What I Blow Money On
Part of the benefit of having extra money is the ability to spend some of it. I believe in cutting costs, investing wisely and building wealth and security. Yet I also believe in enjoying life along the way, if not then what is the point? Any of us could die tomorrow so the key is to balance living for today with planning for tomorrow. So what are some of the things I spend more money on then I should or some of the stuff I just buy when I am bored? Here are a few,
- Starbucks Coffee - I will admit it, I am a caffeine fiend. When I made a lot less money Starbucks was a luxuary that I enjoyed once in a while, now I don’t go a day without a Vente Cappuccino or two. This is extravagance, a waste, a senseless spending that I end up with nothing to show for. Still it makes me happy and I have no real debt to worry about any more, I don’t stop investing to fund it and I only pay in cash so I have the money in my pocket each week to cover the expense.
- My Animals - I have dogs, cats and a lot of reptiles. As a child I wanted to be a herpetologist (a biologist who studies reptiles) but the lure of business was too powerful and I never went to college to pursue the biology degree. When I didn’t have much money and was in debt heavily I kept no pets, today I have an abundance of animals around me. I do breed the reptiles and one day they may pay for themselves but for now all the animals are an expense that never returns any money. Yet the dogs and cats bring joy to me and the family and the reptiles allow me to fufil my childhood dream of being a researcher working with snakes.
- Gadgets - I have all kinds of electronic do dads and I buy something new at least every month. Cameras, software, media players, etc. I just love technology, I like seeing what you can do with it, what you can create and what the latest craze is before it hits. Some of the stuff like my Blackberry has a real purpose for work and organization but most is just for fun. I didn’t need a Sony Alpha DSLR but I bought one because I wanted it. I always pay cash for these gadgets but I must admit I blow money on them. Most are never used to turn a profit I just enjoy having them.
Now let’s say I am bored and just want to go out bumping around with my wife to shops and what not. Doing so will almost always result in spending money! We are all human though and just sitting at home counting money can get old and you don’t always want to really plan an activity so “shopping” (our parents window shopped but we seem to have failed to inherit that ability) has become an American past time. Here are some things I have done to allow me the activity with out totally blowing it.
- Silver Coins - I am a huge fan of American Eagle Coins and often during a jaunt out I stop by one of several local coin shops and buy one or three of them. I keep them in plastic tubes and have been doing this past time for about 10 years now. I occasionally buy more numismaticly valuable coins, mostly older silver dollar and silver half dollar coins. The Eagles have a fixed value against the silver market price (at least newer ones do) so they are decent investments. The other coins have a bit of “subjective value” based on both the silver and collector markets combined. Still even they have a basis based on the price of silver. I will never make a mint on this but there is a value to these coins that will grow. So I get to browse, spend money and not just throw it away.
- Houses - I shop for houses all the time and the beauty of this is multiple. There are always countless new model homes to take a look at, walk around in etc. You never impulse buy a home so that is nice, I shop a lot and buy very seldom. The biggest value is I know my real estate market cold, I know exactly what different types of homes in different areas sell for. So I do know a deal when it pops up. This is the best rule I can give you if you want to invest in real estate some day, window shop houses for a year or so first. Record how long those “great deals” take to sell and keep your whits about you. In time you find gems and when you do you will know it.
- Books - I love knowledge and I love to shop for books, both audio and print. To help with my addiction I shop mostly at Half Price Books so I pay less per book then buying new. A used book is no big handicap to reading it so I just can’t see paying full price unless I want a new book. Then here is the best part, some of these go into my home library but others I read, am done with and sell them back to half price books. They generally pay about 20% or what I bought them for.
So there you go some ways I admit to just blowing money and other ways I stave off boredom with shopping that doesn’t just reduce my net worth dollar per dollar.
Filed under Personal & Home | Comment (1)Write it down and cut the spending
Here is the most painless way I know to cut your spending effectively. For the next 30 days just write down every dime you spend, every bill, etc should be in your check book already but write those down anyway too. Get a simple note book and record every single dime, read it every night before bed and just keep going. Write your required spending (bills you have to pay, light, heat, mortgage/rent, cable, weekly groceries, etc.) in one section of the book and all other expenditures in another section.
