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Showing posts with label Financial information. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Financial information. Show all posts
Saturday, February 22, 2020
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
SHARPEN YOUR FINANCIAL EDGE BY CHANGING YOUR ATTITUDE 2
one should never think they know
everything or have the ultimate solution to every financial question
and challenge that arises. People that exhibit this kind of “tunnel
vision”, often find themselves on the losing end of many
situations. It is better to adopt the attitude that everyone has
something to teach me,by using this mindset you open yourself up to a
world of ideas and possibilities that can propel you into your dream.
Also this attitude will allow you to bridge many gaps in
understanding and knowledge in your work place that will help you
progress, instead of just complaining about stuff.
More often that not you will have to
deal with unpleasant situation like a grumpy boss or a disagreeable
colleague. THIS IS NOT A LIFE OR DEATH SITUATION! Do not not succumb
to the fight or flight response. Understand that modern society has
mad us less and less tolerant of uncomfortable situations. Take a
deep breath, access the situation and stay calm. Use the playback in
your memory of a pleasant situation or time. Think about some song
you like, these thought you attach to the situation helps you change
the experience.
Competition on the basketball court is
OK but when you are competing with money this is a big no-no.
mistakes that can wreck your bank
account. Concentrate on your financial goal and stay in your lane. If
you have a lot of money in company stock that's OK but remember any
company can fall so always follow the golden rule of finance,
diversify.
The Bible say that “the love of
money is root of all kinds of evil”. While money can buy you many
material things, money can not buy you happiness, or respect, or
power. One has to recognized that money is just a tool that allows
you to accomplish a goal. It can't even provide absolute security
only give you the impression it can. To base all actions on money can
be devastating because as hard as you work to get it, just as easly
you can lose it.
Learn to understand other industries
and learn to innovate and adapt ideas to your situation, problems to
find new opportunities. Practice on engaging in public activity that
require performance under pressure. Also plan your activities and
priorities so you don't have a lot of half finished projects at the
end of the day. Don't trust you instincts when you invest big chunks
of money, if your wrong it can set you way back financially. Take
your time put in the Du-diligence and the odds will be more in your
favor. Consider your goals, the markets long term performance and the
time you have to invest.
When you have developed a skill that
your good at learn to barter with other people so you can receive
benefits. If you can do book keeping find a way to trade the skill
off to get some painting done around the house. Find a time bank in
your area by searching the internet people never over pay, the
determine the price of and item before buy doing their homework ahead
of time but they also know when it is time to pay a premium for and
item. Spend real money on your most useful gear and take real time to
maintain it.
Having an attitude of gratitude can
improve your job satisfaction and help your performance. Also having
a optimistic attitude is good for your health. Practice focusing less
on the problems at work and more on the benefits to you, your boss
and coworkers and customers. This adds dignity and motivation to
your work.
Trying
to beat the marking or out-do someone else wealth is dangerous and
leads to short term thinking and
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
SHARPEN YOUR FINANCIAL EDGE
SHARPEN YOUR FINANCIAL EDGE BY
CHANGING YOUR ATTITUDE
Everyone has advice and ideas about
how you can handle your finances and the way you treat money. Some
say to save at every opportunity and watch every penny, some say pay
off all your debt first before you even think about investing, others
advocate that you live within your means, and all of these strategies
have Merritt, and can even propel you forward. But think for a moment
what really motivates you, what drives you to grab your finances by
the throat and corral them into submission, to bend to your will and
carry you on your desired path? A better standard of living for you
and your family, are you tired of living from substandard point of
view? well what ever motivates you to change your attitude it is
always best to have as much understanding and knowledge as possible
so lets explore some mantras of the rich,who knows maybe you can find
a “take away point” that can help you turn that corner to
financial independence.
Having the attitude that you are the
master of your own future and you do not have to fall prey to the
status qua is vital. People with this mindset are more likely to take
responsibility for their lives, their success's as well as their
failures and are more prone to learn from their mistake and failures.
They will normally examine what they did wrong and make improvements
and adjustments. They don't blame others or make excuse but find
results which leads to them becoming successful and accomplishing
their goals.
Having a “CAN DO” attitude can be
the difference of waking up in the morning with a purpose and getting
fired up for the day ahead or waking up in the morning and throwing
the alarm clock at the wall and hating the day you were born and
pulling the covers back over your head. Persons who believe that what
they do has an impact on the world in real time are more likely to
work hard to change their circumstances. While some may have a
“victim” mentality when they awaken to the fact that they can
change their circumstance nothing makes them more angry and
determined to change their attitude toward wealth.
No one wants to be lead buy a person
who has a lacking self-confidence and is weak in making the tough
calls. But those who are confident, even over confident bordering on
the fringe of arrogance has the ability to draw the masses to his
point of view. People gravitate to those whom have strong conviction
about their point of view because they are strong and willing to take
risk and stand back up after a failure to try again. If by chance
they stumble or even fall the manage to do it gracefully. They own up
to the circumstance and move one by their head and shoulders down and
work hard to prove themselves again.
Many of use have a fixed perspective
about our abilities, and some may even think that they are not smart
enough gain wealth. They see themselves as stupid and ignorant but I
think it is more related to fear, fear of failure, fear of losing,
fear of being ridiculed by their piers but if a person can over come
these fears and negativism they can overcome all the regrets and
fallacy's. The only thing that should matter is where is the best
place to put that investment dollar that will give me maximum return.
Proceed without regrets and be a
little anxious about your money. Having this attitude will give you a
healthy availability about your money and keep you motivated to
strive to protect it and your earnings. To show vigilance is better
than overspending or gambling it away. Many take unnecessary risk
when they come into extra money or money that isn't earned from work
like a tax return or an inheritance but that money is the same as any
other money and should be treated with respect. Spend those dollars
as you would any other dollars you may acquire.
Friday, June 2, 2017
Strange Bedfellows
Strange Bedfellows
June 1, 2017 • Karen DeMastersFinancial advisor Chad Willardson worked very hard recently to get elected to a job that had no financial training requirements whatsoever—treasurer of Corona, Calif.
In that position, he is in charge of investing the city’s $250 million bond portfolio. His predecessors were in charge of the same fund, but he says they didn’t have his financial or investment training. They came into the job cold.
More often than people realize, elected officials in the U.S. have no financial training when they are put in charge of public budgets and pension funds on the local, state and national levels. Even when an official is not directly in charge of a financial department, he or she is frequently expected to weigh in on the financial consequences of legislation.
Sometimes financial advisors or those with similar backgrounds decide to tackle the rigors of campaigning and accept public offices themselves, but it doesn’t happen enough, say industry people.
Willardson, the founder and president of Pacific Capital, a wealth management and financial advisory firm, never had any political ambitions himself. But he wanted to make things better in the community where he and his family work and live. Leaders in Corona, a growing city of about 162,000 residents, asked him to run for treasurer in a nonpartisan election, and he is now starting his first four-year term.
“A lot of cities are in financial trouble and there are many of us with financial expertise who can make a real difference,” he says. “Managing the city’s portfolio was like taking on a new client for me, but it is a very important client. It was easy to fold this in with what I already do as a business.
“I don’t think we can afford to place our investments in the hands of politicians,” he says.
Willardson is using the same resources for the city that he uses in his business, and he has brought in a third party analyst to help show the officials how the city can increase yield and reduce costs on its investments. “My goal by the end of four years is to show how much we have improved with our investments,” he says.
The ways advisors get into the public arena differ, but the goal of effectively influencing public policy so that financial consequences are taken into consideration is the same for most. Some advisors who have taken the public servant plunge are battling financial issues on the state level. Heather Bishoff, co-owner and chief financial officer of Bishoff Financial Group in Worthington, Ohio, an asset management and retirement planning firm, started with a seat on the local board of education when she saw teachers being let go and programs being cut. But she soon found that school funding is a state issue.
She is now a Democratic member of the Ohio House of Representatives in her third two-year term facing numerous challenges in a state ranked fifth worst in the United States for taxes. “It was extremely intimidating to run for office, but we need more people who are financially minded to be at the forefront of these issues. There are public policy issues on expenditures and taxes that affect people on a day-to-day basis,” she says. “We have to put our money where our mouth is, so to speak.”
“I’ve had my say, but, despite my pleas, Ohio has raised a lot of taxes,” she says. “What tends to happen when non-financial people make decisions about public policy is they trip over a dollar to save a penny. As financial advisors, we think long term and for taxpayers it should be the same. I am too passionate about this to see shortsighted public policy made. As financial advisors, we know you sometimes have to make investments up front to save money later on.”
As an added bonus, Bishoff says her children love her holding public office. “They feel special. They know I am good for a peanut butter sandwich for them, but I can also stand on a mountain with a sword and let my opinion be known if need be.”
Another bonus is that holding public office can give a financial advisor added exposure, says Doug Lyons, founder of Douglas J. Lyons Financial Group, a wealth management firm in Red Bank, N.J. Lyons was encouraged to run for office in his hometown of Bay Head, N.J., he says, but commuting to New York City every day left him with little extra time. After opening his own business in the suburbs, he had more time.
A Republican, he is now in his second three-year term as a Bay Head councilman in charge of the finance committee. Lyons encourages all financial advisors to serve in public office as a way of giving back to the community. Being in public office gives an advisor more attention but it also means taking the good with the bad, he notes.
“People will unload their complaints about local issues on you at parties, but as a financial advisor you deal with all kinds of individuals, so you can bring a unique skill to the table in knowing how to deal with people,” he says. “Absolutely, I would encourage other financial advisors to run for office.
“In Bay Head, there were issues in the finance department that needed to be dealt with and I think I brought a new perspective that would not have been there without me,” Lyons adds. Since he has been on the council, he has helped deal with full-time and part-time employee issues.
Advisors in general often show a high level of engagement in their communities, some by running for public office, others by taking different actions, says Blaine Aikin, chairman of the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc.’s board of directors.
“Financial advisors are highly engaged in people’s lives and understand behavior and they know how to bring reality into the picture,” Aikin says. “Sometimes what we want to do is not realistic: Advisors have to point this out all the time, so they know how to work with people to show them what the trade-offs of proposed legislation might be.”
But being in politics can be divisive, and some advisors may not be comfortable with that. “Many people may not realize a public official needs to be a fiduciary, just like a financial advisor needs to be one,” Aikin points out. “They need to act in a way that is best for their constituents” on decisions about whether to, say, pursue revenue growth or focus on other goals like land preservation. In this way, they are acting just as advisors need to act—in the best interests of their clients, he says.
Many advisors still hesitate to jump into the political arena, adding more work to what is probably an already busy life and potentially creating enemies along the way, says Paul H. Auslander, the former Financial Planning Association president and chair, who has held leadership positions in the financial community nationally and in Florida where he works and lives. Auslander is the director of financial planning at ProVise Management Group LLC, a fee-based financial planning and investment management firm in Clearwater.
He was selected in 2007 by Florida’s chief financial officer to serve on the state’s first Financial Literacy Council for a four-year term. The council, created by the Florida Legislature, was asked to study the financial issues that affect consumers without basic financial knowledge. The council made recommendations to the legislature on how to help consumers increase their knowledge of these issues.
Auslander is known for urging financial advisors to apply their skills to public policy issues by taking on elected and appointive offices. “Financial advisors in public offices are needed more now than ever, but many do not run because of the time-consuming complications of dealing with their own compliance issues for their firms, or because of a disdain for the political process,” he says.
“I would like to see them do it because they see it as a noble method of service, but most are not interested,” he says. “Some cataclysmic event may spur them to act, but they should not wait until something drastic happens.”
The U.S. Department of Labor’s fiduciary rule, which requires advisors who deal with retirement planning to act in the best interests of their clients, is a perfect example of a law that needed more financial experts weighing in on it, Auslander says. The rule is now set to go into effect in June. “The rule was a great idea in concept but then something went wrong and it is just bad legislation now, which is a shame,” he says.
The reward for those who accept the challenge of being in public office is that “you feel like a public piƱata,” says Frank Astorino, a Republican councilman in his third term in North Caldwell, N.J. He heads the Astorino Financial Group, a wealth management and financial planning firm in Fairfield, N.J.
Tuesday, October 25, 2016
How to create independence.
CREATING INDEPENDENCE;
While getting money thru inheritances is nice it is seldom that most of us will inherit a big steak, but it is documented that eighty percent of wealth was earned through jobs, small business and investments.
These behaviors are linked to greater wealth potential for people of all ages.
Their are four key traits to making money;
1.Frugality;
This doesn't mean you have to be a cheapskate, but it does help, but what it mean is to look for ways that you can trim the fat off the way you spend and the fee's you pay to use your own money. Like instead of paying your bank a monthly account handling fee, look for a institution that has zero fee with direct deposit and channel the money you save into a savings account. Or instead of buying that latte look for a cheaper brand with the same or as good a quality and throw the difference into a money change bottle, when it gets full deposit it in the bank you will be surprised at how fast that pocket change can add up.Before making any big ticket purchase make sure to shop around, ask question talk to people who are knowledgeable in that industry, not just your family members, they call this performing your "due diligence",it can save you a lot of headaches and money.
2.Confidence;
Performing the first task will give you the facts you need to move forward with assurance that you know you have knowledge to make good decisions, this will grow your confidence in your decision making process's to making money.
3.Responsibility;
Remember that no matter what, whether you succeed or fail the buck stops with you. It is your money so it is in your best interest to be responsible and keep your feet on the ground especially as your funds begin to grow and you become more abundant. Normally this is when people become over confidant and make mistakes in their finances.
4. Social indifference,IE the strength to avoid throwing money at fads;
Social indifference does not mean to walk around dressed twenty years in the past, what it doe's mean is not following the crowds spending money on item that have no substance and is over priced that will out dated withing six months to a year when the next thing comes along. Of course everyone like nice things but before you spend that hard earned money ask yourself a few questions
A.Do I really need this?
B.Will this thing last and is it worth the money?
c.How will this item help me improve and advance my circumstance's?
Taking small step can propel you forward a great deal.
google.com, pub-8577904012707424, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
Click Here!
Click Here!
Click Here!
Click Here!
While getting money thru inheritances is nice it is seldom that most of us will inherit a big steak, but it is documented that eighty percent of wealth was earned through jobs, small business and investments.
These behaviors are linked to greater wealth potential for people of all ages.
Their are four key traits to making money;
1.Frugality;
This doesn't mean you have to be a cheapskate, but it does help, but what it mean is to look for ways that you can trim the fat off the way you spend and the fee's you pay to use your own money. Like instead of paying your bank a monthly account handling fee, look for a institution that has zero fee with direct deposit and channel the money you save into a savings account. Or instead of buying that latte look for a cheaper brand with the same or as good a quality and throw the difference into a money change bottle, when it gets full deposit it in the bank you will be surprised at how fast that pocket change can add up.Before making any big ticket purchase make sure to shop around, ask question talk to people who are knowledgeable in that industry, not just your family members, they call this performing your "due diligence",it can save you a lot of headaches and money.
2.Confidence;
Performing the first task will give you the facts you need to move forward with assurance that you know you have knowledge to make good decisions, this will grow your confidence in your decision making process's to making money.
3.Responsibility;
Remember that no matter what, whether you succeed or fail the buck stops with you. It is your money so it is in your best interest to be responsible and keep your feet on the ground especially as your funds begin to grow and you become more abundant. Normally this is when people become over confidant and make mistakes in their finances.
4. Social indifference,IE the strength to avoid throwing money at fads;
Social indifference does not mean to walk around dressed twenty years in the past, what it doe's mean is not following the crowds spending money on item that have no substance and is over priced that will out dated withing six months to a year when the next thing comes along. Of course everyone like nice things but before you spend that hard earned money ask yourself a few questions
A.Do I really need this?
B.Will this thing last and is it worth the money?
c.How will this item help me improve and advance my circumstance's?
Taking small step can propel you forward a great deal.
google.com, pub-8577904012707424, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
Click Here!
Click Here!
Click Here!
Click Here!
Monday, July 18, 2016
Let's Live Better together
The Information And Links I will provide you with on this page are ongoing and growing so it will be to your best interest to check back often, better yet go to JHenterpriseproducts.com and subscribe so you will no when I update this page, I wish you the best let's grow together. Jerry.
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Saturday, August 8, 2015
Curren Events
Now is a good time to get started on some important year-end financial tasks. Wouldn’t you rather enjoy the holidays with family and friends than scramble to meet
Click Here!
Here’s a list of 10 smart money moves to consider—some that need to be addressed by December 31 and others that are an important part of a year-end financial check-in.
Most of them can be accomplished quickly, but the benefits can last a lifetime.
1. Size up your portfolio.
This year’s stock market swings may have changed your mix of stocks and bonds. You may need to bring your portfolio back in line with a diversified mix that is appropriate
for your situation (read Viewpoints: “The pros’ guide to diversification”). For help analyzing your overall portfolio, choosing a target asset mix, and rebalancing your
portfolio to bring it in line with that target mix, use Portfolio Review (login required).
2. See if you may be able to put any losses to work.
Ten things to do before year end
Tax-loss harvesting might sound complicated, but the principle is pretty simple. Offset your realized taxable gains on your investments (capital gains) with losses (capital
losses). That means selling stocks, bonds, and mutual funds that have lost value to help reduce taxes on gains from winning investments. (Of course, you don’t want to
undermine your long-term investing goals by selling an investment just for tax purposes.) Tax-loss harvesting needs to be done by December 31. For more information, read
Viewpoints: "Harvesting losses: One benefit of a correction."
3. Give to a charity or your family.
Give to others. Charitable donations are an effective way to reduce your taxable income when you itemize on your tax returns. If you’ve been meaning to make a donation
and want to lower your tax bill for 2015, be sure to make your contributions by December 31. Now is also a good time to clean out a closet or basement and donate clothing
and household goods. Remember to get receipts for non-cash donations.
Give to family members. You are able to give up to $14,000 a year to as many individuals as you choose without paying gift taxes, which helps reduce the amount of your
estate. You can give cash, stocks, bonds, and portions of real estate. You must do this by December 31. Read Viewpoints: “Getting serious about your giving?”
4. Bundle your tax write-offs.
One way to maximize the value of tax deductions is to bunch two years’ worth of itemized deductions into a single year, especially if you expect your income to be higher.
For example, if you have unreimbursed work expenses that you incurred early in the year, you might be able to pull next year’s expenses into this year and double up your
2015 deduction.
Consider making an extra mortgage payment or prepay taxes (state and real estate) to allow additional deductions. For tax-deduction tips, read Viewpoints: “Tips for
deducting more at tax time.”
5. Max and match: Reduce your taxable income and save too.
Click Here!
Even if you contribute regularly to your 401(k) or 403(b), take a few minutes to see whether you can make an additional contribution before the end of the year—especially
if you aren’t on track to contribute the full amount your employer matches. The maximum you can contribute in pretax dollars for 2015 is $18,000, or $24,000 if you’re
age 50 or older, and contributions must be made by December 31, 2015.
You may be able to reduce your taxable income1 by making a contribution to an IRA or spousal IRA. While you can make an IRA contribution for 2015 by April 18, 2016 (the
tax-filing deadline for 2016 due to a federal holiday), doing so now will give your money more potential to grow in a tax-advantaged way. The maximum contribution is
$5,500 per person ($6,500 if you are age 50 or older) or 100% of employment compensation, whichever is less. For age-based tips on retirement savings, read Viewpoints:
“Retirement roadmap: rules of the road.”
6. Use the money in your flexible spending account.
There are two types of flexible spending accounts that allow you to set aside pretax money and then reimburse yourself, with calendar-year “use-it-or-lose-it” deadlines:
health care and dependent care. The U.S. Treasury Department has relaxed the rules a bit this year. Employers can allow participants to carry over up to $500 in unused
funds into next year, so make sure your balance doesn’t exceed that. Some plans allow you to submit 2015 claims until March 2016—check with your employer.
7. Do a financial reality check.
Understanding how you are saving and spending can be a valuable step to helping put your financial house in order. You don’t necessarily need to manage every penny.
Consider our guidelines: Not more than 50% of your take-home pay should go to essential expenses, 15% of your pretax income to retirement savings, and 5% of your
take-home pay to short-term savings. Use our saving and spending checkup to see where you stand.
8. Check the beneficiaries on financial accounts.
When reviewing your investments, also make sure you have designated a beneficiary for each account. This can be as important as writing a will, but it isn’t as complex. It is
especially important if there have been changes in your life, such as a birth, a death, or a change in marital status.
One important point to keep in mind is that retirement accounts pass directly to named beneficiaries, rather than becoming part of your estate. This can provide significant
tax advantages for your heirs.
If you are married, keep in mind that most employer-sponsored retirement plans automatically designate your spouse as the beneficiary unless you name another
beneficiary and your spouse has consented in writing. For more details, read Viewpoints: “Five ways to protect what’s yours.”
Click Here!
9. Go for tax-free growth: Consider converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
Who wouldn’t want the tax-free growth potential and withdrawals in retirement that a Roth IRA offers?2 The problem is, not everyone can contribute to a Roth IRA because
of income limits. But you may be able to convert existing money in a traditional IRA or other retirement savings account into a Roth IRA. Because pretax contributions and
gains in a traditional IRA are generally considered taxable income when you convert, later in the year is a good time to take a look. That's because you have more
information about your taxable income for the year, which may enable you to convert a more targeted amount to ensure that the income from the conversion doesn’t bump
you into a higher income tax bracket.
If you don’t have an existing traditional IRA, you may want to open one, make a nondeductible contribution, and convert it to a Roth IRA before it accumulates any earnings.
That way it would not be considered taxable income. See if a conversion may make sense with our Roth Conversion Evaluator.
10. If you’re age 70½ or older: Take your minimum required distribution.
Beginning when you turn 70½, IRS regulations generally require you to withdraw a minimum amount of money each year from your tax-deferred retirement accounts, like
traditional IRAs and 401(k) plans, or pay penalties of up to 50% of your minimum required distribution (MRD).3
If you reached 70½ this year, you have until April 1, 2016, to take your 2015 distribution, but it still might be a good idea to do so before the end of this year. Why?
Because if you wait, you’ll have to take two distributions in one year (the grace period applies only to your first distribution, so your 2016 MRD will have to be taken before
December 31 of next year). That could push you into a higher tax bracket for 2016.
Click Here!
Here’s a list of 10 smart money moves to consider—some that need to be addressed by December 31 and others that are an important part of a year-end financial check-in.
Most of them can be accomplished quickly, but the benefits can last a lifetime.
1. Size up your portfolio.
This year’s stock market swings may have changed your mix of stocks and bonds. You may need to bring your portfolio back in line with a diversified mix that is appropriate
for your situation (read Viewpoints: “The pros’ guide to diversification”). For help analyzing your overall portfolio, choosing a target asset mix, and rebalancing your
portfolio to bring it in line with that target mix, use Portfolio Review (login required).
2. See if you may be able to put any losses to work.
Ten things to do before year end
Tax-loss harvesting might sound complicated, but the principle is pretty simple. Offset your realized taxable gains on your investments (capital gains) with losses (capital
losses). That means selling stocks, bonds, and mutual funds that have lost value to help reduce taxes on gains from winning investments. (Of course, you don’t want to
undermine your long-term investing goals by selling an investment just for tax purposes.) Tax-loss harvesting needs to be done by December 31. For more information, read
Viewpoints: "Harvesting losses: One benefit of a correction."
3. Give to a charity or your family.
Give to others. Charitable donations are an effective way to reduce your taxable income when you itemize on your tax returns. If you’ve been meaning to make a donation
and want to lower your tax bill for 2015, be sure to make your contributions by December 31. Now is also a good time to clean out a closet or basement and donate clothing
and household goods. Remember to get receipts for non-cash donations.
Give to family members. You are able to give up to $14,000 a year to as many individuals as you choose without paying gift taxes, which helps reduce the amount of your
estate. You can give cash, stocks, bonds, and portions of real estate. You must do this by December 31. Read Viewpoints: “Getting serious about your giving?”
4. Bundle your tax write-offs.
One way to maximize the value of tax deductions is to bunch two years’ worth of itemized deductions into a single year, especially if you expect your income to be higher.
For example, if you have unreimbursed work expenses that you incurred early in the year, you might be able to pull next year’s expenses into this year and double up your
2015 deduction.
Consider making an extra mortgage payment or prepay taxes (state and real estate) to allow additional deductions. For tax-deduction tips, read Viewpoints: “Tips for
deducting more at tax time.”
5. Max and match: Reduce your taxable income and save too.
Click Here!
Even if you contribute regularly to your 401(k) or 403(b), take a few minutes to see whether you can make an additional contribution before the end of the year—especially
if you aren’t on track to contribute the full amount your employer matches. The maximum you can contribute in pretax dollars for 2015 is $18,000, or $24,000 if you’re
age 50 or older, and contributions must be made by December 31, 2015.
You may be able to reduce your taxable income1 by making a contribution to an IRA or spousal IRA. While you can make an IRA contribution for 2015 by April 18, 2016 (the
tax-filing deadline for 2016 due to a federal holiday), doing so now will give your money more potential to grow in a tax-advantaged way. The maximum contribution is
$5,500 per person ($6,500 if you are age 50 or older) or 100% of employment compensation, whichever is less. For age-based tips on retirement savings, read Viewpoints:
“Retirement roadmap: rules of the road.”
6. Use the money in your flexible spending account.
There are two types of flexible spending accounts that allow you to set aside pretax money and then reimburse yourself, with calendar-year “use-it-or-lose-it” deadlines:
health care and dependent care. The U.S. Treasury Department has relaxed the rules a bit this year. Employers can allow participants to carry over up to $500 in unused
funds into next year, so make sure your balance doesn’t exceed that. Some plans allow you to submit 2015 claims until March 2016—check with your employer.
7. Do a financial reality check.
Understanding how you are saving and spending can be a valuable step to helping put your financial house in order. You don’t necessarily need to manage every penny.
Consider our guidelines: Not more than 50% of your take-home pay should go to essential expenses, 15% of your pretax income to retirement savings, and 5% of your
take-home pay to short-term savings. Use our saving and spending checkup to see where you stand.
8. Check the beneficiaries on financial accounts.
When reviewing your investments, also make sure you have designated a beneficiary for each account. This can be as important as writing a will, but it isn’t as complex. It is
especially important if there have been changes in your life, such as a birth, a death, or a change in marital status.
One important point to keep in mind is that retirement accounts pass directly to named beneficiaries, rather than becoming part of your estate. This can provide significant
tax advantages for your heirs.
If you are married, keep in mind that most employer-sponsored retirement plans automatically designate your spouse as the beneficiary unless you name another
beneficiary and your spouse has consented in writing. For more details, read Viewpoints: “Five ways to protect what’s yours.”
Click Here!
9. Go for tax-free growth: Consider converting a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA.
Who wouldn’t want the tax-free growth potential and withdrawals in retirement that a Roth IRA offers?2 The problem is, not everyone can contribute to a Roth IRA because
of income limits. But you may be able to convert existing money in a traditional IRA or other retirement savings account into a Roth IRA. Because pretax contributions and
gains in a traditional IRA are generally considered taxable income when you convert, later in the year is a good time to take a look. That's because you have more
information about your taxable income for the year, which may enable you to convert a more targeted amount to ensure that the income from the conversion doesn’t bump
you into a higher income tax bracket.
If you don’t have an existing traditional IRA, you may want to open one, make a nondeductible contribution, and convert it to a Roth IRA before it accumulates any earnings.
That way it would not be considered taxable income. See if a conversion may make sense with our Roth Conversion Evaluator.
10. If you’re age 70½ or older: Take your minimum required distribution.
Beginning when you turn 70½, IRS regulations generally require you to withdraw a minimum amount of money each year from your tax-deferred retirement accounts, like
traditional IRAs and 401(k) plans, or pay penalties of up to 50% of your minimum required distribution (MRD).3
If you reached 70½ this year, you have until April 1, 2016, to take your 2015 distribution, but it still might be a good idea to do so before the end of this year. Why?
Because if you wait, you’ll have to take two distributions in one year (the grace period applies only to your first distribution, so your 2016 MRD will have to be taken before
December 31 of next year). That could push you into a higher tax bracket for 2016.
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