21 December 2025

As Investments Gain, Advisers Focus on Taxes

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Several years of rising stock and bond prices have fattened not only portfolios but the taxes on those hefty gains. As a result, given a dearth of investment losses that can offset gains, financial advisers note clients are asking for more sophisticated tax-minimization strategies. Advisory firms are responding by fine-tuning their portfolio-management technologies and hiring tax specialists.

While many firms are paying more attention to taxes, advisers as a whole still lag behind. According to research firm Cerulli Associates, only 23% of advisers offer a full range of planning services that include tax strategies and only 6% of advisers have a certified public accountant designation.

Nevertheless, David Canter, the head of practice management and consulting at Fidelity Clearing & Custody, says many advisers are catching up. Offering tax strategies is “where advisers can earn their keep,” he says. “Increasingly, it’s not about the investments anymore so much as doing right by clients around tax planning.”

Not only have stock markets risen steadily since 2011, tax rates have gone up for many wealthy investors. The Affordable Care Act created a 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax on high-income earners, the long-term capital gains tax increased to 20% from 15%, and income taxes have risen in some states, Mr. Vnak notes. One way to avoid capital gains, he says, is by changing charitable donations from cash to stock to avoid gains from stock sales. Donor advised funds can be an important strategy for clients who have large capital-gains taxes in years they retire because they have to sell company stock and exercise stock options. A client can make a large contribution in years when the tax bill is particularly high and distribute the funds over years to come.

Another strategy is to pay state taxes before the end of a tax year because that creates a tax deduction for the following year. That is particularly important now because some advisers recommend clients take profits on stocks that have become expensive. Necessary portfolio reallocation shouldn’t be put off just because of the expected tax bill.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal.

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