ARE YOUR CHILDREN FINANCIALLY LITERATE?
Most Young Adults Aren’t … And They Could Pay A Painful
Price.
Provided by Jared Daniel of Wealth Guardian Group
How bad is financial illiteracy today? So bad that your adult children
may be at risk of making some serious financial mistakes. Recent surveys have
shown that many young adults are not only wayward financially, but also
pessimistic about ever becoming wealthy.
Young women at
particular risk. A 2006 OppenheimerFunds survey of women aged 26-39 found that 62%
of respondents had no investment accounts at all, and that 67% were living
paycheck-to-paycheck. In a 2005 Consumer Federation of America/VISA USA survey,
55% of the women polled between ages 25-34 had emergency savings of less than
$500.
Surprising
cynicism. In 2005, the CFA and the Financial Planning Association undertook
joint surveys that illustrated a startling expectations gap. In the FPA survey,
most of the financial planners contacted felt that more than 80% of young
adults could amass $250,000 in net worth over a 30-year period, and that about
50% could accumulate $1 million of net worth in the same time span. But only
26% of the young consumers the CFA surveyed believed they could amass $200,000
at any point in their lives, and only 9% felt they could someday accumulate $1
million.
A little knowledge
can be dangerous. Don Blandin, CEO of the non-profit Investor Protection Trust,
commented that “the entry of most Americans to the securities market is by buying
a product rather than understanding the process." Too many young investors
elect to fly solo into the stock market through the Internet; too many young
homebuyers know just enough (but not enough) about mortgage and lease options.
And then there’s the widely publicized case of 24-year-old Casey Serin
(iamfacingforeclosure.com), now $2.2 million in debt as a result of what he
didn’t know about real estate investment.
Prescriptions in
progress. The Ad Council and the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants have started a national campaign, Feed the Pig™, to try and correct
this dilemma (learn more by visiting www.feedthepig.org). The National Council
on Economic Education has also helped launch www.TheMint.org to provide young
adults with vital financial
principles.
Jared
Daniel may be reached at www.wgmoney.com.
These are the views of Peter Montoya, Inc., not the named
Representative or Broker/Dealer, and should not be construed as investment
advice. Neither the named Representative or Broker/Dealer give tax or
legal advice. All information is believed to be from reliable sources; however,
we make no representation as to its completeness or accuracy. Please consult
your Financial Advisor for further information.
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