Thousands of courses for $10 728x90

الاثنين، 31 ديسمبر 2018

Questions About Bicycles, Family Debts, iPads, Used Textbooks, and More!

What’s inside? Here are the questions answered in today’s reader mailbag, boiled down to summaries of five or fewer words. Click on the number to jump straight down to the question.
1. Upset about stock advice
2. Bicycle recommendation
3. Family debts after holidays
4. Standing desk update
5. Using iPad for work purposes
6. Starting company on tiny budget
7. Drawing down 401(k) in retirement
8. Selecting easier chores
9. Free trading cards on Steam
10. Dealing with small library selection
11. Selling used textbooks online
12. Inherited Steinway follow-up

As 2018 winds down to a close, I encourage you to take a moment and reflect on the things that went well in the past year. What were your biggest successes in 2018?

Then, ask yourself how exactly you made them happen. Hard work? Good relationships? A good education? A little bit of luck? How many of those things were firmly under your control?

That’s your recipe for success going forward. Those are the tools that you already have in your hands that are leading you to success. Keep those tools sharp and use them in the coming year.

On with the questions.

Q1: Upset about stock advice

I don’t think your advice on the stock market is very fair. Some of us have our entire future invested in the stock market and to see it lose 20% of its value in just a couple months is really scary.
– Tammy

Over the past ten years, when it was going up in value 10%-20% a year, that was an above average return. 2009 to 2017 was an above average year for the stock market, and it was due to come back to the average.

Yes, it’s scary if you look at only the fourth quarter of 2018 in a bubble. Look back further than that. On January 1, 2009, the S&P 500 was at 865.58. As I write this, it’s at 2,485.42. That’s pretty close to a tripling in value over ten years, an 11% average annual return including this recent dip.

There’s really not much to say other than that. The advice I’ve been giving all the way up is the same as I’m giving right now, because it’s timeless advice. If you need the money in less than ten years, it shouldn’t be in stocks. If you don’t, then momentary shifts in the stock market shouldn’t concern you. If you’re still bothered, you can always move to something less risky, but you’ll get a much smaller average annual return. The stock market is not and never has been a guaranteed annual return – it’s a market that fluctuates up and down over the short term but as long as people work hard and have great ideas, it’ll keep going up over the long haul.

I’m not going to change the plan I’ve always had, one that I stuck with through the much worse 2008 dip and the incredible run we’ve had over the last decade, just because the end of 2018 is a little rough, and you shouldn’t change your plans, either.

Yes, it’s scary. How do I handle it? I very rarely check my retirement balance. What it’s doing on a daily or weekly or monthly basis is something I truly do not care about, because I’m not investing for the next day or the next week or the next month. I’m investing for decades from now.

Does this help individuals who were planning to use money in the short term that was heavily invested in stocks? No, it doesn’t, but nothing will make that lost money come back. If you’re in this situation, evaluate when you’re going to use that money and act accordingly by the above strategy. It’s all you can do. If you couldn’t afford this drop, then you need to be in something safer that might not return as much each year on average, but won’t suffer these big short term drops. Remember, your investment’s value has tripled over the last ten years and a 15% burp is making you reassess whether you can continue to tolerate the risk.

Q2: Bicycle recommendation

My goal for the new year is to bicycle for as many errands as possible around town when the weather is above 40 F rather than using the car to help with fitness and save gas. My aunt and uncle who are wealthy and incredibly generous with family gave me a $250 gift certificate to a local bike shop but I have no idea what I’m buying and all of the bike magazines and websites suggest bikes well over $1,000. Suggestions for good entry level bike?
– Amy

Unless the bike shop is really bad, they should be able to help. Tell them that you want a sub-$200 commuter bike with a detachable pannier (that’s basically a bag that hooks on the back to carry stuff around in, which you’ll want if you’re running errands around town like taking small packages to the post office or hitting the library or shopping). They should be able to hook you up with something decent for $250 total.

Good commuter bikes in that price range include a Vilano Shimano aluminum commuter bike and a Kent Northwoods. However, it really depends on what the shop carries and what their prices are like.

You do not need a $1,000 bike for your first bike. Get one that fits with your gift certificate, ride the crap out of it, and figure out what you really like and don’t like about it. If you find that it’s truly a daily use item for you but there are some specific things you don’t like, save up and replace it someday. There’s no need to do so right now.

Q3: Family debts after holidays

For several years I had a serious gambling problem which I have managed to overcome and have not gambled in 2 years. During my gambling days I borrowed money from many family members which has left me feeling very guilty. I want to repay them. At Christmas this year I gave my older brother a check repaying everything I thought I owed him by my recollection. He said thank you and started crying and said that my debt was repaid and then tore up the check. My other family members forgave the debts too.

While I am incredibly appreciative of my wonderful family, I am still left feeling like I did not repay them. I am struggling. I am secure in the love of my family but still feel like a failure. What can I do?
– Bill

Given this situation, I would probably consider another approach to repaying that debt.

What I would do is find out causes that your family members each deeply care about and then donate to each of those causes in an amount equal to the owed debt in their name. If you owe your older brother $1,000, figure out what cause he cares the most about and donate $1,000 in his name to that cause and send him a letter telling him so. Do this for the other family members too.

It sounds like your siblings are really happy for your recovery from your addiction and don’t want any threads of the past hanging around and they consider your sense of a “debt obligation” to be one of those threads they’d rather have finished off. So, I’d spend the coming year saving up enough money to repay all of them and then next Christmas give them each a card stating what you’ve done. That way, the debt is not on their mind all year and at the end of the year you can erase it from your mind as well.

Q4: Standing desk update

You mentioned a few months ago that you were about to switch to using a standing desk for work. Could you provide an update on how it’s going? Is the transition hard?
– Jeremy

The switch hasn’t happened yet because my new office space isn’t ready yet. I’m anticipating switching over in mid-January.

I don’t intend to switch full cold turkey. I’ve got a schedule planned out where I gradually ramp up my standing desk time and supplement it with time with my laptop in a comfortable chair elsewhere. The laptop-with-comfortable-chair isn’t my most productive environment, but it’ll be good enough as I’m ramping up my hours at a standing desk.

Why do I need to ramp up? Core endurance, basically. I expect to find that body parts get sore, especially my back and perhaps my feet and legs, with that much standing as I’ve been used to being at a sitting desk mostly for many years. I expect the first couple of weeks to involve some soreness as I build up some key muscles.

I’ll update this in a few months.

Q5: Using iPad for work purposes

How exactly do you use an iPad for your work? I have one and it seems like it’s just a deficient laptop and I’d just rather be using my laptop.
– Darren

I use my iPad for several purposes.

My main one is that it serves as a second monitor while working. I set it up on its folding cover stand next to my main work monitor and keep something relevant on the screen there. Often, it’s just my to-do list, but sometimes it will be other thing.

I use it with a stylus to take handwritten notes when I’m reading something really challenging.

I use it as a PDF reader and occasionally as an eBook reader, though I prefer an actual Kindle or my phone for that.

I’ll often take it places where I need an instructional video with both hands free. I’ll set it up on its stand and start the video.

It gets daily use among all of those things.

Q6: Starting company on tiny budget

I want to start a digital record company but I only make $150 to $250 a week and How can I grow my company on a low-income?
– Geoff

The first thing I’d do is sit down and plan out what you actually intend to do. Do you intend to use this as an avenue for releasing your own music? Do you hope to sign other artists and release their music? How will you pay them (I assume through a royalty percentage)? How do similar new labels pay artists?

Most of the work of a digital record label is centered around time investment. It’s all about posting to social media, talking to music fans, and so on, and that doesn’t cost money. It just costs time. If you’re willing to do that work yourself, you don’t need a whole lot of money to get started.

If I were you, I wouldn’t sweat the money. Rather, I’d sweat the research. Study up and figure out what’s involved. Figure out what you want to do. Write a business plan and figure out the actual costs, assuming you’re doing most of the leg work yourself.

Q7: Drawing down 401(k) in retirement

I’m a retired widow, 68, with a small retirement fund, and I’m on my husband’s Social Security account (Survivor’s Benefit). When I retired at 61, I lived off savings until I could go on SSA at 62 (as per my own planning), when I was told that if I left my own SSA account alone until I turn 70, it would be more than the Survivor’s Benefit. So that’s how I set my finances up. About half my income now is Survivor’s Benefit SS, the other half coming from my retirement investments. An SS person on the phone looked up approximately what my own SS would give me, monthly, when I turn 70 in about 1.5 years – and it’s more than my current income (SS & retirement combined). I live pretty simply, I own my own home, so I really don’t need to double my income. There shouldn’t be any major house/car expenses because I’ve got a new furnace and AC, and a 2008 car that runs fine. Since retiring I’ve had monthly amounts set aside automatically so I can pay the property taxes – but I am poor enough that I qualify for our state’s Homesteader’s Exemption and haven’t had to pay any property taxes at all. Those funds have gone toward trips across the country to visit my son, and other special expenses. As for the retirement fund, I’m not financially educated enough to understand a lot of it, but my own kindergarten calculation is this: If I withdrew all of my retirement funds, buried it in the back yard, and withdrew the same amount I have been doing, it would last me right around 8 years. Obviously, I’m not going to do that, but it gives me a crude measure to work with (which has dropped alarmingly in the past couple of months, due to events outside my control). I’ve stuck by your advice and just left it alone despite market fluctuations, and it’s worked pretty well. What I’m wondering now is, what pros and cons are there if I lived off my SS + a couple hundred dollars from my retirement fund monthly (which would greatly extend the lifespan of that fund), and thought of the remainder of my retirement fund as my emergency fund?
– Chris

If I were in your shoes, that’s the exact plan I would follow. I would do my best to withdraw 3% or less of my retirement fund balance each year and live off of that and my Social Security and treat the rest of it as a big emergency fund.

