
Investing with the big money management firms might not always work out for individual investors. Read below the experience of one investor who faced a massive surprise tax bill after investing with Vanguard. Jason Zweig reports:
One investorย posted there: โI think Iโm screwed by Vanguard resulting in an enormous tax billโฆ. I feel that Vanguard guided me down this path which is frustrating.โ
In the Bogleheads area on Reddit, another online forum, an investor posting as โSitting-Hawkโย said he received about $550,000 in distributions in Vanguardโs Target Retirement 2035 fund. So he owes 23.8% in federal tax and 4.95% in Illinois state taxโall told, more than $150,000. โHOW,โ he asked in capital letters, โCOULD VANGUARD LET THIS HAPPEN??โ
โSitting-Hawk,โ who asked me not to disclose his real name, says he put about $1.9 million into the fund in a taxable account in 2015 after he maxed out contributions to his tax-deferred funds. He added more savings; by last year, he had about $3.6 million in taxable money in the fund.
โI didnโt want to be that guy whoโs constantly trading,โ he says. โI just wanted to set it and forget it and have some peace of mind instead of messing around with it every couple of days.โ
โIt sucks that this had to happen,โ he says.
It happened because big clients left little ones holding the bag. Vanguardโs target funds come in more than one format. Smaller clients get the standard version; big customers like corporate retirement plans get an institutional version with identical holdings at a lower fee.
Action Line: Be careful investing with the big dogs. Isnโt it time you cut the cord and own individual positions not the groupthink mutual funds?
Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย


