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02-21-2023, 09:00 PM | #13246 |
MVP
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02-21-2023, 09:02 PM | #13247 | |
MVP
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Quote:
I did something similar a couple of weeks ago. I bank through Capital One and they offer an 11 month 5% CD. |
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02-21-2023, 09:09 PM | #13248 | |
Mod Team
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Quote:
Down 23% from it's high this year. Dividends are not free money and are not risk free when the stock price tanks along with your capital. Don't confuse people into thinking these are the same. Last edited by lewdog; 02-21-2023 at 09:30 PM.. |
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02-22-2023, 02:35 PM | #13249 |
It was not a fair catch
Join Date: Aug 2012
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What the hell is happening yesterday and today?
Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
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#investigatecarlcheffers |
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02-22-2023, 02:36 PM | #13250 |
Grand champ
Join Date: Sep 2007
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Regarding traditional vs Roth IRAs:
How do you determine whether or not you are likely to be in a higher tax bracket at the time you start to withdraw? |
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02-22-2023, 03:58 PM | #13251 | |
Supporter
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Quote:
Typically if you are not earning income you'll be in a lower bracket, but who knows. The big thing with ROTH is you put the principal investment in after tax. Any gain/growth/appreciation is tax free. So if you put 300K in after tax over the life the account, and the value of the account is 500K when you retire, you got 200K tax free. You paid tax on the 300K before it went in and nothing on the back end is taxable. That's the big draw of a Roth. EDIT: Should include the comparison. For a traditional, If you put in 300K over the life of the account and it's worth 500K at retirement, sure you get to deduct the contributions going in, but the whole 500K is taxable on the back end. Last edited by Buehler445; 02-22-2023 at 04:05 PM.. |
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03-06-2023, 09:17 PM | #13252 |
Fish are scared of me
Join Date: Nov 2001
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For Rainman, this is a nice video breakdown of investing in dividend stocks, and I'll wait patiently for the obligatory Lewdog to say it isn't free money. LOL. Love you Lew!
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03-06-2023, 09:25 PM | #13253 | |
fides quaerens intellectum
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: United States
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Quote:
I've had a financial advisor explain his belief that half Roth and half Trad is the way to go in order to take advantage of both a current and future benefit, but it's grounded in concerns that Congress will take away the Roth benefit, which I've never heard anyone else share a concern of, and the thought that a buck today is better than X bucks tomorrow. |
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03-06-2023, 09:32 PM | #13254 | |
THE RED MENACE
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Quote:
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The diabolical genius of Marxism-Socialism is that it provides the emotional and intellectual road map for autocrats to persuade millions of people to support their own enslavement to government. ~Mark Levin April 15, 2019 |
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03-06-2023, 10:24 PM | #13255 |
MVP
Join Date: Oct 2006
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It looks like the Fed is going to have to raise rates through at least June.
Inflation just won't behave like the Feds want. 5.25% from the Fed by July is the consensus. |
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03-06-2023, 10:31 PM | #13256 |
Politically Incorrect
Join Date: Feb 2009
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The Fed has ****ed this all up.
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"The only difference between sex for free and sex for money is that sex for free costs you a WHOLE LOT more!" ~Redd Foxx~ "The men who drafted Patrick Mahomes" |
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03-07-2023, 12:33 AM | #13257 | |
Supporter
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Quote:
Tax rates are almost exclusively higher when you’re earning income (while you’re working) than when you’re not (retired, drawing from your retirement instrument) The difference is GAINS in the Roth are not taxed ever. The basis is taxed when it is put in (basically - there is no tax shelter, but there are ways you could contribute non-taxed earnings - like gains from the sale of a home or restitution or some shit but for all practical purposes, let’s say ROTH dollars are taxed when you put them in), but if it goes up 100% between when you’re 40 making the contribution and 70 when you’re pulling it out, that means half of it wasn’t taxed. Or put another way, your tax rate would have to be half of what you’re paying now, and let’s be real here, if your tax rate is half of what you’re paying now you’re going to have a miserable retirement. And especially for young people, early basis can yield waaaay more than 100% Gain. Do the ROTH. |
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03-07-2023, 05:40 AM | #13258 |
fides quaerens intellectum
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: United States
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Yeah, I agree.
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03-09-2023, 01:46 PM | #13259 |
Seize life. Be an ermine.
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
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VARSITY
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I was thinking about something the other day involving tax rates, and I think the government is running a little IRA grift on us. It's still better to put money into an IRA than to not do it, but this is something I'd never thought about.
If you put money into a stock in an IRA and the price grows, then yay, you make money. When you eventually take it out, you pay regular income tax on the gains, which is going to vary, but it's almost certain to be 22% to 35% for most people. If you bought that same stock in a regular investment account, you're going to pay capital gains tax when you sell it, which is probably going to be 15% for most people. So by holding it in an IRA, you end up paying a higher tax on the gains. Now, it's still better to put it in an IRA because it's pre-tax money going in, which gives you a bigger investment, and the taxes are deferred for many years, but I'd never thought about the fact that you take a bigger bite coming out. Am I thinking about this right? Do I have any wrong assumptions?
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03-09-2023, 02:03 PM | #13260 | |
Supporter
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Quote:
Plus the time value of the tax dollars you didn't have to pay, presuming you're getting a return on that. |
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