Sell Grade

Considerations

GainsAdvisor helps maximize after-tax returns. Its 'Sell Grade' metric reflects the tax consequence of selling an investment. The higher the Sell Grade value, the better the after-tax return. GainsAdvisor assigns a Sell Grade to each of your holdings and then ranks them from largest to smallest.

The 'Sell Grade' is the result of GainsKeeper's proprietary algorithm. The algorithm considers each tax-lot's adjusted cost basis (the original cost basis adjusted for all wash sales and/or corporate actions), current holding period (long-term or short-term), current market price, your personal tax rate, and previous realized gains/losses including the character of those gains and losses. In this way, the Sell Grade is customized to each individual's portfolio and tax situation.

Click any of the terms below to view a detailed definition:

 

Click the link below to view an example of how to use the GainsKeeper sell grade.

Example - Which Security should you sell to raise $2,000?

Most investors tend to sell their winner when looking to raise money. Furthermore, many investors have the 'look what I've made in such a short period of time' mentality - leading them to sell large short-term gains first, but never recognizing that this can be a costly decision from a tax perspective.

In the following example, we'll assume each security has equal underlying risk and investment qualities. You need to raise around $2,000. Which security should you sell? The average investor would likely sell either Ebay or CYTC.

Security

Symbol

Shares

Cost/Basis

Market Value

Gain/Loss

% Return

Short/Long

Sell Grade

PSI Net

PSIX

1,000

$11,500

$2,200

($9,300)

(80.9%)

ST

12.68

Ebay

EBAY

30

$750

$2,200

$1,450

193.3%

ST

0.73

CYTC

CYTC

100

$1,000

$3,750

$2,750

275%

LT

0.84

Ford

F

100

$4,800

$3,750

($1,050)

(28%)

LT

1.25

Selling Ebay would meet your $2,000 cash requirements since its market value is $2,200. Unfortunately, you probably made this sell decision because it harvested a very healthy $1,450 profit on a $750 investment. The Sell Grade metric identifies the tax implications of selling each security and enables you to avoid this mistake. The Sell Grade will identify the tax-smart sell decision, thus maximizing the after-tax dollars you put in your pocket.

What are the after tax implications of selling Ebay?

Selling Ebay would generate proceeds of $2,200 that could be spent now. Assuming a 31% marginal tax rate, the $1,450 short-term gain would result in a $450 tax liability. The investor is left with a $1,750 after-tax return ($2,200 - $450).

Instead of selling Ebay, an investor using GainsAdvisor's Sell Grade would see the benefits of selling PSI Net. Similar to Ebay, proceeds from this sale would be $2,200. But this sale will generate a short-term loss of $9,300 making it exempt from taxes. Furthermore, $3,000 of those losses could be offset against ordinary income - generating a tax credit of $930. The remaining $6,300 loss can offset current gains, or be carried forward to offset future years' gains and ordinary income.

The tax credit of $930 added to the $2,200 proceeds leaves the investor with $3,130 in after-tax dollars. And that doesn't include the tax savings that can be obtained from the remaining $6,300 in losses; the remaining losses can be used to reduce future tax liabilities on future gains or ordinary income.

Security Sold

Proceeds

Tax implication (liability) or credit

After-Tax Dollars Raised

Ebay

$2,200

($450)

$1,750

PSI Net

$2,200

$930

$3,130

By using the Sell Grade to maximize after-tax returns, the investor increased the amount of money raised by almost 80% ($1,750 vs $3,130). GainsAdvisor's Sell Grade enables you to identify which securities (and even specific tax lots of the same security) to sell. By using the Sell Grade, you can minimize tax liabilities and maximize after-tax returns.

Summary of tax-efficient trading:

The GainsAdvisor Sell Grade metric does all this for you!

 

 

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