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03-13-2024, 02:20 PM | #13756 | |
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Quote:
Best to read the website of your broker. |
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03-13-2024, 02:22 PM | #13757 |
Seize life. Be an ermine.
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I've never closed an account completely, but when I've moved money to a brokerage from my bank, it's typically taken two days to complete.
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03-13-2024, 02:23 PM | #13758 |
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2-3 days depending on if your cash is settling from recent trades.
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03-13-2024, 02:27 PM | #13759 |
Grand champ
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Ok, cool, I figured. So the whole “don’t invest money you’re saving for something” in regards to a brokerage account is advised more so because it’s risky and a portion of the investment could be lost?
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03-13-2024, 02:29 PM | #13760 |
Seize life. Be an ermine.
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Yeah, completely. It's about not losing your BMW money because the market happened to dip 15 percent while you were test-driving.
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03-13-2024, 02:32 PM | #13761 | |
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03-13-2024, 02:37 PM | #13762 |
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Dang it. I'm walking a tightrope trying to do Roth conversions without tilting into the next higher tax bracket, and now there's another tax hellhound nipping at my heels.
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03-13-2024, 02:57 PM | #13763 | |
Kind of a mod
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03-13-2024, 03:17 PM | #13764 | |
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03-13-2024, 03:20 PM | #13765 |
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Curious what people think of ROTH conversions, I’m not sure it’s advisable in most situations, but would like to be “convinced” just for discussion.
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03-13-2024, 03:29 PM | #13766 | |
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Quote:
That means that I have a six to ten year window when my tax rate will be low, and then it'll rise back to (roughly) the pre-retirement rate. Roth conversions work great in that case, because I can do conversions and pay taxes in these upcoming lower income years at a low rate instead of paying the higher rate when they're RMDs. Plus, then they grow tax-free. As an added bonus, taking the conversions now also lowers the amount of the RMDs in future years, which can also help my tax bill at those later dates. The tightrope I'm walking is that I want to do conversions that take me up to, but not over certain tax brackets, to maximize the tax benefits. Now I'm learning that I also need to watch the MAGI amount for Medicare payments too, to be sure I don't get a surcharge.
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03-13-2024, 03:37 PM | #13767 |
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Thanks Rainman, that makes a lot of sense for your situation. I’d love to hear others. An advisor started doing this for my SIL and I can’t figure out why!
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03-13-2024, 03:59 PM | #13768 | |
Emporer of Mongo
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Quote:
i think it makes a lot of sense in certain situations. it makes sense to convert when the market is down, to me anyway. You can also do partial conversions over time... I think if you have X years remaining BEFORE you retire, then we can take a look at X and see if it makes sense. The higher X is, the more it would probably make sense. The other thing you can do is just stop contributing to your traditional IRA and let it ride, and then ONLY contribute to a ROTH from here on out. (you CAN have both and its not all or nothing) You have until April 15 to contribute to 2023, and then you can still contribute to 2024 till next april. So if you haven't maxed it out yet, you can still put two years worth in right now. For whatever it is worth, I did a conversion.. So I literally put my money where my mouth is on this one. Ive probably got 15-20 years left (hopefully) of max contributions so I just decided to do it and not look back.
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03-13-2024, 04:03 PM | #13769 | |
Emporer of Mongo
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I dont have the credentials you have but I think everyone's first 6500 - 7500 worth of savings every year should be in a ROTH or maybe trad. ira. (Unless they are broke) you dont? It just seems like a no brainer to get that ROTH tax free growth for retirement...
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03-13-2024, 04:09 PM | #13770 |
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Not sure how old you are but think of it this way…it seems more likely than not that tax rates will be higher in the future so paying presumably lower taxes today will benefit you in the long run. As it currently stands the existing TCJA tax cuts are sunsetting in 2025 so keep that in mind. In addition, there are other factors to take into consideration like reducing future RMDs, building a legacy pool for kids, having greater tax flexibility in retirement planning, etc. Lots of potential benefits that most people would agree on. Does this mean you should convert a massive chunk of pretax dollars to your Roth? No of course not; it’s best done incrementally and when you have some tax flexibility. Most clients I work with like having different buckets of money in retirement.
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