Finance in AG

AG Finance Intel

Friday, May 22, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on finance developments in AG. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on antigua and barbuda finance headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Antigua and Barbuda Finance Headlines

1 story

1.1

Community First Co-operative Credit Union expands savings, loans, and digital banking in AG.

Community First Co-operative Credit Union describes secure savings accounts, affordable loans, and digital banking services for members across Antigua to help them reach financial goals.

Why It Matters

For AG finance professionals, it is a local example of a cooperative model combining core deposits, credit, and digital channels for member finance in one platform.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

SEP-IRA versus Solo 401(k): the deduction limits diverge above $50K profit.

For self-employed individuals, both vehicles allow significant retirement contributions, but the calculation differs. A Solo 401(k) permits an employee deferral plus an employer contribution — often producing higher total contributions than a SEP at identical profit. The crossover point is around $50K-$70K of self-employment income.

Why It Matters

Switching from SEP to Solo 401(k) requires plan establishment by year-end (with contributions until tax-filing deadline). Annual review catches the crossover before it costs a year's missed deduction.

2.2

529 plan state tax deductions: in-state versus out-of-state.

Many states offer income-tax deductions for contributions to that state's 529 plan; a smaller number allow the deduction for any state's plan. Choosing an out-of-state plan with better fees can cost the in-state deduction — a tradeoff that depends on the state's tax rate and the deduction cap.

Why It Matters

The optimal choice varies by state and family income. The "best 529 plans" lists in financial media frequently ignore state-specific tax effects.

2.3

Rebalancing has a tax cost — and a place where it does not.

Rebalancing taxable accounts realizes capital gains; the tax cost can erode the benefit of holding the target allocation. Tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, 401(k), Roth) have no such cost. A common improvement: hold higher-rebalance assets in tax-advantaged accounts and let taxable accounts drift longer between rebalances.

Why It Matters

Mechanical rebalancing without account-type awareness can cost 0.3-0.7% annually in unnecessary tax drag. Coordinated rebalancing across account types is a standard practice that surprisingly few advisors implement.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 22, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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