idhawkman wrote:Good idea making a separate thread on this River.
I think you meant to say that regardless of whether your new employer has a 401k or not, you can roll over into a self directed 401k. I did that a few times through my career. The biggest reason I didn't like the "Offered" investments in some 401ks is because they were loaded too heavily in the company's stock. E.g. at AT&T they mainly had AT&T heavy funds you could choose from. My thought was, I've heavily invested in this company already why would I double down and put most of my eggs in one basket.
I remember when congress approved the IBM buy out and allowed the acquiring party to raid the pension fund to help finance the buy out. That told me right there to never let my money stay in any major corporation but to put it under my control. Then everytime I moved from one company to another I'd roll what I had built up in that company's 401k into my self directed 401k and started over with the next company.
That's what I did - not sure what other people do though.
Aseahawkfan wrote:They need to raise the work age on SS and medicare. This whole retire and relax for 20 years while others pay you is trash. It's trash when it's called welfare. It's trash as SS. SS should be for people that are mostly infirmed and can't work. And more kids means more people to take care of, more crowded streets, more mouths to feed, and the like. Building tax systems based on population expansion is a recipe for disaster. I don't want to end up like China. Crack the whip on the human herd and get them working. They can't keep looking at the government for their well being like sheep looking to to the shepherd unless they're willing to keep putting out the wool, milk, and meat to pay for it all.
There's this idea humans are some kind of special creature. They aren't. They will be as lazy as a crocodile sitting in the shallows of the river letting the sun warm him if they can be meaning they'll golf all day or play video games if you don't get them working. Social security needs to be built with the idea of sustaining only the infirmed, not some kind of national vacation policy, which is what it is now. I plan to work until I can't, hopefully until I drop dead. I can't even imagine sitting at home doing nothing but piddling around.
idhawkman wrote:I have a slight problem with your characterization of "Retire and relax for 20 years while others pay you". REmember, it was a contract between us and the government that we have paid our end of the bargain for. Other's paying me? NOPE! I paid that in adavance over decades. Unfortunately, the democrats voted down self directed SS where I could have managed my own investments and if I so happen to have died, could have willed the remainder to my kids. INstead the government squandered my money on senseless wars, studies on how long it takes a letter to travel from one place to another, shrimp on a treadmill and crucifixes in jars of piss. ...And people wonder why I'm so outraged at the status quo and being "presidential". All I want is for them to be good stewards of my money and freedoms.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I've tried to teach all the young folks in my family about productive assets. I'm absolutely astounded by the complete lack of interest by the vast majority of people. They think savings is all they need along with social security.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The key to a sound retirement is learning how to spend cash on productive assets that produce a passive income over time. If you can do this when you're young, you'll see the cash pile up at an increasing rate through compounding. You want to make sure you don't get into any of the get rich quick thinking that causes people to purchase overly risky assets attempting to win the lotto. Wealth building is a skill that is not taught, but should be. Financial literacy is a necessary skill for survival.
RiverDog wrote:It depends on your company. My former employer would match a maximum of 4% if I contributed a minimum of 6%. Once they stopped admitting new participants to their pension plan, they upped that amount by 3%, and kicked in an extra 2% after we were split off from our parent company, making the maximum Co. contribution 9%. You'd be a fool not to take advantage of that. The other advantage is the tax benefits as I mentioned above. Good 401K plans offer a wide variety of investments. All of my financial advisors love 401K's. They are a great vehicle for accumulating a retirement fund.
That's one of the keys. The other is getting all your debts paid off. My wife and I paid off our house, bought brand new cars a few years before we retired and paid them off, replaced our heat pump, wood stove with a pellet stove, replaced our roof, water softener, etc.
