Author Topic: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds  (Read 8794 times)

lhamo

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Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« on: December 25, 2021, 12:01:12 PM »
I was poking around Vanguard last night trying to figure out what year end distributions are going to be and on my target date funds they are CRAZY!  VFORX is supposed to be paying out $7.67/share in capital gains + a $1.02 dividend.  Luckily I have these funds in my retirement accounts so I won't take a tax hit, but still trying to get my brain around it.

Anybody else dealing with year end surprises on their accounts?

AllTheStocks

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #1 on: December 25, 2021, 03:02:04 PM »
I have VTTHX in a taxable account and was also surprised by the upcoming capital gains payout, which is about 30X the amount that it has paid out in prior years.  See my recent post "Target Date Retirement Fund in Taxable Account - Bad Idea?" for some helpful responses with insights on why the capital gains are so much higher than usual this year and some ideas for what to do if you have a fund like this in a taxable account.

In some ways this is a good problem to have, but it's still a problem.  My taxable income for 2021 is going to be about 7X what I estimated earlier, so in early January I'll need to compute my actual income and tax liability and make revised Federal and State fourth quarter tax payments.  Longer-term, I'm planning to gradually reduce my VTTHX holding in the taxable account by redirecting the dividends and capital gains and selling any VTTHX shares that I can sell at a loss or around break-even.  I plan to re-invest this money in 60% VTSAX and 40% VTIAX in the taxable account (same ratio of US to international stock that Vanguard uses in their Target Date funds), then buy bonds in retirement accounts to get to my target asset allocation.  But it will be hard to get rid of VTTHX in the taxable account quickly without a big tax bill so this will probably be a gradual process.


lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #2 on: December 25, 2021, 03:21:16 PM »
I have a new appreciation for your quandry in that thread!  I have a big chunk of VTTHX, too -- enough that it is going to throw off 50k+ in capital gains.  Thankfully mine is in a retirement account.  If it were in my brokerage account it would have really messed me up....

I'm looking at a nominal 100k+ in year end distributions on my retirement accounts.  Of course it is all paper gains, because the share price will drop correspondingly.  I'm glad I figured out how that process works a few years ago because the immediate boost followed by the drop is always a shocker....

JoePublic3.14

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #3 on: December 25, 2021, 05:52:47 PM »
I have a new appreciation for your quandry in that thread!  I have a big chunk of VTTHX, too -- enough that it is going to throw off 50k+ in capital gains.  Thankfully mine is in a retirement account.  If it were in my brokerage account it would have really messed me up....

I'm looking at a nominal 100k+ in year end distributions on my retirement accounts.  Of course it is all paper gains, because the share price will drop correspondingly.  I'm glad I figured out how that process works a few years ago because the immediate boost followed by the drop is always a shocker....

It’s the phasing of sometimes seeing the drop before the boost that causes folks to freak out…

I’ve been investing in a taxable account for about 28 years, and have paid a lot of taxes on distributions. Hopefully that experience makes the drawdown phase a bit easier to take.

terran

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #4 on: December 25, 2021, 09:07:48 PM »
Ouch, yeah, that's pretty brutal. You can see the final estimates here on page 5. Definitely a good reminder of why it's best to avoid target date funds in taxable.

cool7hand

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #5 on: December 27, 2021, 09:41:57 AM »
Thanks for sharing!

seattlecyclone

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #6 on: December 27, 2021, 11:12:33 AM »
Ouch, yeah, that's pretty brutal. You can see the final estimates here on page 5. Definitely a good reminder of why it's best to avoid target date funds in taxable.

I don't think the problem is so much that it's a target date fund, it's that the fund saw a net outflow of cash representing more than a quarter of the fund's present value. They had no choice but to sell assets to pay the people leaving the fund and that resulted in a capital gain. It could happen with any of Vanguard's funds if enough people sell out.

scottish

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #7 on: December 27, 2021, 11:20:26 AM »
Is it true to say that you won't see this effect in exchange traded funds?


BNgarden

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boarder42

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #9 on: December 27, 2021, 11:38:40 AM »
Is it true to say that you won't see this effect in exchange traded funds?

I think this is correct they have a special rule built for them. But I'd like someone smarter to weigh in.

lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #10 on: December 27, 2021, 12:22:13 PM »
Ouch, yeah, that's pretty brutal. You can see the final estimates here on page 5. Definitely a good reminder of why it's best to avoid target date funds in taxable.

