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الخميس، 18 أكتوبر 2018

Don’t buy retailer giftcards

House of Fraser

I’ve warned in this column about the menace of retailers’ giftcards. Many readers have happily handed them out as presents, only for their friends and relatives to fall foul of ridiculous deadline rules.

With Christmas coming, it’s timely to remind you of this massive drawback – but also to alert you to an even more risky aspect of the cards that makes them, in my view, a financial product that everyone should avoid.

The traditional problem with retailers’ giftcards is that they often must be used within a certain time. If someone receives one as a present and doesn’t use it immediately, then they could discover it’s absolutely worthless.

That’s because some retailers refuse to honour them if they’re not used by a deadline written on the cards.

It means if someone pops a card into a drawer and remembers it months later, they may have lost the money.

But there is a second reason not to buy them – if a retailer goes bust or is taken over, then its giftcards may be instantly worthless.

Reader KS of Croydon was alarmed to read that department store chain House of Fraser was in trouble this summer.

He had previously splashed out £380 on giftcards and vouchers for his disabled sister to use in the store.

When news broke that the chain of department stores had been bought out by Sports Direct, he assumed that the new owner would honour the cards.

But that won’t happen. Sports Direct said in a statement that the company is not liable to honour giftcards or vouchers held by House of Fraser shoppers. Instead, customers were asked to pay to post their giftcards to the retailer’s head office in London.

The hope was that a replacement would be issued. But the fear was that the replacements would be giftcards for Sports Direct, which offers shoppers a totally different kind of goods.

When KS went into a local House of Fraser store he was told to post his cards and vouchers to the firm’s Baker Street head office and that the company would consider his complaint.

He did so, but weeks later he had heard nothing and said it was impossible to get through to the head office by phone.

He spoke to people at his local store but told me they remained tight-lipped.

“When I told them over the phone that they needed to follow protocol in regards to the rules, they hung up,” he said.

“The second time I called, they were quite aggressive and told me there was nothing they could do. Everyone I spoke to refused to give their names.”

He added: “My mother has also sent vouchers to the head office for compensation, but she has also heard nothing.”

I shouldn’t be surprised at this total lack of decent customer service, but I am. I would have presumed that the new owner would want to start off on the right foot and treat customers decently, but sadly this doesn’t appear to be the case.

I discovered that for myself when I attempted to contact the House of Fraser media team.

Responsible companies are quick to respond to questions from the press as they know that if they don’t it could hurt their reputation.

However, when I emailed House of Fraser, the reply to my message was an automatic response, which simply said: “We are unable to respond directly to each request. If you do not receive a personal response within 48 hours we have been unable to help you at this time.”

That is not only unhelpful, it’s also arrogant.

The only presumption I can make is that the firm isn’t interested in trying to help.

I remain hopeful that when the chain gets its act together following the takeover, it will play fair and issue replacement cards to the full value of those that KS and many other customers had.

But there is no guarantee of that. For that reason – and the existing problems of short-dated retailer giftcards – I hope that anyone who buys them as gifts this Christmas or any time in the future bears my warning in mind. One thing is for certain – there are many more stores likely to get into trouble or go bust over the coming months and years. Avoid giftcards and you’ll avoid being lumbered with a card that may well prove to be completely worthless when these closures occur.

OUTCOME: Reader left confused and worried about £280 House of Fraser owes him


Simon Read is a a money writer and broadcaster. He was personal finance editor at The Independent and is an expert on BBC1’s Right On The Money.

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Money Makeover: “Is it time to start investing?”

Rent

We help a reader who wants to get a good return on the stock market, despite her fears over the volatility Brexit may bring

Our money makeover candidate, who wishes to remain anonymous, is a 31-year-old from Wrexham, North Wales who works for the civil service.

She earns £28,000 a year and has no other sources of income. She has amassed the following in cash savings:

  • £20,000 in a savings account
  • £3,400 in a Help to Buy (H2B) Isa
  • £500 in a regular saver
  • £200 in a Cash Lifetime Isa (Lisa)

In addition, she pays in 6% of her salary into her workplace civil service defined contribution pension, while her employer adds around 20% on top.

Our reader, who currently rents, is keen to buy a house with her partner this year. She also wonders if she should start investing in stocks and shares in a bid to earn a higher return on her money. However, she is concerned that the uncertainty over Brexit could create stock market volatility. She has no debts and no financial dependants.


Danny Cox (left), a chartered financial planner at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, steps in to help. Mr Cox has over 27 years’ experience helping people to make the most of their money and has won numerous awards. His advice for our reader is as follows.
 

Check what size mortgage you’re eligible for

The amount our reader can borrow to buy a property will depend on her income and outgoings, as well as her partner’s, and the lender they select. The couple should use a mortgage broker, such as London & Country, to establish what is realistic.

They will also need to factor in all the potential costs of moving, such as a survey, legal costs, moving costs, and broadband connection. Likewise, immediate repairs, decoration, furniture and white goods may be required. If the property is worth less than £300,000, our reader won’t need to pay stamp duty as a first-time buyer.

Stocks and Shares Isas start from £25 a month

Moneywise says: During the Autumn Budget in November 2017, Chancellor Philip Hammond announced that stamp duty land tax would be abolished on homes under £300,000 for first-time buyers, with immediate effect. Meanwhile, London’s first-time buyers who are buying properties between £300,000 and £500,000 will not pay duty on the first £300,000. They will pay the normal rates of stamp duty on the amount above that. There is no relief for those buying properties over £500,000.

In an ideal world, our reader should reserve three months’ worth of expenditure in cash, rounded up to £5,000, to cover any emergencies. So, assuming moving costs are kept to £2,000, this would give her a deposit of £17,080 (£13,000 from her cash savings account, plus £4,080 from her Help to Buy Isa once you include the government’s 25% bonus), leaving £5,000 as a cash reserve.

Generally speaking, deposits of 10% or more attract better mortgage terms, so this might mean buying a property valued at £170,000 or using the Help to Buy equity loan scheme to increase the value of the deposit (Helptobuy.gov.uk/equity-loan/equity-loans).

Note that our reader’s Lisa can’t be used for her planned house purchase as she hasn’t held it for at least a year. She could cash this in without a penalty, as no bonus has been paid yet. Alternatively, she could hang on to it until the age of 60, adding to it over the years to boost her retirement. If she likes this idea, she would be better off transferring it to a Stocks and Shares Lisa. This is far more likely to provide better returns over the next 32 years – see the opposite page to find out more about investing for the long term.

Consider mortgage protection and wills

Once the couple have purchased their house, they need to ensure that should either of them die or suffer a major illness, their financial position can be maintained.

Our reader has death-in-service benefits of twice her salary. Her employer will also continue to pay her salary for a period, typically six months, if she’s unable to work due to an illness or accident. After this, her income could reduce to statutory sick pay.

On their own, these policies may not be enough to repay the mortgage in the event of death, so the couple should consider a joint mortgage protection policy where the death benefit reduces as the outstanding mortgage falls.

A mortgage broker or a price comparison website can be used to find a suitable policy. Non-smokers in good health can expect to pay around £8 a month.


An income protection policy, which pays a replacement income in the event of long-term illness, should also be investigated. A policy that would start to pay after our reader’s employer has stopped paying her salary would be around £15 a month.

The best cover is ‘own occupation’, meaning you can claim in the event that you are not able do your own job. The alternative is an ‘any occupation’ policy, which means that claims are not paid out if the insurer feels you could do another job.

Our reader must also ensure she has nominated a beneficiary in the event of her death, as so-called ‘common law’ spouses have no legal rights to death benefits under a pension scheme.

In addition, the couple should draw up wills to ensure their assets and belongings pass to their chosen beneficiaries on death. While the property may under some circumstances (joint tenancy as opposed to tenants in common) automatically pass to the survivor, possessions and other savings won’t normally do so.

Invest if you’re saving for the long term

The main reason to invest rather than hold cash is to try to beat the rate of inflation – the rate at which prices increase. Over the long term, the stock market has done a much better job at this than cash.

For these reasons, our money makeover recipient should consider dipping her toe into the stock market for longer-term savings through a Stocks and Shares Isa. These start from £25 a month.

Our reader also has some specific concerns about the impact of Brexit on investments.

Generally, good companies will make the best of any political and economic uncertainty and find a way to make a profit. Regular investing should also smooth out the ups and downs of the stock market.

Moneywise says: Check out Moneywise’s First 50 funds for beginner investors (Moneywise.co.uk/first-50-funds).

Continue saving into a workplace pension

This month’s money makeover recipient is in a very good defined contribution company pension scheme with a substantial employer contribution of about 20% of her salary.

As her financial priorities lie elsewhere for now, she should stick to her current level of funding.

Key recommendations for our money makeover:

  • Speak to a mortgage broker
  • Consider mortgage protection and wills
  • Invest if you’re saving for the long term
  • Continue saving into your workplace pension at your current rate

Lift your financial game by getting a Money Makeover

Are your finances in need of an overhaul? The Money Makeover is here to help transform the finances of Moneywise readers, one reader at a time.

We arrange a one-to-one meeting for you with an FCA-regulated independent financial adviser in your local area, who will discuss your financial concerns and goals for the future and draw up a bespoke financial plan for you. From the basics of shedding debts, budgeting and saving, to pension saving, building an investment portfolio and inheritance tax planning, our network of IFAs are qualified to provide strategic advice and specific product recommendations for all areas of financial planning.

You will receive a copy of the adviser’s report and it is completely your choice whether to follow through with their advice. The Money Makeover is totally free – all we ask is that you are comfortable for your personal financial details and photo to be published in Moneywise so our readers can also learn from the advice you receive.

To apply for your makeover, fill in the form at Moneywise.co.uk/money-makeover or email editor@moneywise.co.uk.

None of the above should be regarded as advice. It is general information based on a financial report conducted by Danny Cox of Hargreaves Lansdown in London

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Leave With a Job: Here’s What to Expect at a Seasonal In-Store Hiring Event

Notre Dame ES students dismissed after water main break

EAST STROUDSBURG — A water main break near Spangenburg Avenue closed Notre Dame schools on Thursday. The issue affected both the elementary and junior and senior high school buildings.“Because of a water main break close to our campus, the borough has shut down our water in order to do repairs,” high school Principal Jeffrey Lyons said in a 9:15 a.m. voicemail. “Therefore, we will have to close for today.”Boys varsity athletics were scheduled [...]

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Want a Raise? Here’s How to Get One — and Why Now’s a Good Time to Ask


A good time to ask for that raise could be right about… now.

The latest numbers from U.S. Labor Department show that the 7.1 million job openings now exceed the number of people looking for work.

The outsized demand for workers means more opportunities for you to find a new job with a bigger paycheck — with 3.6 million people quitting their jobs in July, you wouldn’t be alone in seeking greener pastures (pun totally intended).

But if you’re not interested in leaving your job, you can still use the hot labor market to ask for a raise.

We have plenty of tips and strategies to help you saunter into your boss’ office with confidence — including the ultimate guide to negotiating your salary and seven scientifically-proven ways to negotiate your salary.

And don’t let the negotiation stop at your paycheck. Before you ask for money, consider your entire compensation package, including the value of your company’s benefits.

If your boss tries dangling the carrot of a single lump-sum bonus, be sure to do the calculations on whether you’ll make more money in the long run with a raise — including any taxes you’ll owe on a one-time payout.

And if time is money, then negotiating for extra time off could mean more to you than a bump in your bank account.

Happy negotiating!

Tiffany Wendeln Connors is a staff writer at The Penny Hoarder. Data journalist Alex Mahadevan contributed to this article.

The Penny Hoarder Promise: We provide accurate, reliable information. Here’s why you can trust us and how we make money.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.



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Lifestyle Deflation and the ‘Low-Value’ Items in Your Life

Over the past few months, Sarah and I have cut several expenses out of our lives. We eliminated our cable bill. We switched auto insurance after doing a bit of shopping around, cutting our premium nearly in half with no change in coverage. We cut out a couple of subscriptions that we weren’t getting any value out of. During the late spring and summer, we did a ton of bulk buying and meal prepping, filling up cupboards with a number of things that have cut our average monthly grocery bill this year by a surprising amount (about 20% a month). I’ve also found a nice balance with my own personal spending, with the total going down drastically. We’ve planned our 2019 and 2020 family summer vacations, both of which are really inexpensive.

Although this year has been expensive in other ways (replacing a vehicle, going on a very nice family vacation with my in-laws, doing some minor home remodeling), the cuts we’ve made have actually helped a lot with the financial impact of our other expenses.

I occasionally have lunch with a good friend where we openly talk about our finances, a tradition started years ago. As I was explaining these things to him, he made an astute observation. “It sounds like you’re kind of doing the opposite of lifestyle inflation.”

I thought about it for a minute and agreed, and then just spontaneously said, “Yep, lifestyle deflation.”

It’s a term I really like.

To summarize the idea, lifestyle deflation refers to the conscious choice to lower one’s standard of living in terms of dollars and cents spent on their cost of living, whether by need or by choice. People are often forced into lifestyle deflation by unexpected life events, like the loss of a job or a loved one. At the same time, lifestyle deflation can be a choice.

Why would one choose lifestyle deflation, then? Why would a person in America today, without financial reason (like a job loss or an overwhelming debt load), choose to cut their lifestyle?

The argument for avoiding lifestyle inflation makes sense – you’re earning more income, but rather than incorporating it into your spending, you’re investing it first or using it to pay off debt.

Lifestyle deflation, however, is a much different beast. It means that you’re actually cutting elements of your current lifestyle and using that money for long-term investment rather than simply moving that money to different lifestyle choices. You’re cutting the cable bill, but you’re not replacing it with different spending. Instead, you’re actually reducing the paid services in your life.

With lifestyle deflation, you’re not only choosing to redirect some of your money to long-term goals, you’re also choosing to eliminate or reduce the amount of spending done on some aspects of your current lifestyle. It represents a reversal of the earlier decision you made when you chose to start spending regularly on that item.

For most people, the initial gut response to lifestyle deflation is a hard negative. It feels like a bad thing. Why on earth would you choose to have less in your day to day living?

Well, there are several reasons. People undergoing lifestyle deflation by choice usually do so because of at least one – and often more – of these reasons.

First of all, you’ve realized that some aspects of your current day to day life are bringing you very little value in terms of your quality of life. You’re spending money regularly on something that just doesn’t add much value at all to your life. Maybe it did when you started spending that money, but now that value has essentially vanished and you’re spending money out of inertia.

Second, you’ve realized that long-term financial goals actually provide more value to your day to day life than you initially realized. Having a big emergency fund is a big stress reliever, as is knowing that your retirement is secure or that you can handle a job loss without instant panic mode. That stress relief can be more valuable than you think.

Third, you’ve realized that there are free and low-cost things out there that elevate your quality of life as much as or more than other things that you’re currently spend more on. Over the years, there are many, many things I’ve discovered that add tremendous value to my life at almost no cost.

Fourth, you’ve realized that some of the things that you previously viewed only as a big positive actually have a negative side, too, and the new balance isn’t worth it. Cost is obviously one big negative factor, but there are routines that we fall into that have other negative factors. Perhaps they’re distracting us from our relationships. Perhaps they’re eating up too much time and you’re almost time-addicted to it. Perhaps they’re affecting your health in an adverse way. If you add that to the cost, it doesn’t balance out well.

Fifth, you’ve realized that the “bang for the buck” that you’re getting out of things in your life isn’t what you want. You get joy out of something, but it is eating up a lot of your money. Many expensive hobbies will often fall into this trap – you love that hobby, but it eats up a lot of money and there are other less expensive hobbies that you enjoy and haven’t really explored yet.

Sixth, and finally, you’ve realized you have an innate yearning for “less.” Some people reach a point where they just want to declutter and simplify their life for many reasons. Perhaps they can’t even identify a reason. There’s just some subconscious voice telling them that their life is too complicated and too materialistic and it’s time to cut back.

All of these realizations point people toward lifestyle deflation without the misery. The key factor is that they’re all centered around some form of self-realization. You figure out something about yourself or your life and that realization nudges you to deflate your lifestyle in some fashion.

Let’s look at each of these six realizations in a bit more detail.

Realization #1: Low-Value Life Elements

People are creatures of habit, and sometimes we fall into a habit or routine that requires a regular expenditure of money even though we’re no longer getting a lot of value from that habit or routine. Usually, this is because we don’t think about the expenditure with a critical eye; we rely on the routine itself and our past positive experience for it.

For us, cable television was a prime example of this. When we moved into our current home, we watched cable TV quite a bit. My morning routine usually involved watching news and SportsCenter, and we have a number of network and cable programs that we watched faithfully.

Over the years, though, our overall television viewing dwindled. I discovered I found more value in reading books and long articles. Sarah and I mutually chose to limit our children’s screen time and that often inherently meant limiting our own screen time as well. As streaming became more popular, watching programs on demand became more in line with how we lived our lives.

Yet we persisted with cable. Why? Out of habit, mostly. We didn’t sit down and really consider whether it added value to our life. We just recalled that it once did and thus never really questioned the cable bill.

Eventually, we realized that the value we were currently getting from cable was actually really low, so we cancelled it. This was undoubtedly a type of lifestyle deflation, but in terms of our day to day life, there’s not much lost value there.

Here are a few things to think about.

What things do you spend money on at least once a month? Dig through your bank statements and credit card bills a bit so that you don’t miss anything.

Which of those things provides very little value currently in your life? Go through each one and consider that thing in the here and now, not in terms of the value it once provided for you. Be honest and serious with this evaluation; don’t hang onto stuff out of nostalgia or out of a sense of “someday” or “maybe.”

How do I eliminate those services and habits? If you find things you’re investing money in that aren’t providing you real value, eliminate them! Deflate your lifestyle a little!

Realization #2: High Value in Long-Term Financial Goals

Although money put aside for big financial goals isn’t actually doing anything to directly impact your daily life, when you do start saving, you’ll often discover that having money in the bank is a persistent positive in your day to day life.

You’re less worried about your long-term future, obviously.

You’re less worried about life problems and emergencies, because you have money in the bank to deal with them easily.

You feel less regret about having to say “no” to unique opportunities and you feel like those unique opportunities are now able to be considered more deeply, like a career change, because your financial state is no longer blocking you from putting those things on the table.

Those changes add up to less stress in your life, and as you’ll discover, living paycheck to paycheck does have a surprisingly high level of background stress that we often sweep under the table. When that goes away, it feels good, even if it’s often accompanied by some lifestyle deflation of our day-to-day lives.

For me, the peace of mind given by strong retirement savings and a healthy retirement fund has been literally life changing. The amount of stress I had in my life due to finances when our firstborn was a baby was tremendous and I didn’t even consciously realize it. I just felt perpetually stressed out, and it was finances that were behind a lot of that stress.

Here are a few things to think about.

What exactly would you do if you suddenly lost your job and were unable to work, or the same were true for your partner? What kind of “panic mode” would that set off? Does the thought of it alone make you feel nervous?

What happens when a big unexpected expense hits your life, like a car failure? Do you handle it easily? Or is it extremely inconvenient and involves a lot of credit card shuffling?

Do you feel nervous about checking the mail or answering the phone? Are they likely to be carrying bad financial news?

Does talk of retirement leave you with a bad feeling in your gut and you walk away from that conversation quickly? What exactly are you going to do when you’re older and can’t work?

Those things slowly vanish as you deflate your lifestyle a little bit and use that saved money to pay off debt and save for emergencies and for your big life goals like retirement.

Realization #3: Inexpensive, High-Value Life Elements

One interesting aspect of lifestyle inflation is that people often throw away inexpensive life routines that they were happy with out of an allure for more expensive life routines that are now available to them thanks to a higher income. Often, those new routines really aren’t any better than the old ones in terms of the quality of day to day life.

It is well worth your time to rediscover – or even newly discover – the joys of inexpensive but still high value elements of your life. The things that don’t cost much at all but bring you a great deal of personal value should be noted and cultivated. Those are things that you should intentionally include in your life and carve out space for, as they’re far better than high cost / high value things and low cost / low value things.

For me, four things really stand out in terms of low cost / high value for me. The big one is reading – curling up with a library book is about as “low cost / high value” as it can be for me. I feel similarly about low and moderate intensity hiking and cooking at home. I also feel the same way about some of my normal lifestyle routines – bodyweight exercises, meditation, journaling, and so on.

Here are a few things to think about.

What things have I ever done in my life that I’ve deeply enjoyed that didn’t cost a lot of money? Just think about things that you’ve enjoyed in the past that you don’t make time for right now, or things that you currently enjoy that you wish you had more time for. What are those things?

What things have I thought abut doing in my life that didn’t cost a lot of money? Maybe you’ve wanted to try hiking or volunteering or reading the great literary works. Make a list of those things.

How can I incorporate some of these things into my life? What can I cut away to make room for them? Start looking through your life for expensive things that you’re currently doing that you could cut out, at least for a while, to make room for these ideas. Maybe you could try not watching cable for a month while engaging in these hobbies, and if that goes well, just cancelling cable.

Realization #4: Discovery of ‘Hidden Negatives’

Many of the things we spend our time and money on come with “hidden negatives” that we don’t consider at a brief glance or even when we’re engaged with that activity but become apparent at other times.

Vices often fall into this category. They make us feel good in the moment, but they often make us feel awful when we’re not using them. Coughing, dry mouth, feeling hung over – those aren’t great feelings, but we often don’t consider them when diving into a vice.

For me, one great example of something with a hidden negative is board games. They take up space, not just on the table but also on the shelf. They also typically require other people to play, as well as uninterrupted blocks of time in which to play them. Those things are all sometimes hard to come by, and considering them is a good encouragement to keep my board game spending in check.

Here are a few things to think about.

Are there moments where you feel negative feelings as a result of things you otherwise spend money on and feel happy about? I feel this when I’m organizing my board game shelves or trying to organize a game night or trying to find a block of time to play a game I’m excited about. I just want to play the game, not do all of this other stuff.

Does the hobby take up a lot of space? Maybe the hobby requires a great deal of space to participate or to store the items related to the hobby. I have a friend who does woodworking and the workspace requires quite a lot of square footage in his garage, which adds to property taxes and homeowners insurance.

Does the hobby take an inordinate amount of prep time to enjoy? For example, I enjoy the hobby of home brewing, but it takes quite a bit of time to go through the long checklist of tasks that are require to make the beer and clean up afterwards. Simply preparing a batch is an afternoon project when considering all of the cleanup, and then there’s bottling and other associated tasks. It always eats far more time than I expect.

Realization #5: Low ‘Bang for the Buck’

There are also lifestyle choices and hobbies that you actually enjoy but are very expensive for the time and enjoyment you do get out of them. A hobby that requires a fistful of cash to properly enjoy is a hobby that isn’t providing a great “bang for the buck” for you.

For me, the perfect example of this phenomenon is golfing. I really enjoy golfing, but when you add up the cost of decent clubs, the green fees, and all of the other expenses that go along with it, regular golfing quickly escalates into a pretty expensive proposition. As much as I enjoy it, golfing inherently gobbles up a lot of money, taking away significantly from other aspects of my life. It’s got a great “bang,” but not a great “bang for the buck.”

Here are a few things to think about.

What are the most expensive elements of your life? Do you have an expensive hobby? Do you live in an expensive home with high property taxes and insurance? Do you drive an expensive car with high car payments and insurance? Do you eat out constantly at nice restaurants? Think about what your most expensive habits and routines and lifestyle choices are.

What do you really lose by cutting back on those things? These might be things you enjoy, but by cutting back on them, because they’re so expensive, you open the door to other opportunities in your life. What do you really lose by golfing less? What do you really lose by driving the car for another year or two? What do you really lose by eating at home more often?

What might you gain if you cut back? If you cut back on an expensive routine, that’s going to quickly free up a lot of money in your life. What could you use that money for? What low cost things that you’re excited about would you now have the time for?

Realization #6: Innate Yearning for Simpler Life

A final factor well worth considering is an inner yearning for a simpler life. This is often expressed through things like decluttering and minimalist living.

I’ve seen people go through and get rid of most of their possessions. I’ve seen people move from a big home in the suburbs to a small apartment in the city or a smaller home in the country. I’ve seen people reboot their whole life routine. I know one person who went from living in a 4,000 square foot home to basically vagabonding for three years and living out of a duffel bag.

Sometimes, people simply want the simpler life, and that’s a valid thing, too.

For me, I feel this most when I’m spending time on tasks like reorganizing possessions or cleaning up messes. I don’t want to invest my time and energy into those things and I yearn to simplify.

Here are a few things to think about.

Consider your unused and barely used stuff. How many items in your home have you not used at all in the past year? How much stuff is stowed away in the garage and in closets that you simply haven’t touched or considered? Why can’t that stuff just go away? Eliminating everything that you don’t use might open the door to living in a much smaller place, and it will definitely free up regular time once you’ve done it.

Carefully consider any decisions in which you’re buying yet another addition to a collection in which you don’t actively use most items in that collection already. If you have 100 DVDs you don’t watch, why are you buying #101? It’s just cluttering up your space. Rent that movie instead, or borrow it from the library.

When shopping for a home, ask yourself how much of this home you’ll actually live in and how much is just storage space for stuff. Where will you actually spend significant time? Do you need eight closets and four bathrooms? Consider the same thing about your current home as well.

Final Thoughts

Lifestyle deflation, when done by choice after careful consideration, isn’t a negative. In fact, it’s often a positive. It’s a great way to free up time, alleviate stress, and put your financial resources to work in a more personally meaningful fashion.

However, coming to such a conclusion is often tricky. The modern world nudges everyone toward lifestyle inflation, and thus choosing lifestyle deflation can feel as though you’re walking strongly against the tide.

It’s worth it, though. What can you deflate in your life?

More by Trent Hamm

The post Lifestyle Deflation and the ‘Low-Value’ Items in Your Life appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



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We Went Behind the Scenes to Find Out What It’s Like Being a Scare Actor

Credit Card Debt? These 4 Sites Could Help You Pay It Down Faster


So, you have thousands of dollars in credit card debt, and the burden of paying off all that — and interest — is gobbling up your income.

Instead of financially treading water making minimum payments and paying maximum interest, make the smart move, and take out a debt consolidation loan. It’s a personal loan, usually at a lower interest rate that you can use to pay off your high-interest credit cards.

In the long term, you can save a ton of money, but first you have to shop around for a loan.

Sound difficult? It doesn’t have to be. Instead of spending hours scouring the internet, you can go window-shopping at an online marketplace that’ll help pinpoint the best loan for you.

We recommend you try more than one site and see what kind of results you get. Heck, try them all if you want. It won’t take long, and you have nothing to lose: Seeing your options won’t cost you anything, and it won’t hurt your credit score.

4 Marketplaces for a Credit Card Debt Consolidation Loan

To start, you’ll need to know your credit score, but that’s super easy. Just sign up for Credit Sesame, a free credit-monitoring service that helps you keep track of your credit. It’ll immediately show you your credit score, and it’ll offer you personalized tips to better manage your credit.

Here are four different options for places to find a loan online. At the end of this article, you’ll find a chart comparing them at a glance.

Credible

Credible is a one-stop shopping place where you can compare rates side-by-side from multiple lenders who are competing against each other for your business.

It allows you to compare quotes from seven different lenders: Avant, Best Egg, Freedomplus, Lending Club, Payoff, Prosper and Upstart.

Through Credible, you can borrow $1,000 to $50,000 with a loan term of two to five years, at interest rates ranging from 4.99% to 35.99%. The interest rates you’re offered will depend on your individual credit profile.

Credible is best for borrowers who have good credit scores and just want to consolidate their debt. It requires you to have a credit score of at least 680.

Even Financial

Compared to Credible, Even Financial allows you to borrow more money and borrow it for a longer period of time — if that’s what you want to do.

You can borrow up to $100,000 and spend up to seven years paying it back. That’s more money and time than you can get from any of these other three lending marketplaces.

Even’s lending partners include Avant, Best Egg, Freedomplus, Lending Club, LendingPoint, LightStream, Payoff, Prosper, SoFi and Upgrade.

You’ll need a credit score of at least 580. Interest rates range from 4.99% to 35.99%.

Lendvious

Lendvious is the newest of these four online loan websites.

Depending on your credit score and how much you want to borrow, you’ll immediately get offers from up to 10 lenders. You can borrow up to $50,000 with no collateral required.

Different lenders are looking for minimum credit scores ranging from 560 to 650. The company’s lending partners include Avant, Best Egg, Freedomplus, LendingPoint, Lending Club, Marcus, OneMain Financial, Prosper and Upgrade.

Interest rates range from 4.99% to 35.99%.

If your credit isn’t great, Lendvious might be your best option.

Upstart

Unlike those others, Upstart is a lending platform that manages the process from pre-approval through servicing your loan.

Founded by ex-Googlers, Upstart is a lending platform that’s striving to change the personal loan game. Rather than solely focusing on your credit score to determine your borrowing power, it looks at other factors, too, including your education and employment history.

Upstart tends to be especially helpful for recent grads, who have a short credit history and a mound of debt.

Many lenders judge consumers based only on their credit history. But Upstart believes this leaves out an entire segment of the population — even though they’re totally qualified.

When it comes to the length of the loan, Upstart offers three options: three, five or seven years. The company says its average three-year loan has a 16% interest rate*, with 36 monthly payments of $35 per $1,000 borrowed.

Comparing Your Options One More Time

Seeing your quotes from each of these platforms takes 5 minutes, tops, so you can easily try out more than one. Each conducts a soft inquiry on your credit, meaning it won’t affect your credit score at all.

Once you actually apply for a loan, the lender will perform a hard inquiry on your credit, which will ding your credit temporarily.

Here’s the chart we promised you:

  Credible Even Financial Lendvious Upstart
Interest rate 4.99% to 35.99% 4.99% to 35.99% 4.99% to 35.99% 8.92% to 29.99%
Term Two to five years Two to seven years One to five years Three or five years
Loan amount $1,000 to $50,000 $1,000 to $100,000 $1,000 to $50,000 $1,000 to $50, 000
Minimum credit score 680 580 560 620

*The average three-year loan offered across all lenders using the Upstart Platform will have an APR of 20% and 36 monthly payments of $35 per $1,000 borrowed. There is no down payment and no prepayment penalty. Average APR is calculated based on three-year rates offered in the last one month. Your APR will be determined based on your credit, income and certain other information provided in your loan application. Not all applicants will be approved.

All loans are made by Cross River Bank, an FDIC insured New Jersey state chartered commercial bank, equal housing lender.

Mike Brassfield (mike@thepennyhoarder.com) is a senior writer at The Penny Hoarder. He knows a lot about credit card debt from personal experience.

The Penny Hoarder Promise: We provide accurate, reliable information. Here’s why you can trust us and how we make money.

This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.



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How Delaying Retirement – Even by a Few Months – Can Help Erase a Savings Shortfall

I’ve made my fair share of investment blunders, such as buying individual stocks at high prices and panic selling them at low prices. I’ve also sat on cash for long periods of time because I was scared to put it in the market, and I’ve been hit with extra taxes when selling bonds because I didn’t understand the rules.

I try to learn a lesson from each mistake and I generally stay on the right path. But, in part because I’ve had so many stumbles, I am sometimes tempted by strategies that can help me “catch up.” I’m embarrassed to say I actually lost a bit of sleep during the great bitcoin rally of 2017 because I thought I was missing out on a way to erase some of my earlier mistakes (I’m glad I dodged that bullet).

Lately, I’ve been pondering a way to pad my retirement account that doesn’t require getting incredibly lucky, learning a new skill, networking, or going back to school. The forehead slapping, lightbulb moment? I realized I can just work a little longer than I’d planned.

Maybe you’re thinking, “Well, duh.” If so, I applaud you. But I had never considered the implications of working longer; I was more focused on asset allocation strategies and plotting for early retirement. It wasn’t until recently that I actually took a look at the math and learned the true power of working longer — even if “longer” just means delaying retirement by one extra month.

The Math Behind Working Longer

A recent paper by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that, for the average person, “delaying retirement by 3-6 months has the same impact on the retirement standard of living as saving an additional one-percentage point of labor earnings for 30 years.”

If that wasn’t mind-blowing enough, they also conclude that “increasing retirement saving by one percentage point 10 years before retirement has the same impact on the sustainable retirement standard of living as working a single month longer.”

In layman’s terms, that means working just a little longer than you anticipated can make up for quite a bit in savings shortfalls over the course of your career. In understated fashion, the authors conclude that “working longer is relatively powerful compared with saving more for most people.” I’d say.

Why is working longer such a boon? The authors offer up a few key reasons — for one thing, the longer you’re earning money, the less time you’ll be drawing down your savings. But the biggest driver by far is the way Social Security benefits are paid out.

The authors found that “83 percent of the impact of delaying retirement comes from additional Social Security benefits.” That’s because the longer you work, the bigger your payout from Social Security will be. Though many of my millennial peers are worried about the health of the Social Security program, that doesn’t mean we should be cavalier about how beneficial it can be.

Let’s walk through a hypothetical scenario using the quick calculator at SSA.gov to drive home the point. If you’re age 62 and earning $60,000 per year, and you start collecting Social Security now (as soon as you’re eligible), you could expect a payout of about $1,253 a month, or about $15,000 per year.

But if you were to stick around the workforce, making the same salary, for two more years – until you’re 64 – you’d receive $1,503 a month, or about $18,000 a year. (That’s in 2018 dollars; the actual payout would be even higher, since the SSA adjusts payouts for inflation using the U.S. Consumer Price Index, so recipients maintain purchasing power even as prices rise.) That extra $3,000 adds up year after year, and it would take quite an investment return on your existing savings to give you an equivalent payout.

And if you kept working until full retirement age before you started collecting benefits? You’d receive $1,697 a month in 2018 dollars, or an extra $5,300 every year. Hold off ’til age 70, and you’d get $2,308 a month, or nearly double the age 62 benefit.

To be clear, you don’t have to make a high salary to reap the benefits of an extra year of work. The authors made sure that their study covered a large range of income distributions and found that their results hold across “a wide range of realized rates of returns on saving, for households with different income levels, and for singles as well as married couples.”

In fact, the impact of working longer is even greater if you have a lower salary, as low earners stand to receive a higher percentage of their overall income from Social Security. Thus, boosting their Social Security payouts will have a disproportionately larger positive effect.

If you’re still not convinced, there’s another paper by the same authors that really drives home the point. They did a deep dive into all things Social Security, with a focus on just how impactful delaying payments can be. They found that claiming Social Security too early could end up being a $250,000 mistake over the course of retirement. When one third of Americans start taking Social Security benefits the moment they’re able to, that amounts to a lot of money left on the table.

Finally, while it’s noble to try to increase your savings rate toward the end of your working career, it’s still unlikely to be as powerful as working longer. As the authors put it, “the relative power of saving more is even lower if the decision to increase saving is made later in the work life.” You just don’t have as much time to benefit from the compound interest of those changes when you start late.

Again, this is especially true for low earners. If you make $22,000 per year, delaying retirement by a measly three weeks has the same effect as saving an additional 1 percent of your earnings for 10 years.

Challenges to Delaying Retirement

Not everyone has a choice in how long they work. Companies shut down, family members get ill, people get laid off… life throws us curveballs. Also, ageism is real and pernicious, especially for women. That bias can make it difficult to switch jobs while approaching a traditional retirement age.

And what about the people who really hate their jobs? They might get such a boost in overall well being from collecting Social Security as soon as possible that any potential gains from working longer pale in comparison. And calling it quits early on a physically demanding or dangerous job could potentially save you from a costly injury.

Finally, there’s the question of physical health. You can have every intention of working into your 70s, but your health might not allow it. In fact, some people take early Social Security benefits precisely because their health is failing. You can’t blame them for doing so under those circumstances, but it’s an unfortunate and financially unfavorable choice.

All these factors elucidate why most of us are on The Simple Dollar in the first place. If we learn to live frugally, decrease stress, and eat healthy, then hopefully we can live a fulfilling life that allows us the flexibility to keep working should we feel it necessary. We can’t all be Betty White, who’s pushing 97 and has no plans to stop working, but hopefully we can work well into our sixties should we choose to.

Summing Up

When it comes to building wealth, it’s a natural instinct to want to make up for lost ground. The key is to figure out ways to do so that are practical and sustainable. That’s why I was so excited to learn how powerful it can be to work longer. We’re not talking decades, here. Even one extra year of working can help you mop up some serious messes.

As someone who spends too much time immersed in the FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) community online, I feel a pull to leave my primary job as soon as possible. Quitting, or “FIREing,” is a badge of honor. No one gets Reddit upvotes for working an extra year. But, sometimes sticking it out at your job for a few years longer than you planned is the best possible option to meet your financial goals.

More by Drew Housman:

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