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Showing content with the highest reputation on 02/12/2020 in Posts

  1. There's only one company (Corporation A), right? So, doesn't matter where you work. When we get to Mars, I hope our service counts while up there (and during the commute).
    1 point
  2. Ebplans

    "Back Door Roth"

    At the FIS seminar in Orlando last week, there was a little discussion of this 'technique.' In summary, the discussion was that 1. Testing, etc. work for a single life 401(k) plan; 2. Testing, etc. work in the context austin3515 describes above; 3. However, the Mega Back Door Roth may run afoul of the IRS's long standing enforcement position that you cannot do in two steps what you cannot do in one step. No one commented on the results of IRS audits of these plans. For some practitioners, it doesn't pass the smell test.
    1 point
  3. shERPA

    "Back Door Roth"

    Useful for owner-only/HCE-only plans. Otherwise fuggedaboutit!
    1 point
  4. JulesInCNY, the AP is required to start taking RMDs in the year the Participant hit his required beginning date (so the RBD for the AP is based on the participant's age, employment status, and 5% ownership status, not the AP's info). As far as your 4/1 question, the participant hit his RBD in the year before the QDRO split occurred, so the AP would have to take her RMDs by 12/31 of each year (i.e., no 4/1 delay since the participant's RBD occurred in an earlier year). So, if AP received a portion of his account balance in 2017, AP should have received RMDs by 12/31/2018 and 12/31/2019 already. If you know the participant is still alive, the AP's RMD is determined by dividing the AP's prior year separate account balance by the Participant's uniform lifetime table factor based on his age in the year of distribution (rather than the AP's uniform lifetime table factor using her age in the year of distribution). If you know the participant died after RBD, then the AP's RMD would be determined as if she was a surviving beneficiary of the Participant - that is, by dividing her prior year separate account balance by longer of the remaining single life expectancy of the participant (determined based on age in year of death and reduced by 1 each year since the year of death) or the single life expectancy of the AP (determined based on AP's age in current year). Hope this helps.
    1 point
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