- Investing for Kids
Investing for kids can mean two things; investing for your kid's future, such as a college funding investment, or kids actually doing the investing themselves. It's great if your kids are actually investing as a way to spend their time doing something more socially responsible than whiling away their time playing GTA4.First of all, as they are minors, children can't actually buy and sell stocks themselves. They can however take advantage of the Uniformed Gift to Minors Act (UGMA) that enables minors to legally own property. It does this by allowing the establishment of a trust for the minor's assets. There is a trustee for the UGMA that is typically the parents. Unlike more complicated trusts, UGMA related trusts are statutorily established in the individual's state of residence. That's nice because you don't have to rack up a mountain of legal fees to establish a UGMA trust, as can be the case with many other trusts.
What the UGMA allows is the gift to a minor child of an amount of money with no tax consequences as per the limits of the gift tax exclusion. The exact amount of the annual gift tax exclusion can vary from year to year, according to IRS regulations, but currently it's $12,000 from one individual to another. There is no actual contribution limit for a UGMA, but there will be tax consequences if the contributions to the account are greater than the current year's exclusion limit. You can establish a UGMA trust for your kid's investment whims at your broker's office or bank by simply filling out a few forms and choosing a custodian.
You can do all the investing you want with the funds in the account, as long as you don't things like gambling as investing. Any realized gains or losses will be reported under the child's SSN. At the age they cease to be minors, either 18 or 21 years of age depending on the state of residence (although some states allow you to move the age from 18 to 21 if you so desire), the funds in the UGMA trust revert to the ownership of the minor. Hear this, you will lose every once of control over these funds at that time.
This bears a bit of thought, because no matter how responsible or irresponsible your kid, you'll have a trust fund baby on your hands if you establish a UGMA. The difference is that you can not prevent the minor from gaining control of the funds through special terms of the trust as you can in other trusts. They are all set up according to the state's statutes, remember? (There are other trusts that you can set up as custom as you would like, but these will usually cost more to establish than a UGMA trust).
Something else to know about a UGMA is that they reduce the child's eligibility to receive student financial aid. Apparently the Feds feel that if your kid is sitting on a half a million dollar trust fund the taxpayer shouldn't foot the bill for their education. The point is that any assets in a UGMA established trust account are considered the child's assets when applying for financial aid, so they will have an impact on eligibility. That's something to consider when setting up a UGMA so your kids can dabble in the markets.
Another thing to consider is that transferring any funds from the UGMA into another vehicle, such as a 529, will cause you to be liable for capital gains taxes on the transfered amount. That's because the assets can't actually be transfered directly. They must be sold, then the proceeds from the sale are used to fund the 529 account. The other issue is that 529 plans are actually adult owned, so the funds must be transferred back to the parents, possibly incurring other tax consequences. 529 plan assets are not used for calculating financial aid eligibility though.
What if you child just wants to invest for an education. Not to fund their education, but to learn how the markets work, and get an actual financial education. That is a great thing, because the vast majority of children today have absolutely no idea about anything financial. If your child is responsible enough to actually want to spend their time investing their assets, rather than spending them at the mall or on smoking dope, you probably have less to worry about than many parents. Most kids would rather spend their money on new games for their PS3 than on shares of the Visa IPO, so if your's doesn't , congratulations.
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