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Fund for goddaughter

Posted on 3/1/11 at 11:17 am
Posted by BRWhoDat34
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2009
1043 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 11:17 am
I'm going to be godfather for my friends first child (daughter). The Christening is this weekend. I'm trying to think of a good gift to get her. I can do something easy like buying a specific gift, but I've been thinking about setting up some kind of fund that I can contribute to monthly or annually that she will get when she turns 18, 21, graduates college, or something along those lines.

Anyone else been godfather and gotten a gift? If it was a fund of some kind how/where did you set it up? TIA
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
175969 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 11:34 am to
best place is OT.
Posted by BRWhoDat34
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2009
1043 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 11:58 am to
quote:

best place is OT.


I made this post on the OT and someone suggested money board for questions about the fund.
Posted by TheHiddenFlask
The Welsh red light district
Member since Jul 2008
18384 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 12:17 pm to
Would you be interested in a college savings account?

If so, check out a 529 plan

LINK
Posted by BRWhoDat34
Baton Rouge
Member since Aug 2009
1043 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:21 pm to
quote:

Would you be interested in a college savings account?

If so, check out a 529 plan


That's the kind of thing I was thinking about. My concern is that I won't be wanting to put a lot in each month as I'm still young and just out of college. I have student loans and I'm trying to save at the same time. I wish I had something like this plan for when I went to school, but oh well.

What do you think a realistic sum of money to contribute each year would be that could be significant in the end for her?
Posted by TheHiddenFlask
The Welsh red light district
Member since Jul 2008
18384 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:29 pm to
quote:

What do you think a realistic sum of money to contribute each year would be that could be significant in the end for her?


for reference:

100 bucks a month for 18 years at a 6% interest rate would yield just under 40,000 for her in 18 years.

50/month would yield just under 20k
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
175969 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:43 pm to
quote:


100 bucks a month for 18 years at a 6% interest rate would yield just under 40,000 for her in 18 years.

50/month would yield just under 20k



thats what parents are for. Give your goddaughter a teddy bear.
Posted by NELAtigers
Member since Nov 2010
1279 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:51 pm to
something small. you taking responsibility for her if something happens to her parents should be enough.
Posted by Ponchtowntiger
Member since Jan 2011
40 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:51 pm to
You may want to just give her a saving bond or CD; something you are not stuck paying monthly for the next 18 years.
Posted by TheHiddenFlask
The Welsh red light district
Member since Jul 2008
18384 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:53 pm to
I'm just answering the guys question.

I give my goddaughter money for her savings.

At one year old, it's not like they really appreciate a teddy bear.

Maybe when she's a teen I'll buy her something cool.
Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
175969 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 1:57 pm to
quote:

Maybe when she's a teen I'll buy her something cool.


they don't appreciate at this time either.
Posted by Zilla
Member since Jul 2005
10643 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 2:05 pm to
let her parents worry about her college...be the good guy and open her a car savings account
Posted by adavis
North of I-10
Member since Aug 2007
5935 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 2:19 pm to
You could get her a small life insurance policy. They start at about 2 bucks a month. I would just do a savings account though. They pay nothing in interest right now, but you don't have a fixed amount that you have to contribute. Most everything else (college savings plans and annuities) require a minimum of $25 per month. If you can afford that, a 529 is a good choice.
Posted by saint308
LA
Member since Oct 2010
496 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 2:19 pm to
I buy my godchildren one share of XOM per year. That covers birthday and Christmas. I then buy them something small ($10-$15) as a gift on their birthday and Christmas.
Posted by TheHiddenFlask
The Welsh red light district
Member since Jul 2008
18384 posts
Posted on 3/1/11 at 2:22 pm to
quote:

I buy my godchildren one share of XOM per year. That covers birthday and Christmas. I then buy them something small ($10-$15) as a gift on their birthday and Christmas.


Transaction cost on that are pretty significant, no?
Posted by agdoctor
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2004
3193 posts
Posted on 3/2/11 at 2:47 pm to
when my kids were little they used to get US Savings bonds for birthdays and such plus a small gift.
Posted by TheHiddenFlask
The Welsh red light district
Member since Jul 2008
18384 posts
Posted on 3/2/11 at 3:04 pm to
quote:

when my kids were little they used to get US Savings bonds for birthdays and such plus a small gift.


I was going to do that for my god daughter, but it was going to take 18 years to double in value, which is in effect locking her into an 18 year loan at just under 4%.

Not awful, but not the kind of environment I would want to lock her into.
Posted by agdoctor
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2004
3193 posts
Posted on 3/3/11 at 3:03 pm to
quote:

locking her into an 18 year loan at just under 4%


used to be they guaranteed the interest rate.
* 4% for bonds issued March 1993 - April 1995
* 4% for bonds entering an extended maturity period since March 1993
* 6% for bonds issued or entering an extended maturity period between November 1986- February 1993
* 7.5% for bonds issued or extended from November 1982-October 1986

My kids were born in 84 and 89 so they got a very good rate
Posted by blueslover
deeper than deep south
Member since Sep 2007
22792 posts
Posted on 3/5/11 at 12:01 pm to
nickels before they mint new cheaper ones in the coming year or so. $188 of rolls will fit into a .30cal ammo can at about 40lbs. Double or more a year or two after new minting. Unlimited multiplication by the future of metals. Pre '64 coins have a 25X+ return currently at melt prices.

physical property they can watch appreciate
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