Who says your IRA has to be invested in a bank CD or a
similar stodgy instrument? You can also do options, risk
arbitrage and convertible bonds.
GREGOR RIESSER is not your typical individual retirement
account holder. Five days a week the retired 65-year-old
Shell research chemist sits in front of his home
computer and portable stock quote machine to plot
convertible arbitrage plays and other offbeat
investments.
Not content with the plain bank CDS and mutual funds
that get the bulk of IRA money, Riesser is one of a
growing group of investors using self-directed IRAS to
manage their retirement savings.
Adding nondeductible money to an IRA may not make sense
now (see next story), but millions of Americans already
have substantial amounts in established IRAs. Moreover,
it's quite possible to build up a very large IRA from
the rollover of lump sum pensions or 401(k) plans, paid
out when an employee retires or changes jobs. For
example, in 1986 Lowell Milken, brother of Michael, used
his IRAs to take an astute $170,000 position in Beatrice
takeover bonds, just before they went up in price. As
their accounts grow, investors are switching from bank
and mutual fund IRAS to self-directed IRAS that function
like brokerage accounts. Since 1985 self-managed IRAS
have grown from less than 15% of the $200 billion in IRA
deposits to nearly 18% of today's $465 billion in IRAS.
Offered by brokerage houses, banks, mutual funds and
insurance companies, self-directed IRAS allow virtually
any type of investment except collectibles, insurance
and leveraged investments (for example, stocks bought on
margin). Among the holdings permitted by the Internal
Revenue Service: Ginnie Mae mortgage pools, covered
options, foreign securities and financial and commodity
futures.
Riesser's self-directed IRA represents only $15,000 of
his $500,000 retirement savings, so he decided to have a
fling with it and opened a discount brokerage account at
Fidelity Brokerage Services. This is where he does his
most aggressive trading--betting on everything from
proposed mergers to contrarian plays in companies on the
verge of bankruptcy.
Example: In February Riesser made a hedged bet on Circle
K, the Phoenix-based convenience store chain. He bought
$12,000 (face value) Circle K 81/4s of 2005 convertible
bonds for $2,580 and then hedged by buying October puts
on 1,000 Circle K shares, exercisable at 5, for $2,750.
Total outlay, after commissions: $5,777. Since then
Circle K has gone Chapter 11, and Riesser has lost $750
more on the bonds than he's made on the puts. But he
still expects to come out ahead, figuring the bonds will
do well in the reorganization.
Riesser is also high on TWA'S 12s of 9.001, trading at
36 1/2. "They're still being treated like pay-in-kind
bonds, even though they start paying cash in six months,
so they're underpriced," he says. For as long as TWA
avoids Chapter 11, the bonds yield 33%.
While Riesser can afford to gamble with his IRA, such
tactics wouldn't make sense for someone with a small IRA
and nothing else for retirement. Such people wouldn't
have Uncle Sam to help them pay their losses. "Unless
your entire portfolio is more than $250,000, you're
probably better off sticking with the diversity and
efficiency of no-load mutual funds," advises Wallace
Head, director of Arthur Andersen & Co.'s personal
financial planning practice.
Many investors simply lack the time and expertise to
manage their own accounts. In October 1987 Albert
Sherman of Boca Raton, Fla. returned from a vacation in
Africa to discover that his $35,000 self-directed IRA
had $11,000 in paper losses after the market crash.
Sherman held on for a year, narrowing his loss to
$3,500, then cashed in his stocks for a bank co yielding
10%.
But you don't have to be a gambler to benefit from
self-directed accounts. Say you have $250,000 and a
desire to stay in ultraconservative,
government-guaranteed investments, such as Ginnie Maes
and Treasury bonds. Owning them directly would save you
the annual expense overhead of $1,000 or more built into
a typical bond fund account of that size. You would, of
course, incur commissions to establish your bond
portfolio, offsetting some of the savings.
Brokerage houses are pursuing self-directed IRA business
with gusto. With $44 billion in IRA brokerage accounts,
Merrill Lynch has the largest chunk of IRA business.
"Most of the money is coming through transfers from
banks and thrifts with people telling us they want to
manage their accounts more actively," says Don
Underwood, head of Merrill's retirement plan services.
In an effort to hook potential rollover accounts,
Merrill is negotiating with Forbes 500s companies to
offer retirement seminars on its self-directed IRAS.
The mutual fund industry has been quick to respond.
Seven of the ten largest fund families, including
Fidelity, Vanguard, Franklin and IDS, offer self-managed
IRAS through brokerage affiliates. You can mix no-load
funds with other securities in a single self-directed
IRA at one of the no-load fund sponsors.
Full-service brokers such as Merrill Lynch usually offer
the broadest choice of investments--from mutual funds,
CDS, Treasurys, equities and corporate bonds all the way
to American Eagle gold and silver coins. (These coins
are among the rare exceptions to the IRS rule against
collectibles.) Charles Schwab has lower commission rates
than Merrill but can't handle an order for Ginnie Maes.
Do shop around. A recent survey by New York City-based
Mercer, Inc. of the 150 largest discount brokers and
banks with brokerage affiliates found that self-directed
IRA setup and annual custodial charges typically range
anywhere from nothing to $50. Commission fees can vary
by $9,00 on a $10,000 trade.
Two points on setting up a self-directed IRA. One is
that you generally have to set it up with cash. Say you
have 500 shares of GM in your regular brokerage account
and want to move it into your IRA as part of a rollover
contribution of $200,000. You'll have to sell the GM,
contribute all cash to the IRA, then use some of the
cash to purchase other GM shares. Explain this to your
broker. He should be willing to give you a reduced
commission for the sale and repurchase of the shares.
The other caution has to do with rolling over a large
profit-sharing distribution. If you already have a Keogh
plan (something like an IRA, but available only for
self-employment earnings), that's where the rollover
should go. This can preserve desirable income-averaging
provisions if you think income tax rates are headed
higher and want to respond by taking a large chunk of
money out of your tax-sheltered plans all at once.
~~~~~~~~
By Michael Fritz
________________________________________
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Source: Forbes, 6/25/90, Vol. 145 Issue 13, p206, 2p
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