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Shares that could make for handy EOFY tax losses

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By Tim Boreham - 
EOFY tax losses shares ASX 30 June end of financial year

With tax time fast approaching, it’s an opportune time to prune the share portfolio.

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In keeping with the pre-30 June end of financial year (EOFY) vibe, this week your columnist opines on a few well-known underperformers that arguably are worthy of being sacrificed on the altar of the fiscal fiend.

In other words: they’re unlikely to recover in a hurry and their best use is as a tax loss.

Investors who rode the market’s spectacular recovery from the depths of the pandemic are likely to be sitting on enormous gains, especially with anything pertaining to ecommerce.

They may well want to crystallise these windfalls, especially if they have held the shares for more than 12 months and are eligible for the 50% capital gains tax concession.

Sure, it might make sense to hold off selling until after 30 June. But given the arguably toppish market, a prudent strategy might be to take profits and square off with any losses.

So, what are the ‘taking out the trash’ candidates? The answer, strictly speaking, could be any stock depending on when you bought them.

For instance, investors weighing into buy now pay later (BNPL) stunner Afterpay (ASX: APT) at a Covid low of $9 in March last year are more than 1,000% ahead, but nursing a circa 30% loss if they bought at the peak of $158 in October last year.

Whether Afterpay is laughably overvalued or a screaming success is beyond our pay scale, frankly.

Old faves on the decline

But some faves have been on the decline for years and the obvious starting point is former dividend milch cow Telstra (ASX: TLS), which isn’t exactly a small cap but has shrunk over the years in valuation terms.

Investors flocking to the telco for its (now diminished) dividend yield have paid a hefty price in terms of capital value, with the stock down 32% over the past five years (albeit up 11% in the past 12 months).

Once the monopoly King of Copper, Telstra has suffered from the commodifying effect of the National Broadband Network, in that every telco pays the same price for wholesale access.

Competition in mobiles – a key strength for Telstra – isn’t getting any less intense.

So, what about Sydney Airport (ASX: SYD), another yield favourite? The stock has actually fared quite well during the pandemic and has been steady over the last 12 months despite a $2 billion capital raising.

Still, they’re 30% off pre-pandemic levels and with international flights not resuming in a hurry this is a stock arguably not about to take off.

Still on travel, Qantas (ASX: QAN) chief Alan Joyce’s plea (or demand) for open borders is likely to fall on deaf ears in Canberra, given the pollies have sussed out that pulling up the drawbridges resonates well with their constituents.

Qantas stock is about 35% lower than pre-pandemic levels, albeit 60% higher on the five-year graph.

Retail giant failings

In the retail sector, Myer Holdings (ASX: MYR) has been an emporium of false hope for years now. A revered retail title, for sure, but then so were consumer names such as Fosseys, McEwans and Blockbuster Video.

In the half year to 23 January 2021, Myer’s online sales grew 71% to $287 million, which sounds impressive. But ecommerce still only accounts for 20% of Myer’s total sales, which fell 13% to $1.4 billion.

Myer’s $266 million market cap is relative to its net cash position of $200 million, so perhaps there’s value in the stock. But given the retailer’s large legacy and surplus bricks and mortar footprint, it could be time to consign this one to the tax time bargain bin.

Meanwhile, it’s questionable whether the fortunes of shopping centre landlord Scentre Group (ASX: SCG, formerly Westfield) will improve in a hurry, given the spectre of ongoing lockdowns, surplus inventory and the hard-ball negotiating tactic of tenants such as Premier Investments.

Scentre investors are underwater to the tune of 25% over two years and 39% over five years.

Value lost in wealth management

Still on revered names, AMP (ASX: AMP) has titillated investors with takeover approaches and what new management promises to be an “inclusive, accountable, agile and performance driven culture”.

Given the company’s “complex legacy issues”, a baptism of fire awaits new chief executive officer Alexis George when she checks in on 2 August.

While there might be intrinsic value centred on the AMP Capital operation – also under new management – investors might consider cashing in their policy, so to speak.

Also in the wealth management sector, shares in the equally strife-prone IOOF (ASX: IFL) have lost 7% of their value over the last 12 months and 41% over the last five years.

IOOF’s big play was its $1.4 billion acquisition of MLC from the National Australia Bank (ASX: NAB). The share price has been weighed down because this purchase was funded by a $1 billion capital raising executed at a steep 24% discount ($3.50 a share).

In February last year, IOOF acquired OnePath wealth pension and investment business for $850 million, so it may well emerge a winner of the banks’ stampede from wealth management.

But there’s plenty of housekeeping to go in the short term, which is why the stock is a potential tax loss (of course, some investors strongly consider it a turnaround play).

Pandemic-driven performance

While retails stocks have largely shone, Retail Food Group (ASX: RFG) joins Myer as a victim of COVID-19, but also a casualty of its own misdoings centred on the treatment of its franchisees.

The pandemic was okay for RFG’s Brumby’s Bakery outlet, but not so good for its coffee-and-a- sit down brands including Gloria Jeans, Donut King and Michel’s Patisserie.

Its wholesale coffee roasting business has also suffered from subdued café demand.

Investors who have held RFG stock for five years have lost 98% of their investment. While the company has since launched a “franchise first” charm offensive, it’s a long road back from here.

Online commerce hero Kogan (ASX: KGN) is a more contentious inclusion in our pre-30 June ‘to do’ list, because the company fared spectacularly during the pandemic.

As with Afterpay, it’s a case of when you bought the stock.

Investors have increased their money sixfold over five years and doubled it over two years, yet johnnies-come-lately who bought in a year ago are some 20% underwater.

Kogan’s 21 May update was less than impressive, with its guided full-year adjusted underlying earnings coming in at 11-18% below expectations.

Perversely, the online shopping boom has created inventory issues for Kogan which are likely to lead to deeper discounting and demurrage problems (port holding costs, not those pertaining to de marriage of Harry and Meghan).

With any tax loss selling, investors may be tempted to sell out of stocks that – in their heart of hearts – they still believe in, with the intention of buying back in shortly thereafter.

The tax office’s “washing” rules frown on any transaction carried out with the sole purpose of minimising tax. Any decision to re-invest in the same stock has to be justified by an investment strategy.

Your columnist isn’t a qualified tax adviser, so I’ll stop here.

Any decisions on holding or folding stocks depend on the investor’s individual tax circumstances – so it’s over to you, H&R Block.