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how to budget personal finances

30, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

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'King of Crystal' Sinaloa Cartel Leader Ignacio Nacho Coronel <b>…</b>

(July 30) — Mexican troops have killed Ignacio Nacho Coronel, a top drug kingpin known as the King of Crystal, in a shootout as he tried to escape from a wealthy suburban hideout. His death is a rare victory for President Felipe …

Jennifer Lopez signs deal to become new 'American Idol' judge <b>…</b>

Jennifer Lopez has inked a deal to join American Idol's judging panel for its upcoming 10th season, an industry source tells People. The news dropped j…

AMD tops Nvidia in graphics chip shipments | Nanotech - The <b>…</b>

AMD passed Nvidia in graphics chip shipments in the second quarter, according to a marketing research firm. Read this blog post by Brooke Crothers on Nanotech - The Circuits Blog.

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'King of Crystal' Sinaloa Cartel Leader Ignacio Nacho Coronel <b>…</b>

(July 30) — Mexican troops have killed Ignacio Nacho Coronel, a top drug kingpin known as the King of Crystal, in a shootout as he tried to escape from a wealthy suburban hideout. His death is a rare victory for President Felipe …

Jennifer Lopez signs deal to become new 'American Idol' judge <b>…</b>

Jennifer Lopez has inked a deal to join American Idol's judging panel for its upcoming 10th season, an industry source tells People. The news dropped j…

AMD tops Nvidia in graphics chip shipments | Nanotech - The <b>…</b>

AMD passed Nvidia in graphics chip shipments in the second quarter, according to a marketing research firm. Read this blog post by Brooke Crothers on Nanotech - The Circuits Blog.

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personal finance planning

22, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

Web technology has revolutionized finance by making it easier than ever to monitor cash flow and track trends in your spending. Mint.com has been a leader in this realm for personal finance: its technology helps you track multiple accounts, analyze spending trends, and manage financial goals.

There isn’t a clear counterpart to Mint for businesses, though. That’s where inDinero, a Y-Combinator-funded startup, comes in.

inDinero, which launches today, is a web-based financial dashboard for small businesses. Like Mint, it aggregates financial data from bank accounts, investments, and other sources and places them in a simple, easy-to-navigate interface where you can quickly see your income, spending, recent activity, and your financial runway.

The app is divided into five parts: Dashboard, Income, Spending, Planning and Trends. Dashboard provides an overview of your business finances, Income provides detailed information about your income streams, Spending breaks down your different costs, Planning helps you set goals for your business, and Trends analyzes and graphs out spending and income trends in order to provide useful insights.

Businesses need this type of information in order to minimize costs while maximizing revenues. While solutions such as Mint also aggregate financial information and analyze it, they are not focused on small businesses. We look forward to seeing inDinero’s business toolset grow and evolve.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, jwohlfeil

For more Business coverage:

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  • Download our free apps for iPhone and iPad

Web technology has revolutionized finance by making it easier than ever to monitor cash flow and track trends in your spending. Mint.com has been a leader in this realm for personal finance: its technology helps you track multiple accounts, analyze spending trends, and manage financial goals.

There isn’t a clear counterpart to Mint for businesses, though. That’s where inDinero, a Y-Combinator-funded startup, comes in.

inDinero, which launches today, is a web-based financial dashboard for small businesses. Like Mint, it aggregates financial data from bank accounts, investments, and other sources and places them in a simple, easy-to-navigate interface where you can quickly see your income, spending, recent activity, and your financial runway.

The app is divided into five parts: Dashboard, Income, Spending, Planning and Trends. Dashboard provides an overview of your business finances, Income provides detailed information about your income streams, Spending breaks down your different costs, Planning helps you set goals for your business, and Trends analyzes and graphs out spending and income trends in order to provide useful insights.

Businesses need this type of information in order to minimize costs while maximizing revenues. While solutions such as Mint also aggregate financial information and analyze it, they are not focused on small businesses. We look forward to seeing inDinero’s business toolset grow and evolve.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, jwohlfeil

For more Business coverage:

  • Follow Mashable Business
  • Subscribe to the Business channel
  • Become a Fan on Facebook
  • Download our free apps for iPhone and iPad

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ASUS EP101TC Now Shipping with Android | Netbooknews - Netbooks <b>…</b>

Today the Netbook News team went down to the ASUS headquarters to hang out with the Eee Pad team, and we learned something that actually made us breath a sigh of relief. The EP101TC pad will dropping Windows CE and will be shipped with …

Rachel Maddow: Fox <b>News</b> Stoking Racial Fears Among Whites (VIDEO)

Rachel Maddow tore into Fox News again Wednesday night, accusing the channel of stoking racial fears among whites. Maddow used the channel's role in hyping the Shirley Sherrod story as a springboard for a broader discussion of the …

Navigate The 3D Globe of <b>News</b>

TV network ABC has released a custom ABC News iPad app that's interesting for two reasons—its clever use of HTML5 and the amazing rotating Globe of News.

Outside of Martin's West by Julia Delligatti

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ASUS EP101TC Now Shipping with Android | Netbooknews - Netbooks <b>…</b>

Today the Netbook News team went down to the ASUS headquarters to hang out with the Eee Pad team, and we learned something that actually made us breath a sigh of relief. The EP101TC pad will dropping Windows CE and will be shipped with …

Rachel Maddow: Fox <b>News</b> Stoking Racial Fears Among Whites (VIDEO)

Rachel Maddow tore into Fox News again Wednesday night, accusing the channel of stoking racial fears among whites. Maddow used the channel's role in hyping the Shirley Sherrod story as a springboard for a broader discussion of the …

Navigate The 3D Globe of <b>News</b>

TV network ABC has released a custom ABC News iPad app that's interesting for two reasons—its clever use of HTML5 and the amazing rotating Globe of News.

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Outside of Martin's West by Julia Delligatti

personal finance books

21, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

I recently reviewed Gary Rivlin's important new book, Broke USA, for the Huffington Post. Thus, I was stunned when I noticed that the book had been reviewed by the Wall Street Journal.

I wondered if the reviewer, Katherine Mangu-Ward, and I had read the same book.

f you go by her philosophy, payday lenders and other members of the “poverty industry” are upstanding entrepreneurs, performing a service for society!

She waits until the second to last paragraph to “mention” that payday lenders are providing this wonderful service at “something like a 300% to 400% interest rate.”

Ms. Mangu-Ward makes a historic comparison of those in the “poverty industry” with loan sharks of a different era. I'm not sure that Mangu-Ward, a Yale University graduate, has ever met a loan shark. I have.

As I note in my book Son of a Son of a Gambler, loan sharks and gamblers populated my hometowns of Covington and Newport in Northern Kentucky.

Although the sharks were aggressive in their collections policies, any loan shark who charged 400% would have soon been floating in the Ohio River.

I also doubt that many loan sharks were ever touted for their entrepreneurial acumen in the Wall Street Journal.

The sad thing is that the Wall Street Journal would allow such a slanted and biased reviewer to write a review for their newspaper.

She leaps to conclusions that show a lack of research, especially for a graduate of an Ivy League school.

For example, she said that Rivlin brings “a level of financial illiteracy and disdain for entrepreneurs that is somewhat surprising in a man who once covered Silicon Valley for the New York Times.”

If Mangu-Ward had done her homework, she would have read Rivlin's books, The Plot to Get Bill Gates and The Godfather of Silicon Valley. The first book shows Rivlin's tremendous empathy with the featured entrepreneur and the second shows some keen insights into how businesses truly operate.

Anyway, Broke USA is not about entrepreneurism. It's about the poverty industry and how loan sharking has become legalized.

Rivlin devotes much of his book to efforts in North Carolina and other states to offer payday loans at a more reasonable interest rate. He notes how the United States armed services put a 36% cap on any payday loans made to military personnel.

None of that important information made it into a “review” that in the author's mind puts payday lenders in the same category as Mother Teresa: Doing good for the poor.

I don't remember Mother Teresa charging 400% interest rates.

Despite what the Wall Street Journal says, Broke USA is an even-handed look at the poverty industry.

A little even-handedness would have gone a long way in the Wall Street Journal's review.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704629804575325840351124892.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/don-mcnay/wall-street-and-legalized_b_596986.html

Don McNay, CLU, ChFC, MSFS, CSSC is an award-winning financial columnist and Huffington Post Contributor.

You can read more about Don at www.donmcnay.com

McNay has Master's Degrees from Vanderbilt and the American College and is in the Hall of Distinguished Alumni of Eastern Kentucky University.

McNay has written two books. Most recent is Son of a Son of a Gambler: Winners, Losers and What to Do When You Win The Lottery

McNay is a lifetime member of the Million Dollar Round Table and has four professional designations in the financial services field.

My partner and I run tourist accommodation on a rural farm/wildlife refuge in Australia. We launched our first cottage last July and second larger venue in December. This time next year we hope to have another cottage-like venue. Each is self contained and out of sight of each other. We build everything we can ourselves including the furniture.

