You may be enjoying
the economic benefits of gas prices around two dollars a gallon, but last week
investors were skeptical about the effect of low, low oil prices on companies’
performance during 2015.
For the first time
since the financial crisis, the price of crude oil dropped under $50 a barrel
last week. That’s less than half of its value just six months ago and one of
the fastest drops in the past 30 years. Investors weren’t thrilled with the change.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (S&P 500) fell, marking the first time the
index has moved lower during each of the first three days of a new year since
2005. Barron’s described the effects
of lower oil prices like this:
“In the U.S. alone,
oil’s precipitous drop has had a sizable impact on expectations for corporate
profits: Analysts have cut their fourth-quarter earnings forecasts for S&P
500 energy stocks by more than a quarter since the end of September while total
S&P 500 earnings forecasts have come down by more than 7%... But here’s the
thing: Such plunges haven’t been bad for stocks – or the U.S. economy, for that
matter. Since 1984, oil has experienced three similar drops and each time the
S&P 500 traded higher 12 months later.”
Investors were
plagued by mood swings last week. Their outlook improved when the Chicago Fed’s
Charles Evans indicated Fed rate hikes shouldn’t start until 2016, which is
later than consensus suggests. Many analysts believe the Fed will begin
tightening monetary policy (by raising the Fed funds rate) sometime in
mid-2015. Investor optimism was tempered when Friday’s employment report didn’t
deliver as expected. At the end a volatile week, the S&P 500 was lower.
Across the pond, European
Central Bank (ECB) staff presented various models for buying 500 billion Euros
of investment-grade debt during 2015. No commitment was made, but expectations the
ECB might introduce fresh stimulus measures in late January helped push European
government bonds lower.
beware indirect ira rollovers: the rules
have changed. There
are a lot of reasons an investor might want to rollover an IRA. If it’s
something you’ve been thinking about, talk with us. There are numerous tax
implications that should be considered prior to taking any action.
In
general, there are two ways to rollover an IRA. Investors can choose a direct
rollover or an indirect rollover. Direct rollovers, which are also known as
trustee-to-trustee transfers, are pretty straightforward. The funds move from
one custodian to the other and the IRA owner never touches the money.
Indirect
rollovers are the potential source of trouble. Typically, with an indirect
rollover (aka a 60-day rollover), a check is sent to the IRA owner. The owner
cashes the check and, as long as he or she deposits the funds in another IRA
within 60 days, the assets continue to qualify for special tax treatment.
In
the past, IRS rules allowed investors to rollover each IRA they owned once a
year. In recent years, some investors tested the limits of indirect IRA
rollovers by rolling over multiple IRAs. In essence, they took 60-day personal
loans from their qualified accounts. The issue came to court last year:
“In the Bobrow case, the court held that
Mr. Bobrow, a tax lawyer, was taking advantage of the 60-day rule for each IRA.
He had done a series of rollovers from separate IRAs and had use of his IRA
funds for almost six months. The court essentially said, “No more of this
nonsense.” Mr. Bobrow lost his case and that changed the interpretation of the
once-per-year rule for everyone. The court said that the rule applies to all
IRAs, not to each one separately. The IRS agreed and changed the rules in
March.”
If you rolled
over more than one IRA during 2014, don’t panic. The IRS provided relief for
rollovers completed during 2014 when the old rules were thought to apply.
Weekly Focus – Think About It
"Many
men go fishing all of their lives without knowing that it is not fish they are
after.”
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