Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 208

4 rules for measuring after-tax investing success

For most Australian investors, tax can represent a meaningful performance drag. Large superannuation funds, facing a headline tax rate of 15%, may argue that this is only true for investors facing effective tax rates of 30%-49% (such as companies and higher net worth individuals). But our experience is that even a 15% taxpaying superannuation fund should care about the impact of tax on investment performance.

Why is after-tax measurement important?

Investing should not be dominated by tax considerations, and Australia’s tax laws, which generally prohibit strategies conducted with the dominant purpose of obtaining a tax benefit, reinforce this. US tax laws are different so investors should be careful using US research on this subject. However, the trade-off between seeking expected returns and the tax consequences of doing so should receive more attention than it does. The 2010 Cooper Report on the superannuation industry recognised this, and the Government responded by amending the superannuation law in 2013 to specifically compel APRA-regulated superannuation trustees to consider the tax consequences of their investment strategies.

With a few exceptions, this has not yet led to large superannuation funds integrating tax awareness into the way they invest. However, many funds are beginning this process by measuring the investment performance of their equity managers and strategies on an after-tax, not just pre-tax, basis. After-tax performance can give answers to two important questions:

‘Is my portfolio actually growing after tax?’ and ‘Is the tax on the extra turnover generated by my active managers, in trying to beat the market, eroding all my manager outperformance?’

Key requirement of accurate measurement

Measuring the success of equity strategies after tax is not as simple as it sounds, but it helps to apply these four key principles:

1. Ensure the after-tax calculation methodology reflects your actual tax profile.

For a superannuation fund, this means applying a tax rate of 15%, a capital gains tax discount of 1/3 (where applicable), capital/revenue offsetting restrictions and recognising the fund’s ability to claim franking credits (including a refund of excess credits) and foreign income tax offsets. Equities invested via unit trusts are unlikely to offer this because the fund pools the investments of investors with different tax profiles and usually provides standardised reporting to these investors. Discrete mandates (separately managed accounts) are therefore preferable.

2. Ensure the after-tax performances of the portfolio and the portfolio’s benchmark are calculated using the same methodology.

If the after-tax benchmark calculation uses a different methodology, then what looks like portfolio outperformance (or underperformance) could actually be a methodological issue. Specific questions to ask include: Are dividends treated as cash outflow or reinvested, pre- or post-tax? Is tax payable treated as a cash outflow on a monthly, quarterly, yearly or some other basis? How are off-market share buybacks (which sometimes deliver significant after-tax return benefits) treated in the after-tax performance calculation?

3. Use a ‘pre-liquidation’ rather than ‘post-liquidation’ calculation basis.

‘Pre-liquidation’ methods recognise only tax on income received, and gains and losses realised in the performance period, while ‘post-liquidation’ methods reduce performance for unrealised tax liabilities building up in the portfolio. Sometimes it is argued that large superannuation funds should use a post-liquidation methodology to align with their unit pricing (how they value the investment options that members can invest into or withdraw from). This is flawed thinking because the purpose of after-tax performance calculations is to record actual outcomes and encourage managers to be more tax efficient. While the purpose of member option pricing is to strike the price that is fairest, to both current and future assets and liabilities, and to both incoming and outgoing members. It makes sense for the performance calculation to recognise the value of a manager deferring tax compared to a manager creating a current tax liability in the same period. A pre-liquidation calculation will capture this difference.

4. Use a custom, rather than generic, after-tax benchmark.

The tax characteristics of an equity portfolio at inception can greatly influence the measured tax impacts of a manager’s investment strategy. The key characteristics are the inception date, the amount of embedded capital gains and losses in the portfolio at that time and the extent to which these gains are ‘long’ (qualifying for the capital gains tax discount) or ‘short’. A custom after-tax benchmark can mirror these characteristics, and the benchmark will also reflect continuous cash flows in the portfolio, which are outside of the manager's control. This method is the fairest for managers and provides the most precise after-tax performance calculation for investors.

Our final suggestion is to learn what to read, and what not to read, from after-tax performance reporting. For example, an active equity strategy, which has a tax impact higher than a passive benchmark, is not a cause for concern (in fact, this outcome is quite natural). The right question to ask is whether the excess returns more than cover the tax payable generated by the active manager.

 

Raewyn Williams is Managing Director of Research at Parametric Australia, a US-based investment advisor. This information is intended for wholesale use only. Parametric is not a licensed tax agent or advisor in Australia and this does not represent tax advice. Additional information is available at www.parametricportfolio.com.au.

 

  •   29 June 2017
  •      
  •   

 

Leave a Comment:

RELATED ARTICLES

Value of tax-aware investment management

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Ray Dalio on 2025’s real story, Trump, and what’s next

The renowned investor says 2025’s real story wasn’t AI or US stocks but the shift away from American assets and a collapse in the value of money. And he outlines how to best position portfolios for what’s ahead.

Making sense of record high markets as the world catches fire

The post-World War Two economic system is unravelling, leading to huge shifts in currency, bond and commodity markets, yet stocks seem oblivious to the chaos. This looks to history as a guide for what’s next.

3 ways to fix Australia’s affordability crisis

Our cost-of-living pressures go beyond the RBA: surging house prices, excessive migration, and expanding government programs, including the NDIS, are fuelling inflation, demanding bold, structural solutions.

Is there a better way to reform the CGT discount?

The capital gains tax discount is under review, but debate should go beyond its size. Its original purpose, design flaws and distortions suggest Australia could adopt a better, more targeted approach.

How cutting the CGT discount could help rebalance housing market

A more rational taxation system that supports home ownership but discourages asset speculation could provide greater financial support to first home buyers.

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 648 with weekend update

This is my last edition as Editor of Firstlinks. I’m moving onto a new role though the newsletter will remain in good hands until my permanent replacement is found.

  • 5 February 2026

Latest Updates

Property

The 5% deposit scheme is bad for homeowners and Australia

An ‘affordability’ scheme making the county more vulnerable to economic shocks and contributing to the deteriorating financial situation of everyday Australians.

Investment strategies

Is defensive the new offensive?

Relatively boring, unglamorous, defensive stocks like Kroger and Allstate have quietly outperformed gilded tech giants, offering steady growth, visibility, and resilient returns in a market captivated by AI and flashier industries.

Shares

How the RBA scores on its inflation goal

The Reserve Bank continues to face criticism from all sides. A reminder of the RBA's mandate and a review of their track record in maintaining price stability since the early 1990s.

Investment strategies

Levered credit: A late cycle ingredient for drawdown pain

As credit spreads normalised through 2025, yield‑hungry investors have turned to leverage for high returns, uncomfortably echoing pre‑GFC behaviours. Investors need to be careful to understand the true risk‑return trade‑off.

Planning

The more things change… longevity just goes on increasing

Australia needs a major shift in longevity awareness, attitudes and behaviour if, as a community, we are to reap the benefits of increasing longevity. Adopting a national strategy is well overdue.

Property

The improving outlook of Australian commercial real estate

The sector is positioned to benefit from defensive and resilient income streams supported by embedded rental increase opportunities. 

Property

Seize hidden opportunities among 50+ home buyer schemes in Australia

There is a laundry list of government schemes to help Australian's struggling with housing affordability. Savvy buyers should take advantage to break into the property market.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2026 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.