this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2024
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FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early)
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I'm planning on doing this sometime before EOY. I recently bought some small-value ETFs (AVUV and AVDV) in my tax-advantaged accounts and am considering expanding my small-value tilt, and selling mutual funds and waiting until the next day to buy ETFs is a bit of a hassle. I'm also considering moving my taxable assets to Fidelity because they have YTD tax figures, which I haven't been able to find in Vanguard, and I like to estimate my taxes around EOY to decide on any tax moves I want to do (I often do a Roth conversion around EOY from my old 401k rollover).
I'm going to keep a portion in the mutual fund for automatic investments, but I'll probably convert the bulk of it.
Vanguard shows YTD realized gains/losses and dividends. They also publish a report estimating percentage of qualified dividends near the end of each year. Not sure what else you would need.
Under "Year-to-date activity" in "Tax forms & information," I just see "Dividends & interest," which seems to lump qualified and non-qualified dividends together. I can estimate it w/ prior year info since I only have one fund in my taxable account, but it's not particularly helpful w/ tax planning.
Fidelity breaks it down by qualified and non-qualified dividends, but I'm not sure if it's correct since I only have MMFs there (which are all ordinary income on fed taxes IIRC). I've been thinking of moving my taxable assets to Fidelity partially to get better YTD tax info, but also to consolidate accounts (Fidelity has my HSA, e-fund, and "checking" already).
What neither seems to offer is a consolidated view across accounts of my YTD tax picture. I want to know:
The last one is especially important because I plan to realize income on Roth conversions at EOY depending on what my taxable income is since I'd really rather not jump into a higher bracket than expected on those conversions.
I currently manage this in a spreadsheet, which is overly complicated and which I'd honestly prefer to scrap. They gather all this info for EOY tax forms, so surely they can generate it before then...
I can see where you're coming from. Those year-end distributions don't give you much time before the 12/31 conversion deadline.
To be fair, the "penalty" for miscalculating it isn't huge, but it is annoying.