NUA Basis Allocation after N2014-54
Just read the excellent overview of IRS Notice 2014-54’s impact on allocation of after-tax money during rollovers. My question is: will this Notice affect the way that NUA *basis* allocation can occur?
Example: Taxpayer has a 401(k) account with $1MM in it, all from after-tax contributions. Of the total, he has $500,000 in employer stock, with purchase basis of $200,000. The remaining $500,000 is in mutual funds. Of course the taxpayer can transfer his mutual funds worth $500,000 to his IRA. Can he also transfer $200,000 worth of his employer stock to the IRA, allocating the basis to these stocks, and then distribute the remaining $300,000 to his taxable brokerage account so that there is an effective basis of zero, and therefore also zero tax on the distribution? Then when he sells the stock in the brokerage account, naturally the first $300,000 has long-term cap gains treatment and if there is growth of the funds the holding period (for determining LTCG vs. STCG) starts on the date of the distribution.
The reason I wonder about the possibility is from IRC Sec 402(c)(2) where it is stated that the transfer to an IRA as part of a lump-sum distribution with multiple destinations is treated “as consisting first of the portion of such distribution that is includible in gross income”. Since the amount from his distribution that is “includible in gross income” is his mutual funds plus the cost basis of his employer stock, should this basis allocation be allowed?
Any comments on this? Appreciate your insights –
jb
Permalink Submitted by mk foss on Fri, 2014-10-03 00:02
The regulations regarding the determination of cost basis for NUA purposes indicate that you use average cost basis to determine the NUA. You can’t split the shares by allocating basis to some shares and no basis to others. Also Notice 2009-75 indicates that more than the basis amount is taxed when NUA shares are converted to Roth.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2014-10-03 02:45
Permalink Submitted by James Blankenship on Fri, 2014-10-03 12:35
Criminy! No matter how carefully you review something, there can still be problems with it.I intended for my example to be all pre-tax money, not after-tax. If you look at it that way the example should make more sense – if it was all after-tax money he wouldn’t likely rollover/transfer those funds to an IRA. Roth IRA possibly, but likely not a traditional IRA.Thank you both for your insights – and if the correction I’ve mentioned above has any bearing on your opinions, I’d be very interested in hearing them.Thanks.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2014-10-03 19:34
It is a much simpler scenario with no after tax contributions in the plan. The only cost basis here is what the plan paid for employer shares when purchased for the taxpayer’s 401k or ESOP. Therefore we are back to the 1985 PLR, which is what your question depends on, but the current position of the IRS on this is not clear. Under the proposed situation, taxpayer would take a distribution of all 500k of employer shares and then roll 200k of the shares to an IRA within 60 days, and take the position that Sec 402(c)(2) that states the taxable portion is rolled over first can apply to NUA cost basis, and that cost basis can be aggregated instead of each share being composed of 40% cost basis and 60% NUA. Since Notice 2014-54 only deals with after tax contributions, the Notice does not affect the scenario you posted. There is a long and detailed thread on this same question here: https://irahelp.com/forum-post/17504-nua-lsd-401k
Permalink Submitted by James Blankenship on Fri, 2014-10-03 20:48
Thanks again for your valuable insights. jb