TRADERS
SERVICES: RETIREMENT PLAN STRATEGIES FOR TRADERS

Important Update on July 15, 2009.

Click here for Robert A. Green, CPA's 10-page blog article (in pdf format) on retirement-plan strategies for traders. This same article is being edited into a shorter version for Green's Business of Trading column in Active Trader magazine (October 2009 issue).

Click here for updates to a previous blog (May 29, 2009) and our significant earlier content on retirement plans over the past decade.

GreenTrader Retirement-Plan Services:

Summer Promotion: 20 percent off.

It's best to start with a retirement-plan consultation.

GreenTraderTax offers numerous educational resources and consulting services to traders on setting up and utilizing existing retirement plans in a tax-advantaged manner. Whether you want to:

* actively trade (securities, futures, or forex) and/or make alternative investments directly within your retirement plans;
* build up your retirement funds with high annual tax-deductible contributions;
* borrow up to $50,000 from a qualified plan (note: IRAs do not qualify) to help start a trading business entity with trader tax status (or for any other reason);
* convert your traditional IRA or qualified plan to a Roth IRA for permanent tax-free build-up (with a special one-time opportunity in 2010 that removes income thresholds);
* or take early withdrawals with fewer tax pitfalls (no 10-percent excise tax on substantially equal periodic payments);
we can help you accomplish your goals.

There are many nuances, complexities and tax pitfalls (excise taxes on prohibited transactions and more) with retirement plans, and it’s even more nuanced when you factor in special tax matters (such as trader tax status) for business traders versus investors. As a leading CPA firm for traders, we provide many different strategies for using retirement-plan assets in the most tax-efficient manner, and you will be pleased!

We work closely with several different retirement-plan vendors (brokerage firms and intermediary trust companies) and our retirement-plan consultants will help you choose the best options for your needs, incorporating our best retirement-plan ideas, trader tax status, and entity-formation strategies. You pay these other providers directly; there’s no mark-up from our firm. We help you in a variety of ways with the retirement-plan options, features (such as loan provisions), IRS and other DOL & ERISA rules and compliance, trader tax status, entities, tax-deductible retirement-plan contribution options, Roth conversions and much more. Consult with us to determine your individual retirement-plan options and on plan set up as well. We also prepare annual tax Form 5500s when needed, and form your entities and prepare your annual income tax returns as you like.

After you initial consultation, you can either continue with 30-minute consultations as you need them or upgrade to a retainer plan below.

GreenTrader Retirement Plan Service – Retainer (2 Hours)

For simple jobs, the fee should not be more than this minimum fee/retainer. If we go beyond basic services through extra consultations or by making changes to the standard service, the additional time will be charged at our standard hourly rates.

As indicated above, our fees do not include third-party services as laid out in the attached power point file (page 6 of 9).

$480 Retainer
(2 Hours)

Summer
Promotion
$120 Savings



GreenTrader Retirement Plan Service – Upgrade Retainer (1.5 Hours). (If you purchased a 30-minute consultation first).

For simple jobs, the fee should not be more than this minimum fee/retainer. If we go beyond basic services through extra consultations or by making changes to the standard service, the additional time will be charged at our standard hourly rates.

As indicated above, our fees do not include third-party services as laid-out in the attached power point file (page 6 of 9).

$360
Upgrade
Retainer
(1.5 Hours)

Summer
Promotion
$90 Savings

 

Prior Main Content in this Retirement-Plan Section:

May 29, 2009 Update:

GreenTraderTax offers lots of educational resources and services to traders on retirement plans. Whether you want to trade in your retirement plans (securities, futures and/or forex), build it up with annual tax-deductible contributions, borrow money from your retirement plan for personal or business reasons, convert to a Roth IRA for permanent tax-free build-up (special one-time opportunity in 2010 relaxes income thresholds), or take early withdrawals with fewer tax pitfalls, we can help you accomplish your goals.

There are many nuances, complexities and pitfalls with retirement plans, and it’s even more nuanced when you factor in special tax matters for business traders and investors. We have conceived many different strategies for utilizing retirement-plan assets and you will be pleased! Our good ideas and recommendations are included below.

As with our entity formation services, we add more value than those vendors who only offer online filing services; they lack the important integration to our trader tax strategies.

It’s important to note that you don’t need trader tax status to pursue these money-saving retirement plan trading and loan strategies. Several non-business traders also want a self-administered and self-directed retirement plan, so they can trade securities, futures and forex, and have plan loans. None of these value-added features are available in cookie-cutter retirement plans from brokers and banks.

You only need trader tax status if you want to make annual tax-deductible contributions to a retirement plan (or tax-free contributions to a Roth IRA). An entity with trader tax status can efficiently pay a tax-deductible (from gross income) administration fee, which creates the earned income needed for a retirement plan contribution. Without trader tax status, that administration fee is only deductible as a miscellaneous itemized deduction, which is significantly limited with the 2-percent AGI limitation and add-back for AMT purposes (the nasty second-tax regime).

Many investors (such as retiree traders) already have significant retirement assets, and they are more interested in using those assets in a more productive trading manner — without limitations on what and how they can trade. They want a self-administered and self-directed GreenTrader retirement plan to actively trade securities, futures and forex too. They also are interested in plan loans to retire other taxable debt with higher interest rates (mortgages and credit cards).

Business traders enjoy all these benefits and even more. They also benefit from the highest possible retirement contribution tax deductions, saving more income tax than they have to pay in self-employment (SE) tax on the administration fee component only (there is generally no SE tax on trading gains).

