The first step is to decide what you really want to achieve financially. Financial goals might include early retirement, travel, a vacation home, securing your family's financial comfort after the death of a breadwinner, planning for the care of elderly relatives, or building a family business.
The following rules of thumb may work for some people, but they do not make financial sense for everyone. What is more important is knowing whether a particular rule of thumb suits your situation. Here are six more common rules, along with some considerations that should not be overlooked.
Life insurance should equal five times your yearly salary-
>This rule of thumb has been used to answer the question: How much life insurance should I have? The ideal amount of life insurance is the amount that will, when invested, generate enough income to allow your survivors to maintain the level of income they are used to. "Five times your salary" will accomplish this objective in some cases. Still, there is no substitute for making the calculations necessary to find out how much life insurance you need to buy for your particular situation. The amount of life insurance you need depends on how many people there are in your family, whether there are other sources of income besides your salary, how old your children are, and a few other factors.
2. Save 10 percent of your salary per year-
You may need to save much more than ten percent of your gross income to have a comfortable retirement. The amount you need to save for retirement depends on how large your existing nest egg is and how old you are. Those who started saving late in life, for instance, in their 40s, need to save at least 15 or 20 percent per year.
3. Contribute as much as you can to retirement plans-
This makes sense for most people, but if you've accumulated a large amount of money in a retirement plan, say close to a million dollars, you may reach the point where the negatives of contributing to your retirement plan savings outweigh the positives.
4. You need 80 percent of your pre-retirement income to retire comfortably-
Although people may need 80 percent of their salaries during the first few years of retirement, later on, they are often able to live comfortably on less. The amount of income you need depends on whether you have paid off your mortgage, whether you will have other sources of retirement income, and other factors.
5. Subtract your age from 100 and invest that percentage in stocks-
This is one of those "cookie-cutter" rules that only pans out for certain investors. For others, it results in a portfolio that is much too conservative. The best method of allocating percentages among various investments depends on your investment goals and needs and your willingness to risk your capital. In this case, the rules of thumb do not serve the investor very well.
6. Maintain an emergency fund of six months' worth of expenses.
Three months' worth of expenses might be enough depending on your family's situation. On the other hand, even six months' worth might be totally inadequate for some families. The amount you should keep on hand depends on how easy it would be to take out a short-term loan and how much money you have in savings and investments, among other things.
Do not rely on any rule of thumb to make financial decisions. Instead, consider your needs and goals carefully, and then calculate what you'll need to do to fulfill them.
With more women remaining single, nearly half of all marriages ending in divorce, and the odds of becoming a widow by age 55 hovering around 75 percent, nearly 9 out of 10 women will be solely responsible for their financial well-being at some point in their lives. But many are ill-prepared to do so.
Here are several areas where women fall behind when it comes to planning for their financial future:
Women save considerably less for retirement, on average 60 percent less than men, according to a 2010 study conducted by LIMRA of nearly 2,500 employees. This is significant because women typically live longer than their male counterparts and need more retirement savings.
And in 2011, a Harris Interactive survey commissioned by RocketLawyer.com found that of the more than 1,000 people surveyed, 5 percent of the women do not have a will, 26 percent of them citing cost as the primary reason they don't have one.
In 2016, 18 million adults were cohabiting, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of the Current Population Survey. This represents an increase of 29 percent since 2007. Because unmarried couples don't enjoy the same legal rights and protection as married couples, financial planning considerations for issues such as retirement, estate, and taxes can be quite different. For example:
The investment process is comprised of several steps that enable you to select a portfolio appropriate to your risk tolerance and desired return. The primary steps in this process are:
Q: How are risk and return related?
A: Risk and return are positively correlated. The higher the risk of an investment, the higher the return it must offer to compensate for the risk. Risks come in many forms, such as the volatility of the market, inflation risk, interest rate risk, and business risk. You must determine the degree of risk that you are willing to tolerate. Your investment professional can assist you in this process.
Select the level of risk that permits you to sleep at night. If you have a long investment horizon, then focus on your desired return. Year-to-year fluctuations should not be a concern. Over the long term, stocks have generated annual returns of about 10 to 11 percent and have had the highest level of risk, while long-term government bonds have had long-term returns of 5 to 6 percent and have had the lowest level of risk. The more risk you can tolerate or the higher your desired rate of return, the higher the portion of your portfolio invested in stocks should be.
Q: What is an asset allocation plan?
A: Asset allocation is the distribution of investments among asset classes. Asset classes include different types of stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. It is a significant factor in determining your investment return relative to risk. Proper asset allocation maximizes returns and minimizes risk. This is because different classes of assets react differently to economic upswings or downswings. Allocation differs from diversification in that it balances a portfolio among different classes of assets, for example, growth stocks, long bonds, and large-company stocks. In contrast, diversification focuses on variety within an asset class. Generally, allocation among six or seven asset classes is recommended.
Q: What is diversification?
A: Diversification is the selection of multiple investments within a portfolio. For example, you are investing in a portfolio of 30 stocks rather than just a few. By maintaining a diversified, varied portfolio, you are minimizing risk. You're less likely to make that "big killing," but you won't take a big hit when individual investments take a nose-dive.
Q: How can I best monitor my investments?
A: Examine carefully and promptly any written confirmations of trades you receive from your broker and all periodic account statements. Make sure that each trade was completed following your instructions. Check to see how much commission you were charged to make sure it is in line with what you were led to believe you would pay. If commission rates have increased or will increase in the immediate future, or if charges such as custodial fees are to be imposed, then you should be informed in advance.
Suppose securities are held for you in street name (where the customer's securities and assets are held under the brokerage firm's name instead of the individual who purchased the security or asset). In that case, you may request that dividends or interest payments be forwarded to you or put into an interest-bearing account, if available, as soon as they are received, rather than at the end of the month or after some other long period.
Set up a file where you can store information about your investment activities, such as confirmation slips and monthly statements sent by your broker. Keep notes of specific instructions given to your account executive or brokerage firm. Good records regarding your investments are important for tax purposes and also in the event of a dispute about a specific transaction.
Periodically, ask yourself the following questions about your investment:
Nobody invests to lose money. However, investments always entail some degree of risk. Be aware that:
The higher the expected rate of return, the greater the risk. You could lose some or all of your initial investment or a greater amount depending on market developments.
Some investments cannot easily be sold or converted to cash. Check to see if there is any penalty or charge if you must sell an investment quickly or before its maturity date.
Investments in securities issued by a company with little or no operating history or published information may involve greater risk.
Securities investments, including mutual funds, are not federally insured against a loss in market value.
Securities you own may be subject to tender offers, mergers, reorganizations, or third-party actions that can affect the value of your ownership interest. Pay careful attention to public announcements and information sent to you about such transactions. They involve complex investment decisions. Be sure you fully understand the terms of any offer to exchange or sell your shares before you act. In some cases, such as partial or two-tier tender offers, failure to act can have detrimental effects on your investment.
1. Never give in to high pressure. A high-pressure sales pitch can mean trouble. Be suspicious of anyone who tells you, "Invest quickly, or you will miss out on a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."
2. Never send money to purchase an investment based simply on a telephone sales pitch.
3. Never make a check out to a sales representative.
4. Never send checks to an address different from the business address of the brokerage firm or a designated address listed in the prospectus.
If your broker asks you to do any of these things, contact the branch manager or compliance officer of the brokerage firm.
5. Never allow your transaction confirmations and account statements to be delivered or mailed to your sales representative as a substitute for receiving them yourself. These documents are your official record of the date, time, amount, and price of each security purchased or sold. Verify that the information in these statements is correct.
Have this list of questions with you the next time you talk to your broker. Write down the answers you get and the action you decide to take. Your notes may come in handy later if there is a dispute or a problem. A good broker will be happy to answer your questions and impress your seriousness and professionalism.
Is this investment registered with the SEC and a state securities agency?
Does the investment match my investment goals?
How will the investment make money for me (dividends, interest, capital gains)?
What set of circumstances have to occur for the value of the investment to go up? To go down? (e.g., must interest rates rise?)
What fees do I pay to buy, maintain, and sell the investment? After fees, how much does the value have to increase before I make a profit?
How easy is it for me to unload this investment in a hurry? Should I need the money?
What are the specific risks associated with this investment? For example, what is the risk that rising interest rates will devalue your investment or that an economic recession could decrease its value?
Is the company experienced in what it is doing? How long has it been in business? What is their track record? Who are their competitors?
Here is a list of potential questions to ask before making a mutual fund investment:
How has the fund performed over the long run? Where can I get an independent evaluation of it?
What specific risks are associated with it?
What type of securities does the fund hold?
How often does the portfolio change?
Does this fund invest in derivatives or any other investment that could cause rapid changes in the NAV (Net Asset Value)?
How does the fund's performance compare to other funds of its type or an index of similar investments?
How much of a fee will I have to pay to buy shares? To maintain shares?
There are no magic formulas for successful investing. Instead, it takes a disciplined, reasoned approach, a commitment to follow some basic, solid rules that have proved effective over time, and to stay in it for the long haul.
Here are some specific tips.
Don't Let Greed Cloud Your Better Judgment- Considering your investment objectives, a disciplined approach will pay dividends in more ways than one. But on the other hand, investors constantly chasing the jackpot usually lose in the long run.
Don't Rely on Tips- The "hot tip" is the bane of investors. There may be short-term gain in some cases, but in this regard, it's generally wise to follow the maxim, "What goes up must come down."
Be Resolute- Develop a comprehensive, reasoned plan with your adviser, and stick to it, despite the temptation to "take a flyer." When you have developed your plan, and in the absence of other factors, follow it.
Consider All Your Needs and Get a Plan That Fits- For financial planning to be truly effective, all your needs must be considered: money management, tax planning, retirement planning, estate planning, insurance, etc.
Evaluate Investments Periodically- An investment program is not static and unchanging. Your financial situation and objectives may change, as does the economic situation. Therefore, review your plan with your adviser and, if necessary, update it to reflect your current and long-term needs.
Monitor your investments- Stay informed. Don't rely on others to "take care of" your portfolio. Keep up with your reading in newsletters, magazines, or on the internet.
Read Broker-Account Forms With Care- any investors pay scant attention to the forms involved in opening and maintaining a brokerage account. As pointed out earlier, many investors are not aware that much of the paperwork is intended, at least in part, to protect the broker and the form against any complaints they might bring.
Like any other investment, you should match the portfolio with your desired return, risk tolerance, and investment time horizon. The higher your desired return and risk tolerance and the longer your time horizon, the greater the portion of your portfolio should be in equity investments such as common stocks. Since IRAs are generally long-term investments, equity investments are generally appropriate for a portion of the account.
Short-term fixed income investment would be appropriate for those with lower risk tolerance. Many people have their IRAs invested in CDs. This is appropriate only for those with a very short time horizon or very low-risk tolerance. Like any other investment, IRA money should be invested in something that will provide a decent return.
Municipal bonds should never be used within an IRA. In doing so, you sacrifice return and may convert otherwise tax-free income to taxable income when you withdraw the funds.
A derivative is an investment instrument whose value is based on underlying assets such as stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, interest rates, and market indexes. Options are one of the most common types of derivatives and are a useful tool for enhancing a portfolio's income and, in many cases, reducing risk. Other types of derivatives include futures contracts, forward contracts, and swaps, but these are more appropriate for sophisticated investors.
Stock options are contracts that give the purchaser the right to buy or sell at a specific price and within a certain period of time, for instance, 100 shares of corporate stock (known as the underlying security). These options are traded on several stock exchanges and the Chicago Board Options Exchange.
When investors buy an option contract, they pay a premium, typically the price of the option, and a commission on the trade. If they buy a "call" option, they speculate that the underlying security price will rise before the option period expires. They speculate that the price will fall if they buy a "put" option.
While options trading can be very useful as part of an overall investment strategy, it can also be very complicated and sometimes extremely risky. Therefore, if you plan to trade in options, ensure that you understand basic options strategy and that your registered representative is qualified in this area.
Here are the top mistakes that cause investors to lose money unnecessarily.
Q: Should I use a standard asset allocation formula like many popular finance magazines?
A: Most investors are satisfied with a one-size-fits-all investment plan. However, your individual needs as an investor must govern your plans. For instance, how much of your investment can you risk losing? What is your investment timetable? (i.e., are you retired or a young professional?) The allocation of your portfolio's assets among various investments should match your particular needs.
Q: CCan I make a decent return without taking unnecessary risks?
A: You do not have to risk your capital to make a decent return on your money. In contrast, all investments have some degree of risk; many investments offer a return that beats inflation without unduly jeopardizing your hard-earned money. For instance, Treasuries are one of the safest possible investments and offer a decent return with very little risk.
Q: What is the downside of high fees and commissions?
A: Many investors allow brokers' commissions, fees, and other costs to cut into their returns. Be aware of the fees you are paying and make sure they are appropriate for the services you are receiving. The more you pay in fees, the lower your net return will be.
Q: When should I start investing?
A: Today Many investors are not conscious of the power of interest compounding. By starting early enough with your investment plan, you can invest less and, in the long run, still come out ahead of where you would be if you started later in life.
Q: What is the impact of taxes on my investment returns?
A: Net profits on your share of your mutual funds' stock sales are taxable to you as capital gains. The taxes will eat into your profits unless you are in a tax-deferred retirement account. The solution? Invest in funds where shares are bought and sold less frequently and have a low turnover rate (10 percent or less per year).
Q: Should I let my emotions affect my investments?
A: Never give in to pressure from a broker to invest in "hot" security or to sell a fund and get into another one. Planning, discipline, and reason are key to a successful portfolio. Emotion and impulse have no role to play. Try to stay in a security or fund for the long haul. On the other hand, when it's time to unload a loser, let go of it. Finally, do not fall prey to the myth of "market timing." This is the belief that by getting into or out of a security at exactly the right moment, we can retire rich. Market timing does not work.
Instead, use investment strategies that do work:
Suppose Mr. N. Vestor invests $100 in an investment that earns 10 percent this year and 10 percent the next year. What is his cumulative return? The answer is 21 percent.
Here's why. N. Vestor's 10 percent gain makes his $100 grow to $110. Next year, he earns another 10 percent, leaving him with $121. His investment has earned a cumulative 21 percent return over two years. His annualized return, however, is 10 percent.
The fact that the cumulative return of 21 percent is greater than twice the 10 percent annual return is due to compounding, which means that your yearly earnings are added to your original investment before the current year's earnings are applied.
The rule of 72 is a way of determining how long your investment will take to double. Divide an investment's annual return into 72, and you will have the number of years necessary to double your investment.
An investment's annual return is 10 percent. Ten percent divided into 72 is 7.2, so your investment will double in 7.2 years.
If you reinvest all your gains, including dividends and interest, you will get the most from compounding. The percentage you achieve is termed "total return." It includes appreciation, interest, and dividends. Therefore, examining mutual funds' past and current performance is particularly important.
Mutual funds must, by law, distribute almost all of their capital gain and dividend income each year. Many investors reinvest these distributions, using them to buy more fund shares. Because the fund's share price is reduced after a fund makes a distribution, the long-term price trend of a fund's shares may not accurately reflect the fund's performance. However, the fund's total return, which accounts for reinvested dividends, is often a more accurate reflector of the fund's performance.
Investors often take the following shortcut, which often yields misleading results. Instead of looking at total return, they simply compare their year-end portfolio value with the value at the beginning of the year and attribute the entire growth to investment gains.
The reason this shortcut may be misleading is that any additional investments or withdrawals made during the year are not taken into account.
Insurance companies sell variable annuity contracts. Purchasers pay a premium of, for example, $10,000 for a single payment variable annuity or $50 a month for a periodic payment variable annuity. The insurance company deposits these premiums in an account that is invested in a portfolio of securities. The portfolio's value goes up or down as the prices of its securities rise or fall.
After a specified period, which often coincides with the year the purchaser turns age 65, the assets are converted into annuity payments. Although the insurance company guarantees a minimum payment, these payments are variable since they depend on the periodic performance of the underlying securities.
Almost all variable annuity contracts carry sales, administrative, and asset charges. The amounts differ from one contract to another and from one insurance company to another. Fixed annuity contracts are not considered securities and are not regulated by the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission).
Fixed annuity contracts are not considered securities and are not regulated by the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission).
An annuity, in essence, is insurance against "living too long." In contrast, traditional life insurance guards against "dying too soon." Here is how annuities function: An investor hands over funds to an insurance company. The insurer invests the funds. At the end of the annuity's term, the insurer pays the investor their investment plus the earnings. The amount paid at maturity may be a lump sum or an annuity, a set of periodic payments guaranteed as to amount and payment period.
Earnings during annuity are tax-deferred, and an investor is not taxed until the amounts are paid out. Because of the tax deferral, your funds have the chance to grow more quickly than they would in a taxable investment.
There are two reasons to use an annuity as an investment vehicle:
Annuities lend themselves well to funding retirement, and, in certain cases, education costs.
Annuities lend themselves well to funding retirement and, in certain cases, education costs. One negative aspect of an annuity is that you cannot get to your money during the growth period without incurring taxes and penalties. For example, the tax code imposes a 10 percent premature withdrawal penalty on money taken out of a tax-deferred annuity before age 59-1/2. In addition, insurers impose penalties on withdrawals made before the annuity is up. The insurers' penalties are termed "surrender charges" and usually apply for the first seven years of the annuity contract.
These penalties lead to a de facto restriction on using annuities as investments. It only makes sense to put your money in an annuity if you can leave it there for at least ten years and only when the withdrawals are scheduled to occur after age 59-1/2. This is why annuities work well, mostly for retirement needs or education funding in cases where the depositor will be at least 59-1/2 when withdrawals begin.
Annuities can also be effective in funding education costs where the annuity is held in the child's name under the provisions of the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act. The child would then pay tax on the earnings when the time came for withdrawals. However, a major drawback to this planning technique is that the child is free to use the money for any purpose, not just education costs. If an investment adviser recommends a tax-deferred variable annuity, should you invest it? Or would a regular taxable investment be better?
Generally, you should be aware that tax-deferred annuities often yield less than regular investments. This is because they have higher expenses than regular investments, and these expenses eat into your returns. On the plus side, the annuity provides a death benefit. However, you should also be aware that there may be a commission on the product an investment adviser may be entitled to a commission on the product they are recommending.
At first glance, the immediate annuity would make sense for retirees with lump-sum distributions from retirement plans. After all, an initial lump-sum premium can be converted into a series of monthly, quarterly, or yearly payments, representing a portion of principal plus interest and guaranteed to last for life. Moreover, the portion of the periodic payout that is a return of principal is excluded from taxable income.
However, there are risks. When you lock yourself into a lifetime of level payments, you aren't guarding against inflation. You are also gambling that you will live long enough to get your money back. Thus, if you buy a $150,000 annuity and die after collecting only $60,000, the insurer often gets to keep the rest. Unlike other investments, the balance doesn't go to your heirs. Furthermore, since the interest rate is fixed by the insurer when you buy it, you are locking into today's low rates.
You can hedge your bets by opting for what's called a "certain period," which guarantees payment for some years to your beneficiaries in the event of your death. There are also "joint-and-survivor" options, which pay your spouse for the remainder of their life after you die, or a "refund" feature, in which a portion of the remaining principal is resumed to your beneficiaries.
Some plans offer quasi-inflation adjusted payments. For example, one company offers a guaranteed increase in payments of 10 percent at three-year intervals for the first 15 years. Payments are then subject to an annual cost-of-living adjustment, with a 3 percent maximum. However, for these enhancements to apply, you will have to settle for much lower monthly payments than the simple version.
A few companies have introduced immediate annuities that offer potentially higher returns for some market risk. These "variable, immediate annuities" convert an initial premium into a lifetime income; however, they tie the monthly payments to the returns on a basket of mutual funds.
