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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Best Kept secrets of financial planning

Some nice points made by a columnist at Yahoo Finance. I extracted the 6 points that she has mentioned and put it in here. Hope you find them useful.

The Six Best-Kept Money Secrets
by Laura Rowley

1. Understand what you can control, and what you can't.

"Too many investors spend time trying to predict what the market will do, where interest rates will go, or which fund manager will have the best year -- things that, ultimately, they have no control over," says Fran Kinniry, principal in Vanguard's Investment Counseling and Research Department.

"Meanwhile, they're not focused on the things they can control, such as keeping their investment costs down; maintaining a proper, balanced, tax-efficient portfolio; and taking maximum advantage of savings opportunities, such as an employer match in a 401(k)," Kinniry says. "Understanding and acting on the things you can control is the best way to prepare for long-term investment success."

2. You know more than you think.




"Don't believe you can't learn enough to be a savvy investor," says Karen Sheridan, founder of Money Mystique Asset Management in Lake Oswego, Ore. "You know more than you think you know. [Financial services company] State Street had an ad in the New York Times that actually compared investing to brain surgery. It says, ‘No one ever said investing was easy. Make one false move and you could start hemorrhaging money.' Ads like these are unconscionable."

3. Moonlight when you're young, and invest the income.

"Take on a second source of income and direct that income exclusively toward an investment vehicle," says Robert Manning, director of the Center for Consumer Finances at the Rochester Institute of Technology, and author of "Credit Card Nation: The Consequences of America's Addiction to Credit."

Whether it's freelance data-entry work or waiting tables once a week, invest the extra cash rather than spending it, or even paying off debt. "It's a step up psychologically to make yourself part of investor class rather than the debtor class," Manning says. "It's a huge opportunity to demonstrate that you're taking control of your financial life, even though you're not making much money."

4. Take a small step toward big success.

"Sometimes, clients are overwhelmed with financial tasks and expect perfection of themselves," says Candace Bahr, managing partner at Bahr Investment Group. "They may get ‘stuck' for months or even years, and ignore their financial lives."

Bahr says that even the smallest step can make a difference. "If someone spends just 15 minutes a day on their financial well-being, in the course of a year they'll have spent over two full work weeks improving their financial life. That's got to help!" Bahr suggests other small steps on her Money Clubs web site.

5. Consider a tax-managed fund.

The average equity mutual fund lost 1.8 percent a year to taxes over a 10-year period ending Dec. 31, 2005, according to a study conducted by Morningstar. Sound small? It's actually a difference of nearly 20 percent in terms of total annual return. Over the long haul, losing 20 percent of your gain each year to taxes can translate into a loss of tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.

One solution: tax-managed funds. "These funds come in various permutations -- and not all are good -- but they can be immensely useful tools for investors," says Christine Benz, Morningstar's Director of Mutual Fund Analysis.

Such funds, which come in many investment categories, employ a variety of tax-reduction techniques to avoid making income or capital-gains payouts, helping the investor keep a bigger portion of his or her return. (Don't choose these funds within a tax-advantaged vehicle like a 401(k).)

For higher-income savers who max out their company retirement plans, there aren't many other ways to shield investments from taxes. Individual Retirement Account contributions limits are low (or an investor's income may make him ineligible to contribute to a Roth IRA).

For an investor who wants to build an ultra-low-maintenance portfolio composed exclusively of tax-managed funds, Benz recommends Vanguard Tax-Managed Capital Appreciation (VMCAX), Vanguard Tax-Managed International (VTMGX), one of the firm's municipal-bond funds, and a municipal money market fund.

6. Don't shift your assets to your minor child.

"The Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) is the newest four-letter word," says Joe Hurley, founder and CEO of Savingforcollege.com. "A small investment fund in your child's or grandchild's name is probably fine -- you may save some taxes by shifting the investment income onto your child's tax return. But put too much money into the UTMA and you are asking for trouble."

The potential savings are limited now that the kiddie tax has been expanded to children under the age of 18 (the cut-off used to be age 14). Even if the child's account stays below the $1,700 income threshold for triggering the tax, earnings beyond $850 require the headache of filing a federal income tax return.

"You might devise a strategy using tax-efficient mutual funds that keeps the kiddie tax at bay," says Hurley. "But the capital gains at some point come home to roost, and the tax hit may happen at the wrong time." Moreover, investments in a child's name are counted heavily against financial aid eligibility.

Most importantly, a parent loses custodial control over a UTMA when the child reaches age 18 or 21. "You don't have to look too hard to find parents who have regretted their children's decisions regarding the use of such newfound ‘wealth,'" Hurley says.

1 comment:

David Wilson said...

That is good advice by Candace Bahr. If you have not done any financial planning it is easy to get so overwhelmed with where I start, that you never do. Breaking it down into small chunks of time makes it so much more manageable and less intimidating.

David