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Quicken TurboTax: The #1 Tax Solution Year After Year: Buy it Here!
Copyright © 1999-2001 by TaxTuneup.com. No part of this site may be reproduced without express written permission of the publisher. This publication is intended to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is published with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought. Last modified: February 07, 2001 |
| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | *Illegal Income is taxable as ordinary income just as if you had earned it legitimately. Congress and the IRS aren’t endorsing your illegal gains. They just want their share. And they're preserving another avenue for catching bad guys—remember, it was the IRS that finally nailed Al Capone. At the same time, you can deduct most business expenses directly related to illegal income (except for illegal expenses or expenses "contrary to public policy," such as prostitutes for clients or the costs of rubbing out "Tony the Tuna"). If you're a bookie, for example, you can deduct the cost of phone lines you install to take bets. *Immediate Annuity (See Annuity) *Incentive Stock Option (See Stock Options) *Index Funds are a category of mutual funds that aim to passively track a particular index, such as the S&P 500 or the Russell 2000. The largest funds do it by buying every security tracked in the index. Smaller funds do it by buying a representative sample, or by buying options on the index. Index funds have exploded in recent years, with more than 200 index funds tracking large-cap, mid-cap and small-cap indexes, foreign indexes, and fixed-income indexes. There’s even a fund that purports to track an index of "tombstone" stocks: funeral homes, cemeteries, and casket makers. Index funds offer these advantages over their actively managed competitors:
True index funds—those that buy the entire index, and hold it—enjoy a huge tax advantage over actively managed funds. Low turnover means low realized capital gains, therefore, low taxable gains. Each time an active fund manager sells a stock at a profit, she generates a capital gain to be distributed and taxed to shareholders. Index funds sell only when necessary to redeem exiting shares or when the index itself changes. Index funds can also hold less cash than active funds since index investors redeem their shares less often. In fact, many index funds limit transfers just to hold down this sort of expensive turnover. Some index funds don’t actually buy their underlying index. Instead, they buy a representative sample to track it. Some funds may use options or futures to track the index or even beat it. These options and futures generate short-term gains—and lots of them. They don’t give you the tax advantages of true index funds. So, be careful when you index. Hold true index funds in taxable accounts. Buy proxy index funds, enhanced index funds, and leveraged funds in your IRA or retirement accounts. Be especially careful before you buy "leveraged" index funds. These are funds that use options or futures to return a multiple of the index’s return each day. For example, a leveraged fund might aim to earn 150% of the S&P 500’s daily return. This leverage can be a double-edged sword. In down markets, the funds fall faster than the index. This means your future gains build back from a lower base. University of Chicago professor Richard Polson has calculated that leveraged funds can lag their index and even lose money when the index rises. The S&P 500 includes over 70% of the U.S. stock market, by market capitalization. But it’s far from the only index available:
The Vanguard Group is the clear leader in index fund assets, with over 60% of the market. Vanguard’s Index 500 Trust has passed Fidelity’s Magellen as the world’s largest mutual fund, with over $100 billion in assets. Dozens of fund families have added index funds, with over 50 that track the S&P 500 alone. Even full-service brokers have added funds tracking the S&P 500, the Russell 2000, and the MSCI EAFE, among others. But not all index funds are created equal. Once you’ve decided to index, pay attention to loads, expense ratios, and other measures of mutual-fund efficiency. The following table reveals just how widely index fund performance can vary. In May, 1999, The Wall Street Journal surveyed a dozen S&P 500 funds for the period ending April 30, 1999. Loads ranged from zero to five percent. Annual expenses ranged from 0.18% to a whopping 1.50%. And tax-adjusted returns ranged from 18.28% to 21.10%. Not surprisingly, the fund with the highest tax-adjusted return had the lowest expense. Finally, buying index funds and holding them for long-term returns lets you sleep late and ignore the hype of mutual funds marketing. Magazine covers tout "Hot Funds to Buy Now"; market gurus fill newsletters and airwaves with tips. The hype implies that the key to making money is picking the right horse. But as we’ve seen, most active portfolio management falls short of its promise. Buying an index fund lets you bet on every horse. *Individual Retirement Accounts, or IRAs, are tax-deferred retirement savings accounts. There are several different types of IRAs, including ordinary deductible IRAs, College IRAs, Nondeductible IRAs, Spousal IRAs, and Stretchout IRAs. Ordinary IRAs, the most common type, let you deduct your contribution (subject to certain qualifications) and compound your earnings tax-deferred for retirement:
Penalties on Early Withdrawals IRAs are intended as long-term retirement accounts, not merely tax-deferred savings accounts, so the IRS imposes a 10% penalty on most withdrawals before age 59½. Here are the exceptions:
If you need to withdraw funds from a regular IRA (but not a Roth IRA), code section 72(t) lets you avoid the 10% penalty if you "annuitize," or take the funds in a series of substantially equal payments over your life expectancy. You’ll owe ordinary tax on each withdrawal, but you’ll avoid the 10% penalty. You'll also have to keep withdrawing funds for five years or until you reach age 59½, whichever is longer. The IRS has identified three safe harbor methods for calculating withdrawals:
You can take your withdrawals any time throughout the year so long as your annual total satisfies the requirements. Your IRA custodian will send you a Form 1099-R describing the withdrawal as an "early distribution, no known exception." In this case, you’ll have to file Form 5329 with your return to avoid the 10% penalty. Section 72(t) can be a useful escape hatch. But, if you start taking withdrawals according to plan, you’re locked in! If you deviate from schedule, you’ll lose your safe harbor, triggering the 10% penalty plus interest on all your withdrawals. This is true even if you make an extra penalty-free withdrawal. For example, you can’t start withdrawals under Section 72(t), then take extra money for college tuition or medical expenses. The only exceptions are death, disability, and perhaps divorce. (The IRS has ruled privately that an individual taking withdrawals under 72(t) could transfer part of the account to a divorcing spouse with a Qualified Domestic Relations Order; however, the IRS did not explicitly state that the individual could continue withdrawals according to the smaller account balance.) So be careful before you start down this road; no detours are allowed. Minimum Required Distributions Since IRAs are intended as retirement savings plans, not wealth-transfer vehicles, you have to start taking money out of your ordinary IRA, nondeductible IRA, or spousal IRA by April 1 of the year after you reach age 70½, the "required beginning date." This led to a some of the tax code's most Byzantine rules. Previously, you were required to choose a beneficiary and a distribution schedule by age 70½ -- and once you made your choice, you were locked in. Those rules are gone! On January 11, 2001, the IRS issued new proposed regulations, effective retroactively to January 1, 2001, that let you create a stretchout IRA with virtually no advance planning. If you blew your chance under the old rules, you get another crack under the new. The new regulations outline a simplified set of rules and a uniform life expectancy table that let you withdraw less than under most previous methods. Of course, there's a catch. It used to be that you calculated your own minimum required distribution and reported it yourself. Now, your IRA custodian or qualified plan administrator can calculate your minimum required distribution for you -- and helpfully report that amount to the IRS. This lets the IRS cross-check your return with your plan sponsor's report. just as they do with interest and dividend income reported on Form 1099. To calculate your minimum required distribution, simply divide your account balance by your distribution period determined according to your age. If you have more than one IRA, you have to calculate a required minimum distribution for each separate account. However, you can withdraw the required total from a single account.
You have to take your first distribution by April 1 of the year after the year in which you reach age 70½. That distribution counts for the calendar year in which you reach age 70½. You must take your next distribution by December 31 of the same year. That second distribution is based on the same December 31 account balance, minus the amount of your first distribution. This will raise your adjusted gross income for figuring your deductions and credits, and may bump you into a higher tax bracket. If this will be the case, consider taking your required minimum distribution in the actual year in which you reach age 70½, rather than waiting until the required beginning date.
If your spouse is your beneficiary, and your spouse is more than 10 years younger than you, you can withdraw funds over your joint life expectancy as presented in IRS Table V. The process works the same as above, except that you use your joint life expectancy to figure your withdrawals. IRAs at Death When you die, your IRA passes to your designated beneficiary without passing through probate (unless you designate your estate as your beneficiary). After your death, the distribution period is based on the remaining life expectancy of your designated beneficiary. This is calculated using the age of the beneficiary in the year following the year of your death, minus one for each subsequent year.