If you want a comfortable retirement income, your best bet is a balanced portfolio of mutual funds. However, if you want to guarantee that you will not outlive your money, you can plan your withdrawals over a longer time horizon.
While traditional life insurance guards against "dying too soon," an annuity, in essence, can be used as insurance against "living too long." With an annuity, you will receive a series of periodic payments guaranteed as to the amount and payment period. Thus, if you choose to take the annuity payments over your lifetime (there are many other options), you will have a guaranteed source of "income" until your death.
If you "die too soon" (that is, you don't outlive your life expectancy), you will get back from the insurer far less than you paid in. On the other hand, if you "live too long" and outlive your life expectancy, you may get back far more than the cost of your annuity and the resultant earnings. By comparison, if you put your funds into a traditional investment, you may run out of funds before death.
You cannot get to your money during growth without incurring taxes and penalties. For example, the tax code imposes a 10 percent premature-withdrawal penalty on money taken out of a tax-deferred annuity before age 59-1/2, and insurers impose penalties on withdrawals made before the term of the annuity is up. The insurers' penalties are termed "surrender charges" and usually apply for the first seven years of the annuity contract.
You can purchase a single-premium annuity,where the investment is made all at once (perhaps using a lump sum from a retirement plan payout)
With the flexible-premium annuity the annuity is funded with a series of payments. The first payment can be quite small.
The immediate annuity starts payments right after the annuity is funded. It is usually funded with a single premium and is usually purchased by retirees with funds they have accumulated for retirement.
With a deferred annuity, payouts begin many years after the annuity contract is issued. As a result, deferred annuities are used as long-term investment vehicles by retirees and non-retirees alike. They are used in tax-deferred retirement plans and as individual tax-sheltered annuity investments and may be funded with a single or flexible premium.
With a fixed annuity contract, the insurance company puts your funds into conservative, fixed-income investments such as bonds. Your principal is guaranteed, and the insurance company gives you an interest rate that is guaranteed for a certain minimum period--from a month to a year or more. A fixed annuity contract is similar to a CD or a money market fund, depending on the length of the period during which interest is guaranteed, and is considered a low-risk investment vehicle
This guaranteed interest rate is adjusted upwards or downwards at the end of the guarantee period.
All fixed annuities also guarantee you a certain minimum rate of interest of 3 to 5 percent for the entirety of the contract.
The fixed annuity is a good choice for investors with a low-risk tolerance and a short-term investing time horizon. The growth that will occur will be relatively low. In times of falling interest rates, fixed annuity investors benefit, while in times of rising interest rates, they do not.
The variable annuity, which carries higher risks than the fixed annuity (about the same risk level as a mutual fund investment), gives you the ability to choose how to allocate your money among several different managed funds. There are usually three types of funds: stocks, bonds, and cash equivalents. Unlike the fixed annuity, there are no guarantees of principal or interest. However, the variable annuity does benefit from tax deferral on the earnings.
You can switch your allocations from time to time for a small fee or sometimes for free.
The variable annuity is a good annuity choice for investors with a moderate to high-risk tolerance and a long-term investing time horizon.
Today, insurers make available annuities that combine both fixed and variable features.
You have several choices when it's time to begin withdrawing from your deferred annuity. Most people choose a monthly annuity-type payment, although a lump sum withdrawal is also possible. The size of your monthly payment depends on several factors, including:
Summaries of the most common forms of payment (settlement options) are listed below. Remember that you cannot change your mind once you have chosen a payment option.
Fixed Amount gives you a fixed monthly amount (chosen by you) that continues until your annuity is used up. The risk of using this option is that you may live longer than your money lasts. Your beneficiary gets the rest if you die before your annuity is exhausted.
Fixed Period pays you a fixed amount over the Period you choose. For example, you might choose to have the annuity paid out over ten years. This may be a good option if you are seeking retirement income before some other benefits start. If you die before the Period, your beneficiary gets the remaining Amount.
Lifetime or Straight Life payments continue until you die. After that, there are no payments to survivors. The life annuity gives you the highest monthly benefit of the options listed here. The risk is that you will die early, thus leaving the insurance company with some of your funds.
Life with Period Certain gives you payments as long as you live (as does the life annuity) but with a minimum period during which you or your beneficiary will receive payments, even if you die earlier than expected. The longer the guarantee period is, the lower the monthly benefit will be.
Installment-Refund pays you as long as you live and guarantees that should you die early, whatever is left of your original investment will be paid to a beneficiary.
Joint and Survivor- In one joint and survivor option, monthly payments are made during the annuitants' joint lives, with the same or a lesser amount paid to whoever is the survivor. In the option typically used for retired employees, monthly payments are made to the retired employee, with the same or a lesser amount to the employee's surviving spouse or another beneficiary. In this case, the spouse's (or other co-annuitant's) death before the employee won't affect what the survivor employee collects. The monthly payment amount depends on the annuitants' ages and whether the survivor's payment is 100 percent of the joint Amount or some lesser percentage.
A tax-qualified annuity is used to fund a qualified retirement plan, such as an IRA, Keogh plan, 401(k) plan, SEP (Simplified Employee Pension), or other retirement plans.
Any nondeductible or after-tax amount you put into the plan is not subject to income tax when withdrawn
The earnings on your investment are not taxed until withdrawal.
If you withdraw money before the age of 59 1/2, you may have to pay a 10 percent penalty on the amount withdrawn in addition to the regular income tax. One of the 10 percent penalty exceptions is for taking the annuity out in equal periodic payments over the rest of your life.
Once you reach age 72, you will have to start taking withdrawals in certain minimum amounts specified by the tax law (except for Roth IRAs and employees still working after age 72).
Though this is sometimes done, no tax advantage is gained by putting annuities in such a plan since qualified plans and IRAs, and annuities are tax-deferred. Depending on your situation, it might be better to put other investments, such as mutual funds in IRAs and qualified retirement plans, and hold annuities in your account.
Payouts are taxed differently for qualified and non-qualified plans. These differences are summarized below.
Qualified and Non-Qualified Annuities
A tax-qualified annuity is used to fund a qualified retirement plan, such as an IRA, Keogh plan, 401(k) plan, SEP (Simplified Employee Pension), or other retirement plans. When used as a retirement savings vehicle, the tax-qualified annuity is entitled to all of the tax benefits and penalties--that Congress saw fit to attach to such plans.
The tax benefits are:
A non-qualified annuity, on the other hand, is purchased with after-tax dollars. You still get the benefit of tax deferral on the earnings.
Tax Rules for Qualified Annuities
When you withdraw money from a qualified plan annuity funded with pre-tax dollars, you must pay income tax on the amount withdrawn.
Once you reach age 72, you will have to start withdrawing in certain minimum amounts specified by the tax law.
Tax Rules for Non-Qualified Annuities
With a non-qualified plan annuity that was funded with after-tax dollars, you pay tax only on the part of the withdrawal that represents earnings on your original investment.
If you make a withdrawal before the age of 59-1/2, you will pay the 10 percent penalty only on the portion of the withdrawal that represents earnings.
With a non-qualified annuity, you are not subject to the minimum distribution rules that apply to qualified plans after you reach age 72.
Taxes may apply to your beneficiary (the person you designate to take further payments) or your heirs (your estate or those who take through the estate if you didn't designate a beneficiary).
Income tax. Annuity payments collected by your beneficiaries or heirs are subject to tax on the same principles that would apply to your payments.
Exception: There's no 10 percent penalty on withdrawal under age 59-1/2 regardless of the recipient's age or your age at death.
Estate tax. Estate tax. The present value at your death of the remaining annuity payments is an asset of your estate and subject to estate tax with other estate assets. Annuities passing to your surviving spouse or charity would escape this tax.
Check Out The Insurer. Make sure that the insurance company offering it is financially sound. Annuity investments are not federally guaranteed, so the soundness of the insurance company is the only assurance you can rely on—several service rate insurance companies.
Compare Contracts. Compare Contracts. For immediate annuities: Compare the settlement options. For each $1,000 invested, how much of a monthly payout will you get? Consider the interest rate and any penalties and charges.
Deferred annuities. Deferred annuities. Compare the rate, the length of the guarantee period, and a five-year history of rates paid on the contract, not just the interest rates.
Variable annuities. Variable annuities. Check out the past performance of the funds involved.
If a particular fund has a great track record, ascertain whether the same management is still in place. Although past performance is no guarantee, consistent management will grant you better odds.
There are costs associated with annuities. Here are the most important items you should be aware of:
Sales Commission. Sales Commission. Ask for details on any commissions you will be paying. What percentage is the commission? Is the commission deducted as a front-end load? If so, your investment is directly reduced by the amount of the commission. A no-load annuity contract, or at least a low-load contract, is the best choice.
Surrender Penalties. Surrender Penalties. Find out the surrender charges (the amounts charged for early withdrawals). The typical charge is 7 percent for first-year withdrawals, 6 percent for the second year, and so on, with no charges after the seventh year.
Be sure the surrender charge "clock" starts running with the date your contract begins, not with each new investment.
Other Fees and Costs. Other Fees and Costs. Ask about all other fees. With variable annuities, the fees must be disclosed in the prospectus. Fees lower your return, so it is important to know about them. Fees might include:
Other Considerations.Other Considerations. Some annuity contracts offer "bail-out" provisions that allow you to cash in the annuity if interest rates fall below a stated amount without paying surrender charges. There may also be a "persistency" bonus that rewards annuitants who keep their annuities for a certain minimum length of time.
As in so many areas of retirement planning, that depends upon your particular needs and circumstances.
An annuity preserves the tax shelter for funds not yet paid out as annuity income, continuing to grow tax-free to fund future payouts.
A lump sum withdrawal may be preferable for those in questionable health.
A joint and survivor annuity pays a certain annuity during your life and half that amount (it could be more) to your surviving spouse for life.
In almost all cases, the annual amount you will get under a joint and survivor annuity will be less than you would get under an annuity on your life alone.
Joint and survivor annuities are almost always required in pension plans and sometimes in other plans. But you and your spouse can still agree to some other form.
The chief reasons for such an agreement are that your child or another family member can share in the income, take a lump sum distribution, or take a larger annual amount over the participant's life alone.
A bond is a certificate promising to repay a sum of money that an investor or bondholder has loaned to a company no later than a specified date. In return for the use of the money, the company (or municipality or other government entity) also agrees to pay bondholders a certain amount of interest (referred to as a coupon) each year, typically a percentage of the amount loaned.
Bondholders are not owners of the company. They do not share in dividend payments or vote on company matters; the return on their investment does not usually depend on how successful the company is. Bondholders are entitled to receive the amount of interest originally agreed upon and a return of the principal amount of the bond, provided they hold the bond for the time specified. For example, if you buy a bond with a face value of $1000 and a coupon of 8 percent with a 10-year maturity rate, you'll receive $80 in interest every year, and at the end of the 10 years, you'll get your $1,000 back.
Bonds are categorized by the entities that issue them, such as corporate, US Treasury, GSE (Government Sponsored Enterprises) debt securities, and municipal bonds. Corporate bonds generally are issued in denominations of $1,000 or, sometimes, $5,000. Treasury bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000, while municipal bonds are issued in denominations of $5,000. These numbers refer to the face value of the bond and are the amount that the company agrees to repay to the bondholder when the bond matures.
The prices at which these bonds trade may differ from their face values because the price or value of a bond is closely related to the movement of interest rates in the economy. As interest rates change, so too will the value of the bond. So if you need to sell the bond before it matures, it may be worth more (or less) than the price you originally paid.
Some bonds are callable or redeemable, meaning that the issuer can elect to buy them back from holders at the face amount before the maturity date, often referred to as the call date. As a result, the price of a callable bond is always lower than the price of a regular bond, and the yield is typically higher.
Bonds are classified in three ways: by the issuing organization, their maturity, and their quality.
Issuing Organization
The U.S. government sells bonds through the Treasury to finance the national debt and through various federal agencies for special purposes. For example, state and local municipalities sell bonds to finance schools, hospitals, highways, bridges, airports, and the like. Corporations sell bonds to finance long-term capital projects such as new plants or equipment.
Maturity
Maturity means the length of time until the principal is repaid.
Treasury bills have maturity dates of one year or less, Treasury notes mature between one and ten years, and Treasury bonds have maturated ten years or longer.
As a general rule, the longer the bond's maturity, the greater the interest-rate risk.
Bond quality refers to the creditworthiness of the issuing organization; in other words, the likelihood that it will be able to repay its debt. Independent rating services publish directories that rate bond quality, such as Moody's Investors Service, Inc. or Standard & Poor's. A lower rating means the service associates a greater credit risk with that particular bond issue. Rating agencies use a combination of letters A through D to estimate the risk for prospective investors. For example, AAA (or Aaa) is the highest quality bond, while C or D-rated bonds are in default of payment.
The ratings are not meant to measure the attractiveness of the bond as an investment but rather the risk. That is, how likely the principal will be paid if held to maturity.
Only the U.S. Treasury's debt is considered free of credit risk.
Investors considering long-term bonds should be alert to the possibility of a "call" or redemption feature in bonds, which can frustrate expectations of a high yield over the life of the bonds. Such a call feature gives the issuing corporation the right to call in or redeem its bonds after a specified number of years have elapsed. Growing corporations reserve early redemption features in their bonds in hopes of refinancing later at lower interest rates. The call feature has three effects,
After the call date there's no guarantee that high yields will continue
It may limit the appreciation of the bonds
It creates the risk that, where the purchase price is higher than the redemption price, part of the investment will be lost
There are many different call provisions, some of which are complex and hard to understand, but brokers must disclose call features in writing. Then, check the indenture, the contract between the bond issuer and the bondholder, and seek out bonds that either have no call feature or have call protection or choose bonds with the latest possible redemption date.
The table below provides a summary of the ratings:
Moody's Rating: |
Indicates: | Standard & Poor's Rating: |
Aaa | Highest Quality | AAA |
Aa | High Quality | AA |
A | Good Quality | A |
Baa | Medium Quality | BBB |
Ba | Speculative Elements | BB |
B | Speculative | B |
Caa | More Speculative | CCC |
Ca | Highly Speculative | CC |
__ | In Default | D |
N | Not Rated | N |
For more detailed definitions of each rating, consult the publications of the rating services.
Think of bond prices and interest rates as opposite ends of a see-saw. When rates fall, prices rise. When rates rise, prices fall. So why does it work this way?
You buy a bond worth $10,000, which pays 9 percent interest until maturity in 30 years. Suppose you need to sell that bond after only 10 years when the interest rate on new loans is 11 percent. Why should investors buy your bond paying only 9 percent when they can get 11 percent elsewhere?
To sell it, you'll need to drop the bond's price below what you paid. Then, when the bond matures, your buyer will get more than they paid for it, making up for the lower-than-market interest payments received.
On the other hand, if you needed to sell the bond when the prevailing interest rate on new loans was 7 percent, you could charge a premium price for your bond with a more favorable 9 percent rate. As a result, your buyer will receive less than they paid for it when the bond matures, making up for the higher-than-marketplace interest payments received in the interim.
Bond prices are also influenced by maturity. The bond's maturity also influences the extent of the change in bond price. The longer the maturity is, the greater the change in price for a given change in interest rates. For example, a rise in interest rates will bring about a larger drop in price for a 20-year bond than for an otherwise equivalent 10-year bond.
Bond mutual fund share values generally reflect bond prices. Fund managers decide which bonds to buy and sell, following the fund's investment objective. And, of course, shares in a bond mutual fund can be redeemed or liquidated at any time.
Bond fund managers try to lengthen or shorten the fund's average maturity (within the fund's overall investment objectives) to anticipate changing interest rates.
Changes in bond mutual fund prices due to changing interest rates do not reflect the creditworthiness of the bond issuers. If their creditworthiness changes, bond mutual fund prices may also change. This type of price volatility is known as credit risk.
This is one good reason to invest in bond funds. Because a fund consists of a pool of bonds from an array of organizations, the effect of one default on the share price of the entire fund is not nearly as great as it would be for an investor who held only that single bond.
The biggest difference between an individual bond and a bond mutual fund is that with individual bonds, you can "lock in" the rate, but with a bond mutual fund, because the bond fund contains many different bonds, neither the dividend payments you receive nor the maturity date is fixed. So you can't lock in the principal or your payment rate.
Let's examine the implications of this difference.
A bond mutual fund is issued by an investment company whose sole business manages a portfolio of individual bonds. Investors purchase ownership shares in the fund, with each share representing ownership in all the bonds in the fund's portfolio. Thus, a pool of shareholders owns a pool of bonds. Professional money managers use shareholders' investments to buy and sell portfolio bonds per the fund's investment objective.
Due to pooled resources and professional money management, bond fund shareholders can invest in far more bonds than the average individual investor could. For example, you would need to pay $25,000 for a single Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA or Ginnie Mae) bond, but you can invest in most GNMA bond mutual funds for only $1,000.
Liquidity is another important difference between an individual bond and a bond fund. By law, the bond fund must buy back your shares at any time. As a result, you may receive more or less than your purchase price, depending on how the value of the fund's underlying portfolio has changed.
In contrast, for an individual bond, if you invested in it directly, you would need to find your own buyer if you wanted to sell the bond before it matured.
Bond fund portfolios can contain many different types of bonds of different maturates and varying quality. Risks also vary depending on the type of fund. For example, all bond funds are subject to interest rate risk, and most are subject to credit risk. There may be other types of risk as well. Each fund's investment objective, the types of bonds it invests in, related risks, fees, and other information can be found in its prospectus.
The table below shows eight common types of bond funds and some of their key characteristics.
Type of Bond Fund |
Goals | Invest Primarily In |
Principal Risks |
Corporate Bond | Income, Capital Preservation | Corporate Debt | Interest Rate, Some Credit |
Global Bond | Capital Appreciation | U.S. and non-U.S. Corporate and Government Debt | Currency, Policy, Interest Rate, Some Credit |
Ginnie Mae (GNMA) | Income | Mortgage Securities backed by the Government National Mortgage Association | Prepayment, Interest Rate |
High-Yield | Income, Capital Appreciation Corporate Bond | Lower Quality Corporate Debt | Credit, Interest Rate |
Income (Bond) | Federal Tax-exempt Income, Capital Preservation | State and Local Government Debt | Interest Rate, Some Credit |
Long-Term Municipal Bond | Federal Tax-exempt Income, Capital Preservation | State and Local Government Debt | Interest Rate, Some Credit |
State Long-term Municipal Bond | Federal and State Tax-exempt Income, Capital Preservation | State and Local Government Debt of Only One State | Interest Rate, Some Credit |
U.S. Government Income | Capital Preservation, Income | U.S. Treasury and Other Government Securities | Interest Rate |
Bonds issued by states, cities, or certain agencies of local governments (such as school districts) are called municipal bonds. An important feature of these bonds is that the interest a bondholder receives is not subject to federal income tax. In addition, the interest is also exempt from state and local tax if the bondholder lives in the jurisdiction of the issuing authority. Because of the tax advantages, the interest rate paid on municipal bonds is generally lower than that paid on corporate bonds.
Rating agencies evaluate bonds issued by state and local governments and their agencies and consider factors such as the tax base, population statistics, total debt outstanding, and the area's general economic climate.
There are different types of municipal bonds. Some are general obligation bonds secured by the full faith and credit of a state or local government and backed by its taxing power. Others are revenue bonds issued to finance specified public works (such as bridges or tunnels) and are directly backed by the income from the specific project.
Prices of most municipal bonds are not usually quoted in daily newspapers.
Like state and local governments, the U.S. Government also issues debt securities to raise funds. However, because the federal government backs these, they are considered very low risk.
Government debt securities include
Other U.S. Government agencies also issue bonds, notes, debentures, and participation certificates.
While government securities do not have to be registered with the SEC, transactions involving them are subject to the anti-fraud provisions of the securities laws and SEC rules.
Treasury bills, notes, and bonds can be purchased directly from the Federal Reserve. Call the Federal Reserve branch nearest you and ask them to mail you information on purchasing through the Treasury Direct program.