Another good tool often overlooked is a Health Savings Account. Contributions are tax deductible and your earnings are tax free. The only problem is that you have to spend it on IRS approved medical expenses, so it's not a great option for younger folks with negligible medical expenses. I would recommend anyone over 55 to start a HSA and contribute to the max as once you go on Medicare, you can no longer make tax free contributions.
idhawkman wrote:I have a slight problem with your characterization of "Retire and relax for 20 years while others pay you". REmember, it was a contract between us and the government that we have paid our end of the bargain for. Other's paying me? NOPE! I paid that in adavance over decades. Unfortunately, the democrats voted down self directed SS where I could have managed my own investments and if I so happen to have died, could have willed the remainder to my kids. INstead the government squandered my money on senseless wars, studies on how long it takes a letter to travel from one place to another, shrimp on a treadmill and crucifixes in jars of piss. ...And people wonder why I'm so outraged at the status quo and being "presidential". All I want is for them to be good stewards of my money and freedoms.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
I think people paid for a fund that would support them when the life expectancy was lower. If life expectancy rises, so should the retirement age. It hasn't risen high enough. Should be 70 for retirement age, maybe 71. Closer to the average age of death. Social security intent should be to cover you in your years until death give or take some.
What I see now is lots of people that can still work retiring because they want to, not because they have to. Then they just dink around their house not doing much taking vacations and getting surgeries to further extend their life further. I don't believe that is what the contract intended while young folks continue working paying into a fund that seems on its way to bankruptcy. That means a bunch of hard folks in government need to push the change. I doubt that happens since older folks are a huge voting block that want their early retirement with money and benefits to continue. Until SS is brought in line to what it was intended to be when created as far as age of retirement, it's going to be a huge problem.
It's a fund to make the years until death easier, not a vacation fund for people retiring still capable of working to screw around. As far as the rest of what you posted, big surprise the government planned something poorly that they can't undo because once you give the handout guarantee you can't take it back without pissing your voter base off badly.
Aseahawkfan wrote:So a 9% rate of return on all contributions?
Aseahawkfan wrote:That would be a good rate matching what an index fund might provide. Never worked for a company paying 9%. Tax benefits are neutralized for those that like access to their money. If you don't require access to you money, then 401K can be very good. If you want to access large sums, not so good. I never want to worry about the penalty if I have to take a huge sum out for something. I imagine for standard retirement it's good advice. If your money is moving a lot, it's better to maintain an account that won't charge a penalty if you want to make a big purchase.
RiverDog wrote:That's one of the keys. The other is getting all your debts paid off. My wife and I paid off our house, bought brand new cars a few years before we retired and paid them off, replaced our heat pump, wood stove with a pellet stove, replaced our roof, water softener, etc.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I stay debt free. Don't like debt at all. That is definitely good advice. Car payments are one of the worst investments. Even a house can be a bad long-term investment in the current market. A house or dwelling can be a productive asset if you buy a house or property that can be used as a rental property.
RiverDog wrote:Another good tool often overlooked is a Health Savings Account. Contributions are tax deductible and your earnings are tax free. The only problem is that you have to spend it on IRS approved medical expenses, so it's not a great option for younger folks with negligible medical expenses. I would recommend anyone over 55 to start a HSA and contribute to the max as once you go on Medicare, you can no longer make tax free contributions.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Investments in health are good advice too. Keep in shape. Keep your weight down. Maintain your leg, grip, and body strength and mass. Eat right. Make sure you move around and maintain some cardiovascular fitness. Nothing kills you faster making all your retirement savings worthless than letting your health deteriorate. If you move less after you stop working, you're going to feel it. All cause mortality rates are higher for those that don't maintain a healthy bodyweight (don't get too fat, but don't get too small as you get older), leg strength, and grip strength. The likely reason is leg strength helps you move around. Grip strength is primarily what you use the upper body for if your grip strength is weak it means your body is likely weak. A healthy weight means you aren't wasting away or are too fat.
Folks definitely need to invest in their health. Good health as long as you can is worth more than money. I work to maintain good strength into my senior years.
idhawkman wrote:I was thinking that 9% match is a 150% ROI on your 6% contribution. Then whatever is earned in ROI On the fund is added to that. Very good deal especially since it is tax deferred.
