December 31, 2021

Money Tasks to Take OFF your to-do list

Don't hurry to pay off a low interest mortgage. Buy US I bonds instead. The current rate is 7.12% payable through April 2022. You can't access your money for 12 months but give up access to any mortgage prepayment anyway.  Search for I bonds on this blog for more info. 

Don't be a sucker when the ad says "supplies are limited," "only a few left" or "limited time offer or similar" effort to get you to buy now or you will lose out on savings. It's simply marketing language to get you to part with your money NOW!

Don't track every penny spent. Did I really write that? Most people don't need to obsess over every dollar they spend. Simply follow the 50/20/30 recommendations: 50% of your pay for rent/mortgage and other essential bills (electricity, fuel, etc.); 20% for savings (includes emergency fund, short term goals, and retirement contributions); and 30% for remaining expenses. Pay yourself first with an automatic saving/investing contributions. Pay bills automatically (utilities, insurance, credit cards). 

Don't fall for FOMO (fear of missing out). Skip the cryptocurrency rage and invest in time-tested strategies described in this blog: Keep expenses low, diversify and buy index funds. 

Thanks to Veronica Dagher, writing for The Wall Street Journal, 12/29/21

Free photos of Shopping

December 21, 2021

Student Loans: What were they thinking?

A front page article in The Wall Street Journal (December 20, 2021) is a scathing expose of New York University's (NYU) practice of charging exorbitant tuition while students and parents borrowed far beyond their ability to repay. "NYU Tops Ranks-- in Debt for Grad Student, parents: pricey Manhattan school leaves many families struggling with loans" by Melissa Korn and Andrea Fuller provides gruesome details about the burdensome debt that both NYU undergrads and grad students and they parents are undertaking.  The federal Grad Plus and Parent Plus loans burden families while enriching universities, even ones like NYU that have substantial endowments (but meager student aid). NYU's endowment ended fiscal 2021 at $5.8 billion.

One WSJ graphic shows: "New York university has more graduate programs that leave students with high debt loads compared with their salaries than any other U.S. university."

Majoring in film at NYU is a sure bet to land students (and some parents) in debt loads they will never be able to repay. Meaning the U.S. taxpayer ends up footing the bill.

U.S. Colleges and universities offer so many options and opportunities for quality post-secondary education at affordable rates. Plus part of what students and their families need to consider is: Is it worth going into debt for a degree or credential that is unlikely to pay enough for me to live on, let alone repay student loan debt. 

What I can't wrap my head around is what the students and their parents were thinking when they signed up for huge education loans. 

Student loans cannot be discharged in bankruptcy (another area of my research). 

The last research article I published before retiring from 40+ years of years of teaching/research personal finance, consumer problems:

Johnson, C., O’Neill, B., Worthy, S. L., Lown, J. M., & Bowen, C. F. (2017). What are student loan borrowers thinking? Insights from focus groups on college selection and student loan decision-making. Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning,27, 184-198. 

The answer: they weren't... thinking.

Free Open-source Social Security Strategy Calculator

 Deciding when to claim Social Security retirement benefits can be simple for single, never-married persons but complicated for the rest of us. If you've been divorced, widowed, have a disable child or a child still in high school Social Security decisions are complicated. Even married couples are well advised to use a calculator to help them decide the best claiming strategy. 

Most of us, especially if we expect to live longer than the average American, will benefit (greatly!) by waiting until age 70 to claim SS retirement benefits but you need to get expert advice before you make this extremely important decision.

A free calculator Open Social Security https://opensocialsecurity.com/ was developed by Mike Piper, CPA and author of several personal finance books.

The Open Social Security site was recommended by Wade D. Pfau, Ph.D., CFA, is the curriculum director of the Retirement Income Certified Professional program at The American College in King of Prussia, PA. He is also a principal and director at McLean Asset Management and RetirementResearcher.com.

Check out the website of the Open Social Security calculator: author, Mike Piper, Oblivious Investor (simple, low-maintenance Investing): https://obliviousinvestor.com/

December 19, 2021

Never pay the first medical bill and how to negotiate the billing system

Never Pay the First Bill: And Other Ways to Fight the Health Care System and Win

Cover image for Never pay the first bill : and other ways to fight the health care system and win

Never pay the first bill : and other ways to fight the health care system and win
ISBN:9780593190005

Abstract:
"From award-winning ProPublica reporter Marshall Allen, a primer for anyone who wants to fight the predatory health care system--and win. Every year, millions of Americans are overcharged and underserved while the health care industry makes record profits. We know something is wrong, but the layers of bureaucracy designed to discourage complaints make pushing back seem impossible. At least, this is what the health care power players want you to think. Never Pay the First Bill is the guerilla guide to health care the American people and employers need. Drawing on 15 years of investigating the health care industry, reporter Marshall Allen shows how companies and individuals have managed to force medical providers to play fair, and shows how you can, too. He reveals the industry's pressure points and how companies and individuals have fought overbilling, price gouging, insurance denials, and more to get the care they deserve. Laying out a practical plan for protecting yourself against the system's predatory practices, Allen offers the inspiration you need and tried-and-true strategies such as: Analyze and contest your medical bills, so you don't pay more than you should; obtain the billing codes for a procedure in advance; write in an appropriate treatment clause before signing financial documents; get your way by suing in small claims court. Few politicians and CEOs have been willing to stand up to the medical industry. It is up to the American people to equip ourselves to fight back for the sake of our families--and everyone else"-- Provided by publisher.
 
