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Taxes & Alternatives to Shape Your Investment Planning What do you do now? February 27, 2010
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Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

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Page 1: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Taxes & Alternatives to Shape Your Investment Planning

What do you do now?

February 27, 2010

Page 2: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Understanding where we are today in investments Alice: Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?

The Cat: That depends a good deal on where you want to get to.

Alice: I don't much care where.

The Cat: Then it doesn't much matter which way you go.

Alice: …so long as I get somewhere.

—Lewis Carroll

Why did God create economists?To make weathermen feel good about themselves!

Page 3: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Where are we today on investments?

• Starting the decade Started with $100• Jan 2000 – Sept 2002 Down 42% $58• Oct 2002 – Dec 2006 Up 88% $109• Jan 2007 – March 2009 Down 45% $60• March 2009 – Dec 2009 Up 55% $92• Jan 2010 – Feb 2010 Down 5? $88

– Net return really stinks(technical term)

– We are expecting a 20% pullback from 1/1/2010

Page 4: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

The issues in the economy

• Ballooning federal deficits• Overheated China• Inflation and higher interest rates• High unemployment and debt-laden populace• Poor administration policies• Hostile business environment• Nuclear Iran – continued issues in Afghanistan and Iraq

Page 5: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

What the economy is telling us

• Economy is growing – very slowly off the bottom • Job growth is starting – really slowly• Earnings – stabilized and are growing

– Possibility of explosive growth in recovery• Inflation – low and likely to stay low for a long time

– Wages are two-thirds of costs and there is excess• Interest rates – long-term rates are not low (only short-term rates

are low) … they will be kept that way for two years to support housing the market mortgage reset, but then they will rise in the long-term

• Risks are still high – see prior slide

Page 6: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

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Current Income Tax Update and What is Going to Happen

in the Future

Page 7: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Current tax issues and expected changes

• The estate tax has phased out for 2010, but it might come back with more of a vengeance than anyone ever guessed

• More taxes on business; bank tax is first of many• Healthcare reform will fail (thankfully)• Stimulus will keep backing automotive industry and the

housing market • State taxes, fees, etc. are likely to increase further

Page 8: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Convert regular IRA to a Roth IRA: Opportunity or trap? The rules …

• 100% of growth is tax-exempt• No required minimum distributions (RMD) at age 70½• Spouse can convert your Roth to theirs and not have RMD• RMDs are required on inherited Roth IRAs • $100,000 modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) limit• Starting in 2010, the $100,000 MAGI no longer applies• The taxable income recognized on a Roth IRA conversion in

2010 (only) may be spread over the following two tax years (i.e. 2011 and 2012)

Page 9: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Convert regular IRA to a Roth IRA: Opportunity or trap?

• Good idea – Have excess assets to pass without ever needing to spend the

money– Have a large estate tax liability – estates over $10MM – Have a net loss or other deductions you can use to offset

conversion income– Must be able to pay the tax from non-Roth funds– Take advantage of deferred tax payment option (elect to report

the income half in each of 2011 and 2012)– IRA with significant nondeductible contributions

Page 10: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Convert regular IRA to a Roth IRA: Opportunity or trap?

• Bad idea … for most people, despite what you might hear– If your income is going to decrease in retirement– If you need to use the IRA in retirement– Question: Are you sure that a Roth will never be taxed?

• Planning – option to recharacterization back to regular IRA– Make the election now and decide later if you want to leave it – If values go down– Investment options – multiple accounts

• Non-working spouse contribute to nondeductible IRA and convert• If over 59½ – you can do this from company 401(k) (if allowed)

Page 11: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

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Ideas on “Savvy” Investing

Page 12: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Asset allocation Recommendations

• Traditional asset allocation – 60% stocks and 40% bonds

• January 2009 – we said when you see the light at the end of the tunnel (and you are sure it is not a train coming your way), – 40% stocks, reduce high-quality bonds to 30% and increase lower-

quality bonds to 30% • Today …

– High-quality short-term bonds 30%, high-income vehicles 10%, equities 30%, alternatives 30%

