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الثلاثاء، 31 أكتوبر 2017

Picton Property Income (PCTN)

Picton Property Income is a member of Moneywise’s First 50 Funds for beginners. To find out more about investment trusts and how they work read the our guide: Investment trusts – the ins and outs.

Picton Property Income (PCTN)

AIC sector: Property Direct – UK
Objective: To provide shareholders with an attractive level of income together with the potential for capital growth, by principally investing in commercial property sectors.
Ongoing charge: 2.47%
Yield: 4.1%

Picton Property Income’s portfolio consists of 58 assets invested across the main commercial property sectors: Office, Industrial, Retail, Retail Warehouse and Leisure. The portfolio is predominantly invested in the office and industrial sectors and is biased towards London and the South East.

Under chief executive Michael Morris, the team has generated Picton’s outperformance by actively managing its assets, thereby enabling it to raise rents, cut costs and reduce voids.

Picton Property Income invests in assets where it believes there are opportunities to enhance either income or value, and this is primarily achieved by providing space that meets occupiers’ requirements.

The portfolio has around 350 occupiers providing a diversified income stream from a wide range of businesses. The majority of this income is paid out to investors in the form of quarterly dividends.

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Profile: Henderson Smaller Companies (HSL)

Henderson Smaller Companies is a member of Moneywise’s First 50 Funds for beginners. To find out more about investment trusts and how they work read the our guide: Investment trusts – the ins and outs.

Henderson Smaller Companies (HSL)

AIC sector: UK smaller companies
Objective: To maximise shareholder’s total returns by investing in smaller companies that are quoted in the UK.
Ongoing charge: 1.01%
Yield: 2.2%

Managed by Neil Hermon since 2002, Henderson Smaller Companies has since regularly outperformed its benchmark, the Numis Smaller Companies index.

The trust is relatively large for a smaller companies fund. This has seen Mr Hermon invest more in medium-sized companies than true ‘small companies’ – medium-sized companies typically account for around two thirds of the portfolio, while small companies (including Aim-listed stocks) make up the remainder.

Mr Hermon’s main focus is on looking for growth stocks at the right price. He finds his investments mainly by conducting hundreds of meetings with companies each year, where he assesses company managers and their strategy. He looks for ‘the four Ms’: model (a strong business model); management (managers with a good track record); money (strong balance sheets and cash flow); and momentum (good earnings momentum).

He takes a long-term investment approach, holding stocks for over five years on average, so he looks for companies that can grow over that period. Unusual for a smaller companies fund, the trust offers a reasonable income.

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Profile: City of London Investment Trust (CTY)

City of London Investment Trust is a member of Moneywise’s First 50 Funds for beginners. To find out more about investment trusts and how they work read the our guide: Investment trusts – the ins and outs.

City of London Investment Trust (CTY)

AIC sector: UK Equity Income
Objective: To provide long-term growth in income and capital by mainly investing in UK listed equities.
Ongoing charge: 0.43%
Yield: 4%

City of London has a formidable reputation as an income-producing investment trust, with 50 years of consecutive annual dividend increases under its belt.

It is one of the largest UK equity income trusts and has one of the lowest annual ongoing charges. Job Curtis has run the trust since 1991. He manages it conservatively, focusing on high-yielding, cash-generative businesses. It may not be exciting, but it is not designed to be; it is firmly positioned as a steady, dependable option in a turbulent world.

Mr Curtis looks for companies that are undervalued on a medium-term basis that he can invest in over the long term. He likes to run his winners and the portfolio turnover is low. It is well-diversified with more than 100 holdings.

Around two thirds of the portfolio is invested in big ‘blue-chip’ companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, but they tend to be businesses operating globally that are selling their goods and services overseas and investing in economies likely to grow faster than the UK.

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The 5 Biggest Reasons to Hate the IRS Tax Code

Trump's critics on the left seems to think the tax code is just fine the way it is. So as a primer for why Americans deserve genuine tax relief and reform, here are five reminders of how badly our tax system is broken.

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No Dental Insurance? Free Dentistry Days Can Help You Get the Care You Need

Is the pain of paying for dental services keeping you from ignoring that pain in your tooth?

You’re not alone — but, luckily, there’s help.

Several dental clinics across the United States have committed to hosting free dental days throughout the year, providing services such as cleanings, fillings and extractions free of charge.

Free Dentistry Day runs this nationwide initiative to help patients get the dental care they need. Its website states financial strains can make dental care unaffordable, especially for more than 130 million Americans, who are without dental insurance.

“Participating offices are able to help those who would otherwise not receive dental care at all,” Kathy Scent, a practice administrator in the Chicago metro area, said in a video about the initiative on the site.

“Some have gone years without dental care — either because they don’t understand the value of oral health or, more often than not, they simply don’t have the financial resources,” she said.

Since 2010, Free Dentistry Day says over 2,500 patients have been given more than $1 million worth of free care.

The initiative’s website gives a list of local dental offices providing free services. Nearly two dozen practices are signed up for the month of November, including offices in Indiana, Missouri, Virginia, Oklahoma, Florida, Illinois, South Carolina, Arkansas, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Arizona.

With Veterans Day on the horizon, half the upcoming free dental days are specifically for those who’ve served in the military. A veteran’s ID, a license with a veteran’s stamp or discharge papers are required to get those free dental services.

Details about who is eligible, what services are offered and when patients can take advantage of this generosity are included on Free Dentistry Day’s site under each upcoming location’s date.

The initiative’s Facebook page also provides information on upcoming free dentistry days.

Many practices offer the free services on a first-come, first-served basis, but some require appointments to be made in advance. So sign up — or line up — early.

And if no practices near you are offering free dental days, be sure to check out these posts on getting treated at a student dental clinic, signing up for a dental savings plan and multiple options for affordable dental care for your entire family.

There are a bunch of ways to save when it comes to your oral health. Now you’ll have to come up with another excuse for avoiding the dentist!

Nicole Dow is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. She’s overdue for a dentist appointment.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, one of the largest personal finance websites. We help millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. In 2016, Inc. 500 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the No. 1 fastest-growing private media company in the U.S.



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Personal Finance Success and the Road to Happiness

When I first started really turning my financial life around, I was of the genuine belief that doing so was going to bring about incredible positive change in my life. I envisioned this glowing future where all of the things I was worried about in life had melted away.

We were going to live in a beautiful house. I was going to have a low-stress job. My marriage was going to be great. My children were going to be great. Everything was just going to be great in this future where I no longer had financial worry hanging over my head.

One of the realities I figured out over the ensuing five years or so is that even though I was making incredible strides when it came to improving my financial state, it really wasn’t making me happier.

Don’t get me wrong – I felt far better about our financial state, and we were undoubtedly in a more stable financial situation with a lot less financial stress hanging over our lives.

But was I happier? Was everything just like that beautiful picture that I envisioned?

Sadly, no, it wasn’t.

Things were better, unquestionably. I didn’t have that financial worry hanging over my head. I had a really flexible job that provided me with wonderful opportunities. I had a great marriage and three wonderful young children at home.

Yet, I still wasn’t really happy. I still didn’t have that “Instagram life” that I wanted so badly.

I had all of the pieces that I thought I could ever want, but I wasn’t happy.

So, I made another series of changes. I sold The Simple Dollar, for one. I dove into some other passions for a while. I tried seeking out new social circles.

The end result of those changes? No change.

I still never had this happiness that I thought personal finance success would bring me. I never found the endless joy that I thought all of this would bring into my life.

What was missing?

If my underlying goal in seeking personal finance success was to achieve personal happiness, was all of that a failure? Was the elimination of debt and everything else just a waste of my time?

Over the last year or two, this has really been at the forefront of my thinking about finances. What have I really gained from paying off all of our debts and saving at a high rate? Am I really better off as a person because of it? Am I a happier person because of it?

Lately, I’ve finally figured out a few things that come close to answering those questions, something that I’ve been hinting at in a lot of posts recently.

First and foremost, personal finance success alone is not a key to personal happiness, but it is a very useful tool for nurturing it. Do I feel happier because I made a ton of personal finance improvements in my life? Not in any direct way. However, have the things that I gained from personal finance improvements put my life in a better place? Absolutely.

Let me spell out what I mean, as clearly as possible.

Finding Sustained Happiness… or Not

I don’t think that sustained happiness – a true day-in-and-day-out sense of existential joy – is something that many of us ever truly find in our lives. My heart simply does not flip over and over again all day long, bathed in a pool of constant joy, and I don’t believe a life situation exists where that can ever be the case.

For a long time, I tried to chase that sense of sustained joy. I believed that a lot of different things would help me find it – my personal finance changes being a big part of it, and things like having a “perfect” marriage or a “perfect” parenthood also were parts of it – but the truth is that sustained joy will never arrive.

It seems like a pretty big disappointment, doesn’t it? After most of an adult life seeking some elevated form of lasting happiness, I’ve come to the conclusion that it just doesn’t exist.

It’s important here to note what I’m actually saying, though.

I’m not saying that my personal finance journey was fruitless. Not in the least.

I’m not saying that life is devoid of joy. Not in the least.

I’m simply saying that I was too busy rushing through a journey with a mirage at the end and, because of that, I missed the real answer along the way.

The real answer is simple: the best life you can build is a fertile field upon which joy can bloom regularly, but it takes work to cultivate that field.

Let me repeat that: the best life you can build is a fertile field upon which joy can bloom regularly, but it takes work to cultivate that field.

Make Your Garden Grow

I’ve come to really think of life as being a lot more like a garden, much like our humble vegetable garden out behind our house. The most joyful moments in the garden are when you stroll out there and find some fresh produce, which turns out to be a delicious result of quite a bit of work.

To enjoy that fresh tomato, one had to turn over the soil. One had to fertilize the soil as well, with compost made over a period of time. One had to start a tomato plant in the house under a grow light, then plant the little plant out in the garden on a warm spring day. You have to weed around it and then, eventually, cover the ground near it with straw and newspaper. You might have to put up a fence around it to keep animals out, and you might have to spray a little bit of soapy water on the leaves to keep certain pests and diseases at bay.

Eventually, though, that work pays off. You find yourself with a bunch of tomato plants, producing a bounty of delicious tomatoes.

Life is like that, in a lot of ways. Most of life is about cultivating a situation so that true joy can spontaneously arise with some frequency from your efforts.

For example, you might cultivate strong personal finances so that you’re not burdened by money stresses and so that, when an opportunity comes around, you can jump on board that opportunity.

You might cultivate a lot of great relationships by giving freely of yourself, so that you always have friends around and so that when you need a helping hand, at least a few hands will be extended your way.

You might cultivate personal health through diet and exercise, so that your body remains strong and you’re able to enjoy a much wider range of activities for a much longer period of your life.

The important thing to note here is that none of these paths lead to a life of sustained happiness and joy on their own. Instead, they lead to a life where there are more opportunities for moments of true joy.

The journey of a lifetime isn’t a direct path to happiness, because life doesn’t provide that. Instead, life’s path, if given proper cultivation, leads to a place where happiness naturally grows and bubbles up frequently.

This is a huge realization that I missed out on for many years. I kept looking for some kind of ideal life, when what I actually had is a life that was slowly producing more and more joy bubbling up naturally from the work I had put in. I was looking for some kind of perfection, and that was causing me to miss out on countless good things.

Here’s another great realization: there is a lot of inner joy that comes from the process of cultivating, if you look for it. If you look around during the actual journey, you’ll find a great deal of joy along the way. It’s not that different than the feeling of peace that many people get when weeding their garden. You don’t need to directly have that sweet fruit in your hand to know that you’re bringing your garden to a better place, and the process itself is kind of meditative and calming.

All of this thinking has led me toward a few big conclusions about the road to happiness and the role that personal finances play on it.

Building the Road to Happiness, One Brick at a Time

As I said earlier, I don’t think there is a state of perfect, unbridled happiness in life. Instead, we find happiness in individual moments which come about as the result of the effort we’ve put in to build a good life, and finding contentment in that process makes life quite good.

How do you do that, though? What’s the recipe for the road to happiness if that’s true?

I don’t know if the “bricks” in the road are the same for everyone, but I can certainly comment on many of the elements in my own life that are a part of building that fertile ground for happiness and help me to find contentment during the journey.

Choose to spend less than you earn and do wise things with the remainder. I want to start off by mentioning personal finance here. It is a key element for many reasons – it provides foundational resources, it melts away stress – but I’m going to come back to it in detail later on in this article, I promise.

Actively choose to be positive about things and actively choose to look at the glass half full. Most things that happen in life have good things about them and bad things about them. Rather than dwelling on the negatives, deal with them only enough to handle the damage caused and to ensure they don’t happen again. Focus instead on the positives – look at the good things brought into your life.

I make a conscious effort to separate wants from needs and intentionally downplay the wants in both thought and practice. Rather than having a life that’s steered by trying to acquire things that I don’t have, I try to focus instead on using the bounty of things that I do have. If I find myself wanting something new, I reflect instead on the access I have to many, many other things to enjoy, and I ask myself whether I really want that thing and why I want it. I also delay wants by adding those desires to a “wish list.” Those tactics tend to melt away most wants, which in the end mostly just create negative feelings.

Try to nudge my work towards things you care about, so that your work is as meaningful as you can make it. My entire decision-making process regarding The Simple Dollar was to nudge it along a path where I could focus on the things I really do care about – writing articles that were full of meaningful content to help people with personal finance and life decisions and perhaps lead them to reflect on their own lives with a positive outcome – and away from things that I do not, like managing ads and keeping servers running. This can be done in almost any career path by intentionally choosing jobs and projects that are interesting and meaningful to you compared to the other options, while trying to avoid both idleness and overwork. Evaluate things through that lens as often as possible.

Try to cultivate lots of relationships, understanding that not all of them will become deep social connections. Having an abundance of relationships in your life means that you’ll have a constant stream of relationships that are in bloom, relationships that offer up social engagements and opportunities and help when you need it. Relish the fact that you can give those things to your friends as well.

Actively work on maintaining those relationships. Building a lot of relationships is fine. Maintaining them is a different story. It is very easy to allow relationships to wither on the vine, not because of any sort of malice, but because more urgent things pop up in your life. Yet, time and time again, I find that it’s the relationships that I put effort into maintaining that end up bearing wonderful fruit in the long run.

Try to look at most situations through the eyes of other people who are involved in it. Rather than focus on how someone may or may not have slighted me, I try to consider the situation through their eyes. Honestly, most of the time, it quickly becomes obvious that they did not even notice any sort of perceived slight. It’s easy to forget that human beings have a spotlight of focus in their lives and, quite often, you’re not in that spotlight. They aren’t slighting you – you just don’t even enter into their conscious thought. Applying that kind of “put yourself in their shoes” thinking as often as possible is very valuable.

I keep a gratitude journal. Each day, I write down five things I’m grateful for that I noticed or that happened to me that day. Some days, I’ll write even more. Why do this? It’s a day-in day-out reminder of how many good things my life already has for me. It really breeds appreciation of the goodness of my daily life.

Make a consistent effort to show gratitude toward others. This can take the form of simply saying thanks for the things that people do for you during the day, but it can also take the form of writing thank you notes for bigger favors and just for being a good influence in your life. It can also extend back to doing those things for people in your past who mentored and helped you.

Choose positive things to say in conversation, almost all of the time. Rather than dwelling on negative thoughts and perspectives about things, look for positive things to say. Jump in when the conversation is a positive one, or avoid saying much (or find an easy way to redirect) if the conversation has a negative tone.

Carve out time for the things that interest me. In my case, I literally block out times for my hobbies and passions and interests. On my daily and weekly schedules, I devote a little time each day to hobbies and a significant chunk of at least one day a week to them.

Try to take care of your body. A healthy body you can rely on is invaluable. Be more thoughtful about what you put into your body, and spend some time and energy exercising as well, in whatever way works best for you.

Try to take care of your mind, too. You can achieve this by getting adequate sleep. Another invaluable technique is to practice focused meditation, which is like doing bicep curls for your mind. Just simply focus on your breath for a couple of minutes – breathe in, breathe out – and bring your mind back to your breath when you notice it wandering. Do this a few times each day. It really is like bicep curls for your mind.

Try to find positives in each of those things, even when it’s hard. Sometimes, it’s hard to find positives when you’re doing something that isn’t really fun or when the outcome isn’t what you hoped for. It’s very easy to get lost in a sea of negative feelings. Don’t let that happen. Look for the positives in your most difficult outcomes. You might be sore, but that’s your body getting stronger. A friend might not be communicative, but you have a lot of other friends and that might just be that one friend’s style. Look for the positives, above all.

The Key Role of Personal Finance

The thing to remember in all of this is that personal finance might not be the absolute key to happiness, but it is a really powerful foundational layer. Having your finances in order is like putting an extremely rich batch of compost into your garden of life.

Having strong finances dissolves stress, which helps your mind and body. A lot of modern stress revolves around money concerns. How will you pay your bills? How will you afford this or that? If you take a better approach with your money by trimming down the unnecessary and asking yourself what you really want or need and putting money away for the future, that stress melts away. Low stress encourages positive health outcomes (both mental and physical), helps build relationships, makes it easier to rest, and makes it much easier to focus and to see the positives in life.

Having strong finances creates opportunities. It enables you to take on challenging career moves (like, say, walking away from a career in research to be able to write from home so you can spend more time with your family and write things that feel meaningful… not that I know anything about that). It enables you to actually reach out and touch big dreams, like taking your family on a truly amazing vacation. It enables you to take advantage of things that pop up, like buying a $10,000 collection from someone selling them at a fire sale price of $2,000 because they need cash.

Having strong finances creates a positive “snowball effect” of financial health. When your finances are strong, you can do things like buying a car with cash so that you don’t have to pay interest on the loan. You can pay off your credit card in full each month because you’re spending less than you earn, so you’re never accruing interest on there. It becomes easier and easier to save for the future because you’re not losing money to interest, to late fees, and so on.

In other words, being strong in the personal finance department doesn’t create happiness itself, but it is a huge part of a strong foundation upon which happiness can grow. You just can’t expect to be happy simply because you have money in the bank.

The Road Forward

It takes a lot of time to do the things listed in this article. Quite often, you’ll find yourself investing a lot of time and energy into things that don’t seem to be bringing any immediate joy. I have two suggestions there.

First, think about both your progress to date and the positives of where you want to go. In the middle of getting in better shape, for example, consider where you started and how you look and feel now, then think about what things will be like if you stay on this path. Things are better now, and they’ll be even better then.

Second, seek out joy – or at least contentment – on the path itself. Find exercise that you enjoy. Find products that you enjoy. Find low calorie foods that you enjoy. Find joy even in the hard work, because it is a joyful thing to create things you can be proud of. Don’t worry so much about outcomes – think instead about the moment and what you can do that’s good right now that happens to also be good going forward.

Good luck!

The post Personal Finance Success and the Road to Happiness appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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99 Countries and Counting: How She Gets Paid to Explore the World

Lisa Niver is on deadline for She Knows, a website to which she contributes a regular column Today, the travel blogger is at home in Los Angeles, writing about her most recent trip to Las Vegas.

“I drove super fast cars,” says Niver, her voice cheerfully beaming over the phone “I cooked with a chef.”  Her adventures take her all around the world and have her trying a variety of activities, all in the name of her next assignment.

“I’ve been doing this project, ’50 Things Before I’m 50,’ and I got to swim with the sharks at Mandalay Bay,” she says. “I went to the spa. I also did a project in Palm Desert, where I drove BMWs and had my first golf lesson.”

After meeting deadline, where her day goes depends if she’s globetrotting or managing We Said Go Travel, her travel website that publishes blog posts and video content.

But travel writing is more than just wandering to far-off destinations and posing for dreamy photos — there’s a lot happening behind the scenes.

“I spend part of my day doing social media,” she says. “I go out, I do activities then have to write about it. Then I have to do the videos. If I’m not on the road, I’ll put up one photo a day. There’s a lot of hours of the day you’re not seeing if I’m just sharing that photo. A lot of the day is logistics.”

To date, Niver has visited 99 countries, most recently Monaco, for the all-electric Formula E auto race, and San Marino, a small landlocked country inside of Italy that doesn’t have any train stations or airports.

Niver has always been passionate about travel. But that is still a big change for someone who started out in medical school and became an elementary school science teacher before she jumped ship to work on a cruise line.

She founded We Said Go Travel in 2010.

The site started as her personal blog, with one story a week, but now it is a community website that publishes four to five times a week, featuring almost 3,000 travel stories submitted by people from 75 countries.

“It’s been amazing,” says Niver. “I’ve published 11-year-olds to 80-year-olds. It’s been very successful for having a wide variety of views and opinions.”

There are three annual contests on the site writers can submit to, and there’s a destination section where anyone can pitch to be an ambassador of a country.

Submissions for the writing awards are 500 to 800 words with one photo. It has to be an original story and match the theme. There is a $15 fee to enter and a scholarship available for those who need financial assistance.

“I’ve had 13 travel-writing competitions,” says Niver. “We have had almost 2,000 people that we’ve published in the travel-writing awards. Their stories have been remarkable, but it is a lot of effort for people to decide they want to enter their story. In 2018, we are going to do our first travel video competition.”

Niver is working hard to make a name for herself; she recently attended the See Her Women in Entertainment Emmy Party, a campaign started to fight back against bias against women in the media. She also did an Instagram takeover for Frommer’s Travel Guides and has been published in USA Today, Smithsonian Magazine and The Saturday Evening Post, for which she interviewed a WWII veteran for her trip to the Solomon Islands. She’s verified on Twitter and Facebook and has hit a million views on YouTube.

The days are filled with highs and lows.

Niver shared one of her scariest and most challenging experiences so far.

“I went mountain biking and got to write the story for Pop Sugar at Northstar [California Resort in Lake Tahoe],” she says. “I had gone in the winter to the Tahoe resort, and I said, ‘I will come back if you give me a private [biking] lesson with a teacher that doesn’t mind crying, because I am terrified!’”

She did indeed come back to take a lesson. She thought she was doing well until the head instructor, Shep, came out and said they were going to the top of the mountain. She had only worked on the first skill, so she didn’t think she was quite ready. But she jumped in anyways and started the ride. Soon she noticed the signs were above her skill level.

”I started to cry. I was joking about the crying part — I didn’t want to cry! He looks at me and says, ‘Have you fallen down? Are you hurt?’ I said no. I said, ‘The goal of my project was to do 50 things before I’m 50, not to find 50 things to kill me before I’m 50!”

So on she went. “I get terrified. I was crying, cursing, hyperventilating, but I make it. I don’t know that I’ll ever go back. But I was willing.”

That willingness is one of the reasons Niver feels she has been successful in travel blogging.

For anyone wanting to blog about their own travels, Niver shares some tips for getting started.

“Start today,” she says. “Whatever step it is, do something. Don’t spend money. There are so many ways to get started — you can have a Facebook long post, Instagram long post, find someone to write for, use Tumblr. A lot of people get stymied that they have to have the perfect name and the perfect site, and they’re gonna buy a URL, SEO and hosting. In the beginning, the most important part is having commitment.”