My nephew was hit by a pickup truck in South Carolina while on a bike tour. Luckily this driver stopped and had insurance and admitted fault. The hit and run driver in Raleigh, N.C. never stopped. Luckily my nephew wasn't seriously hurt by the hit and run driver but sustained extensive damage to his bike which delayed his trip and cost him out of pocket. The South Carolina accident put him in the hospital. He has medical insurance but as part of the saga I'm learning a lot about how our medical billing system works. My nephew has engaged an attorney on a contingency basis to deal with his hospital bills and expenses of repairing his bike and transportation cost back home. 

Listen to an interview (47:28) with the award winning author: https://www.kalw.org/show/your-call/2021-09-23/never-pay-the-first-bill
Marshall Allen, author of Never Pay the First Bill: And Other Ways to Fight the Health Care System and Winand investigative health reporter who most recently covered the health care industry at ProPublica. Marshall teaches investigative reporting at the Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at CUNY 

Additional Resources for Consumers to determine the fair cost to pay for medical services: 

 

December 16, 2021

Keeping passwords safe with an authenticator app

 By now everyone should be using a Password Manager like Dashlane or LastPass. If you aren't get to it!

Many financial institutions employ two factor authentication where they send a code to your phone. But what if you lose your phone or it's stolen?

Tatum Hunter, writing for The Washington Post also suggests:

"If you want some password hygiene extra credit, take a couple seconds to download an authenticator app. These connect to your accounts and ping you when somebody tries to log on. Then, the app gives you some second piece of info that authenticates your identity and lets you sign in. Google, Microsoft, Twilio and ID.me all make authenticator apps you can access from different mobile devices. Just type 'authenticator' into an app store and download one of these options."

December 9, 2021

For Covid skeptics... Hard dollar proof from insurance insdustry

 

Mostly due to the pandemic, life-insurance payouts last year rose 15% to $90.43 billion, the sharpest rise since the 1918 influenza epidemic drove them up 41%, according to the American Council of Life Insurers. Meanwhile, sales of insurance policies took their biggest jump in 25 years, according to industry-funded research firm Limra. Combined with good returns on some investments, that lifted industry assets by 7.7% to $8.2 trillion, the ACLI’s figures show. 

Thanks to The Wall Street Journal writer Leslie Scism, December 9, 2021.

December 2, 2021

Mid to Late Life Divorce

 Ending a marriage? Don’t get divorced from financial reality in the process

Andrew Osterland covers the following points:

  • Sound financial planning may be the last thing on your mind when divorcing but it may never be more valuable.
  • “People make mistakes in the divorce process that leave them vulnerable,” said certified divorce financial advisor Stacy Francis, CFP, president and CEO of Francis Financial in New York.
  • Here are five key financial issues to consider when ending a marriage.

 Five key issues to consider in divorce

1. Mediation versus litigation

2. Budget for the long-term

3. Watch your assets

4. Mind your taxes

5. Update your life   

Details at: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/15/dont-get-divorced-from-financial-reality-when-ending-your-marriage.html

A condensed crash course in estate planning with implications for inherited IRAs

 Wow, that's a long title for a blog post but the link below to Inheritance and IRAs is a good refresher/reminder on tasks to complete...soon, maybe before the fast approaching end of the year.

  • The importance of having a will
  • The tax implications of inheritance for spouses and other beneficiaries
  • The different scenarios that can occur in inheritance planning
  • The rights spouses and beneficiaries have in the process
  • Extenuating circumstances that could change the outcome of an inheritance
  • How inheritance works for different types of assets outside of an IRA

https://www.birchgold.com/inheritance-and-iras/


November 22, 2021

On Medicare and need therapy? Good luck (sigh)

 "Therapy on Medicare isn't easy to find" is the title of Andrea Petersen's article  (11/17/21) in The Wall Street Journal. Briefly... many patients age 65 and older are out of luck when needing therapy due to the very few practitioners who accept Medicare reimbursement. "The reasons therapists decide not to participate in Medicare are similar to why some don't take private insurance plans either: Therapists say reimbursement rates are too  low and the paper work is too arduous."

"Therapists suggest making plans for mental-health care months before your 65th birthday. Ask your therapist if they accept Medicare or would be willing to enroll in the program. Or seek a therapist who accepts Medicare. Telehealth may be an option so you can access a larger pool of therapists from beyond your region. Larger practices and hospital-based clinics are more likely to accept Medicare. 

So don't wait to find the care you expect to need. Ask your current therapist for help finding the care you need.

November 2, 2021

Inflation adjusted US government bonds paying 7.12%

With interest rates on savings ate rock bottom low, check out U.S. Government I-bonds.
NEWS: The initial interest rate on new Series I savings bonds is the second-highest ever: 7.12 percent. You can buy I bonds at that rate through April 2022.  Details at: https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/products/prod_ibonds_glance.htm

Be sure you understand how I-bonds work. You can't access your funds in the first 12 months. If you cash out before 5 years, you forfeit 3 months of interest. 

But the advantage is that you do not pay state income taxes on the interest and you can delay paying federal interest until you cash out, a big advantage over traditional savings options like CDs and savings accounts. 

 

October 27, 2021

Law School or MBA? Consider the debt implications

"Most M.B.A. programs leave federal student-loan borrowers with manageable debt loads, a WSJ analysis found. At about 98% of universities that offer the masters of business administration programs, graduates typically made more money two years out of school than they had borrowed, according to the Journal’s analysis of federal student-loan data for nearly 600 programs found. That stands in contrast to law schools, where roughly 6% of programs had graduates with higher median earnings than debt in the same time frame." From The Wall Street Journal, October 27, 2021.

Students considering graduate programs need to do research before they decide to pursue higher education.

 

October 26, 2021

Thinking of upgrading to a new phone?

"Buying a $1,000 iPhone can be equivalent to giving up $17,000 in retirement savings or 2,500 cups of coffee" according to Brian X. Chen, writing for The New York Times

Although buying a new iPhone of other top of the line phone might just cost the equivalent of buying a coffee a day for a year, financially astute readers might do some easy math and discover that the $700-$1,000 invested in a retirement account today could grow to about $17,000 in 30 years!

Consider that fewer than half of Americans have adequate emergency savings but many will upgrade their phones every year or two.

"Suze Orman, the financial adviser who once famously equated people’s coffee habits to 'peeing $1 million down the drain.' The seemingly small amount of money that people mindlessly spend on java — and now phone upgrades — could be a path to poverty, she said." Orman further explains that a "$1,000 phone charged to a credit card could turn into $3,000 with interest by the time it’s paid off." Yikes! 

Is it really worth going into debt for a new phone? Your answer indicates whether you are a short-term thinker or a long-term planner. 

October 25, 2021

How to deal with data breaches

 A great resource is the Identify Theft Resource Center: https://notified.idtheftcenter.org

 Change your passwords as soon as you expect a data breach. 

Use a password manager that generates secure passwords. 

October 24, 2021

Financial Literacy and Career Resources for College Students and Grads

 Have questions about borrowing, student loans, car loans, savings, setting goals? Need help with your resume and job search? https://www.igrad.com has videos, info, worksheets and more on its comprehensive website. With additional topics like long term care insurance, the site isn't just for young folks.

October 20, 2021

Launching Well: Coaching Young Professionals to Build their Financial Capability November 10, 2021 Webinar

 The CFPB and the SEC invites all undergraduate and graduate students to a webinar, on Wednesday Nov 10h from 2:00-3:00PM EDT to provide insight and resources for post-college financial well-being. Establishing a strong baseline of financial capability is essential for building long term wealth. The program will start by defining common financial and investing terms that young professionals should understand to better navigate banking, saving, and investing services. We will share insights and best practices on how to navigate student loans once participants graduate and enter the repayment phase. We also will discuss other financial considerations at the start of participants’ careers, and pitfalls to avoid. Finally, we will provide perspectives on investing for the long term, including the importance of diversification, managing fees, and avoiding fraud.

Please join us online on Wednesday Nov 10th at 2pm ET by registering here.

Launching Well: Coaching Young Professionals to Build their Financial Capability
Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Time: 2:00PM – 3:00PM (EST)

Webex Link: https://cfpbgov.webex.com/cfpbgov/onstage/g.php?MTID=ef640dcd38a52de60151fe2b588e466e1
Access code: 2763 386 0790
Passcode: TpvicTWX@586 (87842899 from phones)

October 14, 2021

Wealthiest Families & the stock market

The top 5% of US households own 71% of US equities, while the top 20% of US households own 93% of US equities (source: Survey of Consumer Finances, Federal Reserve Board). 

Beware Parent Plus education loans

 "Some of the wealthiest U.S. colleges are steering parents into no-limit federal loans to cover rising tuition, leaving many poor and middle-class families with debt they can’t repay" according to T. D. Hobbs and A. Fuller reporting for the October 14, 2021 Wall Street Journal

"Unlike undergraduate loans that have limits, there is no cap on what parents can borrow through the fast-growing Parent Plus program, no matter their income. Some parents wanting the best schools available for their children sign on the dotted line unaware how the debt can burden them into retirement." The university with the worst repayment rate for parent Plus loans is Baylor University in Waco, Texas. Baylor has increased tuition (while failing to increase student aid), built lavish facilities and "paid" for it's growing prestige in college ranking by burdening students' parents with unaffordable Parent Plus loans that threaten retirement security.

By the way, for many student the "best school" is not necessarily the best fit with the best outcomes. Numerous studies have shown that choice of major is a far more important factor in long term earnings outcomes than choice of college. 

A specific case reported by Hobbs and Fuller: “I will never get it all paid off,” said Trina Saverin, a 53year-old public-school administrator in Texas. She owes $231,000 in federal student loans of which at least $65,000 in Parent Plus loans came from sending her daughter to Baylor, at least $74,000 in Plus loans for her son’s college costs, and loans for her own 2015 master’s degree. 

Plus loans to parents and graduate student are "the new face of the student-debt crisis, helping drive a sea change in the student-loan marketplace. Until five years ago, undergraduates borrowed more than parents and grad students combined; now parents and grad students borrow more." 

Who is on the hook when Plus Loans are not repaid? Taxpayers, of course. "Defaults don’t hurt colleges, which get the money upfront."

"New Plus loans had an interest rate of 6.28% as of July 1, compared with the main federal loans for students at 3.73%. New parent loans also have an origination fee quadruple that of federal student loans."

While the front page article is a scathing indictment of Baylor University's administration and financial aid policies, Baylor isn't the only school to sell students and their families on a so-called "reputation" that the student cannot afford. There are so many higher education institutions that provide excellent educations at affordable prices. College-bound students and their families need to do a lot more research and/or hire competent financial advice to avoid getting caught in a debt trap they will regret. Far too many students go straight to college from high school because it is the thing to do and they don't consider other options such as a gap year, working, going to a non-profit technical school or community college. The students who are worst off after borrowing to attend college are those who run up debts but don't graduate. 