Don’t judge yourself much just record every penny. I mean if you give the kid a quarter for a gum machine write it down. That coffee at Starbucks, that bag of candy, what ever just record it. Do this religiously for 30 days, don’t cheat trust me you will benefit from this simple action.
Now try something I think might shock you. Take just the expenditures on things other then required bills and total them for each week. Make a graph of your weekly spend over 4 weeks. Odds are you will spend a lot less in week 4 then you did in week one. Remember no one told you to spend less, told you what to cut your spending on etc.
The simple act of being aware of what you spend, where and how you spend it will connect with your inner common sense. We all waste money, hell I do it! The key is to waste it consciously not unconsciously. Choose your play don’t just spend until it is gone.
Those of you who make middle to upper incomes will benefit the most with this technique. In fact the more you make the more you need to do this. This was the technique I used to reel myself back in as I went up in income. The more you have the more you tend to blow as you get to a point where you can pay all your bills easily and have good investments going on you get very complacent with what is left.
No matter your income be it 20K a year or 200K a year I challenge you to give this record keeping a try, most will be very shocked and pleased with the results over 30, 60 and 90 days. If you don’t do this all the time whenever you start to blow to much money, use it as a tune up. Remember you are your own boss and you need to be kicking your own ass once in a while.
Filed under Personal & Home | Comment (0)Pay yourself first and last
We have all heard the saying, “pay yourself first” if you haven’t you really need a financial tune up. Pay yourself first simply means just that, set up your savings, retirement, etc., allocate a certain amount from each check then pay into your accounts just like they are a bill. This is the way all wise investors manage their investments that are funded by their direct incomes.
The other side of the coin though is paying yourself last. Please note this does not mean you stop paying yourself first! Here is how it works, this month let’s say you pay into your investments, you pay all your bills and now at the end of the monthly cycle you have a surplus of funds. Say you generally carry 200 dollars extra between the last pay check of the month and the first check of the new month. This month ends and you have 425 dollars in your account.
How did it get there? Who cares! It is there, perhaps your expenses went down, you made more money, you got a win fall, I don’t care how it showed up there is one and only one things you should do with it. GET IT OUT OF YOUR CHECKING ACCOUNT NOW! Move it to savings, dumb it into your IRA, move it to another account, do anything (other then spending it) to get it our of your check book.
Checkbooks are meant to manage money that you intend to spend, you will never save efficiently because your psyche says that this money is spendable. Move the money to “savings” and even though you can move it back with a mouse click via your online bank account you mind set about this money changes. You will ask yourself, “do I really need to move this money out of savings?”, “why am I doing this?”, “do I really need to do this now?”, etc. In the end you will save more and spend less, you will make better decisions.
You don’t need to lock away this money until you are 59 and 1/2 years old in your IRA for this to be effective. Just the simple act of putting it into a bank savings account will change the way you see this money and that will change how you manage, allocate and spend it. Do it every single time you end with a surplus, be it a dollar, a dime or a thousand dollars, move it to savings and in a little as a years time you may shock yourself.
Filed under Personal & Home | Comment (0)Help your children save for college
OK I have to give credit for this idea to my Brother-In-Law (we will call him Mark). I took a different approach to saving for college for my son. In our case simply set up a 529 plan for our son, made contributions as part of our financial plan and he is now in college and can do four years (including housing) as a state college with no debt and almost on out of pocket expense. While this seems wonderful a bit of it is already biting us in the rear. Our boy just doesn’t seem to realize how lucky that makes him. I am glad we did it but what I am about to lay out for you is a much better solution at least to a degree.
What Mark has been doing since both children were born is both simple, cost free and may I say genius.
Every kid has birthdays, Christmases, Easters and many other times that relatives, friends etc send them cards and gifts and very often money. Mark has required that 50% of his two children’s financial gifts (no matter how small or large) go into savings accounts to be used for college. He choose very safe investments and did not elect to use a 529 due to its restrictions.
