Personal Finance & Money Asked by Post169 on July 6, 2021
Is it possible to swap assets between personal accounts and retirement accounts?
Say I have $100 worth of one fund in my 401k, and I think that fund is better as a short-term investment, and I also have $100 in another fund which I own in a personal account, and I think the second fund would serve well as a long-term investment. To put the asset bought after tax and available to sell at any time into the 401k and pull what’s in the pre-tax 401k out would make no net difference in the current value of the retirement account, or are there other obstacles?
Sort of, but not the way you describe it.
You can't just move assets into a 401(k) - you can only contribute cash from your paycheck (unless this "personal account" is another retirement account, e.g. IRA, and your 401(k) accepts rollovers, but I'm assuming you mean a regular taxable account).
Additionally, you can't just move assets out of the 401(k). You could take a distribution, selling the asset and withdrawing the cash, but it would count as taxable income, be subject to a penalty depending on your age, so you would end up with less money than the asset was worth. A distribution may not even be allowed by your plan if you are still employed.
What you could do is just exchange the assets (sell one and buy the other) within their current accounts, with two caveats:
Correct answer by yoozer8 on July 6, 2021
No, because
It doesn't matter, though, because money is fungible.
Thus:
If your 401(k) options are limited, reduce your 401(k) contribs and put that money into a traditional IRA at a company with a wide variety of investment options.
Answered by RonJohn on July 6, 2021
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