Thursday, October 29, 2009

Guide to Getting Rich

When I first found out about this book I thought the title was right on the money.(No pun intended) But having read this book, the title should be Guide to Getting Rich Slowly.

The book doesn't talk about budgeting but it is big on saving. In my first post on the Total Money Makeover, Dave Ramsey talks about the importance of budgeting and having an emegency fund. The Guide to Getting Rich in fact is through saving. The whole idea is to fiqure out how much money you need for your TPG or Total Portfolio Goal.

The TPG is based on the amount of money you need to have a certain income. When you have the TPG established you then determine how much money you need to save or your total saving goal (TSG)

In essence your TSG builds your TPG which will allow for the money that you targeted to be given to you as interest. Saving is the key. But in order to save you have to first get out of debt. There is a little bit of math in the book such as multiplication and division. I highly recommend this book as I do all the books in this blog.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Looking at your situation

In my spare time I used to create an income statement and networth statement at the end of the year and this gave me a good idea of where we were financially. My wife and I also got a chance to see where the holes where and what we could do to fix them.

The income statement lists your income and expenses and what you might have left over after you subtract your income from your expenses. Once I did this I began to see where our money was going. Now the best part is I can decide how I want to change my behavior to improve my financial life.

This doesn't mean that you never spend any money but what it does mean is that you get more selective. Without the income statement it is harder to plan and make decisions on allocating money.

To get from point A to point B you need directions or a plan. But you have to objectively look at your situation first. We where like everybody else, we had more going out than coming in. Solving this problem is the first step to getting on the right track.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Dealing with the paper tiger

It amazes me that in a technological world such as we have today that we still rely very heavily on paper. There are many companies that are trying to go paperless. This is a good thing yet it adds a bit of complexity too. If you have 5 bills that would be five company websites to go to and 5 user names and passwords.

If you are not online and still receiving paper then you should also have a very good filing system and a way to store all the paper. Too much paper becomes a fire hazard as well as a potential bug investation problem.

Then you have online bill pay which many banks provide but that I find very lacking. The main problem is you still receive the paper copies of each bill. The only thing you do is PAY online.

I found a company about five years ago that allows you to accept paper bills to a central location. The company scans the paper and then posts it to a secure website. All you have to do is go to one website, view the bills online and pay them online. No filing, always pay on time, no stamps or checks. What a life saver! The website is http://www.paytrust.com

Check out a short video:

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Family Sheds $106,000 in Debt

The Biggest Losers (of Debt): How a Family Shed $106,000 in Debt
Karen Kroll
Friday, September 18, 2009

This article is part of a series related to being Financially Fit
Meet the Hildebrandts; their frugal ways lost debt, won an award



Five years ago, the Hildebrandt family of New Richmond, Wis., was juggling more than $100,000 in credit card and personal debt. Through frugality, determination and hard work, they are now -- other than a mortgage -- debt-free.

At the time, Russell and Kandy Hildebrandts' credit card balances totaled about $89,000, and they owed $17,000 to a family member. While they were current on all the payments, the card companies had begun raising their interest rates, adding hundreds to their minimum monthly payments. Kandy acknowledges that they presented a higher credit risk, given how their balances had ballooned. Even so, with the bump in the required payments, covering the monthly payments was a struggle. "We had to change," Kandy says.

Change they did. For their debt-fighting prowess, the Hildebrandts were on Tuesday night named the winners of the Professional Achievement and Counseling Excellence (PACE) 2009 Graduate Client of the Year Award. This national award, given by the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, recognizes the hard work and commitment they demonstrated in repaying their debts, and their willingness to become effective managers of their money and change their lifestyle. (Disclosure: CreditCards.com Senior Reporter Connie Prater served as a judge in the awards.)

Slow Decline Into Debt

Not that the Hildebrandts' lifestyle was lavish. The couple, along with their twin daughters, Heidi and Holly, lived in a rented 1,000 square foot townhome. Vacations consisted of visits to extended family members in the Midwest. Russell was a chemist with a Twin Cities-based environmental testing laboratory; Kandy was a stay-at-home mom and home-schooled their daughters.


Russell and Kathy Hildebrandt of New Richmond, Wis., won an award for successfully tackling $106,000 in credit card and personal debt through thrifty spending, a second job and bit-by-bit payments on their credit card balances. They're shown outside their home surrounded by their three children, 14-year-old twins Heidi (left) and Holly, and 3-year-old Joey.

While the Hildebrandts weren't living extravagantly, they also weren't frugal, Kandy notes. They purchased most items, such as clothes for the girls, new. In addition, they had medical expenses related to Russell's diabetes and several miscarriages that Kandy suffered. At the same time, they remained committed to tithing, or giving 10 percent of their income to their church. The accumulation of day-to-day expenses left the family going a bit more into debt each year.

Bankruptcy? No Thanks

Several family friends recommended that they file for bankruptcy. That was out of the question, Russell says. "We were committed to paying off our debts." They also resolved to continue to tithe and home-school their daughters.

To get started, Kandy met with Linda Humburg, a manager with FamilyMeans Consumer Credit Counseling Service (CCCS) in Stillwater, Minn. Linda reviewed their finances, and developed a five-year debt management plan. While the schedule was daunting, the Hildebrandts signed on. "If we didn't make it, we knew that we would go out trying," Russell says.

Several steps were key to making the plan work. Kandy and Russell eliminated discretionary spending. Kandy began buying generic food and frequenting thrift stores for clothing purchases. They stopped exchanging Christmas and birthday gifts with each other and their relatives.

Even with the drastic cutbacks, the Hildebrandts couldn't cover the $2,000 they were sending to CCCS each month to be distributed to their creditors. At that time, the sum amounted to about half of Russell's take-home pay. So Russell took on a second job cleaning a local grocery store several nights a week from midnight to 4:30 a.m. He would arrive home from his day job, eat dinner, catch a few hours of sleep and head to work. After his shift, he would go back home, sleep a few more hours and then get up for his day job.

Slow Progress

The first two years were particularly tough. Russell's work schedule was grueling, while Kandy managed just about everything at home on her own. Moreover, while their credit card balances were going down, the drop wasn't yet noticeable. For about a year, the Hildebrandts made do with one car, until they received a used van from Kandy's family.

Even so, "they didn't let anything deter them from progress," Humburg says. "If the money wasn't available, they simply did without." Equally, important the Hildebrandts kept their goal -- becoming debt-free -- in mind.

After the first few years, the Hildebrandts' efforts finally seemed to be bearing fruit. Their card balances were coming down, and some were getting paid off. As one card reached zero, CCCS would apply the money that had gone to it to the remaining balances. As a result, those cards would get paid off even more quickly.

About this time, Kandy became pregnant with Joey, who's now 3. While recognizing that a new child would mean additional expenses, the couple was thrilled. "The joy he brought to a negative, grinding situation was the light we needed," she says.

Dream Home Appears

By the fall of 2008, the Hildebrandts had one year to go on the payment plan. Russell even started daydreaming about a new home when he saw a three-bedroom rambler for sale in New Richmond. It had all that they were looking for, including a large yard and a separate bedroom for Joey. Russell let a real estate agent know that they liked the house, but added that the family would have to pay off their debts before taking on a mortgage.

Several months later the agent called and asked if the Hildebrandts would be interested in a rent-to-own agreement. The current owner of the house had some health concerns and was eager to move. The monthly rent would be $1,000, which included $200 to be escrowed for closing costs. They could manage it.

Earlier this year, the owner wanted to accelerate the sale process. In April, using the tax credit for first-time home buyers, the Hildebrandts were able to swing the purchase and pay off the remaining balances on their credit cards about six months ahead of schedule.

Now, the Hildebrandts are content in their new home and free of debt, other than their mortgage. Russell has been able to quit his second job and spend more time with his family -- and catch up on sleep.

Frugal Habits Stick

Several things haven't changed, however. Kandy remains a dedicated bargain hunter. Shopping online, she found eight bar stools for their kitchen island and basement family room for $24; at a yard sale, she bought a $2 desk for the girls. The Hildebrandts "had to completely rethink how they spent and what was a need versus a want," Humburg says.