The only drawback of this plan is that it’s going to represent lean living for a while until you reach age 70. As you noted, when you hit 70, you should see a big bump in Social Security income. If you need to, it’s okay to spend a little more than 3% of your retirement fund to get through the next year and a half, and then after that live as lean as you can.

I am not an advocate of spending one’s retirement fund down to zero just because you’re old. You never know how long you’re going to live, and it’s not a good idea to consign your future self to a threadbare life, even if you’re 90 already.

Your plan is sound provided it creates a livable everyday life for you.

Q8: Selecting easier chores

I enjoyed your article about choosing the frugality of time and energy over money. What was most interesting to me was your estimate on time saved by using a service that charges by the cubic foot. For me, one load of laundry takes 10 minutes to sort, put into the washer, put into the dryer, and fold – but spread out over two hours. Compared to either driving the box of laundry to and from the service or remembering to set out the box and worrying about when it will be delivered, doing the laundry at home is much more stress free for me. Of course, I find doing laundry soothing, whereas cleaning the bathroom is something I tend to eye and then ignore, even though cleaning the bathroom would also only take 10 minutes. Do you find that there are chores you find easier to complete than others, even though the time and physical energy are the same?
– Ellen

There are some that I enjoy more than others, most certainly. I don’t really like doing laundry because our laundry setup is down in the basement while our bedroom is on the second floor and lugging every load up and down two floors gets old – it was actually way more convenient when I lived in an apartment and it was just down the hall.

On the other hand, I really enjoy cooking food and I don’t mind dishes much at all, which is something that’s apparently very different than a lot of people. This is probably part of why we eat at home so much – it saves money over eating out and it’s a task I partially really enjoy (cooking) and partially don’t mind (dishes).

It probably takes much more time and energy to cook a meal and clean up than do a load of laundry, but I’d far rather cook a meal and clean up after it.

Q9: Free trading cards on Steam

Just wanted to share a tip my partner and I have been using on Steam (the gaming platform). Often the games you play on there will reward you with free digital collectors cards or other items like skins for game elements. Personally we don’t find value in collecting them so we put them on the Steam marketplace. So far I have earned roughly £7 doing this and my partner has earned £10+. We also play a game (Armello) that gives you a “free chest” each day with a low level dice skin mostly, but occasionally rare skins thrown in. A lot of the money I continue to make is by selling these free dice, thus having a small income – we’re really only talking 5-10p/week – to put towards future games I want. Thought it might help some of your readers if they’re in to gaming.
– Angie

This is a nice simple strategy that I use myself. I’m not a really avid computer game player these days, but I will play games with my kids and online games with my friends on occasion and I do this exact thing if the game comes from Steam.

So here’s how it works. You have a game in your Steam library. You play it. You get a few free digital trading cards for doing so. You list those on the Steam marketplace. They sell for usually a few cents each. Eventually, that builds up to a few bucks. You then use that credit for a free game during a Steam sale.

It’s not a big money maker or anything, but it’s a way to offset some of the expense. Plus, if you’re like me and have a bunch of older Steam games, it’s a little benefit from digging them out of mothballs and playing them again.

Q10: Dealing with small library selection

I recently moved from a large city to a small town and found that the library here doesn’t offer near the same selection as the city had. This has made me start to consider getting an e-reader or tablet. However, I’m concerned that the cost of the tablet/e-reader doesn’t stop at the purchase of the device. Are subscriptions like Kindle Unlimited worth it for someone who reads about 3 books a month that are usually on current best seller lists? Do you have other ideas for a frugal reader with a limited library selection? Any time and advice with this question are greatly appreciated!
– Carrie

Talk to the librarian!

There’s a very good chance that many of the books you want can be requested via interlibrary loan. Even if they can’t be, your requests will likely be used as feedback to help determine what books the library acquires in the future. There’s also a chance that your library participates in an e-book program that has these books available on your phone.

It can feel a little awkward going up to the librarian to have this kind of conversation, but just start it by asking about interlibrary loan options for certain books. Just say that you noticed that they didn’t have a particular book and you wanted to know if they could get it by interlibrary loan or another means.

Q11: Selling used textbooks online

I’m in graduate school and have some textbooks I’m looking to sell. When I was in undergrad, I had success selling textbooks on Half.com (Ebay), but it seems that Half is now defunct and the process to sell textbooks on Ebay itself isn’t nearly as fast and easy as it used to be. I found an article on TSD from a year ago that suggests Amazon or Craigslist. I don’t live in a high-population area so I don’t think Craigslist would be a good bet. I tried Amazon, but even when I click the link “Sign up as an individual seller” it takes me to the professional seller page which costs $40 a month. So my question is: what would be the best way to sell my used textbooks online?
– Jerry

This is a market that is changing constantly, with different companies and sellers succeeding in the marketplace and then falling back.

At this point, I’d probably have to switch my recommendation back to Chegg, a service I actually used to sell textbooks many years ago. (Full disclosure: I know one of the founders of Chegg but haven’t seen him in many years.)

With Chegg, they actually handle all of the storage and selling for you – you just mail them your used textbook, they list it on their site, and you get money when it sells. Chegg was my standard recommendation for a long time on The Simple Dollar until other companies tried to dive into textbook sales and have apparently somewhat abandoned it, while Chegg is still standing.

You’ll probably get a little bit more for your books by doing all of the footwork on your own – listing them locally, hanging up flyers on campus, and so on. You’ll be able to sell for a bit less than Chegg sells it for and keep more than what you’d get selling through Chegg (you’re cutting out the middleman). However, that takes footwork and time is money.

Q12: Inherited Steinway follow-up

About the inherited Steinway piano: I would have thought you would google the brand. Steinway is the premier, top quality piano of all pianos. Used models of the smallest type go for $25k, larger grands for $75k used. I feel bad for the poor girl that you suggested Craigslist. If you have a way to reach back out, perhaps suggest an appraisal and professional consignment as a necessity for the sale or reconsideration of justifying storage cost for such a valuable heirloom.
– Andrew

This was one of those questions where answering something in a more general way (which I usually try my best to do) didn’t perfectly address the specifics of the question.

The person writing clearly knew what a Steinway piano was and had some idea of the value and seemed to be struggling over whether to keep it because they perceived it as a family heirloom. My feeling in those situations is that you do more honor to such an item by getting it in the hands of someone that would use it and thus selling it is the right option.

In that specific instance, that person had a far better grasp on what to do with a Steinway than I would; the struggle was over whether it was right to sell it or whether they should keep it even if keeping it was prohibitively difficult. I almost always vote against “prohibitively difficult” and tried to voice the answer as more of a general principle that other people take away. Sometimes, taking the more “general principle” approach misses a nuance of a particular question, as was the case here, but generally makes the answers have more utility to the many other readers.

Got any questions? The best way to ask is to follow me on Facebook and ask questions directly there. I’ll attempt to answer them in a future mailbag (which, by way of full disclosure, may also get re-posted on other websites that pick up my blog). However, I do receive many, many questions per week, so I may not necessarily be able to answer yours.

The post Questions About Bicycles, Family Debts, iPads, Used Textbooks, and More! appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



Source The Simple Dollar http://bit.ly/2RkB5di

The Perfect Weekend Getaway? It Might Just Be Puerto Rico

Catch a Lyft to Everest: How a Chance Meeting Turned into a Trekking Company

What does 2019 hold for investors?

2019

The past year has proved to be a turbulent one in the financial markets as the US-China trade war took off, Brexit gloom set in, and interest rates rose. But will 2019 be a more positive year for investors? We get the lowdown from investment experts

Moneywise has canvassed movers and shakers in the investment industry, from fund managers to financial planners, to find out how they expect your investments to perform in 2019 and what they think investors can do to prepare. Here’s what they have to say.

Volatility will continue

Tony Wise, portfolio manager at Wise Funds, believes that 2018 was not the easiest year for investors to navigate.

He says: “While the era of easy liquidity is coming to an end, adjustments have to take place for investors to take the new reality into account. These periods of transition are rarely smooth.

“When combined with the rise of populism, trade tensions, political risks and concerns about slowing growth, the transition gets even rockier.”

Terence Moll, chief strategist at Seven Investment Management, believes that market volatility will continue as a result of these factors.

“The world economy in the year ahead will be rather like it was in 2018,” he says.

“Growth will be healthy, interest rates will drift up further, politicians will throw their toys around and markets will be jumpy.

“Almost all of the big financial markets sold off in 2018. Next year should be better and we expect equity markets to drift up overall.”

