beauanderos wrote:If you choose to cash out, you will have something tangible that will always have value. You can't, with certainty, make the same statement of the worth of an IRA
inflationhawk wrote:Paying the penalty makes no sense. With an IRA you have plenty of options to buy stock, ETFs, mutual funds, etc. to take a 20% penalty up front to buy PMs makes no sense to me. In fact, you'd probably be better off buying PMs In a custodial IRA that will hold PMs on your behalf. Never pay penalties to withdraw early from an IRA unless you are seriously desperate. That's my opinion at least.
barrytrot wrote:For those that want to convert and pay hefty penalties one question: Why on earth did you ever put money there in the first place?
Either you don't think IRA/401k is good and you don't use or you do use it. I don't understand forcing a huge penalty on oneself?
68Camaro wrote:barrytrot wrote:For those that want to convert and pay hefty penalties one question: Why on earth did you ever put money there in the first place?
Either you don't think IRA/401k is good and you don't use or you do use it. I don't understand forcing a huge penalty on oneself?
Nothing personal Barry, but why is that even a valid question? (I started to say this less kindly, but that's not fair to you.) The world is not the same place it was 25 years ago. 25 years ago I would've thought buying gold and silver was stupid. You assume that the IRA and 401K will still be there in a year or five. Maybe it will, I hope it will because short of the situation where I leave my job (which would be far more stupid) I can't get anything out of my 401K for 5 years, except the loan portion which I'm locked out of for another 18 months. The teeny IRA, however, I can cash out. The assumptions I made about the US and the world when I deposited are no longer valid (maybe they weren't valid then, but I was far less well informed and information was sketchy), and the relatively tiny penalty (10%) is nothing compared to a drop in the market, or the total absence of all funds, ala MF Global.
I'm not trying to influence anyone else - do your own due diligence, and not all assumptions can be applied to all situations - but I can tell you that for me personally that if I could cash out my 401K and take the penalty and convert it into physical gold, I'd do the whole damn thing in a heartbeat.
GA-Silver wrote:I paid into my IRA because I was young and inexperienced in money matters. Oh, and I bought into the American dream that if you work hard and put your money in the bank, it'll be there for you when you're old and need it. Plus, I didnt want to pay a 33% tax on cashing out a small retirement account.
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