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What Young Adults Need to Know About Money Barbara O’Neill, Ph.D., CFP® [email protected] Twitter: @moneytalk1

Global Money Week Talk on Young Adults and Money-03-15

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Page 1: Global Money Week Talk on Young Adults and Money-03-15

What Young Adults Need to Know About Money

Barbara O’Neill, Ph.D., CFP® [email protected]

Twitter: @moneytalk1

Page 2: Global Money Week Talk on Young Adults and Money-03-15

It’s Global Money Week!

Global Money Week (GMW) is a money awareness celebration. The goal is to teach children and youth about money, saving, creating livelihoods, gaining employment and becoming an entrepreneur . GMW takes place annually, during the second week of March. Events are organized by schools, universities, government ministries, central banks, financial institutions, and others. GMW is coordinated by Child and Youth Finance International (CYFI).

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What are Your Money Concerns and Questions?

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Financial Capability is an Important Life Skill

• Dr. Ehrenfeld’s 2012 Executive Dean’s Distinguished Lecture: “Reinventing the University for the 21st Century”

• Key themes: – Natural resources are reaching critical limits.

– The university must prepare its students to live this new and dangerous environment

– Students need to learn to be more self-sufficient and less dependent on the global economy

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More on Essential Life Skills • Dr. Ehrenfeld Lecture Summary/Video:

http://discovery.rutgers.edu/events/2012/davidehrenfeld.html

• Essential life skills include personal finance,

growing food, basic cooking, basic home repairs, basic health care, computer trouble-shooting, clothing repairs, and bartering/labor exchange

• SEBS Personal Finance class:

http://rci.rutgers.edu/~boneill/

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How Much Do You Know About Personal Finance?

Take the FINRA National Financial Capability Study Knowledge Quiz: http://www.usfinancialcapability.org/quiz.php

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National Financial Capability Study Knowledge Quiz

Five financial literacy quiz questions:

– Interest rate question

– Inflation question

– Bond price question

– Mortgage question

– Risk question

Number of correct answers 2009 2012

None 7% 7%

One 11% 12%

Two 17% 19%

Three 24% 23%

Four 27% 25%

Five 15% 14%

Average number correct 2.99 2.88

http://www.usfinancialcapability.org/quiz.php

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The Two Sides of Compound Interest

• When you invest, compound interest is your friend :-)

• When you pay interest on credit cards and loans, compound interest is your enemy :-(

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Information Resource: Jump$tart Coalition for

Personal Financial Literacy • Washington DC-based non-profit • Promotes financial literacy for students

from pre-K to college age • The NJ Coalition for Financial Education is

a state affiliate of national Jump$tart

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Jump$tart’s Twelve Principles of Personal Financial Literacy

• Twelve principles for young adults to become financially successful – http://jumpstart.org/12-principles-calendars.html

• Available as a calendar in PDF format:

– http://jumpstart.org/assets/files/12%20Principle%20Calendars/2012_J$_Calendar-time-CM.pdf

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The Twelve Principles • Know your take-home pay

• Pay yourself first

• Start saving young

• Compare interest rates

• Don’t borrow what you can’t repay

• Budget your money

• Money doubles by “The Rule of 72”

• High returns equals high risks

• Don’t expect something for nothing

• Map your financial future

• Your credit past is your credit future

• Stay insured

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1. Know Your Take-Home Pay • Take-Home Pay = Net Pay = Disposable

Income – Amount of income remaining after mandatory

deductions (e.g., taxes) and withholding

• Discretionary Income – Money left after paying household expenses – Include savings for goals as an “expense”

• Know these numbers before committing to large expenses

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2. Pay Yourself First • Treat savings as a household “expense” • Give it the priority of a car loan payment • Make savings automatic

– Employer retirement savings plans – Mutual fund and DRIP stock automatic

investment plans – Checking to savings transfers – Need more ideas? See

http://www.americasaves.org/

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3. Start Saving Young

Source: TIAA-CREF; assumes an 8% average annual return

Time + Money = Magic!

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Source: NEFE High School Financial Planning Program

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4. Compare Interest Rates

• Bankrate.com: http://www.bankrate.com/

• Consumer Action: http://www.consumer-action.org/

• Federal Reserve: http://www.federalreserve.gov/creditcard/survey.html

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Rule of Three Credit Card Comparison

• See Personal Finance class assignment http://rci.rutgers.edu/~boneill/assignments/creditcard.html

• Key Criteria: – Annual fee – Late fee – Over-the-limit fee – Method for computing balance – Rewards for use – APR

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Key Credit Terms • Finance charge

– Total dollar amount you pay to use credit – Includes interest costs and fees, such as service

charges or credit-related insurance premiums

• Annual Percentage Rate (APR) – Percentage cost of credit on a yearly basis – Key to comparing costs when shopping for rates – “Apples to Apples” comparison required by law

It is important to shop around for credit

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5. Don’t Borrow What You Can’t Repay

Debt stinks! (http://www.itsahabit.com/musiccd.html)

– Ties up future income

– Prevents people from saving

– Costs money (interest and fees)

– Can lead to repossession, foreclosure, bankruptcy

– Causes physical symptoms of stress

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What is the Worst Credit Card Trap of All?

