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Four plans received silver-medal ratings, including two that moved down to the second-tier group after winning top marks last year. Those two are Ohio's CollegeAdvantage 529 Savings Plan, managed by the Ohio Tuition Trust Authority, and Virginia's CollegeAmerica, managed by American Funds. The two other plans winning silver-medal honors were Arkansas' iShares 529 Plan, run by UPromise Investments, and the Michigan Education Savings Program, run by TIAA Tuition Financing Inc. Nineteen plans were rated bronze and 33 neutral. Four received negative ratings, compared with none receiving Morningstar's lowest rating last year. "Over the past 12 months, we continued to see 529 plans push for lower fees and higher quality investment options, and both of these trends directly benefit college savers," said Laura Pavlenko Lutton, who oversees Morningstar's 529 ratings. "Unfortunately, not all plans have jumped on these investor-friendly trends, and in a handful of cases where we found high expenses or poor-quality investments, we gave the plan a negative rating." The four negative-rated plans are: Kansas' Schwab 529 College Savings Plan, managed by American Century Investment Management; Minnesota's College Savings Plan, run by TIAA Tuition Financing; and the direct-sold and adviser-sold plans from Rhode Island's CollegeBoundfund, managed by AllianceBernstein. For a list of Morningstar's ratings on each of the 64 plans, visit http://www.tinyurl.com/9rgtwme A written summary of the ratings is also available at www.tinyurl.com/d5c64rz
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