1%ers: What are you doing with your $$ before Dec 31?

Anonymous
I can't think of anything OP. Do you have any suggestions. Please share. Thank you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you people run through all your kids and still need to unload some gift money, I will gladly step up to the plate and take some of your burden.


Take a number.
Anonymous
We're going to donate less to charities in the future including educational institutions beginning this year since we're getting socked by big increases in state and federal taxes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you people run through all your kids and still need to unload some gift money, I will gladly step up to the plate and take some of your burden.


Take a number.

You and 99% of the country are already standing in line.
Anonymous
OP you know most of the trading and market movement has nothing to do with individual stock holders?
Anonymous
We're having our teens open Roth IRAs with the amount each made in their summer jobs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We contribute $29k per kid per yr to 529 and that is annual gift max. The $4k may be deductible against VA taxes.


Maybe it is a typr, but the maximum gift if $26,000 from a couple to a child, as the gift tax exclusion is 13,000 per individual
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP you know most of the trading and market movement has nothing to do with individual stock holders?

I guess I'm not smart enough to have any idea what you're suggesting. We're selling the individual stocks we have with significant cap gains. We'll then buy some low cost index funds.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:We contribute $29k per kid per yr to 529 and that is annual gift max. The $4k may be deductible against VA taxes.


Maybe it is a typr, but the maximum gift if $26,000 from a couple to a child, as the gift tax exclusion is 13,000 per individual

I assume the "we" means a couple.
Anonymous
this thread is gross.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We're having our teens open Roth IRAs with the amount each made in their summer jobs.



I bet that'll make them want to get a summer job next year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
OP you know most of the trading and market movement has nothing to do with individual stock holders?

I guess I'm not smart enough to have any idea what you're suggesting. We're selling the individual stocks we have with significant cap gains. We'll then buy some low cost index funds.

Good for you. So when and by how much will cap gains go up?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We're converting to Roth IRAs, adding $26k per child to 529 plans and probably selling off stocks with a lot if capital gains. Anyone else making money moves before the end of the year?


As a 1%'er I have to agree with the envious here. This post was in very poor taste.

If you want additional strategies by year end by all means discuss with your CPA and trust/estate planning attorney.

If you want to make other people feel bad and gain nothing in return, then carry on.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
OP you know most of the trading and market movement has nothing to do with individual stock holders?

I guess I'm not smart enough to have any idea what you're suggesting. We're selling the individual stocks we have with significant cap gains. We'll then buy some low cost index funds.

Good for you. So when and by how much will cap gains go up?

My magic 8 ball says check again later.
Anonymous
I think the point this no one can predict the market. Hedge funds have a lot more information and resource and look how they do.
Career Risk Panic: Only 11% Of Hedge Funds Are Outperforming The S&P In 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2012 19:10 -0400



The S&P500 may be soaring to new 2012 highs, and has its all time highs within short squeeze distance, yet paradoxically this is arguably the worst possible news to the cadre of US hedge fund managers used to beating the market year after year, thus justifying their (increasingly more unsustainable) 2 and 20 fees. The reason: according to just a released report quantifying hedge fund performance so far in 2012, with an average return of 4.6% as of August 3 compared to a 12% return for the S&P, a pathetic 11% of all hedge funds are beating S&P year to date. This is the worst yearly aggregate S&P 500 underperformance by the hedge fund industry in history, and also explains why the smooth sailing in the S&P500 belies the fact that nearly every single hedge fund manager (and at least 89% of all) is currently panicking like never before knowing very well there are only 4 more months left to beat the S&P or face terminal redemption requests. And with $1.2 trillion in gross equity positions, the day of redemption reckoning at the end of the year (and just after September 30 for that matter as well) could be the most painful yet. it also explains why, just like every other quarter in which career risk is at all time highs, HFs are dumping everything not nailed down and buying up AAPL, which as of June 30 was held by an all time high 230 hedge funds (more on that later).

Key HF performance observations from Goldman:

The typical hedge fund generated a 2012 YTD return of 5% through August 3rd compared with a 12% gain for the S&P 500 and a 10% return for the average large-cap core mutual fund (see Exhibit 1). The standard deviation of all hedge fund returns was 6 percentage points so two-thirds of hedge funds have generated YTD returns between -2% and +11%.
 
Distribution of returns provides more perspective than a single point estimate. Only 11% of hedge funds have generated YTD returns greater than 12%, outperforming the S&P 500, while 10% of funds of returned more than 15%. 79% of funds had positive returns.
 
Popular long positions have lagged both the index and popular short holdings in 2012. Our Hedge Fund VIP Basket (Bloomberg ticker: <GSTHHVIP>, consisting of 50 stocks that appear most frequently among hedge fund top ten holdings, has returned 9% YTD, lagging the S&P 500. Our Very Important Short Position Basket (<GSTHVISP> of stocks with the highest total dollar value of short interest has returned 12% through August 3rd, in-line with the index, outperforming the VIP basket by 250 bp. In subsequent weeks, the VIP basket outperformed. Through August 15th, our hedge fund Very Important Position (“HVIP”) basket returned 12.4%, in line with the VISP basket over the same period of time.
 
Hedge funds reduced risk as the market pulled back in 2Q and their long positions suffered. Hedge fund net long exposure fell to 43% in 2Q 2012 from 49% in 1Q 2012, above the recent low of 36% in 3Q 2011 but well below the 52% high in 1Q 2007. S&P 500 fell 3% in 2Q while the VIP basket returned -7%, likely reflecting both a cause and symptom of fund underperformance and de-risking.
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