Arab Times

Find free, solid money advice in uncertain times

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IBy Liz Weston

f you have money questions — and who among us doesn’t right now? — there are plenty of people willing to offer advice: friends, relatives and random strangers on the internet.

Finding someone who knows what they’re talking about, and who isn’t trying to take advantage of you, can be tougher. Fortunatel­y, several groups of credential­ed, trustworth­y financial advisers are stepping up to offer free help.

Groups such as the Financial Planning Associatio­n, the XY Planning Network, the National Associatio­n of Personal Financial Advisors, the Associatio­n for Financial Counseling & Planning Education and the National Foundation for Credit Counseling are among the organizati­ons offering free consultati­ons to help people navigate the pandemic’s economic fallout. You can find links to the programs by either navigating to the organizati­ons’ sites or searching for their names and the phrase “pro bono coronaviru­s.” (Pro bono means free.)

“There are so many different pieces of informatio­n and misinforma­tion,” says Rebecca Wiggins, executive

Nine out of 10 US adults said the coronaviru­s pandemic had caused them financial stress in an early April survey by the National Endowment for Financial Education. Tens of millions are unemployed, furloughed or struggling with pay cuts, and those numbers are expected to rise. A volatile stock market is hammering retirement funds and other investment­s.

At the same time, what people need to know about money is changing. Congress has altered tax laws, temporaril­y banned certain foreclosur­es and evictions, made it easier to tap retirement funds and rewritten the rules on unemployme­nt. Federal student loan payments have been paused, and many lenders are allowing people to skip payments on other debt.

There are so many moving parts that it’s easy to make a mistake and pay an outsized price.

Not getting good advice can be costly

A reader recently reached out to me after getting what they thought was a coronaviru­s hardship withdrawal from a former employer’s 401(k). Coronaviru­s hardship withdrawal­s, authorized by the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, allow people to take up to $100,000 from their retirement plan balances without having to pay the usual 10% early withdrawal penalty. Income taxes are still owed on withdrawal­s, but the tax bill can be spread over three years. If you pay the money back, the taxes can be refunded.

What this reader actually got was a regular distributi­on - in other words, the 401(k) was cashed out. That triggers taxes and potential penalties without the option to spread out the tax bill or pay the money back.

A qualified financial adviser could have helped ensure that the plan offered the hardship withdrawal option (not all do), that the reader was eligible (people must be affected physically or financiall­y by COVID-19) and that the paperwork was properly filled out. What help you can expect Consultati­ons typically will be virtual, taking place over the phone or using videoconfe­rencing software. All the financial advisers offering free services can help with topics such as budgeting, unemployme­nt benefits, debt management and making the best use of CARES Act relief checks. Certified financial planners with the FPA, the NAPFA and the XY

Planning Network also can advise on more specialize­d topics, such as the Paycheck Protection Program and other help for small businesses. Credit counselors, meanwhile, work with creditors to arrange debt payoff plans and know about available forbearanc­e programs.

“The options vary considerab­ly depending on the lender you speak to, the type of loan or line of credit that you have and the circumstan­ces that you’re dealing with,” says NFCC spokesman Bruce McClary, adding that a nonprofit credit counseling agency can help people prepare for those conversati­ons with creditors.

Also, you don’t have to be in a financial crisis to ask for a free consultati­on with an adviser, Wiggins says. If you’re hoping to eventually hire a financial adviser, you want to make sure the person is a fiduciary, which means they are required to put your interests ahead of their own.

“This could be your opportunit­y to talk with somebody to get prepared for the future,” she says. “We don’t really know what’s going to happen. Let’s make sure we get our finances in order and set up a really good spending plan.” (AP)

 ??  ?? This undated photo provided by NerdWallet shows Liz Weston, a columnist for personal finance website NerdWallet.com. (AP)
This undated photo provided by NerdWallet shows Liz Weston, a columnist for personal finance website NerdWallet.com. (AP)

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