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{"created_at":"2026-04-12T16:17:11.268 {"created_at":"2026-04-12T16:17:11.268468+00:00","dedupe_key":"signal_enriched:discovery_unusual_volume_delta:20acdbbd3a591de6","evidence_event_ids":["evt_ca3e4b31059a"],"signal_type":"discovery_unusual_volume_delta","source":"discovery_ingestor","value":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without-penalty","as_of":"2026-04-12T16:17:11.268468+00:00","canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/12/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without/","enrichment":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without-penalty","article_chars":5000,"article_truncated":true,"blocked_reason":null,"candidate_id":"sc_e9819c73d93fc76d","canonical_host":"fool.com","canonical_is_aggregator":false,"canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/12/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without/","content_type":"text/html; charset=utf-8","enriched_at":"2026-04-12T18:17:05.320077+00:00","extraction_method":"trafilatura","fetched_description":"Key PointsWhile a SEPP plan protects you from a 10% early withdrawal penalty, you must still pay ordinary income taxes on the amount withdrawn.","fetched_title":"How You Can Access Retirement Funds Early Without Penalty | Nasdaq","final_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without-penalty","html_truncated":false,"paywall_likely":false,"publisher_domain":"fool.com","publisher_resolution":"canonical_url","requested_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without-penalty","source_event_id":"evt_ca3e4b31059a","source_quality":"high","status_code":200,"version":"signal_enrichment_v2"},"fp":"f77fd7977fd5cc06","kind":"unusual_volume","published_at":"2026-04-12T14:25:00+00:00","publisher_domain":"fool.com","signal_understanding":{"analysis_basis":"article","claim_confidence":0.78,"dates_mentioned":[],"entities":[{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"Substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP)","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"program"},{"asset_class":"tax_rule","name":"IRS Rule 72(t)","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"regulation"},{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"SEPP plan","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"program"},{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"IRA","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"account_type"},{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"401(k)","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"account_type"},{"asset_class":"benefits","name":"Social Security","relevance":"low","symbol":"","type":"program"}],"event_type":"other","information_gaps":["No unusual trading/market volume data is provided in the text, so the required fields for unusual_volume (baseline volume, volume ratio, direction, ticker, catalyst hint) cannot be extracted from the provided article content.","The signal type indicates unusual volume delta, but the article content is about retirement withdrawal rules and does not mention any market activity or ticker-specific volume changes.","The article does not provide a specific catalyst hypothesis tied to volume changes; it is general informational content about SEPP and taxes."],"key_facts":["SEPP (Rule 72(t)) allows withdrawals from pre-tax retirement accounts (e.g., IRAs or 401(k)s) without the 10% early withdrawal penalty.","SEPP withdrawals are still subject to ordinary income taxes.","To qualify, the account holder must commit to taking payments for at least five years or until age 59 1/2, whichever is later.","SEPP requires using an IRS-approved method to calculate the annual withdrawal amount and taking that exact amount each year (not more or less).","The article lists three IRS-approved calculation methods: required minimum distribution method, fixed amortization, and fixed annuitization.","The required minimum distribution method produces the smallest annual payment and is recalculated annually based on updated account balance and IRS life expectancy tables.","Fixed amortization provides the same distribution each year and is calculated by dividing a starting account balance by remaining life expectancy.","Fixed annuitization provides equal payments using an IRS annuity factor and an approved interest rate.","If the SEPP rules are not followed (e.g., stopping early or taking more than allowed), the IRS can impose a 10% penalty on all prior withdrawals and it may also owe interest on those penalties.","The article suggests alternatives such as using taxable savings and accessing a 401(k) directly if leaving a job in the year you turn 55 (or later), with a lower age threshold for public safety workers (as young as 50)."],"numeric_claims":[{"label":"early withdrawal penalty avoided (SEPP)","value":"10%"},{"label":"age threshold mentioned","value":"59 1/2"},{"label":"commitment minimum","value":"5 years"},{"label":"example penalty on prior withdrawals","value":"10% (e.g., $20,000 withdrawn -> $2,000 penalty)"},{"label":"Social Security bonus mentioned","value":"$23,760"}],"primary_claim":"A SEPP (Rule 72(t)) plan lets you withdraw from pre-tax retirement accounts before age 59 1/2 without the 10% early withdrawal penalty, though the withdrawals remain subject to ordinary income taxes.","relevance_score":0.12,"sentiment":"neutral","source_quality":"high","summary":"The article explains how substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) under IRS Rule 72(t) can allow early withdrawals from pre-tax retirement accounts without the 10% early withdrawal penalty, but ordinary income taxes still apply.","topics":["early retirement withdrawals","SEPP/Rule 72(t)","10% early withdrawal penalty","ordinary income taxes","IRS-approved calculation methods","required minimum distribution method","fixed amortization","fixed annuitization","age 59 1/2","withdrawal schedule compliance","tax penalties for noncompliance","alternatives to SEPP"]},"source":"Nasdaq Markets","source_domain":"fool.com","summary":"Key PointsWhile a SEPP plan protects you from a 10% early withdrawal penalty, you must still pay ordinary income taxes on the amount withdrawn.","tickers":[],"title":"How You Can Access Retirement Funds Early Without Penalty","url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/12/how-you-can-access-retirement-funds-early-without/"}}... |