Zaikei Account
Posted: Mon Dec 16, 2019 4:58 am
Hello,
My employer uses a Defined Contribution plan for pension. In addition, they allow employees to open a Zaikei account through Mizuho (https://www.mizuhobank.co.jp/retail/pro ... index.html)
My understanding is there are 3 options for accounts:
1) General use (no tax breaks)
2) Save for retirement (tax deductible)
3) Save for house (tax deductible)
I have not seen very much information available online in relation to this type of savings options. As I am a US citizen, I have limited options as far as investing here in Japan goes. (As this community helped me learn, so thank you for all the great information). I don't think general use or retirement options would be very appealing since I can do better things with the money (such as send back to the US to invest)
The option that I could see potentially being useful is the saving for house option, as that is something I might consider doing in the next 5 years (my plan is to stay in Japan through retirement. I have a little over 30 years left until retirement for reference). My Japanese is still pretty limited and I could not glean what sort of interest rate they promise on the funds, but I expect it isn't much. The taxable income deduction would probably put me down into the 20% tax bracket, but I can't imagine I would be able to dip below that. So would be looking at a max of 3% tax savings there. I couldn't glean enough information from the Mizuho site in Japanese to do real math on what sort of interest the account would earn.
Could it potentially be a better option for me just to take the cash that I would be saving for a house down payment and send it back to the US to invest in a brokerage account (potentially a bonds market fund, or perhaps even just a typical bank CD ladder for safety). It would hurt to eat the round trip transfer funds, but the returns over 5 years might make it worth it? Does this graph outline the situation?
Does anyone have any experience with these types of accounts? I will be sending at least the maximum Roth-IRA contribution back to the US, however I am very open to suggestions on the best course of action for investing the remaining yen that I earn. (I don't necessarily want to purchase a house here, I would be perfectly ok with just renting and elsewhere investing the funds that would have been used for purchasing a house)
My employer uses a Defined Contribution plan for pension. In addition, they allow employees to open a Zaikei account through Mizuho (https://www.mizuhobank.co.jp/retail/pro ... index.html)
My understanding is there are 3 options for accounts:
1) General use (no tax breaks)
2) Save for retirement (tax deductible)
3) Save for house (tax deductible)
I have not seen very much information available online in relation to this type of savings options. As I am a US citizen, I have limited options as far as investing here in Japan goes. (As this community helped me learn, so thank you for all the great information). I don't think general use or retirement options would be very appealing since I can do better things with the money (such as send back to the US to invest)
The option that I could see potentially being useful is the saving for house option, as that is something I might consider doing in the next 5 years (my plan is to stay in Japan through retirement. I have a little over 30 years left until retirement for reference). My Japanese is still pretty limited and I could not glean what sort of interest rate they promise on the funds, but I expect it isn't much. The taxable income deduction would probably put me down into the 20% tax bracket, but I can't imagine I would be able to dip below that. So would be looking at a max of 3% tax savings there. I couldn't glean enough information from the Mizuho site in Japanese to do real math on what sort of interest the account would earn.
Could it potentially be a better option for me just to take the cash that I would be saving for a house down payment and send it back to the US to invest in a brokerage account (potentially a bonds market fund, or perhaps even just a typical bank CD ladder for safety). It would hurt to eat the round trip transfer funds, but the returns over 5 years might make it worth it? Does this graph outline the situation?
Does anyone have any experience with these types of accounts? I will be sending at least the maximum Roth-IRA contribution back to the US, however I am very open to suggestions on the best course of action for investing the remaining yen that I earn. (I don't necessarily want to purchase a house here, I would be perfectly ok with just renting and elsewhere investing the funds that would have been used for purchasing a house)