One Roth IRA Rule Congress Should Do Away with Now

By Sarah Brenner, JD Director of Retirement Education Today is Inauguration Day. A new administration has arrived. We also have a new Congress. With the arrival of newly elected officials, many will have hopes of legislative change. When it comes to retirement...
Weekly Market Commentary

Weekly Market Commentary

-Darren Leavitt, CFA Financial markets advanced this week as a solid start to the fourth-quarter earnings season, and some better-than-feared inflation data gave investors a reason to buy the most recent dip.  The financial sector gained 6.1% on the week as bank...

The Pro-Rata Rule and Roth Conversions: Today’s Slott Report Mailbag

By Andy Ives, CFP®, AIF® IRA Analyst QUESTION: My wife has two after-tax traditional IRAs at two separate institutions. We are hoping to consolidate them, then convert to a Roth in the next 18 months. She is already retired. She also has an inherited IRA (from her...

IRS Issues Mandatory Roth Catch-Up Regulations

By Ian Berger, JD IRA Analyst One of the more controversial rules in the 2022 SECURE 2.0 Act is the requirement that plan catch-up contributions by certain highly-paid employees be made on a Roth basis. Last Friday, (January 10, 2025) the IRS issued proposed...
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: