Deciphering the Rules for Roth 401(k)-to-Roth IRA Rollovers

By Ian Berger, JD IRA Analyst More and more 401(k) plans are making Roth employee contributions available, and employees leaving their jobs often want to roll over Roth 401(k) funds to a Roth IRA. What tax rules apply to distributions of amounts rolled over? Warning:...
Weekly Market Commentary

Weekly Market Commentary

-Darren Leavitt, CFA Growth concerns entered the market narrative as investors continued to look at policy uncertainties on tariffs and the strains on geopolitical relations.  The Trump administration confirmed that 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico would be effective...
9 Ways Retirement Will Be Different in 2025

9 Ways Retirement Will Be Different in 2025

How changes in Social Security, Medicare, 401(k) contributions and more will affect your finances Retirement is not static. Even when the kids are gone and the career is done, your lifestyle and expectations are constantly evolving. So are your finances. Areas key to...

Watch Out for the Once-Per-Year Rollover Rule

By Sarah Brenner, JD Director of Retirement Education Why is it so important to know how the “once-per-year rollover rule” works? Well, that’s because trouble with the once-per year rule is the kind of trouble no one wants! If you violate this rule, you are looking at...
Note that the example above uses jQuery to trigger the function call, but you could trigger the function call using any method you wish.fbq('track', 'Lead'); - To track the lead event on the page. Like Thank you page after submitting the lead. If you have the Thank you page after submitting the lead then you can paste this code on the page and it'll track it as a successful lead. If instead you wanted to track a standard purchase event when the visitor clicks a purchase button, you could tie the fbq('track') function call to the lead button on your page, like this: