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Prosper Roth IRA

Started by Peter, October 19, 2012, 11:00:00 PM

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Wrats6

I am considering a Roth IRA with Prosper through Sterling Trust.  I've been told there will be absolutley no fees if the Roth balance remains above $10,000.  Does anyone have any experience in establishing a Roth IRA and are there indeeed no fees?  Also, any other comments/thoughts on the Roth IRA option will be appreciated.  Thanks

Peter

I have looked at Prosper's IRA product in depth and it is true there are no fees for balances of $10,000 or more. I think if you are investing in Prosper and can do an IRA it is by far the best option. I will be opening a Roth IRA at Prosper myself next year.
Publisher of the Lend Academy blog

See my returns here: http://www.lendacademy.com/returns

dagilbe

Wrats,

I started a Roth IRA on Prosper a few months ago.  I highly recommend going through another self-directed service besides Sterling Trust.  Google Sterling Trust and read the not so stellar reviews of the company.  After contacting Prosper, an IRA specialist recommended starting  the Prosper Roth IRA through American Pension Services.  I started my Roth through American Pension and have been very happy with the decision.  Just like with Sterling Trust, Prosper has paid all fees relating to setting up the Roth account and has agreed to pay all management fees so long as I put another 5k next year for a total of 10k) into my Roth IRA account.  In order to minimize fees, write out a check to the self directed IRA manager (e.g. American Pension) and direct the company to issue a check to Prosper.  I believe there is a $25 charge to wire the funds to American Pension and another $25 fee to wire the funds to Prosper directly and writing the checks and directing American Pension to issue the check to Prosper was free of cost. 

The only real downside of the Roth IRA through Prosper is that you can't buy or sell notes through Folio.  Otherwise, I would highly recommend a Prosper Roth IRA because of the substantial tax advantages. 


TravelingPennies

Thanks Peter and Dagilbe.  I mailed the forms to Sterling Trust this weekend.  So I guess I am too late to try your American Pension Services option.  I will be transferring $13,000 from my Vanguard Roth IRA.  If things go well, both the customer service and ROI, I may begin monthly transfers from my bank account of $500 to hit the $6,000 limit per year (I am 50 years old so the limit is $1,000 higher than the normal $5,000).  I've been averaging  a 13 percent ROI with Prosper fro 3 years now.  Hopefully all works out.  I'm a little nervous.

TravelingPennies

I am intending to use Sterling Trust to open my IRA as well - I think you will be fine. Best of luck with the investment.

MarkTrader

Sorry, can I ask a dumb question?
I am also looking into the option of opening a Prosper IRA. So if you withdraw the money when you are 65 years old, all the income is tax free? But I am only 29. What happens if I need a portion of the money before than? For example, if in some years, I have $100k in the IRA and I suddenly need $20k, how do I take it out?

TravelingPennies

There are IRS rules governing the withdrawal of funds from any retirement account. You can take out a loan from your IRA as long as you pay it back and you can take a withdrawal early but you will pay a tax penalty. The idea is that IRA should be used for retirement and not as regular savings so the rules are in place to make it more difficult for you to get at the money.

graceful

Marktrader,

I have two IRA accounts at Prosper. At withdrawal, you will allow funds to accumulate and then withdraw, or you can sell notes on FolioN and then withdraw. Very similar to liquidating a portfolio at Fidelity, sell the stocks and then withdraw the funds.

Since we have to liquidate by selling, we've been having conversations at another forum http://p2plending.forumatic.com/index.php" class="bbc_link" target="_blank">http://p2plending.forumatic.com/index.php about how to do this.

After running some experiments, it looks like it will be relatively easy.

Graceful

neals384

Graceful,

Thanks for letting us know about the forumatic site.  But I went there and can't find the discussions you reference.  Can you help?

Neal

TravelingPennies

Sorry, I just saw your question today for the first time.

Look at the conversations about FolioN to learn more about how to organize yourself to be ready to sell notes when you need to cash out more than the cash generated from payments.

http://p2plending.forumatic.com/viewforum.php?f=20" class="bbc_link" target="_blank">http://p2plending.forumatic.com/viewforum.php?f=20

Graceful


faeriering

I think with the Roth, in order to withdraw the original investment, it has to have been invested for at least 5 years, otherwise there are penalties.  There's several good blogs out there that talk about how IRAs work and what the differences between traditional and roth IRAs are.  It is far more information than can be covered here in any depth.  The IRS even has some really good easy to understand resources describing the options.

subdood

Hi guys and gals,
I think one thing you all are overlooking is the fact that Prosper won't let you trade your IRA notes through Folio.
I have an IRA with Prosper, through Sterling Trust.
Here is the HUGE problem. Once you buy a note in your IRA account, you own that note until maturity. There is NO WAY to get back out of that note.
I just got off the phone with Prosper to ask them what options I have to get my funds back out of the IRA. The response was that I have no options other than to wait until the notes mature.
I can transfer the cash that the account generates if I want too, but the notes I own, I have to hold until maturity.
There are no techniques you can use to get those notes converted back into cash.
Once you buy a Prosper note from within a Prosper IRA, You own it until it pays off or defaults.

You better be 100% sure that you will never have a need to get the money you invest into a Prosper IRA back in an emergency.

On the other hand, Lending Club lets you trade notes in an IRA just like they let you trade regular account notes. I could convert my Lending Club IRA notes into cash in a matter of days if I wanted to discount them enough.

I own regular and IRA accounts in both Prosper and Lending Club.

Jeff


Fiscal Sergeant

Just a side note, the IRA limit was raised to $5500 this year.

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