Foreign.
Speaker BWelcome to Ditch the Suits podcast, where we share insights nobody in the financial services industry wants you to know about.
Speaker BWe're here to help you get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BSo buckle up and welcome to Ditch the Suits.
Speaker AHey, Steve, wouldn't it be great if we lived in a world where we don't have to pay any income taxes?
Speaker BIt'd be awesome.
Speaker AHow many times have you heard, and especially recently, it seems like with the politics, how many times have you heard that rich people don't pay their fair share of income taxes?
Speaker BQuite a bit.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo, you know, one of the things that we're gonna talk about today.
Speaker AWell, all we're gonna talk about today really is taxes.
Speaker ABut four common tax reduction mistakes that people make.
Speaker ABut I bring up the rich people, and I kind of bring up the world with no income taxes because there's tax loopholes, and everybody hears about the loopholes.
Speaker AAnd then there's also tax traps.
Speaker AAnd I think people sometimes get confused between, okay, there's a legal way to do things and then there's a way that kind of looks smart, but in the end doesn't turn out to be so smart.
Speaker AThat would be the trap.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo I want people to think about loopholes are kind of a spot that's created or allowed to legally exist because of the way that the law is written.
Speaker AAnd maybe you could say, boy, those.
Speaker AThose interesting politicians, they just didn't know what they were doing or did they know what they were doing?
Speaker AYou never know.
Speaker ABut the whole thing is, is that there's rules to the game.
Speaker AAnd taxes is a.
Speaker AIs a giant rule book.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AIn the game of life.
Speaker AAnd you've got to figure out how to, you know, handle your money as best as you can within those tax rules.
Speaker AAnd so there's the legal ones.
Speaker AAnd then the tax traps are what happen when people actually don't understand how and when to apply the different tax that other people are trying to use that they call loopholes.
Speaker AAnd instead of finding a loophole, they end up getting smacked by the tax collector, like, in the back of the head.
Speaker ABecause tax is like a boomerang.
Speaker AIf you do it wrong, it's going to come full circle and get you later.
Speaker ASo you could be like, oh, this is so wonderful.
Speaker AI'm at the 0% tax bracket, and I see.
Speaker AI see stuff online all the time.
Speaker AYou can live in the 0% tax bracket, too.
Speaker AWouldn't that be great?
Speaker AYou know, there's not much, you know, the.
Speaker AThe reality of a free lunch is eventually you're going to starve to death.
Speaker AYou know, like, like, you know, it's.
Speaker AI don't know if that.
Speaker AI don't know if that analogy.
Speaker BNo, it worked.
Speaker BI'm with you.
Speaker ADid it kind of work?
Speaker AAll right, so in this episode anyway, we're going to get into the four misconceptions that I think could actually change people's lives if they better understood how these tax things, these tax strategies or loopholes kind of work.
Speaker BYeah, well.
Speaker BAnd I think we've done a great job of talking about there's bad decisions and then there's opportunity loss when you don't understand the rules of the game.
Speaker BAnd this is ditch the suits.
Speaker BI'm Steve Campbell, senior marketing director at Seed Planning Group, along with Travis Moss, who you've been hearing from our CEO at Seed.
Speaker BAnd Seed is a fee only financial planning firm where we have a fiduciary obligation to serve our clients best interests.
Speaker BAnd this show is all about us bringing years of experience, conversations we're having internally to bring to you to really help you get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BLet's take a quick break to hear a word from your sponsor.
Speaker BThis episode is brought to you by Seed Planning Group.
Speaker BIf you're looking for a life giving experience working with a financial planner, then Seed is here for you.
Speaker BSeed is a fee only financial planning firm with a fiduciary obligation to put your best interests first.
Speaker BIf your goal is financial freedom and independence without sales products or really glorified salespeople, then check out Seed Planning Group.
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Speaker Bthat's www.seedpg.com.
Speaker Band, and the best part, you can schedule a free consultation to find out if their fee only planners and their process are right for you.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd so we're recording this.
Speaker AYou can go onto YouTube and you can see us recording this.
Speaker AAnd I just.
Speaker AWe're in our new studios.
Speaker AWe just started the season.
Speaker AI just realized I have a tendency to slouch and it kind of makes me.
Speaker BYeah, it makes you be accountable.
Speaker BAnd Patreon head over to Patreon, head of Patreon, Ditch the suits.
Speaker BThat's where you can watch all these videos.
Speaker AYeah, it was looking like I had a food baby there.
Speaker AAll right, so anyway, back to the taxes.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about, number one, the first thing that we're going to talk about is taking investment losses and when the market's down.
Speaker AThis is, we're recording this in April 2025.
Speaker ASo the market's been really shocked over the last couple weeks with the Trump tariff policy and kind of everything going on with that.
Speaker AAnd so one of the things that we get sometimes is clients calling and saying, hey, should I take some losses?
Speaker ARight now seems like a great time to sell some investments that I've lost money on and get a tax loss.
Speaker ASo I wanted to first discuss the concept of harvesting tax losses or harvesting losses so that you can potentially write them off on your taxes and kind of how that works.
Speaker ASo then we can talk about maybe, you know, whether or not it's a good strategy to employ and if you're going to employ it, what you need to know about it so that you don't get hit in the back of the head with the boomerang.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker ASo first off, the idea of harvesting losses is this idea that in your por, these are for after tax portfolios.
Speaker AThese aren't IRAs or Roth.
Speaker AThese like brokerage accounts, money that you've already paid taxes on.
Speaker ABut when you invest, you get capital gains and you have to pay taxes on dividends and stuff like that.
Speaker ASo the idea is, is that in a diversified portfolio, you're going to have some things that have made you money, and if you sold them, you pay capital gains and then you're going to have some things that lose money.
Speaker AAnd if you sell them, you get a capital loss.
Speaker AAnd so if you're going to have gains, so you sell an investment with a gain, let's say it's $10,000, and you sell an investment with a loss, let's say it's $10,000.
Speaker AThey would negate each other and so you wouldn't pay any taxes.
Speaker ASo you could re invest basically without getting hit by the tax bug.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ASo that sounds like a pretty cool idea.
Speaker AAlthough there's some wrinkles to it.
Speaker AAnd a lot of times people don't understand these wrinkles.
Speaker ASo the first wrinkle is what's called the wash sale rules.
Speaker AAnd this is the IRS kind of knows that people are going to try to game the system like this, right?
Speaker ASo they're saying like, so Steve, pretend you had Apple stock and your Apple stock is down 30%.
Speaker ABut you love Apple stock.
Speaker AAnd so you say, okay, I'm going to sell it and get my tax loss, you know, so I can set that off against other capital gains in my tax return.
Speaker AAnd then I'm gonna buy it right back.
Speaker ACause I really love it.
Speaker ASo I just want the tax loss, but I still wanna own it.
Speaker AThe IRS says no, you're not allowed to do that.
Speaker AIn fact, there's a thing called the wash sale rule, which basically says if you buy substantial, and a funny word here, substantially.
Speaker AAnd we'll get into why it says substantially.
Speaker AIf you buy substantially in the same stock or security within 30 days before or after you take your loss, loss is negated.
Speaker ASo basically the cost basis just carries over.
Speaker ASo you could go through that activity and actually not get any benefit for it.
Speaker AAnd you could potentially really hurt your portfolio by selling something and then buying it back if there's time in between when you sell it and when you buy it.
Speaker ASo there's some rules around whether or not you can even take a loss.
Speaker AJust because you've sold it doesn't mean that you automatically get the loss.
Speaker AThere's also some stuff we're not gonna get into today, but it's with tax planning about whether or not, for instance, if you have more losses than you have gained, you can only use so much of the losses on your tax return.
Speaker AThe rest of it you're going to carry forward.
Speaker ASo there's some other wrinkles in there, and I'm not certain everybody understands those, but we're going to leave those for a different day.
Speaker AI want to talk about some other issues.
Speaker AI mean, this, this one topic, we have four of them to go through today.
Speaker AThis one could probably take a whole episode, you know.
Speaker BDo you want more of Ditch the Suits?
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Speaker BSo visit patreon.com search ditch the suits or head to our show Notes where we got links to our channel.
Speaker BWell, and I think this is one of those things that in financial literacy you hear Wash Sale rule, you go to Google, you go to Investopedia, you go to the Facebook chat groups, and it's a cool idea.
Speaker BSo then people, I think, try to execute it, but the way they execute it is sometimes misaligned.
Speaker BAnd so they're doing, hey, I heard this thing.
Speaker BI can get a savings on taxes.
Speaker BI'm going to sell this stock.
Speaker BAnd if you don't understand kind of what you just walk through, you can really do detrimental harm to yourself.
Speaker BBecause like you said, all of this is a game.
Speaker BAnd you run a money business.
Speaker BIf you're not aware of the rules and the IRS catches you, you can be in, you know, potentially negate things and be in trouble.
Speaker AAnd the hard part is it's not just your account the way that the IRA is going to look at the wash sale rule.
Speaker ASo if you say, well, in that account I did not buy or sell anything within the same 60 days, that was, again, substantially identical.
Speaker ABut it could be in a different account you did, including a retirement account.
Speaker AIt could be other people in your household.
Speaker AIt could be dividend reinvesting.
Speaker BThat's huge.
Speaker BI don't.
Speaker BI don't think people really understand that.
Speaker BIt's complicated.
Speaker BSo there's layers to it.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSome people understand, like, the highest level, and then you do something.
Speaker BBut to really understand that you can't just sell it to get a loss and then buy it over here and hope nobody sees it.
Speaker BAnd when you're also talking about family members, it's like, okay, well, then I'll buy it in another member's account.
Speaker BThe IRS catches all of this.
Speaker AWhat if your other family member buys it?
Speaker AYou don't even know they're buying it.
Speaker ASo your spouse, I mean, what they're really talking about.
Speaker ASame household.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey're talking about control.
Speaker ASo you buy.
Speaker AYou sell one, and your spouse buys one.
Speaker AEven if you don't know what your spouse is doing.
Speaker ANot a good enough excuse.
Speaker AThey could still catch you on that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AEnforcement on this rule is a little bit kind of murky.
Speaker BSure.
Speaker ABecause of all the different accounts and everything.
Speaker ABut you don't want to be the.
Speaker AIf you're a high earner or you have a lot of assets, there's a chance that eventually you're going to get audited by the irs.
Speaker AThese are not things you want kind of lurking around in there where they can come in and say, oh, by the way, you shouldn't have done that.
Speaker AHere's some penalties.
Speaker ASo let's talk about that word, substantially identical stock and security.
Speaker ABecause I think it makes sense.
Speaker AIf you buy Apple stock and sell Apple stock, and I want to buy Apple stock back, it's pretty easy to figure out Apple's Apple.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ABut what if you buy a large cap S&P 500 mutual fund, you sell it and you buy the S&P 500 ETF and you say, hey, they're different securities.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut they're substantially identical.
Speaker AThey're buying the same things.
Speaker AIn fact, there's not really good case law on this, but there is an argument that if you own, let's say recently, the market's been going up and down dramatically, mostly driven by Nvidia and some other tech stocks.
Speaker AWhat if you sold those and bought the index and the movement in the index is primarily due to the movement of those stocks?
Speaker AIs that a substantially similar investment?
Speaker ASo one of the issues here is that you might participate in a tax loss harvesting program or do it yourself.
Speaker AAnd you sell the Vanguard S&P 500 fund and you buy the Fidelity S&P 500 fund.
Speaker ADoesn't count.
Speaker ANot good.
Speaker AEven if you buy it, sell that Vanguard S&P 500 fund and you buy the Vanguard Large Cap Growth Fund, there might be so much overlap in that fund that you could actually blow yourself up with the WASH rule.
Speaker ASo first and foremost, you gotta understand the WASH rule and you gotta keep yourself from getting in trouble with the WASH rule because you could end up getting into tax time and figuring out, oh, I can't take those losses.
Speaker AI thought I had.
Speaker AAnd if you've taken other gains against those losses, now maybe you're stuck with the tax bill and it could just be a shock.
Speaker AI mean, if you have $100,000 gains and aren't playing for it and you're in a certain tax situation, not, you know, I mean, hey, here's, here's a $20,000 tax bill.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd you can tell me if I'm wrong.
Speaker BBut basically what the IRS is trying to make sure is that you, when you have a position that's down, don't sell it and turn around and buy it to now get all the upside.
Speaker BAnd then they don't get the money that should be coming to them.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ABecause, well, what they're saying is you don't get to use a loss on something that you still technically own just because you jumped out of it.
Speaker AIf you jump out of it and jump right back in it, you never really had a break of ownership.
Speaker BAnd you got to wait a period of time.
Speaker BAnd then once that period of time.
Speaker AIs over would be, I think, about your house, you know, or a real estate.
Speaker AIf you own a piece of real estate and, you know real estate, you pay your taxes or get a loss on it when you sell it.
Speaker AWell, imagine if you could just sell it for a day, get the loss, and then jump back into it and still own it.
Speaker AWhat they're saying is you didn't constructively give up control of it.
Speaker ASo we're not giving you a loss.
Speaker AYou never lost control of the asset.
Speaker AYou've essentially maintained it throughout.
Speaker ABut there's better reasons why, or not better reasons, other reasons why I Think that this is maybe a troubling area too.
Speaker AAnd for this we're going to talk about market timing because you might say, well, fine, I just won't buy the same thing.
Speaker ASo if I sell my Apple stock, I'll sit out of it for 30 days after I, I sold it, right?
Speaker AAnd I didn't, I didn't sell it or buy any before I sold it within the 30 days.
Speaker ASo I'm good, I got the 60 day window or 61 day window.
Speaker AI'm fine.
Speaker AAnd so I, I just won't buy it back.
Speaker AWell, I want you to think about this.
Speaker AFrom 1995 to 2024, 50% of the best days in the stock market was when the market was in bear territory.
Speaker AWhat that means is the market's doing crappy and your investments are down.
Speaker AYou're feeling like, oh, I got all these losses, I should sell these.
Speaker AEither they don't work or I want the tax loss.
Speaker A50% of the best days of the stock market since 1995 came when it looked the worst.
Speaker A28% were within the first two months of a bull market.
Speaker AHere's what you don't know about a bull market.
Speaker AYou don't know you're in a bull market till after you're in the bull market.
