ETF Talk: Watch Out for Capital Gains in Your Mutual Funds

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By seadmin

Consider taking cover if you hold any mutual funds in taxable accounts. Many mutual funds that absorbed big losses still will incur significant capital gains for the 2008 tax year. Those capital gains are caused by mutual funds buying and selling stocks during the year — even if a fund racked up huge losses.

Investors looking to limit their tax liabilities from capital gains may want to move money out of mutual funds during the very near future. The record date for when mutual funds assign capital gains to their account holders usually comes as soon as early December. This doesn’t leave you much time to take action. If you delay, expect to owe Uncle Sam more in taxes that you otherwise may have anticipated.

The lesson of incurring capital gains from a money-losing mutual fund may come as a bit of a shock if you are a young investor who largely has only known bull markets. This year’s market turmoil likely caused the stock mutual funds that you own to sell heavily as other investors bailed out and caused the fund companies to redeem their shares.

Keep in mind that you still will incur a one-time tax liability if you sell any mutual fund shares for a profit that were held in a taxable account. If you invest in mutual funds through a 401(k) or a similar retirement account, you escape the tax liability this year. The benefit of selling mutual funds before the record date is that you will avoid incurring capital gains not only this year but each year in the future that you otherwise would stay invested in the funds.

I checked with a couple of the leading mutual fund companies, Vanguard and T. Rowe Price, and learned that the capital gains of some of their mutual funds will be significant. The Vanguard Health Care Fund is estimated to incur capital gains of $8.03 a share, with a record date of Dec. 15. T. Rowe Price posted an announcement on its Web site to inform investors that "unprecedented market fluctuations" in the second half of 2008 are causing potentially "substantial" revisions to its previous capital gains estimates. The record date begins Dec. 10 for T. Rowe Price’s stock mutual funds and Dec. 4 for its bond and money market funds.

If you want to profit from the current market fluctuations, and if you also can withstand volatility, then consider checking out my ETF Trader service. It’s easy to do; just click here. If you have any ETF questions that I can answer for you, please click here and I will try to respond in an upcoming ETF Talk. (Continued Below)

. If you have any ETF questions that I can answer for you, please and I will try to respond in an upcoming ETF Talk. If you have any ETF questions that I can answer for you, please and I will try to respond in an upcoming ETF Talk.

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