Monday, May 19, 2014

Tax Information for Students Who Take a Summer Job

Many students take a job in the summer after school lets out. If it’s your first job it gives you a chance to learn about the working world. That includes taxes we pay to support the place where we live, our state and our nation. Here are eight things that students who take a summer job should know about taxes:

1. Don’t be surprised when your employer withholds taxes from your paychecks. That’s how you pay your taxes when you’re an employee. If you’re self-employed, you may have to pay estimated taxes directly to the IRS on certain dates during the year. This is how our pay-as-you-go tax system works.

2. As a new employee, you’ll need to fill out a Form W-4, Employee’s Withholding Allowance Certificate. Your employer will use it to figure how much federal income tax to withhold from your pay. The IRS Withholding Calculator tool on IRS.gov can help you fill out the form.

3. Keep in mind that all tip income is taxable. If you get tips, you must keep a daily log so you can report them. You must report $20 or more in cash tips in any one month to your employer. And you must report all of your yearly tips on your tax return.

4. Money you earn doing work for others is taxable. Some work you do may count as self-employment. This can include jobs like baby-sitting and lawn mowing. Keep good records of expenses related to your work. You may be able to deduct (subtract) those costs from your income on your tax return. A deduction may help lower your taxes.

5. If you’re in ROTC, your active duty pay, such as pay you get for summer camp, is taxable. A subsistence allowance you get while in advanced training isn’t taxable.

6. You may not earn enough from your summer job to owe income tax. But your employer usually must withhold Social Security and Medicare taxes from your pay. If you’re self-employed, you may have to pay them yourself. They count toward your coverage under the Social Security system.

7. If you’re a newspaper carrier or distributor, special rules apply. If you meet certain conditions, you’re considered self-employed. If you don’t meet those conditions and are under age 18, you are usually exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes.

8. You may not earn enough money from your summer job to be required to file a tax return. Even if that’s true, you may still want to file. For example, if your employer withheld income tax from your pay, you’ll have to file a return to get your taxes refunded. You can prepare and e-file your tax return for free using IRS Free File. It’s available exclusively on IRS.gov.
Visit IRS.gov for more about the tax rules for students.
Posted on 4:05 PM | Categories:

Intuit (INTU) to Release Quarterly Earnings on Tuesday May 20, 2014

Max Byerly for TicketReport.com writes: Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) is scheduled to be announcing its Q314 earnings results on Tuesday, May 20th. Analysts expect the company to announce earnings of $3.50 per share and revenue of $2.38 billion for the quarter. Intuit has set its Q3 guidance at $3.46 to $3.51 EPS and its FY14 guidance at $3.52 to $3.60 EPS.Investors that wish to listen to the company’s conference call can do so using this link
 
Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) last announced its earnings results on Thursday, February 20th. The company reported $0.02 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, missing the 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. On average, analysts expect Intuit to post $3.58 EPS for the current fiscal year and $4.00 EPS for the next fiscal year. 

Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU) opened at 75.51 on Monday. Intuit has a 52 week low of $56.74 and a 52 week high of $82.40. The stock’s 50-day moving average is $75.29 and its 200-day moving average is $75.24. The company has a market cap of $21.393 billion and a P/E ratio of 28.85.  INTU has been the subject of a number of recent research reports. Analysts at Evercore Partners upgraded shares of Intuit from an “underweight” rating to an “equal weight” rating in a research note on Friday. They now have a $72.00 price target on the stock, up previously from $62.00. One research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, eight have issued a hold rating, four have assigned a buy rating and one has assigned a strong buy rating to the company. Intuit has an average rating of “Hold” and an average target price of $75.91.
Intuit Inc (NASDAQ:INTU) is a provider of business and financial management solutions for small businesses, consumers, accounting professionals and financial institutions.

Posted on 7:29 AM | Categories:

Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

 Over at Bogleheads we came across the following discussion:   Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

   
        
           
Postby wang.zhen » Sun May 18, 2014 3:32 pm
                       
Hi,

I'm a newbie in personal investment.
Recently I'm considering to create a Vanguard investment account.

There are some recommendations on fund selections following the three fund portfolio.

I get it that -- to build up a three fund portfolio, i can use either mutual funds or ETFs.

However, I do not really understand the differences between ETF and mutual funds.
It seems that ETF are more tax friendly than mutual funds according to the following link.

