I have some money in a regular Scottrade account and I was looking to open a Roth IRA with Scottrade. Can I simply move $4K (the max) over to the Roth or do I have to sell and rebuy in the Roth? Basically, I want to move part of the regular account to the roth account. I hope this makes sense. thanks
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Opening a Roth IRA
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Just remember that only earned income can be put in an IRA. I'm guessing from your ID that you are a teen. You can put in the $4,000 max as long as your 2006 income is at least $4,000. If not, you can only invest up to your income amount.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Question:
If I open a Roth IRA with my bank, are they going to charge me taxes then?
Just trying to figure out what they base taxes on. Technically through my paycheck taxes have already been deducted on that money.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
I honestly don't know the answer to this, but...
Isn't it foolish to open an IRA through a stock-broker like Scottrade?
I mean, won't you pay fees (commission) in excess of those you would pay if you went directly through T. Rowe Price or Janus or whatnot? I realize companies like Schwab have low-fee/'no-fee' options. Maybe Scottrade does too. Maybe someone else can address this.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Paying commissions is always an issue unless you open your IRA at a company that gives you free access to their own funds. But even if you open an IRA at Vanguard, you're going to pay commissions to buy individual stocks or non-Vanguard mutual funds.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Originally posted by poundwiseIsn't it foolish to open an IRA through a stock-broker like Scottrade?
Also keep in mind that you can have multiple IRA accounts in different places as long as your total annual contribution doesn't exceed the limit.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Originally posted by SweepsplayerPaying commissions is always an issue unless you open your IRA at a company that gives you free access to their own funds. But even if you open an IRA at Vanguard, you're going to pay commissions to buy individual stocks or non-Vanguard mutual funds.
I know you will pay something with every offering, whether is a commission called a 'load' or whether it is labeled as some other fee or fees, however, in the case of funding an IRA with mutual funds, it would still seem to me to be MORE costly to go through a source like Scottrade rather than just opening an account at Janus, and/or other mutual fund providers.
That's something I'm still in-the-process of learning about, so any follow-up response would be appreciated.
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Re: Opening a Roth IRA
Originally posted by disneysteveWell, it depends on what you want to invest your money in. If you want to buy individual stocks or ETFs, than a discount broker is a reasonable way to go. If, however, you prefer mutual funds, then you are probably better off opening the account with the fund company directly.
Also keep in mind that you can have multiple IRA accounts in different places as long as your total annual contribution doesn't exceed the limit.
I don't mean to hijack the thread but I was curious.
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