home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky sci.econ:8733 misc.invest:13891 misc.taxes:3595 talk.politics.misc:60675
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sdd.hp.com!caen!malgudi.oar.net!hyperion!desire.wright.edu!demon
- From: demon@desire.wright.edu (Stupendous Man)
- Newsgroups: sci.econ,misc.invest,misc.taxes,talk.politics.misc
- Subject: Re: Taxes and stocks (mostly)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.171007.5661@desire.wright.edu>
- Date: 17 Nov 92 17:10:07 EST
- References: <1992Nov15.221525.5619@desire.wright.edu> <1992Nov16.041235.26993@midway.uchicago.edu> <1992Nov16.125105.5632@desire.wright.edu> <1992Nov16.202148.24943@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Organization: Demonic Possesions, Inc.
- Lines: 233
-
- In article <1992Nov16.202148.24943@midway.uchicago.edu>, thf2@quads.uchicago.edu (Ted Frank) writes:
- > In article <1992Nov16.125105.5632@desire.wright.edu> demon@desire.wright.edu (Stupendous Man) writes:
- >>In article <1992Nov16.041235.26993@midway.uchicago.edu>, thf2@ellis.uchicago.edu (Ted Frank) writes:
- >>> Because of people selling off their stocks in December 1985 (or whenever
- >>> the tax took effect) for the tax break.
- >>
- >> Fence sitters and cyclicals due to peak in the first half of the year
- >>would probably sell in December, but there is not incentive for others to sell
- >>& buyback, incurring the commissions and possible adverse price change.
- >
- > What kind of adverse price change is there going to be in a five-minute
- > stretch?
-
- Differences in price can be quite large. You'd have to wait for
- confirmation of the sell before you bought, at the least. A smart trader would
- wait to see what else the market was doing. You don't want to buy at the top
- end of a downslope. You also don't want to buy if there is a local peak in the
- price. (A period when the price rises slightly before continuing down.
- And there's always the chance that after you sell the price simply goes
- up, and up, and up...before you get back in.
-
- >> Holding costs you nothing.
- >
- > Brett, that's 100% false. If you have $1000 in capital gains, and the
- > tax goes up from 23% to 35%, holding on to the stock costs you $120.
- > Period.
-
- Sorry, but there are no losses. Someone does not knock on your door
- and ask for money. Paper "losses" are only real if you actually sell at that
- point. Most successful traders don't base their trades on paper.
- I held my Sears stock. It's double since then (17-35), so where are my
- "losses"? (And I still haven't sold.)
-
- > Remember, all you have to do is sell and buy within five minutes. Then
-
- Do you buy stocks? Have you ever gotten confirmation within five
- minutes? If you don't wait for confirmation you could be in for a rude
- awakening the next day.
-
- > you've "realized" the capital gains in the year with the lower tax rate.
- > Yes, you pay two extra commissions. But for a large number of people,
- > especially long-term investors, who'd been holding onto stocks since
- > the days when the Dow was below 1000, that tax gain is going to outweigh
- > the cost of the exta commissions.
-
- I don't agree (that is probably obvious by now :). Anyone who held is
- up by two commissions and the tax paid. It's even better when you realize that
- Clinton will either index capital gains for inflation or cut the rate.
-
- >>When, and if, you sell, it's at the higher
- >>rate, but that's just another incentive to hold on for a little more gain to
- >>offset the taxes.
- >
- > We lose money on every sale, but make it up in volume?
-
- Nope. There's a difference between profit and loss. I get the
- impression that you don't trade stocks.
-
- > My jaw is still on the floor after this sentence.
-
- As well it should be. Best not to repeat it, eh? If I'm paying 3%
- more in taxes, but I sell at $10/share higher, it's more profit than selling at
- the lower rate, but at $10/share less.
- You see, you can't guarantee that you'll get back in at the same price
- you get out with. You can't even guarantee that the stock won't simply
- nosedive. Selling and buying back immediately simply locks in whatever profit
- you have at that time. And if that were a successful investment strategy (ie,
- repeatable) then everyone would be doing it as soon as their profits cleared
- commission by X%.
- However, you can't know whether getting back in will be profitable.
- And if you are that sure the stock will go up, then hold it and save the taxes
- and commissions.
-
- >>> And I refuted it. I can re-explain that, if you'd like.
- >>
- >> Go ahead. I doubt whether you'll convince many people that incurring
- >>two commisssions is better than holding in the face of an *eventual* increased
- >>tax bite. And then, only if gains are larger than losses for that year.
- >
- > If you're investing for gains, eventually you pay a tax bite.
-
- Maybe. If Clinton lowers the rate, I win BIG.
-
- > Unless you *plan* to lose money in the stock market. In which case,
- > yeah, you should hold onto stocks.
-
- Heh. Good thing you're in law school.
-
- > Do a Laffer-like experiment on the capital gains tax, Brett. Pretend
- > that instead of raising taxes from 23% to 35%, the government raised it
- > to 100%. Do you doubt that people wouldn't sell off for the tax break?
- > No matter what the commission?
-
- Ahhh, the straw man. Of course we can now argue about 100% income
- taxes to prove Laffer, eh?
