68Camaro wrote:No doubt what I would do - as I've done something similar.
First step - Take the lump sum and pay the taxes now, take delivery of the funds.
Second step - whatever you can convince him to be comfortable with, but for him at his age I would have him pay off any urgent high-interest debt, ensure his other affairs are all in order (adequate housing, meds, transportation, food) and that he has some stores in the event of an emergency.
Third step - Put 5% in literal cash in a safe, 5% in checking, at least 40% in gold (for him more like 60%), and the balance in physical silver. For the physical cash/PM he will need (ideally) an in-ground concreted safe. Put the held cash, 90% of the gold and 30% of the silver in there. Put the balance of the gold and silver in a safe deposit box located in an easily accessible institution less likely to fail or have major issues (local credit union, or high reliability non-US parent bank).
68Camaro wrote:... In the case of IRA gold, I'm not sure where that gold actually resides - I had supposed with a third party, but if you're allowed to have IRA gold in your physical possession I would like to see the reference to that.
68Camaro wrote:Having said the above, if he's completely resistant to focusing on PMs, I would focus anything he won't put into the above on dividend paying core stocks that tend to be able to weather financial turbulance: perhaps Proctor and Gamble, Johnson and Johnson, Coke. Others may have other suggestions. Absolutely no bonds. If you're unsure, look at the performance of the things would consider buying during 2007-2009 and see how far they fell and how quickly they recovered, and what their dividend, stock buy-back and insider trading history has been.
Just my 2 cents. I personally think we're in for a horrible 10-20 years ahead, hyperinflation of the USD, it's eventual collapse and replacement with some other new currency (perhaps not US based), never before seen issues, even if there is no SHTF collapse, and trying to plan for those issues based on past financial advice and history is inapplicable, so conventional advice is worthless.
mflugher wrote:http://fairmark.com/rothira/inherit.htm
Good link re INheriting Roth IRAs.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:I agree that if you cannot put your hands on it, you don't own it. I'd take the cash.
mflugher wrote:I figure within 30 years when I'm thinking of retirement, either the democrats will find some way to tax or confiscate IRAs and replace them with a "guarunteed govt pension" or alternatively the republicans will go to a Flat sales tax in which case all the tax deferral in IRA will go caputt... either way I use my roth IRA for what I consider to be high risk speculation and market strategy testing and I keep my real retirement a little closer to home and a little more tangible.
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 89 guests