Debt could pose a huge threat

Romain Boscher, global chief investment officer for equities at Fidelity International, says that the biggest threat to equities or shares is debt.

“The 10-year quantitative easing experiment, coupled with a debt-fuelled boom in China, has left the world with a big tab to pay.

“Central banks lowered the cost of debt funding in response to the global financial crisis in 2008, and there’s a natural limit to how far and how fast they can normalise it.”

Given the sheer amount of debt in the global economy, a full return within a few years to the aggregate global interest rate of the last cycle, around 4.5%, would be unaffordable.

“While the global aggregate interest rate increased from 1.2% to 2.2% over the past two years, it is close to hitting a new top, which we put at around 2.5%. Going further than this would risk triggering a new financial crisis, which is something no central bank is willing to do.”

US interest rates and inflation will be a key theme

Ben Lofthouse, manager of Henderson International Income Trust, thinks US interest rates and inflation are a key theme for investors.

“In the US, we’ve seen interest rates normalising to some extent with low unemployment and signs of inflation in wages certainly impacting companies,” he says.

“Currently, other developed markets aren’t really seeing this and pricing in inflation, so it makes this area one for the biggest potential change based on where markets sit at the moment.”

The US economy remains important for investors

Events in the ‘trade war’ between China and the US have captivated markets and sent indices fluctuating wildly in 2018. But with a provisional agreement between the two nations in place, both markets are key to the year ahead.

Mr Moll says: “The key question concerns the US, since it sets the tone for the world’s financial markets. We think US growth will slowly ease but remain solid for a while yet, with no danger of recession until 2020 at the earliest. US companies are in good shape and US and global earnings growth should remain firm.”

Both China and the US markets are key to the year ahead

But David Coombs, fund manager at Rathbone Multi-Asset Portfolio Funds, is still confident of US equities’ ability to perform for investors.

“We are keeping tabs on several areas that we feel are most important for the global economy: the strength of the American consumer, the steady deceleration of Chinese growth and the pace of global monetary tightening,” he says.

“Most of our time is spent ensuring that the companies we invest in are the best in their field; that they are being managed effectively; and that they have the best opportunities to grow. We are constantly assessing whether the price of these assets is right, and whether we should buy more or take profits. As it goes, we’ve found this shopping list tends to lead us to US companies.”

China is one to watch

But Rick Lacaille, global chief investment officer for State Street Global Advisors, thinks that China is one to watch for 2019.

“China matters most among emerging markets for global investors in 2019. Not only is it an important driver of global growth, it is also increasingly important to global markets as major emerging market equity and debt indices begin to include onshore Chinese securities,” he says.

“Moreover, markets are only beginning to digest what a fundamental shift in relations between the US and China might mean for future growth.”

Personalised approach to e-commerce

Jenny Tooth, chief executive of the UK Business Angels Association, says: “In regard to what 2019 will entail for consumer investors, the most successful retail and e-commerce businesses are those that can process consumer information, intelligence and sentiment to personalise their offerings and approach. E-commerce businesses will ride out the challenges of Brexit and therefore I believe they will be highly important arenas for investment.”

Pessimism over Brexit could persist or feelings can change

Closer to home, Brexit is the political word on everyone’s lips. With the outcome of events unclear as the UK moves towards leaving on 29 March, investors are urged to be cautious.

Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor (Moneywise’s parent company), says: “In the words of one institutional international investor, the UK equity market is currently close to being ‘uninvestable’, as Brexit concerns – let alone the possibility of a Labour win if a general election was called – weigh heavily on investors.

“In a survey earlier in the year, the FTSE 100 ranked last among investors (and even below cash as an asset class) as a preferred investment destination. As such, not having partaken in the global market rally earlier in the year, the FTSE 100 stands down some 8.5% in the year to date.

“The best advice for investors is to focus on what you can control”

“The relentless surge of pessimism could persist during 2019 as the full ramifications of Brexit become a little clearer.”

However, Mr Hunter thinks: “A small change in sentiment toward the UK market could begin a domino effect, and as such, the FTSE 100 could well transform from an investment frog to a prince in 2019, given even the smallest of nudges.”

Diversifying is essential

Mike Walker, financial planner at Prest Financial Planning, thinks investors should be careful to diversify.

“Whether investing defensively or for growth, I would also consider spreading my investments geographically and not just relying on the UK markets.

“We can’t know what the markets will do next year but a ‘no deal’ Brexit would clearly have some effect – almost definitely negative – on the stock markets, and quite possibly on UK government bond values too,” he says.

“It may sound boring, but in most cases my advice to clients would be ‘as you were’. If you are investing for the long term, then you should hold a diversified basket of investments that is suitable to your appetite for, and capacity to take, risk – and this shouldn’t change because you think the stock market may be going to rise or fall over a given short-term period.

“If you are investing for long-term growth, the important thing is not to get spooked and sell in a falling market. If you are making regular contributions, for instance to an Isa or a pension, then dips in the market can actually provide a buying opportunity.

“That said, if you are making withdrawals from your capital, you should be invested more defensively. If you’re taking money out in a falling market, you will have less money to benefit from any later recovery so you need to minimise your exposure to volatility.

“Defensive assets could include shares that regularly pay strong dividends, which are usually accessed through equity income funds, and corporate bonds.”

Keep a calm head

Ray Black, chartered financial planner and managing director of Money Minder, says reacting emotionally is dangerous for investors.

“Keeping a calm head and not reacting emotionally to losses is more important than ever. A wise investor will not let their emotions rule their investment decisions. None of us like losses and we all hate to see our money going down in value, especially if we have worked hard to save it in the first place. Remember that what goes down in value is cheaper to buy than it was before and losses are only secured when you sell,” he advises.

Dan Brocklebank, director UK, Orbis Investments, says investors shouldn’t get too bogged down in trying to guess what will happen.

“The good news is that you don’t need to be able to forecast to be successful at investing. As in life, the best advice for investors is to focus on what you can control, and adopt healthy behaviours,” he says.

“That means things like keeping a long-term focus, avoiding over-trading, and pound-cost averaging [investing regularly to smooth out highs and lows]. Above all, avoid getting caught up in speculative manias – the best investments are almost never the ones everyone is talking about.”

Section

Free Tag

Twitter

Workflow

Published


Source Moneywise http://bit.ly/2AjS7hS

Weird and wonderful budgeting tips

Weird and wonderful budgeting tips

Are you living from one pay day to the next and failing to save anything for your future? To get a better grip on your cashflow, try adopting some of these old-school budgeting tips with a modern-day twist

1 Make it difficult to spend money

Spending money is just too easy – so put barriers in place to limit your spending. In the old days of cash, people would take out enough money to last a week and leave their cards at home.

But many places don’t accept cash now, so you need to adopt a new approach. One tactic is to transfer a week’s spending money on to a prepaid card that doesn’t have an overdraft facility. So when the money’s gone, it’s gone.

If credit card spending is your weakness, Mutaz Qubbaj, chief executive of budgeting app Squirrel, suggests literally freezing your cards.

“If you’re super impulsive, try placing your credit and store cards in a bowl of water and putting them in the freezer. When you want to use them you’ll have to wait for the ice to thaw,” he says.

If you need extra self-control at the online checkout, Google Chrome extension Icebox replaces the ‘buy’ button on more than 400 online shopping sites with its own ‘put it on ice’ button. All ‘on ice’ items are put into a virtual shopping basket and will stay there until a pre-set cooling-off period expires.

2 Use the jam jar method

The jam jar, pot or envelope budgeting method can help you budget and save towards different goals at the same time. But you don’t need actual jam jars or envelopes – you need multiple accounts.

Kara Gammell, who writes money-saving blog, Your Best Friend’s Guide to Cash (Yourbestfriends guidetocash.co.uk), has five instant access savings accounts for her short-term goals.

“There are a few expenses I know will come up every year, such as my tax bill, Christmas shopping and our six-week long trip to Canada each summer, so on payday, I siphon off money from my current account with a number of standing orders,” she explains.

“I transfer the money into savings right away, rather than wait until the end of the month. And do you know the best part about it? I am so used to the money whizzing out of my account automatically that I don’t even notice that it’s gone when I wake up on pay day.”

3 Set up a virtual loose change jar

When cash was king, many people would save their loose change in a penny jar and periodically count it, bag it and pay it into their account at a bank branch.

But with card transactions now being more popular than cash, it’s no longer the norm to come back from the shops carrying a purse full of coins.

However, there are various apps that save your loose change for you. For example, if you have a Monzo current account you can set up various savings ‘pots’. If you name a pot ‘Coin Jar’, Monzo will automatically round up any card purchases over £1 to the nearest pound and save the difference in the Coin Jar pot.

Rival digital bank Starling offers a similar service but rather than saving your spare change as cash, it invests it via a link-up with the Moneybox app.

Typing in the balances makes your bottom line seem more real

4 The 1p challenge

There are various fun challenges you can do to stash money away. The 52-week saving challenge involves saving £1 in the first week of the year, £2 in week two, £3 in week three…until you’re saving £52 by the last week of the year.

If that sounds a struggle, Ricky Willis, founder of the Skint Dad blog (Skintdad.co.uk), suggests starting small with the 1p saving challenge.

“You start saving 1p and increase by 1p each and every day. So on day two, you save 2p, then 3p on day three and so on. By the last day (day 365) you will be saving £3.65. At the end of the year, you will have saved £667.95 (or £671.61 in a leap year),” he explains, “Search online for a free printable chart so you can tick off each day. If you have some extra cash, then tick off more than one day at a time as it makes saving towards the end of the year easier and quicker.”

5 Keep track

If you want to see where every penny goes, there are plenty of apps for that. Money Dashboard, Money Hub, Yolt, and Bean aggregate all your financial accounts so you can see a complete picture of your finances in one place. You can track what you’re spending your money on and where.

But Andy Webb, founder of the Be Clever With Your Cash blog, reckons these apps can be easy to ignore. “I find a good old-fashioned spreadsheet the best way to keep on top,” he says. “Set aside an hour each month to check all your bank, savings and credit card accounts. Physically typing in the balances makes your bottom line seem more real, and gives you a heads-up if danger is around the corner.”

6 Learn to cook

Food blogger Jack Monroe (Cookingonabootstrap.co.uk) famously fed herself and her toddler on £10 a week. Her secret? She cooked everything from scratch. Her top recipes include 3p Ping Porridge, a 9p bean burger recipe, and 18p toad-in-the-hole.

Ms Monroe is vehemently against throwing leftover food away and her blog contains a handy A to Z with what to do with leftover food. She suggests freezing fruit, herbs and vegetables that are about to go off, or blitzing certain ingredients and adding lemon, garlic, oil, nuts or seeds to make pesto. Potatoes that are starting to sprout can be planted in a little soil in a cheap plastic bucket and, within a couple of months, new potatoes will grow.

7 Procrastinate

Procrastination might be the enemy of productivity but it can be a big help if you’re trying to save money. Faith Archer, money blogger at Much More With Less (Muchmorewithless.co.uk) suggests a ‘buy it next week’ approach to spending.

“You’re not denying yourself everything for ever, just thinking about what you actually need right now. Do you really have to buy new shampoo, shoes or sushi, or could you last till next week with what you already have?” she says. “It can make you look at the contents of your cupboards with new eyes, if you use up odds and ends, dig out old outfits, reread books, repair stuff and rediscover hobbies. If you get creative, you might be surprised at how long you can keep spending stripped down to essentials.”

8 Travel like a local

When you’re on holiday, resolve to immerse yourself in the local area by living, eating and travelling like a local. While you might be tempted to play it safe with well-known restaurant chains, opting for local dishes such as tacos in Mexico, pho in Vietnam or paella in Spain will be cheaper.

If you’re on a backpacking trip, aim to take local buses and trains wherever possible. A ‘chicken bus’ in Central America or overnight train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai will not only cost less than a taxi or flight, but will add to the adventure too. When it comes to accommodation, Airbnbs and guest houses will offer a better insight into local life than big hotels – and save you money.

When on holiday, resolve to live, eat and travel like a local

9 Never pay full price for anything

Make a rule that you won’t spend any money on discretionary or ‘fun’ spending unless you can get a decent deal. Tastecard and Dine memberships (often given away with packaged bank accounts or insurance policies) offer discounts on thousands of restaurants and pubs, while O2 customers can use the O2 Priority app for food and drink deals.

If you’re shopping online, TopCashback and Quidco pay cashback on thousands of online purchases while discount and promo codes generate money off, or free delivery, at online checkouts.

Another tactic is to ‘abandon’ your online shopping basket. If you’re signed in to a website but shut down your browser before paying for goods, the retailer is likely to email you and offer a discount to tempt you back to complete your purchase.

10 Have a buy nothing year (or week)

Extreme budgeters could potentially go the whole hog and not spend anything for a year. That’s what Michelle McGagh, author of The No Spend Year: How I Spent Less and Lived More did for 12 months from November 2015.

Obviously Ms McGagh had to pay for her mortgage, household bills, food, basic toiletries and cleaning products. But that’s it – beyond that she spent nothing. That meant no pub visits, no takeaways or restaurant meals, no new clothes, no holidays, and no gym memberships. She cycled everywhere, met her friends for walks or trips to free galleries or museums, and went wild swimming. By the end of her buy nothing year, Ms McGagh had saved £22,439 compared to what she spent the previous year.

Obviously, spending nothing for a year is challenging, but a week or month may be achievable.

Section

Free Tag

Twitter

Workflow

Published


Source Moneywise http://bit.ly/2SvC1ZM

Get your finances in shape for 2019

2019

January is the perfect time for giving your finances a New Year makeover, but where exactly should you start? Moneywise takes a look at different ways you can help get your finances under control for the year ahead

From organising your finances to switching banks, here are some proactive ways to make sure you are on top of your finances in 2019.

Get organised

First of all, you want to get organised, get on top of everything and make sure you know exactly what is coming in and going out.

By starting a spending diary, you can see exactly where your money is going.

Once you have identified all of your outgoings you can then draw up a budget and spot places where you may be able to cut back. Also, set a reminder in your diary for some time each month to review your finances so that you stay in control.

Research from Citizens Advice suggests that people are spending an average of £160 every three months on services they don’t use, so go through your bank statements and check all your direct debits.

It can be easy to lose track of them and you could be paying for things that you don’t use such as gym membership or credit rating subscriptions.

Save money and cut costs

There are plenty of things you can do to help yourself save money. Set yourself an achievable target and then stick to it.

Think about habits that you could change to help you shave off a few pounds here and there – for example, brands that you buy when there are cheaper alternatives or eating out when you could bring something from home if you planned ahead.

If you are looking to make some savings, you can also go to a website such as MySupermarket.co.uk, which can help you compare the prices between supermarkets.

You can also save money on fuel by shopping around for the best price. One way you can find out the cheapest prices locally is to enter your postcode at PetrolPrices.com. However, make sure that you’re not spending more by driving further to get cheaper prices.

Get pension savvy

While auto-enrolment means almost everyone with an employer automatically gets a pension now, around 15 million people still do not have one.

If you have opted out or are self-employed and don’t have a pension, now is a good time to start thinking about getting one. If not, you could end up having to rely on just the state pension when you are older.

If you have already got a pension, you might want to consider paying in more to boost your retirement income.

You also might want to track down your old pensions if you changed jobs. One way of doing this is by contacting your old employers.

For people who lose track of their pensions, the government provides a free online pensions service that allows you to search for lost workplace pensions. To use it, all you need is the name of an employer or a pension provider. Visit Gov.uk/find-pension-contact-details.

Alternatively, you can contact the Pension Tracing Service by post or via your former employer.

When you have tracked down all your funds, you may want to consider combining your pensions into a single plan if it makes them easier to manage and reduces fees.

Consider remortgaging

Remortgaging can save you hundreds of pounds every year if you have slipped on to your lender’s standard variable rate.

The most common time that people remortgage is when their fixed introductory tracker or discounted rate mortgage ends.

Another reason you might want to remortgage is to protect yourself from interest rate rises.

The Bank of England has raised interest rates twice in the past 12 months, going up to 0.75% in August.

It has hinted that it could raise interest rates if the UK manages a smooth exit from the European Union, with its latest forecasts suggesting rates could rise to 1.5% over the next three years.

While fixed-rate mortgages tend to be more expensive, they can provide you with security against a rate rise.

By fixing, you can keep your repayments the same so that any future rate changes won’t catch you off-guard.

Switch your energy supplier

Recent figures from Ofgem highlight how millions of households are still paying too much for their energy bills.

According to the regulator, 54% of households remain on poor-value default deals, meaning over 15 million people are paying hundreds of pounds more than they need to for energy.

Meanwhile, there is as much as a £352 difference in the cost between a dual-fuel standard variable tariff (SVT) and the cheapest available tariff if you get your energy from one of the Big Six.

Prices are also rising. British Gas customers have seen prices go up twice in the past year, taking the typical standard tariff bill to £1,205 a year. Eon, SSE, Npower, EDF, and Scottish Power have also introduced price rises.

Get on a comparison website such as uSwitch or GoCompare where you can compare energy providers and tariffs to find a better deal.

According to energy switching rules, anyone on a fixed-term tariff has a right to switch to a new deal without paying exit fees when there are 49 or less days before the fixed-term ends.

Millions are still paying too much for their energy bills

Shop around

Loyal customers don’t necessarily get the best deals. Research from Citizens Advice has found that consumers who remain loyal to companies that provide broadband, home insurance, mortgages, and mobile phone contracts are being ripped off by up to nearly £1,000 a year.

The so-called loyalty penalty occurs when customers of a business pay higher costs year on year for staying with the same product, while new customers of the same business pay significantly less.

Whether it is energy, insurance, broadband or your mortgage, shopping around can help you find the best deal out there.

If you are coming up to the end of your contract, check out the prices of rivals online. Alternatively, you can contact your provider to try to negotiate a better deal than the one you currently have.

Change your bank account

With interest rates so low at the moment switching to a new account could give you a much-needed cash boost.

Switching banks has never been easier, with the process taking no more than seven days.

If you are looking for a higher interest rate, the Nationwide FlexDirect account pays 5% interest on balances up to £2,500, which drops to 1% after one year. The overdraft is free for the first year, but you will also need to pay in at least £1,000 a month.

The TSB Classic Plus also pays 5% AER on balances up to £1,500. To earn interest on this you will have pay a minimum of £500 a month.

There are also plenty of incentives from banks. The First Direct 1st Account offers you the choice of a £150 Expedia voucher, an Amazon Echo Spot or an online development course. To qualify, you must deposit at least £1,000 in the first three months. It will pay another £100 if you are unhappy with the bank and leave after the first six months.

With the M&S Bank Current Account, you will get a £125 voucher, plus a £5 voucher each month for a year, as long as you pay in at least £1,000 a month. The deal is also available on the £10-a-month M&S Bank Premium Current Account.

“January is often a very busy month at National Debtline”

Reduce your debt

It is easy to fall behind with your finances in January after overspending during the Christmas period.

National Debtline, run by the Money Advice Trust, is expecting demand for debt advice to rise significantly in the New Year.

Laura Mostaghimi, money adviser at National Debtline, says: “At Christmas time people can feel pressured to spend more money, which can cause worry and have an impact on their longer-term finances. January is often a very busy month at National Debtline, as many people try to deal with the effect of festive spending.”

Some debts are more important to deal with than others, so make sure you prioritise those first.

Although credit card interest might be higher than your mortgage, missing mortgage payments can have more serious consequences as you could lose your home.

Credit card debt can be expensive, so it makes sense to pay this off as quickly as possible.

Balance transfer cards allow you to consolidate all your debt in one manageable payment. Transferring over to a credit card that offers 0% interest on purchases can make debt repayments easier. Some of the best deals will allow you to borrow for more thaan two years, giving you extra breathing space to pay off your debt.

If you are worried about debt you should seek help from a debt advice charity such as Citizens Advice or National Debtline.

Ms Mostaghimi says: “Setting a budget is often the first step to help you get on top of your finances. Knowing how much you have coming in every month and what you need to spend helps you work out the best way to deal with your debts.

“I would also encourage anyone struggling to make ends meet to seek free-debt advice as soon as possible from an organisation such as National Debtline.

“By waiting longer to take action, debts can quickly grow and make a difficult situation worse.”

 

Section

Free Tag

Twitter

Workflow

Published


Source Moneywise http://bit.ly/2AxPd9B

What does 2019 hold in store for your finances? State pension, savings and tax changes revealed

2019

The new year is upon us and with comes lots of changes that could impact your finances. From Brexit to tax changes, we take a look at how your finances will be affected this year.

You’ll be able to earn more before paying tax

From 6 April 2019 the amount you can earn before tax – known as the personal tax allowance - is set to rise from £11,850 to £12,500. This will give basic rate taxpayers an extra £130 a year.

For higher earners on more than £46,350 the 40% tax threshold will rise to £50,000, making them better off by up to £860 a year.

However, National Insurance contribution (NIC) limits have also moved in line with the change in the income tax threshold. As a consequence, higher earners will lose half their newfound tax gains.

People earning more than £46,350 currently pay 12% NICs on earnings up to that level but only 2% on higher amounts.

However, from April they will pay the full 12% rate of NICs on everything up to £50,000, as the upper earnings limit is hiked up. The 2% rate will kick in on earnings above £50,000.

As a consequence, while tax payable on that slice will be reduced by 20%, NICs will go up by 10%, so the net gain is only 10%.

House prices

Most experts are predicting that house prices will flatline in 2019 as Brexit uncertainty continues to bite.

The property market is currently going through a bit of a slump, with buyers holding off to see what happens until after the UK leaves the EU.

However, most think a crash is unlikely with property prices likely to remain stable due to the chronic under-supply of housing.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) says house price growth is set to grind to a halt in 2019, with Brexit uncertainty and higher prices forcing many buyers out of the market.

RICS expects prices in London and the South East to pull back slightly in the first half of next year, while remaining flat in the North East of England, East Anglia and the South West.

However, prices in Northern Ireland, the North West of England, Wales and Scotland are all predicted to increase.

Rightmove is predicting zero growth for house prices with “stretched affordability” limiting people's ability to buy for the first time or trade up.

It is not all doom and gloom though. Halifax expects annual house price inflation to be in the range of 2% to 4%, though it cautions this is dependent on the UK leaving the EU with a withdrawal agreement.

David Hollingworth of mortgage broker London & Country says: “With Brexit looming large on the horizon and so much uncertainty it’s of little surprise that the property market has softened at the end of 2018.”

He adds: “Buyers are likely to take a wait and see approach and therefore purchase activity could be muted in the first quarter. Those that are looking to purchase could therefore find that property availability is limited but that buyer competition is not as fierce.”

Council tax could rise

Council tax could go up by as much as 4.9% in 2019, as funding shortfalls for local councils continues.

The move will see average bills for a B and D home go up by £80 a year taking it from £1,671 to £1,751.

The 4.99% figure includes a 2% hike that many councils will be able to use to fund social care for adults.

Residents also face other rises on top for district and parish councils, police and fire services.

Police will be allowed to add another £24 for their part of the council tax bill.

Energy bills could fall for some

From 1 January the energy regulator Ofgem is bringing in a new cap which could see energy bills fall for millions of customers.

The cap will be set at £1,137 per year for a typical dual fuel customer paying by direct debit.

This means suppliers will have to cut the price of their default tariffs to the level of or below the cap, forcing them to scrap excess charges.

Ofgem says that 11 million households could see their energy bills fall by £76 on average a year and as much as £120 on the most expensive tariffs.

Pay rise for the lowest-paid workers

The national living wage, the statutory minimum for workers aged 25 and over, will increase by 4.9% to £8.21 per hour from next April.

The 38p increase means workers on the minimum wage will see their wages rise faster than the rate of inflation. The rise will mean workers will see their wages go up by around £700 a year on average.

Rates for younger workers will also increase above inflation and average earnings.

Those aged 21 to 24 will see the minimum wage rise from £7.38 to £7.70, while 18 to 20-year-olds will see a rise of 25p to £6.15 an hour.

For people aged 18 and below their money with go up by 15p to £4.25. The minimum wage for apprentices is also increasing from £3.70 to £3.90.

A difficult year for investors?

Many experts are predicting Brexit will have a significant impact on the stock market in 2019. But while opinions differ on the impact, most are forecasting short-term volatility at the very least.

And it is not just Brexit. Trade wars and labour market concerns mean there are plenty of uncertainties for investors to navigate over the coming year.

Darius McDermott, managing director of FundCalibre, expects 2019 to be another difficult year for investors.

“The consensus is that a recession is highly unlikely next year, but the stock market does tend to act ahead of the economy.”

He suggests that investors would be best-served by taking the opportunity to rebalance any biases in their portfolios ahead of a potential downturn.

He says: “The biggest risk to the UK stock market at the moment is Brexit. If we get a hard exit, small and medium-sized companies are likely to be hit harder than larger ones, as they are more domestically-focused. In the same vein, if global stock market volatility is to continue, larger companies tend to outperform in the shorter term.”

Interest rates and mortgages

The Bank of England raised interest rates last August for the second time in 10 years to 0.75% and has warned more rises might be necessary to bring inflation back under control.

It has hinted that it could raise interest rates if the UK manages a smooth exit from the European Union, while its forecasts suggest rates could rise to 1.5% over the next three years.

Howard Archer, chief economic adviser to the EY Item group, says the Bank of England could hold off hiking interest rates until August to see how the economy holds up in the aftermath of the UK leaving the EU.

He says: “We expect just one interest rate hike in 2019 followed by two in 2020 - taking rates up to 1.5%. We see a further two interest rate hikes in 2021, causing them to be at 2% at end-2021.”

But what does this all mean for your mortgage?

If the Bank of England raises interest rates there is a good chance you could see your monthly mortgage payments go up if you are on a variable rate mortgage.

If you are on a fixed rate mortgage you will be safe but if you a coming up for renewal you could see the rate increase.

Many experts believe now is a great time to get a new deal, especially if you are a stuck on a high standard variable rate. Locking in to a fixed rate deal can help guard uncertainty and fluctuations in the interest rate.

Mr Hollingworth says: “The mortgage market looks set to remain extremely competitive which should be good news for those reviewing their mortgage deal. I expect that many borrowers will be keen to make the most of the low mortgage rates on offer, especially as the direction of travel for interest rates has been upward.

“That could continue in the new year but much will depend on Brexit, although the Bank hasn’t ruled out a cut if it feels that the economy requires greater support.”

Pension auto-enrolment

Pension auto-enrolment contributions are also set to change.

Minimum automatic contributions will rise from 5% (2% employer and 3% employee) to 8% (3% employer and 5% employee contributions) in April 2019.

Under auto-enrolment, all eligible employees are signed up to their workplace pensions. Contributions are automatically deducted from their salary and are topped up by an employer contribution and tax relief unless they opt out of the scheme.

State pension

The state pension will rise by 2.6% in April.

For those on a new state pension this works out at a cash increase of £4.25 a week or £220 a year.

This means the full state pension will be worth £168.60 per week, or £8,767.20 after rising from £164.35 a week - above the rate of inflation.

Those receiving the basic state pension will get an increase of £3.25 a week, taking their pension up to £129.10 a week. This means they will get an extra £169 a year, giving them an annual income of £6,718.40.

The level of the state pension rises every year by 2.5%, the growth in average earnings or by inflation – whichever is higher. Known as the triple lock, it gives retirees a guaranteed rise in incomes every year.

The state pension age is also set to rise. From 2019 the state pension age for men and women will gradually increase to reach 66 by October 2020. It is then due to increase to 67 by 2028 and 68 by 2039.

There is also good news for millionaire pension savers. The lifetime allowance for pensions – the amount you can save into your pension tax free - will increase in line with inflation to £1,055,000.

Train fares will rise

Train fares are set to rise again by an average of 3.1% from the beginning of January.

This means long-distance commuters could see their fares rise by as much as £280 from 2 January.

A season ticket for Brighton to London will go up from 4,696 to £4,844 – a rise of £148.

Meanwhile, a ticket from Reading to London will go up by £160 a year to £5,168.

Rail fares have rocketed in Britain over the past decade, growing at more than twice the speed of wages. Since 2008, fares in Britain have risen by 42%, while average wages have increased by just 18%.

Fares rose at the beginning of the year by 3.4%, just below the 3.6% cap for regulated fares.

Regulated fares account for half of fares available and include most commuter journeys. They cannot increase more than the Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure of inflation.

However, the use of RPI inflation for train fare price increases has drawn widespread criticism as it runs higher than CPI inflation – the official measure for inflation used by the government and the Bank of England.

Savings

Isa limits are set to remain the same in the 2019 tax year at £20,000, but it could be good news for savers if interest rates go up in 2019.

It has been a painful decade for savers hit by rock bottom interest rates following the financial crisis. However, some commentators believe the fall-out from Brexit could see the Bank of England raise interest rates again.

A lot will depend on inflation though.

With high inflation the price of goods rises more quickly. This is bad for savers as it erodes the purchasing power of your money.

With most savings accounts paying less than the rate of inflation, millions of savers have actually seen the real value of their savings go down.

Anna Bowes, co-founder savings advice site Savings Champion, says that it is difficult to predict what impact Brexit might have on savings rates.

She says: “All you can do is try to hedge against what might happen. Savers might want to lock some away into fixed term accounts for a couple of years or even longer, that is where the best rates are.

“Bonds are a good choice in times of uncertainty because whatever happens you know what you are going to receive back. Rates have been going up over the past few years, but you do need to shop around.

“Obviously when you tie your money up in a fixed-term account the gamble you are taking is that the interest rate rises out of all proportion and you are suddenly stuck in a less competitive account.”

Help to Buy Isa

First-time buyers need to get in quick if they want to get a Help to Buy Isa as the scheme is set to come to an end on 30 November 2019.

Those who already have a Help to Buy Isa have until 1 December 2030 to claim the bonus.

Launched in December 2015 and was designed to help first- time buyers to save for a house deposit and get a foot on the housing ladder.

However, it has since been superseded by the Lifetime Isa which allows you to save up to £4,000 a year which the government will top up by 25% - £1,000 more than the Help to Buy Isa.

Section

Free Tag

Twitter

Workflow

Published


Source Moneywise http://bit.ly/2SqMQvW

الأحد، 30 ديسمبر 2018

The Financial Movement for Anyone Who’s Sick of Working 9 to 5

Choosing Between a Fireplace, Wood Stove, and Pellet Stove

I grew up with both fireplaces and wood stoves, but neither experience really prepared me for tending to my own fireplace or buying a wood or pellet stove of my own.

Each year when the temperatures drop, the sky grays, and the heating bill starts to inch upward, I am reminded of my family’s first fireplace. In 1984, we moved into a home in Belleville, N.J., that could best be described as a Craftsman Colonial — complete with a covered porch, dark woodwork along the stairs, windows, and trim, and a prominent fireplace in the front living room flanked by two small windows.

My mother had never lived in a home with a fireplace, so she left the fire-tending duties to my stepfather. He’d keep an eye on the newspaper’s classified section for people offering free firewood, tow it home in a utility trailer, and spend hours splitting and stacking it into a lean-to beside our garage.

The fires themselves were basically trials by fire: We learned whether the damper was open only after smoke blew back into the living room. We discovered there was an ash chute to the basement (and what is now the furnace room) only after the hatch in the fireplace floor fell open and burning coals began falling through. We learned about temperature inversions only after the neighbors called the police or fire department because the neighborhood was cloaked in low-lying smoke.

Eventually, however, my parents upgraded the open-air fireplace with a wood-stove insert and a chimney liner. With its fan on, the powered wood stove could heat the entire first floor of the house – even if it made sitting in the living room unbearably hot. My stepfather still claims it heats all 1,400 square feet, but myriad multi-blanket nights in the bedroom directly above it say otherwise. More importantly, it led to more efficient burns and an overall more useful (and less dangerous) heat source.

Nearly 30 years later, I found myself in a home of my own with not one, but three chimneys. One was attached to a shallow Rumford fireplace, another was simply an ornamental remnant of the home’s former 19th-century stove heating system, and the last was a tall chrome chimney built for a guest-quarters wood stove that was never installed.

The house came with high-efficiency gas furnaces on each floor, but my wife and I liked the idea of using fireplaces and stoves during the shoulder seasons to cut down on fuel costs. As we weighed our options, we called in a chimney sweep to clean up the last owners’ mess and get us started. After taking one look up our fireplace chimney, he refused to go any further and said that cleaning the chimney could be taken as an endorsement of its use, which it certainly wasn’t.

That’s how we learned the first question of fireplaces and wood stoves: What kind of infrastructure are you working with? In the case of our fireplace, we were dealing with a chimney that had little to no mortar left between its bricks sitting atop a firebox that had a wad of insulation shoved into it as a “damper.” To rebuild much of the chimney, install a damper, and install a bird screen chimney cap, we ended up paying roughly $5,000. However, we got a fireplace with an easy-opening damper, tremendous draw up the chimney, and enough reflected heat to adequately warm its room and the room above with minimal wood.

For our only other functional fireplace, we strongly considered both a wood stove and a pellet stove. The guest quarters have heating ducts, but they’re far enough from the furnace to make the heat output minimal.

We gave pellet stoves a good look and liked what we saw: They burn at 70 to 83 percent efficiency, are relatively simple to install, and certain models can even burn nut shells and wood chips. However, they also require bags of pellets (typically 40-pound bags that can add up to a ton or more by the end of a season) to operate as well as a place to store them. Also, in our case, we already had chimney pipe sticking through the roof, and the cost of removing it and fixing the roof was only going to add to the total cost of a pellet stove – some of which don’t even require a chimney.

We discovered, however, that newer catalytic wood-burning stoves could also operate at up to 83 percent efficiency, cut down on emissions, and make the best use of our existing chimney. With the help of the folks at Gordon Fireplace in Portland, Ore., (which has since closed) we were able to get a Vermont Castings Intrepid for less than $2,000. That was roughly the same cost as the small pellet stoves that could heat our roughly 700 square feet of lofted space, and it could burn wood that we’d stored outside. When a 150-year-old Pignut Hickory tree fell on our property about a year later, we suddenly found ourselves with roughly four pallets worth of firewood stacked five-feet high.

Even better, however, was the cheap or free cord wood in our neighborhood that we still regularly find on Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace, and elsewhere when we don’t feel like dipping into high-BTU knots of old hickory. We’ve had the wood stove for nearly three years now, and have since closed the heat vent to the guest quarters. If anything, we advise guests to keep the stove set to a low burn just so they don’t end up feeling overheated in the middle of the night.

Every so often, we still consider putting an insert into the fireplace to get more out of it. A fireplace insert can increase efficiency and cut heating costs, but our fireplace faces away from the large majority of the house, making it an effective heat source for only one to two rooms at most.

However, we remain pleased with the decision to use the wood stove in the guest quarters. If we were starting from scratch, the simplicity of the pellet stove and its comparable cost may have won us over. Maybe we could’ve invested in a shed for the pellets or found some storage nooks we weren’t using. But pellet stoves also require electricity to run their fans, pellet feeders, and controls, where the wood stove doesn’t add to energy costs and still works at 100 percent if and when the lights go out during a storm.

Also, while pellet fuel can cost $3 to $4 a bag (with each bag lasting roughly a full day), free firewood tends to show up everywhere in our area. Granted, you’ll likely have to pick it up and/or split it yourself, but you now have options to burn that wood efficiently and get the most heat for minimal investment.

This doesn’t make every wood stove a winner. Our surrounding county has an ongoing wood stove exchange program that offers homeowners $1,500 to $3,500 in rebates just to get rid of older, less efficient wood stoves (even replacing stoves for free in certain households). Even then, they’re reluctant to buy new, more-efficient wood stoves or inserts if a pellet stove or a gas stove is available.

In the end, the costs associated with inserts, pellet stoves, and wood stoves are similar enough that it really comes down to circumstance. If you live in an area like mine where wood is abundant and lots of people are looking to get rid of some, a wood stove can be an inexpensive way to heat your home. However, if you’re starting from scratch and just need a simple secondary heat source to get you through a few tough months, there’s a lot to be said for a pellet stove.

However, if you have a fireplace and chimney that actually face into the rest of your home — and are just sucking most of your home’s heat up the chimney otherwise — an insert is likely the least expensive, simplest option. My parents have used one for 30 years, and they can help turn one of your home’s aesthetic quirks into a functional, reliable, multigenerational heat source.

Related Articles: 

The post Choosing Between a Fireplace, Wood Stove, and Pellet Stove appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



Source The Simple Dollar http://bit.ly/2rYLFsd

السبت، 29 ديسمبر 2018

US retailers hope higher pay will buy more efficient workers

WASHINGTON (AP) — America's retailers, struggling to fill jobs, have been raising pay to try to keep and attract enough employees. Now, some stores want something in return: A more efficient worker.To that end, retailers, fast food restaurants and other lower-wage employers are boosting investment in technology and redesigning stores. Walmart is automating its truck unloading to require fewer workers on loading docks. Kohl's is using more hand-held devices to speed check-outs [...]

Source Business - poconorecord.com http://bit.ly/2RsMZSA

The Ten Most Valuable Financial Lessons I Learned in 2018

Each year, during the period between Christmas and New Years, I sit down and look over what happened during the past year, what I can learn from that, and what I can apply from that to the year to come. I usually come up with a big handful of life lessons during that review, things I learned from situations in my life that didn’t quite go as I liked. What went wrong? Where did I go wrong? What can I do better? These life lessons spread across all spheres of life and usually number in the dozens. I tend to literally make a list of them as I review the year as a way to figure out how to do better in the coming year.

Among the lessons I learned in the past year were ten that have real personal finance implications, though some tend to branch over into other spheres of life. I thought it might be valuable to share those lessons, along with what I hope to do differently going forward.

Lesson #1 – If the stock market is scaring you in terms of your future, you’re either not invested appropriately or don’t know what you’re invested in.

This is something I did right this year, but the bumps in the stock market reminded me of the panic I felt in 2008 when I watched my retirement balance fall by 40%. I didn’t change anything back then, but I was often sick to my stomach about it and my instinct kept screaming to run away from the risk.

But then… things recovered. Between 2008 and 2018, my retirement accounts tripled in value.

The stock market is swooning again, but this time I don’t have the butterflies. Why?

First of all, I recognize that the stock market will rebound. The entirety of the American economy is not going to disappear in a puff of smoke. There are millions of Americans out there every day working hard and innovating, and that’s where the value of the stock market comes from. This is a correction, like every other, not an apocalypse.

Second, I recognize that the stock market is only a place for individual investors to put their money if they have long term goals. If you’re going to use that money within the next ten years, it shouldn’t be in the stock market. Over a period of more than ten years, it will enjoy several years of growth and multiple corrections, which is enough time for that investment to start to approach the long term average annual return of a stock market investment, somewhere between 7% and 10% depending on how you calculate it. I have nothing in the stock market that I intend to use within the next ten years.

I’ve honestly barely paid any attention to the ongoing correction. It’s just another good sized correction, like 2008, like 2001, like 1992, like 1987, and so on. It’s part of having investments in stocks – every several years, the stock market corrects itself.

If you know this and you still feel the butterflies, one of two things are happening. One, you’ve got too much risk – you have money in stocks that you’re going to need within ten years. You fix this by moving such money out of stocks. Two, you’re looking at the trees and can’t see the forest – the success of long term investments is judged over the long term, not over a few months.

What I’ve learned from this correction is that I’m a lot more confident and sure about my investing plan for an early retirement than I was ten years ago and, because of that, there’s no risk of me making an emotionally driven bad financial decision in the face of a momentary change in the stock market.

Lesson #2 – Give yourself plenty of breathing room in terms of both time and money when doing a major home improvement project.

This year, Sarah and I chose to take on a pretty large home improvement project. We tore out our old deck which had some structural issues, replaced it with a four seasons room which now functions as our primary “living room,” put a small deck beside it for things like grilling, and then started down a path of renovating rooms in our home (fresh paint, new carpet in a few cases, and rearranging the purpose of several rooms by moving furniture around). The main reasons were to free up a bedroom for our youngest child (who shared a bedroom with his oldest brother), migrate a lot of “kid’s stuff” to their rooms, and still maintain a good home office space for me while achieving some other minor goals around the house. Almost every change we’ve made will increase the value of our home should we resell it.

We learned a lot of lessons from this project, which we’re still finishing up. The biggest lesson? Projects like this will often exceed your initial time and money budget. Our initial budget for all of these changes was… optimistic, shall we say. Our initial timeline for all of these changes was also optimistic.

At various points, we had to hire help for parts that we realized were over our head. We anticipated doing so for a few pieces, but we ended up getting help for more than we’d planned, which added to the cost and also caused delays. We’d hoped to complete the project by the end of summer but some of the smaller finishing tasks are still ongoing.

We were able to pay for all of the additional costs in cash, of course, so there wasn’t a debt issue here, but if we had been financing these additions and changes, this would have been a serious financial problem.

So, what did I learn? When you’re taking on a big project, make your time and cost budgets high rather than low. Give them both some flexibility and breathing room. My advice is to add at least 20% to the cost and time of everything, if not more. That way, when surprises happen, you’re prepared for them, and if everything goes well, you’re done early with money left over. We may have considered a different plan had we budgeted more accurately in terms of time and money from the start.

Lesson #3 – Stress is one of the biggest enemies of good spending behavior, and thus managing stress is a powerful financial tactic.

In addition to the home renovations, this year brought us more travel than we expected (including a trip to a destination wedding), a vehicle replacement (which I’ll discuss again in a bit), some serious family health issues, and an extremely busy family life. There were times during this year that have been among the most stressful of my adult life, and on the whole, this was probably the most stressful year of my adulthood.

This year taught me many lessons about how to manage my own stress, and I’ve figured out some tools that really help. I find that journaling, vigorous exercise, and meditation have been low cost life savers in this department. They’ve really helped me deal with a lot of the stress related to these ongoing issues.

Having said that, virtually all of my worst spending mistakes in 2018 were during situations where I was stressed out and feeling completely overworked. There have been many, many times in which I spent an entire week doing everything in advance so that I could spend a day on the weekends just relaxing and enjoying a hobby, only to find that something interfered with those plans and stole away that planned time. Countless things were dumped on my plate at the last minute, leaving me feeling like getting all of the truly important “priority 1” things done was impossible, let alone the “priority 2” things.

It was in those peak stress situations where I would resort back to throwing money at problems rather than using better approaches to solving them. For example, I’d order food to be delivered because I was under a writing deadline and couldn’t find time to make dinner. Sometimes, I’d convince myself to buy a hobby item when leisure time was ripped from my schedule (something I’ll revisit in a bit).

So, what’s the lesson? If you’re finding yourself really stressed out and a complete mess at spending money in sensible ways, work on alleviating the stress first. The most effective way to alleviate stress is to simply get things done. Clear big tasks and ongoing responsibilities from your plate so that you have breathing room again and you’ll find it’s much easier to make sensible changes in other areas of your life. For me, simply being efficient and productive with my time while giving room to journaling, meditation, and exercise each day is the key to keeping stress in check.

Lesson #4 – Hobbies actually become less enjoyable when you hit a certain threshold of “stuff” associated with that hobby.

There comes a certain point with any hobby when the items you own related to that hobby go from being items you’re actively enjoying to being a collection that you manage, and a certain significant portion of your time and energy for that hobby moves into curating and managing that collection rather than enjoying the hobby itself.

It’s often hard to identify exactly where that threshold is, but you tend to know when you’ve crossed it.

For me, that’s a sign that I need to pare down the items associated with a particular hobby. When I’m spending a lot of time figuring out how to shelve books, I need to pare down those books and adopt a “when one comes in, another goes out” mindset, for example.

I reached that point this year with my board game collection. While I enjoyed trading games, I found that I was spending more time finding shelf space and figuring out which ones to trade and things like that than I was actually playing them, and I didn’t like that tradeoff.

My solution? I’m downsizing my collection until it’s below that threshold again where I can focus on actually enjoying the hobby itself, rather than curating and managing a collection. This is an ongoing process but I find that I don’t miss items once I’ve purged them. Rather, I’m usually relieved once I convince myself to let them go.

This leads into the next lesson of the year…

Lesson #5 – Getting rid of and selling off old things that you no longer use is a huge mental relief on its own, even beyond the value you get back from the sales.

In the past, I’ve been a collector of certain things and I’ve allowed them to accumulate and fill space in my home. I had a routine of spending my monthly hobby budget by going to clearance sales and looking for hidden gems and spending a lot of hobby time working out good trades. I’ve done this with other things, too, and there comes a point where you need to downsize, not just for physical space, but for mental space, too.

At the same time, there are some aspects of my life where I’m extremely minimal and I’ve come to realize that those are the parts of my life that work best. They require little upkeep and mental effort. They just work. I want that standard in my life in virtually all areas, because I’ve come to realize just how much of a hidden burden an overstuffed closet really is.

The approach I use is somewhat inspired by Marie Kondo’s book The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up, and her technique works as advertised. I’m using it right now to tear down my board game collection, as noted above. I basically ask myself if I would be genuinely excited to play this game right now (assuming I had a block of time and I had the right number of players available) and if I can’t give a wholehearted “yes” without reservation, I’m downsizing it (usually by selling it locally). This approach works well with any collection, honestly.