Speaker ASo you're really talking about 78% of the best days in the stock market are when the stock market seems like it's on a daily dumpster fire.
Speaker BWell, and how many people market timing time in, time out of the market?
Speaker BI love this example because it's psychological to think that you make more money in uptimes, but 50% of the best days came when it was technically in bear territory.
Speaker BWhich when you have people panicking because it's their life savings, they don't think good can come from bad times.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so I think maybe what you're alluding to is with the wash sale, if you made a decision, stocks kind.
Speaker AOf go like you have the market and goes through bull and bear market.
Speaker AStocks kind of have their own cycle like that too.
Speaker ASo if you yank your money out of a stock, a really good stock, you, you bought that company because you or mutual fund because you really believed in it, right?
Speaker AAnd if you don't believe in your investments, you have no business buying them.
Speaker AYou know, that's one lesson.
Speaker ABut so you bought it because you really believe in it, and then it goes down in price.
Speaker AYou say, you know what, let's get out of it and let's hang out for 61 day or 30 days after I get r, let's, let's just hang out and then we'll put it back in when it's done.
Speaker ASo you're, you're rolling the dice there, There's a se.
Speaker AYou know, 78% of the best days in the stock market have come really probably in that 30 to 60 day time period that your was shell rule is going to actually incorporate.
Speaker AYou, Your, your, your likelihood of missing one of those big days is so big.
Speaker AAnd so you would say, well, what if I just miss one day?
Speaker AOkay, we got the numbers on this.
Speaker AWe brought the receipts this time.
Speaker AIf you missed just 30 of the best days in the market from 1995, so you got about 30 years.
Speaker AIf you missed the one best day, essentially every year, you would have made 83% less than the market.
Speaker BThat's crazy.
Speaker AWhich means, okay, you saved some tax money, but you made 83% less than the S&P 500.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AYour taxes weren't that much.
Speaker AOkay, if you missed the 20 best days.
Speaker ASo let's say you're a little bit better at timing than average.
Speaker ASo you miss only the 20 best days.
Speaker A73% less return.
Speaker ALet's say you're really good.
Speaker AYou only miss ten of the best.
Speaker AAnd I've been doing this a long time.
Speaker AI'm going to tell you what.
Speaker AIf you're trying to time it, myself included, we, you cannot, you cannot hit it.
Speaker AWe can watch volatility, you can watch price to value ratios, which you can't figure out is what the headline is going to be tomorrow and whether or not that's going to go to market.
Speaker ABut if you miss the 10 best days, you lose half over half the return of the s and P500 just by missing 10 days in the last 30 years.
Speaker ASo you, you do not, I don't care who you are, you do not have a crystal ball to be able to do that.
Speaker AAnd if you're going to sell your stock and not participate with it when it's down, you're probably going to miss the bet.
Speaker AYou, you have a high probability you're going to miss the best recovery days, which is gonna mean that you're gonna get a far less percentage of the actual return on that stock.
Speaker AIt's just, it's kind of like a fool's game.
Speaker AIt feels good because you're doing something, but the end of the day, it just takes, you lose money.
Speaker AHere's a couple more stats and then we can move on.
Speaker ASteve, the NASDAQ on April 9, 2025 record day, 12.16% return.
Speaker BThat was wild.
Speaker ASo if you were tax loss harvesting and you had sold the day before because the market was way down, you wanna get that loss and you didn't get your money back in the very following day.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AYou missed out on a 12.16% return.
Speaker BThat's a year sometimes.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ABut here, here's the key.
Speaker AIf you have individual investments, so you're like, I use individual investments a little bit easier tax.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AStocks themselves are always going to have more volatility than the index.
Speaker AMetta 15% on, on April 9th.
Speaker ASo it did 3% more than the NASDAQ.
Speaker ATesla 22% that day.
Speaker ANvidia 18%.
Speaker AApple 15%.
Speaker AAmerican Airlines over 22%.
Speaker ASo when you look at trying to time this with an individual stock, so you go, okay, well, I sold Apple and I bought the Nasdaq because I was just trying to, you know, I realized I got to sit there.
Speaker ASo you sold something that was way down.
Speaker AYou bought something that made 12, but you missed something that made 15.
Speaker AAnd so when you start looking at the totality of trying to manage a portfolio and trying to react and make good, prudent decisions, all of a sudden you're making investment decisions that are affecting whether or not you can make good returns based solely on whether or not you want to get a tax loss this year.
Speaker AIt's a really interesting way to make investment decisions.
Speaker BWell, and again, when this episode comes out, right, we're recording in April, so I think when you throw out historical numbers, if you're not in it, it's hard to look back to the past and go, oh, yeah, I remember that.
Speaker BWhat just happened in april with that 12.16 we all experienced.
Speaker BAnd so there are people listening to ditch the suits today that felt pain that day that they were out of the market.
Speaker BAnd I, I know, Travis, sometimes it's not even our own decision making.