You must generally report any mutual fund distribution as income, whether or not it is reinvested. The tax law treats mutual fund shareholders as if they own a proportionate share of the fund's portfolio of securities. As a result, the fund is not taxed on its income if certain tests are met, and substantially all of its income is distributed to its shareholders. Thus, all dividends and interest from securities in the portfolio, as well as any capital gains from the sales of securities, are taxed to the shareholders.
Start calling movers for estimates-
There are two taxable distributions: ordinary dividends and capital gain distributions. Ordinary dividends are the most common type of distribution from a corporation and are paid out of the earnings and profits of the corporation. For mutual funds, this is the interest and dividends earned by securities held in the fund's portfolio that represent the net earnings of the fund. Ordinary dividends are periodically paid out to shareholders and are taxable as ordinary income unless they are qualified dividends. Qualified dividends are ordinary dividends that meet the requirements to be taxed as net capital gains and are included with your capital gain distributions as long-term capital gain, regardless of how long you have owned your fund shares.
Like the return on any other investment, mutual fund dividend payments decline or rise yearly, depending on the income earned by the fund under its investment policy. You should receive a Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions, from each payer for distributions of $10.00 or more; however, even if you do not receive a Form 1099-DIV or Schedule K-1 (dividends received through a partnership, an estate, a trust, or a subchapter S corporation), you must still report all taxable dividends.
Ordinary dividends are taxed at ordinary tax rates for whatever tax bracket you fall under. Qualified dividends are taxed at a 15 percent rate.
Capital gain distributions are the net gains from the sale of securities in the fund's portfolio. When gains from the fund's sales of securities exceed losses, they are distributed to shareholders. As with ordinary dividends, capital gain distributions vary from year to year and are reported on Form 1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions. Capital gain distributions are always reported as long-term capital gains for tax purposes.
Most mutual funds offer you the option of having dividend and capital gain distributions automatically reinvested in the fund a--good way to buy new shares and expand your holdings. Most shareholders take advantage of this service, but you should be aware that you do not avoid paying tax by doing this. Reinvested ordinary dividends are taxed as ordinary income, just as if you had received them in cash, and reinvested capital gain distributions are taxed as long-term capital gain.
If you reinvest, add the amount reinvested to the "cost basis" of your account. "Cost basis" is the amount you paid for your shares. Your fund account statement easily shows the cost basis of your new shares purchased through automatic reinvesting. This information is important later on when you sell shares.
Make sure you don't pay any unnecessary capital gain taxes on the sale of mutual fund shares because you forgot about reinvested amounts. When you reinvest dividends and capital gain distributions to buy more shares, you should add the cost of those shares (that is, the amount invested) to the cost basis of the shares in that account because you have already paid tax on those shares.
You bought 500 shares in Fund PQR in 1990 for $10,000. Over the years, you reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions in the amount of $10,000, for which you received 100 additional shares. This year, you sold all 600 of those shares for $40,000.
Suppose you forget to include the price paid for your 100 shares purchased through reinvestment (even though the fund sent you a statement recording the shares you received in each transaction). In that case, you will unwittingly report on this year's tax return a capital gain of $30,000 ($40,000 - $ 10,000) on your redemption of 600 shares, rather than the correct capital gain of $20,000 ($40,000 [$10,000 + $10,000]).
Failure to include reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions in your cost basis is a costly mistake.
The "exchange privilege," or the ability to exchange shares of one fund for shares of another, is a popular feature of many mutual fund "families." Families are fund organizations offering a variety of funds.
For tax purposes, exchanges are treated as if you had sold your shares in one fund and used the cash to purchase shares in another fund. You must report any capital gain from the exchange on your return. The same tax rules used for calculating gains and losses when you redeem shares apply when you exchange them.
Gains on these redemptions and exchanges are taxable whether the fund invests in taxable or tax-exempt securities.
The "exchange privilege," or the ability to exchange shares of one fund for shares of another, is a popular feature of many mutual fund "families." Families are fund organizations offering a variety of funds.
For tax purposes, exchanges are treated as if you had sold your shares in one fund and used the cash to purchase shares in another fund. You must report any capital gain from the exchange on your return. The same tax rules used for calculating gains and losses when you redeem shares apply when you exchange them.
Gains on these redemptions and exchanges are taxable whether the fund invests in taxable or tax-exempt securities.
Sometimes mutual funds make distributions to shareholders that are not attributable to the fund's earnings. These are called nontaxable distributions, also known as returns of capital. Note that nontaxable distributions are not the same as tax-exempt dividends. Because a return if capital is a return on the part of your investment, it is not taxable. Your mutual fund will show any return of capital on Form 1099-DIV in the box for nontaxable distributions.
If you receive a return of capital distribution, your basis in the shares is reduced by the amount of the return.
Two years ago, you purchased 100 shares of Fund ABC at $10 a share. Last year, you received a $1-per-share return of capital distribution, which reduced your basis in those shares by $1, to give you an adjusted basis of $9 per share. This year, you sell your 100 shares for $15 a share. Assuming no other transactions during this period, you would have a capital gain this year of $6 a share ($15 - $9) for a total reported capital gain of $600.
Nontaxable distributions cannot reduce your basis below zero. If you receive returns of capital that, taken together, exceed your original basis, you must report the excess as a long-term capital gain.
If you're in the higher tax brackets and are seeing your investment profits taxed away, you might want to consider tax-exempt mutual funds as an alternative.
The distributions of municipal bond funds that are attributable to interest from state and municipal bonds are exempt from federal income tax, although they may be subject to state tax.
The same is true of distributions from tax-exempt money market funds. These funds also invest in municipal bonds, but only in those that are short-term or close to maturity, the aim being to reduce the fluctuation in NAV that occurs in long-term funds.
Many taxpayers can ease their tax bite by investing in municipal bond funds. The catch with municipal bond funds is that they offer lower yields than comparable taxable bonds. For example, if a U.S. Treasury bond yields 4.8 percent, then quality municipal bonds of the same maturity might yield 4 percent. The tax advantage makes investing in the lower-yielding tax-exempt fund worthwhile, and the tax advantage to a particular investor hinges on that investor's tax bracket.
To figure out how much you'd have to earn on a taxable investment to equal the yield on a tax-exempt investment, use this formula:
The tax-exempt yield divided by (1 minus your tax bracket) = equivalent yield of a taxable investment.
You are in the 24 percent bracket, and the yield of a tax-exempt investment is 4 percent. Applying the formula, we get 0.04 divided by (1.00 minus 0.24) = 0.0526. Therefore, 5.26 percent is the yield you would have to receive from a taxable investment to match the tax-exempt yield of 4 percent.
For some taxpayers, portions of income earned by tax-exempt funds may be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
Although income from tax-exempt funds is federally tax-exempt, you must still report on your tax return the amount of tax-exempt income you received during the year. This information-reporting requirement does not convert tax-exempt earnings into taxable income.
Your tax-exempt mutual fund will send you a statement summarizing its distributions for the past year and explaining how to handle tax-exempt dividends state-by-state.
Capital gain distributions paid by municipal bond funds (unlike distributions of interest) are not free from federal tax. Most states also tax these capital gain distributions.
Generally, states treat mutual fund distributions as taxable income, just as the federal government does. However, states may not provide favored tax rates for dividends or long-term capital gains. Further, if your mutual fund invests in U.S. government obligations, states generally exempt dividends attributable to federal obligation interest from state taxation.
Mutual funds that invest in state obligations are another special situation. Most states do not tax income from their own obligations, whether held directly or through mutual funds. On the other hand, the majority of states do tax income from the obligations of other states. Thus, in most states, you will not pay state tax to the extent you receive, through the fund, income from obligations issued by your state or its municipalities.
Dividends from funds investing in foreign stocks may qualify for the 15/5/0 percent rate on dividends. In addition, if your fund invests in foreign stocks or bonds, part of the income it distributes may have been subject to foreign tax withholding. If so, you may be entitled to a tax deduction or credit for your pro-rata share of taxes paid. Your fund will provide you with the necessary information.
A tax credit provides a dollar-for-dollar offset against your tax bill, while a deduction reduces the amount of income you must pay tax, so it is generally advantageous to claim the foreign tax credit. However, if you decide to take the credit, you may need to attach a special form to your Form 1040, depending on the amount of credit involved.
Generally, stocks are traded in blocks or multiples of 100 shares, called round lots. An amount of stock consisting of fewer than 100 shares is said to be an odd lot. On an exchange, an order that involves both a round lot and an odd lot-say 175 shares will be treated as two different trades and may be executed at different prices.
In the financial world, trade is jargon for buying and selling. Your broker will charge you a different commission on each trade and confirm each separately. These distinctions do not generally apply to trades executed in the OTC (Over-the-Counter) market. OTC stocks are not traded on a formal exchange such as New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) or the American Stock Exchange (AMEX).
To be traded on an exchange such as the NYSE or AMEX, the issuing company must meet the exchange's listing standards, including requirements on the company's assets, number of publicly held shares, and number of stockholders. Organized markets for other instruments, including standardized options, impose similar restrictions.
The National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System (NASDAQ), operated by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), is considered a stock exchange. Like the exchanges, NASDAQ has certain listing standards which must be met for securities to be traded in that market.
Many securities are not traded on an exchange because the issuing companies are too small to meet exchange requirements. Instead, they are traded Over-the-Counter or OTC by broker-dealers negotiating directly with each other via computer and phone.
Investors who buy or sell securities on an exchange or over the counter usually do so with a broker-dealer firm's aid. The registered representative is the link between the investor and the traders and dealers who actually buy and sell securities on the exchange floor or elsewhere.
Market prices for stocks traded over the counter and for those traded on exchanges are established in somewhat different ways. The exchanges centralize trading in each security at one location, the exchange's floor. There, auction principles of trading establish the market price of a security according to the current buying and selling interests. If such interests do not balance, designated floor members known as specialists are expected to step in to buy or sell for their own account, to a reasonable degree, as necessary to maintain an orderly market.
