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Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs)

Individual Retirement Accounts (often called IRAs) are not investments themselves, but rather a special type of investment account with powerful tax benefits, created by the U.S. government to encourage people to save for retirement. Think of an IRA as a protective wrapper or a special basket. Inside this basket, you can hold a wide variety of investments that you choose—such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, or ETFs. The magic of the IRA is not what's inside, but the basket itself. It shields your investments from taxes in one of two ways: either you get a tax break now and pay later, or you pay taxes now and get a tax break later. This tax-advantaged environment allows your investments to grow more efficiently over the long term, making it an indispensable tool for anyone serious about building wealth for their golden years. While this is a U.S.-specific vehicle, similar tax-advantaged retirement schemes exist in many European countries, such as the Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) in the U.K.

Why Should a Value Investor Care About IRAs?

For a value investor, an IRA is like a supercharged greenhouse for your carefully selected investments. The core of value investing is finding wonderful businesses at fair prices and holding them for the long term, allowing the miracle of compounding to do its heavy lifting. An IRA dramatically accelerates this process. In a regular taxable brokerage account, every time you receive a dividend or sell a stock for a profit, you owe taxes on those gains for that year. This creates a “tax drag” that nibbles away at your returns, slowing down the compounding machine. Inside an IRA, however, your investments grow sheltered from this annual taxation. Dividends can be reinvested and positions can be sold without triggering an immediate tax bill, allowing your capital to compound on a larger, undisrupted base. This is a government-sanctioned tailwind for the patient, long-term investor.

The Main Flavors of IRAs

Choosing an IRA is like picking a car: the best one for you depends on your current situation and where you see yourself down the road. The two most common types for individuals are the Traditional and the Roth IRA.

The Traditional IRA: Pay Taxes Later

With a Traditional IRA, your contributions may be tax-deductible in the year you make them (depending on your income and workplace retirement plan coverage). This lowers your taxable income today, giving you an immediate tax break.

The Roth IRA: Pay Taxes Now

The Roth IRA is the mirror image of the Traditional. You contribute money that you've already paid taxes on (after-tax dollars), so there's no upfront tax deduction. The incredible payoff comes later.

For the Self-Employed: SEP and SIMPLE IRAs

If you're a freelancer, gig worker, or small business owner, the government has created special IRAs for you that allow for much higher contribution amounts.

Key Rules of the Road

IRAs come with a few important rules to ensure they are used for their intended purpose: retirement.

Capipedia’s Bottom Line

An IRA is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available to an ordinary investor. It is the playing field where a sound value investing strategy can truly flourish over decades, protected from the constant friction of taxes. The choice between a Traditional and a Roth IRA is fundamentally a bet on your future self. Do you think you'll be earning more and be in a higher tax bracket in the future? If so, the Roth IRA is your champion. Do you need the tax deduction now or expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement? The Traditional IRA might be a better fit. For many, a combination of both is a smart way to achieve tax diversification. Regardless of your choice, the most important step is to start.