Managing your finances to succeed in the world
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Category — Saving

Retirement Fund

Open up an equity account with a discount broker online. Do it right now. Open up a regular account an IRA account and a Roth IRA Account. This should cost you $0. If your brokerage wants more find another one.

In a regular brokerage account you can buy and sell stocks, mutual funds, index funds, etfs and options. You use after tax dollars and you pay taxes on you profits. You can take the money out any time you want.

In an IRA account you can buy and sell stocks, mutual funds, index funds, etfs and options. You use before tax dollars (this means that when you file your taxes you deduct the amount you put in your IRA account from your income so you don’t pay taxes on it). You pay taxes on your profits but only when you withdraw the funds. You can’t take the money out until retirement age (if you do you pay a penalty.) except for an approved purpose (like buying your first home). You must start taking your money out at age 71(?).

In a Roth IRA account you can buy and sell stocks, mutual funds, index funds, etfs and options. You buy stocks with after tax dollars (it has no immediate effect on you tax returns). You don’t pay taxes on your profits. You’re restricted on when you can and must withdraw the money just like the IRA account.
Roth IRA

April 1, 2008   No Comments

Savings Missteps: “The Plasma TV” problem

So you’ve bought into the importance of savings and you’ve been socking money away with regularity. One day you look at your bank balance and you’ve saved a couple of thousand dollars.

So what happens? This might be more of a guy thing but, a light goes on in your head and an idea arrives fully formed, “Plasma TV”.

When we’re talking about saving were talking long term. We’re talking about accumulating capital whose purpose is to generate a return and grow.

If you want to buy something that you have to save up for, then you have to set up another account for that purpose.

February 26, 2008   No Comments

Saving: The “I’ve got to go to the gym” problem

There are a couple of obstacles you’re likely to trip over when you finally figure “Hey, saving is a great idea.” The First one is the “I’ve got to go to gym” problem.

You know how you keep telling yourself that you have to go to the gym and when you finally do you work out to much or too hard?This can happen in saving, where you figure “yeah 10-15% is good but I think saving 30% would be Great!!!” 

So what happens? You put your money into savings but then you don’t have enough to pay your bills so you have to take the money back out. This violates the sanctity of your savings account. It’s like popping a soap bubble.Once you get into the habit of taking money back out it’s not a savings account anymore, it’s a temporary resting place.

Save the right amount and put it away. 

February 26, 2008   No Comments

$128,000 Plasma TV

Investing is the enterprise of trying to make money with your savings.The amount of money you make is normally quantified as an annual percentage yield of the money invested.

To illustrate, imagine you have a magic box that only opens on New Years Day. This New Years Day you put $100 in the box. Next New Years Day you open the box and there is $110; your invested $100 and your $10 gain. This represents a Yield of 10% (ten percent - 10 per hundred).

There is a handy rule of thumb called the “rule of 72″. Simply put, you divide 72 by your yield and the result is an approximation of how long it will take you to double your money. In this example you divide 72 by 10 and you get 7.2.

So if you keep making a 10% yield, your money will double in 7.2 years.Now here is where it gets interesting.

Let’s say you’re 21 years old and you just graduated from college. Your parents give you a graduation gift of $2000. Your dad tells you that you should put it in your “magic box” to save for Retirement. You want to buy a big ass flat screen TV which with tax, cables and the wall mounting brackets comes to exactly $2000.

So how much did the TV cost? Of course it cost $2000 but what would have happened if you’d put it in your “magic box” and then taken it out when you turned 65.

We’re talking about almost 44 years. 7.2 goes into 44 over 6 times.So your money would have doubles 6 times.So $2000 would become $4000 then $8000 then $16000 then $32000 then $64000 then $128000.

$128,000

February 23, 2008   No Comments

The Pocket: How much to save

If you’re like me, at one time or another you got paid and you put all your money in your pocket. You went about your daily tasks and did what all good Americans are supposed to do; buy stuff.

When you had spent all your money you sat down and tried to figure out where you spent it all. You all know you’ve done this and you know that there is no way in the world that you could account for all of it. I’m pretty sure I dropped some of in the street when I was pulling it out of my pocket.

That part that you can’t account for, that’s the money you should be saving. You won’t miss it. You don’t even know where it went.You save this money up front.

This is called “Paying Yourself”. It’s about 10-15% of your income.

February 23, 2008   No Comments

The Pocket: Time Machine

How many of you have had this happen?  Winter comes and you go to your closet to get a coat. In the coat you find $10.Most of us have experienced this. And how did it make you feel? Great?

This is an example of the pocket time machine. This is what saving is. You take money and send it to the future you. You’ll be glad you did.

Many people just send debt and work and worry into the future.By taking some positive steps now you can have a better tomorrow.

February 23, 2008   No Comments

Step 1 is to get some money

Let’s start with Step 2…Save some money.This is the first lesson you need to learn. Pay yourself first.Every expert, every advisor, every planner will tell you the same thing.If  you could not get credit you would have to save up money to make any large purchase;If you have credit and have monthly payments to make, you need to save money so that you can continue to make the payments if you have an interruption in your income.

You need to save money to give yourself the freedom to take time off from work.You need to save money if you want to start building your fortune.Simply put, you need to save money. 

February 23, 2008   No Comments