Dividend status during TIRA rollover
I was asked about this the other day, and I’m having trouble finding a definitive answer, so thought I might post it here.
TIRA owner has 2,000 shares of LMT he’s been accumulating over the years in his TIRA. He officially retired in March along with already retired spouse, and they project household taxable income this year will be about $70K, as they have not yet began a pension or Social Security. TIRA owner would like to know if he can do a rollover on the 2,000 LMT shares to a taxable account on, say, May 24. The stock goes Ex-Dividend May 28, the record date is June 1 and pay-date June 25, and then transfer the same 2,000 shares back into the TIRA after June 25, meeting the 60 day once-per-12-month rule. If so, will the $5,200 in dividends be reported on the 1099-DIV for the taxable account? As I understand it, the IRS “Same Property” rule requires the 2,000 shares be returned regardless of their change in value. If so, the advantage of this strategy is these qualified dividends will be taxed at the 0% rate, assuming his taxable income (including the dividends) is under the $80,800 cap. for 2021.
Thanks
BruceM
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2021-04-26 17:34
Hi Bruce. I cannot locate anything on point, but most likely the IRS has issued guidance on this at some point many years ago, and it wouldn’t fly. The easy part is that the broker should not report this dividend as qualified because the shares must be held (not in IRA) for over 60 days of a 121 day window. This isn’t possible while meeting the 60 day rollover deadline. The 1099 DIV would then show the dividend as ordinary.
As for the rest of the logic, the share price drops to reflect the dividend payment after the ex div date, so if all else is equal the share value would be less by that amount when rolled back. The same but more dramatic result would occur in a 2 of 1 stock split, so if client rolled back the same number of shares that were distributed, he would have extracted 50% of the value from the rollover. The dividend is much less dramatic, but the IRS should view this dividend as an intrinsic portion of the share value and should require both the shares and the dividend paid to be rolled back to the IRA in order to report a non taxable rollover.
Another issue with all lind rollovers is that the 1099R and 5498 amounts will not match up unless the shares happen to be of identical value when rolled back. If client proceeded, he could report the ordinary dividend income from the 1099 DIV and report the rest as a 100% rollover of the 1099R. But if there is any IRS guidance on this situation, it’s possible that it would contemplate a partial taxable distribution equal to the dividend amount (as if he had just kept the shares equal to the dividend), but then also expected the dividend to be taxed as well, which would be double taxation. Therefore, since the reporting results and the IRS response to those results are both somewhat unpredictable, I suggest that client abandon this idea.
The more clear result is the 1099 DIV not showing qualified since the broker knows it was not held over 60 days outside the IRA. However, perhaps someone else can produce a specific cite on the distribution, dividend and roll back scenario.