Ocherdraco's link is a good one and will lead you to other resources. I used the resources of this Oz site and my state tourist office. I also browse other accommodation venue websites, check their bookings, see what makes them special or not. Quite often I've seen what they've done and do the opposite.

We came to the business with tourist lodge cleaning as our only accommodation operation experience, but had lots of customer service, marketing and business knowledge. We did ensure we had adequate liability insurance, adhered to fire code, and had the right licences etc.

As Lebbanen said, cleaning is your friend. We frequently spend two hours cleaning and preparing our cottage after each stay, and up to three hours in the larger venue. Plus time spent collecting and chopping firewood, maintenance, managing our water resources, marketing and laundry. Lots of laundry.

The answers in these two threads on making our cottage nice and pricing our larger venue gave as a great deal of good advice on making an appealing accommodation venue.

Judging by our occupancy rates we must be doing a lot of things right. We're enjoying it. The commute is great, the dress code is easy - flannies & blunnies - and we like providing for our guests and making them feel comfortable and welcome. But it's not for slackers. Keeping up standards takes care and time. Once we have our third venue, managing the three will take two people 3-8 hours per day… plus laundry.

How are you on laundry?
posted by Kerasia at 3:45 AM on July 17
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When I first got my debit card about 10 years ago, I thought this was going to be the missing link to my money management. After all, the whole point of having a debit card is that you can't spend money you don't have since the money comes directly out of your checking account.

But in these times of banks making more money from our misuse of money than our good use of money, I shouldn't have been surprised at what I began to notice over the past couple of years. (And if you've already noticed this, well, take heart in that you're not alone.)

In the case of credit cards, banks and credit card companies have made over $30 billion in late fees and over the limit fees this year (http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/08/10/am-overdraft-fees/). That's a lot of money. Not only that, but the cardholders are probably not making a dent in their revolving debt. Think you're safe if you have a debit card? Not really. You see, that comfort we had in not being able to spend more than what we have is gone.

With a credit card, usually when you hit the limit or go over, then you cannot charge anymore. I haven't used a credit card in a long time but I will tell you that if I make a mistake with my debit card and there aren't enough funds, then these banks will still approve the charge. Why? The money is not there. So now a charge has occurred you did not have the funds for and now you will be hit with an overdraft fee.

If that happens to you every once in awhile, then it's probably just annoying to you. If you aren't so good with your money, then you are going to see that overdraft fee again and again as the bank continues to let your checking account go into the negative. And if you aren't checking your account like a hawk, then you could look up and be short $500 or more from your direct deposited paycheck, $500 you needed for bills, because the bank approved things it had no business approving.

Not don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that we should not be held responsible for our indescretions with money. We should all strive to be better stewards of the money entrusted to us. But this business with the overdraft fees remind me of the mortgages loans that certain banks shouldn't have made because the customer was not really able to pay it back. If the purpose of the debit card is to only allow you, as the customer, to use the money you have, then why are there overdraft fees after the account has already gone negative? Shouldn't there be a mechanism or something that prevents your account from being charged when you have a negative balance?

So then why would a bank continue to charge $29-$35 overdraft fees that go on top of the charge you didn't have the money for in the first place? One word - greed. I'm not anti-bank, but I am anti-greed.

Greed is the only way I can explain why banks would continue to really rob you of your money like that. If the credit card companies are making more than $30 billion from late fees and over the limit fees, then imagine how much the banks are making from these overdraft fees.

So what can you do about all of this?

1. Be sure you are balancing your checkbook everyday. I know that sounds like common sense, but I assure you that it is not common practice. If you kept the books at a business, then you would have to do it anyway. It only makes sense that you should keep the books for your own household. Don't give away your money because you didn't balance the books.

2. Leave your debit card at home. You don't need it to pay for gas. You don't need it to pay for groceries. You can write a check to pay for larger ticket items. And one of the great things about checks is that you can get them with the carbon copy so that you still have a copy of the check for you to record later. Using good old cash will help keep your checking account in line.

3. Be sure to leave a cushion in your checking account for the “oops” moments. The “oops” moments are when you forget you needed some money for your child's pictures or you scheduled a payment from your checking account and forgot to record it. The “oops” moment should be a rarity, but it's still good to keep a cushion. Everyone's cushion will be different, but if you want a number, then start with $100.

Starting with those three tips should help you from handing over more of your hard-earned money than necessary. Stop paying the banks for their misbehavior and your mismanagement of money. Get a hold of your money and make it work for you to help you and your family to live a better life.

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Brad Friedman and Desi Doyen: Green <b>News</b> Report: July 20, 2010 (Audio)

IN 'GREEN NEWS EXTRA' (see links below): CA's pioneering e-waste program a model gone wrong; 'Climategate' debate a polite, well-mannered affair; Geoengineering can't please everyone!; CBO: Corn based ethanol a waste of taxpayer money; …

Google To FTC: Government Role In Helping <b>News</b> Industry Should Be <b>…</b>

In the document, embedded after the jump, Google argues that the challenges facing the news industry are business problems, not legal problems, and can therefore “only be addressed effectively with business solutions,” which it says it …

Breaking <b>News</b>: Lindsey Graham Thinks You Are Stupid | RedState

Oh, and he's voting for Elena Kagan for Supreme Court (can you believe it? No way…) Apparently, in defending Graham's earth-shattering announcement that.

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personal financeonline personal finance

19, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

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<b>News</b> Picks From The Weekend: Breaking Records At Facebook, Zynga <b>…</b>

An overview of some of the weekend's ad/tech news not to be missed: watch out for multiple records….

When Bad <b>News</b> About Health Reform Isn't Bad - Kaiser Health <b>News</b>

Related Content. Daily Report: Abortion Fight Again Heats Up Over High-Risk Pools, Other Health Reform News. 10:59AM ET. Daily Report: Businesses, States Seek Solutions To Rising Health Insurance Costs. 10:58AM ET. Most Popular. Viewed …

Muhammad Cartoon Activist Molly Norris Lands on al-Qaida Hit List

(July 12) — Molly Norris, the American cartoonist who started Everybody Draw Mohammad Day, has been placed on the hit list of radical Muslim cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

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personal finance books

16, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

Naked Emperor News is touting this one with the breathless headline, “Kagan: It’s Fine if The Law Bans Books Because Government Won’t Really Enforce It,” but insofar as that suggests this is her personal view of the FEC’s power, it’s not quite fair. She’s the Solicitor General, and as such, she’s duty bound to defend whatever crappy law they toss in front of her with whatever crappy argument she can come up with. And this one’s plenty crappy, as you’re about to see. Even that’s not that big of a deal — good lawyers can get cornered during oral argument with judges as sharp as the Supremes — but Kagan’s performance in “Citizens United” was noted months ago as especially poor in a variety of ways. Ed wrote a post back in May about a basic factual error she made right at the beginning of the hearing. Politico chipped in around the same time with a review of a key strategic blunder:

Patch said Kagan hurt the cause of campaign finance regulation in Citizens United by deviating from the central argument in the Austin case – that immense corporate spending could disproportionately shape and distort voters’ opinions on elections.

Instead, Kagan argued that corporate-funded ads could corrupt the politicians benefitting from them and violate the will of shareholders whose money might be spent on them.

“That was a tactical error that was beneficial to people like us who think that campaign finance regulations are too burdensome,” said Patch…

Kagan’s abandoning the holding in Austin that corporate ad spending distorts public opinion “gave an opening (which Chief Justice Roberts took) to further denigrate the rationale by saying: Look, even the government has abandoned it,” said Rick Hasen, a professor at Los Angeles’s Loyola Law School who specializes in election law and usually favors restrictions on campaign spending.

Kagan’s views of free speech are bound to come up tomorrow, if only because of one fateful line in a brief she signed, but there’s some reason to think her views on this subject might be closer to the conservatives than to the liberals. In any event, consider the clip a reminder that a president doesn’t necessarily pick the best person for the job, just the best person who can be easily confirmed. And she will, almost certainly, be easily confirmed. Exit question: Wasn’t one of the big Democratic arguments in favor of Kagan the fact that she’d be able to sway swing votes like Kennedy’s through the sheer force of her intellect and persuasive ability?

I met James Montier at a value investment seminar in Italy in 2007 where he presented. We had long discussions later the day and into the evening on value investing and investment strategy.

James was kind enough to put me on his distribution list and I really looked forward to each of his articles as they always taught me something.

Unfortunately James decreased his writings since taking a position with the asset manager GMO in 2010.

I decided to put this resource page together so Eurosharelab visitors can also benefit from James’s investment wisdom.

James Montier’s Amazon Page shows all the books he has authored as well as the following short biography:

James Montier is a member of GMO’s asset allocation team.

Prior to that, he was the co-Head of Global Strategy at Société Générale and has been the top-rated strategist in the annual Thomson Extel survey for most of the last decade.

