Friday, April 20, 2007

Education Savings Accounts

ShareBuilder - Welcome page My sister is pregnant with her and her husband's first baby. Her baby shower is tomorrow, so my wife and I are driving up to Sacramento for the baby shower tomorrow afternoon. Never having had a baby before, my sister naturally started a baby gift registry at a department store or two and registered for all sorts of cute but impractical baby paraphernalia. In an effort to be the practical counterpoint to my sister's impractical albeit enthusiastic baby shopping list, I have decided to start and fund an Education Savings Account (ESA) for my soon-to-be-nephew for my sister's shower gift. I believe that I will have to wait until my new nephew gets his social security number to start the account (somebody please correct me if I am wrong about this), but I am glad to be the voice of reason amongst so much estrogen-laden baby enthusiasm.

I realize that it is a relatively boring gift for a baby shower, but an ESA will be one of those gifts that is only highly appreciated after the fact. Plus it will make future gift giving incredibly easy, as we can just make an additional contribution to the account for birthdays, holidays, etc. I will be starting the account via Sharebuilder.com due to the $0 minimum balance requirement and the ease of setting up automatic investments in case my sister decides to make regular contributions to the account. I will probably just start the account with some money put into an S&P 500 Index ETF (e.g. SPY), since with eighteen years to grow the account will be able to weather the ups and downs of periodic market fluctuations without any trouble. And the initial investment should multiply considerably in the span of 18 years, given regular contributions, dividend reinvestment, and appreciation. This seems a much smarter idea to me than wasting (er...excuse me...ahem...*cough*..."spending"...) money on baby jumpsuits that will be outgrown in a matter of months.

Any thoughts from the peanut gallery? Boring new uncle or practical older role model? You be the judge!

4 comments:

Ms. MiniDucky said...

Cute new baby clothes are always a must, but I guarantee that everyone else will already have that covered. I've actually wanted to do the same thing for a good friend's baby shower, for the same reasons: it's practical, it'll have long lasting value, and there is a LOT of baby "stuff" that people think is necessary, but isn't. 55% chance that your gift will be one of those items. Uh, I don't yet know if we have to wait until we get the SSN before we can start an account, though, will let you know if I find out first. And you know, pop on by if you find out first.

frugal zeitgeist said...

I think it's a fantastic gift. Good choice!

Living Almost Large said...

ETF will eat your contributions. Better off with an index fund.

But nice gift. If you wanted to give an acceptable gift, I try to give money to a bookstore to encourage reading for my nephews and neices.

IIO said...

That is a sensible gift. Nice blog. Why do you want to get rich?

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