Millennials turn to parents to navigate money milestones
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[April 26, 2018]
By Andrea Januta
(Reuters) - - Amanda Farris got an ATM card
from her father when she was about 13. Her dad told her to treat it like
cash and taught her how to tap her allowance and the money she made
working odd jobs.
Now, at 25, Farris and her husband are fully independent financially
from their parents. But Farris, who works in branding and marketing for
a Missouri bar association, has not stopped asking her father for
guidance. When she bought her first home a year ago, he gave extensive
advice.
As millennials navigate financial milestones – like buying real estate
or switching jobs – the advice of those who raised them continues to
guide their decisions. Despite being so-called digital natives, many
millennials continue to rely on their parents and mentors more than on
online information.
According to a 2017 Instamotor survey, 78.5 percent of U.S. millennials
say their parents have given them financial advice, and more than half
feel their parents prepared them well to make good financial decisions.
While Farris welcomes information from many sources, the advice she gets
from her parents has a special advantage: trust. "Those two people,
especially, will always have my best interests at heart," she said.
TEACHABLE MOMENTS
What is the best way for parents to give money advice? "Look for
opportunities to create conversations about topics – rather than
delivering lectures," said Rich Ramassini, senior vice president at PNC
Investments. In addition to decades in the financial industry, Ramassini
has first-hand experience with his millennial son.
Many financial principles prove applicable across generations – like the
power of compounding interest. "That is an eternal truth that remains
true today. Time is your biggest ally when it comes to investing," said
Ramassini.
But Ramassini also noted differences between millennials - often defined
as those born between 1980 and 2000 - and other generations.
When Ramassini began in the business a few decades ago, he said, you had
to go to a financial adviser to get any information. But now, with the
proliferation of online data and advice, the opposite problem exists –
too much information. "People have trouble turning that information into
knowledge," he said.
Technology has also opened up new ways of saving and investing, he
added, such as through financial apps.
GENERATIONAL DIFFERENCES
Besides having to deal with an abundance of technology and data,
millennials also face different economic challenges than the baby
boomers before them.
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A customer counts her money while waiting in line to check out at a
Target store on the shopping day dubbed "Black Friday" in
Torrington, Connecticut November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi/File
Photo
A 2017 Credit Suisse study found that millennials face tougher borrowing rules,
rising home prices and lower income mobility than their parents' generation.
Additionally, Americans now owe over a trillion dollars in student debt.
These concerns are reflected in the topics on which millennials seek advice. The
most popular subject was saving, with 72 percent discussing it with their
parents, followed by budgeting at 59 percent, according to the Instamotor
survey. Half had discussed debt with their parents.
Millennials are twice as likely as the overall investor population to target
social or environmental goals while making investments, according to a 2017
report by the Institute for Sustainable Investing.
HELPFUL CONNECTIONS
Experienced mentors can fill the void when parents are not available.
Tarah Rupp, who is an independent caregiver in Los Angeles, does not discuss
money with her mother, and her father is deceased.
The most useful advice has come through her church and her in-laws. Before Rupp
turned 21, an older friend from church sat her down to discuss budgeting, and
before she bought her first car, her father-in-law taught her how to negotiate
and to avoid high interest rates.
Katy Neylon, 27, said she is "pretty much an open book" when it comes to talking
about money with her parents, although the conversations are mostly one
direction. While Neylon does share salary and investing habits with her parents,
she does not ask them about their own finances.
Beyond asking for money and job-hunting guidance, Neylon, a marketing
administrator at a private golf community, also turns to her father for advice
on more philosophical aspects of consumption, like how to maintain a basic level
of happiness - specifically, how to avoid ratcheting up one's desires and
expectations with every rise on the career and salary ladder.
Working in Durango, Colorado, a "really tiny mountain town" focused on
hospitality, gives her a lifestyle where she can ski nearly every weekend, she
said. But it also required giving up a potentially more lucrative career path
elsewhere.
She and her father often share their feelings on the balance between happiness
and financial success. "We come to the conclusion that sometimes we pick
lifestyle over pay, which is definitely what I'm doing," she said.
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