Montier is the author of four market-leading books:

• The Little Book of Behavioral Investing: How not to be your own worst enemy (Little Book, Big Profits)

• Behavioral Finance: Insights into Irrational Minds and Markets

• Behavioral Investing: A Practitioners Guide to Applying Behavioral Finance

• Value Investing: Tools and Techniques for Intelligent Investment

He is a Visiting Fellow at the University of Durham and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

2010

In this May 2010 article called I Want to Break Free, or, Strategic Asset Allocation does not equal Static Asset Allocation James Montier talks about in the beginning investing was a simpler and happier.

The essence of investment was to seek out value; to buy what was cheap with a margin of safety. Investors could move up and down the capital structure (from bonds to equities) as they saw fit. If nothing fit the criteria for investing, then cash was the default option.

But that changed with the rise of modern portfolio theory and, not coincidentally, the rise of “professional investment managers” and consultants.

In March 2010 Miguel Barbosa in his Simolean Sense blog interviewed James Montier about his book Value Investing: Tools & Techniques For Intelligent Investing.

In the second part of the interview Miguel talks to James about his other book The Little Book of Behavioral Investing – How Not To Be Your Own Worst Enemy.

In this February 2010 article, the first since joining GMO, James Montier asks Was It All Just A Bad Dream? Or, Ten Lessons Not Learnt from the financial crisis.

2009

In November 2009 article titled Only White Swans on the Road to Revulsion James Montier makes the argument that that the housing bubble and the crisis following its collapse was not an unforeseen event but rather the result of over optimism and the illusion of control, two classic human behavioural mistakes.

This article is the text of a speech called Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast, or how EMH has damaged our industry which James Montier delivered at the at the August 2009 CFA UK conference on “What ever happened to EMH”. Dedicated to Peter Bernstein (EMH = Efficient Market Hypothesis)

Here is the video recording of the above mentioned speech by James Montier: Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast. The video is 42 minutes long, but well worth watching.

The financial times in this 24 June 2009 article EMH, AMH: Edwards and Montier ride again motions James Montier leaving Societe Generale to join US investment manager Grantham Mayo Van Otterloo & Co, just after he and Albert Edwards won the Thomson Extel European analysts award in May 2009 as the top global strategy team.

In this 2 June 2009 research paper Forever blowing bubbles: moral hazard and melt-up James Montier explored the bubble phenomenon and what happens in the future after a bubble pops. He explores the possibility that all the government rescue packages initiated in 2008 have the possibility to again inflate a substantial bubble.

In this 24 June 2009 Financial Times article called Insight: Efficient markets theory is dead. James Montier explains why the efficient markets theory is dead but still lives because of academic inertia.

In June 2009 James Montier’s published this list of his Favorite Investment Books as well as a Summer reading list of more recent titles.

In May 2009 shortly after the market started its recovery from its March 9 2009 lows James Montier in this article titled Sucker’s rally or the birth of a bull? asks if this is a suckers rally and if so what investors could do to protect themselves. He also gives a few short ideas from his shorting screen.

In this 27 January 2009 article Clear and present danger: the trinity of risk, James Montier writes about the three primary and interrelated sources of investment risk; Valuation risk, business or earnings risk and balance sheet or financial risk.

2008

In this excellent review of James Montier’s book – Behavioral Investing: A Practitioner’s Guide to Applying Behavioral Finance, Bruce Grantier summarises the main points of the book with emphasis on mistakes and biases followed by a discussion of number of behavioral phenomena.

In the article The psychology of bear markets published in December 2009, during the brunt of the bear market James Montier writes about that the mental barriers to effective decision-making in bear markets are as many and varied as those that plague rationality during bull markets but that they more pronounced as fear and shock limits logical analysis.

In this 25 Nov 2008 article called The road to revulsion and the creation of value, James Montier argues that the road to revulsion – sharply declining prices – ends in an investment nirvana with unambiguously cheap assets.

In this 25 November 2008 Bloomberg article Montier Has ‘Never Been More Bullish’ on Stocks James Montier makes the cast that stocks are “distinctly cheap” because they trade at 15.4 times the 10-year moving average of its companies’ profits, compared with an average of 18 for the U.S. market since 1881.James wrote that fifteen stocks in the U.S. index, pass his test for “deep value,” while a tenth of shares in Europe and a fifth in Asia qualify.

In this 27 October 2008 article – An admission of ignorance: a humble approach to investing James Montier details his investment strategy.

It makes no sense to forecast, the importance of a margin of safety, avoid trying to time the market and buy cheap insurance. But most importantly, humility should be the central theme of a good investment process.

In this October 22nd, 2008 Financial Times blog post by Paul Murphy summarises an article Analysts are rubbish by James Montier about the bullish bias built in to the investment industry by the analysts and that analysts are exceptionally good at one thing and one thing only – telling you what has just happened.

In this 9 September 2008 article – The dangers of DCF James Montier writes about the dangers Of Discount cash flow (DCF) saying its implementation is riddled with problems but the good news is that several alternatives exist.

In this 23 June 2008 article – You are still wasting your time, or, are analysts just overpaid secretaries? James Montier writes about the whether company visits are useful for fund managers. The answer in general is no but they can be improved by learning to look for evidence that disagrees with us, and seek to disprove our ideas, rather than illustrate them with supportive evidence.

In this article The Road To Revulsion 16 June 2008 James Montier writes about bubbles, that bubbles are a by-product of human behaviour, and that human behaviour is sadly all too predictable.

The details of each bubble are different but the general patterns remain very similar. He also touches on the propensity for commentators to continually proclaim the end of the problem and a resumption of business as usual.

In the 30 May 2008 article Inflation Not The Problem Albert Edwards and James Montier explain why they are sceptical of all the market commentators saying that the worse market decline of the recession was over. How right they were, but it’s the way they arrived at their conclusion that makes the article worthwhile reading.

If you have any interest at all in short selling this is an article for you. On 26 May 2008, with the markets particularly overvalued James Montier turned his thinking to short selling writing Joining The Dark Side: Pirates, Spies and Short Sellers.

In the article he explains a simple short screen with surprising results shown through back testing in the USA and Europe.

In the article with the catchy title Asleep at the wheel, or, How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb published on 7 April 2008 James Montier points out that company management and analysts are unwilling to revise their profit estimates in spite of the looming recession as everyone thinks their business is recession resistant. He points out that this is why they are all overoptimistic and how you can avoid falling into the same trap.

In this 13 March 2008 research article called Remember, Cassandra was right! James Montier makes a strong argument that the mess in the US economy and housing market was not caused by a black swan event (unpredictable) but rather was sadly predictable.

It follows the standard pattern of a bubble deflating, some thing that we have seen a thousand times before.

On 12 January 2008 James made the last post on his blog called Behavioural Investing – The application of psychology to finance and the home of an investing sceptic.

The articles he wrote is luckily all still there and it’s a real treasure trove of information.

In this 15 January 2008 article The Dash To Trash And The Grab For Growth James Montier wrote just shortly after the absolute peak in the 2008 bull market he suggests that if you cannot move to cash because of career risk then invest in large dividend paying companies as what is going to happen to growth stocks at already high valuations is not going to be pretty. How right he was.

2007

In this blog post called The Sources of Value, written in October 2007 James Montier analyses which of the component sources of return leads to value, over reasonable periods of time, to outperform growth?

On 3 October 2007 James Montier posted a blog article titled Sector rotation: an investment dead end? He argues that investors focusing on sectors rather than stocks are barking up the wrong tree.

James Montier’s book Behavioural investing: a practitioner’s guide to applying behavioural finance was published in September 2007. At the link above you can read parts of the book at Google Books.

In this 24 September 2007 blog post called The myth of exogenous risk and the recent quant problems James Montier argues that many aspect of investment risk are endogenous (like a gambler playing poker, where the actions of the other plays are integral to the game) to the way in which we invest.

The problems experienced by the quant funds in August may help highlight some of these issues.

In this 10 September 2007 blog post Yet more evidence on the folly of forecasting, or why we don’t need economists! James Montier presents even more evidence that humans cannot forecast and why you should avoid listening to anyone who says he can as well as avoid it yourself.

On 21 August 2007 James Montier posted a blog article titled Earnings manipulation as a source of short ideas. He identifies shorting candidates through a measurement called the M score. Past results are impressive in identifying under-performing companies.

On 15 March 2007 James Montier posted a Macro Research article titled Global Equity Strategy . Investing 101: A reading list. Here he comes up with a collection of his best books in different categories (classics, modern, psychological and hidden gems) that is arguably the best reading list for any aspiring investor.

In the 30 January 2007 article by James Montier CAPM is CRAP James says that the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is insidious. It creeps into almost every discussion on finance. And them he goes on to systematically take the model apart with real life examples and evidence.

