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Expecting a baby? Here’s how to get your finances ready

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Back-to-school shopping is expected to break records, but uncertainty around Covid-19 could mean a cut back on spending. CNN’s Vanessa Yurkevich reports.

Preparing for a baby doesn’t just stop at picking the name or setting up the nursery. It also requires a lot of financial planning.

The estimated cost for raising a child from birth to age 17 is an average of $233,610, or $12,189 a year, for a middle-income family (with two children) in the US, according to data published in a 2017 US Department of Agriculture report.

“It’s easy to get swept up in the emotions of the pregnancy and ignore practical matters,” said Deborah Meyer, a certified financial planner and CEO of WorthyNest. “It’s never too soon to begin financially planning for a new baby.”

Here are four money moves you can make to prepare for your little bundle of joy:

1. Create a baby budget

There’s no getting past the “B” word when expecting a child. In fact, having a budget is one of the most important money steps you can take.

When creating a budget, be realistic about your expenses and keep it flexible. Researching ahead of time what certain things will cost can go a long way.

Childcare is a good starting point, since it’s often the largest expense on many family budgets.

According to a 2019 report by Center for American Progress, a progressive think tank, the cost of childcare averages 14% of the incomes of middle-class working American families with two children who are earning $50,000 to $100,000 a year. It’s more than double that percentage for a lower-income family, taking up an average of 35%.

Also, make sure to factor in both pre-baby and post-baby expenses. That could include out-of-pocket medical costs, prenatal classes, as well as baby-related items like diapers and car seats.

In many cases, family members or friends may help supply basic items, such as clothes, or other big-ticket baby items, like a stroller. Asking for hand-me-downs is another way to save on clothing, as well as items like toys and furniture.

However, even if those purchases are covered, Meyer suggests allocating for at least $150 a month in additional baby costs.

By doing so, you can provide your family a healthy financial cushion to cover other recurring or unexpected expenses associated with a baby.

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2. Talk money and make a plan with your partner

Many companies offer a form of maternity or paternity leave. You should check with your employer on the type of family leave plans they offer and the details of your healthcare coverage. Then, talk to your partner about next steps.

“Start to wrap your mind around what those early months would potentially look like,” said Danna Jacobs, a certified financial planner and founding partner of Legacy Care Wealth.

Decide if one or both parents will be staying at home or working. From there, you can get a better sense of available income and household cash flow during the first couple months of your baby’s life.

You should also consider your household’s retirement contributions and whether you’ll need to cut back or increase that amount based on your budget. Prioritizing paying off high-interest debt, such as a credit card, and finalizing any plans to fund a 529 savings plan for your newborn are other essential steps you should consider.

In cases where discussing finances with your partner proves to be uncomfortable or difficult, try working with a financial professional, like a financial adviser or coach, to keep you on track with financial goals and your budget.

“Navigating money conversations with your significant other may be awkward, even when you’re not expecting a baby,” said Meyer. “A good financial coach or planner can be helpful to ease the tension if every money conversation ends with an argument.”

Working with a financial professional can also help you navigate major lifestyle changes, such as getting a safer car or moving into a bigger space to make room for a newborn.

3. Secure more savings

Having adequate savings can set your new family up for financial success.

Usually this takes the form of an emergency fund, which financial experts suggest should consist of anywhere between three to six months’ of living expenses.

Add a baby into the equation and that can be more than you needed before. Since your expenses will be shifting, you’ll want to account for that by increasing the amount of your emergency savings.

To come up with a suitable target number, account for monthly expenses such as daycare, baby food, mortgage and car payments.

“It’s always good to get an idea of what that number looks like and start saving for it in advance before you have the additional cash flow hit from baby expenses,” said Jacobs.

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4. Maintain a thrifty mindset

In addition to asking for hand-me-downs, other ways to save can include nursing (if possible), opting in for multifunctional baby gear, buying secondhand items or clothes, making your own baby food, and having relatives babysit rather than paying for outside childcare.

Another way to save is to seek out other parents for advice.

“The biggest mistake is not speaking with other parents of toddlers,” she said. “They are slightly past the sleep-deprived newborn stage of parenthood but close enough to it to remember the extra financial expenses associated with a baby.”

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NJ Real Estate News Buying Home Selling Home

Selling Homes Privately, via ‘Pocket Listings,’ Is on the Upswing

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“Since the pandemic, real estate professionals have found ways around the policy,” said Matt Lavinder, president of New Again Houses, a home-flipping company. Brokers are using WhatsApp, Discord and Telegram chats to privately share listings as well, he said. “This has become a secondary market.”

Pocket listings exist in a gray space between legal and illegal, said Andrew M. Lieb, an attorney and the founder of the Lieb School, a licensed New York State real estate school. The U.S. Department of Justice has argued that the practice could violate antitrust laws. They are also potentially discriminatory.

“It could be argued that they violate the Fair Housing Act,” Mr. Lieb said, because they could contribute to disparate impact discrimination, a phenomenon in which a seemingly neutral policy is disproportionately unfair to one specific group. While no such case has yet to be brought to court, there is precedent: The National Fair Housing Alliance sued Redfin in October 2020 for setting minimum price requirements on the homes it lists, a practice the alliance alleges discriminates against minority communities. According to Morgan Williams, the alliance’s general counsel, both parties have agreed to stay further litigation pending active settlement negotiations. In the meantime, Redfin has yet to change its minimum-price policy.

“By analogy, this is the same concept,” Mr. Lieb said.

However, Glenn Kelman, the chief executive of Redfin, has been a vocal detractor of pocket listings, referring to them as “a relic from the real estate industry’s old history of perpetuating segregation” in a May 2021 opinion piece in Inman, a trade publication. And the national association’s loophole that allows for brokerage-exclusive listings, he said, has unintentionally created monopolies among bigger brokerages.

Not all brokers agree that pocket listings represent unfair competition or are damaging to minority groups.

“I let all my agents know that as long as you’re not advertising the property to the public, you’re good to go,” said Sharelle Rosado, a broker in Tampa. At her brokerage Allure Realty, she said the use of pocket listings has increased 40 percent since the start of the pandemic. She leans on connections with both sellers and developers to build her pipeline of potential off-market sales. They are particularly helpful, she said, when working with high-income buyers looking for homes in the $10 million range, where inventory has always been tight.

“A lot of people are not for pocket listings, but it helps our clients, and it’s beneficial to both sides,” she said. “And I don’t have to split the commission.”

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Are you interested to learn more about the Greater Princeton, New Jersey Market Conditions, feel free to contact me at 609-915-9665.

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Selling is All About Upgrades

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Upgrades & Uprovements!

The home improvement projects with the highest price increases to a home’s resale value are updating the kitchen ($1,200 cost / $2,850 price increase).

The next best ROI is painting the outside of the home ($900 cost / $1,815 price increase).

Home staging ($300 cost / $1,780 price increase).

Contact Rosy today at 609-915-9665 to discuss this and other options!

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