What does this mean to his kids? Upon Graduation both will have over 20,000 dollars in funding toward schooling or life in general if they choose not to go to conventional college. I should point out that this is not a family the gets huge amounts of money for each event, we are talking 20 bucks here, 5 bucks there, may be 50-100 for a Christmas that goes into these funds. Mark requires his kids to save this money no matter the source. If they come over to my house and I give them a ten a piece for spending money, Dad puts 5 bucks a piece away, just like clockwork. The fact that 18-20 years is a very long time for money to grow, takes care of the rest.
Some of the family thinks this is “taking away the fun of just being a kid”, most of our family is BROKE by the way! Taking advice from the broke is a good way to not only be broke but build generations of kids and grandkids that are broke too. Mark wisely has ignored this and I think when his kiddos go to college or start a business or do what ever with their money as adults they will put more value on the funds.
Now we did teach our son to save, we helped him invest in stocks, set up accounts and always made him put some money away. Yet if I had it to do over I would have also had some allocation go to his college fund directly from his hands. Not just to increase the funds available but to give him a true sense of ownership, responsibility and gratitude for the fact that this money is available.
What I know is this my niece and nehpiew will have real options when they finish high school. Options my brother-in-law would be hard pressed to provide on their household income. All this from the simple wisdom of “pay yourself first”. Consider it the next time your little ones get a card from Grandpa Joe or Aunt Betty. A few less do-dads today for a real kick start to life tomorrow.
Filed under Business & Marketing | Comment (0)Why you should never buy whole life insurance
This is going to be a brief and short post, I am going to put this simply DO NOT EVER purchase whole life, universal life or any other name they ever come up with to try to sell it to you. This has been written on a lot so if you want to know more then I give you here, do a bit of research online and you will find a lot more information to back my suggestion.
Let me be blunt, Life Insurance is for when you die, nothing more and combining it with anything is a mistake. Your life insurance should be about 10 times your annual income if you are supporting a family. The reason for that is simple, 10% returns are quite doable with solid investments so your survivors can invest the proceeds, draw 10% a year and not deplete the money for a very long time. This effectively replaces your income for longer then your working life.
Now to carry that much whole life insurance would be extremely expensive, beyond the budget of most working Americans. An insurance agent will try to show you how whole life builds “cash value” but this is nothing but an illusion.
Remember life insurance pays out when you die! When you live a long time (most of us do) it is good for the Insurance company, you pay and they do not. So when you buy term insurance you pay the amount that very smart economists and math PhD’s have determined will be profitable for the insurance company based on average life expectancy. In other words a fair market price that covers you if you die during the term.
Now look at whole life, you pay a LOT MORE for the same amount of insurance (the risk incurred by the insurer) but the insurance company has the same level of risk. Now if you are a good stooge and pay way to much for way to long, they will then give you some of your money back some day. In the interim they invest your money at market rates of 10-15% returns. So they make that interest, they hold your money and they tell you how great it is that they will give some back.
If you like that how about this. Go get 100,000 dollars, send it to me and I will hold it for you, I will even pay out 2% interest on it. Twenty years from now you can have your 100K back, plus 2% interest per year or you can just let me keep holding it until you die. When you die, I will give the money to who ever you tell me do. Sound like a good deal to you? Of course not! Oh and yea if you ever need the money I will loan your own money to you and you can just pay it back with a bit of interest. Sound like a scam? It’s not you just pay in your 100K in installments and they call it whole life!
So here is what you do, buy the insurance you need on 20 year level term and invest the rest of the money in good solid investments. You make the 7, 10, 12 or 15% depending on your risk tolerance and ability, you retain the ownership and control of your money. If you die in the interim your loved ones are covered, if you live till the end of the term and have invested well then you should not need as much insurance. Perhaps you might buy a bit less for say 10 years and by then if you still need insurance you have done something very wrong.
Don’t let the insurance guy tell you how hard it is for a 70 year old to get insurance! At 70 you don’t need life insurance if you have done a good job of saving and investing. You are not leaving behind a young wife and 3 kids, you just need to be buried. If you can’t save enough money to get yourself put in an box and under six feet of dirt in 70 odd years something is drastically wrong.
I won’t be writing on this subject very often as it is pretty well known and accepted by most good financial professionals today. I just wanted to get it out right away because it is a huge mistake often made by young people who end up in front of a well trained but undereducated insurance agent.
Filed under Personal & Home | Comment (0)