In his 10 January 2007 research paper Contrarian or conformist? James Montier, in his usual style puts himself against the common view saying that the then biggest consensus portfolio bets to him seemed to be small cap and low quality however large cap, high quality looks like the better bet to him. To emphasise he quotes Sir John Templeton once observed, “It is impossible to produce a superior performance unless you do something different from the majority”.

2006

In this 30 November 2006 article with the enticing title Improving returns using inside information James Montier explains the results of a unknown but interesting research paper on share buybacks and how they, when implemented, are a powerful indicator for positive returns.

In this July 2006 research note titled Come out of the closet, or, show me the alpha James features a study that suggests
closet indexing accounts for nearly one third of the US mutual fund industry. Stock pickers account for less than 30% of the market, yet they have real investment skill. A fascinating read.

The article Prophet Among Pinstripes in the April 2006 issue of Fastcompany magazine features James Montier where he gives his five laws about investing bias, evolution, and true happiness.

In March 2006 shortly after the release of Joel Greenblatt’s book The Little Book That Beats the Market James tested the strategy worldwide and in this article called The little note that beats the markets found that on average the Little Book strategy
beats the markets by around 7% p.a. between 1993-2005, and with lower risk than the market! Value plus quality seems to make sense.

In the article Behaving Badly published in February 2006 James Montier features a short test you can take after which you will also become a strong believer in behavioural finance. Give it a try!

2005

In November 2005 James Montier wrote the article Seven Sins of Fund Management – A behavioural critique where he explores some of the more obvious behavioural weaknesses inherent in the ‘average’ investment process.

For example he writes that the first sin was placing forecasting at the very heart of the investment process. An enormous amount of evidence suggests that investors are generally hopeless at forecasting. So using forecasts as an integral part of the investment process is like tying one hand behind your back before you start.

In this 31 March 2005 article called Bargain Hunter James Montier confesses that he is an unabashed value investor. He adds that if the reader does not share this viewpoint, or isn’t open to be persuaded of the merits of such an approach, he should stop reading now for what follows will only distress his.

James teams up with Rui Antunes his “usual accomplice and compatriot in adventures involving large amounts of data” and embarked upon an investigation of value strategies.

In the article Abu Ghraib: Lessons from behavioural finance and for corporate governance, wrote at the end of January 2005 James Montier says even though it is tempting to believe bad behaviour is the result of a few rotten individuals. However, the overwhelming psychological evidence suggests that if you put good people into bad situations they usually turn bad.

2004

In the June 2004 paper If it makes you happy James Montier leaves investment advice aside and explores one of Adam Smith’s obsessions: what it means to be happy.

He also discusses why that’s important to investors, and how we can seek to improve our own levels of happiness. The article further lists
James’s top ten suggestions for improving happiness.

In the article Who’s a Pretty Boy Then? Or Beauty Contests, Rationality and Greater Fools James Montier in February 2004 played a classic Keynes’ beauty contest with over 1000 professional investors.

He found that on average professional investors are using between one and two steps of strategic thinking in forming their expectations. He also found that many investors suffer the curse of knowledge and end up either picking zero or severely underestimating the irrationality of other players.

These results speak directly to the ability of investors to exit the market before the mass exodus. He found, unsurprisingly, that only a very small minority shows the required level of strategic thinking to beat the gun.

In this 76 page presentation Insights into irrational minds and market Applied Behavioural Finance: Insights into irrational minds and market James Montier gave in 2004 he in great detail described the behavioural biases investors are prone to. Its a great summary of a lot of his previous work in a presentation format, summarised in bullet points and graphs.

2003

This November 2003 issue of welling@weeden James Montier offers a reality and earnings checks.

In this January 2003 research paper Running with the Devil: The Advent of A Cynical Bubble James Montier explores the nature and underlying psychology of four different kinds of bubbles. To assess which comes closest to describing the current market.

To us, the current market environment is largely a greater fool market. Because such markets lack fundamental support, they are liable to precipitous declines.

2002

In Darwin’s Mind: The Evolutionary Foundations of Heuristics and Biases James Montier in December 2002 writes that a catalogue of biases that cognitive psychologists have built up over the last three decades seem to have stem from one of three roots – self-deception, heuristic simplification (including affect), and social interaction.

In this paper James explores the evolutionary basis of each of these roots. The simple truth is that we aren’t adapted to face the world as it is today. We evolved in a very different environment, and it is that ancestral evolutionary environment that governs the way in which we think and feel.

In 22 November 2002 James Montier wrote in Part man, part monkey that leaving the trees could have been our first mistake. Our minds are suited for solving problems related to our survival, rather than being optimised for investment decisions. We all make mistakes when we make decisions. The list below gives a top ten list for avoiding the most common investment mental pitfalls.

  1. You know less than you think you do
  2. Be less certain in your views, aim for timid forecasts and bold choices
  3. Don’t get hung up on one technique, tool, approach or view flexibility and pragmatism are the order of the day
  4. Listen to those who don’t agree with you
  5. You didn’t know it all along, you just think you did
  6. Forget relative valuation, forget market price, work out what the stock is worth (use reverse DCFs)
  7. Don’t take information at face value, think carefully about how it was presented to you
  8. Don’t confuse good firms with good investments, or good earnings growth with good returns
  9. Vivid, easy to recall events are less likely than you think they are, subtle causes are underestimated
  10. Sell your losers and ride your winners

>

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Whats in my bag by mulder911

tracking personal finances

8, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

The best way to get the most out of short term credit is to create a personal budget. Nobody wants to be on a budget. But everybody has to be on one, no matter how much money they make. When short term cash advances or payday loans become part of your financial strategy, controlling spending with a budget is the best way to make sure the money being borrowed is used in the best way.

Why create a personal budget?

Creating a personal budget involves working with all the information available about your finances. It may sound elementary, but when you decide to get a payday loan, you have to know where your money is coming from, how much you have and where it all goes. One of the biggest reasons most people avoid budgeting is that they would rather not know how they really use their money.

Budget before you borrow money

Creating a personal budget isn’t as bad as it sounds. Most of the work is front-loaded at the beginning. Once your finances are dialed in, tracking income and expenses is pretty much automatic, if you stay on top of it. CNN reports that what may seem like drudgery gets spiced up by facing the reality of foolish spending habits. It’s better to learn what they are on your own. Most of the foolish spending is pretty common and fairly easy to eliminate.

Personal budget for debt reduction

To create a personal budget, get started by making a list of all of your regular monthly expenses, including what you spend on fun things like eating out, entertainment and hobbies. It’s very important to include minimum payments toward debts, including payment in full of personal payday loans at the end of their term. About.com says don’t forget to build in money for debt reduction. Use software like Quicken or Microsoft Money to make it easier. These personal-finance programs have the built-in budget-making tools that can create your budget for you.

Settle emergencies with instant money loans

Subtract expenses from earnings to see how much you can expect to have left at the end of the month. If your personal budget comes out on the negative side, go back over each expense, look for places to make cuts, and figure out where you are willing to make sacrifices to get out of debt. After taking care of emergencies with instant money loans, debt reduction should be your first priority. Then you can start saving money to meet your financial goals, like a nice vacation, retirement investments or an emergency fund.

Live by your personal budget

All the time you spend creating a personal budget will be wasted if you don’t put your budget to work. Try to live within your budget. See how it feels. At the end of that first month, look over your spending to see if it matches up to your budget. If things are still out of whack, consider small money loans while you figure out how you can work harder to control spending. You may have to rework your personal budget to be more realistic as far as how you actually spend your money. Then, crunch the numbers again until you’ve made it right.

Personal budget tips:

Here are some money-saving tips courtesy of freefinancialadvice.net:

  • Do not use credit cards. If you must, pay them in full each month
  • Consolidate your credit cards and student loans at a better rate
  • Refinance your mortgage or car loan at a lower rate
  • Use coupons to shop–try coupons.com for free local coupons
  • Occasionally buy generic, or non-name brand merchandise
  • Stop smoking
  • Don’t try to compare yourself to your friends and neighbors

The best way to get the most out of short term credit is to create a personal budget. Nobody wants to be on a budget. But everybody has to be on one, no matter how much money they make. When short term cash advances or payday loans become part of your financial strategy, controlling spending with a budget is the best way to make sure the money being borrowed is used in the best way.

Why create a personal budget?

Creating a personal budget involves working with all the information available about your finances. It may sound elementary, but when you decide to get a payday loan, you have to know where your money is coming from, how much you have and where it all goes. One of the biggest reasons most people avoid budgeting is that they would rather not know how they really use their money.

Budget before you borrow money

Creating a personal budget isn’t as bad as it sounds. Most of the work is front-loaded at the beginning. Once your finances are dialed in, tracking income and expenses is pretty much automatic, if you stay on top of it. CNN reports that what may seem like drudgery gets spiced up by facing the reality of foolish spending habits. It’s better to learn what they are on your own. Most of the foolish spending is pretty common and fairly easy to eliminate.

