Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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Inheriting non-spousal annunity
I'm 63, cost basis $160000, gain $200000. Bank advisor offered indexed variable annunity, 10 year spread. Anyone familiar with these? I have no experience with annunities. Trying to figure out whether to take lump sum and just pay the $70000 tax bill or do the annunity. If I take the annunity I'd put it into index mutual funds. My situation is very simple...I have no income, lots of savings, no mortgage on home, no tax deductions. If take annunity, goal.would be income I guess. Not taking social security, maybe take at 65.or wait until 70...
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#2
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I would never buy an annuity. The advisor is recommending it because they want to make a commission on your money that will be about 10 percent of the cost. So, if you invest $360,000 in the annuity, the advisor will make about $36,000. I very nice pay day. Don't do it without doing a lot of research on annuities. They are almost never a good investment.
On a $200,000 long term capital gain, the tax should only be about $30,000, which is 15 percent, unless there are other circumstances. |
#3
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I’d take the money, run and stay out of the stock market.
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#4
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#5
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I would talk to a fee only financial adviser.
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#6
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Yeah, I've read that the market is suppose to take a dive. Banks removing lines of credit etc. I'll probably take lump sum if only have to pay $30000 in taxes.
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#7
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#8
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OK, a commercial finance manager here, and this board is not the place to find the best answer for your particular situation. Please find a fee only, independent CFP, and ask him to build you a model of your cash flow versus your assets and your tax situation. Living off of assets versus living off of income is not the best situation
finance guy who wants to get his CFP |
#9
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[QUOTE=CoachKandSportsguy;1990414]OK, a commercial finance manager here, and this board is not the place to find the best answer for your particular situation. Please find a fee only, independent CFP, and ask him to build you a model of your cash flow versus your assets and your tax situation. Living off of assets versus living off of income is not the best situation
finance guy who wants to get his That seems extreme to just get a tax question answered. Also I'm staying liquid to possibly buy a small farm in the next year or two. Monthly expenses are only $1200 mo currently. |
#10
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[QUOTE=Gigi3000;1990445]
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#11
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#12
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[QUOTE=Stu from NYC;1990449]I thought I might at one time but I have lots of time to mull this over and I don't see my situation as all that difficult. Not currently anyway. Might be something I'd do in a year or so tho. Plus I want to learn and this is the best way but I might take some lumps
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#13
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I would seriously consider just paying the capital gains tax and invest the money in a conservative portfolio of Vanguard index mutual funds. 30 percent S&P 500 Index Fund, 30 percent Short Term Bond Index Fund, and 40 percent money market fund. Then, do some independent research on investing before making any more financial decisions. Last edited by retiredguy123; 08-17-2021 at 01:55 PM. |
#14
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#15
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It's possible, based on the type of annuity. I would ask a tax preparer to calculate your options for cashing out the annuity and paying the taxes immediately, or if you can spread the cash payments over a few tax years and maybe reduce the tax payments, based on your marginal tax rate. But, I would want to cash out the annuity and reinvest the money instead of buying another annuity. Whatever taxes are owed, they can only be delayed, but not avoided. My opinion. Good luck.
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Closed Thread |
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