Graybeard
Full time employment: Posting here.
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2018
- Messages
- 683
Normally I don't ask for investing advice as I think I know how to handle things. This has me stumped because I rarely have taken any distributions from any investments.
I need to take the remainder of my RMD from my Vanguard IRA which is about $23,500. The funds were rolled over from my 401k 15 1/2 years ago and I always reinvested dividends and cap gains. It has grown a lot and of course there is no cost basis so it isn't easy to know but it is a lot.
So I have the choice of taking it from either the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (TSMI) mutual fund or my Settlement Fund. The TSMI's nav is down $25 YTD which is -14.5%. Whichever fund I take it from, the net after taxes will be put into my taxable account's Settlement Fund and assuming we have a recession next year at a lower point, I will move those funds to the TSMI. That would have me selling higher today vs months from now when I'd buy those shares at a hopefully lower nav. The other option is just take it from the Settlement Fund, move it to the taxable Settlement Fund and again when the market is lower next year put the money into the TSMI.
So the result is the distribution will eventually be placed into the TSMI but does it make sense to sell shares that are down 14.5% YTD but still have appreciated a lot over the years or just take the money from the Settlement Fund and don't incur the "loss" as it will just go back into the Settlement Fund?
I realize I can put the distribution from the TSMI into the taxable account's TSMI but I'm looking at the appreciation should the recession occur which seems inevitable.
Thanks!
ETA it just occurred to me, the money in the Settlement Fund came from selling bond mutual funds from the IRA back in May that were also down a lot, maybe 10-12% so maybe it is 6 of 1 and a half a dozen of the other?
I need to take the remainder of my RMD from my Vanguard IRA which is about $23,500. The funds were rolled over from my 401k 15 1/2 years ago and I always reinvested dividends and cap gains. It has grown a lot and of course there is no cost basis so it isn't easy to know but it is a lot.
So I have the choice of taking it from either the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (TSMI) mutual fund or my Settlement Fund. The TSMI's nav is down $25 YTD which is -14.5%. Whichever fund I take it from, the net after taxes will be put into my taxable account's Settlement Fund and assuming we have a recession next year at a lower point, I will move those funds to the TSMI. That would have me selling higher today vs months from now when I'd buy those shares at a hopefully lower nav. The other option is just take it from the Settlement Fund, move it to the taxable Settlement Fund and again when the market is lower next year put the money into the TSMI.
So the result is the distribution will eventually be placed into the TSMI but does it make sense to sell shares that are down 14.5% YTD but still have appreciated a lot over the years or just take the money from the Settlement Fund and don't incur the "loss" as it will just go back into the Settlement Fund?
I realize I can put the distribution from the TSMI into the taxable account's TSMI but I'm looking at the appreciation should the recession occur which seems inevitable.
Thanks!
ETA it just occurred to me, the money in the Settlement Fund came from selling bond mutual funds from the IRA back in May that were also down a lot, maybe 10-12% so maybe it is 6 of 1 and a half a dozen of the other?
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