Economic Insights

Can I contribute to my company’s 401(k) plan and to my Individual Retirement Account?
March 5th, 2007 9:22 PM

Can I contribute to my company’s 401(k) plan and to my Individual Retirement Account?

You can contribute to both a 401(k) plan and an Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) -- the question is whether your IRA contribution is tax deductible. If you contribute to a 401(k), you’ll only be able to fully deduct your IRA contribution if you earn less than $50,000 in 2006 ($70,000 if you file jointly). You get a partial deduction if you earn between $50,000 and $60,000 in 2006 ($70,000 and $85,000 if you file jointly). In 2007, the phase-out range for married couples filing jointly is $80,000 to $100,000.

Remember that even if you make a non-deductible IRA contribution, the earnings won’t be taxed until you withdraw the money.

Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 5th, 2007 9:22 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Fed holds rates steady, sees inflation elevated
March 21st, 2007 11:17 PM
Fed holds rates steady, sees inflation elevated
Marketwatch - March 21, 2007 4:59 PM ET
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The Federal Reserve held its benchmark interest rate steady Wednesday, saying its "predominant policy concern remains the risk that inflation will fail to moderate as expected."

In its statement released at the conclusion of its two-day meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee acknowledged recent data shows both higher inflation and a weaker economy. See the full text of the statement.

The committee dropped a phrase from previous statements about the "additional firming that may be needed," a change interpreted by some as signaling that the Fed is moving closer to cutting interest rates later this year, as the market expects. See analysis of Bernanke's communications.

Stock markets rallied on the wording change. See Market Snapshot.

"This is a grudging removal of the tightening bias," wrote Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist for High Frequency Economics, in an email.

But others said the Fed is still focused on inflation.

The committee also heightened its concern about inflation, suggesting that it is still leaning toward raising interest rates if inflation does not moderate.

"Inflation is still very much on the Fed's mind," said Irwin Kellner, chief economist for MarketWatch. Listen to the interview.

"Simple translation: no rate cut," said Rich Yamarone, chief economist for Argus Research, in a research note.

Fed policy-makers are "not satisfied with the progress they are making long-term in bringing inflation back down to 1-2% level, said J. Alfred Broaddus, the former president of the Richmond Fed.

"Frankly, I believe the message that comes out from this is they are probably not going to do anything for a period of time until these mixed signals become clearer," said Robert Parry, former president of the San Francisco Fed Bank in a television interview.

In its statement, the FOMC also downgraded its assessment of the economy and the housing sector. Instead of saying the economy was "somewhat firmer" as they did in January, the Fed said recent indicators had been "mixed."

And instead of saying it saw "some tentative signs of stabilization" in the housing markets, the committee said "the adjustment in the housing sector is ongoing."

"Nevertheless, the economy seems likely to continue to expand at a moderate pace over coming quarters," the FOMC said.

The FOMC repeated that rising inflation remains the greatest risk to a stable economy. "Recent readings on core inflation have been somewhat elevated," the statement said. "The high level of resource utilization has the potential to sustain those pressures."

The Fed has held its key short-term rate at 5.25% since last June.

Since its last meeting in late January, more signs of a slowing economy have emerged, including further troubles in the mortgage market and a sharp downward revision to fourth-quarter growth. But inflation worries have also mounted, putting the Fed in a delicate position. Read our complete Fed coverage.

With forces pushing them in opposite ways -- to raise rates to quell inflation and to lower rates to revive growth -- the Fed opted to do nothing while events play out. The Fed's baseline forecast is for both inflation and growth to stabilize.

Financial markets have priced in one or two rate cuts this year, but a sizable number of economists and strategists say the Fed is more likely to raise rates to stop inflation from getting too high.

The Fed's official policy stance leans toward raising rates, but that could change in an instant if growth slowed too quickly or signs of systemic market turmoil emerged.

The vote to keep rates steady was unanimous.

The Fed targets overnight lending rates to loosely control inflation via their impact on economic activity. Higher rates cool the economy, reducing inflationary pressures over time as demand slows. Lower rates can boost demand.

Banks typically peg their prime lending rates to the federal funds rate. Credit-card rates and adjustable-trade mortgages are sometimes also tied directly to the Fed target.

Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 21st, 2007 11:17 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Fixing the 5 biggest 401(k) blunders
March 11th, 2007 9:32 AM

Fixing the 5 biggest 401(k) blunders

The smallest mistakes you make now can cost you dearly in retirement. Here are the common mistakes -- and five ways to get your savings back. 

The Pension Protection Act of 2006 is supposed to fix the 401(k) system, which is the principal retirement tool for Americans. It's meant to bring more workers into the system and to help direct their investments more intelligently. These are laudable goals, but more rules aren't going to fix the basic problem.

The average American commits five big blunders in planning for retirement, and their cumulative effect can turn potential millionaires into permanent paupers. It doesn't take an act of Congress to correct them. It takes the kind of sensible planning you already do to buy a car or, in Peter Lynch's famous example, a refrigerator. That famed stock picker said investors pay less attention to their portfolios than their appliances.

The five big mistakes are failing to save hard enough; neglecting to maximize returns while controlling risk; relying too heavily on the stock of their employers; fumbling rollovers; and scalping themselves with heedless borrowing from their own nest egg.

Compounded over a lifetime, the smallest mistakes can have life-changing results. Ignoring expenses can clip 10% right off the top. I'll show you one example where a thoughtful choice involving just a few thousand dollars in your 20s can buy you a second home in the sun when your old bones need it most.

Consider this a 12-step program stripped to the bare essentials. Five steps can take you from dreading your financial future to enjoying it.

Get in, max out, catch up

According to Fidelity Investments, the largest operator of corporate 401(k) plans, more than a third of corporate employees don't even join their plans.

The 2006 pension act, signed into law last August, allows employers to automatically enroll you into a plan, forcing you to opt out, rather than in, which is a start. But then there's this issue: Most plan members don't save enough. The average rate is 6.9%, Fidelity says.

That's on what another pension consultant, Hewitt Associates, says is an average salary of $52,120, which works out to be $3,596 annually. But you can contribute up to $15,500. Double this contribution and it is still just half the permitted limit. Contributing enough to get the company match is a no-brainer, but failing to contribute more could be more costly in the end.

 

Brian Pon, a financial adviser with Financial Connections Group in Berkeley, Calif., says clients come to him for advice because the whole issue of retirement planning overwhelms them with its seeming complexity. "Some kind of analysis paralysis sets in," he says. "Is now the best time to invest? The question really is, 'Is now the best time to save?' and the answer is yes."

Even worse, only about one worker in 10 over the age of 50 takes advantage of the "catch-up" provision that allows them to contribute an additional $5,000.

If you don't think you can afford to max out your company plan, consider opening a Roth IRA in addition to it. Because contributions are not tax-deductible, "the Roth could act as an emergency savings vehicle, since contributions can be withdrawn tax-free and penalty-free at anytime," notes Chad Smith of Financial Symmetry in Raleigh, N.C.

 

Also, a Roth at a good, inexpensive mutual fund company will probably provide more investment options than a company plan.

Maximize growth, control risk

One-quarter of all plan participants have their entire account in a single investment option, Fidelity says, and it is often a low-yielding stable-value account which provides no opportunity for the growth of capital.

"The overwhelming mistake that I see 401(k) participants make is that they fail to diversify and employ proper asset allocation," says Jeffrey N. Bogue, a financial planner in Wells, Maine.

According to Fidelity, 22% of participants hold only equities, which cost them 30% or more of their nest egg in the bear market of 2000-2002. A well-diversified portfolio includes bonds and other income-oriented investments to help avoid calamities like that.

But 13% of 401(k) participants err in the opposite direction, owning no equities. With average life spans extending well into the 80s, even retirees need to keep at least a third of their assets in equities to keep up with inflation. The Pension Act liberalizes the rules by allowing plan sponsors to recommend model asset allocation. A sturdy rule of thumb is 60% equities and 40% income.

And don't forget as you allocate assets within your 401(k) to take your other investments into account. Working couples often have two plans, and "most have not spent the time to determine how to maximize the asset allocation between their two plans," says Paul Merriman of Merriman Capital Management in Seattle. "The potential return advantage can be as much as 1% a year." Choose from among the lowest-expense options in each plan.

Sell that company stock

Especially at big corporations, participants hold an average of 21.9% of assets in company stock, according to Hewitt Associates. Equity mutual funds spread risk across hundreds of companies; individual stocks are incredibly risky.

"I worked with several employees of AT&T and then Lucent Technologies who had unfortunately ridden their 401(k) plans to near nothing as the stock dropped from $70 to $3 a share," says Hal Schweiger of Capital Financial Advisers in San Diego. "The belief that a great company like AT&T is not vulnerable to this type of stock fluctuation is a costly problem."

The 2006 pension act gives plan participants more options out of company stock, and they should take them. But if you happen to be stuck with a bunch, there is a way to turn this lemon into a beverage. You can withdraw it from the plan at age 59 ½, pay the tax and then put it into a conventional taxable investment account, where future capital gains taxes -- a lower rate than pension income -- will be based on the value at the time of this transfer, not when you originally acquired it for, presumably, much less.

Rollover follies

Young workers, especially, are apt to cash out their old 401(k) plan when they change jobs. "Apart from the obvious problem of not saving for retirement, they don't realize that the 20% withheld on the distribution isn't the whole tax bite," notes Ronald E. Shaw, president of Evergreen Financial Management in Ann Arbor, Mich. There is also a 10% penalty to be paid, plus state income taxes.

Imagine you're 28 years old and the plan balance you're cashing in when you switch jobs is $5,000. If you take the cash, you'll get little more than $3,000 after all the taxes and penalties are paid. Imagine instead that you roll the money into an IRA at a cheap mutual fund company like Fidelity or Vanguard Group. You leave the money alone and it grows at the stock market's average return of 11%.

At age 70, when your other retirement funds are looking thin, this account will be worth $400,438, which assuming a 2.5% inflation rate is $135,000 in today's dollars. That's enough for a little place in Florida. You swapped it in your youth for a week in Fort Lauderdale.

So, unless your old plan is gold-plated, meaning very, very cheap, take the money out, by all means, but roll it directly into a low-cost IRA. Good mutual fund companies are cheaper than most corporate plans, and they provide more alternatives, including asset classes like real estate investment trusts that are absent from the typical company plan.

This is true in spades if your company plan is run by an insurance company and consists of annuities. My wife, a school principal, owns a version of Fidelity Contrafund (FCNTX) called Fidelity Investments VIP Contrafund Portfolio. It returned 10.9% annually over the five years ended Dec. 31. Contrafund itself returned 12.3%. The difference was extravagant fees for the annuity.

A $10,000 investment in the annuity grew to $16,780. In the fund, it grew to $17,866. The difference, of $1,086, is a whopping 10.8% of the original investment. Insurance companies argue that she received valuable insurance for this additional expense -- but she wasn't shopping for insurance. She's already got insurance. She got gouged, and so does every participant in an expensive retirement plan, which is most of them.

Eschew loans

The deal sounds mouthwatering. You can borrow against your 401(k) to buy a car and pay a lower interest rate than you would for a conventional loan. What's more, you pay the interest to yourself.

If you think that sounds good, you aren't thinking hard enough. First of all, the interest you're paying yourself is less than your money could have earned in a good equity investment over those four or five years. In effect, you'll pay for the car again in retirement in the form of income you won't have. And that's not all.

"If you lose your job or decide to change employers, you will have to pay it back immediately," notes Donald E. Whalen of Versailles Financial in Atlanta. That could be the event that forces you to cash out, with all the woes that can bring, later as well as now.

Time is inexorable. In five billion years, the sun will explode. But for money invested at interest, time is the most powerful wealth-builder there is. A 401(k) can provide a comfortable retirement, if you don't let mistakes gut it.

 


Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 11th, 2007 9:32 AMPost a Comment (0)

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12 ways to save on Homeowners Insurance
March 6th, 2007 5:26 PM

You can save money on homeowners insurance a number of ways. Discounts from your insurance company are available for a wide variety of reasons, ranging from the type of building material used to build your home to how close you live to a fire station. These discounts will vary by state and insurance company.

Here are 12 ways you can save money on your homeowners policy:

  • Shop around.
    Check with many different insurance companies to get rate quotes. Do your friends or family members like their insurance company? Check the Internet using online quotes like the ones here at MSN Money.

  • Raise your deductible.
    The deductible is the amount of money you have to pay toward a loss before your insurance kicks in. Typically, deductibles start at $250.
    Increase your deductible to:
    $500 and save up to 12% on your premiums
    $1,000 and save up to 24%
    $2,500 and save up to 30%
    $5,000 and save up to 37%.
    Just make sure you can afford to pay the higher deductible out of pocket if something should happen.

  • Buy your home and auto policies from the same company.
    Many companies will give a multiline discount if you buy both homeowners and auto coverage from them.

  • Consider insurance when buying a home.
    If you're looking at buying a home, think about the cost of insuring the home. A newer home's electrical, heating and plumbing systems and overall structure are likely to be in better condition than those of an older home. This can lead to a discount on your premiums.
    You'll also want to consider the construction of the home and where you live. If you live on the East Coast, you'll want the house to be able to stand up to wind damage, while on the West Coast, you need to keep earthquakes in mind.

  • Insure your home, not the land.
    While your home and its contents are at risk from fire, theft, windstorms and other perils, the land your home sits on is not. Don't include the value of the land in deciding how much homeowners insurance you need to buy.

  • Improve security and safety.
    Items such as deadbolt locks, burglar alarms and smoke detectors usually can bring discounts of 5% each, depending on the company. Your insurance company may also offer a significant discount of 15% or 20% if you install a sophisticated home-security system. If you're thinking about buying such a system, check with your insurer to see which systems they recommend and which will earn you a discount.

  • Stop smoking.
    Smoking accidents account for more than 23,000 residential fires every year. Some insurers offer to reduce premiums if no one in the home smokes.

