How Wealthy Buyers Purchase Million Dollar Homes Without Selling a Single Share of Their Portfolio

July 03, 20263 min read

The Strategy That Keeps Wealthy Buyers from Paying Unnecessary Taxes

Here is something a wealth advisor who works exclusively with multi-millionaires shared about how serious money approaches a home purchase. The strategy is legal, widely used among high-net-worth buyers, and more accessible than most people realize.

The Costly Mistake Most People Make

Imagine someone with a million dollars in stocks who wants to buy a million dollar home. The instinct for most people is to sell $200,000 worth of stock to cover the 20 percent down payment. That approach works but it comes with a cost that most people do not fully calculate before they execute.

Selling $200,000 in appreciated stock triggers a capital gains tax event. Depending on the gain and the tax rate the bill can easily reach $40,000 or more. That is the equivalent of the cost of an entire kitchen renovation being paid to the IRS for no strategic reason when an alternative exists.

What Wealthy Buyers Do Instead

Rather than selling the stock and triggering the tax event wealthy buyers take out a portfolio loan or what is sometimes called a securities-backed line of credit. The brokerage lends them the $200,000 they need for the down payment using the stock portfolio as collateral. The stocks are not sold. They stay in the account continuing to grow. The loan is extended at a competitive interest rate because the collateral backing it is highly liquid and low risk for the lender.

Because the transaction is structured as a debt rather than a sale there is no capital gains tax triggered. The $40,000 tax bill that would have resulted from selling the stock simply does not occur. The stocks keep compounding. The home gets purchased. And the only cost is the interest on the loan which at around 5 percent is considerably less than what the avoided tax bill would have cost.

As Tom Seaman explains this is the core of why wealthy buyers keep getting wealthier. They do not sell assets to buy things. They borrow against assets and let the assets continue compounding while the debt services itself over time.

Who This Strategy Is Actually Available To

Here is the part that surprises most people when they first hear about this approach. You do not need a million dollars in stocks to access a portfolio loan. Most brokerages will extend securities-backed lending to clients with portfolios of $100,000 or more. The strategy that sounds like it is reserved for multi-millionaires is actually accessible to a much broader range of investors than the wealth management framing suggests.

The specific terms, interest rates, eligible securities, and borrowing limits vary by brokerage and individual financial situation. And like any leveraged strategy this approach carries risks that are worth understanding clearly before implementing. If the portfolio value drops significantly the brokerage may require additional collateral or partial repayment of the loan.

What This Means for the Mortgage Conversation

When a buyer is using portfolio lending to fund a down payment the mortgage financing on the home purchase needs to account for how that down payment source is structured and documented. Lenders evaluate the source of down payment funds as part of the underwriting process and a portfolio loan requires specific documentation and handling that differs from a standard cash down payment.

Working with a loan officer who understands how portfolio lending interacts with mortgage underwriting is what ensures the overall strategy works cleanly from application through closing.

Tom Seaman works with buyers who are using sophisticated wealth management strategies alongside their mortgage financing to make sure every component of the transaction is structured correctly. Follow along for more smart buyer tips and reach out to Tom Seaman to discuss how strategies like this could fit into your specific home purchase plan.


Sources

FINRAInvestorEducation.org
Investopedia.com
Forbes.com
WealthManagement.com
ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov

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