There are no guarantees for investors. No matter how you buy a fund through a brokerage firm, a bank, an insurance agency, a financial planning firm, or directly through the mail, bond funds, unlike bank deposits, are not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance. Corporation or any other government agency. Nor are they guaranteed by the bank or other financial institution through which you make your investment. As a result, mutual funds involve investment risk, including the possible loss of principal. Conversely, investment risk always includes the potential for greater reward.
Even though mutual funds are not insured, there are some protections. First, mutual funds are highly regulated by the federal government, primarily through the Securities and Exchange Commission and each state government.
For example, all funds must meet certain operating standards, observe strict anti-fraud rules, and disclose specific information to potential investors. In addition, after you invest, funds must provide you with reports at least twice a year that describe how the fund fared during the period covered.
Today, debt securities are held in electronic book-entry form, but in the past were issued as paper certificates. As a result, ownership is transferred via computer rather than via actual transfer of paper certificates, reducing the possibility of loss, theft, or mutilation of the certificates.
There are still, however, many securities that are in certificate form. For example, you may have inherited stock certificates in paper form from a grandparent or other older relatives. Certificates representing your ownership of stocks or bonds are valuable documents and should be kept safely. However, if a certificate is lost or destroyed, it may prove time-consuming and costly to obtain a replacement. Furthermore, some securities certificates may not be replaceable at all.
Stocks may be designated as common stock, the most widely known form, or preferred stock. Preferred shareholders have more of a stake in the company's assets and earnings, and when dividends are issued, they are paid before common stock shareholders. In addition, when you hold the preferred stock, you receive dividend payouts at regular intervals. Generally, you have a stated dividend, while common stock dividends are based on company performance. Shareholders with common stock may or may not receive a dividend and are last in line to be paid when a company goes belly up and is liquidated or reorganized in bankruptcy.
Some stocks are designated as "restricted" or "unregistered" because they were originally issued in a private sale or other transaction where they were not registered with the SEC. Restricted or unregistered securities may not be freely resold unless a registration statement is filed with the SEC or an exemption under the law permits resale.
Foreign corporations that sell securities in the United States must register those securities with the SEC. They are generally subject to the same rules and regulations that apply to securities of U.S. companies. However, the nature of foreign companies' information available to investors may be somewhat different.
U.S. investors interested in foreign securities may also purchase American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). These are negotiable receipts, registered in the name of a U.S. citizen, representing a specific number of shares of a foreign corporation. Denominations are in U.S. dollars, and the security is held by a U.S. financial institution overseas. Listed on either the NYSE, AMEX, or NASDAQ, ADRs are an excellent way to buy shares in a foreign company, but keep in mind that there are still risks associated with doing so.
Dividend reinvestment plans, often referred to as DRIPs or DRPs, are associated with company-sponsored plans but may also be purchased through a broker and offer opportunities to make small, regular cash investments in participating companies without paying prohibitive transaction fees. Further, all or a part of your dividends can be reinvested and used to purchase more shares, although some plans offer the option to receive dividends by check.
Treat your decision to enroll in a DRIP just as seriously as you would a decision to invest in a company. Before investing, subject the company to your usual research and analysis.
Many U.S. companies have direct stock purchase programs that allow investors to buy a company's shares directly from the company instead of using a broker. Contact the transfer agent or the company's shareholder relations department to enroll in the DRIP and ask for an enrollment form. Then return the form, usually along with your first optional cash investment, to the company.
Once enrolled, you can invest more money directly through the company's transfer agent. Many companies offer an automatic investment service; they will automatically withdraw a pre-set amount from your bank account to make optional cash investments. There may be a fee for this service.
Direct stock purchase plans cost an investor less since there is no broker commission to pay and often no fee. In addition, some programs have automatic investment options, which will debit a set amount each month from an investor's bank account.
Dividend reinvestment isn't mandatory. Investors can receive dividend payments, which can be automatically deposited in a bank account. Some companies that offer direct-purchase programs do not pay dividends.
As with anything else, there are positives and negatives. The main drawback associated with DRIPs is that the calculation of capital-gains taxes becomes complex when dividends have been reinvested over the years and lots have been bought at varying prices. This can be remedied by carefully keeping track of the cost basis of shares when dividends are reinvested. Further, investors who invest through an IRA need not deal with the problem of calculating capital gains taxes. In addition, the dividends are taxable income even though you reinvest them.
This depends on how much you think your children's education will cost. The best way is to start saving before they are born. The sooner you begin, the less money you will have to put away each year.
Suppose you have one child, age six months, and you estimate that you'll need $120,000 to finance your college education 18 years from now. If you start putting away money immediately, you'll need to save $3,500 per year for 18 years (assuming an after-tax return of 7 percent). On the other hand, if you put off saving until the child is six years old, you'll have to save almost double that amount every year for twelve years.
How much will your child's education cost? It depends on whether your child attends a private or state school. According to the College Board, for the 2020-21 school year, the total expenses - tuition, fees, board, personal expenses, and books and supplies - for the average four-year private college are about $54,880 per year and about $26,820 per year for the average four-year in-state public college. However, these amounts are averages: the tuition, fees, and board for some private colleges can exceed $75,000 per year, whereas the costs for a state school can often be kept under $10,000 per year. It should also be noted that in 2020-21 the average amount of grant aid for a full-time undergraduate student was about $7,330 and $21,660 for four-year public and private schools, respectively. More than 70 percent of full-time students receive grant aid to help pay for college.
As with any investment, you should choose those that will provide you with a good return and meet your risk tolerance level. The ones you choose should depend on when you start your savings plan-the mix of investments if you start when your child is a toddler should be different from those used if you start when your child is 12.
The following are often recommended as investments for education funds:
Series EE bonds: These are extremely safe investments. They should be held in the parents' names. If the adjusted gross income of you and your spouse at the time of redemption is at or under the amount set by the tax law, the interest on bonds bought after January 1, 1990, is tax-free as long as it is used for tuition or other qualified education costs. The tax break is phased out if your adjusted gross income is above the threshold amount.
You can exclude from your gross income interest on qualified U.S. savings bonds if you have qualified higher education expenses during the year you redeem the bonds. For tax year 2021, the exclusion begins phasing out at $83,200 ($82,350 in 2020) modified adjusted gross income ($76,000 indexed for inflation) and is eliminated for adjusted gross incomes of more than $98,200 ($97,350 in 2020). For married taxpayers filing jointly, the tax exclusion begins phasing out at $124,800 ($123,550 in 2020) and is eliminated for adjusted gross incomes of more than $154,800 ($153,550 in 2020). The exclusion is unavailable to married filing separately.
U.S. Government bonds: These are investments that offer a relatively higher return than CDs or Series EE bonds. If you use zero-coupon bonds, you can time the receipt of the proceeds to fall in the year when you need the money. A drawback of such bonds is that a sale before their maturity date could result in a loss on the investment. Further, the accrued interest is taxable even though you don't receive it until maturity.
Certificates of deposit: These are safe but usually provide a lower return than the inflation rate. The interest is taxable. These should generally only be used by the most risk-averse investors and for relatively short investment horizons.
Municipal bonds: Assuming the bonds are highly rated; their tax-free interest can provide an acceptable return if you're in the higher income tax brackets. Zero-coupon municipals can be timed to fall due when you need the funds and are useful if you begin saving later in the child's life.
Be sure to convert the tax-free return quoted by sellers of such bonds into an equivalent taxable return. Otherwise, the quoted return may be misleading. The formula for converting tax-free returns into taxable returns is as follows:
Divide the tax-free return by 1.00 minus your top tax rate to determine the taxable return equivalent. For example, if the return on municipal bonds is 1 percent and you are in the 32 percent tax bracket, the equivalent taxable return is 2.6 percent (1 percent divided by 68 percent).
The American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) was made permanent by the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 (PATH). The maximum credit, available only for the first four years of post-secondary education, is $2,500. You can claim the credit for each eligible student you have for which the credit requirements are met.
Income limits- To claim the American Opportunity Tax Credit, your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) must not exceed $90,000 ($180,000 for joint filers). To claim the Lifetime Learning Credit, MAGI must not exceed $69,000 ($138,000 for joint filers). "Modified AGI" generally means your adjusted gross income. The "modifications" only come into play if you earn income abroad.
Amount of credit- For most taxpayers, 40 percent of the AOTC is a refundable credit, meaning you can receive up to $1,000 even if you owe no taxes.
Which costs are eligible? Qualifying tuition and related expenses refer to fees and course materials required for enrollment or attendance at an eligible education institution. In addition, they now include books, supplies, and equipment needed for a course of study, whether or not the materials must be purchased from the educational institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance.
"Related" expenses do not include room and board, student activities, athletics (other than courses that are part of a degree program), insurance, equipment, transportation, or any personal, living, or family expenses. Student-activity fees are included in qualified education expenses only if the fees must be paid to the institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance. For expenses paid with borrowed funds, count the expenses when they are paid, not when borrowings are repaid.
The tax law says you can't claim credit and a deduction for the same higher education costs. It also says that if you pay education costs with a tax-free scholarship, Pell grant, or employer-provided educational assistance, you cannot claim a credit for those amounts.
In the past, parents would invest in the child's name to shift income to the lower-bracket child. However, adding the "kiddie tax" mostly ended that strategy.
In 2021, the amount that can be used to reduce the net unearned income reported on the child's return subject to the "kiddie tax" is $1,100 (same as 2020). The same $1,100 amount is used to determine whether a parent may elect to include a child's gross income in the parent's gross income and to calculate the "kiddie tax." For example, one of the requirements for the parental election is that a child's gross income for 2021 must be more than $1,100 but less than $11,000.
For 2021, the net unearned income for a child under the age of 19 (or a full-time student under the age of 24) that is not subject to "kiddie tax" is $2,200 (same as 2020).
These rules apply to unearned income. However, if a child has earned income, this amount is always taxed at the child's rate.
In 2021, you can contribute up to $2,000 yearly to a Coverdell education savings account (Section 530 program) for a child under 18. These contributions are not deductible, but they grow tax-free until withdrawn. Contributions for any year (e.g., 2021) can be made through the [unextended] due date for the return for that year (April 15, 2022).
In 2021, the maximum contribution amount for each child was phased out for modified AGI between $190,000 and $220,000 (joint filers) and $95,000 and $110,000 (single filers). These amounts are not indexed to inflation.
There is no adjustment for inflation for the $2,000 contribution limit; therefore, the limit is expected to remain at $2,000.
Only cash can be contributed to a Section 530 account, and you cannot contribute to the account after the child reaches their 18th birthday.
Anyone can establish and contribute to a Section 530 account, including the child, and you may establish 530s for as many children as you wish. The child need not be dependent. They need not be related to you, but the amount contributed during the year to each account cannot exceed $2,000. In 2021, the maximum contribution amount for each child was phased out for modified AGI between $190,000 and $220,000 (joint filers) and $95,000 and $110,000 (single filers). These amounts are not indexed to inflation.
Grants- The best type of financial aid, because they do not have to be paid back -- are amounts awarded by governments, schools, and other organizations. Some grants are need-based, and others are not.
The Federal Pell Grant Program offers federal aid based on need.
Don't assume that middle-class families are ineligible for needs-based aid or loans. The assessment of whether a family qualifies as "in need" depends on the college's cost and the family's size.
State education departments may make grants available. Inquiries should be made to the state agency.
Employers may provide subsidies.
Private organizations may provide scholarships. Inquiries should be made at schools.
Most schools provide aid and scholarships, both needs-based and non-needs-based.
Military scholarships are available to those who enlist in the Reserves, National Guard, or Reserve Officers Training Corps. Inquiries should be made at the branch of service.
Try negotiating with your preferred college for additional financial aid, especially if it offers less than a comparable college.
Grants- The best type of financial aid, because they do not have to be paid back -- are amounts awarded by governments, schools, and other organizations. Some grants are need-based, and others are not.
The Federal Pell Grant Program offers federal aid based on need.
Don't assume that middle-class families are ineligible for needs-based aid or loans. The assessment of whether a family qualifies as "in need" depends on the college's cost and the family's size.
State education departments may make grants available. Inquiries should be made to the state agency.
Employers may provide subsidies.
Private organizations may provide scholarships. Inquiries should be made at schools.
Most schools provide aid and scholarships, both needs-based and non-needs-based.
Try negotiating with your preferred college for additional financial aid, especially if it offers less than a comparable college.
There are various student loan programs available. Some are need-based, and others are not. Here is a summary of loans:
Stafford loans (formerly guaranteed student loans) are federally guaranteed and subsidized low-interest loans made by local lenders and the federal government. They are needs-based for subsidized loans; however, an unsubsidized version is also available.
Perkins loans are provided by the federal government and administered by schools. They are needs-based. Inquiries should be made at school aid offices.
Parent loans for undergraduate students (PLUS) and supplemental loans for students are federally guaranteed loans by local lenders to parents, not students. Inquiries should be made at college aid offices.
Here are some strategies that may increase the amount of aid for which your family is eligible:
Try to avoid putting assets in your child's name. As a general rule, education funds should be kept in the parents' names since investments in a child's name can negatively impact aid eligibility. For example, the rules for determining financial aid decrease the amount of aid for which a child is eligible by 35 percent of assets the child owns and 50 percent of the child's income.
If your child owns $1,000 worth of stock, the amount of aid they are eligible for is reduced by $350. On the other hand, the amount of aid is reduced by (effectively) only 5.6 percent of your assets and from 22 to 47 percent of your income.
Reduce your income. Income for financial aid is generally determined based on your previous year's income tax situation. Therefore, in the years immediately before and during college, try to reduce your taxable income. Some ways to do this include:
Defer capital gains.
Sell losing investments.
Reduce the income from your business. If you are the owner of your own business, you may be able to reduce your taxable income by taking a lower salary, deferring bonuses, etc.
Avoid distributions from retirement plans or IRAs in these years.
Pay your federal and state taxes during the year in estimated payments rather than waiting until April 15.
Since a portion of discretionary assets is included in the family's expected contribution from income, reduce discretionary assets by paying off credit cards and other consumer loans.
If you have any financial hardships, let the deciding authorities know (via the statement of financial need) exactly what they are if they are not clear from the application. The financial aid officer may be able to assist you in explaining hardships.
Have your child become independent. In this case, your income is not considered in determining how much aid your child will be eligible for. Students are considered independent if they:
Are at least 24 years old by the end of the year for which they are applying for aid
Are veterans
Have dependents other than their spouse
Are wards of the court or both parents are deceased
Are graduate or professional students
If you decide to invest in your child's name, here are some tax strategies to consider:
Yes, generally, the same rules would apply to your withdrawals of the same amounts had you lived--unless it's a Roth IRA. A Roth IRA is exempt from federal income tax as long as the account was opened five years before any withdrawals were taken.
Also, your spouse can roll over your account to their IRA. No early withdrawal penalty applies, regardless of your beneficiary's age. Still, a spouse who rolled over to an IRA may owe an early withdrawal penalty on IRA withdrawals taken before age 59 ½.
Only a small percentage of estates (based on the value of one's assets at death and including large lifetime gifts) are subject to the estate tax, and there is no estate tax on assets passing to a surviving spouse or charity. However, if the estate is subject to federal estate tax (except in 2010, when there was no estate tax), you can deduct the portion of the federal estate tax that is attributed to the IRA. You also won't have to pay tax on the portion of withdrawals that are attributed to any nondeductible contributions made to the IRA.
No. The estate is taxed on the annuity's present value.
You can minimize or eliminate tax on inherited retirement assets by using the following methods:
Leave them to your spouse. This saves money owed to estate tax and helps postpone withdrawals subject to income tax--provided your spouse takes no withdrawals before age 59 ½.
Leave them to charity. Although there's no financial benefit to the family, this saves income and estate taxes.
Leave them to the family for life, with the remainder to charity as a charitable remainder trust. This reduces estate tax with some benefits to the family.
If your assets are in a tax-favored retirement fund such as a company or Keogh pension or profit-sharing plan (including thrift and savings plans), 401(k), IRA, or stock bonus plan when it comes time to take distributions, you have several options:
Your retirement assets may be distributed as employer stock or an annuity or insurance contract. Sometimes certain withdrawal options may be associated with certain retirement plans; for instance, annuities are more common with pension plans. Other types of plans favor the other options, but for the most part, most of these options are available for most plans. And more than likely, you'll want to preserve the tax shelter as long as possible by withdrawing no more than you need at any given time.
Timing your withdrawal can be a factor, too. Withdrawals before age 59 ½ risk a tax penalty. Alternatively, withdrawals are generally required to start at age 72 or face a tax penalty. The only exceptions are Roth IRAs and non-owner-employees still working beyond that age.
Your personal needs should decide. For example, you may need a lump sum to buy a retirement home or business. If your employer requires that you take a lump sum distribution, it may be wise to roll it over into an IRA.
>There are several things you might do depending upon your needs:
If you don't need the assets to live on, try to continue the tax shelter and leave the money where it is.
Transfer or roll over the assets into your new employer's plan--if that plan allows it (this can be tricky, though).
If you've decided to start your own business, set up a Keogh and move the funds there.
Roll them over into your IRA.
IIn general, employer plans such as your 401(k), IRAs and pension plan funds are protected from general creditors unless you've used these assets as securities against a loan or are entering into bankruptcy. If this is the case, there's a chance they could be seized, but if the money is in a registered IRA, pension plan, or 401(k), it's more than likely, that they will be protected in case of bankruptcy (subject to state and federal law of course).
Each state is different, but in general, consider the following:
While withdrawals are generally taxable in states with income tax, some offer relief for retirement income up to a specified dollar amount.
If your state doesn't allow deductions for Keogh or IRA investments allowed under federal law, these investments and sometimes more may come back tax-free.
Retirement plans offer the biggest tax shelter in the federal system since funds grow tax-free while in the plan. But the shelter is primarily intended for retirement. So when you reach 72 (or shortly after that), you must start withdrawing from the plan.
The shelter can continue for many of those assets for a long time, assuming you don't need them to live on. You can spread withdrawals over a period based on, but longer than, your life expectancy, for example, over at least 27.4 years if you're 72 now. You are free, however, to withdraw at a faster rate or even all of it if you wish. The shelter continues for whatever is not withdrawn.
Generally, yes. Persons you have named as your plan beneficiaries can withdraw over their life expectancies (or more rapidly if they wish). In addition, the withdrawal period is generally shorter when no individual beneficiary is named (for example, where your estate is the beneficiary). Still, your spouse can sometimes spread withdrawals over a longer period.
Money from retirement plans, including 401(k)s, IRAs, company pensions, and other plans, is taxed according to your residence when you receive it.
If you move from a state with a high-income tax, such as New York, to one with little or no income tax (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming have none), you will indeed save money on state income tax.
However, establishing residence in a new state may take as long as one year; if you retain property in both states, you may owe taxes to both.
A reverse mortgage is a type of home equity loan that allows you to convert some of the equity in your home into cash while you retain home ownership. Reverse mortgages work much like traditional mortgages, only in reverse. Rather than making a payment to your lender each month, the lender pays you. Most reverse mortgages do not require repayment of principal, interest, or servicing fees for as long as you live in your home.
Retired people may want to consider the reverse mortgage to generate cash flow. A reverse mortgage allows homeowners age 62 and over to remain in their homes while using their built-up equity for any purpose: to make repairs, keep up with property taxes or simply pay their bills.
Reverse mortgages are rising-debt loans, which means that the interest is added to the principal loan balance each month (because it is not paid on a current basis). Therefore, the total amount of interest you owe increases significantly with time as the interest compounds. Reverse mortgages also use up some or all of the equity in your home.
All three types of loan plans, whether FHA-insured, lender-insured, or uninsured, charge origination fees and closing costs. Insured plans also charge insurance premiums, and some impose mortgage servicing charges.
Finally, homeowners should realize that if they're forced to move soon after taking the mortgage (because of illness, for example), they'll almost certainly end up with a great deal less equity to live on than if they had simply sold the house outright. That is particularly true for loans terminated in five years or less.
If your assets are in a tax-favored retirement fund such as a company or Keogh pension or profit-sharing plan (including thrift and savings plans), 401(k), IRA, or stock bonus plan when it comes time to take distributions, you have several options:
Your retirement assets may be distributed as employer stock, annuity, or insurance contracts. Sometimes certain withdrawal options may be associated with certain retirement plans; for instance, annuities are more common with pension plans. Other types of plans favor the other options, but for the most part, most of these options are available for most plans. And more than likely, you'll want to preserve the tax shelter as long as possible by withdrawing no more than you need at any given time.
Timing your withdrawal can be a factor, too. Withdrawals before age 59 ½ risk a tax penalty. Alternatively, withdrawals generally require starting at age 72 or facing a tax penalty. The only exceptions are Roth IRAs and non-owner-employees still working beyond that age.
Your personal needs should decide. For example, you may need a lump sum to buy a retirement home or business. If your employer requires that you take a lump sum distribution, it may be wise to roll it over into an IRA.
There are several things you might do depending upon your needs:
If you don't need the assets to live on, try to continue the tax shelter and leave the money where it is.
Transfer or roll over the assets into your new employer's plan--if that plan allows it (this can be tricky, though).
If you've decided to start your own business, set up a Keogh and move the funds there.
Roll them over into your IRA.
In general, employer plans such as your 401(k), IRAs and pension plan funds are protected from general creditors unless you've used these assets as securities against a loan or are entering into bankruptcy. If this is the case, there's a chance they could be seized, but if the money is in a registered IRA, pension plan, or 401(k), it's more than likely, that they will be protected in case of bankruptcy (subject to state and federal law of course).
Each state is different, but in general, consider the following:
Money from retirement plans, including 401(k)s, IRAs, company pensions, and other plans, is taxed according to your residence when you receive it.
If you move from a state with a high-income tax, such as New York, to one with little or no income tax (Texas, Nevada, and Florida have none), you will indeed save money on state income tax.
However, establishing residence in a new state may take as long as one year; if you retain property in both states, you may owe taxes to both.
That depends on your particular needs and circumstances. Here are some reasons you might want to roll over distributions to your IRA:
You want to, or have to, take a distribution from your employer's plan and want these funds to continue to grow tax-free in your own IRA. .
As a self-employed individual, you are terminating your Keogh plan or retiring from business and want to continue the tax shelter for these distributions.
Here are some of the disadvantages of an IRA rollover:
Rollovers from the company or Keogh plans may take away your spouse's right to share in plan assets.
IRAs can't claim the limited tax relief allowed on lump-sum distributions.
To avoid tax hassles, rollovers should be done between the trustees of the plans involved. In other words, the check should not be made out to you personally, but to the trustee of the rollover account.
There are two types of IRAs, Traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs, both of which are discussed in this Financial Guide. Traditional IRAs defer taxation of investment income, and withdrawals are taxable income--except for withdrawals of previously non-deductible contributions. In most cases, however, contributions are deductible. Roth IRAs are subject to many of the same rules as Traditional IRAs. Still, there are several differences, the primary one being that contributions are not deductible and are made after-tax. As such, qualified distributions are generally tax-free.
If you have income from wages or self-employment income, you can contribute up to $6,000 in 2021 (same as 2020). As such, IRAs are available even to children who meet these conditions. In addition, persons age 50 and older can contribute an additional $1,000 for a total of $7,000 in 2021 (same as 2020).
Yes. Contributions of $6,000 for each spouse are allowed in 2021 (same as 2020) if the couple's wages or self-employment earnings are $12,000 or more.
Roth IRAs offer the following advantages:
Yes, subject to the income conditions above. This allows contributions of $6,000 each if the couple's earnings are at least $12,000 in 2021($13,000 if only one of you is 50 or older or $14,000 if both of you are 50 or older). Each spouse can contribute up to the current limit; however, the total of your combined contributions can't be more than the taxable compensation reported on your joint return.
Yes, a child with personal service earnings is subject to other income conditions.
The following is a brief list of negative issues regarding Roth IRAs:
Under the new tax reform law, for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017, if a contribution to a regular IRA has been converted into a Roth IRA, it can no longer be converted back into a contribution to a regular IRA. This provision prevents a taxpayer from using recharacterization to unwind a Roth conversion.
The income limit was permanently removed for tax years starting in 2010. Anyone, even those with high incomes, can convert from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
When you convert from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, you pay taxes on the value of your account as of the conversion date. So if your account loses value and the account is worth less money, you'll end up paying taxes on the money you no longer have in your account.
Say you convert $50,000 in a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, and the value drops to $35,000. If you didn't make any nondeductible contributions, the taxable distribution would be $50,000, which would be the amount you would be paying taxes on. However, now your account is only worth $35,000. By re-characterizing the account, you can avoid paying taxes you no longer have ($50,000). You'll be back to a traditional IRA, but the account is now worth only $35,000.
Before 2018, the IRS allowed you "re-characterize" the account to a traditional IRA, essentially putting you right back where you were - at least tax-wise. However, tax reform legislation passed in 2017 repealed this special rule, and re-characterizations are no longer permitted.
Your heirs are taxed as follows:
An individual who the Social Security Administration determines to be "disabled" receives an Award Letter, which is a notice of decision that explains how much the disability benefit will be and when payments start. It also tells you when you can expect your condition to be reviewed to see if there has been any improvement.
If family members are eligible, they will receive a separate notice and a booklet about things they need to know.
Under the Social Security disability insurance program (Title II of the Act), there are three basic categories of individuals who can qualify for benefits based on disability:
For all individuals applying for disability benefits under Title II, and adults applying under Title XVI, the definition of disability is the same. The law defines disability as the inability to engage in any substantial gainful activity (SGA) because of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment(s) which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months.
Meeting this definition under Social Security is difficult. Insured means that you have accumulated sufficient credits in the Social Security system. Visit the Social Security Administration's Website to apply for an estimate.
If you are getting disability benefits on your own work record, or if you are a widow or widower getting benefits on a spouse's record, there is a five-month waiting period, and your payments will not begin until the sixth full month of disability. The 5-month waiting period does not apply to individuals filing as children of workers. Under SSI, disability payments may begin as early as the first full month after the individual applied or became eligible for SSI.
Your first payment may include some back benefits if the sixth month has passed. Your check should arrive on the third day of every month. If the third falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, you will receive your check on the last banking day before that day. The check you receive is the benefit for the previous month.
The check you received dated July 3 is for June. Your benefit can either be mailed to you or deposited directly into your bank account.
Some people who get Social Security have to pay taxes on their benefits. The rules are the same regardless of whether Social Security benefits are received due to retirement or disability. You must pay taxes if you file a federal tax return as an "individual" and your combined income is more than $25,000. Combined income is defined as your adjusted gross income + Nontaxable interest + 1/2 of your Social Security benefits. If you file a joint return, you may have to pay taxes if you and your spouse have a combined income of more than $32,000. If you are married and file a separate return, you will probably pay taxes on your benefits. Social Security has no authority to withhold state or local taxes from your benefit. As a result, many states and local authorities do not tax Social Security benefits. However, you should contact your state or local taxing authority for more information.
Your disability benefits generally continue for as long as your impairment has not medically improved and you cannot work. They will not necessarily continue indefinitely, however.
Because of advances in medical science and rehabilitation techniques, many people with disabilities recover from serious accidents and illnesses. Also, through determination and effort, many individuals overcome serious conditions and return to work despite them.
If you are still getting disability benefits when you reach retirement age, your benefits will be automatically changed to retirement benefits, generally in the same amount. You will receive a new booklet explaining your rights and responsibilities as a retired person.
Suppose you are a disabled widow or widower. In that case, your benefits will be changed to a regular widow or widower benefits (at the same rate) at 60, and you will receive a new instruction booklet that explains the rights and responsibilities of people who get survivor benefits.
If you disagree with SSA's decision, you can appeal it. You have 60 days to file a written appeal (either by mail or in person) with any Social Security office. Generally, there are four levels to the appeals process. They are
Reconsideration- Your claim is reviewed by someone who did not take part in the first decision.
Hearing before an Administrative Law Judge- You can appear before a judge to present your case.
Review by Appeals Council- If the Appeals Council decides your case should be reviewed, it will either decide your case or return it to the administrative law judge for further review.
Federal District Court- If the Appeals Council decides not to review your case or if you disagree with its decision, you may file a civil lawsuit in a Federal District Court and continue your appeal to the US Supreme Court if necessary.
If you disagree with the decision at one level, you have 60 days to appeal to the next level until you are satisfied with the decision or have completed the last level of appeal.
You have two special appeal rights when a decision is made that you are no longer disabled. -
They are as follows:
Disability Hearing- As part of the reconsideration process, this hearing allows you to meet face-to-face with the person who is reconsidering your case to explain why you feel you are still disabled. You can submit new evidence or information and bring someone who knows about your disability. This special hearing does not replace your right to also have a formal hearing before an administrative law judge (the second appeal step) if your reconsideration is denied.
Retirement benefit calculations are based on your average earnings during a lifetime of work under the Social Security system. The Social Security Administration (SSA) averages your 35 highest years of earnings for the most current and future retirees. Years in which you have low earnings or no earnings may be counted to bring the total years of earnings up to 35.
You can collect early retirement benefits at age 62, but you currently can't get full benefits until 65 for persons born in 1937 or earlier. For persons born in 1938 and later, the full retirement age increases gradually until it reaches 67 for those born in 1960 and later. Then you can collect additional benefits for every year you delay your retirement until age 70. After you collect Social Security benefits, you will continue receiving them for life.
With retirement on the horizon for scores of baby boomers, Social Security will likely be in your future; however, the Social Security trust fund will be less able to pay benefit increases, which increase annually as the taxable wage base rises without some reform.
Information presented on this website is not intended as tax or legal advice. You are encouraged to seek tax or legal advice from a qualified professional.