Karl Klinger, CFP®, CLU®Market extremes tend to make uninformed people invest at extremes.
As the market has suffered over the past nine months, families putting their
college savings into 529 college savings plans have watched their
stock-based holdings shrink with the market and many have run for cover.
This has fueled a growing number of states with 529 college plans to offer
accounts that are insured by the FDIC. According to Investment News,
Arizona, Ohio, Montana, Virginia and the latest state, Utah, have adopted
FDIC-insured investment options such as savings accounts and certificates of
deposit. Could your state's plan be next?
If you're a first-time investor in 529s or are still reeling from the impact
to your current plan results, before you run for the safe cover of minimum
returns, you may want to run for advice first. A Certified
Financial
Planner™
professional can evaluate not only your 529 investments but your entire
investment and savings situation to make sure you're not only doing the best
for your college student, but for your retirement -- which actually should
be your first priority. After one of the worst market downturns since the
Great Depression, now is actually a great starting point for this kind of
advice.
Here are a few things to consider about more conservative investments in a
529 portfolio:
Is 1 or 2 percent good enough?
Yes, keeping your investment safe is a critical goal during a downturn, but
how long do you have until your child needs the money and how close are you
to your savings target? Investing for such an expensive goal takes a mixture
of risk and caution, and if you were one of the smart ones who shifted your
529 funds into conservative investments last summer, bravo. Just make sure
you have the right information so you know when to get out. A mixture of
equities and fixed-income investments are the best structure for these
portfolios, but they bear watching in case of a downturn.
CD flexibility is limited:
The attraction of investing in CDs is not only safety, but the ability to
"ladder" (buying at regular intervals) your investment as CDs mature into
potentially higher-paying investments. Here's the problem. Current rules for
529 savings plans allow investors only one investment change per calendar
year, though in 2009 the IRS made an exception and allowed two changes. So
much for laddering -- that means you can't roll over funds from a matured CD
into a new one more than twice, though some of the plans are devising ways
to automatically roll over mature CDs into shorter-term investments as the
funds meet their target date of use. Yet, it won't be the same as making
those decisions yourself.
Could rolling into more conservative investments now be a mistake?
Knowing when a market bottoms out would guarantee riches. So you have to
have some exposure in the portfolio to the possibility of growth, even in
these times. Rolling your investments into conservative waters may actually
lock in losses of as much as 40 percent. It makes sense to get advice with
such a move and keep your ear to the ground with respect to economic news.
Let the younger child's 529 pay for the older child's tuition:
If your oldest child is ready to or has started college and you have more
than one child and one 529 plan for each, consider using the cash in the
younger child's plan to pay for the older child's tuition. This way the
equity investments in the older child's plan have a chance to recoup their
losses and pay for the younger child's tuition in future years.
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This article was
produced by The Financial Planning Association.
200905 2009-2308 |