  • Senior discounts.
    Insurance companies have found that retired people stay at home more and spot fires sooner than working people. Older people also have more time for maintaining their homes. If you're at least 55 years old and retired, you might qualify for a discount of as much as 10%.

  • Group coverage.
    Alumni and business associations often work out insurance deals with an insurance company, which includes a discount for association members. Ask your association's director about any such deals.

  • Stay with an insurer.
    If you've kept your coverage with a company for several years, you may receive special consideration. Several insurers will reduce their premiums by 5% after staying with them for three to five years; and some companies will discount you as much as 10% after six years.

  • Check your policy annually.
    You want your policy to reflect the value of your home and belongings. If you review your policy every year, you will be able to make the necessary adjustments. If, for example, you just sold a valuable painting, you won't need the same amount of coverage. But if you added a garage, you'll need to increase your coverage.

  • Look for private insurance first. If you live in a high-risk area (one that is especially vulnerable to coastal storms, fires or crime) and think you'll be forced to buy homeowners coverage from your state's high-risk insurance pool, check first with an insurance agent. You may find that you can still buy insurance at a lower price in the private insurance market than from the insurer of last resort.

Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 6th, 2007 5:26 PMPost a Comment (0)

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My NEW LOT PROGRAM!
March 6th, 2007 5:18 PM

New: Lot Loan Expansion

Has Your Client Found the Perfect Lot?
Our flexible Lot Loan program helps your borrowers start the process of building their dream home with short-term financing at a great rate, even if they are not ready to begin construction. When your clients are ready to build, offer them our Mod-to-Perm program.

New Features:

Up to 95% LTV on Full Doc Loans
Up to 80% LTV on No Income Verification (NIV) Loans
Rate/Term Refinance Option
Available up to 10 Acres

Benefits:

Affordable down payments and rates
Convenient NIV option
Flexible 3-year balloon term allows borrowers time to prepare for
building their dream home


Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 6th, 2007 5:18 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Market Report
March 6th, 2007 4:59 PM

[BRIEFING.COM] One week ago fears that the market was getting ahead of itself, after running virtually unabated since bottoming in July, caught the bulls off guard, resulting in the biggest one-day point decline since the U.S. markets reopened on September 17, 2001. The Dow slipped into negative territory for the year as all 30 components suffered losses.

Today, those overbought concerns were thrown out the window, for the time being anyway, as a sense that a bottom has finally formed following a week of aggressive selling pressure gave stocks a sizable boost right out of the gate. The Dow soared 1.3%, logging its best one-day gain since last July; 29 of 30 components finished with gains. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq also had their best performances of the year.

Market internals were decidedly bullish as advancers outpaced decliners on the NYSE by a 5-to-1 margin while those on the Nasdaq held a 4-to-1 advantage. Further underscoring the change in sentiment were declines of 19% and 14% on the VIX (CBOE Volatility Index) and the VXN (CBOE Nasdaq Volatility Index). Known as the "investor fear gauges," both indexes spiking lower suggest investors were actively buying call options in anticipation that investors are growing more cognizant of the fact that recent events have simply had little to no bearing on the fundamental picture.

With a possible unwinding of the yen carry trade potentially leading to a liquidity crunch acting as an overhang, some profit taking in the Japanese currency helped to quell such concerns and prompt a rebound in Asian markets overnight. Japan's Nikkei index rose 1.2% while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index surged 2.1%. With the U.S. markets also extremely sensitive to any good news, participants used the rally in overseas markets as a springboard to pick up bargains across the board.

All 10 economic sectors posted solid gains and, in stark contrast to the action early yesterday morning, when 144 of 147 S&P industry groups were in the red, only three groups failed to participate in today's broad-based recovery. More notably, the most influential sector of them all -- Financials -- also turning in the best performance lent even more conviction on the part of buyers' optimism about the health of the economy.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson saying that sub-prime lending will not have a major impact on the financial sector or the global economy kicked things off on a positive note. Paulson also saying that, "The global economy is more than sound... it's as strong in the last couple of years as I've seen in a lifetime... I see no downturn" also helped to offset former Fed Chairman Greenspan's latest assertion that there is a "one-third probability" of a U.S. recession this year.

Finally, what would a market rally be without some commentary from the current Fed Chairman. At 2:00 ET, Bernanke chimed in with some remarks about government sponsored enterprises. Albeit not expected to offer much in the way of clarity about Fed policy, his tough stance on Fannie Mae (FNM 54.83 +1.71) and Freddie Mac (FRE 62.11 +0.75), saying their portfolios "continue to represent a potentially significant source of systemic risk," was embraced by a market still dealing with a housing correction and continued concerns about mortgage delinquencies possibly spilling over into the broader economy.


Posted by Heath Lefort - Personal Financial Advisor on March 6th, 2007 4:59 PMPost a Comment (0)

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