Page 13: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Fixed income investment thoughts

• Get your money out of money market funds – no return– MMF had grown from $7B to $10B during drop and decreased by

$300MM over last 9 months • Invest in high-quality short-term corporate bond fund or similar

quality short-term municipal bond fund – Yields are 3%+ in tax free and 4%+ in taxable funds– Do the income tax rate analysis; don’t be lazy– Risk spreads have returned to below long-term averages and the

economy is not yet fixed – Examples: FPNIX, IPFIX, STSMX, EMUNX

Page 14: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Fixed income investment thoughts

• Credit spreads back to normal … WHY????– Sell junk/low-quality bonds; 2200 spread now 600, below LT

average – Defaults are increasing but have not hit a high

• Sell long-term bonds; rising interest rates within the next 2 years• Sell closed-end bond funds where the discounts have closed • International bonds being hit by sovereign risk – stay away for now;

watch out for continuing run in dollar off its lows • Buy municipal bonds – ratio of muni yield to Treasury is at 92%

– Stay away from Florida and California – Use national funds, not MD

Page 15: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Fixed income investment thoughts

• For the aggressive portion of your portfolio – income oriented • Buy residential mortgage REITs

– Yields are very high and leverage is low vs. historical averages – The companies mostly own government-guaranteed mortgages – Look for rising short-term interest rates as the signal to sell– Ex: Annaly (ANH), MFA, PennyMac (PMT) Chimera (CIM)

• Look for increasing spreads in closed-end funds during market pullbacks and times of stress

Page 16: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Equity investment thoughts

• All equity market classes move together – Lowest correlation is 73%, meaning you get little protection

from diversification,– But the right sector does add return; – International stocks are not diversification

• Valuations are high but not expensive; – The problem is no growth

Page 17: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Equity investment thoughts

Where are we from the low and the high in the market and where are they valuation wise (current P/E 20 yr avg., PE & %)?

• Large Growth up 66% net down 18% 18.6/24.1 78%• Large Value up 73 net down 30 16.9/15.4 109%• Small Growth up 81 net down 23 19.0/21.4 89%• Small Value up 88 net down 23 15.4/15.4 100%• International up 74 net down 27 on historic averages• Emerging Markets up 109 net down 27 on historic averages

Page 18: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Equity investment thoughts

• Wait to buy half at 10% drop and second half at next 10% • Buy high-quality large cap companies

– Energy, healthcare, consumer staples, technology• Buy emerging markets funds• Buy small growth companies• Buy closed-end funds with high dividend returns

– Alpine Dynamic Dividend (ADVDX) or ING Global Equity Dividend (IGD)

• Buy business development companies– First Street Capital (FSC) & Ares Capital Corp (ARCC)

Page 19: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Alternative investment thoughts

• Includes REITs, commodities, long/short, hedged equity, merger funds, arbitrage, gold, option and multi-strategy approaches

• Alternatives are the only non-equity correlated class of investment – correlation factor of .35

• Goal: make 8-12% a year with much less risk than traditional long equity

Page 20: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

Alternative investment thoughts

• Gateway Fund (GATEX) options strategy• Merger Fund (MERFX) invests in spreads in traditional acquisitions• Diamond Hill Long Short Fund (DHLSX) uses the long short approach

to control market risk• Calamos Market Neutral Fund (CVSIX) is a multi-strategy income

oriented fund• Osterweis Strategic Income Fund (OSTIX) is a multi-strategy income

and appreciation fund • I hate gold and think oil is high right now; buy commodity funds

every time oil gets into the $50s – Ivy Global (IGNYX) or ING managed resources (IRR)

Page 21: Taxes & Alternatives 2 27-10 aaii dc

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Questions?

David Goldner, CPA, CFP, [email protected]

410.685.5512 main410.900.1305 directwww.gma-cpa.com