Personal budget for debt reduction

To create a personal budget, get started by making a list of all of your regular monthly expenses, including what you spend on fun things like eating out, entertainment and hobbies. It’s very important to include minimum payments toward debts, including payment in full of personal payday loans at the end of their term. About.com says don’t forget to build in money for debt reduction. Use software like Quicken or Microsoft Money to make it easier. These personal-finance programs have the built-in budget-making tools that can create your budget for you.

Settle emergencies with instant money loans

Subtract expenses from earnings to see how much you can expect to have left at the end of the month. If your personal budget comes out on the negative side, go back over each expense, look for places to make cuts, and figure out where you are willing to make sacrifices to get out of debt. After taking care of emergencies with instant money loans, debt reduction should be your first priority. Then you can start saving money to meet your financial goals, like a nice vacation, retirement investments or an emergency fund.

Live by your personal budget

All the time you spend creating a personal budget will be wasted if you don’t put your budget to work. Try to live within your budget. See how it feels. At the end of that first month, look over your spending to see if it matches up to your budget. If things are still out of whack, consider small money loans while you figure out how you can work harder to control spending. You may have to rework your personal budget to be more realistic as far as how you actually spend your money. Then, crunch the numbers again until you’ve made it right.

Personal budget tips:

Here are some money-saving tips courtesy of freefinancialadvice.net:

  • Do not use credit cards. If you must, pay them in full each month
  • Consolidate your credit cards and student loans at a better rate
  • Refinance your mortgage or car loan at a lower rate
  • Use coupons to shop–try coupons.com for free local coupons
  • Occasionally buy generic, or non-name brand merchandise
  • Stop smoking
  • Don’t try to compare yourself to your friends and neighbors

http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/Universal-Coin-Bullion-President-Mike-Fuljenz-Speak-National-Rifle-Association-Annual-1256547.htm

Quicken Online is a web-based financial tool that helps to provide centralized perspectives on your personal financial situation. It categorizes your credit card and checking spending into groups, keeps track of your net worth over a timeline, and can even help you define and work toward your financial goals. Once you create an account with Quicken Online and provide it with your financial information, it will automatically aggregate your financial information from your accounts, chart your spending activity across all accounts, and summarize your financial means of living. Quicken Online is a great tool to help you visually see all of your spending and saving activities and to help you change the way you use your money.

Quicken Online is targeted at a different audience than the desktop version produced by Intuit. According to Intuit, Quicken Online is targeted toward the 41% of Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck that do not purchase personal finance products. Quicken desktop products are for people who willingly want to track their finances and manage their money better. Quicken Online's goal is to help make financial tracking easier for the rest of us.

Like other online software, to use Quicken Online you must sign up for the free trial. Visit the Quicken Online site and get started. Sign-in with a username and password. Follow the sign-up procedure, and then submit your account information. Quicken Online connects to your accounts (checking, savings, and credit cards), and then aggregates all your financial information for analysis. The software will assign editable categories to your spending, and also generated graphs and reports to help you better manage your money. Quicken online is a very easy tool to use for account balancing, generating charts and reports, tracking bill payments, and really highlighting the flow of money in and money out. Quicken Online also auto-updates your financial information every day.

Quicken Online displays the bank balance, but it also tracks the “real balance”, or the actual amount of money you have available. This is great because the real balance accounts for the lag between when we write checks or submit payments, and when these events are reflected at the bank. So you can keep track of the amount of true money you have in your account.

Quicken Online is an easy to use tool for online financial account management. I especially like the summaries and visual charts and graphs that you can create to better track your spending habits and help plan for your financial goals. Quicken Online is easy to use, easy to learn, and extremely easy to integrate into your online lifestyle. I recommend that you check it out today.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 7/8 - Arrowhead Pride

Good morning, AP! Here's today's Kansas City Chiefs news. Read and enjoy.

Jon Stewart Smacks Down Fox <b>News</b> For Fear-Mongering About 'Muslims <b>…</b>

Fox News is worried about Barack Obama's new plan to use NASA to reach out to Muslim nations. Jon Stewart points out that “liberal fartbag” Ronald Reagan had the same idea.

Paying For Your Chiefs <b>News</b>? - Arrowhead Pride

Your best source for quality Kansas City Chiefs news, rumors, analysis, stats and scores from the fan perspective.

manage personal finances

3, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

From Entrepreneur:

Next month, Matt Kersten will be up to his neck in Christmas cards. The founder of Kersten Cards, a Scottsdale, Ariz., greeting card company, says 80 percent of his 4,000 orders per year are Christmas cards, which typically hit between July and early December. That leaves fully half of the year with minimal orders–and scant new revenue.

“It's definitely tough, but we do it,” he says. “It's important to manage costs, and you constantly have to reinvest in your business. You can't stay stagnant.”

That balancing act is one that most seasonal businesses face, says Dexter P. Morgan II, founder of MFS Consulting, a Newport News, Va., management consulting firm specializing in small businesses. “The seasonal business, regardless of size, needs to save money and resist the urge to spend when flush with cash,” he says.

Other actions that can help…

From Entrepreneur:

Next month, Matt Kersten will be up to his neck in Christmas cards. The founder of Kersten Cards, a Scottsdale, Ariz., greeting card company, says 80 percent of his 4,000 orders per year are Christmas cards, which typically hit between July and early December. That leaves fully half of the year with minimal orders–and scant new revenue.

“It's definitely tough, but we do it,” he says. “It's important to manage costs, and you constantly have to reinvest in your business. You can't stay stagnant.”

That balancing act is one that most seasonal businesses face, says Dexter P. Morgan II, founder of MFS Consulting, a Newport News, Va., management consulting firm specializing in small businesses. “The seasonal business, regardless of size, needs to save money and resist the urge to spend when flush with cash,” he says.

Other actions that can help…

Mike Fuljenz

This Weekend: What's Great About America (Fox <b>News</b> on Sat, July 3 <b>…</b>

Catch my first documentary on the Fox News Channel, What's Great About America, Saturday July 3rd.

Evening <b>News</b> Ratings in a Word: Down - Media Decoder Blog <b>…</b>

The network news standings showed nothing suggesting a shakeup during the second quarter, although they did demonstrate a distinctive trend for all parties.

Safety In Numbers - Science <b>News</b>

Mathematics offers innovative weapons for fighting terrorism.

MABUHAY ALLIANCE HOST THE 6TH ANNUAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE by mabuhayalliance

personal finance budgeting

2, julho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

When I recently discovered that my local bank had finally been added to Mint, I immediately signed back up. MakeUseOf did an overview of Mint back in 2007 when it was in its beta release. Since then, it has grown and added more features so it’s time for an update post.

Mint is a free, automatic online finance tracking and budgeting platform much like Microsoft Money and Quicken. Since adding my financial accounts (Paypal, credit cards, banking), I‘ve stopped using similar software applications on my Mac and iPhone. Mint does all the personal accounting work for me. In this article, I’ll share some tips on using the features of Mint to track and budget your spending.

How to Make a Mint Budget – Setting Up Categories

When you add your financial accounts to your Mint account, about a year’s worth of your past and current transactions get added to your account. Using your past transactions, Mint assigns your transactions to various categories. For example, credit or debit card transactions you make at Target will be assigned the Shopping category. A transaction from Best Buy will get assigned to Electronics & Software. You may find that many of your transactions get assigned appropriate categories, but you can also change or create categories for any transaction.

Here’s how to do it.

  • Open your Mint account and click on Transactions in the menu bar at the top of the webpage. Select the transaction for the category you want to change.
  • Select the current category for the transaction and click on the triangle in the selection field to either change the name of the category or see if there’s a sub-category. So if say your transaction is from Amazon, you can leave the default category as Shopping or you can assign it a sub-category, such as Books or Clothing.
  • Now that you have changed the category, you will probably want all future transactions from say Amazon to all be labeled Books instead of just Shopping. To make this happen, you need to change the rules set up for this type of transaction. Click on the Edit Detail tab.

In the resulting dialog box, select “Always rename Amazon as Amazon and categorize as Books.“ This new rule will change all existing and future Amazon transactions. Notice also, you can assign tags to transactions, which is great for keeping track of tax related expenses as opposed to personal expenses. By clicking “Manage your tags“, you can change, add, and delete tags.

When you first set up your account and add transactions, you may find there are numerous transactions which are uncategorized. Taking the time to set up rules for uncategorized transactions will inevitably help you monitor your spending. Also, one useful tool in this regard is that you can click on the “Show all“ button on the right side of your Transactions page to get a list of the total spending for all transactions for a particular category, sub-category, or store.

Setting Budgets

One of the best reasons for using Mint and taking the trouble to categorize transactions is that you can make Mint budgets, especially for discretionary spending items and services. For example, I like to make sure I’m spending a limited amount of money on books and iPad/iPhone apps per month. If I don’t monitor my spending on such items, I tend to overspend and even sometimes waste money by not tracking those expenses.

