THE "HOW" AND "WHY" OF THE IRA ROLLOVER
A
way to reinvest the lump sum you've saved for retirement.
Provided
by Gregory M. Montagna, CPA, CFP
As retirement approaches … money decisions become increasingly major.
One big decision concerns what to do with the money in your company retirement
plan.
… Consider a direct rollover. For most people, the most attractive option
is an IRA rollover. In other words, you transfer the money from
your 401(k), 403(b) or 457 planinto an IRA. It is not hard to accomplish, provided
you have the guidance of a qualified financial advisor.
Basic steps. When you leave a company, you usually have
three options with your retirement plan: you can leave the money in the plan,
roll it over into a new plan (if you elect to keep working for a new employer),
or do a direct rollover into an IRA.
A direct rollover
is not the same thing as a direct payment to you. Yes, your employer can
actually write you a check for the full amount of your 401(k) account, but 20%
of that money will be withheld for taxes.
Do you want to
avoid that 20% withholding? A direct rollover is the solution. It is a "trustee
to trustee" rollover, which works like this: your employer writes a lump sum
check not to you, but in the name of the trustee or custodian of the IRA
that you are creating to hold the funds. You then let your company's retirement
plan administrator know that you'll be doing a direct rollover. (There is
almost always a form to be filled out, on which you can state the specific
instructions for the distribution check.)
Your company sends you the check payable to the IRA trustee, with no
withholding, and you have 60 days to deposit it in the IRA; day 1 is the day
after you get the check. (Sometimes a wire transfer of assets occurs instead,
between one investment custodian and another.) If you don't complete the direct
rollover in 60 days, you will pay tax on the entire amount. (There's no grace
period for weekends or holidays.)
If you want to leave work before age 59½ or you own shares of company
stock, you should consider the tax implications created by those circumstances
before attempting any kind of rollover.
What you can and can't do. You can make unlimited direct rollovers of
your retirement account assets, and you can add the money in your retirement
plan to an IRA you already have, if you don't intend to go back to work and put
those assets into a new employer plan. Once your retirement plan assets are in
an IRA, you can invest them in practically any way you choose - in mutual
funds, CDs, stocks, money market funds, annuities, and even more possibilities.
You can also set up your IRA to make systematic payments to you.
You can't roll over
the assets from your retirement plan directly into a Roth IRA. You have to put
them in a Traditional IRA first, and then convert to a Roth IRA by paying tax
on the assets you want to convert before you can realize that tax-free growth.
Is
it time to roll over your retirement money? If that time is here or getting closer, you need to be very
careful with what could possibly be the largest lump sum you ever receive. Be
sure to ask a qualified financial advisor about your IRA rollover options
today.
Gregory M. Montagna, CPA, CFP is a
Representative with 1st Global Advisors and may be reached at www.montagnainc.com,
(949) 833-2371 or greg@montagnainc.com.
These are the views of Peter Montoya, Inc., not the named Representative or Broker/Dealer, and should not be
construed as investment advice. Neither the named Representative or Broker/Dealer give tax or legal advice. All
information is believed to be from reliable sources; however, we make no representation as to its completeness or
accuracy. Please consult your Financial Advisor for further information.
Securities offered through 1st Global Capital Corp., Member NASD/SIPC