Cross posting from lemmy, https://midwest.social/post/29361

  • Neckbeard_Prime [they/them,he/him]
    hexbear
    8
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Depending on your 401k servicer, you can also take out a loan against up to 50% of it, and that doesn't count against your 401k balance unless either you default on it, change jobs and lose your 401k account with that particular vendor, or if the value of your 401k account tanks and you now have less in your account than 2X the principal of your loan (which is due to happen again in about a month or three).

    The loan doesn't incur any tax penalties unless you default on it, in which case, hoo boy does it ever fucking suuuuuuuck. Combine that with not doing a rollover for the remaining balance into a new account when you change jobs and, uh, you're gonna have a bad time. Possibly for multiple consecutive years.

    But yeah, I had to tap my 401k a few years back to put the money towards a new (used) car after the last one let all of the magic smoke out of a crankshaft bearing, connecting rod, piston, valve, and cylinder head all in the span of a few seconds. Fuck cars, but fuck Fiat/Chrysler most of all.

    • Parent [none/use name]
      hexbear
      4
      2 years ago

      To borrow from your 401k don't you have to have cash in your 401k and most people have all of their 401k in stocks or bonds? Do you sell your stocks then borrow? If so what if you need it during a downturn?

      • Neckbeard_Prime [they/them,he/him]
        hexbear
        4
        2 years ago

        In my case, nope, it was against the "market value" of what I had in there, which was a mix of stocks and bonds. You don't have to sell those before you can borrow, and you're correct -- you are absolutely fucked during a downturn, because that reduces how much you are able to borrow, and if you've already borrowed, you can end up "underwater" on the loan, in which case you are on the hook for whatever the difference is between the current market value of (half of) your 401k account and whatever you haven't paid back yet. So this is a case where you would probably want to shuffle things around from unstable/risky securities (e.g., small- and mid-cap stocks) to more stable/slower-growth ones (e.g., bonds, maybe large-cap stonks if you're feeling lucky). But then that hurts your potential overall fund growth, which can screw you in the long run.

        It's a mess, and if you can just forget it exists while still shoveling (employer-matched) money into it, you're better off leaving it alone. It's just another control mechanism for shackling you to a specific employer if you go down that rabbit hole. If you're union and plan on sticking around, fuck yeah, go for it. But if you're in a volatile field, don't dip in unless it's a serious emergency and you're out of other options.

        • Parent [none/use name]
          hexbear
          4
          2 years ago

          Ah ok didn't know you could borrow against the stocks and bonds you have in there. I could use some of that to help buy an apartment. I guess I can call and check on my 401k to see if that's an option.