For any of you who may remember the "old" days before the mid 1970s:
There was no such thing as an IRA. Or a 401k. Or a 403b.
If someone wanted to save for retirement, the ideal investment was a "tax-free" annuity. Sold by insurance companies, these things
would earn interest, and as long as the investor never touched the account, the earnings were tax free. The concept of a "deferred retirement"
account with RMDs, penalties, exceptions, etc. as we know today had not yet been created. But if you wanted to save for retirement, this
was the way to do it.
One of my older clients has such an investment. His broker wants to take this tax-free annuity and roll it over into a Roth.
Can he do that?
There was no such thing as an IRA. Or a 401k. Or a 403b.
If someone wanted to save for retirement, the ideal investment was a "tax-free" annuity. Sold by insurance companies, these things
would earn interest, and as long as the investor never touched the account, the earnings were tax free. The concept of a "deferred retirement"
account with RMDs, penalties, exceptions, etc. as we know today had not yet been created. But if you wanted to save for retirement, this
was the way to do it.
One of my older clients has such an investment. His broker wants to take this tax-free annuity and roll it over into a Roth.
Can he do that?
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