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11-27-2014, 05:19 PM
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#21
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 349
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sengsational
Thanks, all, for the enlightenment. Except I'm not quite enlightened yet.
Say I have -10K carry over loss (certainly would have liked to avoid this and not proud of it!!). Then I sell something and get a 5K gain. Schedule D has me put -5K on line 15 and then on line 21 I put -3K (the smaller of -5K and -3K).
So where does the 0% LTGC rate come in?
Sorry if this is a "dumb question"!
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In the particular case you mentioned, you don't have any LTGC. Your 10K loss will offset your 5K gain. It will leave you with 5K loss. Of that, 3K can be deducted against ordinary income. However you'll have a 2K carryover loss to be used the following year.
0% LTGC rate comes in play when you're in the 10% or 15% tax bracket for ordinary income and the gains you harvest don't bump you over the 15% tax bracket.
The OP article is fairly complex, but it's well written. I suggest reading it again slowly and looking up the terms in a glossary of tax terms so that you understand what they mean.
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11-27-2014, 05:47 PM
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#22
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Moderator
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 10,656
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aim-high
The OP article is fairly complex, but it's well written. I suggest reading it again slowly and looking up the terms in a glossary of tax terms so that you understand what they mean.
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You caught me! Were you looking over my shoulder as I skimmed over the article and was flummoxed by the terminology.
Thanks for the clarification. The bottom line is that I need to burn through my carry-over losses in order to see the "0% LTCG" rate. Thats sort of what I meant by "not interesting", in my earlier post. But it could become interesting if I could create gains larger than my carry-over. But most of my investable assets are in "tax advantaged" accounts, so not a whole lot of CG harvesting to be done in my case.
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11-27-2014, 07:23 PM
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#23
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: West of the Mississippi
Posts: 17,173
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Interesting.
__________________
Comparison is the thief of joy
The worst decisions are usually made in times of anger and impatience.
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11-27-2014, 08:08 PM
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#24
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 3,594
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sengsational
Thanks for the clarification. The bottom line is that I need to burn through my carry-over losses in order to see the "0% LTCG" rate. Thats sort of what I meant by "not interesting", in my earlier post. But it could become interesting if I could create gains larger than my carry-over. But most of my investable assets are in "tax advantaged" accounts, so not a whole lot of CG harvesting to be done in my case.
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I had the same reaction when I began reading this thread. I have a large carry-over loss that I thought would prevent me from exploiting any maneuvers when I am in a 0% LTCG bracket. I had done pro-forma returns with my tax software to look at this and it always went to the carry-over loss first rather than exploit the 0% LTCG bracket. Perhaps this is just a programming decision on the part of the software I used, but I assumed that it was actually a requirement of the tax law.
If anyone believe that you can execute sales of securities with LTCG gains while you are in the 0% bracket without first consuming your carry-over losses I would like to know more about this.
-gauss
p.s. My carry-over loss was not necessarily the result of bad investments such as Ha suggests with his car depreciation example.
In my case I bought high, then the market corrected. I sold before the end of the year to book the loss than repurchased the shares after 30 days to reestablish my position in the security.
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11-27-2014, 08:46 PM
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#25
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gauss
I had done pro-forma returns with my tax software to look at this and it always went to the carry-over loss first rather than exploit the 0% LTCG bracket. Perhaps this is just a programming decision on the part of the software I used, but I assumed that it was actually a requirement of the tax law.
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Your assumption is correct - newly realized gains are subtracted from carryover losses before taxes are assessed. That makes it downright counterproductive to realize new gains before the carryover loss is exhausted. You end up worse off than if you let the unrealized gains sit untouched - you have used up a portion of your carryover losses and can expect to have fewer years of the $3,000 deduction from ordinary income.
That is the reason I recommended in my earlier post that taxpayers with carryover losses make Roth conversions their top priority. Doing Roth conversions allows one to make full use of the 15% tax bracket without wasting future tax deductions.
I was in this very situation after 2008. I had roughly nine years of carryover losses and tried as hard as I could to stretch it as long as I could, but it only took three years to completely use up the carryover losses because of all the gains in my taxable accounts. The quick stock market recovery helped me in a lot of ways, but it really screwed up my tax planning because I wasn't able to get enough money into my Roth IRA quickly enough. Instead of getting about $27,000 in tax deductions, I had to be satisfied with $9,000.
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11-27-2014, 11:44 PM
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#26
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Hooverville
Posts: 22,983
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gauss
p.s. My carry-over loss was not necessarily the result of bad investments such as Ha suggests with his car depreciation example.
In my case I bought high, then the market corrected. I sold before the end of the year to book the loss than repurchased the shares after 30 days to reestablish my position in the security.
