RMD and only illiquid assets in IRA
There have been many posts here on the topic of all assets in an IRA being illiquid, and all responses basically say, “DON’T LET IT HAPPEN!”
But it did happen to my 92-y-o sister-in-law (IRA inherited from spouse), and as of this year she has totally depleted all liquid IRA assets and is trapped in a RE investment that she has been told she can neither cash out nor transfer ownership until 2053. I believe (not sure yet) that the investment manager is also the custodian.
So now that it has happened, what options does she have?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sun, 2024-08-18 18:17
Depending on additional details, she may have legal recourse against the manager or others that put her in this position. I assume that no change of ownership includes no distribution of the assets out of the IRA (owned by the IRA) to a taxable account owned by her.
She should have assumed ownership of this IRA long before this, as that would have reduced her RMD and perhaps not drained the liquid investments. This can still be done this year to reduce the 2024 RMD on which the penalty will be based. The penalty has now been reduced to 25% from 50%, but I know of no way to avoid the penalty if the distribution is not possible.