End-of-Year Financial Planning: 5 Things to Look at, Ep #158
Best In Wealth Podcast - A podcast by Scott Wellens
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What five major areas should you look at at the end of every year? End of year financial planning should include looking at assets and debt, tax planning, cashflow issues, insurance planning, and estate planning issues. Why does it matter? How can it help you from a tax-saving standpoint? Learn more in this episode of the Best in Wealth podcast![bctt tweet="In this episode of Best in Wealth, I share 5 things you NEED to look at in your end of the year financial planning. Check it out! #wealth #retirement #investing #PersonalFinance #FinancialPlanning #RetirementPlanning #WealthManagement" username=""]Outline of This Episode[1:08] Why you need an investment policy statement[8:00] #1: The asset/debt issues to consider[9:45] #2: Tax planning issues[15:17] #3: Cashflow issues[17:11] #4: Insurance planning issues[18:52] #5: Estate-planning issuesWhy you need an investment policy statementAre you staying disciplined and staying in the stock market? Are you staying disciplined in each asset class? An investment policy statement can help you stay disciplined. The S&P 500 is doing quite well with a few companies driving them forward. People have started moving out of other assets to capture some of the returns of the S&P 500. But that isn’t sticking to your plan.Small-value is up 27%. Small companies are up 21% and large value is up 17%. You missed out on the recovery if you got out of these asset classes. An investment policy statement will keep you disciplined through the good and the bad times. It puts YOU in control.The asset/debt issues to look intoDo you have unrealized investment losses? If you have a taxable account and you did tax-loss harvesting, it means you have some losses generated in the account. What can you do? You can look at where you might have selling opportunities to offset the losses with gains (and offset the taxes). If you carry those losses, you’re allowed to write off up to $3,000 each year. You can deduct this from your regular income. If you generated $9,000 of losses in your taxable account, for the next 3 years you have a $3,000 deduction because the loss carries forward. It’s a great way to offset gains or carry forward and offset income.[bctt tweet="What asset/debt issues should you look into as part of your end of the year financial planning? I share some thoughts in this episode of Best in Wealth. Go check it out! #wealth #retirement #investing #PersonalFinance #FinancialPlanning #RetirementPlanning #WealthManagement" username=""]Tax planning: How to save on your taxesThere are so many things you can do to save on your taxes. Do you expect your income to increase in the future? Many people were victims of the pandemic and lost their jobs. If you’re one of those people, it means you won’t make the kind of money you’d normally make. Your taxable income may be lower than it ever has been. If you’re in this situation, now might be the time to contribute to a Roth IRA. Why? Because you’re in a lower tax bracket. If your tax bracket is lower this year, consider doing a Roth conversion. The money starts growing tax-free.If you make around the same amount as you have previously, are you on a threshold of a tax bracket? We live in a progressive tax system which means the first $19,750 you make is taxed at 10%. If you make more than that, you’re taxed at 12%. If you make more than $80,250, you’re taxed at 22%—which is a huge jump. So how do you stay in the lower tax bracket? You could fully fund your HSA or your 401k. Anyone on a threshold should make the same maneuvers if you have the money to do so. What else can you do? Listen for a few other tax-planning savings ideas! I also share some ideas to mitigate cashflow and insurance issues—don’t miss it.Estate-planning [unexpected things you can do]One of the big things you...