Portfolio Selection with Multiple Assets and Capital Gains Taxes

Portfolio Selection with Multiple Assets and Capital Gains Taxes
Author: Lorenzo Garlappi
Publisher:
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

We analyze the portfolio choice of an investor who can invest in tow risky assets (in addition to a riskless asset) and who is subject to taxes on realized capital gains. These taxes appear in the portfolio choice problem as a form of time-independent, endogenous transaction costs. Similar to the case of portfolio choice with transaction costs, the optimal strategy of the taxable investor contains a quot;no tradequot; region originating from the excercise of the option to defer capital gains taxes. This may lead an investor to hold a markedly undiversified portfolio, for reasonable parameter values. With multiple risky assets the investor is effectively holding a portfolio of tax-deferral options. The value of these options is considerable, in the range of 5-10% of the wealth of an investor with constant relative risk aversion. Such value is decreasing in the volatility and correlation of the assets and in the risk aversion. If the risky assets can be held only through a mutual fund, the investor incurs a cost due to the loss of flexibility whose magnitude is small when assets re positively correlated but can increase considerably as the correlation decreases.

Portfolio Investment with the Exact Tax Basis Via Nonlinear Programming

Portfolio Investment with the Exact Tax Basis Via Nonlinear Programming
Author: Victor DeMiguel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2004
Genre:
ISBN:

Computing the optimal portfolio policy of an investor facing capital gains tax is a challenging problem: because the tax to be paid depends on the price at which the security was purchased (the tax basis), the optimal policy is path dependent and the size of the problem grows exponentially with the number of time periods. A popular approach to address this problem is to approximate the exact tax basis by the weighted average purchase price. Our contribution is threefold. First, we show that the structure of the problem has several attractive features that can be exploited to determine the optimal portfolio policy using the exact tax basis via nonlinear programming. Second, we characterize the optimal portfolio policy in the presence of capital-gains tax when using the exact tax basis. Third, we show that the certainty equivalent loss from using the average tax basis instead of the exact basis is very small: it is typically less than 1% for problems with up to ten periods, and this result is robust to the choice of parameter values and to the presence of transaction costs, dividends, intermediate consumption, labor income, tax reset provision at death, and wash-sale constraints.

Optimal Portfolio Selection for the Small Investor Considering Risk and Transaction Costs

Optimal Portfolio Selection for the Small Investor Considering Risk and Transaction Costs
Author: Rainer Baule
Publisher:
Total Pages: 21
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

A direct application of classical portfolio selection theory is problematic for the small investor, since transaction costs in the form of bank and broker fees exist. Particularly minimum fees force the investor to choose a rather small selection of assets. This leads to an optimization problem which juxtaposes the transaction costs against the risk costs arising with portfolios consisting of only a few assets. Despite the non-convex and thus complex optimization, an algorithmic solution turns out to be very fast and precise. An empirical study shows that for smaller investment volumes, transaction costs dominate risk costs, so that optimal portfolios contain only a very small number of assets.