Monday, April 30, 2018

The Cost of Financial Abdication

In spite of decades of the women's movement some attitudes are difficult to change. Many more women are in the workforce than 30 or 40 years ago. Many women make substantial salaries - some even make more than their spouses. A recent survey showed that 56% of married women still leave major investing and financial decisions to their spouses. 61% of that group, qualified as millennials, fall into that category. (Those born between 1981 and 1991.)

Women who have experienced divorce or widowhood plead with their colleagues to pay attention to important financial decisions that will profoundly impact their future! These women suffered the consequences of lack of involvement in financial decision making and urge others to break the cycle of financial abdication.

Some of the surprises that surfaced:
- outdated or lost wills making the estate distribution more costly and time consuming.
- hidden debt and credit cards,
- shared beneficiaries,
- hidden spending,
- secret accounts,
- undisclosed IRA's or 401k plans,
- lack of adequate life insurance or huge loans against life insurance policies.

Remember, women usually live longer than men. Whether you choose to be single or become single as a result of death or divorce, you will need the confidence and experience of being financially savvy.

Be $ Smart - make financial decisions a partnership. You need to protect your future.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Investment Tax Categories

Last week I addressed tax-efficiency in your portfolios. Here I shall review the differences among those classifications of taxable, tax-deferred and tax-exempt to make tax-efficiency more readily understood. The following are simple explanations. For expert tax guidance please speak with your accountant or tax attorney.


Taxable: an account that holds money on which you have already paid taxes - e.g. bank checking or savings accounts or brokerage accounts. These accounts may have stocks, bonds, CD's, etc. Every year you receive a 1099 of all reportable earnings: dividends and interest as well as reportable proceeds: stock or bond sales. You enter these numbers on your tax return and pay taxes accordingly.


Tax-exempt: refers to bonds (loans) issued by municipalities (states, cities, towns, counties). These bonds are exempt from federal taxes. As an incentive to its residents to buy these bonds, which finance local projects, you pay no state taxes on the interest. As a NY resident, if you purchase a NY State bond, it will be double tax exempt as you will pay no state or federal taxes on the interest. However, NY reserves the right to tax the interest earned on other states' bonds.


Tax-deferred: means you pay no taxes now but when you withdraw the money both state and federal taxes are due. IRA, SEP, 401k, 403b all grow tax-deferred. Your 401k or 403b plan from work will take money from your paycheck before deducting taxes, deposit the money into your plan where it will grow tax-deferred (you will not receive a 1099 each year). Taxes will be paid when you start withdrawing money from these accounts later in retirement. The money will be taxed, as your income is taxed, both by the state and the federal government. Hopefully, in retirement you will be in a lower tax bracket and, consequently, pay less in taxes.


Tax-free
: refers to a Roth IRA where money grows without paying taxes each year and is distributed without being taxed. Actually, the money contributed to most Roth IRA's is money on which you have already paid taxes; it is the earnings (growth) that are tax-free.


Be $ Smart - Learn about the impact of taxes on your investments. Position your assets effectively to pay less in taxes.

Monday, April 9, 2018

Make Your Portfolios More Tax Efficient

We are in the midst of tax season so this is a good time to review your portfolio to make sure it is arranged in the most tax-advantaged way.

Most investments (bonds, bond mutual funds and ETF's) that generate interest work best in a tax-deferred account.

Muni bonds are an exception as their interest is exempt from federal taxes and in many cases, exempt from state taxes as well. Hold municipal bonds in your taxable accounts.

Stocks, usually long term investments, should be held in your taxable account for several reasons:

1. long-term capital gains on stocks are taxed at a maximum 20%. Most folks will pay less, 15%. That is certainly a better rate than 25% - 30% regular income as it would be taxed from an IRA or 401K distribution.

2. losses in your taxable account can be used to balance any gains you realize. Losses cannot be taken in a tax-deferred account.

3. qualified dividends from stocks are taxed at 20%. These same dividends in a tax-deferred account are added into the overall distributions and are taxed as ordinary income - 20% -37%.

4. you may donate stock that has grown significantly to charity avoiding any capital gains tax.

5. you may pass appreciated stock on to your heirs at your death. This will give them a step-up in basis (which means the cost basis of the stock - what you paid for it - will now be the value of the stock on the day you died.) If they sell the stock immediately there will be little or no capital gains tax.

Roth IRA's are different!!
All contributions to Roth IRA's are after tax.
Distributions from a Roth are tax-free, so holding both stocks and bonds in a Roth is fine. The one problem is that you may not take a loss on any stock that may have fallen in value.

Be $ Smart - be aware of how dividends, interest and capital gains are taxed so you may position your portfolios in the most tax-efficient way. You keep more money in your pocket and less in Uncle Sam's.