Today I received an unrequested check for my entire investment in the Prospector Opportunity Fund. No explanation. And not quite the entire amount. They withheld several thousand dollars. In a Roth IRA. Um...what? No tax should be due.
I'm in the process of sorting this out. So far I have found out that Prospector has decided to liquidate their mutual funds. And they did not, apparently, decide to inform their shareholders. I don't go as far as to accuse them of deciding to deliberately keep it a secret. But still, this is sloppy. And I want the rest of money un-withheld. I can't be the only annoyed *former* shareholder. UPDATE: the money has been "sent to the government". I have to apply to them to get my money back. All Prospector will say on the telephone is "we will send you a 1099 R". I suppose that means that I may/will/might get a refund from the IRS for any amount over my tax bill.
I'm posting this primarily for the benefit of anyone else who receives a check and did not know their fund had been liquidated by Prospector. And also to let off steam of course.
Hmm. I made money in this investment. They are better at investing than in communicating.
Comments
As for IRA, withholding is required for any distributions not rolled into another IRA.
It's too late in this situation, but my suggestion for fund liquidations has been to sell before the liquidation date.
https://prospectorpartners.com/wp-content/uploads/Prospectus-Prospector-Funds-120525.pdf
I'm half expecting that the coding on the 1099 R will be wrong, incorrectly showing that I do owe some money. But I don't. I've sorted this out before with a different Roth. The custodian sent the IRS a revised 1099.
@Ben Do you use paper or e-mail to receive info from Prospector Funds, check your spam box. FWIW
This may or not be useful for @Ben - the amount distributed and the amount withheld (to be refunded later) can be put into another Roth IRA without penalty or tax for those under 59.5.
Rule for 401k/403b is different - mandatory withholding if not direct-transfer into another 401k/403b or IRA.