Monday, October 04, 2010

Capture and Taxes

Capture That Thought
What is your capture tool? Is it your PDA, your notebook, your laptop or maybe a little of each? The purpose of a capture tool is to catch and retain all that comes in each day. This takes those thoughts out of your mind and puts them all in the same place to retrieve later. This capture tool should be designed to help you be more productive by staying with the "do-nows" and not being dragged into the "not-doing-now" or "never-doing-now" world of work.

Step 1 - Capture: Deciding on how you want to capture information may require redesigning some of the things you are doing. Oh, yes, what works for me may not work for you. The key to a good capture tool according the Brian Stuhlmuller from "Mission Control" is having it with you at all times. So unless you sit in an office all day, the three most popular for those that roam around are a PDA, a microcassette recorder or a 3 "X 5" spiral notebook.

Step 2 - Save for retrieval: Now, when you return to your office, you need to decide what will you do with this information. A PDA should nicely sync with your personal information manager system (like Outlook). If it doesn't, find out how to make it. This is important if anyone other than you needs to see your calendar. With any handwritten notes you will either file them or scan and digitally file. Think of the final resting place for information as a process that you always will follow.

If all this sounds like too much work, think about the last time you lost that piece of paper . . . how much time did you spend tearing your office apart trying to find it?? A capture tool and process will mean Ben Franklin was right when he said "A place for everything, everything in its place". He was Lean before it was cool!

Copyright 2010 Linda Lucas Fayerweather MBA EA
http://www.changinglanes.biz/
419-897-0528
linda@changinglanes.biz
Business Plans Make Profit!
Investments and Taxes
If you buy mutual funds in your taxable portfolio (meaning outside your IRAs or retirement plan), here's a timely warning for avoiding an ugly year-end tax trap.

Mutual funds -- especially stock funds -- generally pay two types of dividends at the end of the year:

• "Income" dividends consist of income earned by the fund's portfolio - bond interest, stock dividends, etc. These are generally taxed as ordinary income whether you take them in cash or reinvest them in new shares. (However, income from "qualified corporate dividends" is taxed at special lower rates and capped at 15%; Treasury income is free from state income tax; and municipal bond income is free from federal and most state tax.)

• "Capital gain" dividends are profits from sales of fund assets. These are generally taxed as long-term capital gains, regardless of how long you own the shares. They're taxed when distributed whether you take them in cash or reinvest them.

Paying tax on income you earn is bad enough. But paying tax on income you don't really get is worse!


How can that happen?
In today's market, you may be thinking of taking cash off the sideline and putting it back in the market. If you do that before the fund you buy pays its dividends, you'll get stuck paying the tax on that dividend -- even though you haven't really "earned" the income or capital gain that you're paying tax on!

If you're looking to invest now, find out whether the fund you like is anticipating substantial dividends. A little homework here can save a lot of tax down the road.

You might also consider index funds or exchange-traded funds, which passively track indices like the S&P 500. These funds avoid the frequent sales that rack up taxable gains. That's because they generally sell only when they need to redeem shares, or when the underlying index itself changes.

What's the bottom line? If you're looking to shuffle your portfolio, pay attention to taxes. You don't control whether markets go up or down. But you do enjoy a surprising amount of control over the taxes you pay. Take advantage of that control whenever you can to turbocharge your investment performance.

Remember, it's what you keep that counts!

Tim Pinkelman, CPA
Accounting Center & Tax Services, Inc.
419-882-9255 or 734-847-0400
http://www.accounting-centers.com/