If you click through to the link terran posted you'll see the ETF distributions (they are in the final section of the pdf).  Minimal distributions and very few funds with any capital gains.  Nothing similar to the target date funds.

August26th

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #11 on: December 27, 2021, 12:37:59 PM »
OP: For those of us with VFORX in an IRA, this is very nice news. Had no idea, as I don’t pay attention to it. Thanks for the info!

seattlecyclone

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #12 on: December 27, 2021, 01:37:27 PM »
Is it true to say that you won't see this effect in exchange traded funds?

I think this is correct they have a special rule built for them. But I'd like someone smarter to weigh in.

Yeah it's all about how each type of fund works. A mutual fund is a pot of money that varies in size as people buy in or sell out. You're never trading your mutual fund shares with another person directly; shares are created when people buy in and destroyed when people sell out. ETFs work differently: you're trading your share on an exchange. For you to sell your share someone else has to buy it. Large brokerages can create new shares by trading in the right number of shares of the underlying stocks (which they will do if they see the ETF is trading above its underlying value) and they can also destroy a basket of ETF shares and take the underlying stock back if they see the ETF is underpriced relative to the rest of the market.

With either type of fund if they trade stock within the fund they have to pay out any gains as cash and the investor is taxed accordingly. This will commonly happen in actively managed funds where they're trading stock all the time according to the manager's strategy. With index funds there's much less trading, so it's uncommon to see much of a capital gain distribution from one. The exception is if an index mutual fund shrinks they have no choice but to sell shares to pay the investors leaving the fund. They can try to sell higher-basis stock to minimize this, but with how much the market has increased in recent years there's only so much they can do to control the distribution when there's a significant outflow of investment from the fund. Index ETFs won't have this problem because the fund doesn't have to sell shares for this reason.

Furthermore I think Vanguard has a process where they link the mutual fund and ETF shares together somehow. They push the lower-basis shares into the ETF (and then into the hands of big brokerages when they destroy ETF shares), leaving less unrealized gain for the mutual fund holders. Unfortunately Vanguard doesn't have ETF versions of their target date funds, so they can't employ that strategy here.

JoePublic3.14

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #13 on: December 27, 2021, 05:18:44 PM »
OP: For those of us with VFORX in an IRA, this is very nice news. Had no idea, as I don’t pay attention to it. Thanks for the info!

Why would this be nice news? Fund distributes $10 per share and share price drops by $10. Net nothing.

MustacheAndaHalf

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #14 on: December 28, 2021, 03:48:56 AM »
OP: For those of us with VFORX in an IRA, this is very nice news. Had no idea, as I don’t pay attention to it. Thanks for the info!
Why would this be nice news? Fund distributes $10 per share and share price drops by $10. Net nothing.
Those with the target date fund in taxable will owe tax on the distribution.


... ETFs work differently: you're trading your share on an exchange. For you to sell your share someone else has to buy it. Large brokerages can create new shares by trading in the right number of shares of the underlying stocks (which they will do if they see the ETF is trading above its underlying value) and they can also destroy a basket of ETF shares and take the underlying stock back if they see the ETF is underpriced relative to the rest of the market.
It's actually not the brokerage, but a designated list of institutional investors motivated by profit.  When their profit is enough, they use derivatives to lock in prices, and then transact a huge block of shares (for VTI it's 100,000 shares or about $24 million worth).  If the price is too high, they gather the stocks that make up the ETF, create shares, and sell those shares at a profit.  Their act of buying stocks and selling ETF shares drives the prices closer together.

With mutual funds that don't use Vanguard's patented approach, it's a pool of assets.  If Vanguard naively held 100% stocks, any selling would require it to sell and realize capital gains.  There was actually an S&P 500 fund run by a bank that did this, and suffered in it's first year in existence.  But most mutual funds aren't naive, and they keep a mixture of stock, cash and derivatives.  They might hold 97% stock, 1% 3x S&P 500, and 2% cash.  Most of the time, redemptions come from cash.  They can adjust derivatives to keep 100% stock exposure.  But sometimes the selling is excessive, and they're forced to sell underlying assets.

A stock + bond fund also has another source of volatility: rebalancing.  If stocks drop too far, they might be forced to rebalance.  And when stocks recover, to rebalance again.

