds and in getting comfortable with the sector fund approach. Table 1 (page 58) lists some attributes of the available sector funds that reflect their effectiveness for tax-loss harvesting. For the most part, the funds covering the sectors are roughly interchangeable in coverage. The choice will turn largely on cost and performance, with volatility a consideration that is harder to quantify.
The fund families are the Sector SPDRS, the iShares Sector Funds and the VIPERS Sector Funds now offered by Vanguard. In terms of sector definitions, both the Sector SPDRS and the VIPERS use the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) jointly developed by Standard & Poor's (which provides the indexes for the Sector SPDRS) and Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI). MSCI provides the indexes for the Vanguard VIPERS. The iShares Sector Funds use the Dow Jones Global Classification System (DJGCS), but they will soon switch to a new Industry Classification Benchmark (ICB) developed jointly by Dow Jones Indexes and the FTSE Group. The principal differences are in the two consumer indexes. In GICS, the nominal emphasis is on consumer discretionary spending versus staple spending. The Dow Jones Global Classification System emphasized the split between cyclical and non-cyclical consumer stocks. In the ICB system, the emphasis is on goods versus services. The resulting split in the consumer stocks will apparently continue to be slightly different.
Most financial industry research and analysis is based on the S&P 500 sector classifications. So, if research availability is important to an investor, the Sector SPDRs or the VIPERS (with a similar classification system) might be preferable. For aggregate portfolio risk management and tax-loss harvesting, the classification differences are not likely to be important.
The coverage differences among the fund families may be significant for a few investors. There are 9 Sector SPDR funds, compared with 10 iShares sector funds and 7 VIPERS sector funds. The difference between the Sector SPDRs and the iShares list occurs because the Sector SPDRs are based on the S&P 500 and there are not usually enough telecommunications stocks in the S&P 500 to populate a regulated investment company (RIC) diversification-compliant telecommunications fund. RIC diversification compliance is necessary if a fund is to distribute dividend income without taxation at the fund level. Any U.S. telecommunications sector fund (as well as funds in several other sectors) cannot be both RIC compliant and capitalization weighted. Telecommunications and technology, which are usually highly correlated, have been combined into a single fund in the Sector SPDRs. Vanguard has indicated that it plans to introduce energy, industrial, and telecommunications VIPERS, apparently when they work out how to handle the RIC compliance issue.
The number of companies included in the various sector indexes and in sector funds based on the components of the various broad market indexes varies significantly over the three sector ETF families. Because the largest companies are so dominant in all the indexes, adding additional companies does not reduce the target weighting of the largest companies in an index very much. While the iShares Sector Funds contain a total of about 1,600 securities from the Dow Jones indexes and a complete family of 10 VIPERS sector funds would have about 2,500 securities from the MSCI indexes, the S&P 500 stocks account for at least 80% of the capitalization weight of these broader sector indexes. The smaller number of companies in the Sector SPDRs makes their indexes and funds slightly more volatile than their more diversified competitors. As Table 2 (page 60) illustrates, the volatility (standard deviation) for the Sector SPDRs indexes generally has been higher than the volatility of the indexes underlying the iShares sector funds.
The principal reason for higher volatility in the Sector SPDRs indexes is the difference in aggregate diversification in coverage: 500 companies, against 1,600 or 2,500. Even though the large companies are weighted heavily in all the indexes, the fact of greater diversification, even within a sector, will reduce volatility. In terms of its effect on tax-loss harvesting, greater volatility in a sector fund is desirable because more volatile funds will usually show more diverse relative performance. Most of the volatility differences will disappear in the aggregate multi-sector portfolio because some of the greater sector volatility will cancel out in any of the broad market indexes that will be roughly matched by the basket of sector funds. We would expect the volatility of the VIPER sector funds to be similar to the volatility of the iShares sector funds.
Because several of the Dow Jones sector indexes are not RIC-diversification compliant, the index data in Table 2 overstates the likely volatility of the iShares sector funds, some of which will have smaller positions in some of their larger-capitalization stocks and, hence, more diversification and lower volatility than their indexes. The Sector SPDR indexes already reflect the smaller positions in some large capitalization stocks necessary to achieve RIC-diversification compliance.
Whose Expenses Are Lowest?