There gotta be some "down-side" for ETFs, right? Otherwise why not everybody selects ETFs?

Any suggestions on how to select between ETFs and mutual funds?

Thanks very much for your time and your help.

Regards

Zhen
   
__________________________________________________________
       
       
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby ogd » Sun May 18, 2014 4:10 pm
                       
Zhen: see our Wiki on the topic, including the Vanguard specific section: http://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/ETFs_vs_mutual_funds
                   
                   
               
                ogd            
Posts: 1759
Joined: 15 Jun 2012
           
       
   
       
       
     __________________________________________________________  
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby wang.zhen » Sun May 18, 2014 4:24 pm
                       
Thanks:)
                   
                   
                wang.zhen            
Posts: 6
Joined: 18 May 2014
           
       
   
       
      __________________________________________________________ 
       
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby retiredjg » Sun May 18, 2014 4:41 pm
                       
From your link....

ETFs. The lower cost alternative to mutual funds is also far more tax efficient. With most ETFs still tracking indexes, portfolio turnover is limited, as are capital gain distributions to investors (now taxed at a higher 20 percent rate for investors with more than $400,000 in annual income).
Taxes on gains in ETFs are due when investors sell the funds, giving them a significant tax-deferral advantage over mutual funds. "Investors don't have to incur the huge tax liabilities that mutual funds can cause," Edelman said.
With the explosion of new offerings in recent years, ETFs now give exposure to a huge variety of markets and investments. Long a favorite of financial advisers who like the low-management fees, their better tax profile versus mutual funds could make them even more popular.

There are times when information is true, but not accurate. This seems to be one of those times. ETFs are tax-efficient because they (mostly) follow an index. This author is comparing ETFs to actively managed mutual funds, not index mutual funds. So what he said is true. But if an ETF is compared to a mutual fund following the same index, there is little to no difference in tax-efficiency.

Some people like ETFs. Others don't. They are a little more trouble, but some people think that being able to sell an ETF during the trading day (as opposed to after hours using the day's closing value) is worth it.

My suggestion is to use mutual funds unless you have a specific reason to prefer ETFs.
           
       
                   
                retiredjg            
Posts: 16326
Joined: 10 Jan 2008
           
       
   
       
      __________________________________________________________ 
       
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby Bracket » Sun May 18, 2014 5:59 pm
                       
My understanding is that the real reason ETFs are more tax efficient than mutual funds is that ETFs can "give away" their appreciated shares of stock with the lowest cost basis (and thus largest gain) when "creation units" are redeemed. They therefore avoid passing on the capital gains, and resulting taxes, to you and I when this occurs. In contrast, a "regular" non-ETF mutual fund cannot give the appreciated shares away "in kind", but must sell them, realize a capital gain, and pass that gain on, along with the taxes, to you and I.

I think the article missed that whole point and vastly oversimplified the reasons for the tax efficiency of ETFs. Any low turnover index fund or ETF could be tax efficient, but it is the unique ETF structure that makes ETFs even more so.

Also, a caveat, this does not apply to vanguarrd ETFs because they are a share class of the equivalent mutual fund, and so there is I believe no difference in tax efficiency between say the vanguard s&p500 ETF and the vanguard S&P 500 mutual fund.
                   
                   
                Bracket            
Posts: 138
Joined: 10 Mar 2013
           
       
   
       
       
    __________________________________________________________   
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby steve_14 » Sun May 18, 2014 8:03 pm
                       
The jury is still out on how much the theoretical tax efficiency advantage of true ETFs, if any, will help investors.

For example, the Vanguard Total Stock Market Fund, inception: 4/27/92, has unrealized cap gains as per M* of 32.3%. SPY, the S&P 500 ETF, inception 1/22/93, has unrealized gains of 7%. Both fund have increased six fold from inception, so both managed to have neutralized most of their gains so far. This may not be true over the next few decades if investors draw down their positions instead of building them up, however.
                   
                   
                steve_14            
Posts: 862
Joined: 20 Jun 2012
           
       
   
   __________________________________________________________                    
                       

Re: Is ETF more tax-advantaged than mutual funds?

           
Postby placeholder » Mon May 19, 2014 2:22 am
                       
As I understand it the Vanguard funds use the ETF shares to reduce capital gains distributions.
                   
                   
                placeholder            
Posts: 1579
Joined: 6 Aug 2013
Posted on 7:29 AM | Categories: