New U.S. tax law could create underpayment headaches for
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[September 21, 2018]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - You could hardly
design a worse scenario for smart money management than being a rookie
in the National Football League. Young men in their early 20s, many from
low-income backgrounds, are showered suddenly with millions of dollars,
alongside teammates with millions of their own.
Meanwhile they are surrounded by people who have been preparing for this
potential payday for years - childhood friends, extended family, shady
advisers.
It's no wonder, according to Sports Illustrated, that 78 percent of NFL
players go bankrupt or experience severe financial stress within two
years of retirement. For young players, the football field is one big
financial minefield.
Brooks Bollinger remembers it well. The 38-year-old former quarterback
was a draft pick of the New York Jets before going on to play for the
Minnesota Vikings and the Dallas Cowboys.
“It’s a situation you have never been in before, and that nobody around
you has ever been in,” said Bollinger. “Everything moves so fast, and
your world changes overnight.”
Bollinger’s job now: Private wealth adviser with NorthRock Partners in
Minneapolis, where he helps professional athletes in the NHL, NBA and
NFL build financially secure lives beyond football.
Those lessons of how to deal with a windfall are applicable far beyond
the football field.
In fact, you may one day deal with such a scenario yourself, whether it
is an inheritance, or a lump-sum buyout from your job, or a legal
settlement, or a lottery win.
So, as the season kicks off and players begin cashing in these big
checks – the top pick in the draft, Baker Mayfield of the Cleveland
Browns, recently signed on for four years at $32.68 million – here are a
few money tips on dealing with windfalls.
CURB YOUR IMPULSES
If you have spent your whole life on a modest budget, rein in your
natural human instinct, which is to spend, spend, spend.
“Athletes think they have to go out and buy a house, and a car, and take
on all these other expenses right away. But they don’t have to do any of
that,” said Lauryn Williams, a former Olympian who is now a financial
planner in Dallas at her firm Worth Winning.
Instead, work on the basics: Get an emergency fund together, because
things could go wrong at any moment. Set up your retirement accounts –
the NFL, by the way, actually has a pretty good one. And the default
place to put your money should not be your cousin’s bar or your friend’s
laundromat; it should be a low-fee index fund that tracks the stock
market.
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Dallas Cowboys quarterback Brooks Bollinger (R) is sacked by New
York Giants' Mathias Kiwanuka during the fourth quarter of their NFL
football game in East Rutherford, New Jersey, November 2, 2008.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
Next, learn from the mistakes of others before you. Several NFL greats have sued
former financial advisers: Cowboys legend Dez Bryant sued his for fraud, breach
of fiduciary duty and gross negligence. Former running back Clinton Portis
earned $43 million over nine years, and yet because of financial mismanagement
had to file for bankruptcy. Indeed, he told Sports Illustrated in a 2017
interview that he at one point mulled killing his advisers (he changed his
mind).
Even Lauryn Williams, a money professional herself, was taken for a ride. She
was charged $10,000 a year by a financial adviser to pay her bills, even though
these days you can arrange automatic bill payments for free. Another planner put
some of her money in Bear Stearns, and then did not alert her when the company
lost nearly all of its value during the financial crisis.
The NFL players association, for its part, offers a database of financial
advisers who have clean records and have the certified financial planner or
certified financial analyst designations, but even that is no guarantee of
positive results.
To be certain that your adviser has no potential conflicts, such as getting fat
commissions to lure you into certain investments, consider a “fee-only” planner
– like those in a database available at NAPFA.org. They get paid to offer
advice, but do not get additional fees or an ongoing slice of your portfolio.
Another important tip: Do not think you have to spend like a Kardashian just
because more money is coming in. If you were living like a normal person before,
live like a normal person now, and just bank the rest.
If possible, do not even touch your principal. That is the money strategy of New
England Patriots legend Rob Gronkowski, affectionately known as Gronk. He lives
off cash from side deals like endorsements, but has not spent a penny of his
actual salary, according to his 2015 memoir, "It's Good to be Gronk." (His last
contract? Six years, $54 million.)
But such money smarts are the exception, not the rule. Said Bollinger: "Boy, I
wish I knew then what I know now."
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Bernadette Baum)
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