Tax Opportunities Before Year-End

     

Tax Opportunities Before Year-End

Every year, U.S. taxpayers face a number of year-end deadlines which, if ignored,
can be costly and even punitive. In the latter category, consider people over age 70
1/2 who forget to take the full required minimum distribution from their IRA or
401(k). If they get the calculation wrong, or forget the distribution altogether
before December 31, they face a 50% penalty on the amount they should have
taken.

     Here, a best practice is to sit down weeks before the deadline, and consider which
parts of your portfolio you want to prune back, or what you would need to sell in
order to rebalance your asset allocations back to their targeted percentages. If you
don’t need some or all of the distribution (which is not uncommon), you don’t have
to spend it; you can reinvest extra money in a taxable portfolio.

     Of course, the tax year also ends December 31, which means if you have losses in
your portfolio (and chances are, you do) you have to claim them before the end of
the year. “Claiming,” in this case, means selling for a loss, and buying a similar
replacement asset in your portfolio. You book the losses and use them to offset an
equivalent amount of capital gains or up to $3,000 of ordinary income. If this is a
low-income year, you might consider taking advantage of the 0% tax bracket for
long-term capital gains (below $38,600 for single taxpayers or $77,200 for joint
filers) and harvest some gains from your portfolio. But remember, if you’re
looking to offset your harvested losses, many mutual funds will be distributing
capital gains in December.

     If you want to get a tax deduction for charitable contributions for 2018, then they
need to be made before December 31. The challenge here is that the deduction is
only available to people who itemize their deductions, and the new, higher standard
deduction means that many people won’t be itemizing. To get above the threshold,
some people are bunching many years worth of charitable contributions into a
single year, making a donation to a donor-advised fund. This raises their total
contribution amount in that year high enough so the donation becomes deductible
again.

Source:

https://www.morningstar.com/articles/891899/retirees-yearend-taxplanning-guide.html

This article was written for information purposes only and its content should not be construed by any consumer and/or prospective client as rebel Financial’s solicitation to affect, or attempt to affect transactions in securities, or the rendering of personalized investment advice for compensation. No client or prospective client should assume that any such discussion serves as the receipt of, or a substitute for, personalized advice from rebel Financial, or from any other investment professional. See our disclosures page for more information.

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