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I didn't really mean to suggest it was the result of bad investing. One takes these losses is a tax-strategic decision. Still, shouldn't they have run off fairly soon after? I compare it to a non-taxable account. If you buy something, and it goes down, you can decide that it was bad buy, or that it was a good buy but the timing was bad, or it was good and the timing was good but Fortuna was not with you. If you still like it as much as before, you keep it, since there is taxation to consider. But no mater how you look at it, your position would not ordinarily seem as good as it might have been had the stock you bought not gone down.
If you sell ABC Corp at a loss, and then buy it back at the same price in an IRA you have spun some wheels and lost some money. If you do the same thing in a taxable account, you get a tax write-off, and you new shares have a lower basis than before, which if you sell them under the same tax regime will cause you to pay more capital gains tax than you would have had you kept and sold the original shares after they had come back into the same gain territory. But you have gotten a time value of money advantage, so it is usually worth the trouble. I do this regularly, but I also consider it getting some help after I had made what seems certainly to have been a suboptimal purchase decision.
Ha
__________________
"As a general rule, the more dangerous or inappropriate a conversation, the more interesting it is."-Scott Adams
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11-28-2014, 05:27 AM
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#27
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 4,337
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This article does a good job of explaining the benefits of LTCG and ordinary income manipulation. After 2015, I'll be able to have whatever income I want after a bit of small pensions. I had planned on maximizing Roth conversions until age 70 to suppress RMDs. I'll revisit this assumption and balance this with the potential for taking capital gains at 0% or 15%. Roth conversions can still be done after 70 1/2 but they need to be over and above the RMD.
__________________
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane -- Marcus Aurelius
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11-28-2014, 05:41 AM
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#28
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 13,203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by haha
Unless I am misunderstanding something, isn't being pleased by huge losses that seems to stretch on forever similar to being pleased about buying an expensive car to depreciate in your real or phony business?
In any case, the tax effect represents money you have already burned.
Ha
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You must've missed the thread this summer where someone called the cap loss carryover a "yummy free lunch".
http://www.early-retirement.org/foru...ml#post1472729
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11-28-2014, 07:07 AM
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#29
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
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Making vague claims like getting a "yummy free lunch" without running the numbers to see what's really happening doesn't impress me much. Yet it's a fact that tax loss harvesting can produce a profit out of thin air, using assumptions that were definitely true for me starting in 2008 and are likely to be true for many other investors as well. One needs to assume that the loss is temporary - that stock prices will sooner or later rebound, just as they always have in the past - and that the investor will use the time until the rebound to get as much money into a Roth IRA as possible.
As a simple proof of concept, consider a taxable investment with a $3,000 unrealized loss at the end of one year that subsequently gains $3,000 the next year. The investor who sits on his hands and does nothing gets no tax deduction in the first year and sits at the end of the second year with a taxable investment that has no net gain or loss. Contrast this with the investor who realizes the loss before the end of the first year, gets the $3,000 tax deduction and uses the money raised by the tax loss harvesting to fund next year's Roth IRA contribution, purchasing similar securities to what he sold at a loss. By the end of the second year, he has a $3,000 profit, but it's all inside the Roth so there is no tax liability at all. In comparison to the investor who did nothing and comes out exactly even in both taxes due and portfolio value, the investor who harvested the loss has the same portfolio value, but has profited by the $3,000 tax deduction, worth $450 in the 15% tax bracket.
I used this strategy of aggressively transferring assets from my taxable accounts into my Roth accounts starting in 2009, getting a subsidy in the form of larger income tax returns for three years. It's over now, but it was fun while it lasted. I now have only a small amount remaining in the taxable part of my portfolio, so the same situation is unlikely to repeat for me on the same scale, even if we have another meltdown like 2008.
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11-28-2014, 07:32 AM
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#30
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Incidentally, "aggressively transferring assets from my taxable accounts into my Roth accounts" means fully utilizing Roth IRA contributions, and also maxing out Roth contributions to 457 plans. Doing this for both myself and DW allowed us to get over $50k in new money every year into Roth accounts. For those people who are still working but don't have a Roth option in their 401k, it would take a lot longer to transfer assets from taxable to Roth.
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11-28-2014, 09:27 AM
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#31
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 13,203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by karluk
As a simple proof of concept, consider a taxable investment with a $3,000 unrealized loss at the end of one year that subsequently gains $3,000 the next year. The investor who sits on his hands and does nothing gets no tax deduction in the first year and sits at the end of the second year with a taxable investment that has no net gain or loss. Contrast this with the investor who realizes the loss before the end of the first year, gets the $3,000 tax deduction and uses the money raised by the tax loss harvesting to fund next year's Roth IRA contribution, purchasing similar securities to what he sold at a loss. By the end of the second year, he has a $3,000 profit, but it's all inside the Roth so there is no tax liability at all. In comparison to the investor who did nothing and comes out exactly even in both taxes due and portfolio value, the investor who harvested the loss has the same portfolio value, but has profited by the $3,000 tax deduction, worth $450 in the 15% tax bracket.
I used this strategy of aggressively transferring assets from my taxable accounts into my Roth accounts starting in 2009, getting a subsidy in the form of larger income tax returns for three years. It's over now, but it was fun while it lasted. I now have only a small amount remaining in the taxable part of my portfolio, so the same situation is unlikely to repeat for me on the same scale, even if we have another meltdown like 2008.
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Are you saying that if you don't have a loss to harvest, you don't fund your Roth? Most people would find a way to fund their Roth either way, making them separate events.
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11-28-2014, 10:03 AM
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#32
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
Are you saying that if you don't have a loss to harvest, you don't fund your Roth? Most people would find a way to fund their Roth either way, making them separate events.
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Not at all. I'm saying that if I didn't have losses in my taxable accounts, it would have incurred a prohibitively expensive tax bill to put hundreds of thousands of dollars into Roth accounts while cashing in taxable investments for living expenses. We were able to do so while remaining in the 15% tax bracket, and have now enjoyed some five years of tax free growth of the six figure amount I added to the Roth when I had a chance.
Doing this in, say, 2007, when I had massive unrealized gains in my taxable accounts would have quickly put us into the 25% tax bracket. Back then I contented myself with maxing out the relatively small contribution limits of our Roth IRAs, just as many others do. That sort of small potatoes move helped, but wasn't the life changing financial event that the post 2008 moves turned out to be.
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11-28-2014, 10:26 AM
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#33
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 13,203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by karluk
Not at all. I'm saying that if I didn't have losses in my taxable accounts, it would have incurred a prohibitively expensive tax bill to put hundreds of thousands of dollars into Roth accounts while cashing in taxable investments for living expenses. We were able to do so while remaining in the 15% tax bracket, and have now enjoyed some five years of tax free growth of the six figure amount I added to the Roth when I had a chance.
Doing this in, say, 2007, when I had massive unrealized gains in my taxable accounts would have quickly put us into the 25% tax bracket. Back then I contented myself with maxing out the relatively small contribution limits of our Roth IRAs, just as many others do. That sort of small potatoes move helped, but wasn't the life changing financial event that the post 2008 moves turned out to be.
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I don't understand. Did you somehow get around the contribution limits of the Roth IRA by taking capital gains losses? I don't see how you do this.
Also, I don't understand how taking capital gains push you into the 25% tax bracket, unless they are short term gains.
I do understand that liquidating holdings with capital losses gives you some money to live off of. Still, the ideal is to make money on your investments, and deal with a % of it being taxed. If you do lose money on some investments, there's some consolation in that you can reduce the losses a bit with good tax management.
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11-28-2014, 10:44 AM
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#34
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
I don't understand. Did you somehow get around the contribution limits of the Roth IRA by taking capital gains losses? I don't see how you do this.
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Please read my earlier post about maxing out both Roth IRAs and Roth contributions to 457 plans.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
Also, I don't understand how taking capital gains push you into the 25% tax bracket, unless they are short term gains.
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Isn't that a big piece of what is covered in the Kitces article? Capital gains are added to AGI, even if they wind up being taxed at 0%. Realizing large enough gains will push you into the 25% tax bracket, at which point part of your gains will start being taxed at the 15% rate that is applicable to tax payers who stray into the 25% bracket.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
I do understand that liquidating holdings with capital losses gives you some money to live off of. Still, the ideal is to make money on your investments, and deal with a % of it being taxed. If you do lose money on some investments, there's some consolation in that you can reduce the losses a bit with good tax management.
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The ideal is never to lose money, true. Whether it's attainable by investors in the real world it more debatable. I know from other threads that you are more willing to try market timing than I am and that you were very successful in navigating through the crash of 2008. Good for you, but I was not so lucky. I had large capital gains turn into large capital losses within the space of a year. Given the unfortunate reality of my situation at the time, I did succeed in finding a way to turn the tax laws to my advantage and profit from the subsequent rebound in a HIGHLY tax free manner.
Good tax management is not only applicable to those who hold investments in taxable accounts. It still applies to me, even though almost all of my portfolio is either Roth or tax deferred. My current goal is to look into ways to get future losses happen more in my tax deferred accounts than my Roth. I recently started a thread about "market timing using asset location" on the subject, but so far haven't seen any strategy that will work without me making a good prediction of future stock market performance.
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11-28-2014, 11:13 AM
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#35
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 13,203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by karluk
Please read my earlier post about maxing out both Roth IRAs and Roth contributions to 457 plans.
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OK, I missed that. 457 was never available to me.
Quote:
Isn't that a big piece of what is covered in the Kitces article? Capital gains are added to AGI, even if they wind up being taxed at 0%. Realizing large enough gains will push you into the 25% tax bracket, at which point part of your gains will start being taxed at the 15% rate that is applicable to tax payers who stray into the 25% bracket.
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No, you misread that. The only mention I see of the 25% bracket is example 3, when regular income + conversions pushed the sample person into the 25% bracket, and all cap gains on top of that were taxed at 15%. Cap gains are "added" to AGI only to the extent of pushing income over the top of the 15% bracket such that some or all capital gains are taxed. It won't actually push other income from the 15% bracket to the 25% bracket. As I almost always say when this topic comes up, it is worth understanding how the Qualified Dividend and Capital Gains Worksheet on your taxes works.
Quote:
The ideal is never to lose money, true. Whether it's attainable by investors in the real world it more debatable. I know from other threads that you are more willing to try market timing than I am and that you were very successful in navigating through the crash of 2008. Good for you, but I was not so lucky.
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You must have me confused with someone else. I am not a market timer at all. I've commented that I'm not against market timing as I know some people make it work, but I'm not one of them. I lost a lot in the dotcom bubble burst in 2001, and since then gradually changed my strategy from individual stocks to mostly index funds, and included some bonds, but that was a fundamental change in my plan rather than timing. I stick pretty closely to a consistent age-based AA now.
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11-28-2014, 11:22 AM
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#36
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
No, you misread that.
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No I didn't. There is nothing in my post that is any different than Kitces' example 3 - allow LTCG and other income to push you into the 25% tax bracket and some of your gains will be taxable at 15%. That's what I said, and that's what Kitces' example says.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
You must have me confused with someone else. I am not a market timer at all. I've commented that I'm not against market timing as I know some people make it work, but I'm not one of them. I lost a lot in the dotcom bubble burst in 2001, and since then gradually changed my strategy from individual stocks to mostly index funds, and included some bonds, but that was a fundamental change in my plan rather than timing. I stick pretty closely to a consistent age-based AA now.
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Please accept my apologies. I did confuse you with sombody else. I have been posting here long enough to think that I know the other members failry well, but I guess I'm overestimating my ability to associate internet handles with the people and behavior behind them.
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11-28-2014, 11:37 AM
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#37
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 13,203
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Quote:
Originally Posted by karluk
No I didn't. There is nothing in my post that is any different than Kitces' example 3 - allow LTCG and other income to push you into the 25% tax bracket and some of your gains will be taxable at 15%. That's what I said, and that's what Kitces' example says.
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Read it again. In that example the person was in the 25% bracket with just regular income and conversions. Try out different scenarios with a tax program to see it for yourself, paying attention to the worksheet I mentioned. LTCG will not push you into the 25% bracket.
Quote:
Please accept my apologies. I did confuse you with sombody else. I have been posting here long enough to think that I know the other members failry well, but I guess I'm overestimating my ability to associate internet handles with the people and behavior behind them.
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No problem.
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11-28-2014, 11:54 AM
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#39
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Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Portland
Posts: 4,946
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Even if you are in a low bracket with a 0% capital gains tax rate, there are other advantages to having harvested tax losses. The losses let you offset capital gains to keep recognized income below tax credit thresholds, for example.
For those folks using a tax credit subsidy to help cover the cost of medical insurance, for example, minimizing realized capital gains from the portfolio end-of-year distribution can save them from an unpleasant tax surprise if the gains would otherwise have put them over the threshold for modified adjusted gross income.
Don't forget to consider these items in addition to the basic tax brackets.
Sent from my iPad using Early Retirement Forum
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11-28-2014, 11:55 AM
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#40
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 681
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningBum
LTCG will not push you into the 25% bracket.
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Not true. LTCG will put you in the 25% tax bracket, causing a bump up in the LTCG rate from 0% to 15%. The 0% rate applies only to taxpayers in the 10% and 15% brackets. If you exceed those brackets, some LTCG get taxed at 15%. I would encourage you to run this through tax software yourself, because I do so every year and always get the same result. Last year, for example, my schedule D gains were included in form 1040 on line 13 and were one of the items added together to produce AGI on line 37. But I had carefully calculated what my AGI would be and adjusted my realized LTCG to conform, so I stayed just slightly below the AGI that would have put me into the 25% tax bracket and all of my gains were taxed at 0%.
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