Your Money: Advice on
boomerang kids from money pros who know
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[May 19, 2017]
By Beth Pinsker
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - George Gagliardi knows the old adage about the
shoemaker with barefoot kids: The financial adviser has two adult sons
bunking at home.
Gagliardi's biggest challenge? Imparting financial advice to his own
offspring.
"I get 'Grumble. Grumble. Stop telling me what to do," said Gagliardi,
who founded Coromandel Wealth Management in Lexington, Massachusetts.
As another crop of college graduates heads into the real world, Reuters
asked financial advisers with "boomerang kids" -adults who have returned
home to their parents - to share advice on launching them to success and
independence.
* Ease them in
Gagliardi is taking a gradual approach.
"You try to infuse a little knowledge and then let them make the small
mistakes, and hopefully they learn from them," he said.
His older son, now 26, has lived at home after college to save money
while he works full-time. That son is about to move out, while his
younger brother, almost 22, is about to come home after graduating from
college.
"If kids are moving home, there should be a cost to it," Gagliardi said.
"You can’t just coast along."
He charges his older son a nominal rent of $350. He also made him map
out three- and five-year life plans.
* Get them ready to jump
Thomas Yorke's older daughter lived at home for about six months in Red
Bank, New Jersey, after she graduated from college. Yorke's main advice
was for her to make sure she chose her roommates wisely, since she was
likely to be in cramped quarters.
"If you are going to be cramming into a small space, you better do it
with good friends and not someone you recently met," said Yorke, of
Oceanic Capital Management.
The daughter saved about $10,000 before moving in with people she knew
in New York.
She is now mostly independent, except for lingering on the family
cellphone plan ($50 a month). Yorke plans to cut her off from the plan
soon or have her contribute.
A second daughter is about to graduate from college, and a third just
started. Yorke hopes they are learning from their older sister.
"It’s really important to get the first one right," Yorke said. "The
others fall into place."
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A graduating student of the City College of New York takes a selfie
of the message on her cap during the College's commencement ceremony
in the Harlem section of Manhattan, New York, U.S., June 3, 2016.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
* Have patience
David Haas was worried because his son was staying out late and not
getting up in the morning.
"We were concerned that he was scared about the next step," says Haas,
of Cereus Financial in Franklin Lakes, New Jersey.
Haas and his wife decided to wait it out. At the six-month mark, their
son got a job in another city and drove off, happily independent ever
since.
Haas' younger daughter, 22, graduated from college a year ago and has
been living at home ever since. She pays for her commute, her clothes
and her entertainment. Haas picks up the car insurance, about $900
annually.
"I know that she wants to be independent, and she’s also very good with
money and frugal," Haas said. "So I trust that she’s going to make good
decisions when she has to make them."
* Set a deadline to cut off support
Brett Anderson, a financial adviser for St. Croix Advisors in Hudson,
Wisconsin, wanted his older son to move home after getting his master's
degree, mostly to save money.
"But there was no way I was going to leave him on the payroll," Anderson
said. "I have clients paying for two or three kids beyond college, and
it starts to add up."
While Anderson paid $50 a month for his son's medical insurance, he
offered a bike instead of a car.
"You have to draw the line," Anderson says, noting that his wife was
equally influential in the decision-making process.
After some career coaching, the son headed to Texas for a job after six
months, and now, at 26, is fully independent.
Next up is an 18-year-old daughter who will graduate from high school in
June. Anderson thinks she will be a much more difficult case.
"We’ll have the same conversations with her," he said. "We’ll have to
help her understand money better."
(Editing by Lauren Young and Lisa Von Ahn)
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