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~ Sharing the Thrill of Travel

Summer Chasers

Category Archives: Money

Tips and Tricks for Gaining Control of your Finances

19 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by Summer Chaser in Money

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Annual percentage rate, Clark Howard, Credit card, Credit card debt, Credit score, Savings account, Tips, Tips and tricks

Having learned the History of Money and the Basics, let me offer some tips and tricks I hope you can make good use of:

  • A simple and easy tip for U.S. residents from Consumer Warrior and Financial Expert Clark Howard is to visit www.missingmoney.com to find out if there is any money out there in your name waiting to be collected. I once found a paycheck  in my name that was never cashed just by following this simple advice.
  • Pay off your credit card debts. Collect information on your credit cards. Which cards are costing you the most every month in terms of interest? List them in that order and concentrate on paying one off. Every month going forward, pay the minimum on all cards except for the one at the top of the list, which you will be contributing all the extra cash that would have gone to the rest of the cards. Discipline yourself until this card is paid off. Once that is done, the extra cash that is freed up is then added on to pay off the next card on the list. Do not relent on this! You will be amazed at the momentum you’ve built and it will speed up your way to freedom!
  • Once every six months, call up your credit cards and ask 1) If they can raise your credit limits without you having to go through a credit check and 2) If they can lower your Annual Percentage Rates so that you could have an easier time using their card more often (which you really aren’t, but this gives them incentive to comply with your request.) Raising your limit will give you better creditworthiness and make it easier to lower your rates with the other cards. This has saved me a lot of money in the long run and has brought me closer to my goals.
Česky: Kreditní karty Deutsch: Kreditkarten En...

Credit is an important concept not only in consumeristic or capitalist modern societies, but also dating back as early as ancient Greece and Egypt.

  • Once you have paid off a card, do not cancel it. If you use it, pay off the debt as soon as possible. If it has an annual fee, ask if it can be waived (at least for this year.) Just make sure that once every six months, you use the card for something, otherwise, the card will automatically be closed due to inactivity.
  • If you have direct deposit through your employer, try to set it up so that a certain amount per paycheck goes into your regular bank account that you use for paying for bills and the rest into a savings account. I remember when I was just starting out during my first job in Michigan as a troubleshooter for a big company, I arranged to have $1000 per paycheck sent to my checking account which I used for paying for daily expenses. Anything I made through overtime or other means that went over that amount automatically got deposited to my savings account which I then forgot about. It’s a nice surprise that on a rainy day, I have emergency funds available.
  • Eliminate bills and expenses that you can live without. Downgrade where ever you can. I mean, do you really need 1000 channels? As the say, less is more… for you!
  • Be diplomatic and polite. You’ll be happy with the results. Not too long ago, I was remodeling my condo to have an Arabian Nights theme. I didn’t want to spend a whole lot on it, so I started browsing online to find complimentary things to add to the theme. I found two people selling a circular, fairly new Moroccan bed that went well with what I had in mind. I wrote a simple, yet polite letter to both owners asking if they would be willing to offer the beds at a lower price. I sent them a link of each other’s ads. One was adamant about her price, while the other was more receptive and lowered the cost. I got a great deal just by having a good, respectful attitude. And in the end, I get a good night’s sleep in a kick ass bed.
My awesome bed

My awesome bed.

I hope you gained something out of this post. Please send me any feedback or questions you may have. Next time, I’ll be talking about the different types of assets and why you should have at least one of each!

Lesson #2: The Basics

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by Summer Chaser in Money

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Albert Einstein, basics, Candy, Cashflow Quadrant, Delayed Gratification, lesson #2, minimalism, Personal finance, Rich Dad, Rich Dad Poor Dad, Robert Kiyosaki

I once read a study where they offered to give children some candy but in this manner: If the child was willing to wait for a period of ten minutes before taking the candy placed on the table in front of him or her, the child would be given another candy. The more ten-minute periods the child could wait, the number of candies given would double. I wish I could find a copy the study online so I could link it here, but it turns out that children who could delay their gratification would later on be more successful in life. Children who could not control the need for instant gratification didn’t get very far in their lives.

Candy at a souq in Damascus, Syria.

I want candaaaaaaay! I want caaaandaaaaay!

Last week, during Lesson #1, we explored the history of money and what it actually is. The takeaway from that was the understanding that if we want to be wealthy or at least financially stable and debt free, we should be acquiring things that retain or increase its value over time and not the reverse. Unfortunately, the dollar (or any other currency for that matter) does not fall into this category.

Here in the U.S. there are so many factors that deny your money a chance to grow unless you convert it into something else. For the average person who is employed, he or she is taxed upon earning that paycheck (Income Tax). Taxed again when spending that paycheck (Sales Tax). Taxed again when saving that paycheck (Taxes on Earned Interest). Inflation will also come into play and diminish the remainder of the money you have managed not to spend. Oh and don’t forget the so called Death tax (Federal Estate Tax). In the future, we will discuss how to legally pay as little in taxes as possible.