It’s wise to get a handle on your retirement-plan strategies in 2009, as a one-time only window of opportunity opens in 2010 with the last of the Bush tax cut breaks. All taxpayers can convert a Roth IRA in 2010, as the annual income threshold of $100,000 of modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is waived in 2010 only. Normally, in all other years, only taxpayers with MAGI of $100,000 or less can convert a Roth IRA. Business traders with large Section 475 MTM ordinary losses and even NOLs (net operating losses caused by MTM losses) can choose to absorb those losses with a Roth IRA conversion (a great strategy for 2009 too). You can pay the conversion taxes in 2010 over two years too. We will have more content on this Roth IRA conversion strategy — check back soon.

It’s important to note that GreenTraderTax and the government — the Department of Labor under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) —also advocate long-term safety for retirement funds. Caution should be used to avoid “self dealing” and “prohibitive transactions” which are subject to onerous IRS tax penalties. We offer great ideas and ways to tap your retirement funds for active trading, but we also want you to be cautious and consider the down side. We don’t want to help enable individuals to lose their retirement funds in active trading activities.

We suggest starting with a half-hour consultation with our GreenTrader retirement-plan experts (Robert A. Green, CPA or Mark Durham, MBA). If we both agree that a GreenTrader self-administered and self-directed retirement plan is a wise strategy for you and your family, you can upgrade to our retirement-plan services retainer (click here).

Our GreenTrader retirement-plan services are structured and priced in the same manner as our entity-formation and tax-preparation services (which many of our clients are familiar with). We provide consultation, design, execution (formation) and annual compliance and support services. We ask you to pay for third-party providers (if required) directly, so there are no mark-ups and these third-parties owe you their direct care and support too. In some cases, we will negotiate special lower pricing and/or value-added services from our affiliates, so it pays to work through us. We make sure to use these providers in every way possible, so you don’t pay us to do what’s included in their fixed prices. If you don’t need the added features of a self-administrated retirement plan, we suggest a “cookie-cutter” self-directed retirement plan offered by leading brokers (which often costs much less).

As with our popular entity formation service, we don’t just form a retirement-plan strategy and walk away. Our clients count on us to provide ongoing support and annual service to help ensure the plan works as designed, reaping all possible benefits in a compliant manner. Just as with our entity-formation and tax-preparation services, the final tax saving comes at tax time (year-end planning and preparation), when we crunch the numbers to see the various savings from different strategies.

We also prepare your annual tax Form 5500 Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan (if required) and handle annual maintenance and upgrades for your plan. Congress and the IRS often update employee benefit laws, and it’s vital to keep your plans compliant with all changes in the law. Our third-party providers make sure the plan paperwork reflects any changes.

Our retirement team consists of a leading retirement plan-professional (who joined us after a 22-year career with Fidelity Investments), a retirement-plan/employee-benefits attorney, a tax attorney, a CPA from our trader tax practice area who also is an expert in preparing 5500s, all our CPAs, and Robert A. Green, CPA/CEO.

Our GreenTrader self-administered plans cover the gamut of your needs. From a simple plan only allowing plan loans at very low cost, to full-fledged value-added features offering trading securities, futures and forex. The annual costs are very reasonable — estimated at around $500 per year (more or less). The cost of forming a self-administered plan usually is our retainer amount of $750. There are complex situations where our time expended and billed will surpass the retainer amount. For example, defined benefit plans — allowing for much higher annual contributions — cost more, as you are required to use the services of an independent actuary too (which costs around $1,000 per year).

Details for our retirement-plan services, features and related costs are attached in this Power Point document prepared by our Mark Durham, MBA. Click here.

Our retirement-plan content (including many magazine articles) below has grown over the years. It’s now better than ever with the 2009 roll out of our new GreenTrader self-administered and self-directed retirement-plan services and related strategies (see below).

Here is the evolution of our retirement plan services and content for traders.

In 2000, we pointed out the great tax pitfall of traders taking “early withdrawals” from their retirement plans to fund their trading accounts. Many of these traders got caught in a double-tax whammy when the tech bubble burst. They were forced to pay very high income taxes on their early withdrawals from retirement plans (at higher ordinary income tax rates), plus they had to pay the onerous 10-percent excise tax penalty (reported on IRS Form 5329). The painful lesson back then was that too many business traders neglected to also elect Section 475 MTM (to protect themselves with ordinary loss treatment), so they were stuck with restricted capital loss treatment and had to carry over large trading losses to subsequent tax years (and many never used them in later years). The sad result was that they paid taxes on just breaking even. Many of these traders wound up owing the IRS and their states more than they could pay. With Section 475, they could have offset their retirement-plan early withdrawal ordinary income with Section 475 MTM ordinary trading losses, thereby not owing any tax except the 10-percent excise tax. The remedy at that time was to trade within your retirement plans and if you took early withdrawals to make sure you also had Section 475 MTM. This same problem happened again in 2008 for many traders caught in the meltdown.

Now we are pleased to offer broader and better remedies to traders facing this conundrum and who need to access funds in their retirement plans for trading and other personal and business uses.

Ready for Help? Click here.

GreenTrader "Self-Administered" Retirement Plans:

We offer specially designed GreenTrader self-administered Mini 401k retirement plans (regular and Roth), as well as other types of retirement plans (including high-deductible “defined-benefit” retirement plans).

Our self-administered retirement plans contain value-added features such as plan loans (borrowing money from your retirement plans for whatever reason — business or personal), the ability to trade securities, futures and forex, as well as other types of investments (such as hedge funds). Most brokerage firms provide cookie-cutter prototype retirement plans that do not offer any of these value-added features.

In the 2009 jobs recession and credit crisis, many people including traders are facing cash-flow shortages and the withdrawal of credit lines (on home equity loans) from their banks and credit card providers. Many traders are unable to finance their trading working capital and other living needs, especially after incurring large trading losses in 2008 and 2009 year-to-date. Finding a legal and tax-efficient way to tap into retirement funds to finance a trading business and/or living expenses can be a wise move (of last or first resort). Again, be cautious and think twice about using this type of financing to fund a losing business.

Even non-traders are interested in these retirement-plan strategies. As an example, if you are a conservative investor and have your retirement plan assets invested mostly in cash equivalents earning very low interest rates, consider borrowing from your retirement plans to pay down your mortgage and credit card debt, which probably has much higher interest rates (interest rates are sky rocketing on credit cards and remain high on jumbo mortgages too). Saving several basis points on interest rates is wise, even after forgoing some mortgage interest expense tax deductions. Credit card interest is not deductible.

We recommend the following strategy for business traders. Borrow some retirement-plan funds to sufficiently replenish your trading business accounts in order to maintain your trader tax status and Section 475 MTM treatment. Some traders have fallen below “pattern day trader” amounts of $25,000 for securities and their broker then restricts day trading, only allowing 2/1 margin (rather than 4/1 margin for pattern day traders). A retirement-plan loan can be the answer. But don’t borrow all the money you can from the plan (up to 50 percent) — borrow only enough to replenish what you need.

The maximum term for a participant loan generally is limited to five years (unless financing the purchase of a residence). The Code requires that participant loans be amortized substantially evenly over the loan term, with at least quarterly payments of both principal and interest .

The loan must bear a reasonable rate of interest. The interest is treated as investment return and not a contribution. Accordingly, there will not be a basis adjustment and will generate ordinary income upon distribution.

Even if otherwise deductible, the interest expense would not be deductible if the loan is a loan to a key employee or secured by amounts attributable to elective deferrals to a 401(k) plan.
Unfortunately, the interest part of this strategy is not very tax efficient, as the interest expenses (paid by the taxable account to the retirement plan) is not tax deductible. On the flip side, the interest income is ultimately taxed as part of later-year retirement-plan distributions. There is a benefit in that the interest income is not part of the annual retirement plan contribution limits — so you wind up with a higher payment into the retirement plan, which generates more tax-free build-up.

Why borrow the maximum amount allowed and then have to pay it back to the retirement plan over five years, after you pay annual taxes on the trading gains related to that plan loan funding? It may be wiser for you to leave as much of those retirement-plan assets as possible in the retirement plan itself and trade the plan as you like (securities, futures and forex in a self-administered plan trust account). That way, you build up the retirement assets without having to pay annual income taxes on the gains. If you have large losses with Section 475 in a taxable account (with full retirement-plan loan funding), you will enjoy NOL immediate tax refund treatment. However, the IRS is beefing up attacks on trader tax status and if yours is weak, it may be more prudent to trade in the retirement account instead. Avoiding taxes in a taxable account and trading more in your retirement account is better over time tax-wise. Growth from tax-free compounding is far better than paying taxes every year in a taxable account.

We suggest a consultation with Robert Green and/or our retirement-plan expert Mark Durham, MBA to determine the best strategy for your needs.

Green will consult with you on qualification for trader tax status and if you can benefit from an entity and a retirement plan contribution. He and/or Durham can advise you on using a retirement-plan strategy along with trader tax status and your entity, or using a self-administered retirement-plan strategy as a regular investor (to have plan loans and rights to trade securities, futures and forex).

We can fine tune the best overall retirement-plan strategy for you and work together with you and our affiliates to find the best cost versus benefits plan.

It’s important to note that trading securities on margin in your retirement plan (through an underlying hedge fund investment) leads to Unrelated Business Taxable Income (UBTI) and Unrelated Business Income Tax (UBIT). Current tax law dictates that margin interest paid on trading also means that the trading gains and income generated from that leverage (part only) is subject to annual income taxes — and is otherwise not protected by the tax-free status of the retirement plan.

Pension funds and college endowments invest in offshore hedge funds to avoid UBIT caused by using leverage in a domestic fund. Offshore hedge funds are known as “UBIT-blockers.” As part of Congress and the Obama administration’s agenda to reduce offshore tax breaks, Congress has proposed tax law-changes to encourage pensions and other tax-free institutional funds to invest in domestic funds rather than offshore funds. Congress proposes to eliminate the UBIT blocker tax loophole, not by causing offshore funds to generate UBIT on par with domestic funds, but rather in a more positive manner — by simply removing UBIT entirely in domestic funds.

These potential changes to UBIT rules could help traders using their own retirement plans too. Perhaps UBIT won’t apply in this instance either. It’s also important to note that trading futures and forex in a retirement plan does not generate UBTI as that type of leverage does not generate margin-interest expense.

Notes from our attorney on UBIT issues:

• Qualified plans are subject to the unrelated business income tax (UBIT) on its unrelated business taxable income (UBTI). While interest income and securities gains are generally considered exempt from UBIT, if an investment is "debt financed" then it is subject to tax in proportion to the financed amount. Accordingly, margin investments within a plan may be taxable. Also, revenue received from unexercised stock options (puts and calls) regularly issued on stocks held in the trust's portfolio may constitute UBTI and not "passive" investment income.

• Points for possible additional review:

A. Since there is no tracking of loan proceeds, there should be no prohibited transaction issue (not a plan investment); however, in the event that the business adopting the plan is premised on the use of a plan loan, query as to whether the validity of the business will be questioned.

B. Even though non-financed investment activities generally do not generate UBTI, will active trading ever rise to the level of an "unrelated business" if trust funds are utilized as a "trader" activity?

Comment from Green. We don’t want a taxable trading business (or hedge fund) to be solely funded from a retirement plan account. Rather, we prefer it to be less than 50 percent funded so the IRS can not take the position that the retirement plan is running a business.

Borrow what you need and leave as much of those assets as possible within your retirement plan, and trade them in the retirement plan as you like (securities, futures and forex). The funds traded within the retirement plan build up tax free until retirement (and they are permanently tax free in a Roth IRA). Trading losses incurred within the retirement plan reduce your tax basis, which reduces taxes to be paid on later year distributions from the plan. If you need to cover more living expenses later on, perhaps because you have trading losses in your taxable accounts, you can always borrow more retirement assets as you need them over time. We recommend this strategy rather than taking a larger loan to start.

Many traders have been asking us for these value-added retirement-plan features. They want the ability to borrow money from their own retirement plans to finance their trading business, especially during this recession. Their brokers have said no. Their only alternative has been taking an ill-advised early withdrawal from their retirement plans, subject to ordinary income taxes plus a nasty 10 percent excise tax penalty.

We can set up a GreenTrader self-administered retirement plan to meet your specific needs. Self-administered means you (and not our firm) are responsible for your investment decisions. (We don’t offer investment advice because GreenTrader is not an investment adviser.)

We provide support for compliance and administration, including 5500 tax filings, loan agreement setup and maintenance.

Many of our plans are fairly simple to set up and reasonably priced. The added-value features and tax benefits far exceed the set up and annual maintenance costs.

If you are interested in a GreenTrader self-administered and self-directed retirement plan, please email us at retirementplans@greencompany.com and tell us the features you are most interested in.

Our retirement-plan professional Mark Durham, MBA, recently joined us after a long and successful career at Fidelity. Mr. Durham is working on these plans along with Robert Green, CPA, and our outside employee-benefits attorney, Louis Barr, JD, and tax attorney, Mark Feldman, JD. We are using the leading non-prototype plan engines with opinion letters, too.

Note about Roth IRA Conversions: There was a good article By Bill Bischoff in the WSJ titled "Reversing a Roth IRA Conversion" published on June 11, 2009. Link.

Excerpt: "When it comes to retirement planning, it's easy to make mistakes. If you converted a traditional individual retirement account into a Roth IRA last year before the stock-market free fall, for instance, you may be especially forlorn -- most likely your Roth IRA is now worth considerably less than it was on the conversion date. Even worse: You're stuck paying 2008 taxes on phantom value that no longer exists.

Thankfully, you can reverse that ill-advised Roth conversion. In fact, you can make it so it's like the conversion never happened, and as a result, that inflated conversion tax bill will also disappear.

Even better, you have until Oct. 15 to accomplish the reversal. (The deadline applies whether or not you extended filing your 2008 Form 1040 to that date.) However, if you plan to hold stocks in your IRA, and you think the market is headed up from here, you may want to get the reversal done ASAP. Here's how Roth conversions work:" Check with us if you need help too.


Prior content:

Every consistently profitable trader should have a retirement plan. Many plans provide for a tax deduction on annual contributions, and this generates immediate tax savings – sort of like an immediate high rate of return on your investment. Plus, you benefit from tax-free compounded returns, which can far exceed taxable returns.

See the incredible savings with a small Mini 401K plan contribution - click here.

Article: Traders, go long your retirement funds. Trading retirement funds can save loads in taxes. This article is the second of two pieces explaining how traders should plan for retirement. See the September 2004 issue of SFO magazine. Click here to learn more.

Article
: Do you sincerely want to retire one day? Market forces may force you into “early retirement.” Traders face special rules in retirement planning and you should start (or update) your retirement planning now. Learn how to get significant income savings from tax-deductible retirement-plan contributions while limiting your self-employment taxes. Most likely, you will need an entity to create “earned income,” so learn which type of entity is best suited for your needs. Robert Green's article submitted to SFO Magazine for their August 2004 issue.

Article: Enhance your retirement (accounts) by making prudent investments with asset diversification and liquidity. If you want to use your retirement plan accounts as part of your day or swing trading business, watch out – you could be in for some nasty surprises from the IRS and ERISA! We can explain the rules and some limited ways to navigate around the rules. Robert Green's article for Active Trader magazine in their February 2004 issue.

We help choose the right plan for your needs and customize a trading-business entity or investment company to execute the retirement plan strategy (and other strategies).

IRS Form 5500 ERISA Annual Report: ERISA (retirement) plans must file an annual report to the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) each year on Form 5500 or Form 5500-EZ. These forms are due by Aug. 1 of the following year (2004 Form 5500 is due Aug. 1, 2005). An extension is allowed on Form 5558; file the extension by Aug. 1 to extend your 5500 or 5500-EZ until Oct. 15th. Mini 401(k) plans are ERISA plans so they must file these forms. IRAs are not ERISA plans so they don't file Form 5500. Click here to learn more.

Hire our firm to plan and establish your Mini 401(k) retirement plan before year-end. You can fund it after year-end, but it must be "papered" before year-end. Note: Traders without any other source of earned income need a trading entity to pay themselves earned income as a basis for a retirement-plan contribution. Click here to learn more about entities for traders. We can help you figure out the maximum tax savings possible versus SE taxes to be paid and how much you can afford to contribute to a retirement plan.

Your cost of forming the entity (needed for a trader-retirement plan), including GTT's fees and state-filing fees, is around $850. In future years, you don't have this one-time cost. Click here to learn about our GTT Entity Formation Services.

If you have a very successful year and can afford to contribute more to your retirement plan, we recommend you contribute the maximum allowed – $42,000 for 2005 and $44,000 for 2006 (to a Mini 401(k) plan or other type of defined contribution plan). In that case, you can expect even greater net savings, and you'll be able to grow more money in a tax-deferred account. You can save even more with a Mini 401(k) defined benefit plan, which is available from a few brokers now (try Pioneer, Schwab and Fidelity; see some links below).

The major tax reason why the Mini 401(k) is the most attractive retirement plan for traders is that you can contribute the maximum $42,000 on a lower fee income (of approximately $148,000). With other profit-sharing retirement plans, you must use the maximum fee compensation allowed of $210,000 to get the $42,000 contribution limit (or just less than $42,000, after deducting half the SE tax). With the Mini 401(k) plan, you save SE taxes (the 2.9% Medicare portion) on the difference in the fee amount, which translates to a savings of around $1,800.

More on the law. Because current tax law treats administration fees as self-employment income, these earnings can be used for making deductible contributions to a Keogh plan. A Keogh plan is a retirement plan—either a traditional defined benefit pension plan or a defined contribution plan, such as a money purchase pension plan or a profit-sharing plan for self- employed individuals. There are some special rules that apply to Keogh plans, but essentially deductible contributions of up to 20% of this income—up to a maximum of $42,000 (for 2005)—may be made to either type of defined contribution Keogh plan. Keogh pension plans are funded in much the same manner as employee pension plans. The amount of income that can be set aside under these plans is substantially the same as under regular employee pension and profit-sharing plans.

If a profit-sharing plan is selected, an additional benefit can be provided through the use of a “solo” or “mini” 401(k) plan. These are one-participant plans that, for 2005, allow for the contribution of up to $14,000 in regular 401(k) contributions, plus an additional $4,000 in catch-up contributions. “Solo” 401(k) plan contributions are subject to the same $42,000 limit on deductible annual contributions as the profit-sharing plan contributions. In effect, the “solo” 401(k) plan contributions would help to fill a portion of the $42,000 deductible contribution limit not used by the profit-sharing plan contributions.

If you are interested in this type of trader-retirement savings plan, contact info@greencompany.com or call us.

We recommend a consultation with Robert A. Green, CPA & CEO. He will review your tax and retirement situation and consult you on the best retirement plan for your needs.

IRS Publication 3998: Choosing a retirement solution for your small business.

IRS Publication 560: Retirement Plans for Small Business.

If you have any questions on retirement plans for traders, send us a confidential e-mail at info@greencompany.com or call us.

Ready for Help? Click here.


Trading for your RETIREMENT:

An article by Robert A. Green, CPA, appeared in the February 2004 issue of Active Trader magazine: Trading for your retirement. Many traders want to actively trade their retirement plans. For some it's a bad idea; for others it's a nice way to benefit from tax-deferred cumulative returns. However, there are limitations to what you can do with a retirement account, so take some time to learn the rules before actively trading your retirement plan.

Important update on March 12, 2004: We point out in our below article that there are several limitations in trading your retirement accounts, such as a business-activity (hyperactively). Since writing this article, one more significant limitation has arisen as a result of a recent NASD crackdown on credit abuses in "cash accounts." Click here to learn more.

Here is the original article submitted, before editing by the magazine.

Enhance your retirement (accounts) by making prudent investments with asset diversification and liquidity. If you want to use your retirement plan accounts as part of your day or swing trading business, watch out – you could be in for some nasty surprises from the IRS and ERISA! Learn the rules and some limited ways to navigate around the rules.

By Robert A. Green, CPA

The bear market clawed away at most traders’ working capital. Traders seek new sources of capital to ride the bull (markets) again.

Some traders are interested in joining proprietary trading to gain access to a firm’s trading capital, with a sub-trading account using leverage up to 10 to 1. Proprietary trading firms require a brokerage license and minimum capital of $25,000 or more.

Other traders are interested in forming their own hedge fund to raise capital from investors (friends, family and others) and to make money off “other peoples’ money.” This is a good opportunity for successful traders, but losing traders may have trouble executing this business plan.

A last resort for many traders is closer to home – their own retirement-plan assets. But before you start day trading your retirement assets, you should learn about many restrictions that apply.

Various government agencies regulate retirement-account investments. For the benefit of tax-free deferral or permanent savings, the government insists on investment protection, prudence, diversification, liquidity and no self-dealing.

There are limited ways to navigate around these rules to actively trade your retirement accounts. In all cases, try to follow the spirit of the law; prudence is a virtue and you want to retire one day on these assets. Throwing caution to the wind and losing all your retirement assets in risky day trading is not a wise undertaking anyway.

It’s not a perfect world!

In a perfect world, a business trader has sufficient capital to fund their trading business.

If a reasonable to aggressive return on trading capital is 25 to 50 percent, a trader needs capital of at least $200,000 to generate income of $100,000 – what many traders need to cover their living and business expenses. Certainly, the past few years have not been a perfect world for traders and many have suffered losses to their trading capital. Can you make a good living on trading capital of $25,000 or less?

For many traders their last resort for trading capital is their retirement-plan assets.

Take a cookie from the jar and you will get slapped (with penalties)

It’s not easy finding ways to take money out of your retirement plans to put in your trading accounts.

If you take money out of your retirement plan before retirement age, it's an “early withdrawal” subject to regular income tax (at ordinary tax rates up to 35 percent), plus a nasty excise-tax penalty of 10 percent. Many traders tap into their retirement plans figuring they have no income or losses and can take the distribution into income. They are later surprised and upset about the 10-percent excise-tax penalty (there are some exceptions which you can find at www.irs.gov or http://www.irs.gov/faqs/faq5-3.html).

Most qualified retirement plans allow for loans and you can use the loan proceeds to fund your taxable trading accounts. IRAs are not qualified plans and they do not allow loans.

Leave the money in your plan and benefit from tax-deferred trading

You don’t have to pay taxes and excise-tax penalties on early withdrawals to have access to trading your retirement-plan assets.

There are limited ways to leave the money in your retirement plans and trade it there for continued tax-deferral on the existing money and all the trading gains you generate. Short-term trading on securities is taxed at ordinary tax rates anyway, so when you retire and take distributions, you will have those same ordinary tax rates (tax laws can change the rates when you retire).

Find a financial calculator on the Internet and see the power of tax-free compounded returns. You will be impressed.

If it sounds too good to be true, well, it is. There are many pitfalls, restrictions and possible violations, so read on.

Brokers take a pound of flesh

Barron’s reviews and rates online and direct-access brokerage firms each year and they provide charts showing who has the lowest commissions. They are all low these days, a huge benefit for traders.

The problem is that when it comes to retirement-plan accounts, brokerage firms cover the gamut in terms of commissions (most are very high), number of allowed trades, and other terms and conditions. Some of their terms are based on ERISA and IRS rules and others are simply their own policies. We are doing our own survey now on retirement-plan brokerage accounts and will report on this soon in this column.

I have advocated Mini 401(k) plans (also known as solo or individual 401(k) plans) as a retirement plan of choice for traders, but most brokers still do not offer this product. Mutual fund companies offer Mini 401(k) plans, but most traders prefer a retirement plan they can trade (with efficiency and at low cost).

ERISA – what’s that and why should I care?

ERISA stands for the “Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,” administered by the U.S. Department of Labor. To learn more about ERISA go to http://www.dol.gov/dol/topic/retirement/index.htm.

ERISA was passed to better protect employees’ retirement-plan assets. Far too many companies were abusing their company retirement plans for the benefit of management and shareholders, and not employees.

Before ERISA, companies could purchase only their stock in their retirement plans. Bankrupt companies took jobs and retirement-plan assets, and this could not continue.

ERISA saved the day for employees but makes life difficult for traders
A Department of Labor (DOL) ruling for ERISA on “plan diversification” prevents a company from investing all retirement-plan assets into its own stock, or any one stock. Certainly, this saves the day for employees.

Company administrators are charged with a “fiduciary duty” to diversify investments and manage the risk of losses. Traders are very familiar with this type of risk management.

This rule presents a problem for many traders. Is active trading in an ERISA covered retirement plan a violation of the plan diversification rules?

There is no clear DOL or ERISA guidance or case law indicating how to apply the 25-percent plan-diversification rule to active trading. Each case should be evaluated on an individual facts and circumstances basis in consultation with a CPA or tax attorney specialized in ERISA and tax regulations. 

Don’t panic, if you have an IRA or individual-level plan, you are exempt from ERISA rules

Before you start worrying about ERISA rules, find out if your retirement plans are even subject to ERISA regulations.

Some retirement-plan types are subject to ERISA rules, and others are not.

Individual retirement accounts, including traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs, Rollover IRAs and education IRAs, are not ERISA covered plans; therefore, IRAs are not subject to this 25-percent plan-diversification rule. 

Even though you are not subject to ERISA rules, other IRS rules may serve to restrict your IRA investment activities. See below.

Mini 401(k) plans are ERISA plans. See Form 5500 rules below.

ERISA plans include all company-level plans including but not limited to 401(k) plans, traditional retirement plans and other qualified retirement plans.

This makes sense. Retirement plans that include third-party employees are covered by ERISA, for the protection of those employees. But plans for individuals without employees have significantly less government oversight and protection. That’s the American way!

Individual-level plans are the plan of choice anyway

I usually advocate individual-level plans for traders; with a Mini 401(k) as the first choice and SEP IRAs as a second choice (if you miss the year-end establishment date on a Mini 401(k) plan).

To have the opportunity to fund a tax-deductible retirement plan, a trader needs to form a simple legal entity. This is done to create earned income, since trading gains are not earned income.

The entity pays the individual trader a fee (which is the earned income) and the trader establishes a retirement plan on the individual level, not the entity level.

All IRA retirement plans effectively navigate a trader around many ERISA rules, including the 25-percent rule for plan diversification.

There are restrictions on IRA investments

IRA investment guidelines limit what investments can be made, and disallow “self-dealing” or “prohibited transactions.”

For more information on these guidelines see “The Dos and Don’ts of IRA Investing” by Robert Preston at http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/apr2000/preston.htm.

Some IRA investments are prohibited, while others are allowed. However, the ones that are allowed generate “unrelated business income (UBI),” which leads to the payment of taxes (UBIT) on that income – even though the investment is made in a tax-deferred IRA account.

IRAs may not invest in life insurance and collectibles (art works, antiques and most precious metals).

Foreign investments should be limited to ADRs and domestic mutual funds.

Real estate investments are allowed, providing your trustee is a qualified provider, he or she allows it and can navigate around complex rules.

When it comes to brokerage accounts, IRAs are “cash accounts” and may not use margin to buy stocks (or other forms of debt-leverage for purchasing stocks). If an IRA invests in a hedge fund or other investment company that uses leverage, that is tantamount to breaking the rule on the use of leverage. The consequence is the generation of UBI from the income in the hedge fund and taxes on that income (UBIT).

In the above article, Robert Preston writes, “With certain investments, IRA owners face other risks. The IRS can use portions of the IRC (sections 511–514) to tax a not-for-profit or a tax-exempt entity that conducts business unrelated to its original purpose. The rules cover income-producing 'businesses' in tax-exempt entities, including trusts (IRA trusts under section 408(e)(1) that are considered businesses). Investments can lose their tax-exempt status and be taxed as business entities even though they operate in a tax-exempt environment. These rules relate only to investments the IRS considers 'profit- producing' and camouflaged by tax-exempt entities such as using IRA funds to buy an interest in a cattle-breeding operation or to invest in a hedge fund that uses leverage to purchase securities. Both transactions generate unrelated business taxable income (UBIT).”

Do you owe taxes if you day trade your IRA?

Many traders are interested in actively trading their IRA accounts, even though they can’t use margin to buy stocks.

Some traders will enter and exit trades on a daily basis, similar to how they operate their day trading business in “taxable” accounts.

This raises an important question of great concern to many traders. Will the IRS consider day or swing trading in an IRA account a camouflaged “profit-producing” activity that is subject to UBIT?

