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Session Notes - October 17, 2025

Session Overview

  • Date: 2025-10-17
  • Duration: ~30 minutes
  • Format: Knowledge point testing on NEW topics (not previously covered)
  • Main Topics: RMD rules, Time value of money, Disability insurance

Practice Problems - New Topics Tested

Question 1: Required Minimum Distributions (F.51)

Topic: F.51 Distribution rules and taxation - Retirement Savings & Income Planning domain (18% of exam)

Problem Given: Sarah (born 1952, turned 73 in 2025) has traditional IRA worth $500,000 as of Dec 31, 2024.

  • Part A: Does she need RMD in 2025?
  • Part B: How much RMD? (distribution period = 26.5 years)

Student's Answer:

Part A:

  • "Yes, because is more than 72.5 years old so she need to take RMD before 12/31 after her birthday"
  • ✓ CORRECT conclusion (yes, needs RMD)
  • Minor correction: Threshold is age 73 (not 72.5) for those born 1951-1959

Part B:

  • "$500k / 26.5"
  • ✓ PERFECT FORMULA
  • Correct calculation: $500,000 ÷ 26.5 = $18,868

Follow-up on April 1 delay and penalty:

  • Student understood: "She can delay her first withdrawal for that year until the April of the following year"
  • ✓ CORRECT - First RMD only can be delayed to April 1 of following year
  • Student calculated penalty: "$18,868 times 0.25 = $4,717"
  • ✓ CORRECT - 25% excise tax on missed RMD

Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Perfect grasp of:

  • RMD age requirements
  • RMD calculation formula (account balance ÷ life expectancy factor)
  • April 1 delay exception for first RMD
  • 25% penalty for missed RMD
  • Risk of doubling up RMDs if delay first one

Key Learning:

  • RMD ages: 73 for born 1951-1959, 75 for born 1960+
  • First RMD can delay to April 1 (but creates 2 RMDs in one year)
  • 25% penalty for missed RMD (reducible to 10% if corrected quickly)
  • Roth IRAs: NO RMD during owner's lifetime

Question 2: Time Value of Money (B.12)

Topic: B.12 Time value of money concepts and calculations - General Principles domain (15% of exam)

Problem Given: Maria wants $100,000 in 10 years. Investment earns 6% per year compounded annually. How much to invest today?

Student's Answer:

  • Set up equation: "x × (1.06)^10 = 100k"
  • Solved: "x ≈ $55,256.64"

Evaluation:

  • ✓ PERFECT EQUATION SETUP - understood concept immediately
  • Calculation slightly off: Correct answer $55,839.48
    • (1.06)^10 = 1.790848
    • 100,000 / 1.790848 = $55,839.48
  • Student's $55,256.64 close but not exact (likely calculator rounding)

Understanding Level: EXCELLENT - Demonstrated:

  • Clear understanding of PV/FV relationship
  • Correct formula application
  • Strong mathematical skills
  • Note: Student already knew this topic before our sessions

Key Concepts Introduced (not tested):

  • Future Value (FV) = amount in the future ($100k)
  • Present Value (PV) = amount today (~$55,839)
  • Compounding frequency (annual vs monthly would change formula)

Question 3: Disability Insurance - Own Occupation vs Any Occupation (C.20)

Topic: C.20 Disability income insurance - Risk Management & Insurance domain (11% of exam)

Problem Given: Tom (surgeon, $400k/year) shopping for disability insurance.

  • Option A: "Own Occupation" - $5k/year premium, $15k/month benefit
  • Option B: "Any Occupation" - $2.5k/year premium, $15k/month benefit
  • Scenario: Hand injury prevents surgery, but can work as consultant earning $100k/year
  • Question: Which policy pays?

Student's Answer:

  • "Option A will reimburse but Option B will not because he's not qualified for the any occupation, he still can do something"
  • "I think Option 1 is better"
  • ✓ CORRECT CONCLUSION - Option A pays, Option B doesn't

Initial Understanding:

  • Correctly identified outcome
  • Had terminology slightly mixed ("option 1 only covers all occupation") but understood the concept

Explanation Given:

Own Occupation Policy:

  • Pays if cannot perform YOUR specific occupation
  • Even if can work elsewhere
  • More expensive ($5k vs $2.5k)
  • Best for high-income specialists (surgeons, dentists, lawyers)
  • Tom gets benefits + consultant income

Any Occupation Policy:

  • Only pays if cannot perform ANY reasonable occupation
  • Harder to qualify for benefits
  • Cheaper premium
  • Tom can work as consultant → no benefits

Modified Own Occupation (introduced):

  • Middle ground option
  • Pays if can't do your job AND aren't working elsewhere
  • Benefits stop if work elsewhere

Premium Difference:

  • Own Occupation costs 2x more because easier to qualify for benefits

Understanding Level: VERY GOOD - Grasped the outcome correctly, just needed terminology clarification on which is "own" vs "any" occupation.

Key Learning: Own Occupation = better coverage, more expensive, recommended for professionals with specialized skills.


New Topics Covered Today

Topic CFP Code Confidence Notes
RMD Rules & Calculations F.51 High Perfect formula, knows age thresholds, penalties, April 1 exception
Time Value of Money (PV/FV) B.12 High Already knew concept, perfect equation setup
Disability Insurance (Own vs Any Occupation) C.20 Medium-High Correct outcome, needed terminology clarification

Coverage Map Updates Needed

F.51 Distribution Rules and Taxation: NEWLY COVERED

  • Add: RMD age requirements (73 vs 75)
  • Add: RMD calculation formula
  • Add: April 1 delay exception
  • Add: 25% penalty for missed RMD

B.12 Time Value of Money: NEWLY COVERED (student had prior knowledge)

  • Add: PV/FV calculations
  • Add: Compound interest formulas
  • Note: Strong existing foundation

C.20 Disability Income Insurance: NEWLY COVERED

  • Add: Own occupation vs any occupation
  • Add: Premium differences
  • Add: Modified own occupation (introduced)

Session Progress

Strengths Observed:

  • Excellent on RMD calculations - immediately grasped formula
  • Already has strong time value of money foundation
  • Quick to understand insurance policy differences
  • Strong mathematical reasoning

Areas Noted:

  • Time value of money: Knew concept already (possibly from prior education/work)
  • Disability insurance: Needed terminology clarification but concept clear

New Topics Added to Knowledge Base: 3 major topics

  • Moved from 23/73 topics (32%) to 26/73 topics (36%)

Action Items for Next Session

Continue Testing New Topics:

  • More distribution rules (early withdrawal exceptions, 72(t))
  • Education funding vehicles (529 plans, Coverdell ESA)
  • Estate tax calculations
  • Business taxation (still high-priority gap)
  • Trust types and taxation

Practice Topics Covered Today:

  • More RMD scenarios (inherited IRAs, multiple accounts)
  • TVM with different compounding periods
  • More disability insurance scenarios (elimination periods, benefit periods)

Summary Statistics

Session Duration: ~30 minutes New Topics Tested: 3 topics Performance: Excellent - all 3 topics understood well Coverage Increase: 32% → 36% (3 new topics added)


Notes

Session 5 - Student is 20 days from exam. Focused on testing NEW topics from exam outline that haven't been covered. Student performed excellently on all 3 tests:

  • RMD rules: Perfect understanding
  • Time value of money: Already had strong foundation
  • Disability insurance: Grasped concept quickly

Student requested to stop session to handle other tasks. Progress saved. Next session should continue testing uncovered topics or dive deep into business taxation (high-priority gap).

Repository Reorganization Completed: Consolidated all progress tracking to single cfp-exam-coverage-map.md file for easier maintenance.