Speaker BWe just went through tax season.
Speaker BSometimes there are tax professionals that are trying to save taxes.
Speaker BAnd so they're looking at what individuals hold.
Speaker BAnd they're not investment managers, they're not financial planners.
Speaker BThey're just doing.
Speaker BI remember a scenario years ago where they just wanted to help a client save money and told them, let's, let's sell these positions, right?
Speaker BSo you're dealing with a professional going, okay, that makes sense for taxes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIf you're not dealing, though, with a financial planner that's looking at it and saying, is saving a $10,000 loss write off for Apple or For Tesla, Nvidia really worth it in the long run.
Speaker BAnd so I wonder how many people are also trying to do the right thing, maybe getting misguided advice from.
Speaker AI think, you know, you Google and they talk about tax and there's ways that tax loss harvesting does good.
Speaker AAnd I think that there's ways of tax loss harvesting kind of paint you into a corner.
Speaker AAnd that's the whole, you know, the tax loophole versus the tax trap.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker AAnd I guess here's my advice on tax loss harvesting is if you're going to use the strategy, you need to make sure that when you're selling investments that you're mapping them over to a very similarly jargon.
Speaker AI know, but correlated investment with the same upward potential.
Speaker ASo when you look at the price, the value and the business characteristics, people forget about.
Speaker AYou know, these are businesses.
Speaker AYou can have an amazing price to value ratio that makes it look like a great buy.
Speaker ABut you got, you know, major turmoil and leadership at the company.
Speaker AAnd you get a question, okay, just because the price to value is split out, is this business actually capable of recovering at its price to where it's going or is the price a precursor to probably where the value is going?
Speaker ASo, you know, the price is kind of a leading indicator sometimes of where things are going, but it's not, it's not, it's not going to give you the concrete answer.
Speaker ASo you have to understand the business too.
Speaker ASo when you're selling one company, so if you were to sell something like Apple, you would need to, to move those funds to something with a similar profile that also, let's say, is experiencing the same level of volatility.
Speaker ASo if Apple was priced to value, let's say that you could buy it for 80 cents on the dollar, you would not want to sell that and buy something that was, that was selling at 110 cents on the dollar.
Speaker AJust because they're both, they could both be down 30%.
Speaker AOne just started from a higher point.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd so you would want to make sure that, oh, I've sold something that is on a, you know, selling at 80 cents on the dollar, and I've bought something that's around 80 cents on the dollar and it's down for pretty much the same reason and it's got a high likelihood, it kind of matches up with the other one of recovery.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo there's, there's, that's not a quick and easy decision.
Speaker AThere's a lot of research that goes into that.
Speaker ASo you not only have to be watching the stocks that you invest in.
Speaker ABut you have to be watching the stocks you don't invest in that you would invest in if you couldn't invest in the stocks that you do invest in.
Speaker ASo you start to, you start to see where professional management comes in, but you can also start to see where, you know, I, a lot of times people say, well, I've done really good with investing.
Speaker AIt's like.
Speaker ABut compared to what?
Speaker AYeah, you know, what are you comparing yourself to?
Speaker AOh, Well, I averaged 7%.
Speaker AWell, if everybody else in the time period averaged 9, you did okay.
Speaker AYou didn't do really well.
Speaker AAnd that's what we're trying to do here is let's make sure that we don't make, you know, get caught in this tax boomerang.
Speaker BWell, and to make, let me help the listener who might sound like maybe we're contradicting ourselves because they don't understand.
Speaker BSo when we talked earlier about the tax loss harvesting in a substantial position, I believe what you were trying to say is if you sell Apple as an individual security and you want to turn around and buy an ETF that holds Apple as a major holding, that is a substantial thing.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker AIn this case, you're talking about not quite.
Speaker AWhen it comes to one security versus a fund, the argument is you'd have to have the majority of the performance.
Speaker ASo if the majority of the negative performance is coming from the largest capitalized stocks and those happen to be the ones that you sold, and they make up the main driver of the up and down in that fund, then that could be, that's not going to map over one stock.
Speaker ABut if you had Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, Facebook, Netflix, and then you had a tech fund and it was basically map, you know, performance was almost perfectly correlated with those that could be considered a substantially, you know, and again, there's, there's not a lot of IRS enforcement on that right now.
Speaker ABut it's kind of like one of those things.
Speaker AJust because you can speed and, you know, a cop's not looking doesn't mean it's a great idea.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker BGreat analogy.
Speaker BWell, and I think to your point, then what you're talking about is making sure you have a plan, right?
Speaker BYou want to take a loss, but then what?
Speaker BWhere are we going to put in?
Speaker BIf you're like, well, how do I know what to do?
Speaker BA couple episodes ago, and it's been fun connecting with Ditch the Suits listeners, we had put out Travis's kind of top 10 investment guidelines.
Speaker BWe've had a number of listeners reach out to us and say, hey, how do I get a copy of that PDF?
Speaker BI think sometimes we talk about very high level things and we try to bring it to the mass to help you understand that you can make money buying companies, but you have to understand their competitive advantage, their leadership, their moats.
Speaker BSo we have a PDF that if you're like, hey, I want more information guys, what do I do?
Speaker BReach out to us.
Speaker BWe'll, we'll send that PDF and it's just Travis's 10.
Speaker BKind of putting purpose behind why we're buying, what we're buying.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker ASo moving on because we got three more things that we got to hit.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AWhat's our next one here?
Speaker AThe next issue is people will try to reduce their income.
Speaker ASo you go to this, like you said, you go to a well meaning CPA or accountant and they say, hey, look man, you qualify to put some money in a retirement account, you get a tax deduction.
Speaker ASo if you put in, you know, five grand this year, we'll save you a thousand dollars in taxes or something.
Speaker AAnd that sounds wonderful.
Speaker AOr maybe you're like, I hate paying income taxes and I'm in my 50s, my peak earning years, I'm going to keep maxing out that retirement, that 401k account, so I can get this big tax deduction.
Speaker AOne of the issues that comes with that is, yes, you're reducing your income taxes, but do you know what your future income taxes look like?
Speaker AAnd somebody can say, nobody knows their future.
Speaker AWe get pretty darn close when you do a projection because the one thing with IRAs, so number one, you can project your lifestyle and your budget and your expenses out.
Speaker AAnd especially, you know, when you're 30, it's hard to figure out where you're gonna be when you're 60, but when you're 55, we can pretty much figure out where you're gonna be in your 60s.
Speaker AIt's a little bit easier to do.
Speaker AAnd so we say, okay, this is where we look like we're gonna be in our 60s and 70s.
Speaker AAnd we could come up with, you know, oh, you're going to need money from that retirement or not, retirement account or not.
Speaker AAnd this is how long it's going to be deferred.
Speaker AAnd if you don't take money out, this is how much you're going to, this is your projected RMD that you're going to have.
Speaker AAnd you can even underestimate that and still come up with some pretty wild numbers, at least for our clientele.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWe get some Clients in that, you know, let's say 1 to $12 million range and a bunch of monies in those IRA 401ks.
Speaker AI think when you get, when you have, when you have clients over the 12 million, a lot of times the IRAs and 401ks are a much smaller part of it, right?
Speaker ABecause they've had businesses, other things going on.
Speaker ABut in that 1 to 12 million area, normally you have some big retirement account balances and a lot of times that money's not necessarily needed for a living or not all of it.
Speaker AYou're not taking, you're not maxing out those accounts as far as withdrawing money when you hit retirement.
Speaker AThat's why you were able to accumulate that much money.
Speaker AWell, when you're in your 70s, the IRS says, hey, you're going to take this money out whether you want to or not, right?
Speaker AOr if you don't, your kids are going to have to take it out.
Speaker ABut if you take it out, you can take it out over your lifetime.
Speaker AIf your kids have to take it out, they got to take it out in 10 years.
Speaker ASo you have this tax bomb that is about to go off on your life or your kid's life.
Speaker AAnd so if you defer, you end up with 3, 4, 5 million dollars in an IRA or 401k or more.
Speaker AAnd you're like, I'm not taking that till I have to.
Speaker AYou could go from being in like a 12 or 22% bracket to the max bracket.
Speaker AI mean you, you could just blitz, right?
Speaker AWe've, we've seen, we have clients that have three four hundred thousand dollar RMDs.
Speaker BAnd this is pre tax accounts, right?
Speaker BSo as your 401ks IRAs, pre tax, we're not talking about Roth IRAs or things like that.
Speaker BSo these are people that are cash poor later in return.
Speaker AWell, not necessarily cash poor.
Speaker AWhat it means is, is that people have deferred a lot of money to get the tax deductions, right?
Speaker AWhen you, let's say you're a hiring, let's say you're an engineer or a doctor or something like that, and you're making 200 grand a year or 300 or 400 or whatever you're making and you could save, just for easy math, 30% of your money by putting in a retirement account, right?
Speaker AThat's why people do it, because it's a huge amount of money in those higher tax brackets.
Speaker AWell, the problem is in the future you got to take it out.
Speaker ASo what if you saved it at the 22 or 24% tax bracket, but now you have to take it out at the higher tax brackets in retirement.
Speaker AThat's the problem.
Speaker AThere's a delta there that gets you.
Speaker ASo you're not getting as much for the tax.
Speaker AYou're actually paying for the tax deduction later on.
Speaker ASo the point is that you shouldn't always take the tax deduction.
Speaker ANow, there's a thing called a Roth, and what the Roth does is it says you don't get a tax deduction.
Speaker ANow, Steve, but if you put money in here, you never have to pay taxes again.
Speaker AOr you also have the option on a lot of 401 plans now.
Speaker ASo you can max out your 401k, but we're not going to give you a tax deduction.
Speaker AYou're still going to pay that full 24%.
Speaker AYou're not going to get the tax deduction.
Speaker ABut when you take that money out and all the money you've made on it, it's going to be tax free for you.
Speaker ASo the issue is if, you know, if you've already gotten to the point where you're going to have this tax bomb problem, and this is where financial projections come in and tax planning comes in.
Speaker AIf you look in that crystal ball and you go, holy cow, I'm going to have a tax bond problem, stop taking the tax deductions today.
Speaker AI know it feels good to get the tax deduction.
Speaker AYou're sacrificing a lot.
Speaker AFirst of all, you're gonna need a tax deduction on money you don't need.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ABecause you're putting in an IRA and you're saying, I'm probably not gonna use that money.
Speaker ASo you're getting a tax deduction on money you don't need, which locks it up and it creates a bigger tax problem in the future versus saying, look, if I don't need the money, then I'm gonna pay the taxes now.
Speaker AWe'll never have to deal with it again, no matter who inherit, if my kids inherit it, if I want to use it, whatever.
Speaker ASo people miss that all the time.
Speaker AI get my zero percent.
Speaker AYou know, I, I save, I save my taxes, but I end up owing a big tax bill in the future.
Speaker AIt's just, it's just a silly kind of thing that, that people.
Speaker BBut the power of projections, if you've never seen this projected out, it's powerful to take people who feel stuck and then show them that there's hope.
Speaker BBut you got to make some very.
Speaker AIntentional decisions for clients with a couple million Dollars.
Speaker AIn this type of scenario, you're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Speaker ADifferent difference.
Speaker AIt's crazy.
Speaker APossibly.
Speaker AI looked at one the other day.
Speaker AIt was about a million and a half dollars.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe difference between, you know, it depends on how much you have.
Speaker ASo everybody's gonna be in a different situation.
Speaker ABut it was a phenomenal difference.
Speaker BIt's a substantial.
Speaker AIn putting the money in the right account to begin with and understanding if you should take a tax deduction or not.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ACongress is not stupid.
Speaker AWhen they give you a tax degree, normally, there's a caveat to when they said, okay, you don't have to take your RMDs until you're 75.
Speaker ADo not for a second think they were thinking, wow, you know, the federal government has too much money.
Speaker AWhat they did is they created a scenario for the people who do not need their RMDs.
Speaker ASo these are the people with more assets.
Speaker AThey allowed you to wait longer to take the money out, which means the money that you have to take out, when you're forced to, you have to take out a higher percentage, and the balance will be bigger.
Speaker ASo you have to take out a higher percentage of a bigger balance, which means more will be in a higher tax bracket, more money will be inherited by the kids.
Speaker AMore money will be forced to be cashed out within 10 years.
Speaker AThey are.
Speaker AThe federal government is making money off of people not understanding how this strategy works.
Speaker BTwo more.
Speaker ATwo more.
Speaker AYou tired yet?
Speaker BHang with us, folks.
Speaker BTwo more.
Speaker BWe're gonna bring it home.
Speaker AThis is intense.
Speaker BIt's been a good one, though.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AThe other two are a little bit quicker, too.
Speaker ARefusing to take capital gain gains.
Speaker AI can see the argument for this in both directions, the problem.
Speaker ASo what I mean by this is you have a stock that's done really, really well for you over the years, but you don't want to sell it because you'll have to pay cap.
Speaker AYou'll have to pay capital gains taxes on it.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AThere's two ways out of capital gains taxes for you, really.
Speaker AYou could die, or you can give the money away.
Speaker ASo if.
Speaker AAnd I talk to clients all the time.
Speaker AThey're, like, in their 50s or 60s.
Speaker ALike, well, if I don't.
Speaker AIf I don't sell this stock, my kids will inherit it.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AThe average life cycle of a Fortune 500 company is less than 15 years.
Speaker ASo when you're 60 and you're saying, I'm gonna just leave the stock to my kids, what you're saying is you're either gonna die within the next 15 years or you're gonna bet that that company is well above average.
Speaker AAnd that's just not the nature of corporations, not in today's world.
Speaker ASo the problem is, is that you may want to do something with that money, or if you sit on that company, that company could become a shell of what it once was.
Speaker AAnd so you basically going backwards when you account for inflation and everything, or you could have even negative returns.
Speaker AI've seen people during 2008 because I was new to the industry in 2007.
Speaker ASo in 2008, I had a client with a million dollars of bank of America.
Speaker AAnd after 2008, he had a fraction of that.
Speaker AAnd they didn't sell it because of the capital gains.
Speaker AAnd then they gave it all back to the stock market.
Speaker AGod.
Speaker ASomeplace.
Speaker BAnd we've had over the years, Apple employees that were gifted stock early on that just took off in after tax accounts.
Speaker BNvidia if you got in at the right time, taken off and so you see this huge capital gain and it's like, what do I do with it?