Again, when you set up your Mint account, Mint creates a few default budgets which you can change or create new ones. To do this, click on Planning in the menu bar of your account’s page. Select the budget you want to change or update. Or click the Create Budget button to create a new budget.

For an existing budget, you can increase or decrease the amount by clicking on the left and right triangles. You can make additional changes by clicking the Edit Details tab, in which you can change the time period of the budget, and check whether or not you want the selected budget to roll over to the next month. As you spend money toward those budgets, the bar color will change from green to red when you are over your budget.

Almost everything about Mint is automatic. So once your transactions are updated for your accounts, all your categories and budgets get automatically updated. You never have to manually input that data.

Setting Up Email Alerts

Another useful Mint feature which helps you monitor your finances is by sending you email alerts for when you’ve gone over budget, when your balance is low, when a bill is due, and so on. You can configure the settings for alerts by clicking on Your Profile on your accounts page. In the drop-down box, select Email and Alerts to set up changes.

Get the Free Mint iPhone App

If you‘re an Apple mobile user, you can download the free Mint app to view your online account. Transactions, however, may not immediately show up on your Mint account. It may take an hour or two to get updated. But using the mobile app also allows you to add tags and/or change categories for new transactions. Your new alerts also show up in the app.

There are many more features in Mint, and once you get your accounts set up, you’ll see that it provides you with a wealth of information about your finances, as well giving you tips on how to save money.

Mint.com may not be the best solution for say tracking a large business account, but for personal and small business accounts, the service is a huge time saver. The biggest drawback to the service, however, is that it doesn’t provide a way to print out reports of your transactions, categories, and summaries. You have to download the data and then set up a spreadsheet to create reports. Hopefully the developers of Mint will address this problem in future updates.

Let us know if and how you use Mint.com. Has it helped you budget your spending?

What a fantastic basic concept.
Hitler lost the second world war because he attacked Russia too soon. udervise ve vood all be speeking Deutsch now.

We employed the alternative massively effective budgetting tool.

Be a self employed Engineer for 15 years with take home pay of £50K a year and spend it all (and more besides, because ‘I want one of those NOW’) because ‘my jobs safe’.

Watch as the banks destroy the worlds finances.

Suddenly realise that over 90% of British industry is ultimately owned by Japanese investment banks, who suddenly have no money to fulfill their legal obligations to complete legislation driven improvment projects.

Watch as my £50K a year take home falls to ZERO.

Start a brand new business with Kleeneze (sorry not available in the USA) Which although it’s building really well is , after all, a business and needs time.

Suddenly HAVE to live on £18K a year GROSS.

Best Motivation for re-inventing your budget that anyone can have LOL.

We used to spend about £1,000 a month on groceries, now we spend around £300 a month, AND we eat more healthily.

Fortunately the finance on my car ended a month after our income disappeared saving us £375 a month.

We’ve sold my wifes’ car (THAT hurt) it was a really nice car, but it was costing us £489 a month in finance.

We’ve moved to a cheaper house saving us £400 a month in rent.

We’ve cancelled everything that wasn’t absolutely essential - including SKY and the TV license (It’s true, you don’t die if you turn the telly off!)

We still have creditors who we’re negotiating reduced payments and frozen interest with, but basically we are starting again from scratch.
We won’t fall into the credit trap again
Certainly not in the next six years or more ‘cos no-one in their right mind will give us credit now anyway!!

The one thing that keeps coming back to me though is

WHY aren’t our schools teaching kids how to budget? It’s a thousand times more important than even the basics.

Who cares if you can’t spell budgit if you can make one and stick to it.

It CAN’T be one of the things that are left to parents because nobody ever taught us!

Back to subject,
Your article is brilliant and if it helps one person (which I’m sure it already has) to get out or stay out of debt then you’ve done a service to humanity.

Keep it up &
we’ll see you
OVER the top

robert shumake citywide invensting robert shumake robert shumake

BudgetPulse Press Coverage by BudgetPulse

personal finance planning

29, junho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

The most common personal finance question I'm hearing from people of a surprising array of ages is this: “Is it possible for my golden years… to really be golden?”

The one, two, three punch of the housing, stock, and job markets has left millions reeling. Thankfully, there is some good news. And here to deliver it is Mark Miller, author of the newly released book, The Hard Times Guide to Retirement.

Mark, what prompted you to write The Hard Times Guide to Retirement?

I've been covering retirement and aging for more than five years. Before the economy crashed, I was struck often by the lack of planning, preparation and thought that my generation–baby boom boomers–has given to retirement. Now, the Great Recession has made the planning gap much more critical. I wrote the book hoping to give people looking ahead to the next part of their lives the first examination of retirement issues in the post-crash economy. I wanted to show how strategies for money, work and living can be interwoven and leveraged for retirement security-even in tough times. I also hope to help readers boost their retirement I.Q.s by showcasing the best thinking I've been able to find in my reporting on retirement and aging.


What was the most surprising thing you learned in researching this book on retirement?

One of my major themes is that the traditional notion of retirement–hanging it up at age 65–will be discarded, and not only for economic reasons. But I was surprised–and really amused–to learn where that notion of age 65 came from. Otto Von Bismarck, the chancellor of Germany, started the first system of social security in the 19th Century. He initially set the German retirement age at 70, and later adjusted it to 65. When FDR started the American Social Security system in the 1930s, he looked to the German program as a model. That's where the idea of retirement at age 65 got its start, and it has stuck with us ever since. Of course, people didn't live nearly as long then as they do now, and 65 has really become somewhat irrelevant, I think.

If a reader could just take away one concept from The Hard Times Guide to Retirement, what would you want that to be?

There are no magic bullets or easy solutions to the problems we face with retirement security. But there are many solid ways to achieve a satisfying, secure retirement, even in difficult times. These aren't get-rich-quick investment gimmicks or schemes to make millions working part-time from your kitchen table. I think the best ideas focus on basic blocking and tackling–getting the most from the financial tools already at hand, and making smart decisions about work and lifestyle. Also, I want my readers to focus on the definition of retirement security. It's not just about what happens this year or next, but finding a way to reliably generate income to support a retirement that could well last 25 years or more for you or your spouse. Boomers are going to need to start focusing on what lies ahead–and get smarter about retirement–quickly!

What is your favorite free online retirement calculator?

Actually, I'm not a big fan of most free retirement calculators. A recent study by actuarial experts on retirement calculators shows that many of the free online tools have serious flaws that can lead to serious miscalculations when you're plotting your retirement. The Society of Actuaries analyzed 12 retirement calculators created by financial services firms, software companies, nonprofits, and government for consumers and financial planning pros. All but one of the six consumer calculators was free-and they had a lot of problems. For example, most of the free calculators do a poor job projecting your Social Security benefits. They also use questionable rate-of-return assumptions on investments. And they don't handle longevity questions or inflation very well.

One exception is ESPlanner, which was developed by Larry Kotlikoff, an economist at Boston University. There are free and premium versions of this tool available to consumers. Unlike many of the freebies, ESPlanner gathers more detailed data, and experts on this have indicated to me that it can give you a more reliable forecast. Outside of that, I wouldn't use the free tools for anything beyond getting a very general idea of where you stand with your retirement planning. Making a precise plan requires one of the more sophisticated software programs that you pay for, building your own spreadsheet or hiring a financial planner.

Did you find any of your own personal financial habits (or attitudes) changing as a result of writing this book?

Well, speaking of financial planners . . .The biggest change for me came from writing the chapter “How to Hire a Financial Adviser.” This chapter sorts through the alphabet soup of the myriad designations you can find for different types of advisers, and also the different ways that they are compensated. I'm in my mid-fifties, and my wife and I have been diligent retirement savers over the years–but we never really had a retirement plan. Writing this chapter pushed me into action, and we hired an adviser this year to help us build a plan. My research convinced me that the best way to go in this area is to hire a fee-only planner. Unlike advisers who work on commission, fee-only advisers aren't registered reps for any particular financial services company. Usually, they are self-employed Registered Investment Advisers or work for a firm of independent planners. You pay all the fees, but the planner has no bias toward any one product or solution. I've been really pleased with the process, and it's given me much more confidence that we can meet our goals.

Which was your favorite chapter to write and why?

I had the most fun writing the chapter titled “Making a Difference: Encore Careers.” It examines how mid-life Americans are reinventing their careers with a social purpose in mind. The Encore Career concept comes from Civic Ventures, a not-for-profit think tank and incubator for social entrepreneurship co-founded by Marc Freedman and John Gardner in the late 1990s. Gardner, who died in 2002 at age 89, was a visionary thinker and leader on civic engagement, civil rights, and social reform. He wrote extensively on leadership and self-renewal, and he co founded Experience Corps, the national organization that promotes and enables volunteer work for older Americans. Freedman is one of the country's leading thinkers on how Americans can redefine the second half of life with a sense of social and individual renewal.

