I don't think I've seen this proposed anywhere yet, so here goes, let me know what could go wrong.
Suppose you have an IRA balance well into the six-figure range or higher. Further, you have $30K in cash savings on which you'd like to earn more than 0.05% interest or whatever the meager rates currently are.
So, you take a $100K CARES Act coronavirus-related distribution in 2020, and you elect to pay the tax entirely in the first year, let's say $30K. You park the $100K somewhere (more on that) for 3 years, then pay it all back into the IRA. You file the amended 2020 tax return claiming a $30K refund, and the IRS pays you that plus 3% statutory interest per year. In effect, it's like a 3-year savings CD paying 3%, much better than any deal I've seen out there lately and much better than any forecast, given that the Fed intends to keep their rates rates close to zero for the foreseeable future.
This assumes the IRS interest rates won't drop below 3% (they never have in modern history).
One key is where to park the $100K for 3 years. Safest is to put it in a FDIC-insured bank account. But then, if the stock market does well, you've missed out (of course if the stock market tanks, you are that much better off). Or, you could adjust your remaining IRA investments to be more risky, to offset the cash holding. Or, you could just re-invest the $100K back into a regular brokerage account and take your chances. Gains will be taxed at cap gains rates (good), and even if there was say a 50% drop in the market, it is reasonable that you could use up a $50K LT cap loss over 15 years or less, which is much better than having a non-deductible loss in your IRA. (But you would need some short-term financing to restore the lost dollars back into your IRA at the end of 3 years, at least until you get your $30K back).
A lot of trouble for an extra $2,700? Maybe. But again, how much trouble would it be, really? Just a few online transactions.
Suppose you have an IRA balance well into the six-figure range or higher. Further, you have $30K in cash savings on which you'd like to earn more than 0.05% interest or whatever the meager rates currently are.
So, you take a $100K CARES Act coronavirus-related distribution in 2020, and you elect to pay the tax entirely in the first year, let's say $30K. You park the $100K somewhere (more on that) for 3 years, then pay it all back into the IRA. You file the amended 2020 tax return claiming a $30K refund, and the IRS pays you that plus 3% statutory interest per year. In effect, it's like a 3-year savings CD paying 3%, much better than any deal I've seen out there lately and much better than any forecast, given that the Fed intends to keep their rates rates close to zero for the foreseeable future.
This assumes the IRS interest rates won't drop below 3% (they never have in modern history).
One key is where to park the $100K for 3 years. Safest is to put it in a FDIC-insured bank account. But then, if the stock market does well, you've missed out (of course if the stock market tanks, you are that much better off). Or, you could adjust your remaining IRA investments to be more risky, to offset the cash holding. Or, you could just re-invest the $100K back into a regular brokerage account and take your chances. Gains will be taxed at cap gains rates (good), and even if there was say a 50% drop in the market, it is reasonable that you could use up a $50K LT cap loss over 15 years or less, which is much better than having a non-deductible loss in your IRA. (But you would need some short-term financing to restore the lost dollars back into your IRA at the end of 3 years, at least until you get your $30K back).
A lot of trouble for an extra $2,700? Maybe. But again, how much trouble would it be, really? Just a few online transactions.
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