Allocation and Taxation

Vivian’s planned Portuguese paperwork procedures took less time than anticipated so you are getting a blog after all today…

First a message from the anti-Vivian, Leila Heckman. Vivian does bottom up and Heckman is the pioneer of top down country allocation research and an expert in quantitative analysis, macro economics, stock selection, and portfolio optimization with expertise in developed, emerging and frontier markets. She asks:

Over the past month, investments in Europe have increased 7-8%. Have investors’ worries about investing in the European market and contagion dissipated, or have they just quieted for the moment? Is Europe poised to bounce back?

According to Heckman, now Senior Director of Mesirow Financial, people are quick to forget crises, including those in the financial markets. She thinks while Europe’s bailout will likely take place over an extended period of time, there are several positive market drivers indicating that there are good investment opportunities now.

Currently, Heckman believes the most attractive European markets include: Turkey, the Netherlands, Spain, and Norway.

Heckman has over 20 years of experience specializing in country allocation modeling and international equity investing. Previously, she was the senior managing director and head of international equity for Bear Stearns; founder and CEO of Heckman Global Advisors; and head of global asset allocation for Salomon Smith Barney. Her Interactive model is built on a scoring mechanism. Each month it compares the markets under coverage on the basis of quantitative investment factors that have been shown to convey information about future equity returns in research by academics and practitioners, including ourselves. These indicators include valuations, growth indicators, macroeconomic indicators, and measures of momentum. The factors and the weights we put on each one are shown below. Each month statistical scores are computed for each factor, and a total score is computed for each country as the weighted average of the individual factor scores. The weights on each factor are determined by the strength and reliability of each factor in back tests. Each country then gets an allocation relative to the benchmark roughly in proportion to its total score, with restrictions on the maximum allocation to avoid unrealistically large exposures. Each month performance of the hypothetical portfolio is compared with the benchmark.

Here is another important note from Information Line, a hard money newsletter, of interest to all US investors, by Vernon Jacobs CPA. He writes that the Foreign Bank Account Report form used by the Dept of the Treasury for many years to collect information about American banking and investment accounts overseas, which have to be reported if they total more than $10,000, is about to be supplanted by new rules. Mr. Jacobs writes about the Housing Act to Restore Employment (HIRE):

“Questions about what must be disclosed on the FBAR form may soon become a moot issue. The recent HIRE act incluedes a new requirement to report foreign financial assets – which is much broader than foreign financial accounts. This new form is to be effective for tax years beginning after the effective date of the HIRE act which was March 18, 2010.

“For most individuals, that means it will be necessary to discolose any foreign financial assets with their 2010 income tax return – but only if the total of those assets exceeds $50,000 at any time during the year.

“Unlike the FBAR form, the new and expanded report of financial assets is to be included with the income-tax return of the ‘person’ that has foreign financial assets that must be reported. The law specifically mentions that the report should include information about foreign securities, financial instrucments or contracts and any ownership interest in a foreign entity. The law also gives very broad authority to the IRS to develop regulations to implement the law and to exclude assets that are being disclosed in other reports.

“Even so, it seems likely that there will be a duplication of reporting in the new HIRE act asset report and the FBAR form. One of them goes to a part of the Treasury Department that is separate from the IRS and is not part of an income-tax return. The new asset report will be required as part of a tax return.”

For his readership, Mr. Jacobs then worries about how holdings of gold bullion or silver will be dealt with under the new rules, which probably is irrelevent to most of us. Mr. Jackobs has written a half dozn books on international taxes and writes the twice-monthly International Wealth Protection Monitor newsletter. He is producing a new edition of his Guide to Reporting Foreign Financial Accounts. www.vernonjacobs.com Information Line is published by info@assetstrategies.com