This is not financial advice, but I distributed my IRA from Swan directly into cold storage last year. Bitcoin went up like 100% and halved the value of the taxes/penalty I owe for doing it. From one third to one sixth the Bitcoin amount. Not as bad, but it stings nonetheless. The cost of exiting is worth it.
Discussion
I keep trying to convince my mother to dump her "retirement" "savings" but she won't do it. Just bitches about how much tax she would pay.
It doesn't matter mom, Bitcoin is money, your savings are garbage.
You're going to have to pay taxes on it eventually unless it's a Roth. And there's a 10% penalty for IRA's which I didn't really care about because Bitcoin will do way better than that to make up for it. And it did.
most retirement accounts can be rolled into gold and silver without a tax hit
I understand choosing this over going directly into an ETF but that penalty is some bullshit.
Literal theft, yes. Retirement accounts are their cash cow and they don't like it getting taken away from them.
I would much rather have been able to choose my own adventure than get a 401K when I started working. They lock you into preselected “safe” investments that are supposed to grow enough to beat inflation and also give your employer a tax break for matching your contribution. Unfortunately, I didn’t know any better at the time. Since starting in bitcoin I’ve beaten every single retirement target they ever set for me and I still have plenty of time left.
I was in the same boat. Then when I left my company, I rolled over to Bitcoin IRA, used them for a bit even though it sucked. Then I moved it all to Swan, then to cold storage. It was a long journey, but I agree with you. I would have loved to have just started buying Bitcoin instead of jumping through all those hoops.
now that i've been on the other side of that arrangement, I understand why employers offer 401k over IRAs. The underlying reason is that officers are able to set aside larger sums of pre tax or roth money into the company's 401k than any other tax deferred vehicle. When i say larger sums i mean a significant proportion of the company's profits, that might add up to as much as five times or more of what an employee is allowed to put away. In exchange for being able to do that as the owner or officer of the company, the employer is required to offer a retirement matching amount to his employees and this is considered a profit sharing program.
The structure of the retirement matching program is that the company is the custodian of the retirement funds, and most small companies are even medium companies will choose to hire that out to a third party who is responsible for managing and reporting that retirement program. This is why when you start with a new company after the probationary period, when you're allowed to join the retirement program, your asked to talk to the retirement administrator which is always someone at some kind of a financial management firm. It's because of the arrangement where the company is ultimately responsible for your retirement funds that that type of program as only allowed to use managed investments and that's where the entire mutual fund industry comes from, that is to service companies that want to offer 401k's but legally aren't allowed to make any investment recommendations directly to their employees. Reasons being that a corporation good qualify as something called a qualified investor and that means that the corporation if it were managing a retirement fund could theoretically dip into their retirement fund and invest their employees retirement money in two high risk investments particularly this that or not outside of arm's reach relationships. This modern arrangement of retirement options for the average employee is intended to reform the private company pension fund swindles that were happening in the sixties seventies and eighties.