401(k) Plans
by Charles M. O'Melia
I’ve been in and interested in
the stock market so long (one year shy of forty years) I can remember when the
mutual fund pages in my home town paper were just one page! Now it looks like
there are more mutual funds then there are stocks listed on the New York stock
exchange.
I wonder how many billions of investor dollars are supporting
these funds. How many investor dollars are supporting all the brokerage firms?
How many times has 401(k) monies been given to a ‘financial expert’ to manage
after retirement, then three years later the 0,000 is down to 0,000. (Yet, the
financial expert is still driving around in a new Lexus.)
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I could tell
you stories from the people I know, who have retired and aren’t so happy with
these experts, but I bet you know some stories of your own.
Do you know
what you’re going to do with your 401(k) money when you retire? If you are going
to hand it over to a financial expert to manage, see if you can get the names of
some of his/her clients. See if you can call some of the expert’s clients, tell
them what you’re planning to do and ask them if they’re satisfied with the
expert’s performance. Or you could talk to those people you’ve once worked with,
have retired, and went with a financial advisor or planner. Try to get some
reference from a live body that has already been there, rather than just a bunch
of statistics thrown at you by the expert.
Today’s 401(k) plans are
excellent vehicles for saving money and here’s what I like about mine:
I
like the 10 percent contribution being a tax write-off (some plans, sixteen
percent). I can contribute up to 16 percent, but 6 percent would have to be
after-taxed dollars.
I like that the monies made in a 401(k) are
tax-deferred.
I like the company’s 70 to 100 percent company match (it
differs every year with my company) up to 6 percent of my contribution.
I like the option to move my money (every business day, if I wished)
into my company’s stock or an Interest Income fund, Bond fund, Mutual fund or
Index fund, at no cost.
I like the option to roll-over into an
individual IRA account, twice a year, any after-tax and company matched dollars
put into my 401(k), with no penalties or fees, even while I am still employed
with the company. This allows me to select individual stocks and allows the
dividends from those stocks to be rolled-over automatically into more shares of
each company, also at no cost. (However, there are commission fees for the
purchases of the stock. Dividend purchases only are commission-free. In my book
'The Stockopoly Plan' I explain how to purchase stocks commission free.)
I like that the company’s dividends in my IRA (set up by monies from my
401(k) plan) are also tax-deferred and are 85% tax free.
I like knowing
that when my retirement day arrives, I’ll already have an individual IRA set up
to move the rest of the 401(k) monies into, with twelve stocks already chosen,
owned and proven to provide reliable ever-increasing dividend income. (The
companies owned all have a history of raising their dividends every year.)
I like the free 1% the company gives me, just for being in the 401(k)
plan.
I like the option to borrow money from my 401(k) plan, pay a low
interest rate on the loan and know that the interest rate I’m paying on the loan
goes to me (if I were paying a credit card bill of ,000.00 at 18%, I know I have
the option to pay off the high interest credit card loan and pay only 6%
interest (to myself) on the 00.00 loan from my 401(k).
I like knowing
that when I move the rest of my 401(k) monies into my IRA when I retire, I’ll
know about how much income I can reasonably expect in dividend income four times
a month, twelve months a year (all twelve stocks have staggered dividend pay-out
dates, providing cash dividends every week of the year).
The companies
chosen in my IRA, with their history of raising dividends every year, will
provide the comfortable, worry-free income which I believe investing should be
all about.
My advice on 401(k) plans is to talk to an expert from the
firm your 401(k) monies are with and find out what options are available to you
and/or what your company allows. My point was simply to inform you that you may
not be restricted to just putting your money into a Mutual fund or your
company’s stock. You can transfer monies from your 401(k) to an individual IRA
(Tradition, Roll-Over or Roth), at no fee and build your own Mutual fund. (I
have been doing this in my 401(k) plan for years while still employed with my
company.) If those companies you choose in your IRA have a dividend reinvestment
plan you can request to have the dividends reinvested back into the stock each
quarter. And this would be done for you, commission-free.
Charles M. O'Melia may be contacted at www.thestockopolyplan.com
chassmo99@yahoo.com. Click
here to view more of his articles. Charles M. O’Melia is an individual
investor with almost 40 years of experience and passion for the stock market.
The author of the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan - Investing for Retirement’,
published by American Book Publishing. The Book can be purchased at: pdbookstore.com
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