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Friday, September 20, 2013

Today's Annoying Discovery About 401k Plans

After 59 1/2, you can take money out of your 401(k) plan without penalty -- but it is still subject to taxation as you take it out.  I knew this, but somehow I was thinking that I could just convert it to municipal bonds, and have a tax-free income stream.  Nope!  The interest income is tax-free, but when you take that interest income out of your 401(k) (according to the account manager I spoke to today), it is taxable income again.

If so, it argues for leaving it in equity funds (which in the long run will likely outperform bonds), and taking a relatively small fraction out each year to supplement tax-free income in my personal portfolio.  I suppose that I could take out money from the 401(k) each year and invest it in municipal bonds, slowly moving it over an entirely tax-free income stream -- but it somewhat frustrates me to think that the IRS is going to get a chunk of that every year.

Complicating this, you have to take a minimum amount out each year after 70 to avoid penalties.

4 comments:

  1. There is (used to be?) a dodge for IRAs which might also apply to 401(k)s - you put the money into a life insurance policy, then borrow from the policy, without repaying it. This is definitely in the "talk to a good tax adviser" territory, but apparently what gets taxed is only the life insurance payout when you die.

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  2. Yep - IRA's are a tax trap - you can get bitten.

    They seem to be predicated on the idea that you'll have less income when retired. Bad idea.

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  3. You might also be able to roll over the 401K into an IRA and be subject to different restrictions.

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  4. I wish my 401K had exchange-traded funds among the choices. A year or so from now I'd put it in Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (symbol: FAZ). Mimics 300% of the inverse of the performance of the Russell 1000® Financial Services Index. The Fed bubble is gonna burst, and I'd like to have a real choice to protect it.

    I'm a big fan of Ken Moraif, a huge proponent of the buy-hold-sell strategy. (It's galling how so much conventional wisdom is invested in buy-and-hold. That line of thinking makes a portfolio a ship without life boats.)

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