JoePublic3.14

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #15 on: December 28, 2021, 10:03:21 AM »
OP: For those of us with VFORX in an IRA, this is very nice news. Had no idea, as I don’t pay attention to it. Thanks for the info!
Why would this be nice news? Fund distributes $10 per share and share price drops by $10. Net nothing.
Those with the target date fund in taxable will owe tax on the distribution.

Of course, but August26th specifically said IRA. Trying to see if they don’t understand how distributions work, so they could be informed about it.

Debts_of_Despair

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #16 on: December 28, 2021, 10:08:17 AM »
Where are you seeing the this information?  I don’t see anything listed for 2021 yet.

lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #17 on: December 28, 2021, 11:35:37 AM »
Another poster posted this link above:

https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/FAPYEEST_112021_RIG_Final.pdf

Target funds are on  page 5 of the pdf.  VTSAX is on page 6.  VTI, etc are in the ETF section

terran

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #18 on: December 28, 2021, 01:15:16 PM »
Ouch, yeah, that's pretty brutal. You can see the final estimates here on page 5. Definitely a good reminder of why it's best to avoid target date funds in taxable.

I don't think the problem is so much that it's a target date fund, it's that the fund saw a net outflow of cash representing more than a quarter of the fund's present value. They had no choice but to sell assets to pay the people leaving the fund and that resulted in a capital gain. It could happen with any of Vanguard's funds if enough people sell out.

Don't ETFs, and by extension vanguard index funds that have an ETF partner (which doesn't include their funds of funds) avoid this issue?

seattlecyclone

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #19 on: December 28, 2021, 01:27:54 PM »
Ouch, yeah, that's pretty brutal. You can see the final estimates here on page 5. Definitely a good reminder of why it's best to avoid target date funds in taxable.

I don't think the problem is so much that it's a target date fund, it's that the fund saw a net outflow of cash representing more than a quarter of the fund's present value. They had no choice but to sell assets to pay the people leaving the fund and that resulted in a capital gain. It could happen with any of Vanguard's funds if enough people sell out.

Don't ETFs, and by extension vanguard index funds that have an ETF partner (which doesn't include their funds of funds) avoid this issue?

Here's an article summarizing Vanguard's process. When a redemption is settled in stock instead of cash, no tax is due immediately. I presume the cost basis follows the stock in this case. ETFs typically redeem their shares in stock, giving the ETF owner the ability to get rid of whichever shares have the lowest cost basis (and highest unrealized gain). Mutual funds redeem in cash, so net outflows mean that they need to sell shares and distribute any gains to remaining investors. Vanguard's special patented process is they link an ETF (such as VTI) to a mutual fund (such as VTSAX). They can shift the lowest-basis shares from the mutual fund into the ETF, so when someone redeems ETF shares they can get rid of the stock with the maximum tax liability.

The mutual fund is still its own entity with its own shares. Just because they've optimized it so that the mutual fund owns the stock with the highest basis doesn't mean it's impossible for a selloff to cause a capital gains distribution; it's just much less likely. A small selloff can probably be mitigated by doing some loss harvesting in tandem with selling shares for a gain, but at some point I'd assume they'd run out of losers and have no choice but to sell some stock that had gained.

DaTrill

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #20 on: December 28, 2021, 01:32:25 PM »
Friends don't let friends buy mutual funds in taxable accounts. 

ETFs, control the gains (for now as Democrats are after punishing Bezos, Gates, Musk who hold trillions in ETFs???).  I thought Democrats wanted to tax the rich.  All the wealthy investors piling into low-cost index ETFs ;) 

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/09/16/democratic-plan-would-close-tax-break-on-exchange-traded-funds.html

August26th

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #21 on: December 28, 2021, 01:34:22 PM »
Perhaps I do not understand, as JoePublic3.14 mentioned.

If this is all happening in an IRA, I’m only taxed when I withdraw funds someday many years from now… correct? If that is the case and I withdraw a long time from now and am only taxed at my normal tax rate at the time I withdraw, why wouldn’t I be happy about dividends, etc. NOW that only make the account grow?

Educate me. Thank you.

seattlecyclone

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #22 on: December 28, 2021, 01:56:57 PM »
Perhaps I do not understand, as JoePublic3.14 mentioned.

