2FORCEFULL
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2008
- Messages
- 28,968
- Reaction score
- 17,611
FIDELITY???
FIDELITY???
Effective 12/31/19, RMD (required minimum distribution) from traditional retirement plans was raised to age 72I just put my money in a Roth with my credit union. It’s not going to win the internet in % growth but it pays a guaranteed rate so it’s a good place to drop $6K per year.
Since your a small business owner you should be looking at SEP’s. You can put a lot more in those yearly. ($28K yearly or some shit like that)
FYI - Both SEP’s and IRA’s require a withdrawal when you hit 70.
Fidelity if your just going to open a Roth IRA. If you would rather the flexibility to invest in Real Estate, private business, or Lend, Etc....Then I think the best Vehicle is a self directed Solo 401k with Roth and full checkbook control. You can contribute 25k per year into the Roth and your wife can do 25k. Then you can invest in what you like. It is as simple as having the 401k admin co draft the documents and you walk into the bank and open an account under the 401k trust name.
Fidelity if your just going to open a Roth IRA. If you would rather the flexibility to invest in Real Estate, private business, or Lend, Etc....Then I think the best Vehicle is a self directed Solo 401k with Roth and full checkbook control. You can contribute 25k per year into the Roth and your wife can do 25k. Then you can invest in what you like. It is as simple as having the 401k admin co draft the documents and you walk into the bank and open an account under the 401k trust name.
seems kinda late?
X2Vanguard
It’s never to late...seems kinda late?
doesn't roth make it easy to transfer to kids....???
Fidelity if your just going to open a Roth IRA. If you would rather the flexibility to invest in Real Estate, private business, or Lend, Etc....Then I think the best Vehicle is a self directed Solo 401k with Roth and full checkbook control. You can contribute 25k per year into the Roth and your wife can do 25k. Then you can invest in what you like. It is as simple as having the 401k admin co draft the documents and you walk into the bank and open an account under the 401k trust name.
so you can only put 50k in a roth??? what if you need to move 6 or 7 figures???...I'm try'n to pull out of the mortage lending game...and though I have 2 homes being built,... I wanna quit that also..I just wanna a rabbit hutch..... beer in hand, toes in sand, and money breeding 24/7..I keep reading where people say they make a minimum 20% return every year..lol...I'm lucky to make 5%...Fidelity if your just going to open a Roth IRA. If you would rather the flexibility to invest in Real Estate, private business, or Lend, Etc....Then I think the best Vehicle is a self directed Solo 401k with Roth and full checkbook control. You can contribute 25k per year into the Roth and your wife can do 25k. Then you can invest in what you like. It is as simple as having the 401k admin co draft the documents and you walk into the bank and open an account under the 401k trust name.
Roth money has to come out starting at 72 now so I don't see it as a way to save or give money to kids. you can set them up one for each kid now.
so you can only put 50k in a roth??? what if you need to move 6 or 7 figures???...I'm try'n to pull out of the mortage lending game...and though I have 2 homes being built,... I wanna quit that also..I just wanna a rabbit hutch..... beer in hand, toes in sand, and money breeding 24/7..I keep reading where people say they make a minimum 20% return every year..lol...I'm lucky to make 5%...
so with a roth, the money is taxed already,... but no tax on gains???
FIDELITY???
so you can only put 50k in a roth??? what if you need to move 6 or 7 figures???...I'm try'n to pull out of the mortage lending game...and though I have 2 homes being built,... I wanna quit that also..I just wanna a rabbit hutch..... beer in hand, toes in sand, and money breeding 24/7..I keep reading where people say they make a minimum 20% return every year..lol...I'm lucky to make 5%...
so with a roth, the money is taxed already,... but no tax on gains???
so you can only put 50k in a roth??? what if you need to move 6 or 7 figures???...I'm try'n to pull out of the mortage lending game...and though I have 2 homes being built,... I wanna quit that also..I just wanna a rabbit hutch..... beer in hand, toes in sand, and money breeding 24/7..I keep reading where people say they make a minimum 20% return every year..lol...I'm lucky to make 5%...
so with a roth, the money is taxed already,... but no tax on gains???
3 ways to get money into your solo 401k plan. Contributions from your paycheck, company match, and company contribution (profit share, has nothing to do with profitability....just the name). There are several rules that must be followed...the main one is that you can’t get more money in the plan than you are paying yourself. The other is the annual limits set by irs.I think I make like 15%....seen tons of people fuck themselves trying to play stocks like Vegas. Johnson Johnson, Valero, Disney, fedex, etc. nothing crazy...you’ll make money though, this is just investing I don’t know much about Roth’s and tax shielded things cause I never thought long term...oops
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
If you have a solo 401k with checkbook control you can borrow for real estate. It is a non recourse loan which means the property secures the loan not an individual or their individual credit. Downside is that you need close to 50% down (from the 401k) and the rate is higher.This
You can also use leverage in a Solo 401(k) when it comes to investments like real estate and you don't have to pay taxes on the gains due to the leverage if the deal is set-up right.
If you have a solo 401k with checkbook control you are not “pulling” money from the plan or borrowing against the plan. You have checkbook control to invest within the plan. It is as simple as writing the check and the deed is in the name of the 401k trust.Hows the flexibility work on this to invest in RE and or lending?? I can certainly pull 50 out and lend on a few deals and be able to show tons of profit to shove back within a 12 mo period easily..how would that work?
Not sure what you mean. I’m pretty sure only 19k + 6k over 50 years old into Roth. Matching and profit share go into 401k from the company as pre-tax not Roth which is post tax."Mega Backdoor Roth" you can put in $62k a year (50+).
If you have a solo 401k with checkbook control you can borrow for real estate. It is a non recourse loan which means the property secures the loan not an individual or their individual credit. Downside is that you need close to 50% down (from the 401k) and the rate is higher.
Not sure what you mean. I’m pretty sure only 19k + 6k over 50 years old into Roth. Matching and profit share go into 401k from the company as pre-tax not Roth which is post tax.
BTW: If you are trying to get 6 to 7 figures into a plan that grows without tax and is tax free upon transfer or later in your life AND are interested in stock investment you may want to consider a life insurance vehicle. Hit up @jddearden for help. I think it’s called universal indexed life insurance. Basically it is a contract based on the stock market index. Buy the contract with after tax money. If the stock index goes up then your contract value goes up the same amount. There is a ceiling on how much you can gain if there is an unusually high gain in the stock index but there is also a floor to protect you from losing money. The scenario that you are describing is why this insurance product was created. Might be a better fit than a defined contribution plan like IRA, 401K, ETCdoesn't roth make it easy to transfer to kids....???
Its sort of a new thing. My company just started offering it through Fidelity, but I'm sure it's widespread by now. https://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/investing/mega-backdoor-roths-work/Not sure what you mean. I’m pretty sure only 19k + 6k over 50 years old into Roth. Matching and profit share go into 401k from the company as pre-tax not Roth which is post tax.
I have a solo 401k with checkbook control. I went this way because I feel more comfortable investing in a tangible thing like rentals vs. stock. Non recourse loans Are secured by the property itself so the lenders want more down and interest. 40% down may be out there...but you would need to shop. The big pit fall is that if you are the trustee, trustor, and beneficiary of your 401k trust....you absolutely cannot engage in a prohibited transaction irs rules.). The gist of a prohibited transaction is that you can’t do business in this trust (selling products or services, etc) this is designed as a passive investment. And you can’t do transactions with yourself. Think present self and future self. Self also means your immediate family, including your wife’s parents. Can’t for example short term flip a house, move into the house you bought with 401k or sell to family.I have seen as low as 40% down but I have never owned my own business (so shit out of luck for me) but I have tried to get my Father to do it via his business. Do you own any property through your 401(k)/Roth. If so and you have personal experience let us know of any other pit falls.
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing that. So if I understand correctly, irs allows you to convert existing pre-tax 401k contributions to post-tax (pay the tax on income) and if the plan is written to allow in plan conversions....you are left with higher post tax contributions than normally allowed. Confusing but pretty slick.Its sort of a new thing. My company just started offering it through Fidelity, but I'm sure it's widespread by now. https://www.nerdwallet.com/blog/investing/mega-backdoor-roths-work/
Yeah first $19+6 in 401k pre-tax + company match 6% + after tax saving up to the $62k max for each of us. The after tax gets rolled into a roth on the same day it's contributed to prevent any tax implication. +HSA pretax $7k + Company match = grows tax free. Pretty slickVery interesting! Thanks for sharing that. So if I understand correctly, irs allows you to convert existing pre-tax 401k contributions to post-tax (pay the tax on income) and if the plan is written to allow in plan conversions....you are left with higher post tax contributions than normally allowed. Confusing but pretty slick.
I have a solo 401k with checkbook control. I went this way because I feel more comfortable investing in a tangible thing like rentals vs. stock. Non recourse loans Are secured by the property itself so the lenders want more down and interest. 40% down may be out there...but you would need to shop. The big pit fall is that if you are the trustee, trustor, and beneficiary of your 401k trust....you absolutely cannot engage in a prohibited transaction irs rules.). The gist of a prohibited transaction is that you can’t do business in this trust (selling products or services, etc) this is designed as a passive investment. And you can’t do transactions with yourself. Think present self and future self. Self also means your immediate family, including your wife’s parents. Can’t for example short term flip a house, move into the house you bought with 401k or sell to family.
To your point, yes it takes at least twice as long since you have to first fund the 401k. I am in the funding stage. I am about to fund my third year then I can buy RE, take a non recourse loan, etc. You could be in stocks while funding the plan then liquidate to purchase the RE. I’m too conservative for that.I was speaking more to personal pit falls. The examples you gave are all on the internet to read. I was thinking more along the lines of things you may not read on the internet. Maybe for example it takes twice as long to fund a property through a 401(k) or the lender wants to see where the contributions came from for the last 5 years. (Just making up scenarios to give you examples what I was looking for). Thanks