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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: โ€œI think Iโ€™m screwed by Vanguard resulting in an enormous tax billโ€ฆ. 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 โ€œSitting-Hawkโ€ย said he received about $550,000 in distributions in Vanguardโ€™s Target Retirement 2035 fund. So he owes 23.8% in federal tax and 4.95% in Illinois state taxโ€”all told, more than $150,000. โ€œHOW,โ€ he asked in capital letters, โ€œCOULD VANGUARD LET THIS HAPPEN??โ€

โ€œSitting-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.

โ€œI didnโ€™t want to be that guy whoโ€™s constantly trading,โ€ he says. โ€œI 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€

โ€œIt sucks that this had to happen,โ€ he says.

It happened because big clients left little ones holding the bag. Vanguardโ€™s 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. Isnโ€™t it time you cut the cord and own individual positions not the groupthink mutual funds?

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย