Yesterday my sister called asking for some financial advice. She has two separate retirement accounts. One account was from her time as a bank teller, and the second from when she worked a small insurance office. They are relatively low balance, around $3k and $8k. She is concerned because the accounts had went down over the past quarter. Her two initial questions were:
"Should I just take the money out?"
"Should I consolidate them into a single account?"
My answers were "No" and "Maybe".
She isn't the most financially literate, but she is relatively smart, and is interested in learning. Currently she works part time in a day care and her husband works construction in his father's family owned company. Their family business could make them millionaires, or it could make enough to just get by. Either way, she is 36, he doesn't have any retirement plan, and I suspect the reality of their future retirement in 30 years as occurred to her.
She read some of the balance information over the phone to me for the accounts, but she doesn't know what type of accounts they are (401k, IRA, Roth IRA). What she described from the insurance office sounded an awful lot like just a regular IRA and what she described from the bank, I really couldn't tell.
So #1 we have to figure out what she has. She is working on that.
Number #2 she asked where I have my retirement, and I told her for the Roth IRA it is through Vanguard. Then she asked the question that really made me smile: "Why?"
I told her I had heard reviews from Dave Ramsey and others that Vanguard was a top rated company with low fees but there were many other companies as well. Then she asked "What other companies are there" to which I named a few off the top of my head; Edward Johns, Merrel Lync, T Roe Price, etc.
My advice was for her to start a Roth IRA for her future contributions, and depending on the type of accounts the other two were, opening a second regular IRA to roll them into. Also I recommended she talk to the guy who does her taxes to get his advice on if they are regular IRAs if it makes since to transfer them over to a Roth knowing there would be taxes due or not.
So my question for ya'll is: "Who do you use for your Roth IRA and why?" and any other advice you could provide her her situation.
"Should I just take the money out?"
"Should I consolidate them into a single account?"
My answers were "No" and "Maybe".
She isn't the most financially literate, but she is relatively smart, and is interested in learning. Currently she works part time in a day care and her husband works construction in his father's family owned company. Their family business could make them millionaires, or it could make enough to just get by. Either way, she is 36, he doesn't have any retirement plan, and I suspect the reality of their future retirement in 30 years as occurred to her.
She read some of the balance information over the phone to me for the accounts, but she doesn't know what type of accounts they are (401k, IRA, Roth IRA). What she described from the insurance office sounded an awful lot like just a regular IRA and what she described from the bank, I really couldn't tell.
So #1 we have to figure out what she has. She is working on that.
Number #2 she asked where I have my retirement, and I told her for the Roth IRA it is through Vanguard. Then she asked the question that really made me smile: "Why?"
I told her I had heard reviews from Dave Ramsey and others that Vanguard was a top rated company with low fees but there were many other companies as well. Then she asked "What other companies are there" to which I named a few off the top of my head; Edward Johns, Merrel Lync, T Roe Price, etc.
My advice was for her to start a Roth IRA for her future contributions, and depending on the type of accounts the other two were, opening a second regular IRA to roll them into. Also I recommended she talk to the guy who does her taxes to get his advice on if they are regular IRAs if it makes since to transfer them over to a Roth knowing there would be taxes due or not.
So my question for ya'll is: "Who do you use for your Roth IRA and why?" and any other advice you could provide her her situation.
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