This chapter was really fun to write because I had a chance to interview and profile a number of people who have created Encore Careers for themselves–an aerospace exec who transitioned to teaching in gang-ridden Los Angles high school, an auditor who went to work for the IRS, and a college teacher who now runs a non-profit that helps refugee immigrants adjust to life in the U.S. I found their stories fascinating and inspiring. I also really enjoyed writing the chapters on doing volunteer work and lifelong learning for similar reasons–I really love telling the stories of people who are taking action and getting things done!

If you could give a woman in her 30s or 40s just one piece of “retirement advice” what would you say?

I'd urge younger women to confront the fact that they are greater risk of retirement insecurity than men–and take steps to fight back. Unfortunately–and outrageously–women earn less over the course of their lifetimes than men. That reduces their contributions to Social Security and retirement savings plans. Caregiving for aged parents or children often interrupts their careers. And women are less comfortable dealing with their finances than men, which makes them more conservative investors at a younger age–at a time when they should be investing aggressively.

Even for middle-class or affluent women, the risks are high. Single elderly women are the largest segment of Americans living in poverty. In 2007, 20.5 percent of unmarried women age 65 and older had income below 100 percent of the federal government's definition of poverty–far higher than rates experienced by men or married couples, according to Census Bureau data. I urge younger women to get educated about retirement security, and to build a plan at the earliest possible date. When you're job-hunting, be sure to pay attention to retirement benefits, and crank that into your decision-making about what job to accept. It's also important to start saving for retirement at the earliest possible date, either in a tax-deferred account like a 401(k) or a Roth IRA. I think Roths can be especially beneficial for younger investors.

Finally, focus on debt management, not just investing! In particular, try to avoid building up big credit card balances, because they can eat even the best retirement plan alive.


How do you plan to spend your retirement?

I don't anticipate having a traditional retirement. I hope to do a mixture of work and leisure as long as possible. I'm already in my own Encore Career, which should make that possible–after working for years at large media companies, I'm now an independent writer, and I also do some consulting work helping non-profit organizations with their online strategies and websites. When I decide that I want more down time, I expect to simply adjust that mix. My areas of interest outside of work include distance bicycling, tennis, playing guitar, traveling and doing volunteer work in the non-profit sector.

To read a sample chapter of The Hard Times Guide to Retirement, CLICK HERE. To get more wisdom from Mark, follow him on Twitter at @RetireRevised

The social media revolution has given way to a generation of tech-savvy and interconnected young Americans. Youthful social media users share their personal lives online, tweeting and posting everything from their relationship status to their current location to their latest purchases. Yet, when it comes to discussing deeper personal finance issues or seeking personal finance advice online, the majority of young adults typically shy away from the web.

AARP recently conducted a national study of young adults in the 18 to 34 age bracket; 57 percent of respondents said that money (specifically the burden of paying bills and carrying debt) was their primary concern. Facing a recession and a brutal job market, young adults are starting to pay more attention to their financial autonomy and planning, yet only 1 in 10 respondents reported sharing financial information or seeking financial advice through social media.

This is starting to change with the advent of trustworthy, unbiased online personal financial resources — websites that enable users to monitor their own spending, create short-term and long-term financial plans and get trusted financial advice. In fact, 85 percent of young people who have used social media for personal finance advice have reported that doing so made them feel “more confident” about their finances.

These new financial resources are breaking down the taboo of sharing, discussing and managing personal finance online. Whether you are a tech-savvy, social media guru or someone who spends a limited amount of time on the web, you can very easily leverage the internet to gain a greater understanding of your personal finances in a few short steps.

1. Make the most of online banking to make your life easier and keep your finances organized. Online banking is great because it offers quick, easy, 24-hour access to your checking and savings accounts. Here are three ways to make the most of online banking:

  • Set up direct deposit for your paychecks so your salary (or other form of income) gets transferred directly and securely into your checking account.
  • Set up online bill pay for your monthly bills — your monthly payments will automatically be transferred from your checking account on a designated date each month. If you are not ready to commit to monthly bill pay or simply want to monitor your bills more closely, you can choose a one-time monthly payment. (*Remember to only set up automatic payments to companies or people you trust)
  • Set up calendar alerts two to three days before your bills are due to remind you to pay on time — never miss a payment or your credit history will take a hit.

2. Start utilizing trusted and unbiased personal finance sites to learn more about personal finances.

LearnVest and other personal financial sites help you manage and understand your finances through tools, games, discussion pages and often, targeted daily newsletters. Whether you need help figuring out how to open an IRA, pay down credit card debt and student loans or find the right health insurance for you and your family, these sites offer expert, step-by-step advice — for free. Many of these sites employ financial experts to answer your questions or guide you through a financial issue.

3. Use these websites for financial advice pertaining to family life or career changes.

Whether you are preparing for a baby or changing jobs, these sites will help you understand and navigate your way through these life changes. Learn how to negotiate for a raise, handle a tricky situation with your colleague or boss, and choose the employee benefits that are right for you. While personal finance websites are small in number, most of them include live discussion pages (similar to Facebook or Twitter pages) where you can chat with other users whose financial circumstances are similar to your own. Ask users on the site about techniques they use to give themselves a financial advantage in the workplace or to maintain financial autonomy in their marriage.

4. Use social media to find great discounts and deals.

There are tons of discounts and deals to be found on the web. These range from Twitter-only deals from sites like AmazonMP3, JetBlueCheeps, CheapTweet to Promo Code Websites like RetailMeNot, Coupon Cabin, CouponChief.

The AARP study found that young people feel a pinch on their social budgets — 69 percent say that they suggest low-budget entertainment options and 57 percent say that they sometimes skip going out with their friends for financial reasons. Use social networking to communicate with friends and share information to come up with fun, budget-friendly things to do.

5. Get online and get (free) help to get out of debt.

Many websites offer step-by-step guides to help you take the right steps to get out of debt. With these online checklists, you'll learn how to get a free credit report online (I recommend using creditkarma.com!) differentiate between good debt and bad debt, and take the necessary steps to pay down your credit card.

While I strongly encourage my readers to take advantage of the internet and social networking platforms to gain a greater understanding of their personal finances, it is extremely important to be safe, smart, and responsible when it comes to sharing, discussing, and managing your finances online. There are many random, unprotected sites online that appear safe to use and are ready to accept credit card information. You wouldn't give a stranger off the street your credit card information, so be extra cautious about who you are sharing it with online. For the most part, never share certain personal financial information, i.e. credit card information or bank account information, unless it is with your bank, or a site that you have confirmed is trusted, secure and password protected.

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You can take control of your personal finances by applying the lessons listed below.

Problem #1. Spending Without Knowing Your Limits

As in business, you will not last long financially if you spend without regard to your income. Knowing your spending limits is not hard to do. Just find the answers to these 4 easy questions:

Question #1. What is my take-home income per pay? (that is your total income less taxes)

Question #2. What do I need to spend to live?

Question #3. What is the difference after taking spending from income?

Question #4. Can I save enough for my future from the answer in Question #3?

There are many tools to help you gain answers to these questions. You can find many on the Internet. Helpful Hint: Find one that helps you set your savings targets, checks your ability to meet the targets and then shows your progress towards your goals.

Problem #2. Spending Without Setting Savings Targets

It's OK to spend to the limits of your income but that does not provide you with any buffer for urgent purchases, or protect you from a financial emergency. Urgent purchases could be renewing a broken fridge or stove, calling a plumber to fix a broken pipe or having to spend for major car repairs. Financial emergencies could be temporary loss of income or hospitalization of a family member. How would you survive financially in any of these situations?

You can begin to save today, it's easy. What if you went without your bought lunch each day at work? That saves you $1,000 per year on $5/day. What if you reduced your Starbuck's coffee by 1 each working day? That's another $1,000 per year on $5/day. Just those two amounts alone can mean a holiday for you, the beginnings of a savings plan, or an emergency buffer.

If you set a target of 10% of your take-home pay each payday that would be a good start. If you think creatively, you are sure to come up with ways to achieve this. Think of the peace of mind that would bring.

Problem #3. Spending Without Knowing How to Save

There are many easy ways for you to save money that allow you the freedom to spend when you see something you really want. Some of these are:

1. Don't buy on impulse. Ask yourself 2 or 3 times “Do I really NEED this?” before you buy. If you cannot answer with a resounding “YES ” let it go.

2. Don't buy things JUST because they are on sale. Only buy things you need. If you do need them wait a few weeks the price may fall even further.

3. Don't buy the latest fashion items at the height of the season. Just wait a while. The prices usually reduce.

4. Don't compare yourself with others and what they have. They may have purchased making the same finance mistakes as you.

5. Set yourself a savings target. Put this money aside each payday BEFORE spending any of your pay.

Problem #4. Spending Without Feeling Satisfied

Spending can leave you feeling pretty shallow and unrewarded when you purchase on a whim or fancy when you really know you cannot afford the item. What's more you may not even use it. What a waste!