RiverDog wrote:No, a 9% contribution. The rate of return is totally up to the individual in how they invest their funds and how those funds perform.
You can access all of your 401K w/o penalty after 55 1/2 years old, but if you withdraw funds from the conventional side, you'll have to declare it as income and pay the tax. My recommendation for people under 55 is to maintain two separate funds, one for retirement, either a 401K if available with an employer or an IRA if your employer does not participate in a 401K. You don't want to miss out on the tax advantages a 401K/IRA provides. You can borrow from a 401K and pay yourself back, but I don't recommend that as your earnings will drop, but a lot of people do it.
If you can get a loan at a very low percentage, then so long as you're disciplined and don't buy a $50,000 car and have a stable income, I see no problem borrowing. The two cars my wife and I purchased we bought on a 0% interest loan even though we had the money to pay cash. You can use the money you would have used to buy the car to work for you in some other way. But you definitely don't want to get into debt prior to retirement, prior to having a kid, etc.
You're confusing health with finances. Of course, what you say is true, but it's true no matter what your age is. My point was that HSA is a good way to lower your tax bill, especially as you get older and start having health issues...and even a healthy lifestyle and good physical fitness isn't necessarily going to prevent you from having age-related health issues.
RiverDog wrote:It is not necessarily tax deferred. As a matter of fact, I chose not to defer my taxes on my contributions and put them in the Roth side of the plan. As I said above, if you defer your taxes in a 401K, you will pay taxes on the entire fund, ie contributions and earnings. In a Roth, you only pay tax on your contributions. The earnings are tax free.
As I mentioned in my comments to ASF, I was invested in a different plan ("profit sharing") when Congress created 401K's back in the late 80's. The selling point for them was that you would defer your taxes until you retired, and the assumption was that your income would be lower retired than working and thus you'd be in a lower tax bracket meaning you'd pay fewer taxes.
But in my case, my retirement income isn't low enough to put me in the next lowest tax bracket than I was in when I was working, so there was no advantage at all for me to defer the taxes, plus I have to pay taxes on the earnings.
Edit: The company contribution has to be on the conventional or pre tax side, and I believe that's due to how the law is written. Also, not all 401K's have a Roth (post tax) option. Mine did, but the hourly employees I managed did not have that option.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
If the company is giving you a 9% contribution, that is a 9% ROI. Any additional ROI from investments adds to that. That is how you rate if the monetary savings is worth it. Contribution and ROI in this instance mean the same thing.
You have to avoid access up to 55 for this to be relevant. I want access to my money all the time. This is likely good advice for those with no real need for that type of access. For average joe worker, likely good advice.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I studied HSAs. They seem like a way to deprive yourself of money you could be investing for what amounts to a tax deduction that reduces your pre-tax taxable income. This is an extremely minor amount for investors earning a market rate ROI.
idhawkman wrote:Two rules which you've most certainly passed though on the Roth. Rule 1. Must leave the deposit in the account for a minimum of 5 years.
idhawkman wrote:Rule 2. Must be 59 and a half before withdrawing. Otherwise the earnings can be taxed.
idhawkman wrote:The idea is to max out the match on the pretax 401k side and then do the roth with what is left over that you want to save. Sounds like your plan had that kind of built in whereas most people have to start their own Roth and do that part on their own.
idhawkman wrote:I don't think you are seeing it the right way Asea or maybe we have a communication error. "IF" River puts 6% of his pay for the pay period into the 401k his company will put in 9% of his pay for that pay period for a total of 15% of his gross pay. "IF" River only put in 6% to achieve 15% increase then his 6% is getting a 150% return right out of the gate.
Couple of questions I don't really expect you to answer here but its something that comes to my mind whenever I hear people talking like you about having access to their money all the time and consider any investment of their capital as a potential separation from it.
At what point do you enjoy the fruits of your labor? I've known lots of misers (Not necessarily calling you one at this point) who died with huge wealth and they never enjoyed any of their wealth.
