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Linda Stern

It may be time to reassess conventional wisdom about 401(k) investing

Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Linda Stern
January 29, 2008

Are you losing money in your tax-deferred 401(k) and IRA accounts?

Here's a thought that may add to your pain: If you held those same investments outside of a retirement fund, you could be using them now to cut your taxes. Instead, you'll wait years, rebuild your balances, and pay full income taxes on every penny that you use - possibly at higher tax rates than today's.

That's one of many reasons some financial experts are now warning savers not to overdo their retirement account contributions. It's counter to what they've been saying for years, but the disadvantages of having all of your money socked away in tax-deferred vehicles can come back and bite you.

"While conventional wisdom has traditionally counseled investors to defer the pain as long as possible, that wisdom may be changing," Jim Grote wrote in The Journal of Financial Planning. "Investors who take current tax benefits by investing as much as possible in pre-tax accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s feel the pain of those benefits later by paying ordinary income tax on retirement distributions."

It's not clear whether those future taxes will be higher or lower than they are now by the time investors retire. Many Washington-watchers look at federal tax deficits and the possibility of a Democratic Congress and White House, and suggest that tax rates are going up. But retirees who move to low-tax states or live on less in retirement than they do while working may find themselves in a lower tax bracket later, even if tax rates rise.

Financial advisers are giving greater weight to a new concept called "tax diversification." The idea behind it is this: If you retire with your money in different pots that get different tax treatments, you'll do better over the very long term. It's never a good idea to make taxes the primary emphasis of your investing and retiring plans; instead consider taxes and aim for the best post-tax returns over the long term. With that in mind, here's how to determine whether tax diversification can help you, and how to achieve it.

Study your situation

What is your tax rate now, and what do you expect it to be when you retire? Guesstimate your post-retirement taxable income and where you'll live. Learn the rules about taxes on Social Security benefits by reading IRS publication 915. The bottom line: The more taxable income you report in retirement, the more your benefit is taxed. Living solely on those benefits and taxable withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts could raise your total tax bill considerably.

Fit the strategy to your picture

If you expect to live on less in retirement or to have a lower tax rate than you do now, keep plowing money into tax-deferred accounts. The savings now are nice, and probably enable you to put more away than you would be able to in after-tax dollars. If you expect to live large once you retire and expect to stay in place, consider "tax-diversifying" your portfolio.

Get a Roth IRA if you can

Tax-free income down the road may be worth more than tax-deferred income now. If you make too much to qualify for a Roth IRA contribution, ($114,000 for singles, $166,000 for couples), know that in 2010 you'll be able to move money from your a IRA into a Roth. You'll have to pay taxes on the tax-deferred money you move, but if you see 2010 as a low-tax year for you, it might make sense to put some money into a traditional IRA now, so you can switch it into a Roth then.

Hold some stocks separately

Own some individual stocks or slow-trading stock mutual funds outside of your retirement account. You can sell when the market is down and bank the losses against other gains. You can reap rewards and pay only 15 percent capital gains taxes on earnings, instead of the 25 percent or more that you're likely to pay on income from retirement accounts. And, if you find yourself needing some money pre-retirement, for items like weddings or home repairs, you can tap this money without a slew of rules.

Lock in some losses

If you already own individual stocks, consider taking some winnings off the table before you retire. Capital gains rates are about as low as they've ever been, and not everyone expects that to last. Get busy while the world is selling off: Lock in those losses. With luck, you'll be able to use them to offset gains later in the year.

Linda Stern is a freelance writer. She can be reached at lindastern@aol.com.

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