To really FEEL GOOD ABOUT SHOPPING and spending you need to know these 4 things:

1. My budget allows me the freedom to purchase this item

2. I have the cash put away already for this purchase (even though I will use my credit card for the transaction).

3. This purchase is something that I really want and will use.

4. I have purchased this item at the best possible price, saving as much as I can.

Problem #5. Spending Without Caring About Your Future

Unless you are planning for your future and financial security, you cannot be really happy. There are always worries lurking in your mind about how you would survive in a financial emergency if you have no savings. It can be very rewarding to see how quickly your savings multiply over time with only a small investment each payday.

Did you know that by saving just $5 every day this would grow into $1,867 in 12 months at 5% interest and then it grows into a whopping $10,343 in 5 years? Isn't your future worth investing in?

Why not start to overcome your personal finance problems today? Looking back you'll be so glad you did!

If you click on the links below you will be taken to a great budget solution. It helps you set your savings targets, checks your ability to meet the targets and then shows your progress towards your goals.

Bruce Hokin has designed a simple budget tool called “5 Steps to Freedom Personal Budget.” It based on his extensive background as a qualified, experienced accountant, manager, consultant and financial adviser. You can download this powerful budget assistant today and be on your way to financial freedom within the hour. It is available at his website www.freedom-personal-budgets.com.

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managing your personal finances

28, junho, 2010 aluecilespo Sem comentários

One of the big bits of gossip at Bristol between certain British comics professionals was the fate of Insomnia Productions. British independent graphic novel publisher, with books like Cancertown and Burke & Hare on their roster, they’ve been expanding of late. And naturally have been exhibiting at Bristol Comic Expo.

But something happened this weekend. What no one seems to be exactly sure. But harsh words were meant to have been exchanged. Certain people didn’t show up when they were meant to and neither did certainb books. To the extent that people believe the company may be breaking up, or parts sold off. Lots of huddled conversations and behind back briefings, some people feared the worst.

When approached, Crawford Courtts, one of the co-founders and Managing Director of Insomnia Productions replied;

Hi Rich,

Thanks for your email.

When we first started, our ambition was to change how the industry worked and the time has come for us to change again to move away from possible threats and make the most of new opportunities. In particular, we’ve been attempting to adapt to the growth of digital content for example the expansion of our range on the Digital Comics service on the Sony PSP.

As you know all companies have their internal debates but unfortunately, in this case, one of our team made this public and they will be held accountable for their actions.

Yes, we have different visions for the future of the company, but we are moving forward and we will continue to do so.

In particular we are looking forward to the release of Burke and Hare the Movie later in the year, which will no doubt increase the companies exposure and further the case of Graphic Novels as a Medium rather than just a Genre.

The historically accurate theme of the novel and the movie we believe will truly show the strengths and opportunites of graphic novels and hopefully broaden their appeal to a wider market.

I’m told that Creative Director Nic Wilkinson, who had recently moved into the marketing side of the company, will be stepping down for unrelated personal reasons, And while there were some issues getting stock and attendance arranged for this year’s convention, that the publisher is not for the chop, the vultures can stop circling and planned projects will continue.

We’ll be looking to the letterhead for any changes though…

Someone on an earlier thread quoted the axiom “After 50, life isn’t about achieving your aspirations, it’s about managing your disappointments.” But I’m 54, and I’m not surprised that it may not be that simple:

… A large Gallup poll has found that by almost any measure, people get happier as they get older, and researchers are not sure why.

“It could be that there are environmental changes,” said Arthur A. Stone, the lead author of a new study based on the survey, “or it could be psychological changes about the way we view the world, or it could even be biological — for example brain chemistry or endocrine changes.”

The telephone survey, carried out in 2008, covered more than 340,000 people nationwide, ages 18 to 85, asking various questions about age and sex, current events, personal finances, health and other matters… Finally, there were six yes-or-no questions: Did you experience the following feelings during a large part of the day yesterday: enjoyment, happiness, stress, worry, anger, sadness. The answers, the researchers say, reveal “hedonic well-being,” a person’s immediate experience of those psychological states, unencumbered by revised memories or subjective judgments that the query about general life satisfaction might have evoked.

The results, published online May 17 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, were good news for old people, and for those who are getting old. On the global measure, people start out at age 18 feeling pretty good about themselves, and then, apparently, life begins to throw curve balls. They feel worse and worse until they hit 50. At that point, there is a sharp reversal, and people keep getting happier as they age. By the time they are 85, they are even more satisfied with themselves than they were at 18.

In measuring immediate well-being — yesterday’s emotional state — the researchers found that stress declines from age 22 onward, reaching its lowest point at 85. Worry stays fairly steady until 50, then sharply drops off. Anger decreases steadily from 18 on, and sadness rises to a peak at 50, declines to 73, then rises slightly again to 85. Enjoyment and happiness have similar curves: they both decrease gradually until we hit 50, rise steadily for the next 25 years, and then decline very slightly at the end, but they never again reach the low point of our early 50s…

For some people, the universe sends an unusually specific message. The Spousal Unit’s fiftieth birthday was also the first day after he’d lost his job, so he slept late and woke up thinking, “Well, at least it can’t get much worse… “

That was September 11, 2001.

Open Thread, Seriously | 3:18 am |

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In India we have an old saying which means something like this - “you can emulate everything else but not money.” When it comes to cash, you really require cash only, nothing else can replace cash. In these days of easy credit certainly you can use credit cards, borrow some loans on EMI (Equated Monthly Installments), create mortgage, etc. But finally to service all these loans you need cash, rather extra cash because money has cost to it called interest. In fact when you borrow to meet your cash requirements what you do is postpone the cash requirement. At the end of the day what you need will be cash only.

What is Cash Flow?

Here comes the management of cash flows. It is a simple statement of receipt of cash and payment commitments in cash. In financial jargon it is called statement of inflow of short term sources and out-go there of. It can also be called Funds Flow statement.

In personal finance we are more concerned about cash flow rather than funds flow. Our incomes are of short term nature, recurring by way of salary, dividends, interest on savings, rents, annuities, bonuses, insurance/mutual fund maturities, etc. All these are of the nature of once at a time. We do not normally have permanent investments like equity or bonds in the business. To that extent our cash flow statement is simple.

However, it should be remembered that it is not a mere account of your earnings and expenses for a particular period. It is a projected account of income and expenditure.

How to prepare a Cash Flow Statement?

You can use a simple note book in which you can prepare columns like the ones done for traditional balance sheet; two way accounting, left side for in- flow and right for out-go. The excel sheet on computers would be still better. The following format shall be good enough in either case.

In-Flow

Sources/ Months

(Columns)(Rows)

Out-go

Uses/Months

(Columns) (Rows)

The sources column will have all the heads of income from various sources which shall carry amounts to be received during the respective months of the year.

The row will carry names of twelve months for each year.

Similarly, the Uses column on Out-go side will have particulars of each payment commitments or expenses falling due in various months. While planning for expenses you will have to take into account family and social commitments, children's education, medical contingencies, ceremonies, festivals and so many other things that might need cash during a particular month.

It will include outings with friends and a gift to a girlfriend! Better still, gifts to many girlfriends.

Cash Flow Mismatch

The total of In-flow and Out-go for a particular month of the year will show excess or shortfall of income over expenditure during a particular month.

This is called positive or negative mismatch. The positive mismatch leaves scope for savings whereas negative mismatch will require borrowings. The sustained positive mismatch can leave a scope for some long term investments to meet future expenses like child's education, travel or medication. But recurring negative mismatch will lead to long term borrowings. It will also trigger a warning for curtailing avoidable expenses to reduce the mismatch.

Living within Means

Best thing to manage cash flows is to restrict your expenses to maximum 90 % of your income. The 10% cushion is must for savings or short term exigencies. The golden rule is “live within your means and work hard & smart to earn more to live lavishly.” Never ever borrow for routine expenses.

It doesn't mean that we should not borrow. Living in a modern world would be impossible without borrowings. If you need to buy a house, probably you would never be able to buy one out of your savings. Your savings won't appreciate as faster as the prices of properties in your neighborhood.

So your projected cash flow should take into account such necessary borrowings (which in fact are investments in wealth) and provide for out-go by way of EMIs of such loans. Borrowing for a house may in fact lead to certain savings like income tax on repayments/ interest or house rent allowance, increased own house allowance or income from rent, etc.
While managing personal finance you should educate your self about various products of house loans/ mortgage loans and tax benefits in your country.

Financial Self Discipline

Your Cash Flow statement should take into account all such savings and expenses. You can prepare it for reasonably longer period and project your savings and expenses for better planning of your personal finances. Preparation of your cash flow statement is a first step towards financial self discipline and a sure way to avoid disgraceful bankruptcy.

******

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