RiverDog wrote:Not really. You can still access your money in an HSA any time and for any purpose with no additional penalty. The only difference would be that you'd have to declare anything you withdraw for a non medical purpose as income, which you would have had to anyway had you put it in some other vehicle.
If you or a dependent have medical costs..and by that, it means almost anything except insurance premiums, like vision, dental, prescription drugs, a trip to the clinic for a cold, etc, you're a fool if you don't at least put what you expect to pay in a year into an HSA and pay your medical expenses via that account and take advantage of the tax break, which can be significant. I saved over $1.5K in taxes last year by contributing the max (for me and my wife around $7700) to my HSA.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Let me get this straight. For every 6 dollars River puts in, the company puts in 9 dollars? That is a much higher ROI and much better. Totally worth it. Most companies. That kind of matching is way old school. You rarely see that any longer.
Idahawkman wrote:Couple of questions I don't really expect you to answer here but its something that comes to my mind whenever I hear people talking like you about having access to their money all the time and consider any investment of their capital as a potential separation from it.
At what point do you enjoy the fruits of your labor? I've known lots of misers (Not necessarily calling you one at this point) who died with huge wealth and they never enjoyed any of their wealth.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Hmm. I find investing enjoyable. I see investing as enjoying the fruits of my labor. You work to earn money, so seeing that money grow is enjoyable.
I get what you're saying. I splurge here or there on a computer or a TV. I do like my quality electronics. I imagine it depends on what you enjoy. I truly enjoy investing. Finding a new company to invest in might be the equivalent of someone else buying a sports car or a nice house. I don't much enjoy traveling or vacationing. Sporty cars don't appeal to me. I would rather purchase a functional house than an aesthetic one. I do like a good piece of gym equipment or cardio machine. I enjoy an occasional nice meal.
I don't know what to tell you. I'm not the best person to ask about "enjoying life." The way I enjoy life tends to bore the living crap out of other folks.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Sounds like a good idea if you know you have certain medical expenses each year. So the 10% plus tax penalty for withdrawing for non-medical expenses has been removed prior to the age 65? When last I looked at HSAs, they had a penalty for withdrawing the money for non-medical expenses.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Could you not have written the medical expenses off at the end of the year obtaining the same tax savings? Usually medical expenses are deductible.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Let me get this straight. For every 6 dollars River puts in, the company puts in 9 dollars? That is a much higher ROI and much better. Totally worth it. That kind of matching is way old school. You rarely see that any longer. If I had that program, I'd be shoving money into hand over fist.
I thought they were paying 9 cents on every dollar River contributed up to 6% of his gross pay.
I don't know what to tell you. I'm not the best person to ask about "enjoying life." The way I enjoy life tends to bore the living crap out of other folks.
RiverDog wrote: In any event, since my house is paid off, I do not have enough deductions to itemize so I've been claiming the standard deduction for years. Contributions to an HSA is taken directly off your reportable income so you don't need to itemize your deduction and claim it as an expense.
RiverDog wrote: In any event, since my house is paid off, I do not have enough deductions to itemize so I've been claiming the standard deduction for years. Contributions to an HSA is taken directly off your reportable income so you don't need to itemize your deduction and claim it as an expense.
idhawkman wrote:Many people didn't have enough medical expenses to justify deduction as you pointed out River. Even though I itemized my taxes for many years I never got the medical deduction write offs because I didn't meet the threshold. Outside of the occasional cold or flu, my family is pretty healthy (Knock on wood).
Now with the new Tax Cut bill becoming law and the family deductions levels being raised it is going to be harder to justify itemizations.
RiverDog wrote:Unless both you and your wife are freaks of nature, you're going to start having medical expenses by the time you get into your mid 50's. If you don't already have a HSA, I'd recommend opening one, and if you do, I'd recommend contributing as much as you can afford regardless of your expected medical expenses. Also, keep in mind that you can use it for dental, vision, prescription drug, immunizations, as well as any other expense that qualify under IRS regulations such as weight loss and tobacco cessation.