Now before we go any further, as a disclaimer, I don’t pretend to be a professional in this matter. I am not licensed to give out money advice nor do I do this to make a living. I am simply sharing what I’ve learned and what has worked for me. I challenge you do to your own research on what I am sharing. Please feel free to email me your thoughts, questions, or (constructive) criticisms.

Okay, with that out of the way, you may be asking “So, what can we do to be financially stable?” The basic concept behind the answer is simple. Collect assets and avoid liabilities.

Cover of "Rich Dad, Poor Dad: What the Ri...

Written by Robert Kiyosaki.

As I’ve learned from the lessons of Robert Kiyosaki and his series of educational books and games (Rich Dad, Poor Dad, Cashflow Quadrant, Rich Dad’s Guide to Investing, et al,) assets are things that gain or retain value and put money into your pocket and liabilities are things that lose value or take money away from your pocket.

Sounds simple enough that any kid could do it, right? Well, you’d be surprised at how many people out there can’t grasp this commonsensical attitude. People still dive into debt for an expensive car, not realizing that it is perhaps one of the fastest things you can own… that loses its original value.

This really isn’t anything you don’t already know. Similar to my recipe for losing weight, in order to gain control of your finances, two things or some combination of both must happen:

1) You make more than what you spend.

2) You spend less than what you make.

English: Albert Einstein Français : portrait d...

Professor Albert Einstein, theoretical physicist.

Today’s world can seem overly complicated, but as Einstein has reputedly said, “Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius — and a lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction.”

So try and keep things as simple as possible that still fits your needs. Try to trim off the fat. Cut off the bills that you can live without. Live beneath your means. Don’t play the ‘Keeping up with the Jones’ game, as it is a never-ending game with no clear definition of when or how to win. Sell off some of your stuff. Downgrade what you can that isn’t essential. Learn to embrace the minimalistic way of life. Collect experiences, knowledge and memories, not appliances, cars and things. But most of all, if there’s just one thing you take away from all of this, I hope you’ll remember the study I was telling you about earlier, before we began the lesson. Learn to delay your gratification… Don’t take the candy just yet!

I hope you learned something new from all this. Next time, I’ll give out some tips on what you can do to gain control of your finances. Until then, have a happy Monday!

Lesson # 1: Understanding What You Have in Your Hands

05 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by Summer Chaser in Money, Travel

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

finance, gold, Gold Standard, lesson 1, Precious metal, Richard Nixon

I was recently talking about the difference in the value of money, comparing the pesos in the Philippines with the dollar here in the U.S. Ever since immigrating to the ‘Land of Milk and Honey’, it has been a non stop learning experience for me. Getting culture shocked was simply the beginning. Today, I have been through numerous ups and downs, thicks and thins, and summers and winters than I care to recount. I’ve had businesses succeed as well as fall apart, properties fall under on the one hand and incredible bargains sealed on the other.

I think I am very fortunate to be where I am standing today, almost entirely debt free. A fully paid for residence, no more car loan payments, and very little in the way of credit card balances. I mention this, not because I want to brag (though I assure you, I am quite vain and proud, bordering on arrogance even.) Rather, it is my objective to share with you the summation of the lessons I’ve learned about money and finance from my humble virtual platform with the sincere intention that you can make good use of this knowledge and avoid the pitfalls I blindly walked into.

That brings us to lesson number one, understanding what you have in your hands.

You see, understanding is key. If you want to become a doctor, you have to understand medicine and the ways your body reacts to it. If you want to become a lawyer, you must understand the law and how it affects the people around you. Want to be an engineer? You had better get a good understanding of physics and mathematics. If you want to be wealthy, or at the very least, financially stable, the first step is that you must have a good grasp of what money is.

Go ahead. Take your paper currency out and look at it. Have you ever asked yourself why a printed piece of paper has as much value on it as what it says?

A gold-standard 1928 one-dollar bill. It is id...

A United States Bank Note printed in 1928 indicates that the bearer of this certificate or note is entitled to gold from the U.S. Treasury equivalent to the amount of one dollar

For thousands of years, majority of civilizations have used some type of precious metal to be their form of money. In most cases, this was usually gold. Money was necessary, simply because bartering was cumbersome. Trading chickens for bread, for example may work just fine for some, but what if the baker was allergic to chickens? No trade between the two commodities could occur unless a third commodity came into play that the baker would accept in place of chickens. That is essentially why money was invented. It had to be compact, valuable, divisible, durable and universal. Gold fit these criteria perfectly and so, it has and probably will always be a valuable form of money.

Gold Key, weighing one kilogram is used to acc...

Gold or Aurum is still highly valued up until today

Early paper money, China, Song Dynasty

Early Paper Money from the Song Dynasty

What about paper money? Well, that came from the Chinese Dynasties during the Middle Ages. During long caravan voyages, instead of carrying around precious gold that could be stolen or lost, a merchant would approach his family bank, turn in or deposit his wealth and receive a sealed certificate. He would travel to the next city, present his certificate and withdraw the same amount minus a small fee. This would prove to be a much more practical way of doing business.

It was from here that paper currencies evolved. Merchant caravans would bring the practice further and further west. The Islamic sheiks closest to China began to adopt the practice. Jewish pilgrims would carry this further west into Europe.

I remember once, I saw a very old British Note. It said on it “Bank of England. I promise to pay the bearer of this note on demand, a sum of ten pounds.” That is what it essentially was, a certificate indicating that you had that much gold in the bank. So, for my fellow Americans, the dollar that you and I carry around, used to give you the ability to walk up to the Treasury office and exchange that $100 bill or note for $100 worth of gold. But that all changed.

In August 15, 1971, President Nixon took the U.S. off of the Gold Standard. That meant, that you could no longer change your paper money to the pegged rate of $35 per ounce of gold. It meant, that the dollar was no longer backed by how much of this precious metal our government held. The dollar was merely backed by promises of what its value is worth.

In short, my friends, the cherished time we trade for the paper money that becomes less and less valuable as more and more of it is printed out is a plan doomed to end… well, NOT in your favor. Sooner or later, people around the world will not continue to accept it, since it isn’t supported by anything of value (other than the promise that we will continue to credit it, and from what I’ve seen lately… a really poor job of debt management is being done.)

Regardless of whether you believe any of this, the lesson underneath it all is, instead of collecting something that is losing its value… start collecting assets that retain or increase value over time.

To achieve my goals of seeing at least 80% of the world and to be able to live anywhere it is currently summer, I have aimed at having a residence that I can easily rent out for a profit, portable freedom businesses that generate trickles of income, stocks and other paper assets that provide dividends regularly, and commodities such as gold and silver that retain or increase their value especially as paper currencies become worthless. And in the doomsday scenario where the dollar should ever fall apart and a new chicken currency arises, I would still be able to survive by charging my renters for chickens…

Food for thought.

Money Lessons and Pizza

27 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by Summer Chaser in Money

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Dollars and Pizza, Money, Pizza, Purchasing Power, United States dollar

It’s been a little over a decade since I’ve lived here in the U.S. and it has been an amazing journey to say the least! Talk about getting culture shocked! As one might imagine, it was a HUGE change from my simple life in the lovely islands of the Philippines.

Something that is quite apparent right on the onset, though, is the power of your money.

UPLB Main Library and the Pegaraw. Note: The P...

The Library at UPLB where slackers like myself can hang out and not be bothered by classes, teachers or books.

You see, when I was living in the Philippines, there seemed to be plenty of time for everything compared to the United States. Life tends to be more laid back. Shops and restaurants are usually open very late, so the nightlife can get quite insane. Even when I was back in college at the country’s best university (Shout out to UPLB! Woooh!) the student’s life left a lot of time for extra-curricular activities be it productive or intoxicative.

The issue came in the form of money. It was really hard to make a living compared to the opportunities found here. Once I had arrived in Michigan, I started working the first job I could find. I was a waiter at a small family diner. Life suddenly floored the gas pedal and I was left gasping for what little time I could hustle for myself. Everybody seemed to be in a rush. People even walked faster!

But then, after earning my tips and paychecks, I discovered that I could feel my money. The dollar’s buying power stretched on further than I had imagined! In one paycheck, I bought the most coveted video games for my PC which would have cost an arm and a leg in the Philippines.

My world had turned on its head. I traded most of my time for some (pretty powerful) money.

To give you an idea of the difference in purchasing power, I like to use my favorite conversion method.

In the United States, how many hours at the rate of the federal minimum wage would you have to work in order to afford a large pizza with all your favorite toppings on it? Two, three hours? Maybe four at the most?

Česky: Pizza

A Filipino Pizza has a myriad of savory flavors that would blow your taste buds away. One bite, and everything else seems bland.

About decade ago in the Philippines, it would have taken around 400 Philippine Pesos to buy a pizza with everything on it. The National minimum wage was set to around ₱ 200… per DAY! I’m talking a *whole* day of back breaking work to earn a measly $4 (₱ 50 to $1 back in those days.) So after TWO whole days, you could buy the same pizza that an American could have bought after a couple of hours on the job.

That my friends, is how powerful the dollar felt in my hands.

While the values may have changed somewhat between now and then, fundamentally, the U.S. Dollar is still the World’s Reserve Currency. In the next few weeks, I want to share with you some of the top money lessons I’ve learned here in the good ol’ U.S. of A. I sincerely hope you can make good use of this knowledge, regardless of where you find yourself in the world today.

As a side note, let me just say that I firmly believe those of us over here have one of the best opportunities to leverage what we can potentially earn in order to live, travel, and enjoy the best things in life. And to finally cross off all those pesky lines on our bucket lists.

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