Personal Finance & Money Asked on May 1, 2021
Let’s assume you contribute a certain deductible amount to your IRA on Jan/2, and invest it there. You really want the money in your IRA Roth at the end of the year, but you try to pick the best approach after the fact:
I don’t see a reason why this would be illegal or not workable?
It seems legal and workable. There was a variation of this strategy called the "Roth IRA horse race", but with the 2017 tax law changes that eliminated recharacterizing Roth IRA conversions, that is no longer possible. Your strategy still is, but it's limited by how many people are eligible to make deductible Traditional IRA contributions. And those that are probably don't have a particularly high marginal federal tax rate to make it extremely attractive. Also keep in mind that most years the market goes up, so most years you'll have to go through the trouble of doing the recharacterization.
Answered by Craig W on May 1, 2021
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