A couple of retirement related items. First up is a thin article about the psychology that might go with inheriting money. There can be feelings of "guilt and grief." My tiny sample size with clients, there's never been guilt but grief happens, a loved one just died.
I'm about to talk out of both sides of my mouth but while relying on getting an inheritance is a bad idea, you do need to know if it is likely and need to do some planning. If you're going to inherit some or all of one of your parents' IRA accounts, you need to plan for taking all the money out over ten years. I can't believe they made that a requirement but they did.
You have the option of waiting until year ten to get the max tax deferred growth but if it is a lot of money, then you might be paying tax at 37% in ten years when you take it out. If you're still working ten years from now and inherit a $400,000 IRA today and want to wait to take it out in ten years, that $400,000 invested in VBAIX might double. $400,000 into VBAIX in 2016 is worth $992,000 now. That's an enormous tax bill. Maybe for someone, this scenario is their best outcome, or not, but there is no reason not to think this through well ahead of time.
Taking out $40,000/yr in this scenario might end up in a similar net dollar amount but paying less taxes, sort of a wash? Putting $400,000 into VBAIX in this scenario ten years ago, letting it sit untouched until April 13, 2022, it would have grown to $701,000. Then there's four years to take out the money, maybe $175,000 per year...sort of. The money not yet taken out is still growing. Pretend they just took the last $175,000 out today, there would still be $109,000 from price appreciation of VBAIX to take out in addition to this year's $175,000 and now the account is depleted.
Figure these people earn $150,000, then add the $175,000 they take from the inherited IRA. They are in the 24% bracket with an effective rate of 19.3%. In the last year, adding the final $109,000, they do get up into the 32% bracket on a few of their dollars earned but the calculator at taxact.com has the effective tax rate at 20.89%.
One way they might be able to cut their tax bill is contributing to their 401k. Having earned income makes you eligible to contribute and the limits of course can be quite high. If you've been living on $150,000 and get an extra $175,000 from an inherited IRA then there's a good chance you can fully fund your 401k...assuming you're eligible of course.
Does this seem like a lot of detail? We didn't even get into inheriting money not in an IRA, like maybe from the sale of a house or maybe the parents just had their money in taxable accounts.
I realize don't rely on it but plan for it is contradictory but I think it is prudent to understand the probabilities of your situation and do a little planning. Then if it actually happens, do some serious planning. Use AI if you want, it's probably a good idea, if nothing else, maybe AI helps you avoid a really bad strategy even if it doesn't get you to an optimal strategy.
The other article was about whether or not to pay off your mortgage from Barron's. In terms of the math, paying off a mortgage with a low rate is not optimal. Again, that is just the math and ignores the emotional value of being mortgage free. The idea is that it is reasonable to think you'd get a better return investing the money than paying off a 3% or 4% mortgage. That idea is less compelling though with a mortgage at 6% or higher.
VBAIX failed to return above 4% about 1/3 of the time, eight out of 25 years, since it started trading. We are all going to draw our own conclusion about what makes sense in this regard. The mortgage on our Airbnb rental is 3.5% and we are not paying it off early. It's a 15 year that will be paid off in 2032. The mortgage we just took out for the house in Tucson is 6.375% and we plan to pay that down very aggressively over the next four years +/- by not contributing to my 401k. If we get it paid off when I am 64 or 65 and I am still working (that is the plan), then we can resume 401k contributions.
Being able to do this is a function of the optionality I think my wife and I created for ourselves when we were younger.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.