Archive for the ‘Retirement’ Category

TradeKing

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

I opened several different accounts with TradeKing in the past several days.  Smartmoney magazine had rated TradeKing the best online discount brokerage firm. My current accounts are with Scottrade (they finished second), and I thought after reading this that I would have the two compete for my business. 

I went to tradeking.com and the account set-up process was easy to understand and a snap to finish.  I signed up for a joint account in addition to a Roth IRA account.  All I have left is to fund my accounts, but so far I am very pleased with the efficiency of the process. Updates will follow.

IRA Account Transfer

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

In the last several weeks and months my stock portfolio has had some major and minor changes. Last week a transferred all my family’s IRAs into Roth IRAs. You might wonder why I did this. I thinkn the current tax rate for income are very low, mainly because of the Bush Administration’s tax cuts. Because of the current and future financial mess the country is in, I do not think tax rates will be this low again in my lifetime. Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security are a mess; defense spending is ridiculously high, we are borrowing more and more money to fund these prgrams along with the costly War on Terror. I do not think the economy will grow to the point where it will just pay for itself on the current tax rate and programs we have.

Paying the taxes out of the traditional IRAs and rollover IRAs will be a short-term loss in the value of our retirement portfolio. However, in the long-run this will be a huge gain for us because all the retirement money we have now will not incure any tax consequences once we remove it for our retirement.

Many might disagree with this strategy, but that is my story and I am sticking with it.

Early Retirement Forums

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Honestly, who doesn’t want to retire early if they have the means to do it. However, the means is precisely the roadblock in many people’s way. I have a plan on getting there, but there are a lot of hurdles in the way.

On average we live longer; therefore, we must save more so it will fund our entire lifespan. This is no easy feat, but it can be done. It will take discipline and wise investments in order to get there.

If you want to discuss early retirement there are a couple great forums out there where you can bounce some ideas around. Also, you can see sample plans on how to retire early, executing an early retirement plan and making your funds last your entire lifetime.

Here are a couple good early retirement forums:
http://early-retirement.org/forums/
http://www.retireearlyhomepage.com/

Personal Finance Education Websites

Sunday, March 4th, 2007

Many people want to learn more on personal finance and investing, but do not know where to start. Websites like this one and other personal finance sites are great tools. I also wanted to let you know of other resources available to get you up-to-speed on a wide variety of financial topics.

I would recommend watching Mad Money for investing. He is one of the few who will go step-by-step to help you invest smarter. This can buttress a general investing education you can get from doing some homework. Obviously, there are loads of investing books so look around and see what others have to say about it.

These are from from the only options available. You can easily go to Kiplinger, Money, Smartmoney, Yahoo! Finance, Google Finance, etc. These are all informative and can hold your hand until you get the hang of certain topics you might not have mastered yet.

These are great personal finance education websites to start. Ask around and get people’s opinions on what sources to use. I would recommend using as many reliable sources as possible. It is not easy, but we all want to do better with our money.

Retirement Savings: How to Guides

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

The first wave of the 77 million Baby Boomers begin to retire this year. Studies show that a majority of them do not have a well-thought-out plan for their retirement. Although this generation seems to be as wealthy or more wealthy than their parent’s generation they need some guidance on the how tos of retirement saving. If you are a Boomer or just out of college you need to learn the basics of retirement savings and all the issues you must be prepared to deal with along your path.

Yahoo! Finance offers so How To primers on many subjects involving personal finance and your retirement.

Mutual Funds Tailored for Your IRA

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

It is nearing the April 16th deadline to max out your 2006 IRA limits so you need to consider what your strategy will be for the investments you make.

Consider these points when investing:

  • Retirement usually means a long investment time-horizon
  • You IRAs are not the place to be speculating
  • Diversification and rebalancing are essential to your retirement portfolio
  • Fees can eat up returns of your investments
  • Max out your IRAs because the longer you have money invested the more time coupound interest takes effect with the Rule of 72.

Kiplinger has some interesting ideas on mutual funds that go hand-in-hand with your IRA.

Retirement Planning: 2006 Roth IRA Contributions

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

My wife and I have been distracted lately with kitchen cabinets being installed. Corian kitchen and bathroom counter tops and hardwood floors being installed and sanded. However, we are aware that we have until April 17, 2007 to complete our Roth IRA contribution for fiscal year 2006. The contribution limit is $4,000 each and my wife has already contributed $2,000 directly to an international value mutual fund while I have contributed about $1,250 to a small cap growth mutual fund. So we have about $3,750 left to contribute to our Roth IRAs. 

The plan is to wait until April until we do our contributions. We plan to do this for a couple reasons: 

1) Our current available cash is being tied up in home improvement projects and 

2) I want to wait and see what the stock market is going to do in the next couple months. There is still part of me that is very concerned about the stock market and I think any day it could begin a move downward. Obviously, I cannot time this if it does occur, but since our money is tied up I thought it was a wise retirement planning investment strategy. 

The probable scenario for investment choices will be that my wife will deposit $2,000 into her Scottrade Roth IRA account when we have enough of a safety net in cash. Then that $2,000 will go toward an individual stock that looks undervalued at the moment. My $2,750 would be contributed directly to a couple mutual funds. One will be an international growth mutual fund and $1,750 will go into that asset class. The remaining $1,000 will go into a real estate mutual fund. I think both of these investments are solid no matter what happens in their own asset class and I see them doing well in the short-to-mid-term (I only invest in mutual funds that have excellent long-term track records–so the long-term performance is a give for me). 

If we have enough cash in our savings we will begin our 2007 Roth IRA contributions, but we will cross that bridge when we get there. 

 

Retirement Accounts: 401 (k) at Work

Monday, February 5th, 2007

Last year I had my wife enroll in her company’s 401 (k) plan at work. For the first year I had her hold off on enrolling because the plan is not very good. The investment choices and the company match are substandard. After we bought the house our next goal was to focus on enhancing our retirement nest egg so I had her enroll. She contributes only to the extent of the employer match is in effect. We do that because we still do not have income that can easily fund these retirement options. Plus, I would rather pay taxes on income now than in the future because I do not believe taxes will ever be this low again. So her 401 (k) is up and running and is at a low amount, but that is ok.

On the other hand, my 401 (k) plan at my job offers much better investment options, although the employer match is poor. Even though the match is bad I have contributed 10% because some of these options are investments I had wanted to do in the past, but could not because they were not open to me.

So by the end of 2007 our 401 (k)s will add about 15-20% to our retirement nest egg and at the same time we hope to max out our Roth IRAs so that will be another $8,000 we contribute. With this I think we will be on our way to catching up on our retirement accounts.

How to keep retirement savings on track after leaving a job

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

More great information written by Robert Powell in IBD.
Call it a mistake waiting to happen. Every year millions of workers who retire or switch jobs must figure out what to do with money in their 401(k) plan. Should they leave the money with their former employer? Should they cash out? Should they transfer the money to their new employer’s plan? Should they roll over the money into an IRA?

Big money may be at stake in the answer to those questions. And lots of people still make costly mistakes even when they answer the questions correctly.

Consider: Some 7.5 million Americans took about $440 billion in distributions from their 401(k) plans in 2004, according to Brightworks Partners research. Of the 7.5 million, 6.25 million were job changers and 1.25 million retired. Of the 7.5 million, 55% had 401(k) balances greater than $5,000.

Where did the money go? About 45% — representing some $200 billion — rolled their 401(k) into an IRA, while 32% left their money in their former employer’s plan, 20% withdrew the money and paid the taxes due on that distribution, 9% transferred their money to a retirement plan at their new employer and 6% purchased an annuity or arranged to have the money paid in installments over a period of time.

To the untrained eye, all that 401(k) money sloshed to and fro problem free. Nothing could be further from the truth.

According to Mercer HR Services, many workers get off the retirement-savings track when faced with the what-to-do-with-my 401(k) question. For one, many workers — especially those who had 401(k) balances of less than $5,000 — took taxable cash distributions. In fact, more than 40% of distributions from a 401(k) plan were taken in cash, according to the Federal Reserve Board’s 2004 Survey of Consumer Finances.

Taxable cash distributions

A new law — the automatic IRA rollover law — was put in place in 2005 to address what the U.S. Department of Labor called leakage, small-balance 401(k) owners cashing in their nest eggs. With that law, workers who have between $1,000 and $5,000 in their 401(k) and leave their employer will have their money automatically rolled over to an IRA unless they choose otherwise. And to some degree, that new law has helped reduce the problem of cash-outs, David Wray, president of the Profit Sharing/401(k) Council (PSCA).

According to a Centier Bank study of small-balance plans published in a PSCA newsletter, only 2.7% of workers cashed out of their 401(k) plans over a 17-month period following the enactment of the automatic IRA rollover law. What’s more, 12% of workers had their 401(k) automatically transferred into what’s officially called a safe harbor IRA. That’s an IRA in which the worker’s money is invested in funds designed to preserve principal and provide a reasonable rate of return. (One problem with this model is that the safe harbor IRA may or may not sync up with the investor’s investment goals so it’s imperative that workers examine whether the investments in the safe harbor IRA make sense or not.)

The bigger problem with small balance transfers, however, is this. James Boyd of Centier Bank noted that there’s a large percentage of what the industry calls “no-contacts,” that is, missing or nonresponsive 401(k) participants. Some 80% of small-balance participants who left their employer were labeled as “no contacts” in the Centier Bank study. And in the extreme, funds in those plans could be escheated by a state as unclaimed property. And that’s just another form of leakage, according to Boyd.

Paperwork problems

Even workers who want to roll over their 401(k) plan to an IRA can fly off the savings track, according Mercer HR Services. Indeed, the process to transfer those assets is downright difficult and onerous.

For instance, about one-third of the forms required to complete the transfer are not completed correctly. In other cases, the forms are lost in transit. Workers often spend countless days if not weeks completing, correcting and tracking down paperwork and calling multiple plan sponsors. Mercer estimates that the traditional process of requesting and completing an IRA rollover could take up to two to three weeks.

