Hi all,
In the process of fixing some tax-fail that I recently had, an idea struck me:
The Roth IRA over-contribution penalty is 6% of the over-contributed amount. If you have an over-contribution sitting in the acct at the end of the tax year (first year) and end of a calendar year (subsequent years), you have to pay the penalty.
Doesn't this mean that it is potentially advantageous (i.e., if you're an active trader) to purposely over-contribute? The risk you take is that you're unable to earn 6%+margin (where margin depends on your current tax bracket & your estimated retirement bracket). Also it'd be more useful to someone who's young & is starting out, b/c you could quickly jump-start the amount of money in the Roth, get some earnings going, and then withdraw all over-contributions to stop the penalty.
After that, the earnings stay and you can continue to build on earnings+std contributions.
For example, if you make speculative, short-term plays w/stocks, it could be very advantageous to do this. Like say XYZ has big news coming and you want to gamble 10k. You could contribute 10k to the IRA & buy XYZ. If the news is good & say XYZ doubles, then you have 10k untaxable (i.e., the earned 10k is untaxed & anything you do w/it subsequently within the roth is untaxed) dollars at the cost of $600.
If XYZ fails, you can just withdraw what's left of your 10k from the Roth since you can always remove roiginal contributions penalty-free. If the contribution amt is still too large, as long as you withdraw before the end of the tax year (April 15 + extensions), you will not be liable for over-contribution fees (nor early withdrawal since you lost money). Though the added downside here is that you cannot claim capital losses. Though you can mitigate your capital losses by converting the lossy bits to a traditional IRA, I believe.
Thoughts? I don't plan on doing this or anything like it, but I'm pretty sure the steps are valid b/c the IRS told me so--I had to resovle some over-contribution situations due to previous errors of mine. But I'm unsure of whether there's actually any benefit to be had.
-Eric
In the process of fixing some tax-fail that I recently had, an idea struck me:
The Roth IRA over-contribution penalty is 6% of the over-contributed amount. If you have an over-contribution sitting in the acct at the end of the tax year (first year) and end of a calendar year (subsequent years), you have to pay the penalty.
Doesn't this mean that it is potentially advantageous (i.e., if you're an active trader) to purposely over-contribute? The risk you take is that you're unable to earn 6%+margin (where margin depends on your current tax bracket & your estimated retirement bracket). Also it'd be more useful to someone who's young & is starting out, b/c you could quickly jump-start the amount of money in the Roth, get some earnings going, and then withdraw all over-contributions to stop the penalty.
After that, the earnings stay and you can continue to build on earnings+std contributions.
For example, if you make speculative, short-term plays w/stocks, it could be very advantageous to do this. Like say XYZ has big news coming and you want to gamble 10k. You could contribute 10k to the IRA & buy XYZ. If the news is good & say XYZ doubles, then you have 10k untaxable (i.e., the earned 10k is untaxed & anything you do w/it subsequently within the roth is untaxed) dollars at the cost of $600.
If XYZ fails, you can just withdraw what's left of your 10k from the Roth since you can always remove roiginal contributions penalty-free. If the contribution amt is still too large, as long as you withdraw before the end of the tax year (April 15 + extensions), you will not be liable for over-contribution fees (nor early withdrawal since you lost money). Though the added downside here is that you cannot claim capital losses. Though you can mitigate your capital losses by converting the lossy bits to a traditional IRA, I believe.
Thoughts? I don't plan on doing this or anything like it, but I'm pretty sure the steps are valid b/c the IRS told me so--I had to resovle some over-contribution situations due to previous errors of mine. But I'm unsure of whether there's actually any benefit to be had.
-Eric