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You are here: Home / Archives for Budgets / Saving Money

Saving Money

Your Emergency Savings Can Save You

March 22, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Who plans on having roof repairs? Emergency savings can help cover these costs.
Who plans on having roof repairs? Emergency savings can help cover these costs.

Saving part of your income on a regular basis may sometimes seem to be an unnecessary step that just deprives you of having the things you’d like now. But there are instances when a savings pad may be what saves your bacon in an emergency.

A bankrate.com survey in June 2015 discovered that 29 percent of Americans have no savings at all. They could learn from the personal stories shared by Americans who found that their savings suddenly meant all the difference to their personal finances.

Claes Bell is one of those. It happened under very ordinary circumstance, he related. Those who make Florida their home know that heavy, long-lasting rain is a reality in that part of the country. “It’s sudden and loud and so thick you can’t see much past the end of your driveway,” Bell recounted.

The Bells knew that the roof on the home they bought was 25 years old and becoming a problem, but they’d put off repairs. So when the next storm arrived, they were dismayed but not surprised to hear dripping in their bathroom and find a stain on the ceiling that let them know where the rain was getting in.

Bell tried stop-gap measures, including a sealant, but the drip kept occurring during rainstorms. It became obvious that the only real solution was a new roof. In a poor realty market, the chances for a line of credit or equity loan seemed remote. That’s when the Bells’ emergency fund became the factor that saved their finances.

“Thanks to the sluggish market for home repairs, we were able to get a deal on the roof that allowed us to just cover the cost with our emergency fund,” Bell wrote.

Using up the fund was painful, but it served the purpose for which the family established it. They were able to repair their home without incurring budget-busting debt. They were safe and comfortable, even knowing that Florida’s rains would continue to fall. Starting a new emergency fund was at the top of their priority list.

Thousands of such stories should be impetus for that huge group of Americans who continue to shun saving as a vital part of their budget. As the Bells could tell them, savings and safety are words of a feather.

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Filed Under: Emergency Fund, Money Management, Saving Money Tagged With: Budgeting, money management, Saving Money

Should I Cut The Cable Cord?

March 15, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Dropping Cable Or Satellite TV? Make An Educated Choice

Thinking of dropping live tv.
Many people are trying to decide whether to drop live tv.

The great majority of Americans, some 83 percent as of 2015, pay for TV service, according to Leitchman Research Group. They put out money for cable, satellite or fiber-optic providers. The percentage actually has dropped slightly since 2010, when it was at the 87 percent level. The difference, according to the researchers, is that fewer households are signing up for cable to replace those who have dropped the service. And some couples moving into their first home don’t sign up as a matter of course.

The percentages may continue to drop as people catch on to the fact that they don’t need cable or satellite to watch their favorite TV shows. Streaming, downloading, library discs and network TV are all reasonable alternatives.

Streaming:

Services such as HULU, Netflix and Amazon Prime give you access to thousands of shows, including past seasons of popular cable series, current episodes of network TV shows and original shows that are only available online. The average price of the services is just $9 per month, only a fraction of the $99-per-month average cost of cable or satellite. An advantage: you can tune in on your own schedule, rather than the network’s.

Downloads:

You have access to many TV shows from iTunes or VUDU for $2 to $3 each. That could become more expensive than cable or satellite if you get all your shows this way. But if you are an occasional viewer or if you want to watch just one particular show that you can’t get through a streaming service, it’s practical.

Library Discs:

Most modern libraries now offer videos for patrons. Check out your local library.

Network TV:

Despite the many delivery choices now available, it still is possible to watch TV the old-fashioned way without any additional fees. All you need is a good antenna, preferably a roof-mounted version. Various indoor antennas also are available if you don’t have easy access to a roof. You can even build your own with instructions from such publications as Popular Mechanics. Online tutorials can guide you in making an antenna from materials that are readily available, such as scrap wood and old coat hangers, cardboard and aluminum foil.

Choosing among the alternatives could save you a bundle. For instance, compare a $99-per-month cable fee with an $8-per-month HULU subscription. Over a year, that’s a $1,092 savings.

Filed Under: Cutting Costs, Debt Reduction, Saving Money, Spending Habits Tagged With: Budgeting, money management, save money

Check Up On Your Personal Finance Planning

March 11, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

The Great Recession that plagued personal finances from 1993 to 2008 had a significant impact on the amount of money Americans were saving. Savings figures for the period were at the lowest levels in recent history.

But by May of 2009, the household savings rate had climbed to 6.9 percent, the highest level since 1993. It took a major financial jolt to get people back on the right track. The effect of the recession, coming on the heels of a period of high borrowing, was a disaster for many. Bankruptcy filings had nearly doubled by the end of 2008.
If you have lingering concerns about the state of your own finances, check your data against these indicators. Make adjustments if necessary.

5 Steps To Financial Health

Credit Scores

1. Check your credit score. In a range of 300 to 850, the higher your score, the better your financial health. Lenders use this score to determine if they want to do business with you. To get a credit score without cost, contact one of the three primary credit bureaus, TransUnion, Equifax or Experian. If your score is below 600, try to improve it by paying down debt, satisfying outstanding judgments or curb your use of credit cards.

Savings

2. If you are saving less than 5 percent of your income, it isn’t enough. In 1993, the rate, at 7 percent, was the highest it had been. Since then, too many earners began dipping into savings to see them through the recession, rather than adding to their savings cushion. The trend now is up and if you haven’t joined the savers, now is the time. Don’t look at it as an immediate thing, but as part of the retirement you hope to have. If your savings backup is niggardly, it may disappear entirely in the event of a medical emergency or any other of the many financial challenges that can bite when you aren’t prepared. Make savings of 10 percent of income a goal.

Credit Cards

3. You can be pretty sure you are in over your head if you carry credit card balances from month to month or if you are paying only a small amount to the principal. This is a major cause of financial stress for many people. Ideally, you use a credit card only in emergencies, or charge only what you can pay off in a month. Then you start whittling away at the total, paying whatever you can over the expected monthly payment. Only $5,000 in credit card debt requires a minimum $200 a month and can ultimately cost $8,000, taking up to 13 years to pay off.

Mortgages

4. If housing consumes more than 28 percent of your income, you are in trouble. Almost certainly you will have to cut back in other areas of your budget to handle that load. When the housing market was thriving, the mortgage lenders were allowing people to buy homes that absorbed up to 35 percent of their income, but with the country just coming out of the housing slump, they are edging back to the 28 percent figure. Give some serious thought to downsizing if possible.

Cut Back

5. If your non-housing bills are going crazy, you can assume you need to do something to restore balance. Succumbing to the temptation to buy items on time, you end up paying what seem to be relatively small amounts on a dozen or more products or services. Then relative small quickly becomes over-large and you’re suddenly in the category in which the required outgo is larger than the income. Assess your situation by putting all the bills on the table and seriously discussing them. Identify what you can trim or do without and then do without it. Just one for-instance: Do you really need a 500-channel cable TV package if you are using only a few of the channels? Do you really need a land line if you have cell phones? Etc. etc. etc. An honest look may help your family regain control of its resources without any really painful sacrifices.

Do what you can to avoid become part of the dismal foreclosure and bankruptcy statistics. Keep tabs on your finances and move toward a better distribution of what you have for the sake of the future as well as the present.

Filed Under: Credit, Credit Cards, Cutting Costs, Mortgages, Saving Money Tagged With: budget, credit cards, credit score, money management, Mortgages

Investment Trends For Personal Finance In 2016

March 7, 2016 By Twila Van Leer

Investment Trends For 2016
Investment Trends For 2016

What’s happening in the world matters to your personal finances. The larger socioeconomic trends filter down to your own pocketbook whether or not you want them to. Following are current trends that may affect your finances over the next five years, according to the experts:

Interest income will continue to be dismal.

Cash and savings accounts are being affected by global debt, aging populations and low energy prices. Countries have lowered interest rates they pay on short-term notes, in some cases paying negative interest rates. That means the lenders have to pay a fee to own debt securities. The results trickle down to the individual. To offset, the experts advise that you modestly increase your allocation to global stocks and real estate.

Too much information can swamp you.

Technology makes an excess of data available through blogs, social media and emails. With so many options and relatively easy access to competitive products, analysis paralysis can cloud decisions. Turn off the “cookies” feature in your browser and avoid an overabundance of ads.

The costs of investing will continue to drop.

In the investing world, where so many factors are beyond the control of individuals, it is smart to lower expenses in hopes of increasing returns. But cost isn’t the only factor. Consistent savings, investment diversification and comfort with volatility are also to be considered. The experts say that instead of focusing solely on low fees, you should create an investment strategy that aligns with your goals.

Life insurance costs are going up.

Insurance companies earning less on their portfolios may opt for premium increases for whole and term life policies. The companies make their money on premium income and investment performance and they share the pain with customers when things are not going well for them. To counter, you might consider buying term insurance for the longest time span that makes sense to you. Term life, unlike whole life and other so-called permanent policies, has no cash component and usually expires after a set number of years, so it usually is cheaper. If you want permanent life insurance, look at a variably policy from a lower-cost but reliable provider. You then take a moderate risk over a longer time and grow the policy’s investment.

Filed Under: Insurance, Investing, Personal Finance, Saving Money Tagged With: Investing, money management, Personal Finance

Where To Watch Star Wars Online

December 18, 2015 By Sherry Tingley

Are you wondering how you can watch Star Wars Movies at home? You could buy the popular video series from Amazon, but that would cost you up to $100. You can’t watch it on Netflix, Hulu, or HBO or M-GO. The easiest and cheapest way is to use a sell and buy back system offered by a new service called VidAngel

All Star Wars Movie Links

Star Wars A New Hope
Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back
Star Wars The Phantom Menace
Star Wars Attack Of The Clones
Star Wars Return of the Jedi
Star Wars Revenge Of The Sith

You may be wondering if it is legal to watch movies through Vid Angel. It is completely legal. You are buying a video from VidAngel, then when you are done watching, you sell it back to them. It is all seamless and easy. This service is becoming one of the web’s most popular video streaming companies out there.

Media Trivia For Star Wars

Do you know these interesting trivia facts about Star Wars? From who was offered the roll of Hans Solo to how much the voice of Darth Vader cost, these fun facts will brighten any fan’s day.

The Future Of Star Wars

Colin Trevorrow, the director of Star Wars Episode 9, attended the Sundance film festival. He said that the next Star Wars may be filmed in space. The film is set for release in 2019 so this may be a real possibility.

Iconic Historical Star Wars Poster

alt text
Historic Star Wars Posters – Courtesy of ScreenCrush.com

Go to VidAngel and enjoy all the Star Wars Movies.

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Filed Under: Saving Money Tagged With: Star Wars, Vid Angel, Video Streaming

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