Posts in Blog
KISS for Summer 2017

With Independence Day behind us, the heart of summer has begun. For some, it is the time to disengage from real life issues, like personal financial. For me, it’s time for my annual “KISS” for your money! What is KISS? “Keep It Simple, Stupid” and it’s the perfect mantra for this time of year. Here are five tasks that are easy to complete before you shut down.

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Half Time for the Economy 2017

The better than expected June jobs report and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen’s upcoming Congressional testimony is a good opportunity to review where the U.S. economy stands at the mid point of 2017. Economic Growth: The broadest measure of economic growth is Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Over the past fifty years or so, the economy has grown by 3 percent annually. In the past decade, that rate has dropped to about 2 percent, with 2015 being the best year (+2.6 percent) and 2009 the worst year (-2.8 percent).

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Credit Scores Likely to Rise

Credit scores recently reached a record high and given changes to the industry, they could continue to rise. According to Fair Isaac Corporation (creator of the widely used FICO score), the average score hit 700 during the spring, the highest since at least 2005. As a reminder, FICO scores range from 300 to 850 and borrowers with scores above 750 are generally considered excellent, while scores below 650 are considered poor. The three most important factors that determine your FICO score are: payment history, total debt outstanding, which takes into account how many accounts you have and how close you are to your credit limit and the number of hard credit inquiries made on your behalf from mortgage, auto or student loan companies. 

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Senate Health Care Q&A

By now you have seen the headlines, but to understand the full impact of the Senate Health Care bill (Better Care Reconciliation Act),  here is a Q&A that dives into some of the numbers of the current version of the plan. What is Medicaid? Medicaid is the country’s largest government health care program, covering about 20 percent (74 million) of all Americans, including:

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Amazon vs. Wal-Mart

American consumers will soon have an easier time: they will shop at either Amazon or Wal-Mart. That’s overstating the situation, but after Amazon announced that it was buying Whole Foods for $13.7 billion and Wal-Mart (which last year bought fledging Amazon competitor Jet.com for $3.3 billion), said it had purchased online men’s retailer Bonobos for $310 million, the retail landscape shifted once again. Both transactions signify that to succeed, companies will need robust digital as well as a brick and mortar beachheads. Whenever big deals are announced, it can make you feel like there are going to be three or four companies left in each sector. In the past, there have always been cycles of expansion and consolidation and just as big conglomerates were created, they could also be pared down.

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The Unromantic Wedding Gift: A Prenup

It’s wedding season and as thousands of happy couples prepare to take vows, just a fraction will spend time contemplating the end of their relationships. Let’s face it: signing a pre-nuptial agreement (“prenup”) is the most unromantic engagement or wedding gift ever. A prenup is a contract that outlines how a couple would split their financial lives in the event that the relationship does not work out. While most of us may think of a pre-nup as something for the very rich, after hearing about disastrous divorces and the financial horror stories associated with them, it’s clear that many more couples might benefit from the process that forces them to outline what they bring into the marriage, how they might split up assets accumulated during the marriage (marital property), including a home, and how the couple intends to manage family gifts or an inheritance.

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Congress Throws Consumers Under the Bus

Last week, House lawmakers passed a bill that threw consumers under the bus. The Financial Choice Act would gut the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation of 2010 by giving the president the power to fire the heads of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, at any time for any -- or no -- reason. It would also provide Congress with sweeping power over the CFPB's budget, which means that lawmakers could defund the agency entirely. That’s a shame, because in the six years since the CFPB was established, it has provided nearly $12 billion in relief for more than 29 million consumers. The CFPB was created out of Dodd Frank in order to create a single point of accountability for enforcing federal consumer financial laws and protecting consumers in the financial marketplace. The agency’s main goals are to:

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Comey Steals Spotlight from Reg Reform

While most Americans were glued to former FBI Director James Comey’s testimonybefore Congress last week, two financial regulatory measures dropped below the radar. House lawmakers passed a bill that would gut the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation of 2010. If passed under its current form, the Financial Choice Act would give the president the power to fire the heads of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, at any time for any -- or no -- reason. It would also give Congress power over the CFPB's budget, which means that lawmakers could defund the agency entirely. That’s a shame, because in the near six years since the CFPB was established, it has provided over $12 billion in relief for millions of consumers.

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