Monday, March 3, 2014

Intuit Upgraded to “Buy” by Citigroup Inc. (INTU)

Shane Hupp for Ticket Report writes:  Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) was upgraded by equities research analysts at Citigroup Inc. from a “neutral” rating to a “buy” rating in a research note issued to investors on Monday,TheFlyOnTheWall.com reports. The firm currently has a $94.00 target price on the stock, up from their previous target price of $75.00. Citigroup Inc.’s price objective suggests a potential upside of 20.28% from the stock’s previous close.
Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) opened at 78.15 on Monday. Intuit has a 52-week low of $55.54 and a 52-week high of $81.21. The stock’s 50-day moving average is $74.20 and its 200-day moving average is $70.93. The company has a market cap of $22.141 billion and a price-to-earnings ratio of 30.41.
Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) last released its earnings data on Thursday, February 20th. The company reported $0.02 earnings per share for the quarter, missing the analysts’ consensus estimate of $0.14 by $0.12. The company had revenue of $782.00 million for the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $778.88 million. Analysts expect that Intuit will post $3.57 EPS for the current fiscal year.
The company also recently announced a quarterly dividend, which is scheduled for Friday, April 18th. Investors of record on Thursday, April 10th will be paid a dividend of $0.19 per share. This represents a $0.76 annualized dividend and a dividend yield of 0.97%. The ex-dividend date is Tuesday, April 8th.
Several other analysts have also recently commented on the stock. Analysts at Jefferson Research upgraded shares of Intuit from a “sell” rating to a “hold” rating in a research note on Friday. Separately, analysts at Jefferies Group raised their price target on shares of Intuit from $73.00 to $75.00 in a research note on Friday, February 21st. They now have a “hold” rating on the stock. Finally, analysts atZacks downgraded shares of Intuit from a “neutral” rating to an “underperform” rating in a research note on Thursday, February 20th. They now have a $71.40 price target on the stock. Three equities research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, eight have given a hold rating, six have given a buy rating and one has issued a strong buy rating to the company. Intuit presently has an average rating of “Hold” and an average target price of $74.85.
In other Intuit news, CEO Brad Smith sold 100,000 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction that occurred on Monday, February 24th. The stock was sold at an average price of $77.73, for a total value of $7,773,000.00. Following the sale, the chief executive officer now directly owns 224,640 shares in the company, valued at approximately $17,461,267. The sale was disclosed in a filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is available at this link.
Intuit Inc (NASDAQ:INTU) is a provider of business and financial management solutions for small businesses, consumers, accounting professionals and financial institutions.
Posted on 10:49 AM | Categories:

Scribe Announces Cloud-Based Data Integration With QlikView

Scribe Software, an established global provider of solutions that easily bring customer data anywhere it is needed, today announced its partnership with Qlik, a leader in user-driven Business Intelligence (BI). Scribe connectors will now be available for the QlikView Business Discovery platform allowing customers to quickly extract data from key business applications. Providing automatic, immediate access to data regardless of where it resides in the organization, the joint offering powers informed business decisions.
With QlikView's patented core technology, associative experience, and collaboration and mobile capabilities, users can ask and answer streams of questions on their own or in teams and groups, wherever they are working. Users can continue to explore information freely rather than being confined to a predefined path of questions and gain rapid time to value in deployments that can be productive in just days or weeks.
"User-driven, self-service BI is extremely powerful when an organization places it at the center of its actionable intelligence strategy. Putting knowledge in the hands of business users can help drive better business decisions and increase competitive agility," said Les Bonney, Qlik Chief Operating Officer. "Scribe offers a flexible and user-friendly data platform for advanced business intelligence. Through our partnership, customers will benefit from being able to seamlessly connect vital business data residing throughout the company to more easily leverage that data."
Data lives in on-premise and cloud applications across many different functions in an enterprise, and today's organizations need effective and immediate integration between different business systems -- from marketing to finance and beyond. Simplifying enterprise data integration, Scribe gives businesses a powerful, 360-degree view of the customer by quickly extracting critical data from a variety of business applications across the organization. The new Scribe connector gives QlikView users easy access to critical data regardless of where it resides to drive deeper analytics and smarter decisions making.
"The proliferation of BI initiatives continues as data dilemmas become more complex. Business users require immediate access to data -- regardless of where it resides in the organization or in which system it lives," said Scribe Software CEO Lou Guercia. "Manually collecting data from disparate systems is no longer an option. Today's modern enterprise requires immediate access to an expansive amount of data. We continue to address those needs -- the latest step being our connector linking critical business apps in real time to QlikView." 