So what can be done to head off those problems? First, make sure an IRA rollover is the best option. “Before deciding to roll over 401(k) assets to an IRA, people should make sure that they are not missing out on other benefits by rolling over the assets,” Denise Appleby of Appleby Retirement Consulting said in an e-mail.

Appleby said there are two cases when a worker might choose something other than a rollover. If a person has employer stock in a qualified plan account that has been highly appreciated since they were first added to the account, Appleby said it may be more beneficial to have those stocks credited to a regular savings account instead of an IRA, as that person would then be able to apply capital gains treatment to the earnings. “Rolling these stocks to an IRA means that the individual would pay ordinary income tax on any distribution of the earnings from the traditional IRA, instead of the capital gains rate,” she said.

In another case, Appleby said if the balance in the qualified plan includes after-tax amounts, the person should consider whether it would be more beneficial to have that amount credited to a regular account, instead of being rolled over to an IRA.

“Rolling over employer stocks and after-tax amounts are not necessarily poor choices, and may even be suitable for some individuals,” she said. “However, many individuals’ roll over these amounts unknowingly and attempt to reverse the rollover, but then it’s too late.’

Once the decision to do an IRA rollover as been made, Ed Slott, author of “Your Complete Retirement Planning Road Map,” suggests that the “best way to get this done right is to engage the people that have the most to gain from having you as their customer.”

Slott said workers leaving a company should contact either the IRA custodian or the financial adviser who will be investing the IRA funds early in the process. “They will make sure the rollover is done properly,” he said. “They will be gaining a new customer so they will be more than happy to handle all the paperwork.”

Slott said workers should never leave it to the plan sponsor or plan provider to help with the paperwork. “They generally do not have competent help and just really want to get rid of you,” he wrote in an e-mail. “The people at the plan don’t work for you. They work for the plan so they could really care less if the transfer goes as you would have liked.”

Appleby agrees. “Before completing the rollover request, the individual should have it, and the account statement, reviewed by a financial adviser who is proficient in the area of rollovers and IRA management, to ensure that the proper elections are made on the forms, and to help ensure that the options selected are the ones more suitable for the individual’s financial profile,” she said.

No matter who does the rollover, make sure it is done as a trustee-to-trustee transfer (a direct rollover) where the funds go directly from the plan to the IRA, Slott said. “If the funds are withdrawn and then rolled over to the IRA then a 20% withholding tax will be taken from the funds and it may be tough to find the money to make up the 20% to complete the rollover,” he said. “With a direct rollover, 100% of your company plan funds go to your IRA with no tax withholding.”

What’s more, with a direct rollover, the worker doesn’t have to worry about depositing the retirement money into an IRA within the 60-day grace period. If the taxpayer doesn’t roll the retirement money into an IRA within 60 days, the taxpayer will pay a penalty on the distribution and possibly more taxes.

After requesting the withdrawal/rollover

After requesting the withdrawal, Appleby said the person should take the following steps:

  • Find out from the plan administrator when the transaction will be processed. Some plan administrators process distributions during certain periods, like the end of every quarter or only after a certain number of days have passed since the end of employment.

  • Check back with the plan administrator about a week before the due date to make sure it is on track.

  • Check with the receiving financial institution, not only to make sure the funds were received but that they were credited to the right account. There are countless instances where assets are erroneously credited to regular accounts instead of IRAs. Often, the error is not detected until months or even years later, creating an accounting nightmare for everyone involved.

  • Also, check to make sure that amounts that are credited to IRAs are processed properly. For instance, check to make sure it was processed as a rollover contribution, which is reported on IRS Form 5498 and not as a nonreportable transfer.

Even workers who do IRA rollovers get off retirement-savings track

Appleby said most qualified plans liquidate the plan assets and complete the rollover in cash. This means that the money will likely sit in cash or a low-interest money-market fund in the IRA, she said.

Here is more great information from Investors Business Daily

In some cases, the money sits in cash because of inertia; investors have a proclivity to do nothing. In other cases, the money sits in cash because investors don’t know how to re-allocate their funds or find funds that were similar to the ones in their 401(k) plan.

“Individuals should make the money work for them by having it invested in assets that can produce higher returns,” said Appleby. And they should consider hiring an adviser to help with that process, say both Appleby and Slott.

For more on rolling over you 401k click here.

Annuity Options

Saturday, September 30th, 2006

Here we will discuss a couple options you have when deciding on what annuity is best for you.

-Lifetime Income for you and your spouseHere you will be paid as long as you or your spouse still lives. Decide if the initial payment you receive is low or high or if payments will remain the same after the first person dies. The higher payment that drops by half when one spouse dies is another option to consider.

-Lifetime Income for you
You will get the highest income with this option and will recieve a flat monthly payment the remainder of your life. Once you are gone the money stops. So don’t die early!!!!

-10-Year Certain
Flat payment, but if you die before 10 years are up your spouse will receive payments until the 10th year is up.

-Inflation Protection
Your beginning payment would be low, but will increase every year as inflation does.