Kiplinger’s Personal Finance — September 2017

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34 KIPLINGER’S PERSONAL FINANCE^ 09/2017

MONEY

won’t earn much interest, but you’ll
give yourself time to assemble a finan-
cial team and come up with a long-
term plan. If you need help resisting
the urge to splurge, plug “celebrities
and bankruptcy” (or “pro athletes and
bankruptcy”) into a search engine for
some cautionary tales of how quickly
millions of dollars can disappear.

Set your priorities. Your financial team
should include a certified financial
planner, a certified public accountant
or enrolled agent, an attorney and,
depending on the circumstances, an
insurance professional. Work with
your team to create a priority list for
your money, says Ashley Bleckner, a
CFP in Newport Beach, Calif. If you
have credit card balances or other
high-cost debts, those should top the
list because you’ll get an immediate
return of up to 15% or more by paying
them off. Next, consider maxing out
your retirement savings accounts, if
you aren’t doing it already. James
Shagawat, a CFP in Clifton, N.J., asks
clients to write down immediate, one-
year and five-year goals. “This may be
your only windfall, so we’ve got to
make it last a lifetime,” says Shagawat.
With the bull market approaching its
ninth year, investing in the stock mar-
ket may be unnerving. But as we noted
above, stocks (and stock mutual funds)
have historically recorded the highest
rate of long-term growth. And you
don’t need to shoot out the lights: A
$292,000 investment that earns an 8%
average annual return would be worth
more than $1.4 million in 20 years.
If the idea of investing your entire
windfall has you reaching for the
nearest antacid, especially with the
market at its current lofty levels, con-
sider dollar-cost averaging. With this
strategy, you invest a given amount on
a regular schedule. Your fixed amount
of dollars will buy more shares when
prices are low and fewer when prices
are high. And if the market turns up-
side down, you’ll have some money on
the sidelines, which you can use to buy
stocks at a discount. ■

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a modest windfall at some point in
your life, and with proper planning,
you can transform that bequest into
a million-dollar nest egg.
Two-thirds of baby boomers will
receive an inheritance, according to
the Center for Retirement Research
at Boston College. The median amount
is $64,000; the average inheritance
(which ref lects bequests from wealth-
ier parents) is $292,000. Other sources
of windfalls include insurance payouts,
stock options, the sale of a business
and, occasionally, lottery winnings.
Managing a windfall is a problem
we’d all love to have, but it can be
stressful. Family members and dubi-
ous friends will no doubt have plenty
of suggestions for how to invest your
money. You may be tempted to splurge
on a big-ticket item you’ve never been
able to afford. That’s why the most
important first step you can take is
to “hit the pause button,” says Mark
Beaver, a certified financial planner
in Dublin, Ohio. Inherited IRAs have
rules of their own, but for other kinds
of windfalls it makes sense to stash the
money in a safe place, such as a bank
account or money market fund. You

your toe into investing, you could “buy
your second home first,” says Justin
Gramm, an exclusive buyer’s agent in
San Diego. That means choosing an
attractive neighborhood and a home
comfortably within your budget that
you don’t intend to stay in forever.
Hang on to the home as a rental prop-
erty once you buy a new place; you’ll
be an expert on the neighborhood.
More-experienced buyers with
enough equity in their homes can take
out a home-equity line of credit and
borrow from it to buy a property. The
downside: Your own home is on the
line as collateral. If you choose this
route, “do your homework,” says Cotty
Lowry, a real estate agent in Minne-
apolis. That means studying the cost
of similar rentals in the area you’re
targeting and the strength of the
rental market so you can anticipate
your monthly income. Be sure you
have the funds to absorb extra ex-
penses, whether that means covering
your tenants’ utilities, repainting the
walls or dealing with vacancies. Speak
with a loan officer to calculate your
mortgage payments and closing costs.
Harb also advises those who are
shopping around to develop a “net-
work of resources,” including a real
estate agent and mortgage broker,
whom you could call in a f lash when
you find a property you want—espe-
cially in competitive markets. The
effort pays off. “Aside from opening
my own business, the best investments
I’ve ever made have been real estate,”
he says. In Silicon Valley, people asso-
ciate wealth with careers at compa-
nies such as Google or Facebook, or
speculative tech stocks. “But to me
that’s all noise,” says Harb. “Buy some
land.” MIRIAM CROSS

Maximize a Windfall
The odds that you’ll win the Powerball
jackpot are about one in 292 million,
and stories about people receiving huge
inheritances from eccentric relatives
are usually the stuff of fiction. But
there’s a good chance you’ll receive

MOVING ON UP


Millionaire Households

The number of U.S. households with
a net worth between $1 million and
$5 million has steadily increased as
the stock market has recovered from
the 2007–09 bear market.

SOURCE: Spectrem Group

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2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016

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