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I want to roll my 401k over into a traditional, and eventually into a roth (I am going back to school and will do the roth rollover during a year where my income is very small). The problem is that I am in two really good funds that are closed to new investments; thus I want to roll over AND stay in those funds.

2007-12-23 02:39:06 · 4 answers · asked by Reno Dillon 2 in Business & Finance Personal Finance

4 answers

If you open an IRA with a brokerage, they will probably accept 'in kind' contributions as well as cash. The problem would be, MOST 401(k) plans will only distribute CASH. If that is the case for your plan, you can only roll over cash and then convert to other investments.

Even if your plan will distribute shares, the closed funds may not allow the shares to be transferred from the 401(k) to the IRA.

2007-12-23 04:34:16 · answer #1 · answered by STEVEN F 7 · 0 1

When you roll over a 401(k) into an IRA, the existing fund shares in the old plan are sold by the custodian and cash is given to the new (IRA) custodian. So unless that new custodian has a way to open new accounts in those closed funds, you may be out of luck.

2007-12-23 02:55:25 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Engineer is correct, when you "roll over" a 401(k), it is CASH that moves from the 401(k) account to the IRA.

If the funds are closed to new investors, and you really like them, you can probably just leave them there. There is nothing to stop you starting over in a new job.

2007-12-23 03:40:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

absolutely, in most cases anyway. just open your new IRA or if you have an existing IRA just initiate the transfer of accounts. Dont liquidate the funds within the 401K

2007-12-23 02:48:02 · answer #4 · answered by roguetrader12002 4 · 0 4

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