Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Three Mistakes To Avoid When Calculating Portfolio Return

The truth about portfolio performance and investment returns is a lot more complex than most people realise. Here’s three tips on better understanding how your money is performing in the market over time.

When someone asks you how your investment portfolio is performing, what do you say?

‘Not bad’? ‘Could be better’? ‘Stock X has been on a tear lately’?

If you use a financial advisor to manage your investments, do you simply glance at the ‘annual return’ figure and say that’s how your portfolio has performed?

What about income from dividend payments?

Or taxes?

What about time?

Are you happy to look at the short term and cherry pick assets that have performed well?

In this post, we’re going to explore the common problems people have in understanding and expressing their portfolio performance.

Specifically, we’re revealing three mistakes you should avoid when you’re analysing your portfolio and determining its performance.

These mistakes relate to our understanding and perspective on time, our tendency to ignore the impact of dividend income and reinvesting, and the dangers of ignoring the impact fees and taxation has on your overall portfolio performance.

Here at Navexa, we believe intelligent investing hinges on carefully analysing data to get a clear view of your portfolio’s big picture.

Mistake I: Not Annualizing
Your Investment Returns

Say you buy a stock at $5.00 and you sell it for $10.00.

Boom, that’s a 100% gain!

Awesome, you doubled your money.

Good for you. But, what’s missing from the above account of your epic gain?

Time.

Consider this; Two investors buy a stock each. The stock price of both increases by 100%.

Say it took one of them 12 months, and the other three years.

Is it the same result?

On paper, yes. Their capital doubled.

But there’s little doubt you’d rather do it in one year than three.

When you ‘annualize’ your investment returns, you factor time into your calculations.

There are various methods of doing this, but the basic idea is that you divide your capital gain by the time it took you to realize it.

So, 100% in a year is an annualized 100% gain — it took one year to realize.

But 100% over three years is a 33.3% gain, because it took three years to realize.

Annualizing your portfolio performance gives you a more balanced and realistic understanding of your returns over time.

Time, after all, is a finite resource for every investor. So it pays to factor it in!

Mistake II: Treating
Dividend Income Separately

If you own a stock that pays a dividend, you’re collecting income simply for holding the company’s shares.

Investments that pay an income are central to compounding capital and building wealth over the long term.

However, there’s sometimes a tendency for investors to think of their stock’s capital gains as one thing and their income as another.

In some ways, they are separate.

But in terms of calculating the true performance of a holding or portfolio, it’s vital to factor in dividend income.

For instance…

Say Stock A goes up 100% in price over three years (a 33.3% annualized return), and Stock B goes up 110%.

If you fail to account for dividends, you’d think Stock B would be the winning investment.

But if Stock A paid you a 8% quarterly dividend over those three years, and B only a 3% dividend…

Then you’ll find that despite returning a lower capital gain, Stock A delivered the better return on account of the superior dividend income.

This applies even more so when you’re reinvesting your dividends into new shares in a holding.

It’s vital to treat investment income as a factor in calculating you’re overall true portfolio performance.

Mistake III: Disregarding
Broker Fees and CGT Events In
Your Portfolio Performance

Every time you buy or sell an investment, you’ll pay a fee for the transaction to your broker.

Say you pay $10 per trade.

One hundred trades will cost you $1,000 — regardless of whether the investments themselves make any return.

You broker fees should factor into your portfolio performance calculation.

It’s money you’ve spent in the investment process. Money you ideally want to (more than) make back in capital gains and dividends.

The other thing to note about trading fees is obviously that the more you trade, the more capital you’ll burn in the process.

The same goes for CGT — capital gains tax — events.

In Australia, every time you sell a holding you trigger a CGT event.

For argument’s sake, let’s return to the example from earlier.

Say you make a 100% capital gain on a stock over three years.

And say that stock made you another 50% in dividends over those three years.

That’s an annualized gain of 50% (150% total divided by three).

If it was a $10,000 investment to begin with, on paper you’d have $25,000 in capital.

Now let’s deduct the broker fees for buying and selling: $24,980 left.

Now, let’s deduct a notional capital gains tax of 25% on the gain itself ($14,980).

The tax would be $3,745, leaving a gain of $11,235 and total capital after exiting the position of $21,235.

So when all is accounted for — annualization, broker fees and taxation — you’re investment, while you might have liked the sound of 150%, has returned you a 37.45% annualized return of $3,745 over three years.

How Navexa Gives You a Clearer Picture of Portfolio Performance

The Navexa portfolio tracker platform is designed to help you quickly and easily see your portfolio’s true performance.

That means, your annualized return taking into account dividend income, broker fees and taxation.

Cherry picking results to brag about — like the 150% above, for instance — might seem like a good idea.

But the reality of investing is that you must be blunt with yourself about the costs of making money in the markets.

That means not ignoring the key factors we all have to work with when we buy and sell stocks: Capital gains, dividend income, trading fees, tax obligations and, above all, time.

Categories
Cryptocurrencies Tax & Compliance

The Ultimate Guide To Australian Crypto Tax

If you’re buying and selling cryptocurrencies in Australia, you need to know your tax obligations, the ATO’s position on cryptos and a couple of key ideas to help keep your crypto investing and trading on the right side of the law.