You can designate a trust as your IRA beneficiary without blowing up the account. It’s usually done to take advantage of the full unified credit exemption equivalent ($675,000 in 2000) in estates consisting largely of an IRA (by leaving the IRA to the marital deduction bypass trust). You can designate an irrevocable trust as beneficiary if it meets these five requirements:
You can also name a living trust as a beneficiary so long as the trust becomes irrevocable at your death. If you name a trust as your IRA beneficiary, the distribution period will be based on the life expectancies of the underlying trust beneficiary or beneficiaries. You can leave part of your account to charity. If you do so, be sure to split your IRA assets into separate accounts so that you can take advantage of the new stretchout provisions with the part you plan to leave to your family. For more information on IRAs in general, see IRS Publication 590, "Individual Retirement Arrangements." To download the text of the new proposed regulations in .pdf format, click here for IRS regulations and and scroll down to REG-130477-00;REG-130481-00. *Inheritances are nontaxable income. However, 13 states impose an inheritance tax on the amount that you receive. This is a separate tax that doesn’t affect federal or state income taxes. *Installment Sales let you defer tax on sales until you actually receive your payments. Tax is divided among the actual installments and due as you receive them. No payment is necessary the year of the actual sale; you have to receive at least one payment in a year after the year of the sale. Installment sales are especially good for "big ticket" sales like businesses and real estate. (Congress has just eliminated installment-sale treatment for accrual basis taxpayers. However, this change may have such a chilling effect on family business sales that it may soon be repealed.) The installment sale concept is simple. First, figure your gain on the sale. Next, figure what percent of your total sale price consists of gain. Finally, multiply each installment by your profit percentage to figure taxable gain from that installment. For example, if you buy a building for $600,000, then sell it for $1 million, 40% of your sale price is gain, so 40% of each installment is taxed as capital gain. Here are some rules:
Report installment sale income on Form 6252, then carry it forward to Schedule D. For more information, see IRS Publication 537, "Installment Sales." *Insulin Treatments are a deductible Medical Expense subject to the 7.5% floor. *Interest you earn on bank deposits, bonds, loans, and even tax refunds is generally taxable in the year you receive the interest. (Interest on municipal bonds is generally tax-free. See Municipal bonds.) Original issue discount and zero-coupon bond interest are taxable in the year accreted or accrues. See Original issue discount and Zero-coupon bonds. Interest you pay on a variety of loans may be deductible depending on the source or the purpose of the loan:
*International Business Corporations (See Offshore Investments) *Inventory is property you manufacture or buy for later resale in the course of your trade or business. Gain you earn from selling inventory is taxed as ordinary income, not capital gain. *Investment Expenses you pay to generate taxable income are deductible up to net investment income subject to the 2% floor on miscellaneous itemized deductions. Deductible expenses include:
Commissions you pay to buy and sell investments are included in the cost of the investment for figuring gains and losses when you sell. However, if you pay your broker or investment manager an asset management fee that includes commissions on investment trades, you can deduct the fee the year you pay. For more information, see IRS Publication 550, "Investment Income and Expenses." There’s no deduction for costs you pay to manage tax-exempt securities, simply because there’s no taxable income to offset. And there's no deduction for the cost of investment seminars or the travel costs for shareholder meetings. *Investment Interest you pay to buy or hold most taxable investments is deductible, up to your "net investment income." If your investment interest exceeds your net investment income—a real possibility in flat or declining markets—you can carry forward the excess against future investment income. Here are the rules:
*Investment Management Fees are deductible as an Investment Expense up to net investment income subject to the 2% floor on miscellaneous itemized deductions. However, fees you pay to manage IRAs that are deducted directly from the IRA are not deductible because they don’t offset taxable income. *Investment Newsletters (see Subscriptions) *Involuntary Conversion is the loss or destruction of property through casualty, theft, seizure, condemnation, or sale under threat of condemnation. Involuntary conversion can result in capital gain if you receive insurance proceeds greater than your adjusted basis in the property. However, you can postpone tax if you replace the property within a specified time. *IRA (See Individual Retirement Account) *IRA Custodial Fees are a deductible Investment Expense, up to net investment income, subject to the 2% floor on miscellaneous itemized deductions. To claim the deduction, you have to pay the fee separately by check, rather than letting your IRA sponsor deduct the fee from your account. (Better yet, find a custodian who doesn't charge a fee!) | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
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