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Strategies & Market Trends : Income Taxes and Record Keeping ( tax ) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: VincentTH who wrote (1209)8/1/1998 6:42:00 PM
From: Robert A. Green, CPA  Respond to of 5810
 
Software for Traders to ease tax preparation.

Barron's Online has a great story this weekend, "Heavy Duty"
about the software program, "Financial Navigator" finnav.com

All the below is a cut a paste of Barron's Online. I hope they don't mind this. Barron's Online is a great service at the Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition. I strongly recommend the service.

"The rich really are different. It takes a substantial portfolio to qualify as truly affluent, which last week's Barron's cover story defined as being able to walk away from your job and live comfortably on the return from your investments. If you're fortunate enough to fall into that category, however, personal finance programs such as Intuit's Quicken and Microsoft's Money might not be up to the task of helping you manage your wealth."

Financial Navigator 6.7, the cornerstone of the product line, currently
available for $299 (for a single user), doesn't yet have the online connections
of Quicken or Money. But the upcoming version 7.0 will use Internet
connections to bank accounts though those capabilities are not yet fully
implemented. Navigator Access, an add-on program ($199), provides online
securities price updates. Version 6.7 can track a wide range of investments
and assets, from typical IRA, Keogh and 401(k) accounts to the more
complex, such as executive stock options and oil and gas working interests.

Once the program is installed, you have to set up a chart of accounts, either
accepting the "typical user" defined in the program, or building your own by
choosing from among Financial Navigator's 500-plus choices. This
exemplifies why Financial Navigator appears to be aimed at
financial-management pros rather than typical individual investors. The
single-user version allows you to track up to five different entities, which are
defined as sets of books.

The three main areas of the program -- transaction entry, report preparation,
and account maintenance -- are accessed from a pull-down menu or from a
button on the icon bar. Unlike Quicken and Money, which coach you through
every step, Financial Navigator assumes some familiarity with
financial-management concepts, such as knowing the difference between
income and assets, and double-entry bookkeeping.

The program's strength is in managing a complex financial situation, such as
interests in partnerships, trusts, multiple businesses, multiple currencies and
intricate investment scenarios. Financial Navigator tracks stocks, bonds,
options, short sales, partial sales, multiple purchases and sales of the same
security, and asset depreciation. When you define a particular item, the
program automatically classifies it for tax purposes, and generates data for tax
schedules such as Form 1040, Schedules A, B, C, D, E, F, Passive Activity
and Working Interest. Exporting data to tax preparation programs such as
TurboTax or the BNA Income Tax Spreadsheet is possible using the add-on
DataBridge ($49). Separate reports can be generated based on specific asset
classes, or you can choose an overall consolidated financial statement.
Additional reporting capability is possible through Navigator Impressions 1.0
($99), an add-on that provides charting and graphing in a wide variety of
formats. The upcoming version 7.0 is fully compatible with Microsoft Office,
however, which will facilitate generating reports.

Financial Navigator also includes small-business accounting capability,
allowing you to incorporate a wholly owned business into your overall
financial statements easily. You can generate payroll and invoices as well as
reports that should satisfy a bank's loan officer.

Financial Navigator's investment management capabilities are what really set it
apart from Quicken and Money for high-net-worth individuals. It not only
tracks the usual securities and mutual funds, but can also keep tabs on real
estate, collectibles, royalty interest, trusts and estate assets. Dividends can be
tracked both as cash and as reinvestments, and gifts of securities are also
handled well. Stock purchase plans, precious metals and the current value of
executive stock-option programs can be tracked, too. Through the chart of
accounts setup, you can organize your investments in a wide variety of
categories. Version 6.7 includes options for reports that include mid-term
capital gains to satisfy the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997.

Another add-on of interest to investors is Navigator StockWeb ($99-$199
per year), an online service that updates your portfolio with current price and
dividend information, sparing you the need to enter those numbers manually.
StockWeb acts in many ways like the soon-to-be-defunct Investor Insight,
providing automatic access to performance and volume charts for stocks and
mutual funds as well as news, profiles, quotes, research data, SEC filings,
market indexes and industry information. Much of the information accessible
from StockWeb is available for free or for a small fee if you want to go
digging for it yourself; but StockWeb makes it all tie in nicely to the data
already painstakingly entered into Financial Navigator.

The publisher invites financial management experts and Financial Navigator
users to an annual conference, which for 1998 was recently held in Northern
California. Registered users are sent a newsletter with tips on using the
program as well as financial management information, along with invitations to
Financial Navigator training seminars, which are useful for new users trying to
get a handle on such a complex program. There also is a lot of help available
on Financial Navigator's Web site, which is updated whenever a new problem
is identified and solved. Technical support is also available from live helpers
for a fee after an initial free period.

One glaring omission from Financial Navigator is
the ability to read Quicken or Money files, which
would enable those who have outgrown the
mass-market financial management programs to
upgrade easily. The tedious setup process and
the need for various add-ons are the downside to
using Financial Navigator; once it's up and
running, though, the professional-style reports are
worth the work. Check out its Web site for a
demo.

Update: Investor Insight, Intuit's
subscription-based online financial information service, will be phased out on
August 31. Intuit representatives say that most of Investor Insight's functions
are now available on the Web site (www.quicken.com) for free. Portfolios
with more than 50 equities in them cannot be processed there, however,
which has displeased some subscribers. Financial Navigator plus StockWeb
can act as a substitute for those with complicated portfolios, albeit at greater
cost, both in terms of the initial expense and the time needed to set up the
files.

"Financial Navigator International, a 10-year-old (ancient for this business) company, publishes a suite of programs that might fill the bill of dealing with complex finances, if you're willing to deal with its corresponding complexities. Financial Navigator is the sport-utility vehicle of this software category -- big and rugged with numerous add-ons, but occasionally difficult to drive. Indeed,if your finances are complex enough to need Financial Navigator, you may well want to leave the driving to a financial chauffeur, who might make better use of the program's capabilities."