And taxpayers are left holding the bag for unpaid debts while colleges collect their money up front, regardless of the outcomes for students and their families.  

October 12, 2021

Financial Scams targeting Seniors... and what adult children should know

"Many financial scams specifically target seniors. Knowing what the warning signs are for each of these scams can help you avoid falling for them."Adult children need to know how to recognize signs of scams that may target their parents... and their future inheritance. 

A Senior’s Guide to Financial Scams (And How to Avoid Them)

Lear: Why Are Seniors Susceptible to Financial Scams?
 
A quick summary:

7 Financial Scams That Target Seniors

1. Fake-Check Scams

2. Medicare Scams

3. Tech-support Scams

4. Lottery + “You’ve Won…” Scams

5. Investment Scams

6. Grandparent Scams

7. Charity Scams

Get the details at: https://www.annuity.org/financial-literacy/seniors-guide-to-financial-scams/

October 9, 2021

Want to boost your savings?

 Check out this website with plenty of suggestions to help you (or those you care about) improve their savings behaviors. 

Author Carly Hallman writes: 

Strategies for Saving Money

"Saving money is a beneficial skill to have for several reasons. It may help stretch your paychecks further and you can also work on saving for the future. If you have accumulated debt, saving money may help you pay off your loans, too. Frugality is the first step toward saving money. What you do with your saved funds is up to you."

The site lists more than a dozen links to specific suggestions for improving your money management to boost your savings. 

Thanks to Carol Briggs who suggested this website after applying the recommendations for her family.

Claim the Child Tax Credit (CTC) and stimulus payments if you didn't file income tax return

 Most Americans received stimulus payments during Coronavirus because they had filed a federal income tax return in the previous year. If you missed receiving payments because you didn't file a tax return, there is still time to claim your payments. check out this link to the Social Security website: https://www.ssa.gov/coronavirus/eip/?utm_campaign=ocomm-eip-22&utm_content=t2-learn-more&utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery

A new non-filer sign-up tool is available if you do not usually file a tax return to claim the Child Tax Credit (CTC), and missing Economic Impact Payments, known as stimulus payments.

  • Social Security excludes the Child Tax Credit as income and resources for 12 months when considering a person’s eligibility for Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and monthly SSI payment amount.
  • Social Security does not count Economic Impact Payments and certain other disaster assistance against your eligibility for SSI or your SSI amount.

 

 

October 2, 2021

Will you need long term care in old age?

 "Seventeen percent of 65-year-olds will need no long-term care. Almost one-quarter will develop severe needs, requiring many hours of help for more than three years."

"Most older people will fall between those poles, with 22 percent having only minimal needs. The largest group, 38 percent, can expect moderate needs — like support while they recover from a heart attack, after which they can again function independently."

Tallying the Cost of Growing Older

 

September 21, 2021

How ‘engagement’ on social media makes you vulnerable to manipulation and misinformation

 Time to rethink your use of social media? 

Wonder why so many Americans are refusing to get vaccinated against Covid-19?

"Our research shows that virtually all web technology platforms, such as social media and news recommendation systems, have a strong popularity bias. When applications are driven by cues like engagement rather than explicit search engine queries, popularity bias can lead to harmful unintended consequences."

"Social media like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube and TikTok rely heavily on AI algorithms to rank and recommend content. These algorithms take as input what you “like,” comment on and share – in other words, content you engage with. The goal of the algorithms is to maximize engagement by finding out what people like and ranking it at the top of their feeds."

"Evidence shows that information is transmitted via “complex contagion,” meaning the more times someone is exposed to an idea online, the more likely they are to adopt and reshare it. When social media tells people an item is going viral, their cognitive biases kick in and translate into the irresistible urge to pay attention to it and share it."

"First, because of people’s tendency to associate with similar people, their online neighborhoods are not very diverse. The ease with which a social media user can unfriend those with whom they disagree pushes people into homogeneous communities, often referred to as echo chambers."

"Second, because many people’s friends are friends of each other, they influence each other. A famous experiment demonstrated that knowing what music your friends like affects your own stated preferences. Your social desire to conform distorts your independent judgment."

"Third, popularity signals can be gamed. Over the years, search engines have developed sophisticated techniques to counter so-called “link farms” and other schemes to manipulate search algorithms. Social media platforms, on the other hand, are just beginning to learn about their own vulnerabilities."

"People aiming to manipulate the information market have created fake accounts, like trolls and social bots, and organized fake networks. They have flooded the network to create the appearance that a conspiracy theory or a political candidate is popular, tricking both platform algorithms and people’s cognitive biases at once. They have even altered the structure of social networks to create illusions about majority opinions."

Currently The Wall Street Journal is publishing a series of articles exposing how Facebook manipulates users.

Written by FILIPPO MENCZER, Indiana University. https://www.stgeorgeutah.com/news/archive/2021/09/16/prc-the-conversation-how-engagement-makes-you-vulnerable-to-manipulation-and-misinformation-on-social-media/#.YUoJfX1MHo4

 

Want a guaranteed 8% return on your retirement investments?

"If you delay Social Security by a year and instead dip into savings to cover the missed benefits, you're effectively buying an annuity with an 8% payout. That's a deal that's hard to beat, as Rick Connor explains.

"How do you buy an annuity from the Social Security Administration (SSA)? For each year that you delay claiming Social Security, your benefit increases by about 8%. The CRR paper makes the case that delaying Social Security, while using your savings to pay current expenses, is the equivalent of buying an annuity from the SSA. The annuity’s cost is the Social Security payments that you forgo in the meantime. What’s the benefit? That’s equal to the increase in your Social Security check you receive in return for the delay."