If this is all happening in an IRA, I’m only taxed when I withdraw funds someday many years from now… correct? If that is the case and I withdraw a long time from now and am only taxed at my normal tax rate at the time I withdraw, why wouldn’t I be happy about dividends, etc. NOW that only make the account grow?

Educate me. Thank you.

Dividends and capital gains distributions don't make the account grow. When a company pays dividends, that money comes from somewhere: the company's bank account. This payout reduces the value of the company, and thereby reduces the value of the shares. Let's imagine someone founds a company that will just hold cash in a checking account: they issue 100 shares for $100 apiece. The company has $10,000 in its bank account. They decide they'll pay a $2 per share dividend. Their bank account is down to $9,800, still with 100 shares outstanding, so each share is now worth $98. Instead of having a $100 share like you did before the dividend, now you have a $98 share and $2 of cash. Obviously you wouldn't invest in a company that just has a checking account. You expect them to have some business operations that make the value of the stock go up, but the principle is the same: the dividend comes out of the value of the shares and is a completely neutral thing for the overall value of your portfolio.

Debts_of_Despair

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #23 on: December 28, 2021, 03:28:44 PM »
Another poster posted this link above:

https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/FAPYEEST_112021_RIG_Final.pdf

Target funds are on  page 5 of the pdf.  VTSAX is on page 6.  VTI, etc are in the ETF section

I see it now.

Weird how the capital gains are so much higher than the closely related 2035 AND 2045 funds.

JoePublic3.14

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #24 on: December 28, 2021, 04:48:14 PM »
Perhaps I do not understand, as JoePublic3.14 mentioned.

If this is all happening in an IRA, I’m only taxed when I withdraw funds someday many years from now… correct? If that is the case and I withdraw a long time from now and am only taxed at my normal tax rate at the time I withdraw, why wouldn’t I be happy about dividends, etc. NOW that only make the account grow?

Educate me. Thank you.

SeattleCyclone explained it, but please ask more questions if it is not clear. We are all trying to keep learning, so don’t feel bad.

theolympians

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #25 on: December 28, 2021, 05:05:12 PM »
Jumping in to the discussion involving August 26th. As a poster wrote, if dividends reduce the value of a share, why invest in any fund or stock that issues dividends? Is this a momentary concern for rapid traders and not for buy and hold types like myself?

My dividends are reinvested in the fund, hence more shares for me. Over time it is hoped the value of the shares increase meaning more $$. Is my thinking wrong?

Finally, I am not understanding the capital gains implication in this discussion. Wild guesses here: Are they taxes per share that must be paid, or a further dividend to the seller? Excuse my novice question!

seattlecyclone

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #26 on: December 28, 2021, 06:01:02 PM »
Jumping in to the discussion involving August 26th. As a poster wrote, if dividends reduce the value of a share, why invest in any fund or stock that issues dividends? Is this a momentary concern for rapid traders and not for buy and hold types like myself?

Dividends are a way for a company to get profits into the hands of investors. Another way is for the company to retain the profits (reinvesting the money into growing the business) and investors can sell their shares for a gain. There are various reasons why one or the other option might be desirable for different companies and different investors. Within a taxable account you might generally have a small bias against dividends because dividends take away your choice about when to realize the income on your own taxes. It's often better to let that gain ride and compound until later. Within a retirement account it's more of a neutral thing that doesn't make much difference either way. Whether you get cash that you then reinvest to buy more shares (and keep the value of your investment the same as it was before the dividend), or whether the company just lets the shares go up, it's mostly irrelevant.

Quote
My dividends are reinvested in the fund, hence more shares for me. Over time it is hoped the value of the shares increase meaning more $$. Is my thinking wrong?

Once again, the dividends aren't magic money. They come out of the value of the fund. If you immediately reinvest your dividend right back into the fund, it's little different than if there had been no dividend at all. The value of your resulting investment is the same either way, minus any taxes you pay on the dividend.

Quote
Finally, I am not understanding the capital gains implication in this discussion. Wild guesses here: Are they taxes per share that must be paid, or a further dividend to the seller? Excuse my novice question!

When a mutual fund sells shares for a gain they have to track how much that gain was. They are required to pay cash equivalent to this amount out to their shareholders at the end of the year. You might get two payments: a dividend and a capital gain payment. The tax treatment of these payments is very similar.

August26th

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #27 on: December 29, 2021, 02:20:21 PM »
This has been educational - thanks very much.

theolympians

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #28 on: December 29, 2021, 03:22:32 PM »
Thank you! 

rebel_quietude

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #29 on: December 29, 2021, 05:44:44 PM »
I'm appreciating this thread today, as my target date fund fell 11.6% for no apparent reason . . .

lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #30 on: December 29, 2021, 05:45:28 PM »
I have a new appreciation for your quandry in that thread!  I have a big chunk of VTTHX, too -- enough that it is going to throw off 50k+ in capital gains.  Thankfully mine is in a retirement account.  If it were in my brokerage account it would have really messed me up....

I'm looking at a nominal 100k+ in year end distributions on my retirement accounts.  Of course it is all paper gains, because the share price will drop correspondingly.  I'm glad I figured out how that process works a few years ago because the immediate boost followed by the drop is always a shocker....

It’s the phasing of sometimes seeing the drop before the boost that causes folks to freak out…


You were right about the order -- the drop just happened today and my accounts are over 100k lower than they were yesterday when the reinvested shares will bump them back up.


lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #31 on: December 29, 2021, 05:48:00 PM »
I'm appreciating this thread today, as my target date fund fell 11.6% for no apparent reason . . .

That's the drop in share price to account for the payouts -- those will hit your account tomorrow in additional shares (if you have automatic reinvesting turned on) or cash in your money market fund.

I am glad I figured out ahead of time how big the hit was going to be, though.  Really feel for anybody who has these funds in  taxable accounts who wasn't aware this was coming....

rebel_quietude

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #32 on: December 29, 2021, 06:38:26 PM »
I'm appreciating this thread today, as my target date fund fell 11.6% for no apparent reason . . .

That's the drop in share price to account for the payouts -- those will hit your account tomorrow in additional shares (if you have automatic reinvesting turned on) or cash in your money market fund.

I am glad I figured out ahead of time how big the hit was going to be, though.  Really feel for anybody who has these funds in  taxable accounts who wasn't aware this was coming....

I had no idea this level of realized gains was a thing. I'm scrubbing all my holdings to make sure I've prioritized selling any remaining mutual funds once I have room for the capital gains tax hit.

I hadn't found a lot of good math posts contrasting dividends and realized gains for equivalent ETF and Mutual Funds . . . I can't be the only person relying on fund pages, bogleheads, and Investopedia. Anyone have recommendations?

Tried to figure out the ETF vs mutual fund tax efficiency question years ago - and I obviously didn't do it well enough!

cannotWAIT

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #33 on: December 29, 2021, 07:42:45 PM »
I am an unsophisticated investor so please bear with me. I’ve read the thread but I still don’t understand it all. I have a tIRA and Roth in the 2030 fund, just saw the drop (down $50K) and came here looking for an explanation. What is going to be the actual impact for me in these accounts? And maybe more importantly, I have $100k in the equivalent fund at T.Rowe Price, but that one is in a taxable account. Is the same thing going to happen over there? Thanks for your help ans don’t worry about insulting me with very simple explanations! :)

lhamo

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #34 on: December 29, 2021, 10:28:15 PM »
With your Vanguard funds, if you have the accounts set up to reinvest dividends and capital gains you will see a bump in both the number of shares you have in the accounts and the value of the account after those transactions register tomorrow. Account value should go back to close to what it was yesterday. There are no tax implications because this is happening inside your tax sheltered retirement accounts.

If you have these Vanguard target date funds in your taxable brokerage account at TRP then the dividends and capital gains are going to be taxable. If they are different funds the gain and associated taxes might not be so bad, though.

kenmoremmm

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #35 on: December 29, 2021, 11:39:23 PM »
I'm appreciating this thread today, as my target date fund fell 11.6% for no apparent reason . . .

Right on. I had logged onto my account a few mins ago to update my year-end spreadsheets and saw -13.6% and was like WTF???

Glad this forum exists (for many reasons)

moonpalace

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #36 on: December 30, 2021, 06:45:36 AM »
As someone who holds some target-date funds in a retirement account, I'm planning to just not check my balances for a week or so. For mental health. :-)

JoePublic3.14

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #37 on: December 30, 2021, 07:13:54 AM »
I am an unsophisticated investor so please bear with me. I’ve read the thread but I still don’t understand it all. I have a tIRA and Roth in the 2030 fund, just saw the drop (down $50K) and came here looking for an explanation. What is going to be the actual impact for me in these accounts? And maybe more importantly, I have $100k in the equivalent fund at T.Rowe Price, but that one is in a taxable account. Is the same thing going to happen over there? Thanks for your help ans don’t worry about insulting me with very simple explanations! :)

You need to go check your transaction history at TRP. That will show how much you will be claiming come tax time. I think all TRP distributions are complete.

Check it out and come back with more questions.

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #38 on: December 30, 2021, 08:20:54 AM »
Yep, this hit me this year, I did have a chunk of a vanguard target retirement fund in Taxable from long ago that due to gains never seriously considered getting rid of (ETFs were not really a thing when I bought this...or maybe they were and I didn't know the difference, cant really recall). I remember buying it just so I wouldn't be tempted to be market timing my re-balancing, which I know I otherwise probably would, and it being Vanguard the fees were so low anyway.

rebel_quietude

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #39 on: December 30, 2021, 10:44:32 AM »
I really feel like they should have a disclaimer on the fund page. Like, "due to tax implications, these target date funds may not be appropriate for taxable accounts."

How hard is that? Would save some headaches.

secondcor521

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #40 on: December 30, 2021, 11:31:29 AM »
I really feel like they should have a disclaimer on the fund page. Like, "due to tax implications, these target date funds may not be appropriate for taxable accounts."

How hard is that? Would save some headaches.

Vanguard is an investment firm which provides investments.  What you're describing is tax advice, which Vanguard does not provide but can be found from a tax professional such as a CPA.

cannotWAIT

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #41 on: December 30, 2021, 11:33:11 AM »
But is it actually a target date fund issue? If a quarter of the holders of any fund decide to leave for the ETF equivalent, wouldn't that have the same result?


Rob_bob

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #42 on: December 30, 2021, 11:38:05 AM »
Perhaps I do not understand, as JoePublic3.14 mentioned.

If this is all happening in an IRA, I’m only taxed when I withdraw funds someday many years from now… correct? If that is the case and I withdraw a long time from now and am only taxed at my normal tax rate at the time I withdraw, why wouldn’t I be happy about dividends, etc. NOW that only make the account grow?

Educate me. Thank you.

Dividends and capital gains distributions don't make the account grow. When a company pays dividends, that money comes from somewhere: the company's bank account. This payout reduces the value of the company, and thereby reduces the value of the shares. Let's imagine someone founds a company that will just hold cash in a checking account: they issue 100 shares for $100 apiece. The company has $10,000 in its bank account. They decide they'll pay a $2 per share dividend. Their bank account is down to $9,800, still with 100 shares outstanding, so each share is now worth $98. Instead of having a $100 share like you did before the dividend, now you have a $98 share and $2 of cash. Obviously you wouldn't invest in a company that just has a checking account. You expect them to have some business operations that make the value of the stock go up, but the principle is the same: the dividend comes out of the value of the shares and is a completely neutral thing for the overall value of your portfolio.

When a company makes payroll and pays the electric bill doesn't that reduce the value of the company? Does that affect the stock price?

MissNancyPryor

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #43 on: December 30, 2021, 11:44:54 AM »
VWUAX distributed more than $22 per share (last year was $6).  I own a shit ton in taxable as well as retirement.  It totally blew up my health subsidy and I am sending a large check to Uncle Sam where last year I paid zero tax.  Strangely I find I am not mad about that at all.     

ETA- Post-FIRE my taxable brokerage proceeds come directly to my checking account rather than re-invested.  This means I didn't have to sell some of the stock I planned for filling the annual living expenses account this year.     
« Last Edit: December 30, 2021, 11:49:00 AM by MissNancyPryor »

secondcor521

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #44 on: December 30, 2021, 11:51:18 AM »
Perhaps I do not understand, as JoePublic3.14 mentioned.

If this is all happening in an IRA, I’m only taxed when I withdraw funds someday many years from now… correct? If that is the case and I withdraw a long time from now and am only taxed at my normal tax rate at the time I withdraw, why wouldn’t I be happy about dividends, etc. NOW that only make the account grow?

Educate me. Thank you.

