Friday Financial Five - August 26, 2016

Dan Forbes, GoLocal Contributor

Friday Financial Five - August 26, 2016

Fidelity report on college savings

College savings awareness continues to increase, and 70 is the magic number in Fidelity’s 10th edition of the College Savings Indicator Study. Over 70 percent of families in the study say they’re actively saving for higher education, a huge uptick from 25% surveyed in 2007. Over 40% of the surveyed families are using 529 plans. 71 percent of parents are considering strategies to manage college costs, including having the child live at home. Parents’ cite their own experience paying education costs as the primary driver for saving, with 70 percent of total expense again the magic number that parents plan on paying for their children’s schooling.

DOL rule encourages state retirement plans

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At some point, all fifty states may offer a worker option to establish a retirement account. This week, the Department of Labor finalized a rule that should make the process of setting the accounts up easier. This is part of the continued effort to reach the one third of private workers that don’t have a retirement plan at work. To date, the Obama administration has been successful in getting eight states to implement the program, despite some push back from the financial industry.

Wells Fargo pays for student loan practices

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) settled a dispute with Wells Fargo for practices related to student loan payments. These loans occupy a huge percentage of consumer debt, and Wells Fargo represents one of the bigger lenders outside of the federal government. According to the CFPB, Wells Fargo failed to provide important payment information and charged illegal fees that unfairly penalized borrowers. For that, Wells Fargo didn’t admit guilt but did pay over a $4 million penalty.

State regulators crack down on more insurance companies

Four more insurance companies reached a settlement with several state regulators to the tune of $3.4 million. The regulators cited issues with the companies’ use of the Social Security Administration’s Death Master File database. As with other insurance companies, questions stemmed from how the database was being used to identify deceased individuals and pay their beneficiaries in a timely manner. This settlement follows a similar pattern between regulators and other insurance companies such as Prudential and John Hancock. 

Olympic success can be costly

While Olympic glory must be gratifying, it came at an expense for some top U.S. swimmers. Ryan Lochte’s well publicized brush with Rio’s security cost him endorsement deals with Speedo, Ralph Lauren, and Airweave. That’s a monetary loss approaching an estimated seven figures. Michael Phelps faces a different financial problem. With the U.S. Olympic Committee paying athletes for finishing in the top three, his Olympic prowess will cost him an estimated tax of over $50,000.

Dan Forbes, a CFP Board Ambassador, is a regular contributor on financial issues. He leads the firm Forbes Financial Planning, Inc in East Greenwich, RI and can be reached at [email protected]


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