Read the article to understand the long term implications of delaying claiming Social Security retirement benefits.  https://humbledollar.com/2021/09/income-for-sale/

 

Insurance companies no longer covering 100% of Covid costs

"The days of full covid coverage are over. Insurers are restoring deductibles and co-pays, leaving patients with big bills." Headline in The Washington Post 9/18/21.

Maybe it is time for the unvaccinated to finally get the jab to protect themselves.

"In 2020, as the pandemic took hold, U.S. health insurance companies declared they would cover 100 percent of the costs for covid treatment, waiving co-pays and expensive deductibles for hospital stays that frequently range into the hundreds of thousands of dollars."

"But this year, most insurers have reinstated co-pays and deductibles for covid patients." Christopher Rowland, writing for the Post. 

 

September 13, 2021

Home Modifications Covered by Medicare and Medicaid

"Walk-in tubs, hospital beds and wheelchair ramps are among the many home modifications and devices keeping seniors safe. They don’t come cheap, but government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid can defray the cost."

"Medicare is extremely strict about what it covers, but seniors who show medical necessity qualify for up to 80% coverage. Seniors using their hospice care benefit don’t have to pay anything for covered equipment. Meanwhile, a few Medicare Advantage plans offer limited support for home modifications."

"Medicaid is more flexible, with many programs routinely offering medication dispensers and personal emergency response services."

Get the details at: https://www.theseniorlist.com/research/medicare-benefits-home-improvements/

 

September 8, 2021

Immediate fixed annuities: Create your own pension for guaranteed lifetime income

 Immediate fixed annuities are a way to create your own pension from your 401(k) or IRA retirement funds. Immediate (not deferred) fixed (not variable) annuities are plain-vanilla products that provide a predetermined income stream that starts paying out right away.While typically sold but insurance salespeople who earn a commission, annuities are also available direct from insurance companies, avoiding the sales commission. 

One example: "a 65-year-old man could currently expect to receive monthly payments of about $481 in exchange for purchasing a $100,000 annuity." "That translates into an effective income rate (which includes both interest payments and return of principal) of about 5.8%, which is higher than the cash flows generated by most investments. And in contrast to an investment portfolio, which runs the risk of depletion from unexpected longevity, market downturns, or a bad sequence of returns, an annuity won’t run out during the investor’s lifetime (or payout period)." 

The article offers some guidelines on figuring out if an annuity makes sense for you, and if so, how much to allocate.

The article offers 6 steps to decide if an annuity is right for you. Get details at: https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1056871/do-you-need-an-annuity-for-retirement-income?template-name=%7B%7Bletter.config.name%7D%7D&utm_campaign=wp_personal_finance&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_finance

 

Thinking about hiring a financial advisor? Considering switching advisors?

 Here are some links to articles to help you find such assistance. Thanks to Michelle Singletary, personal finance writer for The Washington Post.

What You Need to Know About Fee-Only Financial Advisors

Fee-Only Financial Planner vs. Fee-Based: What’s the Difference?

Financial adviser, financial planner or robo-advisor? Here’s how to find the right help to manage your money

August 23, 2021

Remote online notarization (RON)

Besides the Covid factor, RON (also called Remote Electronic Notarization) is useful for convenience and safety, as well as when you are in a different state from the notary. 

Having just helped a relative settle an estate, RON could have saved us some trips to offices. 

Thanks to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for this info. 

"With RON, notaries can meet with you on video to verify your signature on an electronic document."

Many states have laws that allow RON on a permanent basis. Other states have put temporary measures in place to allow it during the COVID-19 pandemic.

State laws about RON vary, but many include three key parts:

  • Allowing notaries to use audio-video communication to witness the signature;
  • Requiring notaries to verify the identity of the person who is signing the document; and
  • Requiring notaries to record the audio-video communication. 
  • Check out your state's laws: https://www.nass.org/initiatives/remote-electronic-notarization

Few go back to work when unemployment benefits are cut off early

 Despite the rhetoric, few Americans returned to work when red states cut back unemployment benefits early. Instead, consumer spending dropped, hurting the economies of those states. Half the states (26), all with Republican governors except one, have ceased expanded unemployment benefits during Covid. "Several recent studies, however, have concluded that the extra payments have played only a small role in this year’s labor shortages."

"Data released Friday by the Labor Department provided the latest evidence. It showed that the states that cut benefits have experienced job growth similar to — and perhaps slightly slower than — growth in states that retained the benefits. That was true even in the leisure and hospitality sector, where businesses have been particularly vocal in their complaints about the benefits."

Cutting benefits failed to force people back to work because they couldn't find childcare, didn't find jobs, refused to work due to the  more dangerous Delta variant (had health problems themselves or had family members to protect), were unwilling to work for low wages, 

"Cutting off the benefits left unemployed workers worse off on average. The researchers estimate that workers lost an average of $278 a week in benefits because of the change, and gained just $14 a week in earnings. They compensated by cutting spending by $145 a week — a roughly 20 percent reduction — and thus put less money into their local economies."

Get the details from Ben Casselman writing for The New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/20/business/economy/unemployment-benefits-economy-states.html?campaign_id=12&emc=edit_my_20210823&instance_id=38609&nl=your-money&regi_id=83720664&segment_id=67012&te=1&user_id=bde4c6c63beab087f13b761e1ee9fe1e


July 16, 2021

What to Do When a Loved One Dies

"Settling a deceased family member's affairs is not a one-person task. You'll need the help of others, ranging from professionals like lawyers or CPAs, who can advise you on financial matters, to a network of friends and relatives, to whom you can delegate tasks or lean on for emotional support." f

To Do Immediately After Someone Dies

Get a legal pronouncement of death

Tell friends and family

Find out about existing funeral and burial plans

Within a Few Days of Death

Make funeral, burial or cremation arrangements

Secure the property

Provide care for pets

Forward mail

Notify your family member's employer

Two Weeks After Death

Secure certified copies of death certificates

Find the will and the executor

Meet with a trusts and estates attorney

Contact a CPA

Take the will to probate

Make an inventory of all assets

Track down assets

Make a list of bills

Cancel services no longer needed

Notify the following of your loved one's death:

• The Social Security Administration

• Life insurance companies

• Banks, financial institutions

• Financial advisers, stockbrokers

• Credit agencies

Cancel driver's license

Close credit card accounts

Terminate insurance policies

Delete or memorialize social media accounts

Close email accounts (& social media)

Life will be so much easier for our survivors if we gather this information, prepare a will and letter of last instruction and provide guidance on your wishes.

 

 

 

July 15, 2021

Need a passport or need to renew?

Plan at least 6 months ahead! Yes, the backlog is long so don't book your trip unless your passport is good for at least 6 months. Check the expiration date and renew early.

AAA rating of the United States government bonds at risk due to politics

"Fitch Ratings, a credit rating company, is considering downgrading the AAA rating of the United States government bonds. The problem is not the economy. In fact, the Fitch Ratings report praises the economy, saying it “has recovered much more rapidly than expected, helped by policy stimulus and the roll-out of the vaccination program, which has allowed economic reopening…. [T]he scale and speed of the policy response [is] a positive reflection on the macroeconomic policy framework. Real economic output has overtaken its pre-pandemic level and is on track to exceed pre-pandemic projections....” 

"Although the report worries about the growing debt, we also learned yesterday that the deficit for June dropped a whopping 80% from the deficit a year ago, as tax receipts recover along with the economy. Year-to-date, the annual deficit is down 18% from last year."

"The problem, the report says, is politics. And it is specific." “The failure of the former president to concede the election and the events surrounding the certification of the results of the presidential election in Congress in January, have no recent parallels in other very highly rated sovereigns. The redrafting of election laws in some states could weaken the political system, increasing divergence between votes cast and party representation. These developments underline an ongoing risk of lack of bipartisanship and difficulty in formulating policy and passing laws in Congress.”

Thanks to Boston College historian Heather Cox Richardson for this blog post. 

July 8, 2021

Hospitals Often Bill Uninsured the Highest Prices

Going without health insurance is NOT an option!

Insurers negotiate lower rates for same treatment, new data show, with the uninsured charging up to three times as much as patients with insurance. No wonder we have the highest bankruptcy rates in the world. My research at Utah State University on bankruptcy in Utah and that of Levi Pace at the University of Utah confirmed the role of medical debt in personal bankruptcy. Other researchers around the country reported significant decreases in consumer bankruptcy filings once the Affordable Care Act was enacted.

Writing for July 7, 2021 The Wall Street Journal, Melanie Evans, Anna Wilde Mathews and Tom McGinty provide details on a practice of multi-tiered pricing by hospitals. Those who can least afford the care are charged the most, while insured patients pay far less, depending on their specific insurance. This practice of charging wildly different rates based on insured status is nothing new. 

"Hospitals typically charge different customers different prices for the exact same service, with big discounts for some but not others. Those rates—and wide pricing differences—were confidential until Jan. 1, when a new federal rule required hospitals to make prices public. The newly public prices allow
for the first time a comparison of what deep-pocketed insurers pay hospitals versus rates that hospitals set for patients who pay cash. Time and time again, the Journal’s analysis revealed, cash payers are charged among the highest prices." You can't afford to be uninsured!

"Hospitals generally offer financial aid, but policies vary widely and can be poorly promoted, leaving many uninsured, who are often also low income, to struggle with unmanageable bills."

It may take the uninsured hiring a lawyer or professional patient advocate to negotiate an affordable repayment plan.

Hospitals within the same county charge wildly different rates for the same procedures. While that suggests shopping around, ending up in the emergency room with a heart attack or stroke doesn't allow such prudence.

Just one more reason why we need universal, single-payer health insurance like the rest of the industrialized world.



June 29, 2021

Understanding the different parts of Medicare

Three Key Medicare Decisions

"While not an overly complicated benefit, initially signing up for Medicare can be an overwhelming and anxiety-inducing process" according to | Jun 16, 2021 quoting from his article: https://www.wealthmanagement.com/retirement-planning/three-key-medicare-decisions

  • Part A (hospital coverage) covers things like inpatient hospital stays, some home health care, skilled nursing facility care and hospice; requires no out-of-pocket annual premiums; but has both annual deductibles and copays.
  • Part B (medical coverage) covers things like doctor visits, outpatient services, X-rays and lab tests, as well as preventive screenings; carries both annual deductibles and copays; and requires monthly premium payments.
  • Part C (Medicare Advantage) is a private all-in-one alternative to Medicare that covers the services associated with Parts A and B (and usually Part D). On the plus side, these bundled plans tend to be more affordable and may offer broader coverage (for example, vision, hearing and dental. Providers must be Medicare-approved. But the plans typically come with greater restrictions, and most plans act as HMOs and require plan participants to go to their network of doctors and health care providers.
  • Part D (prescription drug coverage) is an optional add-on prescription drug coverage that requires monthly premiums, annual deductibles and copays. Your client will need to enroll in an approved plan and be covered under both Medicare Parts A and B (or Part C).
  • Medigap is offered by private insurers to help fill any coverage gaps in Part A and Part B such as copayments, coinsurance, deductibles and potentially foreign travel health emergencies. There are 10 different types of Medigap plans—some cover more out-of-pocket costs than others.

Free Legal Forms Online

 While geared toward college students, the following online forms can be helpful at all stages of adult life. Free high-quality legal templates and information are provided online by FormsPal.com

 Special thanks to Daphne Moore!

Just say no to Extended Warranties for Cars

Extended Warranties for Cars Are ‘Fraught With Peril for Consumers’

"While reputable options exist, the robocalls are almost certainly scams, an industry group warns. And for consumers who feel they have been ripped off, there is no guarantee anyone will help" writes

What's the Deal with Social Security for Women?

 What's the Deal with Social Security for Women? is a new book by Marcia Mantell.

What's the Deal with Social Security for Women 

The following is quoted from: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/whats-the-deal-with-social-security-for-women-marcia-mantell/1133342938

"As a woman nearing retirement, you may be delightfully surprised to get your own Social Security check. But you probably have questions. Questions such as:

  • How much money will I actually get from Social Security?
  • How soon can I retire and start collecting my Social Security?
  • What are my options for claiming?
  • Do I really get benefits on my spouse or ex-spouse?

Drawing on the author's expertise and sharing the personal stories of real women, What’s The Deal With Social Security for Women opens the door on how Social Security works regardless of your life's journey. It's for you if you’re married, divorced, widowed, or single and will take some of the mystery out of this complex yet critical income source. Read this book discover how important it is to:

  • Make smart decisions about when to claim Social Security
  • Receive more monthly income by claiming after age 62
  • Learn the facts about Social Security's future
  • Balance time and money when deciding when to retire"

 

Who is more susceptible to financial scams: Seniors or young adults?

 We all know that financial scams target seniors and that they are the most susceptible to the bait. Right? think again...

"Stop it with the ageism and delusions of invincibility. Young adults often don’t recognize the bad checks coming at them, or fake job offers, either" writes Ron Lieber for The New York Times.

"For years now, the Better Business Bureau’s survey research has shown that younger adults lose money to swindlers much more often than the older people you may think of as the stereotypical victims. The Federal Trade Commission reports similar figures, with 44 percent of people ages 20 to 29 losing money to fraud, more than double the 20 percent of people ages 70 to 79."

It's not the Nigerian prince or pfishing scam. "The targeted activities vary widely, from the online shopping that these victims may do nearly every day to their once-in-a-blue-moon handling of paper checks. Illegal schemes also target the student debt payments they must make and the jobs they seek to afford them."

"Pet and pet-supply scams have historically made up 25 percent of the online purchase scams reported to the Better Business Bureau."

"Given its size, con artists try to impersonate Amazon more often than any other company’s brand."

 

How much to invest to have $1 million by retirement

Start early to attain your goal.

Starting at age 20:
  • Assuming a 6% return, compounded monthly, you should aim to invest $364 a month toward retirement to reach $1 million in savings by age 65.
Starting at age 30:
  • Assuming a 6% return, compounded monthly, you should aim to invest $704 a month toward retirement to reach $1 million in savings by age 65.
Starting at age 40:
  • Assuming a 6% return, compounded monthly, you should aim to invest $1,444 a month toward retirement to reach $1 million in savings by age 65.
Starting at age 50:
  • Assuming a 6% return, compounded monthly, you should aim to invest $3,439 a month toward retirement to reach $1 million in savings by age 65.

    How to retire a millionaire

Invest wisely. Check out other blog posts on index investing and investing.

June 17, 2021

How much are you spending on bottled water?

The Story of Bottled Water

For those of us who remember life without bottled water, it is sad, pathetic, and frustrating when consumers spend money on water packed in a throw away plastic bottle. The bottle is made from petroleum and shipped across the country (wasting more petroleum), and then 80% of the bottles end up in landfills or incinerators. Even worse, much of the supposedly recycled bottles are shipped to developing nations like India (wasting more petroleum in the process) where they add to the pollution problem. While consumers routinely claim to be immune to advertising, bottled water is a classic example of “manufactured demand,” using scare techniques and images of pure fantasy to entice buyers. Pepsi’s Aquafina and Coke’s Desani are simply filtered tap water sold at 2,000 times the price of tap water! Despite its advertising claims and images of pristine sources, Fiji water is lower quality than Cleveland’s tap water. Imagine paying 2,000 times the price of gas for your car! Yet consumers succumb to this insanity daily. 

Logan, UT has some of purest water on the planet coming out of our taps. Don’t be a schmuck. 

Save your money and the environment; use a steel water bottle. 

Watch the 8 minute video and kick the bottled water habit: http://storyofstuff.org/movies/story-of-bottled-water/

June 8, 2021

Retirement Planning Checklist

Whether the day you stop working is a decade away or around the corner, these to-do items will help you retire on your own terms.

June 5, 2021

Median CEO Pay Sets Fifth Straight Record


 "Median pay reached 413.4 million for chief executives of the biggest. U.S. companies in 2020, setting a fifth straight annual record in a year when businesses and their leaders battled a global pandemic" (Theo Francis & Inti Pacheco, The Wall Street Journal, 6/2/21). 

Seven CEOs were awarded compensation of more than $50 million in one year!

