What a Long/Short strategy actually is
Long/Short is a tax-managed separately managed account that combines a long-only direct indexing core with a short extension overlay. The same product trades under several names in the industry — Long/Short Direct Indexing, Long/Short Extension, Tax-Aware Long/Short, Long/Short SMA, or simply by its canonical leverage ratio, 130/30. They all describe the same architecture: the long side owns individual stocks that replicate an index, harvesting losses as individual names decline. The short side borrows and sells additional securities, generating a separate stream of realized losses when those positions are closed at a profit. Unlike hedge-fund long/short strategies designed to produce alpha, the tax-managed version prioritizes loss generation over market outperformance.
The classic institutional framing for this strategy is the 130/30 portfolio: 130 percent long exposure funded by 30 percent short exposure. The short proceeds finance additional long positions, and the short book generates losses independently of the long holdings. Tax-managed versions may use different ratios depending on the investor's gain profile and risk tolerance, but the core concept remains the same: short positions create a second source of realized losses that the long-only portfolio cannot produce on its own.
The vehicle is typically a separately managed account rather than a mutual fund or ETF. You own the individual securities directly, which allows the manager to harvest losses at the lot level and customize the portfolio to your specific tax situation. Providers like Parametric, Aperio, and several large wealth managers offer Long/Short SMAs with minimums ranging from five hundred thousand dollars to one million dollars or more.
Do not confuse tax-managed Long/Short with hedge-fund long/short strategies. Hedge funds short securities they expect to decline, hoping to profit from the drop. Tax-managed Long/Short shorts securities the manager expects to rise, generating losses when the short is closed. The goal is not to beat the market on a pre-tax basis. The goal is to produce realized losses that offset gains elsewhere on your tax return. If the short book outperforms the market, the strategy actually underdelivers on its tax objective.