Finance in TT

TT Finance Intel

Tuesday, June 2, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

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

1

Trinidad and Tobago Finance Headlines

1 story

1.1

NEDCO Small Business Financing Available for TT Entrepreneurs.

National Entrepreneurship Development Company Limited (NEDCO) offers small business financing through its government-backed programme.

Why It Matters

Finance professionals in TT can advise clients on NEDCO's accessible funding options to support local SME growth and economic development.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Step-up in basis: the JTWROS edge case that surprises survivors.

Property held jointly with right of survivorship between spouses gets a full step-up in community-property states and a half step-up in common-law states. The same property held as community property (where available) gets a full step-up regardless. The titling distinction can change the surviving spouse's basis by hundreds of thousands.

Why It Matters

Re-titling between spouses is typically straightforward during life; impossible after one spouse's death. The decision has to happen while both are living.

2.2

Mega-backdoor Roth eligibility hinges on plan provisions, not income.

The mega-backdoor Roth strategy requires a 401(k) plan that allows after-tax contributions AND in-service distributions or in-plan Roth conversions. Without both features, the strategy is unavailable regardless of income. Many plans permit one but not the other.

Why It Matters

Highly compensated participants who plan around mega-backdoor savings need to confirm both plan features at the start of the year, not when contributions are due. The planning window is the calendar year.

2.3

Required minimum distributions: the 50%-then-25% penalty trap.

Missing a required minimum distribution from a tax-advantaged account historically triggered a 50% excise tax on the missed amount. SECURE 2.0 reduced this to 25% (or 10% with timely correction). The penalty has not gone away — it has just become survivable with prompt action.

Why It Matters

Even at 25%, the penalty on a missed RMD is far larger than the income-tax hit on the distribution itself. Detection often happens at year-end review, sometimes years later.

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Issue Summary

DateJun 2, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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