About Scribe SoftwareScribe is an established global provider of solutions that easily bring customer data anywhere it is needed -- regardless of IT infrastructure. Scribe's award-winning products help 12,000 customers and 1,000 partners use customer data -- cloud-based, on-premise or a mix -- to increase revenue, provide superior service, and create business value faster. Its easy-to-use, enterprise-ready solutions are backed by extensive support options and training, and service customers across a wide array of industries including financial services, life sciences, manufacturing, and media and entertainment companies.
Posted on 10:29 AM | Categories:

MYOB boss has Xero worries about tech rival

Paul Smith for AFR.com writes: The chief executive of accounting software provider MYOB has said hype around ASX-listed rival Xero has not resulted in any loss of market share, and hosed down speculation his company could soon reappear on the stock exchange.
Speaking to The Australian Financial Review, MYOB’s Tim Reed said the ­company expected to steal a march on rivals in the increasingly competitive mobile side of the market in March when it launches its answer to the Square ­payment device.
He also said the company was focused on product development and the migration of customers to its cloud computing platform, rather than seeking an exit for private equity owners Bain Capital.
MYOB released annual results last Thursday showing increased revenue and an improved profit performance on the previous year.
Mr Reed characterised the year as a transformational one for the company as an increasing number of its customers elected to use cloud-based rather than desktop software.
It also saw the company become increasingly embroiled in a battle with sharemarket favourite Xero, which has been garnering headlines for its rapid growth.
In late February Xero said it had added 39,000 customers to its online platform in the previous four months, surpassing the 250,000 customer mark for the first time.
The company said the number of ­customers in Australia alone was approaching 100,000, up from 79,100 in September.

READY FOR COMPETITION

But Mr Reed said competition was nothing new in the sector, and that MYOB had seen off plenty of competitors in the past two decades of operation.
“I wouldn’t say we have seen the degree of competition change materially in the last few years, we have just seen the source of the competition change,” Mr Reed said.
“We have international players that are entering; we have start-ups who are entering, so the nature of competition is changing.”
As well as Xero, MYOB goes head to head with well-established rival Reckon and US giant Intuit, which has tried to move into the Australian market in the last couple of years.
Mr Reed said MYOB had more clients actively using its products than ever before, with the migration of customers to its cloud-based products occurring faster than anticipated.
Last year the number of customers using the cloud-hosted version of the company’s product increased from 7 per cent to 22 per cent.
In addition, half of all new product registrations were for its cloud products, up from 25 per cent a year earlier.
One of the criticisms aimed at the company in recent times has been that its products are not as easy to use on mobile devices as Xero’s. Mr Reed said MYOB had increased spending on product research and development last year by 20 per cent to $36 million, with mobile users a key focus.
The upcoming launch of its PayDirect app will be viewed with interest across the Australian financial services industry.
Like Square, the successful US ­payments product started by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, PayDirect will let retailers accept card payments via an app in their smartphones.

DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION

News of Square’s impending launch in Australia, first revealed in the Financial Review, was received with interest by those keen to see the level of disruption inflicted on current payments industry players.
However, while MYOB’s product will work as a standalone payments tool, it will have the added benefit for MYOB ­customers of integrating with the software to effectively manage bookkeeping tasks such as sending receipts, managing invoices and tracking debtors.
“I am absolutely confident that we will be the first to market with this combined payment and accounting app. We keep hearing from everyone that we take it out to that this is the killer combination,” Mr Reed said.
“I have no information about what Square is doing other than what I have read in the Financial Review, but based on that it would have us being there first.”
Meanwhile, speculation arose last year that the success of Xero’s shares on the ASX could lead to MYOB owners Bain Capital pushing for an IPO exit in the near future.
Mr Reed said Bain generally held on to their investments for five to seven years, and had only owned MYOB for two and a half years.
“I suspect it will be another several years before we are having any discussions about the sale of the business,” Mr Reed said.
“Whether that would be an IPO or sale is too early to tell. Who knows where the market will be in two or three years?
“I can tell you that we aren’t spending any time at all at the board room and director level thinking about those issues.”
Posted on 10:29 AM | Categories:

‘Get savvy’ with cloud services, says MYOB to SMBs

Peter Dinham for IT Wire writes: Online accounting software provider MYOB already has more than 50% of new customers signing up for delivery of services via the cloud, but despite the accelerating take-up of cloud services has today launched a new ‘cloud confidence” campaign to encourage SMBs to “get savvy” with cloud computing.
MYOB General Manager - Marketing, Caroline Ruddick said the multi-channel media campaign was aimed at driving awareness of MYOB’s extensive range of cloud solutions.

As part of the campaign, MYOB is offering existing AccountRight clients a range of special offers for ‘Live’ cloud services, such as cash back offers and free upgrades. Ruddick says potential new clients can take advantage of free 30 day trials and a 90 day money-back guarantee for LiveAccounts and AccountRightLive.

Ruddick says the campaign, which launches this week and will run until the end of the second quarter, includes a series of online, social media, direct, radio and lift advertisements, with visual communications illustrating key benefits, competitive features and “why MYOB online accounting solutions are seriously better.” 
“There are 2.1 million small businesses that help drive our economy; we want to help them level the playing field by increasing their use of cloud technologies. Our MYOB Business Monitor study showed that business owners using cloud computing were 59% more likely to see annual revenue rise than those who weren’t. They tell us they’re more productive and have fewer IT issues and costs.

 “In an increasingly digital global economy, there’s never been a better time to embrace online accounting. We’re keen to raise awareness of the benefits. For example, SMEs utilising our secure bank transaction feeds and automatic reconciliation say it saves them an average of 10 hours per month. The average value they put on this time saving is $713.

“This is a key feature of both our LiveAccounts and AccountRight Live solutions, so it’s little wonder cloud accounting solutions now account for more than 50% of our new product registrations,” Ruddick said.   END. You can read ITWire.com here, y
ou can learn about Peter Dinham here.

Posted on 10:29 AM | Categories:

XERO : That’s a wrap on our biggest rollout of roadshows in Australia!

Xero writes: After months of planning and preparation our biggest roadshow ever in Australia has come to a close in sunny Perth.
And what a way to finish with the announcement that we have reached a major milestone in Australia: 100,000 customers! We presented to over 5,500 registered attendees across 20 locations – from regional centers such as Bendigo, Wollongong and Dubbo to Launceston, all the way to the top end, then down to the final destinations of Adelaide and Perth. Sit back and watch the roadshow wrap-up video.

I was blown away by the levels of enthusiasm and energy I witnessed at each event I went to. It was great to see so many partners, bookkeepers and accountants seeing the value in the cloud, showing enthusiasm and embracing what we do – some partners even felt compelled to applaud when we announced certain Xero features such as Tax, which was awesome to see.
To make sure we connect with partners at all levels, the content we presented was aimed at partners early on their Cloud journey right through to the most advanced partners. Content on the day included: sessions on the Cloud itself, Cloud Practice and upcoming developments (crowd favourites, for sure), as well as a sneak peek of the upcoming Tax feature.
Thanks again for coming along and making our roadshow such a hit. We love what we do and our events are a great way to share this with you. If you missed a session, want a roadshow refresh or would like to share content with a colleague, we have put together free roadshow webinars so no one misses out.Register for a free online session.

Posted on 10:28 AM | Categories:

Scariest Tax Form? Skip It, And IRS Can Audit Forever

Robert W. Wood for Forbes writes: Tax lawyers and accountants spend some of their time monitoring exposure, and so should you. Sometimes that means watching the calendar until you are clear of audit. Unless you skip filing taxes entirely, you might assume your risk of audit eventually dissipates.
The IRS normally gets three years to audit. Sometimes, say if you mess up with offshore account reporting, the IRS gets six. Having a foreign bank account and unreported income is tough to resolve. The safest approach is going into the IRS Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program, although some clients opt for more aggressive approaches. What many people find surprising is that having a company that holds a foreign account is even more sensitive. Yes, we’re talking about controlled foreign corporations, or CFCs. When a U.S. shareholder holds more than 50 percent of the vote or value of a foreign corporation, the company is a controlled foreign corporation or CFC. A U.S. shareholder is a U.S. person who owns 10 percent or more of the foreign corporation’s total voting power. 
That triggers reporting, including filing an annual IRS Form 5471. It is an understatement to say this is an important form. Failing to file it means penalties, generally $10,000 per form. A separate penalty can apply to each Form 5471 filed late, and to each Form 5471 that is incomplete or inaccurate.
What’s more, this penalty can apply even if no tax is due on the return. That seems harsh, but the next rule—about the statute of limitations—is even more surprising. If you have a CFC but fail to file a required Form 5471, your tax return remains open for audit indefinitelyNormally, the statute expires after three or six years, depending on the issue and its magnitude. 
This statutory override of the normal statute of limitations is sweeping. The IRS not only has an indefinite period to examine and assess taxes on items relating to the missing Form 5471. In fact, the IRS can make any adjustments to the entire tax return with no expiration until the required Form 5471 is filed. You might think of a Form 5471 like the signature on your return. Without it, it really isn’t a return. 
And don’t assume that you have no issue if there is no CFC because U.S. shareholders don’t own over 50%. In fact, Forms 5471 are not only required of U.S. shareholders in CFCs. They are also required when a U.S. shareholder acquires stock that results in 10 percent ownership in any foreign company. The harsh statute of limitation rule for Form 5471 was the result of the HIRE Act passed March 18, 2010. Not coincidentally, this was the same law that brought us FATCA, the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. Bottom line: be careful with CFCs and with Form 5471. The possibility that a statute will remain open can ruin more than your day.
This problem is commonly paired with other failings, such as the filing of foreign bank account forms known as FBARs. That means the potential for large civil penalties and perhaps even criminal liability can be palpable.   [end]

Posted on 10:28 AM | Categories:

10 Facts and Tips on Roth IRAs and 401k’s

Kiplinger for MSN writes: Creating a tax-free stream of income is a powerful retirement tool. Here's the scoop on Roth IRAs and 401k's.
Tax-free income is a dream of every taxpayer. And if you save in a Roth account, it’s a reality. Roths are the youngsters of the retirement savings world. The Roth IRA, named after the late Delaware Sen. William Roth, became a savings option in 1998, followed by the Roth 401k in 2006. These accounts offer big benefits, but the rules for Roths can be complex. Here are ten things you must know about adding a Roth to your nest egg.

1. You pay Uncle Sam now instead of later

Roths turn traditional IRA and 401k rules on their head. Rather than getting a tax break for money when it goes into the account and paying tax on all distributions, with a Roth, you save after-tax dollars and get tax-free withdrawals in retirement.
By accepting the tax breaks for traditional accounts, you accept the government as your partner. If you’re in the 25% tax bracket, for example, 25% of all earnings will effectively belong to the IRS to be collected when you withdraw the money. With a Roth, 100% of all future earnings are yours.
The Roth strategy of paying taxes sooner rather than later will pay off particularly well if you’re in a higher tax bracket when you withdraw the money than when you passed up the tax break offered by the traditional account. If you’re in a lower tax bracket, though, the Roth advantage will be undermined.

2. There are limits contributing to a Roth IRA

To be able to contribute to a Roth, you must have earned income. And unlike traditional IRAs, if you’re still working after age 70 1/2, you can keep contributing.
In 2014, you can stash up to $5,500 in a Roth IRA and an extra $1,000 if you’re 50 or older.
But higher-income taxpayers are barred from contributing to a Roth IRA. For 2014, the ability to contribute to a Roth phases out if your adjusted gross income is between $181,000 to $191,000 for joint filers and between $114,000 to $129,000 for single filers.
You can make a 2013 Roth IRA contribution as late as April 15, 2014. You can contribute to both Roth and traditional IRAs, but the total cannot exceed the annual limit.

