mbailey1234 wrote:I don't know anything about trusts. He has been talking about this today some and I think he may be considering setting something up for his son and his two grandkids. Same issues though, it's still going to be on paper in some way shape or form! How much can you give to your kids and grandkids and if done correctly, can this result in capital gains tax savings? He said he would much rather set something up for them than to waste it away in a nursing home someday.
A question I would be asking the tax pros is if he pays the taxes on all of that now and he dies in 2 years, what kind of taxes will his son have to pay on the inheritance? If you inherit funds from a Roth IRA, is it available right away at no penalty or would the person receiving the money have to roll it into a similar Roth and wait until 59.5 to be able to withdraw without penalty?
mbailey1234 wrote:if you pay the taxes on it and then lose half of it, you would have paid taxes on a lot more of the sum than you needed. (I guess I can see that point of it.)
SilverEye wrote:At that age, not a great plan to dump it all in the stock market. Also, perhaps not the best to dump it into metals, because that is really for long term wealth preservation. Over the short term, prices will be up and down, at that age who needs the heartache?
Real estate. That is plenty to buy a couple rental houses almost anywhere in the country. Get a rental management outfit to oversee the thing if being a landlord doesn't appeal to him. It will throw off income that keeps up with inflation, should there be any, and the principal will keep up also. And it can be unloaded easily in a month or two should it need to be liquidated. (Sorry to sound morbid, but in case of his passing or an uninsured medical emergency.)
mbailey1234 wrote:Who cares if they aren't happy, if it's legal do it! I will be making some calls in regards to this as the concept is obviously getting banged around quite a bit out there.
Engineer wrote:Speaking of Congress, they recently slipped some retirement account legislation into the most recent transportation bill. I forget the specific details, but it basically forced either 401k or IRA accounts (or both) to convert into a Roth upon the death of the owner.
mbailey1234 wrote:Haven't heard of this but do you know if it was possibly pertaining to a death that happened in 2011? If so, this could affect what my uncle can do with this situation.
I can only think of a couple of cases where this would be bad anyway. If future tax rates would drop (very unlikely) of if you lost the investment after the taxes were out then you have paid too much tax on the withdraw. (and hopefully that wouldn't ever happen.)
Unless there is some sort of "loop hole" to get it transferred at a reduced valuation, they are eventually going to get their cut.
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