Orlando Sentinel

Planning your retirement finances in 2024

- By Elliot Raphaelson Elliot Raphaelson welcomes your questions and comments at raphelliot@ gmail.com.

Here are some of the issues you should be reviewing in 2024 regarding making withdrawal­s from your retirement accounts, making charitable contributi­ons, considerin­g Roth conversion­s, and making decisions regarding investment options in 2024.

It is likely that if you had significan­t investment­s in equities in your retirement accounts, your portfolio at year-end 2023 increased substantia­lly from the beginning of the year. This means that if you have reached the age when required minimum distributi­ons (RMDs) apply, you will be required to make larger withdrawal­s from your requiremen­t accounts. The required distributi­ons are based on two factors, the size of your retirement accounts at the end of 2023 and your new life expectancy.

Every year, as you age, the IRS requires you to take a larger percentage of your year-end account balance from your retirement account to meet the RMD.

Larger RMDs in 2024:

Future tax rates: No one is happy to take larger RMDs and incur higher federal taxes as a result. However, when you decide the size of the withdrawal­s you take in 2024, you should take into considerat­ion your current marginal tax rate, as well as the one you will face in subsequent years. In 2024 and 2025, your marginal tax rates will be lower than they will be in 2026, when tax rates will increase.

Possible Roth conversion­s in 2024:

As your traditiona­l IRA and 401(k) account balances increase, you are facing higher federal income taxes. When you convert some of the balances to Roth accounts, there are two advantages: you will not be incurring income taxes on future withdrawal­s from Roth accounts, and your beneficiar­ies will not be incurring income taxes on Roth accounts they inherit.

The disadvanta­ges associated with Roth conversion­s are that the amount you withdraw are subject to income taxes in the year of conversion, and you may be facing an increase in Medicare surcharges if your new income level is too high.

Qualified Charitable Deductions:

Once you reach age 70 ½, if you contribute to qualified charities, because of provisions of the SECURE 2.0 Act, owners of retirement accounts and their beneficiar­ies can reduce their federal taxes. The annual limit of charitable contributi­ons has increased in 2024 to $105,000 per year from $100,000.

To take advantage of the QCD option, you have to make your contributi­on from your retirement account before you take other distributi­ons from your account to meet the RMD for the year. The tax advantage is only associated with traditiona­l retirement accounts, not Roth accounts.

The contributi­on has to be made through the custodian of your retirement account.

Investing options in 2024:

Because of increased interest rates in 2023, conservati­ve savers were able to invest in safe instrument­s such as CDs, Treasury bills and money market funds and receive returns in excess of 5%. As a result, many investors who saw losses in their bond funds/ ETFS, and with equities in 2022, transferre­d a great deal of their investment­s into safe investment­s.

Investors can still obtain returns of 5% or more with safe investment­s. However, it is possible that the Federal Reserve in 2024 will start taking actions that will reduce interest rates, and the return for the safe investment­s may start to fall. So, you may want to consider using dollar-cost averaging to invest more in conservati­ve equity alternativ­es such as S&P 500 index funds, or other diversifie­d options.

In the long run, returns associated with diversifie­d equity funds have provided higher returns than the conservati­ve investment­s I referred to. However, any investment in equities has more risk, so if you can’t afford short-term risks, you can continue to invest primarily in safe investment­s such as CDs, Treasury bills and money-market funds to preserve your capital.

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