Log In

I'm a financial writer, but I'm not teaching my teenagers about investing. It's hard to get excited about stocks before you have an income.

Published 2 months ago3 minute read

Father sitting at a table between two teenage boys helping them with homework. There is a glass of water on the table, one of the teenage boys is using a laptop and the other is looking at a workbook.

The author (not pictured) is a financial writer but isn't teaching his kids about investing yet.Imgorthand/Getty Images

There's a lot of chatter about when parents should start teaching their kids about saving, investing, and building wealth for the future. I'm a longtime finance writer, and I love saving and investing, but I'm not teaching my kids to invest.

Here are a few reasons I'm not trying to get my kids started with their own brokerage accounts.

Other than their paltry allowances and occasional birthday and holiday cash gifts from relatives, my kids don't earn income. They don't have part-time jobs. When people don't have any income, it's hard to get too excited about investing.

And even if my kids did have part-time jobs right now, they likely wouldn't be getting a 401(k) plan or company match. Instead of investing in stocks, I would encourage my kids to just save extra cash from their part-time jobs in a high-yield savings account instead of worrying about locking up their money in longer-term investments like stocks. Young people who are just getting started in life might not want to bother with the volatility and risks of the stock market; just build up your emergency savings fund first.

In a 2022 National Endowment for Financial Education survey of American adults, 80% of respondents said they wished they had been required to take a financial education class in high school. But do you remember what it was like to be a high school student?

I doubt that most practical "adult life" advice about personal finance will feel relevant to teenagers, and a 2013 analysis of research backs this up, finding that 20 months or more after the time of intervention, financial education had "negligible effects on behavior." If you try to teach high school students about 401(k) plans and diversified asset allocations, it goes in one ear and out the other. Kids are unlikely to understand things like credit card debt when they're too young to have a credit card; I didn't either when I was that age.

The idea of buying stock exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or opening a Roth IRA account probably feels bizarre and out-of-touch with my teenage children's reality. I believe my kids will be ready to learn more about investing when the time is right — when they're actually ready to start saving for retirement at their first job. My kids already know some of the basics of saving and investing, but they're not worried about picking stocks. And speaking of picking stocks…

Origin:
publisher logo
Yahoo Finance
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...