2006 Passive Income Update
Post viewed 264 times, 2 so far today
Yesterday, I got the last statement that concerns our 2006 passive income. It was from TreasuryDirect for our investment in 4-week T-Bills. Early in the week, I also received a statement from Buffalo Fund and it turned out that they also distributed capital gains in 2006. For us, we received about $827 in distribution.
Overall, 2006 is a good year in terms of passive incomes, which came from dividends and capitial gains from stocks and mutual funds, as well as interests earned from high-yield online savings accounts and Treasury bills.
| Category | Income |
| Mutual funds | $6,588.36 |
| Stocks | $1,145.84 |
| Savings | $2,396.12 |
In total, our passive income of 2006 is $10,130.32. However, since I don't have any data for 2005, there is no quantitative comparison on how exactly we did year over year. In any case, one thing is certain. As we kept adding shares to our mutual fund holdings, the distributions will be bigger and bigger every year.
Though I love to see the money being added to our nest eggs without having to lift a finger, what we eventually get will be much smaller since all these incomes were generated by assets held in taxable accounts (in contrast to tax deferred accounts like 401(k) and IRA). For dividends and long-term capital gains, we have to 15% federal income taxes; for interests and short-term gains, the tax rate will be the same as that of our ordinary income. Now I am evaluating our mutual fund holdings to reduce some overlaps due to asset class changes of some funds we own and hopefully to cut one or two funds which will help us lower the taxable income a little bit.
Apparently, I am not the only one that tracks passive income. 2million, The Dividend Guy and Lazy Man do as well as far as I know.
If you enjoy reading this post, subscribe to the RSS feed.
Popularity: 7% [?]
If you enjoyed reading this post, please consider subscribing to my full RSS feed (What's RSS feed?). You can also subscribe by email to have daily updates delivered right to your inbox.
Featured Financial Products
- Ready to buy stocks/ETF with zero commission? Check out the Zecco review and try Zecco Trading with these Zecco promotion codes to get 10 free trades/month. Or, use TradeKing as an alternative (TradeKing review and TradeKing promotion codes).
- Seeking higher returns for your cash? Take a look at the latest interest rates from leading online banks and find out where to get the most for your money.
- Earn up to 5% cash back from these cash back credit cards while shopping at gas stations, grocery stores, or online.
Related Posts
- Update: 2007 Passive Income
- Year-to-Date Net Worth Change by Category and Passive Income Update
- 2007 Passive Income Summary
- Mutual Fund Year-end Distributions
- June 2007 Score Card — Part II: Passive Incomes
Readers Who Viewed This Post, also Viewed
- Referral
- HSBC Introduces New Online Payment Account
- Free $10 Barnes & Noble Gift Card for Completing a Short Survey
- TreasuryDirect 1099 Form for 2006 Available
8 Comments
Share Your Thouhgts
Your opinion matters. Please use the form below to share your thoughts on 2006 Passive Income Update with us.Recent Entries
- E*Trade Complete Savings Account Offers $25 Signup Bonus
- Oil Down, Stocks Up, Two in a Row
- Poll: Are You Concerned about Your Bank After the Collapse of IndyMac?
- Add Wind to Your Portfolio with PowerShares Global Wind Energy ETF
- myFICO 20% off Summer Sale on All 3 Credit Scores
- Banks Taken Over by FDIC in 2008
- Free iPod Offer from Key Bank
- Weekend Linkage - July 23, 2008
- Free Summer Recipes from Gourmet Magazine
- Scottrade Did Not Allow Me to Buy Freddie Mac (FRE)
- UPromise $10 Target Gift Card Offer
- MyGallons: Save Money on Gas?
- EverBank Offers Better Rates: 4.76% Intro APY
- Revolution Money Exchange Launches RevolutionCard
- Weekend Linkage - July 6, 2008
- Dow and S&P in Bear Market?
- Chinese ADRs Monthly Update - June 2008
- E*Trade Complete Savings Account now 3.30% APY
- June 2008 Score Card — Part I: Net Worth
- Weekend Linkage - June 29, 2008
- Discover More Card $100 Bonus Offer
- Make Hundreds of Dollars by Referring People
- Free Schick Quattro Titanium Razor/Trimmer
- Stocks Fell Like a Rock
- TradeKing Review and Promotion Codes: A Discount Broker with Loads of Features


How much do you have invested?
1mil from millionster.com
To answer your question, we have about $260K invested in mutual funds, stocks, Treasury bills and savings account at the end of last month. Therefore the passive income counts about 4% of our taxable assets.
fyi. I dont ever write my full email unless I know someone because I don’t know how ppl store emails in their system, or where or how they display them, just an extra cautionary step when venturing my email into cyberspace.
gmailz-z.com = gmail.com =)
1mil
Not too shabby!!!
I’m envious of the passive income number. Your assets are definitely up there. I’m a little curious why the total of stocks, mutual funds, and treasury bills isn’t bringing in more than 4%. Seems like there’s some risk where you could put your money into some high yield bank account and get 4.5-5%. I though mutual funds and stocks did well for the most part this year, so I suspect that you didn’t lose money there.
Actually, the “passive income” are the distributions from stocks, mutual funds, and savings accounts. Those are the money that I indeed received in the past year and the price appreciation of mutual funds and stocks are not included because the gains are only on paper, not realized. If considering the price appreciation, the gain is much higher than 4%.
That makes perfect sense. I didn’t think about it in that way. Considering that, 4% is actually fairly impressive.
While 4% is quite good and I like it, all the gains are part of our taxable income and will increase the tax bill. I am considering whether I should reduce some holdings to actually lower the income. I am not sure if this is the right way to do. On on hand I like the money that are generated without too much effort, on the other, I don’t like pay big chuck of that money as taxes. That’s a dilemma I am facing.