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" ... "With your own IRA you can take the money out and redeposit it in another IRA within 60 days without penalty. Not so an inherited IRA. All movement of money must be from one IRA custodian to another--be sure to specify a `trustee-to-trustee' transfer. Moreover, unless you've inherited from a spouse, you must retitle the IRA, including the original owner's name and indicating it is inherited, e.g., `Daddy Warbucks, deceased, inherited IRA for the benefit of Little Orphan Annie, beneficiary.'" ... "
" ... American Airlines has eliminated all change fees on domestic and short-haul international tickets, for example Mexico and the Caribbean. It has also dropped long-haul international change fees as well, as long as the ticket originates in North or South America. That applies to all tickets except Basic Economy, and it means that going forward AA customers will have quite a bit of flexibility. That’s on top of the fact that AA has eliminated change fees and mileage redeposit fees on all award tickets too. ... "
" ... Gov Bank should be in the business of giving customers safety (FDIC insurance) and accessibility (ability to pay for things). Adding lending would create significant moral hazard: competition with private banks from a rate-insensitive lender with unlimited loss-making capacity. Gov Bank should redeposit assets with private banks that can make loans, while avoiding lending itself. ... "
" ... In the case of the retired engineer, it’s because of another tax relief provision in the March 2020 stimulus package: the one that waived required minimum distributions for retirement accounts for 2020. The Treasury Department later said that folks who had taken money out of their accounts before the law change were allowed to put it back in by August. Why didn’t the widow get the Round 1 and Round 2 stimulus payments originally? The IRS based those off of most people’s 2019 income. His 2019 adjusted gross income was $122,000, clearly over the $75,000 individual threshold for a full $1,200 payment, and well over the $100,000 level where the Round 1 payments fully phased out for individuals. So the IRS wouldn’t have automatically issued him a payment in Round 1 or Round 2. His 2020 income also would have been too much at $118,000, which included a $79,000 RMD, but he was able to redeposit the $79,000 RMD. That zeroed out his taxes (federal and California) and qualified him for the recovery rebate credit and the Round 3 stimulus payment. It also meant less of his Social Security benefits were taxable, and it knocked off Medicare premium surcharges, saving him a bundle that way too. ... "
" ... The notice clarifies that people who took their RMDs in January (and anytime this year) can redeposit their RMDs to accommodate the CARES Act RMD suspension for 2020 under new rules that apply to 2020 RMDs. ... "