السبت، 30 يوليو 2016
Deeds, Sunday, July 31, 2016
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2aqjesw
Sanofi begins flu vaccine shipments
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2alzpqd
State e-cigarette shop owners react to new taxes and regulations
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2a84yCn
Shawnee-On-Delaware artist Joy Taney on reality show Wednesday
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2aSChwP
Pocono Medical Center scores high in gov't survey
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2aFeyna
Pocono medical center scoresn high in gov't survey
Source Business - poconorecord.com http://ift.tt/2alhoZr
Why Expenses Really Matter When It Comes to Your Investments
So, how exactly does an investment house make money?
Let’s use Vanguard as an example. You can go there, sign up for an investment account with them, and buy shares of one of their funds and they don’t charge you a fee for doing so. Your fund rises almost exactly with the stock market. A few years later, you sell those shares – again, with no fee for doing so – and pocket some profits.
Where does Vanguard make money in that picture?
They make money by charging expenses directly to the investment. Throughout the year, they withdraw a little bit of the value of the investment you’re holding and keep it for themselves.
Let’s say, for instance, that you own shares in a fund that has $10 billion in total assets. During the year, they might withdraw, say, $8 million from that fund to pay the employees, keep the servers running, and so on. All that you actually see is a very slight gradual downtick in the value of the investment. In fact, the expenses are usually charged so slowly that you barely notice the change…
But it’s a real change, and it can be very expensive.
Those withdrawals done by the investment house have to be disclosed to the investor and they’re almost always listed as an “expense ratio.” It’s the percentage of the annual assets that the company pulls out in a year in order to pay for all of those costs. In that example above, where the fund has a value of $10 billion and they take out $8 million a year for expenses, the fund would have an expense ratio of 0.08% – a pretty good ratio, I might add.
Expense ratios are one of the very first things that I look at when considering an investment, and in the remainder of this article, I’m going to show you why it’s so important.
A Baseline Investment Example
Let’s start off looking at a very basic investment example. Let’s say that a company offered an investment with a 7% annual return and 0% expenses. I’ll tell you this – if that fund existed in the real world, my money would be there in a heartbeat. It’s also a pretty good analogy for the long term stock market, as a 7% annual return over the long run is what most models predict for the future.
I decide to contribute $5,000 a year to that investment over the next 40 years. I start this year with $5,000 at the start of the year and repeat that for the next 39 years. What will I wind up with?
At the end of the tenth year, my balance will be $73,918.00.
At the end of the twentieth year, my balance will be $219,325.88.
At the end of the thirtieth year, my balance will be $505,365.21.
At the end of the fortieth year, my balance will be $1,068,047.85. Pretty sweet; I’m a millionaire.
Unfortunately, expense ratios are going to change this picture, and not in a good way.
Investment Example With 0.1% Expense Ratio
Let’s take the above example and slightly tweak it. Let’s add a 0.1% expense ratio to that fund. We’ll assume, for ease of calculation’s sake, that the expenses are withdrawn at the end of the year.
In this example, at the end of the tenth year, my balance would be $73,471.93. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $73,918.00. After ten years, a 0.1% expense ratio will have cost me $446.07.
At the end of the twentieth year, my balance in this example would be $216,563.51. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $219,325.88. After twenty years, a 0.1% expense ratio will have cost me $2,762.37.
At the end of the thirtieth year, my balance in this example would be $495,244.13. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $505,365.21. After thirty years, a 0.1% expense ratio will have cost me $10,121.08.
At the end of the fortieth year, my balance in this example would be $1,037,993.60. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $1,068,047.85. After forty years, a 0.1% expense ratio will have cost me $30,054.25. Ouch.
As you can see, even a tiny 0.1% expense ratio has rather large financial implications over the long haul. It shaves about 3% off of the overall total over a forty year stretch, which is enough to actually affect quality of living in retirement, at least a little.
Many Vanguard funds have an expense ratio in this ballpark, which is one of the big advantages of their investing strategy. By just following extremely simple strategies (buy everything, follow the average), Vanguard keeps the expenses low.
Investment Example With 0.5% Expense Ratio
If we bump things up to about 0.5%, we’re getting into the realm of some of the better mutual fund offerings from all sorts of different companies. These aren’t bad investments at all in the grander scheme of things. Let’s take a look.
Let’s use the original example – 7% annual return, 40 years, investments at the start of the year – and add a 0.5% expense ratio to that fund. We’ll assume, for ease of calculation’s sake, that the expenses are withdrawn at the end of the year.
In this example, at the end of the tenth year, my balance would be $71,715.88. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $73,918.00. After ten years, a 0.5% expense ratio will have cost me $2,202.12.
At the end of the twentieth year, my balance in this example would be $205,894.67. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $219,325.88. After twenty years, a 0.5% expense ratio will have cost me $13,431.21.
At the end of the thirtieth year, my balance in this example would be $456,940.20. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $505,365.21. After thirty years, a 0.5% expense ratio will have cost me $48,425.01.
At the end of the fortieth year, my balance in this example would be $926,640.74. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $1,068,047.85. After forty years, a 0.5% expense ratio will have cost me $141,407.11. Wow.
At a 0.5% expense ratio, retirement savings are taking a major hit, big enough to change one’s long term plans significantly. About 14% of the balance has dissipated due to that expense ratio, which is going to seriously alter your plans.
But it’s going to get more painful yet.
Investment Example With 1.0% Expense Ratio
At a 1.0% expense ratio, you’re looking at investments that are perhaps a bit more pricy. Usually, these are heavily promoted “prestige” funds from investment houses.
Let’s continue to stick with the original example – 7% annual return, 40 years, investments at the start of the year – and add a 1% expense ratio to that fund this time. We’ll again assume, for ease of calculation’s sake, that the expenses are withdrawn at the end of the year.
In this example, at the end of the tenth year, my balance would be $69,583.01. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $73,918.00. After ten years, a 1% expense ratio will have cost me $4,334.99.
At the end of the twentieth year, my balance in this example would be $193,375.10. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $219,325.88. After twenty years, a 1% expense ratio will have cost me $25,950.78.
At the end of the thirtieth year, my balance in this example would be $413,608.23. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $505,365.21. After thirty years, a 1% expense ratio will have cost me $91,756.98.
At the end of the fortieth year, my balance in this example would be $805,415.39. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $1,068,047.85. After forty years, a 1% expense ratio will have cost me $262,632.46.
In that situation, you’re probably not retiring when you originally planned to retire – it’s simply not going to work out. The expenses have drained literally a quarter of your retirement savings at this point, which means that your annual withdrawal is going to drop by a quarter, too (unless you want to risk running out of money). You’re either going to be working for quite a few more years or you’re going to have a part time job in retirement or you’re going to have to accept a lower standard of living. That’s the reality of it.
But it gets worse yet!
Investment Example With 1.5% Expense Ratio
When you start getting above a 1% expense ratio, you’re usually in the domain of investments that are being heavily promoted by investment advisors that are getting a cut out of those expenses. I personally wouldn’t touch these with a ten foot pole, but they’re out there. Let’s see how painful they are.
Let’s continue to stick with the original example – 7% annual return, 40 years, investments at the start of the year – and add a 1% expense ratio to that fund this time. We’ll again assume, for ease of calculation’s sake, that the expenses are withdrawn at the end of the year.
In this example, at the end of the tenth year, my balance would be $67,517.26. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $73,918.00. After ten years, a 1.5% expense ratio will have cost me $6,400.74.
At the end of the twentieth year, my balance in this example would be $181,703.79. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $219,325.88. After twenty years, a 1.5% expense ratio will have cost me $37,622.09.
At the end of the thirtieth year, my balance in this example would be $374,818.33. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $505,365.21. After thirty years, a 1.5% expense ratio will have cost me $130,546.88.
At the end of the fortieth year, my balance in this example would be $701,417.47. Compare that to the balance I would have with no expense ratio, $1,068,047.85. After forty years, a 1.5% expense ratio will have cost me $366,630.38.
There you have it. At the forty year mark in a 1.5% expense ratio investment, a full third of your money is gone to expenses. Poof. You may not even be able to retire at all at that point.
The Impact of Returns Versus Expense Ratios
As you might be able to guess, there’s a bit of tension between annual returns and expense ratios. A fund that has a higher annual return than another fund can get away with a somewhat higher expense ratio and still be beneficial for you as a customer. The trick, of course, is to find that fund that actually has a long-term history of a higher annual return.
Let’s look at the numbers to see how that works.
An 8% Baseline Investment?
For this example, let’s tweak the baseline investment from earlier. We’re still investing $5,000 a year, but now it has an 8% annual return, over 40 years, with a 0% expense ratio.
In that case, at the forty year mark, your investment would be worth $1,398,905.20. Remember, in the initial example, the annual return was 7% and we wound up with $1,068,047.85. So, just by bumping the return up from 7% to 8%, we increased our total return by $330,857.35.
If we toss in a 0.1% expense ratio, our forty year total goes down to $1,358,375.12, a loss of $40,530.08 compared to no expense ratio.
If we use a 0.5% expense ratio, our forty year total goes down to $1,208,392.96, a loss of $190,512.24 compared to no expense ratio.
Now, here’s where it gets interesting. If we use a 1% expense ratio (with the expenses removed at the end of the year), our forty year total drops to $1,045,489.98, a loss of $353,415.22 compared to no expense ratio. Why is this one interesting? This is the point where the return is actually lower than a 7% investment with 0% expense ratio, which would give us $1,068,047.85. Part of that comes from exactly when the expenses are withdrawn throughout the year and when the returns come in throughout the year, of course.
If you have a 1.5% expense ratio, your year-end balance is $906,114.04, which is again somewhat comparable to a 7% annual return with 0.5% expenses, which would give you $926,640.74.
The Impact of Expense Ratios
To summarize all of this, what you’ll notice is that the annual return of a mutual fund or index fund minus the expense ratio gives you a good idea of what your annual return will be for that investment. It’s not a perfect result because it varies depending on when the expenses are withdrawn and so on, but it will get you fairly close to the right number.
However, when in doubt, go for the fund that has the lower expense ratio. So, if you’re looking at two investments, when one has a 7% annual return and a 0.5% ratio and the other has an 8% return and a 1.5% ratio, you’re better off with the lower return and drastically lower expenses.
That’s because, year in and year out, the annual returns are going to jump up and down, but the expense ratio is going to stay the same. Thus, in a bad year, the expense ratio becomes increasingly more important and a high expense ratio is really going to pinch you badly, choking off the returns. You gain some of that back in the good years, but in a volatile investment, it’s generally not quite enough.
How Can You Find Out Expense Ratios
When you’re choosing between investments of a similar type, two pieces of information you’re going to want to know are the average annual return and the expense ratio. Both of those numbers should be easily available in the summary of an investment; if they’re not, tools like Yahoo Finance or Morningstar will help you quickly find that data.
As I mentioned above, the simplest way to use that information is to take the average annual return and then subtract the expense ratio from that, then use that number to compare different funds. If they’re pretty close, go with the one that has the lower expense ratio; if they’re still really close, go with the one that has the longer history.
Final Thoughts
Expense ratios are extremely important when you’re investing. As you’ve seen, a bad expense ratio can gobble up a lot of your money over the long haul. While you’re almost always going to have to settle for at least a small expense ratio, there’s a world of difference between a 0.1% expense ratio and a 1.5% expense ratio. Over the course of many years saving for retirement, the difference is hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Another important thing to remember: expense ratios and annual returns aren’t the only thing you should be considering while investing. You should also be considering risk, which you can figure out by looking at the annual returns each year for the last several years. Do those jump up and down a lot? Such investments are fine for the very long term – more than ten years out – but as you get closer to your goal, you’re going to want investments that don’t jump up and down each year, even if that means a lower average annual return. That’s because you don’t want to hit your deadline at the end of a very bad year because that will really hinder you going forward.
Expense ratios are mostly useful for comparing very similar investments, ones with similar rates of return and similar volatility. When I’m looking at investments like that, expense ratios are almost always the tiebreaker. I virtually always go for the investment with the lower expense ratio.
So far, using this strategy seems to have worked well for my family. We have most of our long term savings and investments with Vanguard in investments with very low expense ratios that strive to simply match the market by owning a little bit of everything. That strategy has worked like a champ, and low expense ratios are a big part of the reason why.
Good luck!
The post Why Expenses Really Matter When It Comes to Your Investments appeared first on The Simple Dollar.
Source The Simple Dollar The Simple Dollar http://ift.tt/2ayyTYU
This Woman’s Smart Money Move is Saving Her $15K on Her Student Loans
“There’s nothing terribly unique about my story,” Caitlin Harren assured me when I asked about her experience paying back student loans.
She’s one of millions of former college students contributing to our country’s more than $1 trillion in student loan debt.
She’s probably right: She’s not alone.
But what is unique about Harren is her apparent financial literacy.
I don’t think she realizes how ahead of the curve she is in understanding the debt she took on and how it affects her financial future.
Funding Graduate School
Professionally, Harren is Amazon’s senior product manager in sustainability operations in Seattle. She’s helping the online retail giant reduce waste and increase efficiency in its packaging and shipping practices.
After five years working in the nonprofit sector, Harren wanted to move her environmental sustainability work into a more corporate environment. To do so, she went on to grad school.
An upstate New York native, Harren says she was fortunate enough to graduate from Smith College debt-free 10 years ago. Her parents funded her Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Science, and she took her skills to nonprofits after college, including The Sierra Club.
By the time she was ready to go back to school, her resources were relatively depleted. Five years working for nonprofits and living in the San Francisco Bay Area hadn’t been a boon to her savings.
