U.S. baby boomers fall behind in paying off mortgages: Fannie Mae

Older American homeowners are trailing the prior generation in paying off their mortgages, complicating their finances if they carry the loans into retirement, a report from Fannie Mae released on Thursday showed.

This lag has persisted even with an improving economy since the last recession and a housing recovery in the aftermath of the housing bust in the late 1990s, Patrick Simmons, Fannie Mae’s director of strategic planning, wrote in the article.

The baby boomer generation, or those born in the 1946 to 1965 as defined by the Census Bureau, amounts to 33.4 million households.

Fewer of the oldest baby-boomer homeowners, who were 65 to 69 years old in 2015, were mortgage-free when compared with their pre-boomer counterparts who were the same age in 2000, according to Simmons.

This group’s outright homeownership without a mortgage was 49.4 percent, 10 percentage points below the pre-boomer group at the same age.

The expected mortgage-free rates among younger baby-boomer homeowners were estimated to run higher than the oldest boomers. For example, the rate for the youngest boomers is estimated at 58.0 percent, just under 2 points below that for pre-boomers.

”However, even with the post-recession acceleration in free-and-clear homeownership, Boomers appear unlikely to attain mortgage-free retirements at the same rate as the predecessor generation,” Simmons said.

The oldest of the baby boomers, who are already past the traditional retirement age, with mortgages were more than three times more likely to experience a housing cost burden than were those who owned their homes outright, he said.

“The relatively high incidence of housing debt among Boomer homeowners has the potential to strain their retirement finances,” Simmons said.

Possible ways for these older borrowers to ease their financial burden include refinancing to pare their monthly payments, shorter-term mortgages that accelerate full loan repayment and moving into a less expensive home, he said.

 

Source: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-economy/u-s-payrolls-shrink-in-september-after-hurricanes-harvey-irma-idUSKBN1CB0D3

5 Types Of Fraud In Business That Could Put You In A Bind

Running a business is hard enough when everything goes smoothly. But when you’re an entrepreneur, the unexpected happens. You need to prepare yourself for every possible situation, including fraud.

Business fraud isn’t as rare as you might think. It’s important that you know how to prevent and deal with fraud if it comes your way.

Types Of Fraud In Business

Small businesses with less than 100 employees experience a median loss of $154,000 due to fraud, according to the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE). This number is higher for small businesses than most large companies.

Employees and customers are just a few people who might take advantage of your small business. Recognize types of fraud in business and learn how to protect yourself.

Here are a few types of common small business fraud you might face.

1. Identity Theft

Identity theft could cost your business thousands of dollars. Fraudsters could steal your business’s identity and use it to access your credit.

People might get their hands on things like financial statements, bank statements, or your federal tax identification numbers. It’s also possible to have information taken from your computer.

To prevent identity theft, make sure you keep your statements and sensitive information secure. If you have physical copies, keep them locked in filing cabinets that only you can access. For digital copies, make sure you use difficult usernames and passwords, and avoid falling for phishing scams. Don’t hand your information out to anyone.

Fraudsters could also have access to your business bank account if employees lose paychecks. Paychecks are very sensitive since they contain your business’s routing and bank account numbers.

If a lost paycheck gets into the wrong hands, fraudsters could access and withdraw money from your bank account. To limit the damage this could do to your business, consider separating your payroll account from the rest of your business’s money.

Having a separate payroll account means potential fraudsters would only have access to a limited amount of funds. You only deposit enough money to cover employee paychecks with a payroll account.

You might also consider paying employees via direct deposit instead of paychecks. With direct deposit, you put the employee’s wages directly into their account. That way, you do not need to pass out checks with sensitive information. Some states allow employers to enforce mandatory direct deposit.

2. Payroll Fraud

Payroll schemes are twice as common in small businesses as opposed to large companies, according to the ACFE. There are a few different ways that payroll fraud can occur at your business.

Employees might ask for pay advances without paying them back. Or, employees might lie about hours worked on their timesheets. Employees could also get co-workers to clock in for them even if they aren’t at work.

Do background checks on all employees before you hire them. And, you should audit payroll accounts so you can catch fraudulent behavior early on.

Use SaaS payroll services so you can approve payroll before you pay employees and keep track of their pay rate and hours within your system. Don’t wait until your business has doled out huge sums of cash to start keeping an eye on things!

3. Money Fraud

Because there’s so much illegal cash circulating in the United States, you might come across fake bills. Money fraud can happen without you or the customer even noticing. But, counterfeit money is worthless when you go to deposit the cash at the bank.

The most common counterfeit bills are high-valued, like $100 bills. If you accept counterfeit money, you won’t receive any revenue from the sale. Worse, you could end up giving real currency as change for a fake bill.

Protect your small business from money fraud by learning how to tell if money is fake. There are different features you should be able to spot on legal currency, like raised printing, microprinting, watermarks, and color-shifting ink. And, teach your employees to check cash before accepting it.

4. Return Fraud

The majority of small businesses that sell goods have experienced return fraud in one way or another.

There are different types of return fraud. Some customers might purchase a product, use it, then return it even though nothing is wrong with it. Or, you might have fraudsters who steal products from you and attempt to return them to make a profit.

Return fraud can be damaging to your business. You might not be able to wipe out all return fraud, but you can limit it based on your policies.

To prevent return fraud, you can require receipts. And, you could tighten your policies so that customers only receive store credit after a certain time period. Although you want customers to be happy, you also don’t want your business to lose money from fraud.

5. Workers’ Compensation Fraud

Workers’ compensation fraud is another type of small business fraud you could come across if you have employees.

As a business owner, most states require that you purchase workers’ compensation. Workers’ compensation insurance pays your employees if they become injured or ill at work.

There are different ways workers’ compensation fraud can occur, so you need to be vigilant. Employees might get injured outside of work and say they got the injury at your business. Or, employees could make up an illness or injury.

How do you protect your business from workers’ compensation fraud? You need to document everything, keep accurate records, and look out for signs of fake injuries.

Author: Mike Kappel

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikekappel/2017/10/04/5-types-of-fraud-in-business-that-could-put-you-in-a-bind/3/#53b64fc91b60

New Updates on Hurricane Tax Relief (10-05-2017)

Hurricane tax relief (10-05-17)

On October 2, 2017, the President signed H.R. 3823, the Disaster Relief and Airport and Airway Extension Act of 2017, which provides temporary tax relief for victims of hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. The following is a brief overview of some of the provisions of this Act.

  • Casualty losses: Affected taxpayers can calculate their deduction without regard to the 10% floor. Also, taxpayers aren't required to itemize to take a casualty loss. 
  • Withdrawals from IRAs and retirement plans: Taxpayers located in the disaster areas may withdraw up to $100,000 from IRAs and qualified retirement plans as qualified hurricane distributions. The 10% penalty doesn't apply, the distribution is included in income ratable over three years (by election), and withdrawals can be recontributed within three years.
  • Loans from retirement plans: For qualified taxpayers, the limit on loans from qualified retirement plans is increased to $100,000 and the first loan repayment is delayed for one year.
  • Charitable contributions: Contributions made between August 23, 2017, andDecember 31, 2017, for Harvey, Irma, or Maria relief efforts are not subject to the 50%, 30%, and 20% of AGI limitations under IRC §170(b). Note that hurricane contributions must be in cash. For taxpayers that do not itemize their deductions, the contributions can still be deducted in full in addition to their standard deduction.
  • Credits:
    • Employers in hurricane Harvey, Irma, or Maria disaster areas will be eligible for a new employee retention credit that equals 40% of the qualified wages for each eligible employee, up to the first $6,000 of wages.
    • For taxpayers in the hurricane areas, if their earned income for 2017 is less than their earned income for 2016, they may elect to use their earned income for the 2016 tax year for purposes of calculating the Earned Income Credit and the Child Tax Credit.

California does not conform to any of the provisions of the Disaster Relief Act. However, any distributions or loans made from a qualified plan under the Act will not disqualify that plan for California purposes.

Source: Spidell