-
- >>> Someone holding onto stocks with significant capital gains on the eve of
- >>> the tax change takes a huge hit that they don't have to if they sell and
- >>> rebuy the stocks. Yes, this transaction incurs two commissions. And for
- >>> *some* people, it's more profitable to take the hit. But are you really
- >>> arguing that there wasn't a single American out there whose tax advantages
- >>> didn't outweigh the sum total of the commissions? There
- >>
- >> No, just that their numbers are within the noise ratio.
- >
- > But, Brett there was a *spike*. It's clear that the numbers aren't within
- > the noise ratio.
-
- Year: Revenue from cap gains (millions):
-
- 1965 $4,100
- 1966 $4,000
- 1967 $5,500
- 1968 $7,200
- 1969 $5,900_________rate hike here
- 1970 $3,600
- 1971 $5,300
- 1972 $6,900
- 1973 $6,900
- 1974 $5,600
- 1975 $5,600
- 1976 NA
- 1977 $8,104
- 1978 $9,104________rate cut here
- 1979 $11,669
- 1980 $12,459
- 1981 $12,684
- 1982 $12,900
- 1983 $18,500
- 1984 $21,800
- 1985 $26,500
- 1986 $49,700_______rate increase here
- 1987 $32,900_______crash here
- 1988 $38,900
- 1989 $36,020
-
- 1990 should be out now, but I haven't been able to locate it.
-
- So, look at the periods after rate hikes, and the ones after rate cuts.
- Now you pick which trend you'd rather have.
- You can argue that $50k is a spike *caused* by the rate hike, but you
- can't argue that the revenues have not declined since then.
-
- >>They would not
- >>significantly increase the totals in the face of the usual year-end sell-offs.
- >>We could always take an un-scientific poll in misc.invest and ask how many
- >>people sold off to avoid the higher taxes.
- >
- > I'd prefer if you asked people who knew what they were doing. Or cite
-
- So we should leave you out? :)
-
- > to an investment column that told people *not* to take advantage of the
- > tax break.
-
- I can cite any number of investment columns that have been wrong.
- Getting it right means making a profit. Which I have done. Now, how much
- money did you make?
-
- > I'm sure there are a number of people in misc.invest who have the same
- > fallacious reasoning as you do. That's how the rest of the world makes
- > its money in the market.
-
- Heh. So your portfolio is up how much this year? Mines up 40% so far.
- There's still time to get in on Value CIty and Federated. Nike has passed you
- by as have Liz Claiborne and Reader's Digest. Allthough you did miss out on a
- lackluster Spaghetti Warehouse. :)
-
- >>> were billions of dollars of capital that were sold off and sometimes, but
- >>> not necessarily, rebought, for the sole purpose of avoiding the tax hit.
- >>> Which increases revenue dramatically in 1985 and drops it dramatically
- >>> in 1986.
- >>
- >> If people were going to get out of the market in the near term, that
- >>would certainly push them off the fence. But most investors don't play the
- >>market, they play the individual stocks.
- >
- > That doesn't stop them from taking advantage of the tax code.
-
- Or simply looking at the larger picture. The saying "pennywise and
- pound foolish" comes from such situations.
-
- >>> Ask any tax lawyer who was around in 1985, Brett.
- >>
- >> That's a bit like asking a broker whether I should trade now or wait.
- >>When does he want to get paid? Tax lawyers will always trumpet tax code
- >>changes to drum up business.
- >
- > What business is a tax lawyer going to drum up in 1992 to take advantage
- > of something that can't be taken advantage of after 1/1/1986?
-
- What's your point here?
-
- > Sheesh, I'm not a tax lawyer, and *I* can figure this out. You mean
- > to tell me that investment fund managers holding billions of dollars of
- > stocks couldn't figure this out?
-
- Heh, investment fund managers make money when they churn. They make
- even more money when they show gains. And they make still more when the gains
- last more than one year.
-
- >>> Or draw up the scenarios
- >>> yourself. For a certain capital gain greater than some N, it was more
- >>> profitable to sell off in 1985 and pay taxes that year. And there's
- >>> lots of money in that when you consider the large number of long-term
- >>> investors out there.
- >>
- >> I still have stock from that period. Unsold. No taxes paid. No
- >>commissions paid. How have I been hurt?
- >
- > If the additional 12% tax on your capital gains in 1985 was larger
- > than the cost of commission, that's how much you've been hurt.
-
- Not at all. When Clinton lowers the rate, or indexes for capital
- gains, I win big.
-
- > 12% is a big number, Brett. A lot bigger than commissions for more
- > investors than you think.
-
- Sure it is, but 100% is even bigger. (Sears doubled in that time
- frame. If I had sold, I would have paid more to get back in.)
-
- If you're so good that you can time the market, and can predict the
- price of a stock 3 hours from now, I invite you to do some stock trading and
- prove me wrong.
- But until you can show better results, I don't think any investors will
- listen to you.
-
- Brett
- ===============================================================================
- 80s: 18 million new jobs, deficits down (%GNP), tax rates down, tax revenues up
- GNP up, inflation down, unemployment down, interest rates down, cold war won
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-