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How to Split $250,000 in Student Loans in a Divorce
Divorce is stressful and complicated and hurts on so many emotional and financial levels. It becomes even more complex when you throw in the additional financial stress of student loans â whether they are loans the spouses took out for their own education or for a childâs college. It can be hard to deal with even after you have decided whether a student loan is a marital or separate debt.
Student loans are a complex liability because there are so many different and complicated repayment methods. These repayment plans come with such acronyms as PAYE, REPAYE, IDR and PSLF.
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The borrower’s circumstances can also play a huge factor in deciding how to deal with student loans properly. For example, you might not have to repay your student loans in total if you qualify for student loan forgiveness for various reasons. The most common are taxable long-term forgiveness or Public Service Loan Forgiveness.
How student loans are handled in a divorce can be tricky. Depending on the laws of the state in which the divorce occurs, if one of the parties incurred student debt before the marriage, it could be considered separate property. That is especially common if the borrower’s partner received no economic benefit from the student loans or if the parties come from certain states that have community property laws. (1)
But what happens if you have Parent PLUS loans that you took out for your children? Let’s imagine the case of Jack and Jill, a couple who have been married for years but are now divorcing. Letâs say that a few years ago Jill took out $250,000 of Parent PLUS loans under her name to pay for their two children’s college education.
This is a common situation. Arguably, because the Parent PLUS loans were taken out during the marriage for the benefit of their children, they ought to be considered marital debt. (1)
Analyzing the case
Jack and Jill are both 55. Jack makes $180,000 a year working for an accounting firm, and Jill makes $45,000 working for a non-profit.
Jill has $250,000 of federal Parent PLUS loans that charge a 6% interest rate. As a result, considering these loans as marital debt, Jack and Jill together expect to pay $2,776 a month, or $33,312 a year. For both Jack and Jill, it is a significant financial burden that impairs their ability to plan for retirement and other long-term goals.
What if Jack and Jill refinance?
If Jack and Jill refinance at 3%, it will reduce the monthly payments to $2,414 a month. Although the $362 monthly savings are welcome, they are not a significant improvement in their situation.
Divorce has a way of making money scarce. In many divorces, the division of assets and debts approaches 50%, meaning that the burden of paying for her half of the loans would be significantly greater on Jill, who only makes $45,000 a year. Even with an asymmetric division to reduce Jill’s share, it would likely not be easy to sustain. (2)
How their house factors into the equation
Jack and Jill have agreed to sell the family home as part of the divorce. They expected to net about $250,000 after expenses and mortgage repayment to be divided equally. Jack wants to use the proceeds from the sale to pay off the entire parent loan balance. Jack had heard horror stories about other parents not being able to retire because of parent loan payments, so he wanted to get rid of the balance and not worry about monthly payments that could continue into his retirement.
So, he and Jill decide to split the loans down the middle. It means that Jack will pay Jill $125,000 from the sale of their shared home, since the Parent PLUS loans are in Jill’s name. With that, Jack’s share of the parent loan debt is addressed, and he believes that Jill should use her share of the sale to pay her half of the debt.
One of Jill’s loan options could save big bucks
Here’s the thing. With the $125,000 that she would receive from Jack and her $125,000 share from the home sale, she could pay off the debt and move on to other issues. Jill was all in on the idea of each side paying half of the loans until she spoke to a Student Loan Strategist and decided to take a different route with the $250,000 of Parent PLUS loans still in her name.Â
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Jill has always been passionate about providing support for vulnerable children worldwide. She works full-time at a local charity, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. She loves her work and has no plans to retire for at least 10 years. In this case, Jill could qualify for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF). It means that she could get her loans forgiven tax-free after she makes 120 monthly payments in an Income-Driven Repayment plan. (2)
Here is a summary of Jill’s parent loan repayment options:
Option No. 1: A flat cost of $250,000
She could make a lump-sum payment of $250,000 from the sale of their marital home ($125,000 from Jack + $125,000 of Jill’s share) to pay off the entire loan balance.
In this case, the total cost of the parent loan is $250,000. This way, Jill can get rid of the parent loans in her name. However, Jill still needs to figure out her post-divorce life, including how to pay for her new housing and how to invest the other assets she may receive from Jack from the asset division from their divorce.
Option No. 2: A cost of up to $333,062Â Â Â
She could keep the $250,000 proceeds and pay off the loans with the standard federal 10-year repayment plan or private refinancing.
The cost of paying off $250,000 of federal loans with a 6% interest under the default 10-year standard repayment plan is $2,776 per month and $333,062 total over the 10 years. However, if Jill could find a private refinancing deal at 3% interest for the same 10-year term, the cost is $2,414 per month and $289,682 total, which is a savings of $362 per month and $43,379 in total.
It may make sense for Jill to do that if she needed to use the $250,000 home sale proceeds to buy a new house to live in, and if she could afford the $2,000+ per month of payments for the student loans. However, this is not an attractive option for Jill since her monthly income is $3,750, and the loan payments would absorb much of it. Even if her divorce agreement provided for alimony, it would still be difficult.
Courtesy of Saki Kurose
Option No. 3: A cost of just $29,766
Finally, Jill could enroll in an Income-Driven Repayment plan and pursue Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).
Typically, federal Parent PLUS loans are only eligible for one of the Income-Driven Repayment plans, called the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan, even after being consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan.
Still, in some cases, these loans can be “double consolidated” (to learn more, please read How to Pay Off $130,000 in Parent PLUS Loans for Just $33,000) and qualify for cheaper Income-Driven Repayment plans.
 For example, let’s say that Jill double consolidated her parent loans, enrolled in Pay As You Earn (PAYE), and pursued Public Service Loan Forgiveness for 10 years. Then, filing taxes as Single every one of those years, working for the 501(c)(3) employer and making the same level of annual income ($45,000, adjusted annually for inflation), she pays $205 to $283 monthly and a total of $29,059 over 10 years. (3)
The remaining loan balance (which happens to be $430,633 under this scenario) is forgiven tax-free under current tax rules. In this case, assuming that Jill makes the $205~$283 monthly payments out of her cash flow, she gets to keep all $250,000 from the home sale proceeds and pay off the parent loans for just under $30,000. She can use the $250,000 to buy a new home for herself or invest it in retirement, whatever she and her wealth strategist thought would work best. (4)
The burden is still on Jill
Did we mention that student loan repayment options can be complicated? Jill should ensure that she has her ducks perfectly aligned before engaging in the double consolidation/PSLF strategy. In the worst case, she could have missed something and may remain liable for the entire loan and the full payment or end up with a very large tax bill. Hence Jill should get an experienced student loan strategist to counsel her on her strategy.
If she felt inclined, she could discuss this PSLF option prior to the divorce with Jack and divide the benefit between them. However, Jill should remember that the burden is still on her because under this strategy, she has to stay in the PSLF program for 10 years. That obligation is not quantified but should be considered in the asset division.
Summary
Sometimes we can find a silver lining in the worst situations. In their divorce, Jack and Jill could take advantage of a quirk of student loans and could save up to hundreds of thousands of dollars. As a result, Jill could have an additional $220,234 to support her lifestyle.
Student loan repayment strategies can be very different depending on the situation. For example, it would be an entirely different situation if Jillâs income were higher, her employment did not qualify her for Public Service Loan Forgiveness, or she retired earlier than expected. There are still pitfalls ahead for her.
Solutions to student loan problems tend to be unique and difficult to generalize. If you have federal student loans, the short- and long-term costs can vary significantly depending on your income situation and the repayment plan you choose. However, as a federal student loan borrower, remember that you do not always have to pay back the entire loan balance.
Everyone’s situation is different, especially in divorce, especially with student loans. If you are unsure what to do, reach out for help. It might pay off!
(1) Consult an attorney to figure out what applies to you. (2) Consult a financial professional with a specialization in student loans. (3) Note: The projection in the PSLF option assumes that, among other factors such as Jillâs PSLF-qualifying employment status and family size staying the same, Jillâs income grows 3% annually, which increases her monthly payment amount each year. Individual circumstances can significantly change results. (4) Consult a financial planner.
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10 Tax Deadlines for April 18 (It’s Not Just the Due Date for Your Tax Return)
Time is running out if you haven’t filed your 2021 federal income tax return yet. This year’s tax filing deadline is April 18 for most people (April 19 for residents of Maine or Massachusetts) â so the day of reckoning is almost here. But filing your federal tax return isn’t the only thing you should be thinking about on April 18 â there are a few more tax deadlines to worry about, too.
You might have to take some action by April 18 if you’re self-employed, saving for retirement or college, have a health savings account, or employ a nanny. There are other reasons why you might have a tax-related deadline on that day, too. And, of course, overlooking a tax deadline could cost you money â either in additional taxes, penalties, or interest. So, as a quick reminder, here are 10 tax deadlines for April 18 that you don’t want to miss. Check them out to see if something unexpected applies to you.
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Copy Trading Defined – Can You Make Money Mirroring a Professional?
Stock Market Today: Stocks Scratch Out Meager Gains
Wall Street seemed to be en route to another day of losses, but a strong jobless-claims report helped stocks gain some momentum ahead of the week’s final session.Â
The Labor Department on Thursday said that for the week ended April 2, just 166,000 Americans filed for unemployment benefits â the lowest number since November 1968 (though also what they were for the week ended March 19). It also easily flew in lower than the 200,000 claims expected.
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“Initial jobless claims looked too good to be true,” says Edward Moya, senior market strategist at currency data provider OANDA. “Today’s impressive claims data reminds Wall Street that the labor market is ‘firing on all cylinders’, which should allow the Fed to continue to solely focus on inflation.”
However, while the markets did manage to turn higher, it was primarily led by defensive names. Pfizer (PFE, +4.3%) and Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO, +4.2%) were among the best performers in the healthcare sector (+1.9%), while Costco (COST, +4.0%) and Target (TGT, +5.7%) helped lift consumer staples stocks (+1.2%).
The end result was modest gains among the major indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 0.3% to 34,583, the S&P 500 improved 0.4% to 4,500 and the Nasdaq Composite eked out a marginally higher finish at 13,897.
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“We continue to see defensive trading patterns in the options market, especially at the onset of earnings season, and remain surprised that the Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, remains relatively subdued,” says Steven Sears, president and chief operating officer of asset-management firm Options Solutions. “If earnings reports are as stressed as many investors believe they could be amidst these extraordinary economic and risk conditions, we could see a sharp investor re-rating of risk assets.”
YCharts
Other news in the stock market today:
- The small-cap Russell 2000 fell 0.4% to 2,009.
- U.S. crude futures slipped 0.2% to $96.03 per barrel, marking their third straight loss.
- Gold futures gained 0.8% to settle at $1,937.80 an ounce.
- Bitcoin retreated 0.8% to $43,414.98. (Bitcoin trades 24 hours a day; prices reported here are as of 4 p.m.)
- Deutsche Bank analyst George Hill downgraded Rite Aid (RAD, -17.2%) to Sell from Hold and slashed his price target on the pharmacy chain to a mere dollar per share from $16. The bruising analyst note comes ahead of RAD’s fourth-quarter earnings report â due out after the April 14 close â in which Hill will closely be watching the company’s guidance for its next fiscal year. Why? “Because RAD needs to generate $190 million to $200 million in cash annually to cover its debt service costs, plus another $200 to $250 million to cover its store maintenance capital expenditure requirement, meaning RAD needs to generate ~$400 to $450 million in annual adjusted EBITDA [earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization ] to continue as an operating company,” Hill writes in a note. Anything below that $400 million mark and “the equity arguably has no value as the company is not in a position to generate real returns to shareholders,” he adds.
- Ford Motor (F) skidded to a 2.9% loss after Barclays analyst Brian Johnson cut his rating on the automaker to Equalweight from Overweight (the equivalents of Hold and Buy, respectively). The analyst said Ford remains “vulnerable” to an ongoing global semiconductor shortage, while additional macro headwinds like commodities inflation could pressure margins. “Despite the selloff, we believe investors are still underestimating risks to the sector â and in particular to suppliers – from inflation and production pressures â as well as the impact of interest rate hikes on portfolio allocations,” the analyst says.
Buffett Makes Another Big Buy
One of the day’s most noteworthy gainers was printer leader HP (HPQ, +14.8%), but it had nothing to do with any economic indicators. No, HP’s good fortune was a vote of confidence from none other than the Oracle of Omaha.
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Last night, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway disclosed a huge 11.4% stake in HPQ stock, immediately making it a dominant shareholder in the PC-and-printers name. Berkshire bought up 121 million shares worth $4.2 million, surpassing asset manager Vanguard as the top holder of HPQ.
Much of the Berkshire Hathaway portfolio represents bets by one of the greatest investors of all time, so as most of our readers know, we regularly keep tabs on what Buffett is buying and selling. But he has been busier than usual of late, also taking a massive stake in oil play Occidental Petroleum (OXY) and outright buying insurer Allegheny (Y) in the past month or so alone.
Berkshire’s most recent splash might leave some investors scratching their heads. But we explain why and how the HPQ stake move looks like a classic Buffett bet.Â
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How to Avoid Taxes on Social Security
Stock Market Today: Tech Stocks Lag as Treasury Yields Keep Rising
Tech stocks underperformed in today’s session, much as they’ve done over the last few months.
The technology sector gave back 1.4% as the 10-year Treasury yield climbed 5.2 basis points (a basis point is one-one hundredth of a percentage point) to 2.71% â a level not seen since March 2019. The longer-dated bond yield is up six days in a row amid expectations the Federal Reserve will undergo an aggressive monetary policy tightening campaign with 50-basis-point rate hikes and the sale of $95 billion in assets each month.Â
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Energy, meanwhile, was the best-performing sector, rising 2.8% as U.S. crude futures jumped 2.3% to $98.26 per barrel. Financials (+1.0%) and material stocks (+0.6%) were other pockets of strength in today’s trading.
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At the close, the Nasdaq Composite was down 1.3% at 13,711, with chip stocks Nvidia (NVDA, -4.5%) and Marvell Technology (MRVL, -3.8%) among the day’s biggest decliners. The S&P 500 Index (-0.3% to 4,488) also ended lower, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.4% to 34,721) finished the day in the green.
For the week, the Nasdaq shed 3.9%, the S&P 500 gave back 1.3% and the Dow slipped 0.3%.
YCharts
Other news in the stock market today:
- The small-cap Russell 2000 shed 0.8% to 1,994.
- Gold futures rose 0.4% to finish at $1,945.60 an ounce.
- Bitcoin fell 1.5% to $42,777. (Bitcoin trades 24 hours a day; prices reported here are as of 4 p.m.)
- EPAM Systems (EPAM) was one of the biggest gainers today, adding 9.9% after the software development company said it is ending operations in Russia. Stifel analyst David Grossman maintained a Buy rating on the tech stock in the wake of the news. “We interpret today’s announcement as a positive as it removes the most visible overhang from a customer standpoint and accelerates EPAM’s initiative to geographically diversify its labor base,” Grossman writes in a note.
- HP (HPQ, -7.1%) was downgraded to Neutral (Hold) from Buy at UBS Global Research. This came on the heels of yesterday’s announcement that Warren Buffet bought HPQ stock and occurred amid a “confluence of factors including incremental signs of softness in low-end Consumer PCs following recent checks over the past month along with the likelihood of a slower buyback next year following the expected close of the Plantronics deal in late calendar-year 2022,” writes UBS analyst David Vogt.
Stock Selection is Becoming Increasingly Important
Next week, we’ll start to get a look at the latest inflation figures with Tuesday’s release of the consumer price index. Plus, the start of earnings season will offer an initial gauge of how corporate America fared during a period of scorching prices.
This will be especially important to investors looking to target firms that have been able to withstand red-hot inflation thanks to rock-solid balance sheets.
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A focus on quality stocks will give them a better shot at building resilience in their portfolios, according to Tony DeSpirito, CIO of BlackRock’s U.S. Fundamental Active Equities. He says that stock selection is becoming more important as investors “must discern which companies are most impacted by rising costs, and which have the pricing power to pass those higher costs through to consumers and maintain their profit margins.”
But stock picking isn’t for everyone, and some investors may want to leave making these judgments to the pros. Those looking for a human touch could check out the Kip 25 â Kiplinger’s list of our favorite low-fee mutual funds. Another great place to look is the small but expanding group of actively managed exchange-traded funds (ETFs). This list of equity and fixed-income ETFs aligns with a variety of risk tolerances and investing horizons, and all are run by seasoned stock pickers.Â
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[Update] Citi Rewards+ Credit Card: Minimum 10 Points/trx, 20,000 Signup Bonus, 10,000 Redemption Points, No Annual Fee
Update 4/5/22: The signup bonus is now 20,000 points after spending $1,500 within 3 months, updated below (see other past offers here). They also added a new signup perk for a limited time to get 5 ThankYou points per $1 spent on air travel and hotel purchases up to $6000 for the first 12 month. […]
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