Archive for the ‘IRA Rollover Issues’ Category

FINANCIAL PLANNING 101: Estate Planning

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

An Inherited IRA is also known as a Stretch IRA

 

As IRA account owners pass away their assets are typically inherited by designated beneficiary(s) named on the account. The beneficiary(s) have a choice to receive a lump sum distribution, minus ordinary income tax, or establish their own Inherited IRA account, which offers additional tax deferral. If the later option is chosen, the IRS requires annual beneficiary distributions to be taken based upon a uniform life expectancy table. Therefore, younger beneficiaries inherently have an advantage to grow inherited IRA assets due to relatively small-required annual distributions.

 

Ask a financial advisor to show you a hypothetical illustration for inherited IRA distributions with beneficiaries who vary in age. This may become an opportunity to include loved ones who are younger than you into your estate plan while providing them with a financial foundation.

 

Many of our advisors are members of the Financial Planning Association (FPA) and also the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA: the nation’s leading organization promoting Fee-Only comprehensive financial planning).

 

Using the services of a qualified financial advisor (to help you identify the strengths and weaknesses in your financial picture) will ensure you can retire comfortably!

 

NOTE: Experts recommend contacting 2-3 financial advisory firms, so that one may compare/contrast each firm, thus making the best-qualified choice.

Retirement Account Assets: Take It, Roll It, Leave It?

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

A chance to take control of the employer sponsored retirement account you left behind!

With Americans changing jobs every 2-4 years it presents an opportunity to revisit and consolidate retirement account assets i.e. 401K, 403B, Simple IRA and Defined Benefit plans. Without formal instruction given to the previous employer, retirement accounts are often left in the pre-existing status with no proactive advice from the employer or financial advisor.  This can make account maintenance and investing cumbersome.  Once a change of employment occurs the opportunity to Take It, Roll It or Leave It comes alive!  This is your chance to take full authority of retirement account assets.

Take It:
By taking it a request is made by account owners to the previous employer for full liquidation and distribution of assets held in the retirement account.

Formal documentation, called distribution paperwork, will require the owner’s consent (signature) to pay the appropriate federal and state income taxes. Additionally, if the assets are distributed prior to the age of 59 ½ a 10% pre-mature withdrawal penalty is assessed. The bottom line: taxes combined with penalties significantly reduce the net amount received!  Use this option as a last resort for accessing money.  If forced to use this option try to make the distribution during a year in which you will be in a lower tax bracket softening the blow.

Roll It:
For those who want to maintain the tax advantages of the existing retirement account, roll the old retirement plan assets into a Self-Directed IRA with the help of a qualified financial advisor or into a retirement plan sponsored by your new employer.

Formal documentation, called distribution paperwork is required to make this transaction possible. However, some plan administrators recently have allowed telephone and/or internet directed rollovers. If it matters, check to see if there is an option to roll assets “like-kind” or in cash. “Like-Kind” allows previously held investments to transfer without change into the new investment firm (“The Custodian”).  Usually, like-kind transfers are available when rolling into a Self-Directed IRA account. Double check with the outgoing and receiving custodians prior to this type of transaction to make sure it is possible. Cash rollovers are the most common, especially, for those rolling into a new retirement plan. For the most efficient rollover, first open the new Self-Directed IRA or Retirement Plan account and then request the rollover from the old plan. Rollovers to Self-Directed IRAs allow investors the widest range of investments and an opportunity to work with their financial advisor. 

Leave It:
Let the existing plan assets stay where they are and do nothing — if the old plan had everything you needed; including a wide array of investments, good service and acceptable performance. In some cases, smaller account balances (<$5,000) can be forced out of the plan.  Considering that employers change plan administrators and investment menus often – ”doing nothing” can become a real challenge if you need to track down the account sometime in the future.  Don’t expect the firm who previously handled the plan to still be there.

Find a knowledgeable investment advisor or financial advisor to help consolidate retirement accounts into one concise account. This will streamline investment activity, help reduce expenses, reduce account maintenance and ease the ability to monitor investment performance.

Remember to keep primary and contingent beneficiary designations (who the $ goes to if you pass away) updated no matter what you decide!

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