• Teaser rates?

• Default rates (penalty APRs)?

• Late fees?

• Over-the-limit fees?

• Minimum payments?

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The High Cost of Minimum Payments

Data derived from Credit Card Smarts calculator

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Warning Signs of Debt Problems • Paying only the minimum balance each month

• Trouble even paying the minimum amount due

• Total balance increases every month

• Missing loan payments or paying late

• Using savings to pay for necessities

• Getting second or third payment notices

• Borrowing money to pay old debts

• Exceeding the credit limits on your credit cards

• Denied credit due to a bad credit report

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Two Simple Student Loan Guidelines

• Limit total student loan debt at graduation to < starting salary for first post-college job

• Estimate monthly student loan payments as 1% of loan balance

– Example: $30,000 debt = $300/month payment

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6. Budget Your Money

• Spending Plan Worksheet: http://njaes.rutgers.edu/money/pdfs/fs421worksheet.pdf

• Positive Cash Flow: Income > Expenses – Increase income

– Reduce expenses

– Do both

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Seven Step Budgeting Process 1. Set financial goals and identify required savings

2. Estimate income from all sources

3. Budget an emergency fund and goal savings

4. Budget fixed expenses (include 1/12 occasional expenses)

5. Budget variable expenses

6. Record spending amounts

7. Review spending and saving patterns

Review financial progress Revise goals and budget allocations

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What are Your Spending Leaks?

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7. Money Doubles By “The Rule of 72”

• Calculates the number of years it takes for principal to double – Number of Years = 72 divided by interest rate – Example: 72 ÷ 6% = 12 years

• Calculates the interest rate it takes for principal to double – Interest rate = 72 divided by number of years – Example: 72 ÷ 10 = 7.2% http://www.moneychimp.com/features/rule72.htm (calculator)

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The Rule of 72 Source: Garman/Forgue, PERSONAL FINANCE, Fifth Edition

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8. High Returns Equals High Risks

Source: Garman/Forgue, PERSONAL FINANCE, Fifth Edition

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Investment Risk Factors Source: Garman/Forgue, PERSONAL FINANCE, Fifth Edition

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9. Don’t Expect Something For Nothing

If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is” • Phishing scams • “Pump and dump” scams • “Free lunch” seminars • “Guaranteed” returns > other investments • Exotic sounding deals • Exclusive, limited-time offers

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10. Map Your Financial Future

• Be a “future-minded” planner

• Set SMART Goals: http://njaes.rutgers.edu/money/pdfs/goalsettingworksheet.pdf

– Short-Term: Under 3 years

– Medium-Term: 3 to 10 years

– Long-Term: 10 or more years

• Match savings/investments to goals

• “What you think about, you bring about”

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Net Worth Statement • A financial statement that reports what an

individual or family owns and owes as of a specific date

• Also called: – Balance sheet – Statement of financial position

Items of Value (what you own) - Amounts owed

(what you owe) Net Worth

(your wealth) =

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11. Your Credit Past is Your Credit Future

• People with low credit scores pay more to borrow money

– FICO score range: 300 (low) to 850 (high)

• Negative information stays on your credit report for 7 years (bankruptcy- 10 years)

• Credit scores are used in job hiring, car insurance premiums, apartment rentals

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Credit Scoring Factors • Bill payment history, weighted to

emphasize past 12 months (35%)

• Proportion of outstanding debt to available credit limits (30%)

• Length of credit history (15%)

• Number of recent credit inquiries (10%)

• Mix of types of credit used (10%)

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12. Stay Insured

• Health insurance: “Age 26 law” (federal), NJ “Dependent Under 31” law, http://www.state.nj.us/dobi/division_consumers/du31.html

• Also, COBRA, ACA exchanges: https://www.healthcare.gov

• Life insurance (if dependents or co-signers)

• Disability insurance

• Renter’s and auto insurance with adequate liability limits (at least $300,000)

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Closing Messages • You are a “Millionaire in the Making”

• Time + Money = Magic!

• Compound interest can be your best friend or your worst enemy

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Financial Education Resources For College Students

• Money Smart for Young Adults (FDIC): http://www.fdic.gov/consumers/consumer/moneysmart/young.html

• NEFE Cash Course: http://www.cashcourse.org/

• Love Your Money: http://loveyourmoney.org/

• Money Skill: http://www.moneyskill.org/

• SEBS Personal Finance Course: http://rci.rutgers.edu/~boneill/

• Rutgers Cooperative Extension: http://njaes.rutgers.edu/money/

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Questions? Comments? Experiences?