Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are actively looking for a house do it know. We just bought a house - got the keys two weeks ago). I sold 50,000 dollars worth of stock I had and it took longer than I thought. I had never sold stock before. I had the money in a Vanguard brokerage account. I underestimated the time to settle (close of market plus 3 days), then I didn't realize I had to verify my bank account which took 8 days then transferring the money took three days. The loan officer wouldn't send our docs to the underwriter for final approval until the money was in our bank account as final not pending.
+1 -- It isn't instantaneous by any means.
As to selling because the market dropped, that's what makes the rest of us rich.
Anonymous wrote:If you are actively looking for a house do it know. We just bought a house - got the keys two weeks ago). I sold 50,000 dollars worth of stock I had and it took longer than I thought. I had never sold stock before. I had the money in a Vanguard brokerage account. I underestimated the time to settle (close of market plus 3 days), then I didn't realize I had to verify my bank account which took 8 days then transferring the money took three days. The loan officer wouldn't send our docs to the underwriter for final approval until the money was in our bank account as final not pending.
Anonymous wrote:It's a good time to get some money out of the stock market from the looks of things.
Anonymous wrote:It's a good time to get some money out of the stock market from the looks of things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the most tax-effective way to deal with a large cash gift for downpayment from immediate family? Any way to avoid documenting?
Just have them transfer it 3 months beforehand. Banks don't go back that far.
As far as IRS gift tax rules, you can get a certain amount from each parent to each you and your spouse yearly. I forget what it is this year, but it's a lot when you multiply it x4.