The same folks oppose raising the minimum wage to $15/hour.  Nuf Said.


U.S. Government I Bonds (inflation protected) are the best savings option you probably have never heard about


"In today’s yield-parched world, money-market funds are paying 0.02%, bank savings accounts 0.13%, a three-month Treasury bill 0.015% and even a 30-year Treasury bond only 2.25%." Wall Street Journal writer Jason Zweig reminds us of one of the best kept secrets for savers; I-Bonds. These savings instruments are inflation-protected U.S. savings bonds that are currently paying 3.54% for bonds issued May 2021 – October 2021. I bonds are almost risk-free and offer significant tax advantages.

"The maximum purchase is $10,000 per year per account holder (unless you elect to take your tax refund in the form of an I bond)."

"Ironically, the less you earn and have to invest, the more powerful a tool I bonds are."

Never heard of I-bonds? Maybe because "financial advisers have no incentive to sell I bonds, which don’t pay commissions or charge expenses and are available exclusively from the U.S. government (see TreasuryDirect.gov)" 

"Their yield consists of a fixed rate for the 30-year life of the bond and an inflation rate, which adjusts semiannually. The current 3.54% applies to I bonds issued until Nov. 1, 2021 and will reset every six months unless the official government rate of inflation stays constant."

While the yield can decline if inflation drops (not likely in coming years according to my reading of the WSJ). "But, unlike with Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, the yield on I bonds can never go below zero. So they protect against both inflation and deflation."

Interest on I bonds is exempt from state and local income tax! So especially appealing for residents of high tax states. "For income-tax purposes, you can choose to defer declaring your I-bond interest until maturity or you redeem, whichever comes first." 

Some caveats: You can't access your funds for first 12 months. If you cash out before 5 years, you lose 3 months of interest. "If you buy an I bond at today’s 3.54% rate and sell it one year and a day from now, you’ll earn 2.65% after the penalty (assuming the rate doesn’t change). That’s roughly quadruple what you’d get from a one-year certificate of deposit or ultra-short-term bond fund."

I bonds are ideal for emergency savings. You don't get monthly or yearly reminders about your account so it's "out of sight, out of mind" so you're not tempted to used the money for less than an emergency.  They are also well-suited for short term goals where you want to be sure your money grows and you can't lose purchasing power. 

Thanks to Jason Zweig for this timely reminder about a great addition to one's portfolio. Check out his website and his books: https://jasonzweig.com/

For more details see: https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/products/prod_ibonds_glance.htm

 

May 19, 2021

Required Minimum Distributions from IRAs and 401(k) accounts

Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) are calculated differently for distributions from multiple IRAs and multiple 401(k) plans.

If you have more than one traditional IRA, the RMDs are calculated separately for each IRA but can be withdrawn from any of your accounts. 

However, if you have multiple 401(k) accounts, the RMD must be calculated for each 401(k) and withdrawn separately from each account. Some 401(k) administrators calculate your required distribution and send it to you automatically if you haven't withdrawn the money by a certain date, but IRA administrators may not automatically distribute the money from your IRAs.

https://www.kiplinger.com/retirement/602564/questions-retirees-often-get-wrong-about-taxes-in-retirement

 

 

Taxation of Annuity Income

If you purchased an annuity that provides income in retirement, the portion of the payment that represents your principal is tax-free; the rest is taxable. The insurance company that sold you the annuity is required to tell you what is taxable. 

Different rules apply if you bought the annuity with pretax funds (such as from a traditional IRA). In that case, 100% of your payment will be taxed as ordinary income. In addition, be aware that you'll have to pay any taxes that you owe on the annuity at your ordinary income-tax rate, not the preferable capital gains rate.

Source:  https://www.kiplinger.com/retirement/602564/questions-retirees-often-get-wrong-about-taxes-in-retirement


Resources for Financial Caregivers


 May is Older Americans Month 

Financial caregivers are people who manage money for a loved one who may need help because of health problems or memory issues. If you don’t have a financial caregiver lined up, it helps to plan ahead in case you need help in the future. Understanding your options will allow you and your loved ones to choose what works best for your situation. Here are some free CFPB resources to help:

  • Considering a financial caregiver? Know your options is a new tool to help you decide whether you or your loved one need an informal caregiver, who helps manage money on an as-needed basis, or a formal caregiver, established by a legal arrangement. The brief guide also walks you through what to consider when choosing a financial caregiver.
  • Planning for peace of mind: Social Security Advance Designation explains a new tool from the Social Security Administration that allows you to recommend someone you trust to manage your Social Security benefits if you become unable to do so yourself.
  • Planning for diminished capacity and illness helps you understand the potential impact of diminished capacity on your ability to make financial decisions and avoid fraud and other forms of financial abuse. The joint advisory from the Securities and Exchange Commission and CFPB encourages you to plan for possible diminished financial capacity long before it happens.
  • Managing Someone Else’s Money guides explain the responsibilities of a financial caregiver, as well as how to spot financial exploitation and avoid scams. The guides are tailored to the needs of people in four different fiduciary roles: power of attorney, guardians, trustees, and government fiduciaries.

Order free print copies of these publications for yourself, and to share with older adults in your community.

 

Reverse Mortgage Resources

 The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau offers resources for older Americans on reverse mortgages. 

Reverse mortgages are one way an older homeowner can continue to live in their home without making monthly payments. However, a reverse mortgage is a loan, and a complicated product with ongoing responsibilities. 

Financial Planning for Women does not sell, rent, loan, lease or otherwise provide any personal information collected at our site to any third parties.