RiverDog wrote:No. You have to declare as income anything you withdraw for non medical purposes regardless of your age. But like I said, had you not put that money in an HSA, you'd be paying the same taxes anyway.
I think you have to have a certain dollar amount of medical expenses, over $10K if I recall, before it's tax deductible. In any event, since my house is paid off, I do not have enough deductions to itemize so I've been claiming the standard deduction for years. Contributions to an HSA is taken directly off your reportable income so you don't need to itemize your deduction and claim it as an expense.
HSA good idea for those with known medical expenses. The penalty has been removed. So it's a pre-tax savings account specifically for medical that can be rolled over. Definitely good for those with chronic conditions.
RiverDog wrote:Now with the new Tax Cut bill becoming law and the family deductions levels being raised it is going to be harder to justify itemizations.
burrrton wrote:
Ayup. They're fantastic. And you can negotiate cash payment in many circumstances.
idhawkman wrote:Good to know and lord knows I could lose a few pounds but my health is covered at the V.A. from my military service. Got my hernia fixed a year or so ago. I'm already mid 50's but I come from good stock. (on my father's side they lived into their 100s when most people were dying in their 40's and 50s through the depression.) My wife works at St. Lukes hospital and has really good insurance through them but I get what you are saying.
RiverDog wrote:No. You have to declare as income anything you withdraw for non medical purposes regardless of your age. But like I said, had you not put that money in an HSA, you'd be paying the same taxes anyway.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Seems they did remove the penalty. That's not a bad idea for folks with known illnesses. When I was offered HSAs long ago, there was a penalty for withdrawal of funds. I avoid accounts that charge me a penalty as I never know when I'll need to access the funds. I've been mostly healthy as well, so never needed. I work to stay that way.
RiverDog wrote:I think you have to have a certain dollar amount of medical expenses, over $10K if I recall, before it's tax deductible. In any event, since my house is paid off, I do not have enough deductions to itemize so I've been claiming the standard deduction for years. Contributions to an HSA is taken directly off your reportable income so you don't need to itemize your deduction and claim it as an expense.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It's 7.5% of gross or above. HSA good idea for those with known medical expenses. The penalty has been removed. So it's a pre-tax savings account specifically for medical that can be rolled over. Definitely good for those with chronic conditions.
burrrton wrote:Ayup. They're fantastic. And you can negotiate cash payment in many circumstances.
RiverDog wrote:
Which is another good point. Since retiring, I no longer have dental insurance so I'm paying for those services out of my pocket. Most dentists offer a cash discount so I'll pay them cash, take the discount, then keep the receipt and pay myself back via my HSA. I'm sure that you could do the same thing at vision clinics.
idhawkman wrote:The V.A. doesn't have dental available to me so I go to Mexico for my dental work. The largest concentration of dentist and eye doctors are just across the border in Yuma AZ. They take care of all the snow birds down there. My dad found a guy in San Luis that does a great job at reasonable rates. When I took my family down there, it saved us over $10,000. I had a daughter with wizdom teeth that needed to come out, I had a bridge I needed after breaking a tooth and my wife needed a couple inplants - my other daughter had some cavities. Total quoted in the states was over $13k, we got everything done for just under $2k.
Best part is, this detist would fill out all the forms for insurance if you needed him to.
RiverDog wrote:
Not an option for me, but even if it was, I don't want to change dentists. My hygenist is a personal friend of mine that's been cleaning my teeth for the past 30 years and she has forgotten more about dental work than some dentists will ever know.
idhawkman wrote:tsk, tsk River... You should know, in the minds of liberals and millenials, its always someone elses fault that they don't know something. I usually hear it in these terms. "Nobody told me...." As if we were twanged in the head with a magic wand to learn what the law says, right...
RiverDog wrote:
It's not limited to liberals or millenials. As a matter of fact, I just got through talking with my neighbors, conservative Republicans that are approaching retirement, and you should have seen the jaw drops when I told them about some of the things such as those we've been discussing in this thread. Ignorance has no political or generational boundries.
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