
Rating 529 College
Savings Plans
Use Morningstar
ratings to determine the
long-term performance of these programs.
by Jan E. Eighme
| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
Section 529
college savings plans offer
numerous advantages and have few
disadvantages compared with other
options. Their benefits include tax
savings, estate planning benefits, high
contribution limits and no income
limitations. One of the few drawbacks to
these plans is that investment products
usually are chosen by the state
treasurers office and the 529
program manager. Withdrawals
used to pay for qualified
educational expenses usually are free of
federal taxes. With any other
withdrawals, the earnings portion is
subject to federal taxes and a 10%
penalty. If a child doesnt go to
college, the funds generally can be used
to pay for another family member. There
are two types of plans: prepaid tuition
plans and savings plans. The two most
common asset-allocation options clients
can choose for savings plans are
age-based and static-investment
allocation.
Clients will want to
consider which states have the
best-performing plans. Unfortunately,
because 529 savings plans are relatively
new, it is difficult to determine their
long-term investment performance.
Because 529 plans
invest in mutual funds, it is
possible to use the long-term performance
evaluations of these funds from a rating
service such as Morningstar or Lipper in
order to calculate weighted-average
ratings for a states 529 portfolio
options.
Jan
E. Eighme, CPA, PhD, is
assistant professor, Department of
Accountancy, Richard T. Farmer School of
Business, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.
Her e-mail address is eighmeje@muohio.edu.
|
ollege expenses are increasing faster
than the average paycheck, but IRC section 529
savings plans can narrow the gap. These plans
provide numerous advantages and have few
disadvantages compared with other options. They
offer tax savings, estate planning benefits, high
contribution limits and no income limitations.
One of the few drawbacks is that investment
decisions usually are made by the state
treasurers office and the 529 program
manager. As a result clients will want to know
which states have the best-performing plans. CPAs
offering financial planning services to their
clients should be prepared to provide this
information.
Unfortunately,
because they are relatively new, it is difficult
to determine the best-performing 529 savings
plans using the most popular yardstick of
comparison: long-term investment performance.
However, the plans invest in mutual funds whose
long-term performance evaluations are available
from rating services such as Morningstar and
Lipper. This article shows CPAs how to use
Morningstar ratings of the underlying mutual
funds to evaluate a states 529 portfolio
options. These weighted-average ratings provide a
long-term, risk-adjusted performance measure that
can be used to compare 529 savings plans.
As of March 31,
2006, there were
6.6 million section 529 savings plan
accounts holding $75.3 billion in assets.Source:
College Savings Plans Network.
|
THE BASICS OF 529 SAVINGS PLANS
WIn qualified plans covered
by section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code,
withdrawals used to pay for qualified educational
expenses usually are free of federal taxes. With
any other withdrawals, the earnings portion is
subject to federal taxes and a 10% penalty. If a
child doesnt go to college, the funds
generally can be used to pay for another family
member. (For more on investing in these plans,
see The Best Use of Spare Cash, page 41.)
Section 529
authorizes two types of plan: prepaid tuition
plans and savings plans. Generally,
state-sponsored prepaid tuition plans
offer tuition contracts that allow contributors
to lock in the cost of tuition and mandatory fees
at an in-state public college or university.
Unlike these prepaid tuition plans, most 529
savings plans do not offer any guarantees. The
529 plan program manager, usually a large mutual
fund company, collects contributions and invests
them in funds or other financial instruments.
The two most
common asset-allocation choices for 529 savings
plan investors are age-based and
static-investment allocation. With an age-based
allocation, the assets are moved over time to
portfolios with progressively lower percentages
of stock and higher percentages of fixed-income
securities to minimize risk as the child gets
closer to college age. Conservative age-based
options move out of equities quickly; aggressive
ones move out more slowly.
Static-investment
allocation options maintain a constant equity
percentage as a beneficiary grows older. Many 529
plans offer low-, medium- and high-equity content
options and most allow account owners to use more
than one. By investing in multiple options,
clients can create customized portfolios to match
their risk preference. For example, if a 529
account owner wants a portfolio with 75% of its
assets in equity funds and 25% in fixed-income
funds, he or she can put $750 of each $1,000
contributed into a 100% equity option and $250
into a 100% fixed-income option.
CALCULATING WEIGHTED-AVERAGE MORNINGSTAR RATINGS
To determine its mutual fund star ratings,
Morningstar classifies funds into 69 categories,
then calculates risk-adjusted returns for each
fund, taking into account asset-based expenses
and loads. Morningstar rates the funds (from 1 to
5 stars 5 being the best) in each category
based on these risk-adjusted returns. In other
words, funds
In the top 10% of their category receive five
stars.
In the next 22.5% receive four stars.
In the middle 35% receive three
stars.
In the next 22.5% receive two stars.
In the bottom 10% receive one star.
Morningstar
calculates star ratings for 3-, 5- and 10-year
periods and combines them to obtain a
comprehensive star rating for each mutual fund.
The online
exhibit shows
weighted-average Morningstar ratings for selected
529 options for each state that have been
calculated using the comprehensive star ratings
of the options underlying mutual funds.
Section 529 savings
plan
assets are expected to grow
to $228 billion by 2010.Source:
U.S. News and World Report.
|
The
online
exhibit provides
age-group performance evaluations by giving
weighted-average Morningstar ratings for a sample
of age-group portfolios. This sample includes
portfolios for newborns and children ages 6, 12
and 18. The weighted-average Morningstar ratings
of these age-group portfolios have been used to
calculate the overall age-based option ratings.
The online
exhibit also gives
weighted-average Morningstar ratings for three
types of static-investment option: growth,
balanced and conservative.
Taking one state
as an example, exhibits 1 and 2 use
Connecticuts age-based option to illustrate
the method used to calculate the weighted-average
Morningstar ratings in the online exhibit. (Practitioners can follow the example
in these exhibits to make their own calculations
for different states, keeping in mind that fund
ratings may need to be updated since they can
change over time. More information can be found
at www.morningstar.com.) A portfolios weighted-average
Morningstar rating is based only on its rated
funds. If an age-group or static portfolio does
not have at least 75% of its non-money-market
assets in Morningstar-rated funds, the portfolio
is not given a weighted-average Morningstar
rating. If an age-group portfolio is unrated, an
overall rating is not calculated for the
age-based option.
| |
Connecticuts
Age-Based Option |
| |
|
Asset
Allocation |
| |
|
Percentage |
| Funds
Used in
Connecticuts
Age-Based Option |
Morningstar
Star Rating1
|
Newborn |
Age
6 |
Age
12 |
Age
18 |
| TIAA-CREF
Equity Index |
4 |
60 |
52 |
32 |
16 |
| TIAA-CREF
International Equity |
4 |
7.5 |
6.5 |
4 |
2 |
| TIAA-CREF
Inflation-Linked Bond |
4 |
6.25 |
8.75 |
15 |
8.75 |
| TIAA-CREF
Real Estate Securities |
3 |
7.5 |
6.5 |
4 |
2 |
| TIAA-CREF
Bond |
3 |
18.75 |
26.25 |
45 |
26.25 |
| TIAA-CREF
Money Market |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
45 |
| Total
Assets |
|
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| Percentage
of total assets in
Morningstar-rated mutual
funds |
|
100 |
100 |
100 |
55 |
| Percentage
of non-money-market
assets in
Morningstar-rated mutual
funds |
|
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| Is
the percentage of
non-money-market assets
in Morningstar-rated
mutual funds greater than
75%? |
|
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
1Star
ratings as of June 12, 2006.
Note:
The money market fund in this
exhibit does not have a
Morningstar rating because
Morningstar does not rate money
market funds or any funds less
than three years old.
|
|
In
addition to weighted-average Morningstar ratings,
the online
exhibit provides the
total asset-based expense for each 529 option and
the portion of this expense accounted for in the
options weighted-average Morningstar
rating. A 529 options total asset-based
expense is usually made up of two parts: the
asset-based expense charged by the 529 program
manager and the asset-based expense charged by
the options underlying mutual funds. The
asset-based expense charged by the program
manager is not accounted for in the options
weighted-average Morningstar rating. On the other
hand, most of the asset-based expense charged by
the options underlying mutual funds is
accounted for in the rating.
| |
529
Planning Tips Clients
should consider the proper timing
of contributions. A single-year
529 contribution of up to $60,000
($120,000 for married couples
electing to split gifts) can be
treated as five equal annual
gifts. If the contributor makes
no other gifts to the beneficiary
during this five-year period, the
contribution will be exempt from
gift tax and the
contributors lifetime gift
exemption will not be reduced.
To minimize
taxes, advise clients to consider
making nonqualified withdrawals
from a 529 plan payable to the
beneficiary if the
beneficiarys marginal tax
rate is lower than the
owners and the plan permits
such payments.
Instead of
closing a 529 account, advise
clients to transfer it to a new
beneficiary who is a qualifying
family member of the original
beneficiary to avoid income tax
and the 10% withdrawal penalty.
When a
states allocation options
do not match a 529 account
owners risk preference,
clients should consider
investing in a combination of
static-investment options to
create a customized portfolio.
If a 529
contributor invests in a load
plan, the most advantageous share
class for long-term investors is
usually class A.
Before
opening an out-of-state 529
savings plan account, clients and
their CPAs should consider the
possible tax consequences. By
investing out of state, a
contributor might lose a state
income tax deduction or a tax
credit for contributions and
might be subject to state income
tax on qualified withdrawals from
the account.
A client
interested in investing in an
out-of-state 529 account who does
not want to give up a state
income tax deduction for
contributions should consider
funding an in-state account to
the maximum deductible amount and
putting further contributions
into an out-of-state account.
|
|
INVESTING IN OUT-OF-STATE 529 PLANS
Of course, CPAs should remind clients that
investment returns and ratings are only part of
the puzzle. When deciding whether to invest in an
out-of-state plan, clients should consider other
issues, such as expenses and tax consequences.
Out-of-state 529 account owners sometimes pay
higher expenses than state residents do. For
example, some 529 plans require out-of-state
account owners to invest in load-based funds
resulting in additional asset-based expense. If
this is the case, the online exhibit
assumes, for rating purposes, that class A shares
are purchased. Class A usually is the most
advantageous load share class for long-term
investors.
Owners of an
out-of-state 529 account might lose a state
income tax deduction or tax credit for
contributions to the account and, in a few
states, do not receive an exemption from state
income tax for qualified withdrawals. About half
of the states allow their residents a state
income tax deduction for some or all of a
contribution to an in-state 529 account, but not
for contributions to an out-of-state account. If
an out-of-state investment seems attractive, the
client might consider funding an in-state 529
account to the maximum deductible amount and
putting any further contributions into an
out-of-state account. A client in a state that
taxes qualified withdrawals from out-of-state 529
accounts should consider rolling an out-of-state
529 account into an in-state account before
withdrawals begin to avoid these taxes. (To learn
more about plan details, go to www.savingforcollege.com/529_plan_details.)
| |
Calculation of
Weighted-Average Morningstar
Ratings Using Connecticuts
Age-Based Option |
Newborn
(.60*4 stars) + (.075*4
stars) + (.0625*4 stars)
+ (.075*3 stars) +
(.1875*3 stars) = 3.74
stars |
Age
6
(.52*4 stars) + (.065*4
stars) + (.0875*4 stars)
+ (.065*3 stars) +
(.2625*3 stars) = 3.67
stars |
Age
12
(.32*4 stars) +
(.04*4 stars) + (.15*4
stars) + (.04*3 stars) +
(.45*3 stars) = 3.51
stars |
Age
18
(16/55*4 stars)
+ (2/55*4 stars) +
(8.75/55*4 stars) +
(2/55*3 stars) +
(26.25/55*3 stars) = 3.49
stars |
Overall
[(100*3.74) +
(100*3.67) + (100*3.51) +
(55*3.49)] = 3.62 stars
[(100 + 100 + 100 + 55)] |
|
|
A VALUABLE COMPARISON TECHNIQUE
For many 529 account owners, the advantages of
investing in an out-of-state 529 plan outweigh
the possible disadvantages. An out-of-state plan
may provide diversification benefits, be
better-suited to an account owners
investment style and be more compatible with an
owners non-529 investments. Clients who
invest in an out-of-state 529 plan, regardless of
the reason, share a common goal: obtaining good
investment performance at a fair expense. The
weighted-average Morningstar ratings and expense
figures in the online exhibit
can help CPAs and their clients identify the 529
plans that will allow them to achieve this goal.
Most 529 account
owners are investing for the long term and, as
part of their overall decision-making process,
would find it useful to compare the long-term
performance history of various 529 plans. Because
of the newness of most 529 plans, long-term
performance measures are not commonly available.
Until they are, using the procedure outlined in
this article to determine weighted-average
Morningstar ratings for a 529 plans
portfolio options is a good alternative. 
|