It seems like a no-brainer, but Niver credits it for getting her to where she is now.

“Commit to writing once a month,” she says. “At the end of the year, you’ll have 12; that’s way more than you have now. It doesn’t have to be the best — it has to be published.”

Aaron Drake is a travel writer and former magazine editor who has contributed to Amtrak, The Advocate and Man About World, among others. He pretty much lives to get lost in other countries.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, one of the largest personal finance websites. We help millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. In 2016, Inc. 500 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the No. 1 fastest-growing private media company in the U.S.



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Your Credit Information and the End of Privacy as We Know It

The recent Equifax data breach has many people talking about privacy and what you can do to protect your personal information. While it’s true that you should try to safeguard your private data from people with bad intentions, it’s also true that there’s a very good chance your information is going to be exposed at some point.

Equifax’s data breach alone just put the personal information of some 145.5 million U.S. consumers at risk. According to reports from Identity Theft Resource Center, over 1 billion records have been exposed in data breaches since 2005 – and that’s just the breaches that have been made public.

With such massive numbers of exposed records, not to mention all the information we willingly give away online, it’s safe to assume that your information isn’t private any longer, and perhaps hasn’t been for a very long time.

The question therefore becomes: What should you do to protect yourself in this world where “data privacy” is an endangered species? What you can’t do includes hitting some sort of metaphorical “delete” button and removing all your information from the cyber world. Although, that would make for a great app!

Your Responsibilities

Most of us are understandably angry about the never-ending string of high profile data breaches. After all, in the case of the credit bureaus specifically, you don’t recall giving permission for any company to collect your account management habits or the other types of information that appears on your credit reports. Yet like it or not, the credit bureaus can legally collect, store, and sell your information without your permission if they obey various federal and state laws when they do so.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) is the primary federal statute that serves to protect you and your information where credit reporting is concerned. Among the many rights that the FCRA confers upon you is the right to expect to see only accurate information on your credit reports. Unfortunately, that’s not always the way credit reporting works.

Credit reporting errors and fraud exist. When such issues occur, the result is that inaccurate and potentially unfair information could show up on your credit reports, lowering your credit scores and often making it difficult to qualify for the financing and services you desire and deserve.

However, you may not realize that it’s always been your personal responsibility to check your credit reports for accuracy. In an age where the privacy of your information is no longer a certainty — and perhaps even nonexistent — that responsibility is more important than ever.

Routine credit checks might not necessarily prevent fraud or credit reporting errors, but they can make you aware when something goes wrong so that you can take steps to correct the problem.

Protecting Your Credit

Your credit identity is ground zero when your personal information has been stolen. Credit fraud is the easiest way to monetize that information. As such, identity theft is one of the biggest threats you may face when your personal information is stolen.

Identity theft occurs whenever someone steals and uses your personal information to impersonate you or to open fraudulent accounts in your name. Although it’s difficult to fully protect your personal information, you can take steps to protect your credit reports. If a crook manages to steal your info but cannot actually open any fraudulent accounts in your name, then you’ve avoided the problem of cleaning up the aftermath.

Placing a credit freeze on all three of your credit reports is perhaps the best way that you can protect your credit from fraud, especially if you believe your data may have already been compromised. When you freeze your credit reports, they are actually taken out of circulation, preventing new lenders from accessing them. As a result, if someone applies for a fraudulent account in your name, the application will be denied. If the thieves cannot qualify for an account in your name, then they’ll simply move on to the next victim on their list.

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John Ulzheimer is an expert on credit reporting, credit scoring, and identity theft. He has written four books on the topic and has been interviewed and quoted thousands of times over the past 10 years. With time spent at Equifax and FICO, Ulzheimer is the only credit expert who actually comes from the credit industry. He has been an expert witness in over 230 credit related lawsuits and has been qualified to testify in both federal and state courts on the topic of consumer credit.

The post Your Credit Information and the End of Privacy as We Know It appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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How to Manage Slump Months When Your Income Fluctuates

Slump months happen to the best of us with variable incomes.

My first came recently, eight months into full-time self-employment, and it caught me by surprise. As I tallied up my income spreadsheet, I was shocked to learn I’d barely cover the month’s basic expenses, let alone business costs or incidentals. Sure, I’d brought it on myself by pressing pause on new projects to focus on my book launch, but that didn’t help me any feel better.

Fortunately, I could rely on savings, but not everyone has that luxury. Plus, hearing the advice to “just save more in advance” when you’re already in the throes of a slump month is pretty unhelpful. (Although having a safety net really does lower stress.)

How else to weather the storm? Try these tips from people who’ve been there.

1. Don’t Turn Away Lower-Paying Gigs.

“The highest-paying jobs are usually the least consistent, and the lowest paying are the most consistent,” says Cory Kleinfeldt, a paintless dent repair technician who works on commission in Sacramento. “I had to learn to value the lower-paying, but more consistent work, while [aiming] to make the higher-paying work more consistent.”

For some, this means picking up a side gig you can do on your own schedule, like driving for Uber. Or it could mean reaching out to lower-paying clients you don’t typically work with during busy months, but who are likely to have work available.

2. Renegotiate Your Rates.

Unlike full-time employers, clients don’t give us annual reviews or opportunities to negotiate higher rates — it’s on us to engage those conversations. What better time than a slump month?

Start by reevaluating your existing relationships to determine if you can re-negotiate your fees. You’ll likely have the most luck with long-term clients you’ve worked with for at least a year. Just like you’d prep before asking your boss for a raise, be able to defend the increase and explain what added value you’ll bring.

3. Review Your Contracts

Look for contract stipulations that can stabilize your cash flow. For example, I’ve been asked to pay for my travel costs — like flights and hotel — for speaking events, then wait to be paid back until the event wrapped. After fronting several hundred dollars on several occasions and not getting reimbursed for months, I changed my contracts so clients are obligated to reimburse me within 30 days of booking.

“There’s also no shame is asking for half your payment upfront — or all of it upfront — if that works in your industry,” says Kleinfeldt.

Or consider changing your business model altogether. “If you have a client you could work with on a regular basis, selling them on a monthly contract can give you some regularity when your other income sources are variable,” suggests Liz Theresa, an online marketer and web designer in Norwell, Massachusetts.

4. Slash Unnecessary Lifestyle and Business Expenses

Concentrating on the bare necessities can help carry you through a down month or two. That goes for lifestyle expenses, like avoiding takeout, and business costs. “I usually cut back on ad dollars and invest more time in creating valuable content, especially since ad results can be so variable,” Theresa says.

Zina Kumok, a freelance writer in Denver, scales back on buying educational courses and books and reduces hours she needs from her virtual assistant.

5. Look for Patterns for Future Slump Months

Some contractors can predict future down months, which presents an opportunity to double down during the high season. That’s the case for both Lauren Cafrelli — a personal trainer in New York who can generally count on a January boom and a slow summertime — and Kara Perez, a money writer and founder of Bravely in Austin, Texas, who’s figured out that summer is slow for her, too.

Knowing a slow month — or season — is on the horizon allows you to relieve some pressure by prepaying big expenses or getting ahead on other yearly goals. With some foresight, having a slow season is basically a built-in vacation, Perez says.

While Kleinfeldt doesn’t have seasonal predictability, he uses slow months as motivation to build his book of business. “Every time I have a slow month is because I spent too much time earning money and not enough time seeking more jobs,” he says. “We can all get caught up in performing our skills and not spending enough time marketing, selling or finding new revenue streams for the future.”

Related stories on Grow:

How to Create a Budget That Works

7 Daily ‘Rich Habits’ Anyone Can Adopt

25 Ways to Turn Your Interests Into Income

This article originally appeared on the personal finance site, Grow.

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