Financial question...
"John H." salmonremovebait@gmaildotcom wrote in message
...
On Wed, 20 Aug 2008 16:26:27 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote:
On Wed, 20 Aug 2008 17:11:31 -0400, John H.
salmonremovebait@gmaildotcom wrote:
I'm not talking about taking money out of savings (CDs), but about
selling
stocks. I believe the interest earned on CDs is taxable in the year
earned,
not when the CD matures.
Yeah, but you have cap gains taxes on stock, no?
I' was talking IRA CD's, which are taxed as current year income.
Anyway, on the CD's, once you figure the tax hit and interest lost,
and figure the interest saved on the home note, there you are.
Easy.
With your situation, there's the potential of the stocks to increase
or decrease in value, and any known dividends. Future valuation
can't be determined.
One piece of advice I can give is "psychological."
If you sell the stocks, don't bother checking their performance
afterwards. It could hurt, or it could make you smile, but it doesn't
matter. Every day is a new day.
--Vic
If stocks rise more than 5 1/8% per year, then selling would be a bad
idea.
(Actually, since the tax on capital gains is less than the tax on earned
interest, the % could be a little less.) The CDs I have are currently
doing
better than the interest rate I'm paying, so they won't be used.
The decision is very dependant on what the future may hold for the stock
market.
--
** Good Day! **
John H
Don't bet your farm on the Market. It runs in cycles and historically
returns an *average* of about 10%/year. No one knows when the next up-cycle
will begin.
Not to worry though, according the Mayan calendar these problems will all be
a mute point in 2012. 8)
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