Updates

Debts and death

DEAR TRUST OFFICER: What happens to my debts when I die? —STILL PAYING THE MORTGAGE DEAR STILL: According to a study by the credit bureau Experion, released in December 2016, some 73% of consumers have debts when they die, including mortgage debt. Some 68% have credit card debt; 37% have mortgage debt; 25% have car […]

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Corrections are Opportunities

Stocks, as measured by the S&P 500, would have been higher again last week if it had not been for the large cap tech stocks, this year’s market rally leaders. After year-to-date gains of 20% to 30%, the group took a breather Friday finishing with one day declines of three to four percent. Rather than […]

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The Problem of Faithless Trustees

There’s been quite a bit of press coverage of “fiduciary duties” when it comes to professionals giving financial advice. Bank trust departments and trust companies always have been held to the fiduciary standard, and are proud of it. Unfortunately, there are some documented cases when individuals with such duties simply ignored them. Special needs Lawrence […]

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Market Facts vs. Personal Facts

Investment decisions require more than gut feeling responses to current news. Typically, after a long decline in stock prices, a good deal of risk has been removed from the market, yet investors perceive the risk has increased. Conversely, when stock prices are high and rising, investors perceive the risks of investing to be much lower […]

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Triple record

Dear Trust Officer: I heard that the stock market has been setting new highs. Does that mean now is a good time to invest in stocks? — New at investing Dear New:  On one hand, by example, last August all three of the major stock market indices (DJIA, S&P 500, and NASDAQ) set records on the […]

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The Entire Process

Financial planning is one half of the process. Estate planning, often neglected by the majority of financial service providers, is the other half of the process. The Trust Company of Kansas (TCK) has always stressed a holistic approach to wealth management.  Good investment results can be squandered if accounts are not appropriately titled and beneficiaries […]

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Fear of Identity Theft

A survey of high-net-worth investors, reported on wealthmanagement.com, probed for respondents’ greatest fears.  Major illness came in third, at 56%.  Terrorism concerned 65%.  The top worry, for 72% of respondents, was identity theft. The concern is not misplaced.  Reportedly, in 2015 alone there were 13.1 million victims of identity theft, at a cost of $15 […]

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Noise Versus News

As of May 10th, only ten companies of the five hundred which make up the S&P 500 Index are responsible for 46% of the gain in the index so far in 2017. The S&P 500 is a market capitalization weighted index and those same ten companies make up just 12% of the market cap of […]

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Tapping Retirement Funds to Pay for College

DEAR TRUST OFFICER:  Should I withdraw or borrow from my 401(k) plan to help pay for my child’s college expenses? —PUZZLED ON FUNDING DEAR PUZZLED:  As a general rule, impairing your retirement savings to meet current spending needs is not a good idea, even for higher education expenses.  There are other sources of funds for education […]

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Sell in May and Go Away?

Not this year, according to Stephen Auth, who oversees asset allocation at Federated Investors. Any corrections should be viewed as buying opportunities. He provides observations to support his view. News of the various political risks is mostly noise and both tax and healthcare reforms will begin to take shape in coming weeks. First quarter earnings […]

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