Abstract:We investigate optimal intertemporal asset allocation and location decisions for investors making taxable and tax-deferred investments. We show a strong preference for holding taxable bonds in the tax-deferred account and equity in the taxable account, ref lecting the higher tax burden on taxable bonds relative to equity. For most investors, the optimal asset location policy is robust to the introduction of tax-exempt bonds and liquidity shocks. Numerical results illustrate optimal portfolio decisions as a fun… Show more
“…A family strategy is shown to be accepted for many parameter combinations, especially in families with low marginal tax rates, if the heirs are very wealthy, or in a case where the retiree has an average population life expectancy. Outside the family or annuitization context similar frameworks were recently applied by Michaelides (2003, 2005), Dammon et al (2004), and Cocco et al (2005), as well as Rodepeter and Winter (2005).…”
“…A family strategy is shown to be accepted for many parameter combinations, especially in families with low marginal tax rates, if the heirs are very wealthy, or in a case where the retiree has an average population life expectancy. Outside the family or annuitization context similar frameworks were recently applied by Michaelides (2003, 2005), Dammon et al (2004), and Cocco et al (2005), as well as Rodepeter and Winter (2005).…”
“…However, older households tend to benefit from maintaining a respectable allocation to equities. For example, using Monte Carlo simulation analysis and reasonable investment return assumptions to determine optimal portfolio allocation, Dammon et al (2004) reported the average overall proportion of equity within a portfolio for households at least 55 years of age is predicted to be no smaller than 53%. Lai (2008) contended that increased appetite for equities among older households is further justified by the desire to protect inflation and mitigate longevity risk (the risk of outliving assets).…”
Section: Allocation To Risky Assetsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, tax deferral on retirement accounts has been shown to increase the expected return on investment assets (Amromin et al 2007;Engen and Gale 1997), leading to a higher optimal portfolio share in sheltered accounts. This and an increased willingness to invest in equities within these accounts led to riskier portfolios among the more financially sophisticated and risk-averse baby boom cohort (Calvet et al 2009; Center for Retirement Research 2009; Dammon et al 2004;Follain and Melamed 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…We focus on the period leading up to the mortgage crisis and test the hypothesis that housing leverage among households with at least one individual age 55 or older is positively affected by financial sophistication, tax variables that reduce the after-tax cost of mortgage borrowing, and larger portfolio allocations to risky assets. Similar to other studies that have used age 55 or older as a cutoff point to investigate financial decisions among older households (Dammon et al 2004;Masnick et al 2006; Thorne et al 2008), we restrict our sample to households with a head (or spouse) at least 55 years old in order to investigate determinants of housing leverage among households who are at or near the average age of retirement in the US.…”
Increasing mortgage debt among older households has been cited as evidence of financial distress caused by low financial knowledge, poor lending practices, and an increased appetite for debt. This paper investigates whether housing leverage among older households is related to financial sophistication, tax effects, and a desire to increase portfolio allocation to risky assets. Results indicate a time trend in low housing leverage, but no trend in high housing leverage. While housing leverage increases with liquidity constraints, it also increases with financial sophistication, and tax and portfolio incentives are strongly related to high housing leverage. The incentive to borrow against home value created by the deductibility of mortgage interest appears to encourage greater housing leverage and vulnerability to housing price shocks.
“…As argued in a series of important papers (Dammon, Spatt, and Zhang (2004) and Huang (2008)), tax incentives can tilt the tax-deferred account towards bonds and taxable accounts towards stocks.…”
Section: Economic Mechanisms Of Tax Deferralmentioning
Since World War II, direct stock ownership by households across the globe has largely been replaced by indirect stock ownership by financial institutions. We argue that tax policy is the driving force. Using long time-series from eight countries, we show that the fraction of household ownership decreases with measures of the tax benefits of holding stocks inside tax-deferred plans. This finding is important for policy considerations on effective taxation and for financial economics research on the long-term effects of taxation on corporate finance and asset prices.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.