The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Don’t panic that the market has whittled your kids’ 529 plan

- Michelle Singletary

When my husband tells me to “calm down,” even if my concern is warranted, I want to punch him.

In my mind, when he says those two words, all I hear is: “You’re being irrational.”

But I know his heart, and that’s not what he’s saying. He just knows that I can let my emotions get the better of me.

For natural worriers like me, when there’s a threat to our well-being, our go-to emotion is panic. So I understand why people are fleeing equities now that the stock market is having some of its worst days in history.

However, you can’t let your feelings drive your financial decisions. It’s OK to feel what you feel, but please pause before you make a move.

I’m glad readers are reaching out for advice. This week, I received an email from a Maryland couple investing in a 529 college-savings plan. Their son is graduating from high school in a little over a year and will be applying to out-of-state schools, mostly in the $60,000 to $70,000 a year retail range.

A 529 savings plan allows your contributi­ons to grow tax-free. If the funds are used for qualified educationa­l expenses, earnings are not taxed at the federal or, in most cases, state level.

“We had saved about $150,000 in a 529 account before the coronaviru­s outbreak sent markets tumbling,” the mother wrote. “We don’t have a lot of time to wait out a recovery — as we do for retirement. We had already begun to move some of the 529 investment­s into more conservati­ve funds, but are wondering if we should stop pouring money into a dropping 529?”

In this situation, experts I reached out to said that the couple shouldn’t be heavily invested

When there’s a threat to our wellbeing, our go-to emotion is panic. However, you can’t let your feelings drive your financial decisions. in stocks.

“Because equity markets are uncertain with respect to shortterm valuations even in the best of times, I routinely recommend to clients that as their children approach their junior and senior years of high school, they keep their investment­s out of equities for funding the first 12 to 24 months of college at a minimum,” said Lynn Ballou, a certified financial planner and partner at EP Wealth Advisors in Lafayette, Calif.

The time to aggressive­ly invest in 529 funds is when your child has years before heading off to college, Ballou said.

“It’s hard to take the high road and move to more conservati­ve pastures when markets are skyrocketi­ng up, because it feels like we are leaving money on the table,” she said. “But when the rollercoas­ter ride of market volatility returns and it’s time to cash out and pay up for what we were saving for, it’s no fun to pull money out at a beaten-up value. Better we had just passed up some of the gain by being a long-term investor who got out a little too soon but still made a great rate of return.”

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