I intend to use this very approach with a lot of things around my house and garage over the coming year.

Lesson #6 – The car buying process is much easier if you do the homework first, know exactly what you want and how much you’ll pay for it, and communicate that up front to dealers.

In the early part of the year, Sarah and I finally replaced the used SUV we bought off of Craigslist almost ten years ago. Yup, for ten years we drove around in a SUV that we originally bought used off of Craigslist. We drove that thing until it was approaching the 300,000 mile mark, and we knew it was time to move on when a couple of small things failed and the mechanic pointed out about fifteen more things that were going to fail before too long. The total repair bill was big enough that we realized it was time to move on.

We spent a few months shopping around and really refining our strategy. At first, we went to various dealerships and just looked at cars to figure out what we liked and what we wanted and we found that salespeople were all over us when we didn’t really want them to be. We made the mistake of giving out our contact information to a couple and heard back from salespeople endlessly for a while.

Once we had an idea of what we liked and what we actually needed, we cross-checked those models with the recommendations from Consumer Reports and came up with a brief list of makes, models, and years that were acceptable to us. We wanted a late model used (3 to 6 years old) Toyota Sienna or Honda Odyssey, with a few other models that might be acceptable. We identified what we were willing to pay for that car and again we shopped around.

What we learned, after some trial and error, is that the best approach for us is to know exactly what you want before ever contacting the dealer, seek out only models matching what you want online before stepping foot on the lot, and really only looking specifically at those models. In fact, it’s probably worth your while to directly contact the dealership in advance and state exactly what you want and what you’re willing to pay, and if they’re willing to play ball, then go and actually examine the car and test drive it. If you’re not going to take that approach, then the Craigslist approach we used beforehand works best, because if you have a very wide range of vehicles that you’re willing to drive, you might as well cut out the middleman and find someone to buy from directly.

Lesson #7 – A social circle that centers around low key social gatherings without the need to spend much money is worth its weight in gold.

During the year, we came to realize that virtually our entire social circle prefers either to hang out at each other’s homes (dinner parties and game nights) or go to free community events. We don’t really “go out on the town” together unless we happen to be traveling together for some specific reason.

Of course, that means that socializing is a very, very inexpensive part of our life, and for that we’ve become very thankful this year.

At an earlier stage in my life, most of my friends were big spenders, constantly going out on the town, playing golf, trying to “one up” each other with new possessions, and so on. I had fun hanging out with them, but it came with a steep financial cost, one that ended up creating a net negative in my life.

Friendships shouldn’t be a net negative. If the cost of friendship is so high that it is a net negative in your life over the long term, then it’s a friendship you need to reconsider whether you should continue. Note that this does not mean abandoning friends when they have a difficult patch, because they’re often there for you when you’re going through a rough spot.

Having friends that enjoy simple potluck dinner parties and game nights and love doing free stuff around the community makes social decisions much easier because there’s basically no financial component to it whatsoever.

If you’re struggling to find friends who feel this way, the best way to find them is at free community events. Start checking out things like Meetup, your local community calendar, your local library, and your local parks and rec department. There are almost always things going on near you, and if you go with an open mind and an intent to get to know people, you might find friendships bubbling up.

Lesson #8 – When you’re thinking through a financial decision, nothing beats some time with pen and paper.

In the past, my decision making process for major choices (like, say, what car to buy) was to quickly whittle things down to a small handful of options, then turn them over and over and over again in my mind until one of them stood out for some reason, then I’d go for it. I’d make mental pro and con lists and revise them and check them again and hopefully eventually reach a decision. In short, a big decision could distract me for months.

In the past several months, I’ve been using a different approach, one that borrows heavily from the book Creating Great Choices, which I mentioned in my recent article about impactful books I read this year.

Basically, I’ve just blocked off some significant time for coming to a decision – usually, I block off two or three hours on a weekend for this – and I sit down with several sheets of paper. On each piece of paper I identify one of several options for that decision and I try to make a long concrete list of both pros and cons for that option.

Once I do that, I start pairing them off. I look for ones where some of the “pros” cancel out the “cons” of the other option it’s paired with. I try to find pairs (or even sets of three) where most of the “cons” are eliminated by the various “pros” from the other items in the pair or trio.

If I find a really good pair or trio that synergizes well, I then brainstorm and see if there’s a good solution that can incorporate both (or all three) of those options. Is there a way where I can essentially do these both at once?

For example, we recently decided to give our oldest child a cell phone, as he’s involved in a lot of after school activities and that sometimes creates logistical issues in making sure he has a ride and so on, and having a cell phone just makes everything easier. This led to a lot of possibilities about how to do this. Should he have a very simple light plan of his own? Should he be on some sort of family plan with us? Is this a moment to change carriers?

I sat down and looked at a ton of plans. I listed the pros and cons of each – the price, what we get, and so on. I looked at the new customer plans for our current provider and the new customer plans for other providers, too. I looked at some pay-as-you-go options. Naturally, there were different advantages to each choice and some disadvantages to each as well.

What I ended up doing is that I took the things I really liked from one provider and added them to what I liked from another one that ended up with a set of features and cost that nailed what we wanted, and I simply went to the provider that already had most of that in place and told them what we were seeking at what price. I pointed out a similar plan at another provider for a similar amount to what we wanted to pay. Guess what? They said sure.

Basically, rather than choosing an option, I combined two options into one which cancelled out most of the drawbacks of both of those options. We’re probably saving $80 a month over what we would have paid for the services we have without all of that effort.

I’ve used this with lots of decisions recently: what’s our best setup after cutting the cable cord, how to handle a couple of difficult personal issues, and so on. Each time, I’ve ended up going with a combination of solutions that ended up better than any of the initial solutions I was comparing.

Lesson #9 – It is far easier to make good spending decisions during the “afterglow” of exercise.

This seems strange, but I’m stunned as to how well it works.

This year, I’ve found that the absolute best time for me to go shopping is shortly after I’ve done vigorous exercise, when I’ve drank some water and rested for a bit and my legs no longer feel like jelly. I find that in the three or so hours after exercise, I have much better abilities in terms of focusing on the task at hand and not getting easily distracted.

I really discovered this earlier this year when I got into a routine of exercising in the early afternoon in order to kill the drowsiness I sometimes feel during that time of the day. Rather than slumping in front of a keyboard, I started making myself do some intense exercise and then get some household chores done.

I found that I was knocking out those household chores like it was nothing, and I also noticed that if I went grocery shopping during that period right after exercise, I stuck very tightly to my grocery list.

Since then, I’ve made it a point to go grocery shopping and make other financial decisions right after exercise, simply because I’m taking advantage of a sharpness of mind that isn’t always there at other parts of the day. It keeps me on task, and being on task at the store means that money stays in my pocket where it belongs.

Lesson #10 – When you read about a new strategy or watch a video about it, take action immediately or you won’t do anything about it.

Let’s say you just read an article or a book on personal finance or some other self-improvement topic. There’s a lot of good ideas in there and you feel excited to take them on, like you’re ready to succeed.

That’s a great feeling, but it comes with a catch: unless you do something very soon about what you’ve just read, you probably won’t do anything at all. Your brain will file it away as something interesting but unimportant. The urgency you feel to take action and make change will fade quickly. Very likely, you won’t do anything at all.

I’ve read countless articles over the years that suggested actions I could take to improve my situation – my finances, my health, my time management – but they simply don’t matter unless you do something with that information. That choice could be to choose to forget about it… but then why did you read the article to begin with?

Rather, try to find something actionable to do within 24 hours of reading something that really clicks with you. Whenever I read an article or book that’s intended to improve my situation in some way and walk away from it thinking about an idea that I really want to try, I lock it in as a priority task for the next day. I make it my goal to take some kind of action related to that article.

Maybe I’m inspired to try a new frugality technique, or a new exercise practice, or a new meditation technique. Whatever it is, I usually include it as a “priority 2” thing to do the next day (not the big main things I hope to do that day, but one of the lesser things that will fill the rest of my day, and I usually get to everything I have listed as “priority 2”).

This simple step alone has transformed a lot of articles and books that would have just felt like interesting ideas into something I can take action on in my own life to see if it really works for me or not. Sometimes that new strategy clicks and sometimes it doesn’t, but the worst case scenario is that I merely learned something new (that this tactic doesn’t work for me) and the best case scenario is that I now have a better approach to living.

When you read about a good practice you could incorporate into your life, don’t just let it slide by. Rather, make an honest effort to actually do it – and soon.

Final Thoughts

Throughout the past year, life has pounded each of these lessons into my head. My belief is that they’ve helped shape me into a better person, more capable than before of achieving my goals and reaching my dream of financial independence. These lessons also apply strongly to other areas of my life – fitness, intellectual growth, and so on.

What did this past year teach you? What have you really learned going forward?

Good luck.

The post The Ten Most Valuable Financial Lessons I Learned in 2018 appeared first on The Simple Dollar.



Source The Simple Dollar http://bit.ly/2Ri40ib

5 Ways You Can Save $1,378 in 2019 (Even if You’re Awful at Saving Money)