Dividends and capital gains distributions don't make the account grow. When a company pays dividends, that money comes from somewhere: the company's bank account. This payout reduces the value of the company, and thereby reduces the value of the shares. Let's imagine someone founds a company that will just hold cash in a checking account: they issue 100 shares for $100 apiece. The company has $10,000 in its bank account. They decide they'll pay a $2 per share dividend. Their bank account is down to $9,800, still with 100 shares outstanding, so each share is now worth $98. Instead of having a $100 share like you did before the dividend, now you have a $98 share and $2 of cash. Obviously you wouldn't invest in a company that just has a checking account. You expect them to have some business operations that make the value of the stock go up, but the principle is the same: the dividend comes out of the value of the shares and is a completely neutral thing for the overall value of your portfolio.

When a company makes payroll and pays the electric bill doesn't that reduce the value of the company? Does that affect the stock price?

Technically speaking, yes.  But for large companies those expenses are small, continuous, and regular enough that for the stock price analyses they are probably ignored and/or just modeled as a continuous outflow.

I think companies are required to accrue expenses on financial statements, but probably only ones that are significant.  In theory, if payroll or the electric bill were significant, then when preparing financial statements they would have to reflect, say, 12/15th of their payroll or 13/30ths of their electric bill based.  This is different from ordinary people who usually don't accrue their paychecks or electric bills on a daily basis - they get their paycheck every other Friday or whatever and pay their electric bill on the due date.

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #45 on: December 30, 2021, 12:04:24 PM »
Reinvested shares have already hit my accounts, bringing the balances back up to about where they were pre-distribution.  So far I am up about 5k for the week.

August26th

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #46 on: December 30, 2021, 01:27:56 PM »
In light of this eye-opening discussion, I remembered that I began participating in a deferred compensation program just in the past couple of months, and I put those funds in a target plan. Should I consider selling/moving them to regular ETFs?  It’s only about 14K right now, but I do see that there were $850 in dividends this week. I believe I can change future contributions too. I expect to put 60-100K per year in this account going forward, depending on my income. It is tax-deferred, so maybe I’m okay though?

Thank you.

EvenSteven

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #47 on: December 30, 2021, 01:41:07 PM »
In light of this eye-opening discussion, I remembered that I began participating in a deferred compensation program just in the past couple of months, and I put those funds in a target plan. Should I consider selling/moving them to regular ETFs?  It’s only about 14K right now, but I do see that there were $850 in dividends this week. I believe I can change future contributions too. I expect to put 60-100K per year in this account going forward, depending on my income. It is tax-deferred, so maybe I’m okay though?

Thank you.

Deferred compensation plans like 457's will not pay taxes on dividends and capital gains. Like 401k or 403b plans, you will be taxed upon withdrawal, so dividends and capital gains distributions within these accounts won't affect your taxes. No need to change to ETfs for this reason.

rebel_quietude

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #48 on: December 31, 2021, 06:34:17 AM »
I really feel like they should have a disclaimer on the fund page. Like, "due to tax implications, these target date funds may not be appropriate for taxable accounts."

How hard is that? Would save some headaches.

Vanguard is an investment firm which provides investments.  What you're describing is tax advice, which Vanguard does not provide but can be found from a tax professional such as a CPA.

No. It's entirely possible to lawyer-up the verbiage so as to remove accusations of providing "tax advice," while still highlighting to customers that the model used for re-balancing increases dividend and capital gains exposure in taxable accounts.

Highlighting the tax implications of how their target date funds are managed is providing transparency and clarity to customers on the nature of the product. Not tax advice.

secondcor521

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Re: Crazy high capital gains on Vanguard target date funds
« Reply #49 on: December 31, 2021, 07:41:17 AM »
I really feel like they should have a disclaimer on the fund page. Like, "due to tax implications, these target date funds may not be appropriate for taxable accounts."

How hard is that? Would save some headaches.

Vanguard is an investment firm which provides investments.  What you're describing is tax advice, which Vanguard does not provide but can be found from a tax professional such as a CPA.

No. It's entirely possible to lawyer-up the verbiage so as to remove accusations of providing "tax advice," while still highlighting to customers that the model used for re-balancing increases dividend and capital gains exposure in taxable accounts.

Highlighting the tax implications of how their target date funds are managed is providing transparency and clarity to customers on the nature of the product. Not tax advice.

OK, let's try this:  What is the reason you think Vanguard has not yet implemented your idea?  Perhaps they've never thought of it, or perhaps nobody has ever made the suggestion to them, or perhaps they're dumb?