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The future of children is the future of the planet. Here we address matters related to the education of children - mind, body and spirit - formally through school, at home and via alternative methods.

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Jul 13


401kid was created with the consumer in mind. Namely, we provide education savings plans at a low cost; we do not compromise our objectivity by accepting fees from investment managers; and we offer clients access to superior techology.

SogoInvest is a like-minded, consumer-conscious company. Genesis Securities, through its new unit SogoInvest, offers investors 15 free trades a month after paying a $15 a month fee with no account minimum required. Investors unwilling to pay the monthly fee can still conduct trades for $3 each. SogoInvest’s founder and chairman, William Yeh, says the unit is targeting individual investors interested in developing long-term investment strategies. With this bold strategy, SogoInvest will become a leading voice in the investment community.

Here are some links of interest:

SogoInvest

Evolution Shift

Blueliner Marketing

4 Comments | Tags: 401Kid College Savings Blog, Investor Education |Discuss this topics in the forum



Jul 13


These are the the wise words of Jim Boyle, President of College Parents of America, that always seem to elicit a smile whenever he speaks to a group of parents of younger children. Here are some of Jim’s other comments:

“I guess the simplicity of the line, and the fact that college for their kids is more concept than reality, makes these parents of small kids focus on the “before” part and nod in knowing recognition that if they can save enough money over the next 10 or 12 or 18 years, then in their minds “college will be taken care of” and they can keep a lifestyle as good or better than the one they have right now.

But then, as you well know, reality hits. The assumption of a progressively increasing income may prove wrong, as an employer takes a tumble. The comfort of a backstop from your parents may disappear, as they hold too long to a home they can’t sell, or an unexpected long-term medical crisis ensues, and you end up footing the bill.

That’s where the “during and after” part of paying for college kicks in, and where I surmise that you are probably spending your life right now.

If you are the parent of a current college student, you are probably struggling to pay for college in real time – or “during” – these four, or five or six years when your son or daughter is earnestly taking a full load of undergraduate classes and trying to earn enough money themselves to make a real dent in the bills that seem to just keep on coming from his or her college or university.

And you are learning, of course, that reality hits yet again, and that neither nor child nor you can earn enough money to pay for college in real time, and that borrowing money for college expenses is really the only possible way that you together will be able to make the bills for tuition, room and board, books, fees, travel to and from school and all of the other expenses that hit because you have a child striving to attain a higher education.

So, you as a parent borrow money, and before long you will enter the “after” life and have to start to pay it back, sometimes beginning in 60 days, sometimes at the end of each school year or, in some cases, not until the end of his or undergraduate education. Or in the case of your son or daughter, he or she may borrow money and commit to paying that loan back beginning six months after graduation.

But you may done all this without much of a strategy (and believe me you are not alone), so some of your joy in experiencing your child’s college years is tempered by that nagging feeling that you are just not doing enough to learn options and make smart decisions about paying for college.”

401kid can help families create a tax advantaged Education Savings program so they front load the “before” part of paying for college. By doing so, the college experience becomes more enjoyable and stress-free for all!

see College Parents of America

2 Comments | Tags: 401Kid College Savings Blog, Investor Education |Discuss this topics in the forum



May 03


Now that your tax returns are completed, it is a good time to clear out the paper trail in your files so that your time can be spent on more valuable pursuits. You will also have a better handle over your portfolio with a little work done now in keeping only what is current and necessary.

Fund firms send out generous paperwork during the year on share purchases and sales, dividends, and capital gains reinvested into accounts. These are important to record for tax purposes, but you do not need every piece of paper they send. It is redundant to keep all the interim statements after you receive that one year-end report. The final yearly statement will give you any invormation necessary for cost basis calculations well into the future.

Here are some other documents you do not need – outdated prospectuses and annual reports as well as old mailing envelopes and deposit tickets. Only keep the most up-to-date versions of these, as computer systems or transfer agents could have changed during the year. You would not want your deposits sent to the wrong account.

Finally, it may make sense to review the funds held in your portfolio to determine whether they are meeting your expectations. Evaluating why you bought a fund in the first place and how it is performing will help you see if it is still a right fit for your investment dollars.

No Comments | Tags: 401Kid College Savings Blog, Investor Education |Discuss this topics in the forum



Apr 09


John Wasik, columnist for Bloomberg News, recently pointed out that whaling captains in Alaska are getting better tax breaks than college students on this year’s IRS returns. He wasn’t kidding. As written in IRS Publication 553, “whaling captains, if recognized by the Alaska Eskimo Commission, may deduct up to $10,000 of necessary whaling expenses.” That’s about $6,000 more than the highest deduction college students can take on their tax returns. And 2005 will be the last year the tuition and fees deduction will be allowed. That means $2,000 will be the most a student can gain in the form of a tax credit for 2006. Correct me if I’m wrong, but wasn’t the last time tuition at any of our nation’s public institutions equalled $2,000, somewhere around the mid-1970’s? Who is kidding whom? Š

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Apr 09


The indicators as to how we are competing with the rest of the world are how many students are prepared to go on to college and graduate school and how many are being left behind. In 1991, the United States ranked second in college preparation. In 2001, we were fifteenth. We currently rank 17th in the world with our high school graduation rate, at 74 percent. In tests assessing basic knowledge and skills, U.S. students rank 15th in reading, 19th in science, 24th in mathematics and 24th in problem-solving. While this is not earth- shattering news, it continues to show that we are not keeping pace with other world leaders in education. Why is this important? Right now, we are on the edge of beginning to retire the segment of our population with the highest attained education, the baby-boomers. And other nations around the world are investing huge sums of money to make sure their countries are prepared to compete in every field. Twenty other nations have made higher education a major focus in their spending. India and China are leading this charge. China alone, is building 800 new universities within the next ten years which will educate approximately 20,000 to 30,000 students each. Now it is really more important than ever to make a bigger financial commitment to educating our country’s future workforce. Š

No Comments | Tags: 401Kid College Savings Blog, Investor Education |Discuss this topics in the forum