When cryptocurrencies burst onto the scene in 2009 with Bitcoin, governments and central banks were quick to deride and discredit the strange new financial instruments. 

It’s wasn’t money, they said. 

It’s a ponzi scheme, they said. 

Cryptos would never threaten to destabilize nor replace ‘real’ money.

The financial establishment largely elected to ignore cryptos in the hope they’d go away. 

But go away cryptos did not.

More than a decade since their inception, cryptos look more than ever as though they’re here to stay.

A quick glance at Coindesk and you’ll see that cryptos and the blockchain technology behind them are edging ever closer to the hallowed ‘mainstream’ adoption:

The institutions and authorities which a few years ago seemed to cover their ears at any talk of them, are now actively seeking to make money on cryptos, too. 

In late July, Bitcoin charged back above $US10,000.

According to analytics from Glassnode, that drove the number of Bitcoin addresses worth more than a million dollars 38% higher to about 18,000.

That’s 18,000 millionaires who may never have grown so wealthy had cryptocurrencies not emerged. 

And when citizens gain wealth — from work, investing, selling property, whatever it may be — the government tends to take a cut. 

Despite remaining skeptical about cryptocurrency’s legitimacy, many governments are now creating new tax legislation in the blockchain space.

That’s the case in Australia and that’s the topic of this guide to crypto taxation. 

Of course, we’re not tax accountants or lawyers, and none of what follows constitutes personal financial advice.

If you’ve been buying and selling crypto and you’re unsure about your tax obligations, this article is a good place to start.

Do You Have To Pay
Tax On Crypto Gains?

The Australian Taxation Office doesn’t regard cryptos as money or foreign currency.

Rather, it sees them as a form of property.

And like property in Australia, they expect you to pay tax on any capital gains you make from investing in this property. 

The ATO says that ‘transacting with bitcoin is akin to a barter arrangement, with similar consequences’.

Those consequences are that you need to pay tax on any gains you make. 

This tax is called Capital Gains Tax (CGT) and is applied equally to cryptocurrencies as it is to other goods such as real estate, shares, and some collectibles or items. 

The ATO spells it out here.

CGT is not a special tax as such, and is simply considered part of your ordinary income you might earn from salaried employment.

The main difference is that capital losses (where sale of an asset results in a net loss) cannot be offset against your ordinary income — only other capital gains, either in that financial year or in the future.

Another important point (and crucial for planning your trades) is that if you hold a CGT asset for 12 months or more, the CGT rate is reduced by 50%.

Example 1: Short Capital Gains

Alice wants to invest in cryptocurrencies, and purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on 1st January for $5,000.

Three months later on 1st April, she sells her Bitcoin for $6,000, and has made a profit of $1,000.

This net gain of $1,000 is added to her ordinary income and charged at the progressive marginal rate for her bracket.

Example 2: Long Capital Gains

Bob purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on January 1 for $5,000.

Fourteen months later on April 1 the following year, he sold his Bitcoin for $8,000 AUD, and has made a profit of $3,000.

However, he has held the asset for more than 12 months and is eligible for the CGT discount of 50%.

Thus the net gain of $3,000 is reduced by half and $1,500 is added to his ordinary income and taxed at the marginal rate for his bracket.

It was folk wisdom (or perhaps wishful thinking) in the early days that only crypto to fiat trades would be applicable for CGT.

This is not the case.

Crypto to crypto tax rules are the same.

The only difference is that you must perform a fair market evaluation of the asset’s worth at the time of the trade in Australian Dollars.

This might be already provided on the trades list for the exchange you use. Or, you might need to use a well-regarded asset tracking site or API to find the backdated asset price.

Example 3: Crypto to Crypto Trades

Charlie purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on January 1 for $5,000.

On February 1, he traded his Bitcoin for 650 Litecoin. On this day, 1 Litecoin is worth $10 AUD. So for taxation purposes, he has sold his Bitcoin for 650 x $10 = $6,500.

The same process then applies. This net gain of $1,500 is added to his ordinary income and charged at the progressive marginal rate for his bracket.

Importantly, $6500 also becomes the cost base for his Litecoin going forward.

When Charlie sells these Litecoin later on, the purchase price is considered to be $6,500.

Does This Mean Tax Authorities
Are Admitting Cryptos Are ‘Money’?

Just because the ATO taxes crypto-to-cash and crypto-to-crypto transactions, doesn’t mean the government is making a declaration on the broader role of cryptos in the financial system.

Nor does the ATO appear to be ‘targeting’ crypto traders to penalize them for making money on the controversial and commonly misunderstood ‘asset’ class.

Here’s the latest guidance from the ATO:

Australia’s crypto tax policy is similar to the legislative requirements you have as an individual if you collect and resell luxury cars for the purpose of making a profit.

Each sale is a CGT disposal and you need to pay tax on that event.

The ATO has for many years now consulted with experts and the public on the taxation treatment of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

Although the laws were perceived by many to be unclear and still in active discussion, since 2014 the ATO guidelines have been very clear.

My Experience: How To
Minimize Crypto Tax Stress

Navexa’s crypto consultant, Aaron Boyd, shares his personal experience on paying tax on his crypto profits:

Having been involved in the crypto space since 2013, frankly I was expecting blockchain assets to remain a grey area for some time and not really require any action. 

Nonetheless, I followed a comprehensive tracking schedule from day one.

This helped me backtrack and ultimately submit amendments for previous years where (at the time) I wasn’t sure exactly how to treat crypto assets.

Here are my three biggest tips:

  1. Record everything. The important information is the action you took (deposits, trades, withdrawals) and the date. If possible, addresses and on-chain transaction IDs are very useful as well. If you have most of this information, you can always calculate your tax liability later on. 
  1. If your situation is complicated, use a blockchain taxation specialist. Crypto Tax Australia has been instrumental in getting my data clean and across the line for a number of years and I can recommend their services . They have been featured on Nugget’s News ( https://youtu.be/1mnn2r1Ysv8 — and I recommend watching this interview ) and have a deep technical understanding of all the various blockchain edge-cases.
  1. Use software that can make your life easier. Originally, I was using bespoke spreadsheets, but this only gets you so far and is incredibly time-consuming, especially if you are a frequent trader. Today, there are many crypto tax software suites that perform exchange imports, automatic price discovery, data cleanliness, tax reporting, and so on. In the past I’ve use Cointracking.info, but there many other great resources now (https://tokentax.co/, https://koinly.io/).

Navexa — the platform hosting this blog post — is one such software service that can help you get your crypto taxes in order.

Navexa’s portfolio tracker lets you track your crypto holdings and trades in fine detail, then auto-generate a comprehensive tax report for a given time period.

From there, you can either report directly to the ATO at tax time, or work with a specialist crypto tax accountant to finalise your tax report before submitting.

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Finding Financial Freedom By Creating Passive Income

Financial independence or ‘freedom’ is the ultimate goal for many. But what is it, exactly? We take a look at the role of passive income and intelligent financial management in building financial freedom.

Building a passive income is something many people dream of, but few achieve.

For those who do manage to build a passive income, enjoying true financial freedom becomes more realistic.

It’s easier than you think to build a passive income stream.

Before we get into that though…

What is Financial Freedom, Exactly?

The truth is that financial freedom means different things to different people.

One person might say they only need a million dollars to feel financially free.

Another might say a billion.

Generally speaking, though, financial freedom means collecting a comfortable income from your money, instead of having to trade your time for money.

If you have enough savings, investments and liquid funds available to live the lifestyle that you and your family want, then you have financial freedom.

In other words, you might say it’s having the ability to choose how you spend your time, rather than having to devote your time to making money.

Few people achieve that goal.  

A survey by GoBankingRates found that 69% of Americans have less than $1,000 in their savings accounts.

In Australia, savings.com.au reports that about half the population has less than $10,000 in savings.

Saving for a rainy day is the first and most important step to financial freedom.

Think of it as the foundation for financial freedom.

Once you’ve created a firm foundation, you can start to look at building up passive income.

What Are The Best Ways
To Earn Passive Income?

The idea of having a passive income is often dismissed as a ‘get rich quick’ scheme.

Perhaps that’s because many people don’t like the idea of parking a substantial amount of money in an investment for a long period of time.

The truth is that passive income is the opposite of ‘get rich quick’.

It’s more like ‘get financially free slow and steady’.

There are, however, ways to make the money you are already earning work harder for you and generate a passive income through interest or an investment portfolio.

The average annual return of the stock market over a 10 year period is 9.2%.

That’s far higher than a typical savings account.

If you follow the golden rule of personal finance and pay yourself first by saving some money — even a small amount of money — then the returns you’d see investing in the stock market over the long term could be life-changing.

Imagine you invested $70 per week, every week, for a decade.

With returns of 9.2% per year, compounded, your $33,600 deposits could earn an extra $21,726 in interest, making them worth $55,396.

That’s a pretty impressive return for a relatively modest investment.

The 20-odd grand of interest is your passive income.

If you were able to invest $10,000 a year for 20 years, for argument’s sake, you can see how you’d create a substantial passive income over time.

This long-term, passive income-focused investing can become the path to financial freedom.

How Much Money Do You
Need To Be Financially Free?

Financial independence is a very personal thing. How much money you need depends on your own lifestyle.

In general, if you want to be able to live off the interest on your savings you should aim to be drawing down no more than 4% per year.

So, you should aim to save enough to be able to do that.

If you want to withdraw $40,000 per year, you would need savings of $1 million.

If you live more modestly, you could get away with smaller savings.

Do I Have To Be Rich To
Achieve Financial Freedom?

You don’t have to be rich to start saving.

Simple things like cutting your outgoings and building a modest emergency fund can help you avoid expensive borrowing.

Once you have a safety net you can start investing while looking to increase your income.

Even if you feel like the amount you can save now wouldn’t make a difference, it’s worth making a start.

Consider the snowball cliché.

Even the greatest avalanche starts with a single flake.

And if you’re serious about investing to create passive income and financial freedom, platforms like Navexa give you the tools you need to make intelligent decisions for your portolio.