Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Saner Savings

Forbes has a recent article, Seven Steps to Saner Savings, that lays out the different ways an individual can save for retirement.

There's little question as to if one wants to save, it's a matter of in what account?

    "Most investors ignore the asset-location issue. They fail to recognize the significant impact of placing the right assets in the right buckets," says John Nersesian of Nuveen Investments' Wealth Management Services. General advice: Use taxable accounts to hold individual stocks (these present better opportunities for loss harvesting) and index funds or exchange-traded index funds that don't throw off much taxable income. Put your assets with the highest growth potential in a Roth. Taxable bonds and REITs belong in a pretax 401(k) or IRA; the income they generate is taxed at ordinary rates anyway, and this way the tax is deferred. Also good for your pretax 401(k) or IRA are assets that generate short-term gains, which are taxed at ordinary income rates--stocks you trade a lot and actively managed small-company or international funds.

Phew! The article breaks down each vehicle, from a 401k, to a Roth, to a taxable account (ie brokerage account such as Sharebuilder). It's one of the shortest guides I've seen, and pretty easy to digest.

1 comment:

asgreen said...

Thanks for passing this article on!