3. Your company may offer a Roth option

Many companies have added a Roth option to their 401k plans. After-tax money goes into the Roth, so you won’t see the immediate tax savings you get from contributing pretax money to a traditional plan. But your money will grow tax-free. (Any employer match will go into a traditional 401k account.)
For 2013 and 2014, you can stash up to $17,500 a year, plus an extra $5,500 a year if you’re 50 or older, into a 401k. Contributions must be made by December 31 to count for the current tax year, and the limit applies to the total of your traditional and Roth 401k contributions. A Roth 401k is a good option if your earnings are too high to contribute to a Roth IRA.

4. You can do a Roth conversion

Another route to tax-free earnings inside a Roth is to convert traditional IRA money to a Roth. In the year you convert, you must pay tax on the full amount shifted into the Roth. That’s the price you pay to buy tax freedom for future earnings. (If you have made nondeductible contributions to your traditional IRA, a portion of your conversion will be tax-free.)
If you expect your tax rate to be the same or higher in the future, converting could make sense; if you expect your future tax rate to be lower, it might not.
You’ll want to pay the tax owed on a conversion with money outside of the IRA. Drawing money from the IRA to pay the tax will result in an additional tax bill, and a penalty if you’re under age 59 1/2.

5. A conversion could trigger other tax events

Look at the big picture if you plan a conversion. The added taxable income could boost you into a higher tax bracket. A big jump in income could trigger other taxes, too, such as the new 3.8% surtax on net investment income. For Medicare beneficiaries, a rise in adjusted gross income could result in premium surcharges for Part B and Part D.
A series of small conversions over several years could keep the tax bill in check. For instance, you may want to convert just enough to take you to the top of your current tax bracket.

6. You must pass the tests for tax-free earnings

Because there’s no tax deduction for Roth contributions, you can retrieve that money at any time free of taxes and penalties, regardless of age.
But for earnings to be tax- and penalty-free, you have to pass a couple of tests. First, you must be 59 1/2 or older. You will get hit with a 10% early-withdrawal penalty and taxes if you take out earnings before you hit age 59 1/2. And you must have had one Roth open for at least five years. If you are 58 and opening your first Roth IRA in 2013, you can tap earnings penalty-free at age 59 1/2, but you won’t be able to tap earnings tax-free until 2018.

7. There are 2 5-year rules

If you make a conversion, you must wait five years or until you reach age 59 1/2, whichever comes first, before you can withdraw the converted amount free of the 10% penalty. Each conversion has its own five-year holding period. So if a young account owner does one conversion in 2013 and a second conversion in 2014, the amount from the first conversion can be withdrawn penalty-free starting in 2018 and the amount from the second starting in 2019.
Earnings on a converted amount can be withdrawn tax- and penalty-free after the owner reaches age 59 1/2, as long as he or she has had any Roth IRA opened at least five years.

8. There’s an order to withdrawals

The rules for determining the source of money coming out of a Roth work in the taxpayer’s favor. The first money out is considered contributed amounts, so it’s tax- and penalty-free. Once contributions are depleted, you dip into converted amounts (if any). This money is tax- and penalty-free for owners 59 1/2 and older or younger ones who have had the converted amount in a Roth for more than five years. Only after you have cashed out all converted amounts do you get to the earnings. Once the account owner is 59 1/2 and has had one Roth for at least five years, earnings, too, can be withdrawn tax- and penalty-free.
The ability to tap money in a Roth IRA without penalty before age 59 1/2 allows for flexibility to use the Roth IRA for other purposes. For example, the account could be used as a fallback for college savings.
Once you reach retirement, having a pot of tax-free income to draw upon may allow you to lower your tax bill. Roth money doesn’t count in the calculation for taxing Social Security benefits, for example, or in the calculation for the new tax on investment income.

9. You can take a mulligan

Roth IRA conversions come with an escape hatch. If you converted $50,000 but the Roth is now worth $35,000, you would still owe tax on the $50,000. Undoing the conversion—known as a recharacterization—wipes away the tax bill. Recharacterizing can also pay off if you can’t afford the tax bill or the conversion unexpectedly pushes you into a higher tax bracket.
You have until Oct. 15 of the following year to undo a conversion. So a 2013 Roth IRA conversion can be reversed up until October 15, 2014.
But note: While you can now convert a traditional 401k to a Roth 401k within a company plan, an in-plan conversion cannot be reversed.

10. A Roth can benefit heirs

Unlike traditional IRA — which you must begin to tap at age 70 1/2 — Roth IRAs have no minimum distribution requirements for the original owner. So, if you don’t need the money, it can grow in the tax shelter until your death. If your spouse inherits the account, he or she never has to make withdrawals, either.
If the Roth IRA passes to a nonspouse heir, the rules change. They are required to take minimum distributions starting the year following the death of the original owner, or empty the account within five years of the account owner’s death. Distributions, though, will still be tax-free and can be stretched over the beneficiary’s life expectancy. A young child or grandchild who inherits a Roth has the potential for decades of tax-free growth.
Wealthy taxpayers may find another estate-planning advantage to a Roth conversion. The taxes paid on a Roth conversion will be removed from their taxable estate.
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Posted on 10:27 AM | Categories:

The End of the Traditional IRA As You Know It

  for the Motley Fool writes: With all the varying eligibility and tax-deduction rules out there, saving for retirement is often a confusing prospect. Now, after three years of work, Rep. Dave Camp (R-Mich.), the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, has released his proposal for tax reform, and one of his plans for simplifying retirement savings is to prohibit new contributions to traditional IRAs and make the Roth the only IRA option.
Let's look at what the Camp Plan's proposals might mean for you.
The end of the traditional IRA?
Individual retirement accounts currently come in two flavors: traditional and Roth. Traditional IRAs allow your investments to grow tax-free until you withdraw them. Withdrawals are taxed as regular income, and contributions can be tax-deductible, depending on whether you have a retirement plan through work and on your income level.
Roth IRAs also let your investments grow tax-free, but contributions are never tax-deductible, and you can't use a Roth if your income is above a certain level. The benefit of a Roth is thatwithdrawals are tax-free as long as you meet certain requirements.
The Camp Plan would end new contributions to traditional IRAs and open up Roths to everyone. The reasoning is twofold: First, having two types of IRAs with lots of rules and complexities creates confusion and causes some people not to save at all. Second, many people with traditional IRAs don't realize they'll owe taxes when they begin their distributions, which means people end up having less for retirement than they thought they would.
The bottom line
Although people would lose a tool for retirement planning under the Camp Plan, a default option to the Roth IRA would simplify everybody's taxes and encourage more Americans to save for retirement. That's a winning option for anyone who's trying to ensure a comfortable retirement.
COMMENTS
  • On March 02, 2014, at 1:19 PM, NanaKnows wrote:
    Without a traditional IRA option, how would one rollover a 401(k) plan?
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 1:31 PM, ajadeheart wrote:
    Introduced by a Republican. Sounds like an elimination of a "tax break" to the middle-class in America. Are we too stupid to figure out how to reduce our taxes in retirement. Lucky if the majority of seniors live 20 years into retirement and for 38 yrs of working life, (amount of years needed in SS calculation of benefits for full benefits, it's complicated there is more; but if middle class "me" can figure it out on a spread sheet, you can too) we have no tax breaks. Why not increase the capital gains tax on incomes over $250K that would bring in tax revenue from individuals and corporations. At the current rate of 15% on capital gains, it has not increased employment in this country as every Republican wants to tout as a reason to reduce capital gains tax. We need to tax at a 32% rate on capital gains for everyone. Capital gains is money making money not money being earned from employment. Will something like this bill pass because it is a Republican majority controlling the houses right now? Well, the President does have veto power.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 2:27 PM, TMFDanDzombak wrote:
    @NanaKnows You would still be able to roll over a traditional 401k to a traditional IRA. When you went to contribute to your IRA however you could only contribute to Roth IRAs
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 2:47 PM, steve363 wrote:
    The author claims that the bottom line is that more Americans would be encouraged to save.
    How would REMOVING an option for retirement savings encourage MORE retirement savings? Not a very smart comment.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 3:31 PM, TMFDanDzombak wrote:
    @steve363 It's called the paradox of choice, the more options the less likely someone is to make a choice.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 3:46 PM, ferdiefor wrote:
    Long term you are better off with ROTH. The reason is the possibility exists for people to actually run their traditional IRAs down to zero meaning they truly outlive their retirement assets.
    I changed to ROTH when the financial crisis smashed my IRA so that I could get it done at minimal tax cost. My ROTH has since more than doubled back to recovery and then some.... but I now have the ROTH advantages.
    I have clients that are starting to have to take mandatory high five figure and six figure distributions from traditional IRAs. Now you may not sympathize with their situation but even they are afraid of running out of assets should they outlive their life expectancy.
    Once you get past the initial period of adjustment there is no difference to funding a ROTH because you would have made the lifestyle adjustments required because contributions are with after-tax dollars.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 5:43 PM, SomeDude wrote:
    If you are in a lower tax bracket when you retire, because you didn't save enough to keep your income level the same, the traditional IRA can be the better tax choice. Of course, that is a gamble on what future tax rates will be, where the roth eliminates the future higher rates issue. This seems more like a stealth tax increase than anything else, because it will increase current tax revenues if the traditional option is eliminated. A lot of people fund traditional IRA's to decrease their current tax liability, so taking away that option eliminates the ability to decrease current taxes with a contribution. I would think that will lead to less total contributions to IRAs.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 6:09 PM, dbtuner wrote:
    Roth's are a scam. The government will change the rules on them in the future. So you will pay tax on the money you invested and when you take it out. Just watch.
    Take the tax break now.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 7:07 PM, Mentallect wrote:
    Clearly the GOP wants middleclass people to pay taxes now rather than later. If middle and low-middleclass people delay paying taxes using the Traditional IRA, then the Top 1% will have to actually pay their share of taxes today instead of having all those loopholes allow them to pay 0% taxes as many do now.
    The Traditional IRA is good for the middleclass, but not so good for the rich. I want to see the GOP introduce a bill which helps non-Rich people for once.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 9:08 PM, AlanMichael wrote:
    As a tax accountant of 20 year I can opine with confidence when I say that taking the tax deduction out of IRA contributions will NOT encourage more retirement savings. This is political posturing, nothing more.
  • Report this CommentOn March 02, 2014, at 9:17 PM, ddewar2k wrote:
    Wouldn't forcing those who are currently in a tradition IRA to contribute to a ROTH IRA complicate their tax situation. When they retire they would need to distinguish withdrawals from contributions to a tax deferred IRA versus a non-tax deferred ROTH IRA.
    A great data point to add to this article would be the growth of a ROTH IRA versus a Traditional IRA. I would think since the ROTH IRA is not tax deferred the ROTH contribution would be less and therefore the growth due to compounding interest is less.
  • Report this CommentOn March 03, 2014, at 12:32 AM, jimdandy wrote:
    @ajadeheart- you're blaming Republicans for something that isn't really their fault. I worked for a very wealthy family owned business for 22 years. I was not part of the family that owned the business but rather one of the managers. During every election, the owners would try to sway/persuade the employees to vote Democratic for which I was extremely surprised. I asked the son of the owner why he voted Democratic instead of the Republican ticket and his answer was quote " because I am not going to pay any GD taxes, that's why!" I started watching the very wealthiest of people and they all are Democrats as well. They don't pay taxes either. The Democrats want you to believe that they are for the so called "working man" but most have never even held a job! Get real folks. Politicians are out for themselves period. We have to get in their face and let them know that they are one termers if they don't serve the people and not themselves. Look at the current President. He is serving no-one but himself. Think about that for a while....
  • Report this CommentOn March 03, 2014, at 7:59 AM, AHuston wrote:
    So is it really a paradox of choice, that keeps people from investing? Only having one option (the Roth IRA), instead of two options (a Roth or a traditional IRA) will eliminate choice. One would have no choice but to invest in a Roth IRA. We have now eliminated the only choice people had if traditional IRAs better suit their economic situation and retirement goals. Shows how short sighted the Camp proposal is. Bring in more tax dollars now and be short of tax dollars in the future. Kick the can down the road and let your grandchildren pay for it.
Posted on 10:27 AM | Categories: