August 2015 - In This Issue:
The light breaks through on Ailsa Craig
UNITY: 
The Documentary 
Client Appreciation Event
UNITY the Movement

On August 12th Ailsa Capital hosted many of our San Diego clients at a premiere screening  of the documentary UNITY.  If you weren't there, we missed you. As a previous employee and relative of Ailsa Capital, the filmmaker Shaun Monson had a powerful message to share.  Ailsa Capital was pleased to be able to share it with our clients. Thank you to all of those who were able to attend.

Please let us know if you would like to be invited to any of our upcoming events, we are happy to host you.

"Merely satisfying customers will not be enough to earn their loyalty. Instead, they must experience exceptional service worthy of their repeat business and referral."
- Rick Tate, Author of The Customer Revolution
CONTACT US

AILSA CAPITAL 
272 E 12200, Suite 100 
Draper, Utah 84020

Toll Free (866) 511-0302
T (801) 501-0302
F (801) 501-0313
San Diego (619) 952-3561

[email protected]

     

Visit us on the web at www.ailsacapital.com

Know someone who needs a trusted source for Wealth management and insight?

Click the link below to send them a copy of this newsletter with a note from you.  Let us here at Ailsa know what we can do to follow-up with your referral.




Dispelling Myths about 529 Plans
529 plans might be a good fit for you to save
on future education expenses. 
As kids all across America return to school for another year, parents' and grandparents' thoughts turn to the affordability of a quality education. Often the best way to save for children's education costs is a 529 plan. We will explore some myths surrounding these plans to determine if a 529 account might be right for you.

Myth 1: You have to contribute to a 529 in your home state. That statement is false with regard to 529 college-savings plans, in which money is invested in a portfolio of securities on behalf of a beneficiary. Any U.S. resident can contribute to a 529 college-savings plan in any state. Contributing to a plan offered by your home state might offer an added bonus in the form of a state income tax deduction, but that shouldn't be your sole consideration. If your state's plan is poor (with high fees and poor investment options, for example) looking at plans outside your state might be worth forgoing the tax break.

Myth 2: You have to send your child to a school in the state where his 529 plan is offered. ALSO FALSE. A 529 college-savings plan is fully portable, meaning assets can be used for college expenses in any state and at some institutions abroad regardless of which state's plan holds the account.

Myth 3: You can only get a tax deduction if you contribute to your state's plan. Usually true, but NOT always. In fact, residents of Arizona, Kansas, Maine, Missouri, and Pennsylvania get a state income tax break on 529 contributions made to any state's plan. Elsewhere the benefit is restricted to contributions to in-state plans, with deduction limits varying from state to state and some states offering tax credits.

Myth 4: If you save in a 529 account for your child, it will hurt his or her financial aid prospects. Possibly, but not as much as you might think. Yes, financial aid calculations generally do take into consideration 529 assets, but money in a 529 account owned by the parents or a dependent student counts far less than assets owned by the student outside a 529. In fact, non-529 student-owned assets carry more than 3 times more weight in financial aid calculations than do assets held in the parents' names. So no, 529 accounts aren't completely impact-free when it comes to financial aid, but the impact is relatively minor.

Myth 5: If your child doesn't go to college, you'll lose the money. Unused 529 money does not have to go to waste, or to the tax collector. It can be used to help pay another family member's college costs simply by changing beneficiaries or transferring funds to the family member's existing 529 account. And the list of potential recipients is rather long, including siblings, first cousins, parents, grandchildren, aunts and uncles, and even in-laws. If you do decide to cash out the plan, you'll have to pay federal and state income taxes on earnings, plus a 10% penalty (waived if the beneficiary dies, becomes disabled, or gets a scholarship).

Myth 6: All 529 plans are the same. This is a potentially costly mistake some investors make. Like many investment products, 529 plans may look similar from the outside, but once you get under the hood you'll find major differences that determine how effective they can be at helping you meet your college-savings goals. Fees, fund offerings, glide path (the rate at which the asset allocation switches from equities to fixed-income in age-based portfolios), and even ease of use vary from plan to plan. Fees, in particular, can have a corrosive effect on 529 assets, and can vary not only from state to state but also within the same plan.

529 plans are tax-deferred college savings vehicles. Any unqualified distribution of earnings will be subject to ordinary income tax and subject to a 10% federal penalty tax. Now is the time to


Put your concerns to rest.  Find out how a 529 plan will benefit you. 

Housing Construction in Good Shape
Back to school season often has families rushing to sell or buy their current home and get into a new school district before kids are back in school.  The housing market reflects these moves.
The chart below depicts the state of the housing construction industry, suggesting there is still plenty of room to grow in this slow, but steady recovery we've seen so far. The latest starts and permits data from the Census Bureau, however, shows a slightly exaggerated picture, as it is the multi-family category that's been making overall housing construction look better than it is in reality. Both starts and permits picked up in June, as multi-family activity rose sharply amid expiring construction tax incentives for developers in the New York City area. As a result, the housing construction revival is probably not as strong as the numbers seem to currently suggest. Nonetheless, improvements for single-family construction still look healthy, and continue to trend up closer to the 10% rate year over year.