Both Russell and Kandy say that while bankruptcy might have seemed like an easier option at the outset, it would not have been as satisfying. They wouldn't have learned to take control over their money and spending. What's more, with a bankruptcy on their credit record, they wouldn't have been able to purchase a house when they did.

Their advice to others? "Get out of debt," Kandy says. "It's a chokehold."

Investing with Nickels and Dimes


Investing With Nickels and Dimes
Earl Crawley, 69, better known as Mr. Earl, earns $20,000 a year as a parking-lot attendant. But he has amassed a stock portfolio worth more than $500,000.


From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, September 2007

How did you get started investing?

Soon after I started working for Mercantile Bank in Baltimore 44 years ago, one of the bankers took me aside and told me I didn't have enough education to go very far at the bank. He suggested I invest in stocks.

Where did you get the money?

I did it with good old-fashioned nickels and dimes. My mother taught me how to budget, which made me appreciate how a little money can grow. I saved what I could from odd jobs, such as lawn-cutting and window-washing, that I did in addition to my day job. I used that money to buy one share of IBM stock back in 1981.

How did you learn how to invest?

I really didn't know enough to be scared. In school I was considered a slow learner -- dyslexic, it's called now. My true gift from God is my ability to listen, and that's how I'm able to ask questions and use tips from the brokers, financial planners and bank customers I see every day.

Do you have a formula for picking stocks?

When I first started out, I had to be conservative and take my time because I couldn't afford to lose money. Now I look for companies with stability that pay dividends. I read the stock pages but don't claim to know everything about them. I have a broker, but many times I'll go where my spirit leads me.

Any stocks you're excited about now?

I've been buying shares of ExxonMobil.

We've heard that you're helping others invest.

I started an investment club at my church. And I've been coaching a couple of young men, such as bar-and-grill cook Antawn Davenport and Dana Mouse Smith, who toured with the late rapper Tupac Shakur. They can help spread the message that people can do whatever they set their minds to do.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The Snowball

The Snowball by Alice Schroeder is one of the best biographical primers on saving and investing that I have ever read. The book describes the life and times of Warren Buffett one of the richest men in the United States. The title describes his technique for becoming wealthy.

The concept is that you take a little snow and a very long hill, and roll that little snowball until it becomes a gigantic snowball at the end of a very long hill.

What does that mean?

In finance, the term is called compounding. To compound your money is to make it grow through interest. The classic example is that of a savings account. You start with $10.00 and the bank, for example, may give you interest at 2% for the year. So, for every year that passes, the bank, in our example, will give you 20 cents.

The idea is to get the highest interest rate for as long as you can.

This is how the richest man in the United States says he got rich. COMPOUNDING is critical. Debt is compounding working in reverse and makes the bank rich. Getting out of debt allows you to begin to save and saving is the first part to investing.

A lot of people out there would like to make this complicated and it really is not. Making a lot of money is not compounding. If I gave you $100,000 in cash how much of it would you have after 20 years? 15 years? Or even 10 years? How would you compound it to get the highest interest rate? Check out the book and see how Warren did it.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

The Total Money Makeover

The Total Money Makeover: A Proven Plan for Financial Fitness is a must read. I have read this book and taken the Financial Peace University Course. The course is a thirteen week video presentation on various topics such as budgeting, saving, investing, insurance, bankruptcy and debt reduction. The book and the videos are informative and fun at the same time.

Using the principles in the book I have eliminated over $20,000 in debt. Eliminating debt is not the real goal but a means to an end. The real goal is to take the money going to debt (once eliminated), and save and invest it instead.

The bigger picture is that as I eliminated my debt I also became much better at telling my money where to go. (Also known as allocation). This is a valuable skill no matter how the economy is doing.

The only problem in reading this book and taking the course is that I wish that I had done it years ago. Regardless, of where your money journey begins please add this book to your reading list. For more information visit his website at http://www.daveramsey.com/