That would all be very important if the fund was actually producing any investment income. The advantage of deferral of taxation on investment income is that it allows you to accrue a bit more compound interest before you realize the gain and pay the taxes. This is obviously irrelevant if you aren't accruing any interest at all.
This fund is chump change to Mitt Romney, and the laws governing it are now out of date. Obviously he let it go to cash because it's simply not worth dealing with anymore.
*Side note: when you actually have a real job, be aware that dividend-paying stocks or ETFs are best reserved for tax-advantaged accounts, like your 401k. You can't defer taxes on dividends otherwise. Capital gains can be deferred until the sale of the asset, which means that growth stocks are a little bit better for accounts that are not tax-advantaged. If you invest with Vanguard or a similar manager, they can do this deferral optimization for you.
**Further side note: if this sounds absurdly complex, that's because capital gains taxes are an incoherent concept in the first place.
This fund is chump change to Mitt Romney, and the laws governing it are now out of date. Obviously he let it go to cash because it's simply not worth dealing with anymore.
*Side note: when you actually have a real job, be aware that dividend-paying stocks or ETFs are best reserved for tax-advantaged accounts, like your 401k. You can't defer taxes on dividends otherwise. Capital gains can be deferred until the sale of the asset, which means that growth stocks are a little bit better for accounts that are not tax-advantaged. If you invest with Vanguard or a similar manager, they can do this deferral optimization for you.
**Further side note: if this sounds absurdly complex, that's because capital gains taxes are an incoherent concept in the first place.
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