cellio: (hubble-swirl)
[personal profile] cellio
Sorry; no big weighty thoughts tonight. It's been a randomly-busy week, as opposed to a contemplative one.

Tonight at a board meeting we were looking at some revenue/expense forecasts. I wonder how many people in the room actually read footnotes. (I do, always.) I silently noted, in particular, the entry labelled "SWAG" (actually "swag", but I decided not to correct him :-) ). I contemplated it, decided the number sounded reasonable to me, and concluded that anyone who might have been able to offer a better number had already been involved in the process, so I did not ask him to clarify the "S".

I'm beginning to rethink personal investment strategy. I've always maxed the IRA/401(k), because you just do. The result is that most of my long-term money is in a retirement account that I can't touch, rather than mutual funds that I can. And I'm not convinced that the income tax rate at retirement beats the taxes I would pay now. Hmm. (This thought brought to you, in part, by the annual review of funds with the financial planner on Wednesday.)

Choir practice on Monday was small but functional. For the last few weeks I've been the only one on my part; fortunately, I can handle that. Unfortunately, though, the fact that we have to go to Toronto for Pesach on the Saturday before (not the Sunday before as I had been planning) means that we won't have part coverage for an SCA event we were going to sing at. Mind, the world doesn't end if we don't sing there, but it's still unfortunate.

The latest CD from the Austin Lounge Lizards, from 2003, has a song with the refrain something like "why can't we blow up Saddam?". Some topics are just riskier than others for the songwriter. I hope they got some mileage out of it. :-) (I had forgotten just how much I enjoy having a working source of music in my car.)

It's looking like the D&D group is going to cut over to version 3.5, with some adjustments made to avoid penalizing players too much on things that got drastically changed for the worse. Saturday night we're having a rules discussion before the game.

Because if I wait for Zach to ask...

Date: 2004-03-19 01:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmelion.livejournal.com
It will never get done...

Was wondering if you can recommend someone in the NYC area who might be willing to play the hammered dulcimer for the ceremony...or possibly allow you to use theirs (since you'd have the added advantage of knowing Jewish music).

Shabbat Shalom!

Devo

(no subject)

Date: 2004-03-19 06:06 am (UTC)
sethg: picture of me with a fedora and a "PRESS: Daily Planet" card in the hat band (Default)
From: [personal profile] sethg
Your financial advisor may have told you this already, but....

Even if you'll be in the same tax bracket at retirement as you are now, the taxes will be taken off of your distributions from the IRA/401k, after they've had mumble-mumble years to accumulate tax-free compound interest. If, say, you had this money in a regular stock-market mutual fund, you'd be paying capital-gains tax every time the fund manager cashed in one security to buy another one.

If you're in a low tax bracket right now, you might want to consider converting your IRAs to Roth IRAs. You'll have to pay a tax at the time of conversion, but when you retire, distributions from a Roth IRA are completely tax-free. Also, you can withdraw the principal from a Roth IRA at any time (obviously, not a good thing to do unless you really need the money).

You can also talk to your bank about getting a Roth IRA/CD. The interest rate sucks, obviously, but since it's a CD, it's FDIC-insured, and since it's a Roth IRA, you can withdraw the principal in case of financial emergency, and enjoy tax-free interest on retirement if no emergency ever strikes.

(no subject)

Date: 2004-03-19 06:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nsingman.livejournal.com
You can withdraw funds from an IRA, but unless it's for a few specific purposes, you get hammered with deferred income taxes and a hefty (10%) penalty. A Roth IRA is a great idea, because the growth and withdrawal (at retirement) are both tax free. I'd open one in a heartbeat if our oppressive government weren't punishing me for having a decent job. :-)

Personally, I max out my 401(k), even though my employer doesn't match our contributions. I also make monthly contributions to the kids' 529 accounts, monthly transfers from checking (where my paychecks go) to savings, and monthly deposits into a mutual fund account, an annuity, and a brokerage account. That's essentially a reflection of my basic investment rules: save a lot (I try to save 15-20% of my gross income), save regularly, and diversify across a few different markets and types of investments.

Truly, though, if you're saving regularly, you're already ahead of most of our fellow citizens. The savings rate of Americans is just terrible.

Re: Roth IRAs and investment strategies

Date: 2004-03-19 06:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nsingman.livejournal.com
You don't need to worry about prying. It's not a big secret that if I'm living in the New York City metro area, and have had three kids in yeshiva, I'm probably doing a bit better than minimum wage. :-) Even though the income threshold for a Roth IRA is higher for married couples, my income is still too high to be eligible (not that I'd want a pay cut just for that!). I hope that they'll raise (or eliminate) that threshold. National savings are too low in general, and preventing people likely to have some more disposable income from putting it into various savings-type investment vehicles strikes me as counterproductive.


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