Many traders may not mind paying taxes on their day trading gains in their IRA account, since they would have to pay similar taxes anyway in a taxable account.  Their goal may be to tap additional sources of trading capital and they don’t mind losing the tax-deferral benefits. If a trader stops trading, then the future profit growth is tax-deferred in the IRA account.

“Prohibited transactions” and “self dealing” will cost you dearly

The IRS does not allow “self-dealing” or “prohibited transactions” between your retirement-plan assets and yourself.

For example, if you actively trade your retirement-plan assets (ERISA or not), you may not pay yourself a management or administration fee. That will be deemed “self dealing” and be subject to “prohibited transaction” tax penalties. The initial tax on a prohibited transaction is 15 percent.

That’s not your only problem. You also have an “early withdrawal” subject to ordinary taxation plus a 10 percent excise-tax penalty (Form 5329).

Here are other self dealing and prohibited transaction to stay clear of:

Your retirement plan may not be a partner in your trading entity.

You can’t sell securities from your taxable accounts to your retirement accounts.

You and your family members may not invest their retirement plan assets into your own hedge fund.

Based on a more aggressive interpretation of the law, some CPAs and attorneys may not categorize an owner’s IRA investment in their own hedge fund as a self-dealing prohibited transaction, providing the following facts and circumstances apply: The managing member does not earn any revenue from his own IRA (i.e., fees at zero); the IRA capital may not be material enough to help the managing member launch the hedge fund (showing others the fund has other investors of certain magnitude); the IRA does not help pay the fund expenses in a material manner.

Taking this more-aggressive approach may give you the answer you want to hear, but recognize that you may turn your tax-deferred or tax-exempt IRA into a taxable account. We do not suggest this aggressive approach.

Solo traders with ERISA plans are stuck with the 25-percent rule
Traders may raise the following question: "I don’t have any employees so why should this ERISA plan diversification rule apply to me?"

Tough luck. If you have an ERISA plan the rule applies to you even if you don’t have any employees.

If you trade an ERISA plan that only includes yourself (no employees), you may think "What’s the risk if no employees can sue me for ERISA violations?"

You should also consider that if you get divorced and it’s contested, your spouse’s attorney can allege ERISA violations. A spouse may be entitled to half or another portion of your ERISA retirement plan assets and deserve the protection of ERISA.

A conservative approach to the 25-percent rule
In my prior Active Trader articles on this subject, “A Special K," February 2003, and "The Proof is in the Return," April 2003, I stated a conservative approach to the 25-percent rule as advocated by our attorney who specializes in ERISA and tax law.

Both articles mentioned that traders should only actively trade 25 percent of their ERISA plan assets and conservatively invest the other 75 percent.

Many traders have written our firm and posted questions on popular message boards asking for more detailed information on the 25-percent rule and ways to possibly navigate around it. I explain the rules above and ways to navigate around it below.

Traders and their CPAs looked for the 25-percent rule in the tax code but it's not there. The 25-percent rule is an ERISA rule, not a tax-code rule.

Our retirement plan attorney recommends that traders only actively trade (with risk) 25 percent of their ERISA plan assets. To achieve required plan diversification, she recommends prudently investing the remaining 75 percent in mutual funds, interest-rate and other types of non-stock investments.

Our attorney based her recommendations on research of ERISA and DOL court cases. DOL raised the stock investing argument in a few litigations. However, our attorney’s informal opinion is that ERISA case law supports the following: "a high concentration of plan investments in stocks was prudent for a fiduciary and not an ERISA violation" and "there is support (in the ERISA case law) for day traders to self-direct plan (ERISA) investments."

If there is a will there is a way (around the 25-percent rule).
Consider the following example of trading in an ERISA plan.

This trader is actively trading 100 percent of ERISA plan assets but may not be in violation of the 25-percent plan-diversification rule.

A business trader actively trades 10 stocks on a daily basis and he does not keep any positions overnight (day trading). This trader hedges his positions and monitors risk very closely, using stops and other available methods. This trader is diversified and, notwithstanding the perceived risk of day trading, this trader is consistently profitable.

The spirit of the 25-percent plan-diversification rule calls for risk management, liquidity and diversification. It does not specifically state that active trading is prohibited. It can be argued that this trader is not "buying and holding" one or a few stocks with great market risk. In fact the trader is very diversified and trading with plenty of risk management.

What can be argued as risky is the pursuit of day trading, a known high-risk activity. A profitable trader can argue that consistent profitability proves that day trading is not high risk for them.

Of course this trader may not need to tap into retirement-plan assets; a consistent losing trader may need to tap these retirement-plan assets and hence they may have a problem with this argument.

This more aggressive approach is based on theory and has not been tested under the law, so proceed with caution and at your own risk. Consult with an expert to better assess this risk.

Consider the reverse example: A consistent losing trader actively trades stocks in his ERISA plan in a very risky manner without the use of stop losses or hedging. An argument can be made that this trader violated ERISA rules by not diversifying out of risky swing and day trading activities.

You can’t get trader tax status benefits from just trading your retirement accounts

Now that you solved how to actively trade your retirement-plan accounts without ERISA or tax trouble, keep in mind that you are still lacking trader tax status unless you actively trade a taxable account as well.

Retirement-plan trading does not count for trader tax status (business tax treatment). You need trader tax status in order to deduct all your trading business expenses.

If you just trade retirement-plan accounts and no taxable accounts, all your expenses are matched to your retirement-plan income, which is tax-deferred; that makes your expenses also tax-deferred. It will be difficult (but possible) to keep appropriate records so that when you retire and take taxable distributions, you can reduce that income by the deferred expenses. An administrator will not allow you to record those tax-deferred expenses in the retirement account.

To protect against deferral of your expenses, achieve trader tax status on at least a small taxable trading account. Within reason, you can allocate all your business expenses to the taxable account and not be stuck with any expense deferral. You will then get the best of both worlds.          


Bottom line
If you want to actively trade your retirement-plan accounts, first determine which EIRSA and IRS rules may apply to your trading plan. It’s a minefield with gray areas and you need to protect yourself against ordinary taxation on “unrelated business income” or “early withdrawals,” plus 10-percent excise tax penalties on early withdrawals, plus 15-percent tax penalties on “prohibited transactions” on “self-dealing.” Ask yourself is it worth these extra costs, uncertainties and headaches to put your retirement (accounts) at great risk? For some the answer may be yes, so do your homework and try to stay clear of these extra costs and gray areas. Consult with a CPA and/or tax attorney with expertise in the retirement plan and trading areas. If you are talking big bucks, it may pay to engage an expert firm to prepare a file for a private letter ruling with both the IRS and DOL.

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No credit or margin is allowed in retirement-plan accounts, because they are "cash accounts."

Important update on March 12, 2004:
We point out in our above article that there are several limitations in trading your retirement accounts such as a business-activity (hyperactively). Since writing this article, one more significant limitation has arisen as a result of a recent NASD crackdown on credit abuses in "cash accounts."

All retirement plan accounts are "cash accounts," whereas business trading accounts are "margin accounts." Business traders, who fall under the "pattern day trader rules" are allowed 4-to-1 margin; investors are allowed 2-to-1 margin. Cash accounts are not permitted any credit or margin. Herein lies the problem with the recent NASD crackdown.

NASD argues that many brokerage firms are allowing credit in cash accounts, where no credit is allowed by law. NASD is not claiming brokers are using margin in cash accounts, but claiming credit infraction over a technicality – using proceeds for purchases before the proceeds' settlement date. For example, if you sell a stock and re-purchase another stock before the first stock sale settles (3 days later), NASD claims your broker is lending you the funds and that's a violation on cash accounts.

The consequence of this "waiting for settlement date" rule is that "cash account" holders will have to wait longer to turnover capital in their cash accounts. This can be a significant problem for active traders.

WASHINGTON, March 11 /PRNewswire. PRESS RELEASE: NASD Fines Ameritrade, Datek and iClearing $10 Million for Improperly Extending Credit and Allowing Trades. Click here to read this story.

A leading brokerage firm recently sent the below e-mail (redacted) to one of our GTT pros, which explained this policy change on her retirement account.

E-mail: Thank you for choosing XXCo.

Thank you for your e-mail regarding your buying power. In order to comply with a more strict interpretation of trade settlement regulations, XXCo. has changed its policy towards cash account trading as of 12/19/03.

In a cash account such as yours and for trades placed on our website, all proceeds from a sale will not be available for reinvestment until the trade has settled. However, customers can purchase securities, through one of our brokers, if sufficient funds from a sell order will settle on or before the settlement date of the purchase (system changes will make these trades available on our website in the near future. In the meantime a broker assist fee will not apply). Regular way settlement for stocks is going to be the day of the trade plus three business days, options settle just one business day after the trade, and for mutual funds please consult the funds prospectus. For example, if you sold your stocks on Tuesday, the funds would be available for reinvestment on Friday.

Alternatively, once you sold your stock on Tuesday you would be able to use those funds for re-investment if you call us at the number below and one of our brokers placed this trade for you. A broker assist fee will not apply. If you choose to purchase additional stock through a broker, please note that this stock cannot be re-sold within the settlement period. Doing so will result in a free riding violation on your account. Two free-riding violations in a cash account may result in it being closed. It is your responsibility not to sell stock that will cause a violation. We understand that this has changed the fundamental manner in which you are able to trade within your account and we apologize for the inconvenience and hope to educate you on the changes.

These cash settlement regulations affect only cash accounts; however, trading within margin accounts remains unaffected. If you are considering upgrading your account to margin, please note that there are risks involved with establishing and using a margin account. Ultimately you would have to determine whether or not a margin account would be suitable for your investment objectives. Please note that margin is not allowed on retirement or custodial accounts.

Ready for Help? Click here.


IRS Form 5500 ERISA Annual Report: ERISA (retirement) plans must file an annual report to the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) each year on Form 5500 or Form 5500-EZ. These forms are due by Aug. 1 of the following year (2004 Form 5500 is due Aug. 1, 2005).

An automatic 2.5-month extension for filing employee plan returns is obtained if a properly completed Form 5558 is filed by the due date of the Form 5500 Series return/report. The IRS will not return an approved copy of the extension request to the taxpayer. The taxpayer must attach a photocopy of the completed Form 5558 to the Form 5500.

Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) are not ERISA plans so no annual report (Form 5500 or any other form) is required for IRAs (including but not limited to traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs, SEP IRAs and education IRAs).

ERISA-based plans include but are not limited to 401(k) plans, Mini 401(k) plans, Keogh plans, profit-sharing plans, money-purchase plans and defined benefit plans.

Many ERISA plan administrators prepare a Form 5500 or 5500-EZ for their clients. If not, use the below resources to file the form on your own, or you can ask our firm for this assistance.

Our tax software (Lacerte) has all these forms, so we can prepare your 5500, 5500-EZ and extension Form 5558. Please contact us (or your GTT tax preparer) by July 25 if you want us to file your extension.

One person or husband/wife plans file 5500-EZ. It's fairly simple to prepare with very basic plan information.

Here are some resources to learn more:

www.irs.gov/retirement/article/0,,id=110293,00.html

www.efast.dol.gov/ – US Department of Labor (DOL) Employee Benefits Security Administration (Form 5500)

www.dol.gov/ebsa/ – US Department of Labor (DOL) Employee Benefits Security Administration.

(800) 829-3676 DOL toll-free.

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