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LTCG Tax impact on Early Retirement

Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG) Tax impact on Early Retirement

Starting with the recent budget , you have to pay 10.4%(including cess) long term capital gains tax (LTCG) on gains when you sell mutual funds or stocks after holding them for 1 year.

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What does this mean for your Early Retirement plans?

What Should You Do?

What Charlie Munger has to say about LTCG tax:

Another very simple effect I very seldom see discussed either by investment managers or anybody else is the effect of taxes. If you’re going to buy something which compounds for 30 years at 15% per annum and you pay one 35% tax at the very end, the way that works out is that after taxes, you keep 13.3% per annum.

In contrast, if you bought the same investment, but had to pay taxes every year of 35% out of the 15% that you earned, then your return would be 15% minus 35% of 15%—or only 9.75% per year compounded. So the difference there is over 3.5%. And what 3.5% does to the numbers over long holding periods like 30 years is truly eye-opening. If you sit back for long, long stretches in great companies, you can get a huge edge from nothing but the way that income taxes work.

Charlie Munger, USC Business School, 1994

 Impact on our family’s early retirement plans:

Special thanks:

  1. livemint : for first planting the doubt in my mind that I might be over-estimating the impact of this tax.
  2. phreakv6  : for the Charlie Munger speech that pointed me in the exact direction
  3. basuvinesh  : for calculating the tax impact with a real example.
  4. My wife : for giving me the simple idea to use Excel to calculate the exact post-tax CAGR %  when I was trying to wrap my head around its impact on our unique early retirement plans which was not getting covered in the mainstream media.
  5. deepesh raghaw : for the image I used earlier. his calculations matched my excel calculator including munger’s example so I’m confident of publishing this article and the excel 🙂 I especially agree with his quote below:

Fall from 10% p.a. to 9.49% p.a. may not look like much. However, when we talk about many years of compounding, the impact is going to be sizeable.

I have read accounts where many experts have mentioned that the impact is going to be minimal. That’s clearly not the case. Most of us shifted from regular to direct to save this extra 0.5-1% p.a. of the expense ratio. Didn’t we?

Therefore, let’s not fool ourselves. There is going to be an impact of LTCG taxation. Let’s accept it and pay the taxes happily.

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