1 / 27

Diane L. Burnett, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Miami County &

Diane L. Burnett, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Miami County & Susie Latta, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Marshall County. How Are You Doing? A Financial Check-Up. Program prepared by: Susie Latta, M.S.,

carina
Télécharger la présentation

Diane L. Burnett, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Miami County &

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Diane L. Burnett, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Miami County & Susie Latta, M.S. Family Financial Planning Family & Consumer Science Agent, Marshall County

  2. How Are You Doing? A Financial Check-Up Program prepared by: Susie Latta, M.S., Family Financial Planning Marshall County Extension Agent, FCS & Diane Burnett, M.S., Family Financial Planning Miami County Extension Agent, FCS

  3. Class Objectives • Provide assessment tools to determine financial strengths and weaknesses • Provide worksheets to set goals and make calculations • Provide suggestions to improve financial management • Improve “financial fitness” and “screen” for potential problems (like physicals)

  4. Financial goals Net worth Financial ratios Income & expense statements Spending plans (budgets) Credit cards Marginal tax brackets Insurance analyses Retirement analyses Investment performance Asset allocation Retirement & estate planning Class Topics:

  5. 1. Financial Quiz • Financial Fitness Quiz (20 questions) • Scores: Always(5) to never (1) • Scores range from 20 to 100

  6. 2. Financial Goals • Make your goals SMART • Specific (date, cost) • Measurable (progress) • Attainable • Relevant • Time-related (deadline) • Short-, intermediate-, long-term (match investments to goal time frame)

  7. Develop an Action Plan For Each Goal • Approximate amount needed • Number of months to save • Divide number of months into goal amount • Try to automate savings (e.g., credit union) Example: $15,000 goal divided by 48 months = $312.50 per month to save

  8. 3. Net Worth • Assets: everything that you own • Liquid (cash assets) • Tangible (property) • Investment • Debts: everything that you owe • Short-term • Long-term • Assets minus debts equals net worth

  9. Benefits of Net Worth Statement • Can determine adequacy of emergency savings • Can determine home equity • Can analyze portfolio diversification • Can see gaps in planning (e.g., no IRA) • Can see the total amount of debt owed • Can use to track progress annually • Often required for loan approval

  10. 5. Income and Expense Statement • Do monthly; then annually • Track Expenses • Fixed • Variable • Periodic/irregular • Track Income (all sources) • Income Minus Expenses = Cash Flow

  11. 6. Irregular Expenses • List all expenses that come irregularly throughout the year • Examples: car registration, school tuition, birthdays, holidays, vacations, quarterly property tax payment • Total each expense and divide by 12 • Save that amount monthly in revolving savings account to cover irregular expenses

  12. 7. Financial Ratios • Liquidity Ratio: Liquid assets divided by monthly expenses • Should be 3 (months expenses) or more • Debt-to-Asset Ratio: Total liabilities divided by total assets • Should be less than 1.0 (insolvency) • Debt Payment to Income Ratio: Annual debt payments divided by gross income • Should be .36 or lower

  13. 8. Spending Plan/Budget • List anticipated sources of income • List expenses • Fixed (including revolving savings) • Variable • Compare budgeted amount with actual amount • Adjust as necessary

  14. 9. Tax Check-Up • What is your marginal tax bracket? • Would you do better in taxable or tax-exempt investments? • Are you contributing to tax-deferred plans such as IRAs and 401(k)s? • Could you contribute more? • Is a Roth IRA conversion advisable (check www.rothira.com)?

  15. 10. Credit Card Check-Up • Are there credit cards you don’t use that can be canceled? • Can you get a better interest rate? • Have you checked your credit report? • Do you have a list of credit card contact information (e.g., 800 numbers)? • Would refinancing/consolidation help?

  16. Credit Score • Special three digit number • Affects how much you pay for credit, insurance and other life necessities

  17. 11. Insurance Check-Up • Is your home insured for at least 80% of its replacement cost? • Do you have replacement cost riders? • Do you have at least $300k of auto liability? • Do you have LT disability insurance? • Do you have a umbrella liability policy? • Have you considered LTC insurance? • Does your health insurance have high coverage limits andfew exclusions?

  18. 12. Life Insurance Check-Up • Most financial planner figure you need 75% of your current household income in the event of a death • Follow these steps: • Calculate # of years income is needed • Add expenses (e.g., funeral, debt, other) • Subtract income, such as government benefits and survivor’s income, and existing assets • Review periodically as needs change

  19. 13. Social Security and Pension Check-Up • Review annual SS benefit report • Retirement benefits at 62, Full Retirement depending on date of birth or age 70 • Disability benefits • Annual earning amounts (check accuracy) • Request a pension benefit estimate (defined benefit) or check balance (defined contribution) • Be alert to pension plan changes

  20. 14. Retirement Check-Up • Estimate required annual income (% of pre-retirement income) • Subtract SS, pension, earnings, etc. • Estimate life expectancy & retirement age • Determine total required savings • Add up value of existing retirement savings • Subtract future value of savings • Calculate total savings needed & annual (or per-paycheck) savings amount

  21. Retirement Check-Up Resources • Ballpark Estimate worksheet (available online at www.asec.org) • www.ces.purdue.edu/retirementWeb site (10 modules with online calculators)

  22. 15. Risk Tolerance Check-Up • Understanding Your Risk Tolerance Quiz (www.rce.rutgers.edu/money/riskquiz) • Check online quizzes (investment firms) • Most people more sensitive to potential losses than potential gain • Consider possible losses in dollar figures (e.g., $3,000)- NOT percentages

  23. 16. Asset Allocation • Determine your desired asset allocation (% of portfolio in stocks, bonds, or cash) • “Stay the course” in bull and bear markets and follow the model • Rebalance back to the original weightings if percentages shift by a certain amount (e.g., 2%)

  24. 17. Investment Performance • Can do for each investment individually or for total portfolio • Write down beginning balance and ending balance • Add half of annual contributions to beginning balance and subtract half of annual contributions from ending balance • Divide adjusted ending balance by adjusted beginning balance • Convert into a percentage

  25. 18. Estate Planning Check-Up • Do you have a current will? • Have you recently reviewed beneficiary designations on insurance and retirement accounts? • Are there any conflicts between your will and the titling of assets? • Do you have a living will, power of attorney, trusts (if needed)?

  26. Final Thoughts • A financial check-up is as important as a medical check-up • Can help assess problems (e.g., high debt ratio) and risks (e.g., lack of disability insurance) • Can evaluate progress toward goals • Can help identify “action steps” • Can provide motivation to change

  27. Any Questions? Please complete your evaluation form. Thank you.

More Related