This time, she applied for federal student loans and headed to the Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise at the University of Michigan.
Three years later, Harren returned to the West Coast armed with a dual M.S./MBA… and about $60,000 in debt.
This is where her “basic” understanding of personal finance kicks in — and where we can learn from her.
Many of us with student loan debt of that magnitude are simply drowning in it. We make minimum payments, defer payments, accrue interest, struggle each month and ultimately make little progress.
Maybe once things are completely out of control, we finally seek a better solution.
Harren knew she needed to address her student loan debt head-on from the start, and she found a smart solution.
When she graduated in 2013, federal interest rates were hovering around 6.8%, she recalls.
“I think that’s completely inappropriate,” she said. “I would have taken any lower rate.”
Finding a Fun Way to Refinance
Through other grads on Facebook, Harren heard about a then-new refinancing marketplace — SoFi.
The community aspect of the startup appealed to Harren — as did the opportunity to drastically reduce her student loan bill with a lower interest rate.
SoFi offers student loan refinancing and other financial services aimed at young professionals. It’s committed to a different approach from what you’d get with a bank.
When Harren found the company, she was attracted to its alumni-funded model, where students and recent grads would receive school-specific student loan funds from alumni and institutional investors.
Harren liked that she’d be sharing funds with people who also shared her experience.
Since SoFi’s financial offerings have expanded, it’s no longer alumni-funded, but has turned its focus to lending to — and supporting — financially responsible individuals.
Now it uses forward-looking factors like education, career experience and free cash flow to determine your loan eligibility, rather than relying on your FICO score.
And SoFi goes beyond loans in its commitment to empowering members to accomplish career and life goals.
The company also offers Career Strategy services, providing career planning and job search assistance to help members grow professionally and earn more money.
SoFi even offers fun, educational opportunities and local events that connect the SoFi community, like happy hours, community dinners and — I’m not kidding — skydiving.
How Much Money Can You Save with SoFi?
So it sounds fun, but how much money does SoFi actually save grads?
Remember Harren’s 6.8% interest on those federal loans? Refinancing with SoFi cut it down to 2.5%.
That’s a variable interest rate, which means it can rise over time. But it will likely be a while before Harren’s interest hits its original astronomical rate, so she can enjoy years of savings.
With the remaining $48,700 in loans she refinanced with SoFi, Harren estimates she’ll save between $11,000 to $15,000 over the 10-year life of her loans.
How to Pay Down Student Loan Debt Faster
In addition to refinancing early, Harren is making some other smart moves to pay down her student loan debt inside of 10 years.
Instead of the minimum $430 payment each month, she’s paying about $650 to stay ahead.
She said she could have been more aggressive and even paid off all of her debt by now, but she’s opted to put some of her extra money into high-yield savings each month instead — something she wouldn’t have been able to do easily under her original repayment plan.
She also took advantage of an opportunity to pay down a big chunk of her loans when she had it.
When Amazon hired her three years ago, she got a relocation stipend, which she was able to put toward her debt before refinancing. She moved to Seattle with just two suitcases and bought her flight with travel rewards — quite the Penny Hoarder!
With the money she can save each month, Harren wisely keeps a stock of “short– to mid-term savings.”
The bulk of that savings went to the down payment on a house last spring, and now she’s working back up to an emergency fund of six (or more) months’ expenses.
Is Refinancing With SoFi Right for You?
Harren was smart to look into refinancing early after graduation to secure a dramatically-reduced interest rate.
Even if you’ve been out of school and working on paying down your student loan debt for a few years, refinancing could still help you save money.
In addition to a lower interest rate, refinancing could mean a lower monthly payment and, like Harren’s, thousands of dollars saved over the life of your loans.
If you’re struggling to keep up with monthly payments, or you’re buried in interest and feel like you’re making no progress, refinancing with SoFi could offer some relief.
What would you do with an extra $15,000 in the next 10 years?
Your Turn: Have you considered refinancing to pay down student loan debt?
Sponsorship Disclosure: A huge thanks to SoFi for working with us to bring you this content. It’s rare that we have the opportunity to share something so awesome and get paid for it!
Licensed by the Department of Business Oversight under the California Finance Lender Law License No. 6054612. SoFi loans are originated by SoFi Lending Corp., NMLS # 1121636. (http://ift.tt/1dl1tJY).
Dana Sitar (@danasitar) is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. She’s written for Huffington Post, Entrepreneur.com, Writer’s Digest and more, attempting humor wherever it’s allowed (and sometimes where it’s not).
The post This Woman’s Smart Money Move is Saving Her $15K on Her Student Loans appeared first on The Penny Hoarder.
source The Penny Hoarder http://ift.tt/2aybGpJ