General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: 401(k)s are a sham: Duped by a DIY retirement dream, elderly face staggeringly low living standards [View all]FBaggins
(28,705 posts)The term is used in different ways here. You're thinking of a CD that "rolls over" into a new CD of the same maturity at the end of the term. You can do that as often as you like.
As noted above... a "rollover" for IRA purposes only occurs when you remove funds from an IRA account and take them in your own name... then deposit them in a new IRA account within 60 days. This allows you to avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty.
If you close an account and take the check made out to the next custodian (rather than yourself)... then it's a transfer, not a rollover. If you never take the money at all (because it's just an account that has matured and renewed at the current rate)... that's neither a rollover nor a transfer.
The news you misunderstood is actually a good thing. One of the reasons that 401(k)s and IRAs are not working as well as we would like is that it's too easy you spend the money before retirement (which you couldn't do with a traditional pension in most cases). Social Security and traditional pensions would also have troubles if you could walk up during tough times and say "I know this is going to hurt my retirement benefit, but I need some of that money now." Trying to tighten up the restrictions on hurting yourself isn't necessarily a bad thing.