Speaker BThe blessing is you've made money, but now you feel trapped.
Speaker BSo you got two options.
Speaker BDie or give it away.
Speaker BSo just, just be aware.
Speaker AAnd maybe, maybe what you do is you look at a comb.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASelling some of it and doing some charitable gifting or something.
Speaker BGifting.
Speaker AAnd kind of knocking down.
Speaker AKnocking down some of the taxes on that.
Speaker AAnd then the last one that we had.
Speaker BYou've kind of touched on this a little bit.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWas whether or not you should live in that.
Speaker BKicking the can down the road to live in 0%.
Speaker AThis happens with retirees all the time.
Speaker AYou retire.
Speaker AYou know, sometimes people retire early in their 50s, where you're in your 60s and you retire and you can actually get to the 0% tax bracket because you got your mortgage pay, everything's paid off, you're in good shape and you got your Social Security, maybe a little bit of pension and a bunch of cash in the bank.
Speaker AAnd that's more than what you need.
Speaker AYou know, you got good cash flow on Social Security, unless your income's over a certain threshold, isn't going to be taxed.
Speaker ASo it's very easy for you to kind of get to that 0% tax bracket and be like, I'm good.
Speaker APeace out, yo.
Speaker AI don't want to do any of this.
Speaker ABut if you got that $2 million in the IRA or the 401k and you're going to let that bake from the time you're in your late 50s to the time you're in your mid-70s, that 2 million is going to turn into probably 4 million or something like that, depending on what your investment strategy is.
Speaker AAnd then you're going to have this much higher RMD in the future.
Speaker AWhat if you just, you hate paying taxes.
Speaker AIf you looked at a projection with a what if scenario of what if I just pay up to what if I just filled the 12% tax bracket, right?
Speaker ASo I'm not talking about getting crazy, right?
Speaker AWhat if I just filled the 12% tax bracket?
Speaker AAnd what I'm going to do is I'm going to convert my IRA money over to my Roth.
Speaker ASo I'm going to pay the 12% taxes now, and I'm going to be in well above the 12% bracket in the future, but I'm going to pay the 12% now so that I never have to pay any more taxes on it.
Speaker AThen I can also do another thing.
Speaker AI can shift my portfolio.
Speaker AI can put the most aggressive investments in the Roth so I can displace the growth from the IRA to the Roth.
Speaker ASo I might still average my.
Speaker ALet's pretend you average 8.5% a year.
Speaker AI might still average my 8.5% a year.
Speaker ABut when you look at the Roth, maybe the roth is returning 10 and the IRA is returning seven, and so it averages out at eight and a half.
Speaker ASo you can do some things to goose the future benefit of that and get an even better return.
Speaker ABut when you have a zero percent tax bracket, you should not be rejoicing.
Speaker AYou should be saying, great, how can I, how can I basically stick it to the man?
Speaker AHow can I move money around here and, and pay a tiny tax bill compared to what I'll pay in the future and get out of that future tax bill for me, my kids, my grandkids, the next generation, when, as soon as you see zero tax bracket, it's not dancing.
Speaker AYou should be dancing for the fact that, bam, I can move a ton of money around and make a six figure or bigger difference for the future of my family.
Speaker AYou never want to just be like, that's great.
Speaker AI hate paying taxes.
Speaker AI'm just going to move on.
Speaker AYou really actually want to pay a little bit of taxes if you have that kind of money?
Speaker ASome people literally will have assets that there's no deferred tax on it.
Speaker ABut if you have assets with deferred tax, that's when you want to take, take advantage of that stuff.
Speaker AThat's also where, by the way, with that, I don't want to sell my investments because the capital gains people don't understand how capital capital gains work.
Speaker AIf you're in that 0% bracket, you're not going to pay anything on your capital gains anyway, other than maybe state level depending on what state you live in.
Speaker ASo you should be looking at and saying, okay, that's a perfect year to max out that 0% capital gains bracket.
Speaker ASo again, it's just understanding how these things work.
Speaker ABut these are traps that people fall into.
Speaker AIt feels good, all these things.
Speaker AThat feels good.
Speaker BYep.
Speaker ABut at the end of the day, it hurts you.
Speaker BFour Traps Travis and I are here to help you get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BA little bit longer an episode, digest it, go back re listen before traps that if you can understand how these work, can set you up for getting the most from your money in life.
Speaker BUntil then, thanks for stopping by.
Speaker BDitch the Suits thanks for checking out Ditch the Suits.
Speaker BBe sure to write a review or drop a comment about this episode.
Speaker BAnd if you want more like this, head over to ditchesuits.com you can send us a message and get in touch.
Speaker BLet us know how we can help and be sure to share any topics you'd be interested in having us cover on the show.
Speaker BWe're here to help you get the most from your money in life.
Speaker BThanks for being our guest and checking out Ditch the Suits.