Archive for November, 2006



One Reason Not To Become A Landlord…

Thursday, November 30th, 2006

Besides asking family friends for real estate advice, my father-in-law also manages rental properties himself. He is an extremely handy guy, and I hope to get him to teach me some useful home repair and remodeling skills later on. But today, he was replacing a tenant’s toilet and dropped it on his foot. The result was a side trip to the Emergency Room and a stylish cast. As a klutz myself, this is not good.

Take The First Step Towards Your Goal Today.

Thursday, November 30th, 2006

No, I didn’t forget! Over 100 people joined me in my Make A Goal Experiment and shared their goals. Since they are cached somewhere in a Google database by now, your goals are now a permanent piece of internet history.

Now to make it happen… I’m going to share a little tip my mom taught me. Whenever you are too lazy to study, exercise, or do a chore, tell yourself to just do it for five minutes. If you want to stop after that, fine. But you’ll be amazed. Once you do it for 5 minutes, most of the time you’ll keep doing it. I often do this with jogging. Sometimes I just come home after a circle around the block. But 90% of the time I go much longer.

Most of the goals involved a certain sum of money, be it for a house, debt repayment, or retirement. Applying my 5-minute trick, my suggestion is spend those 5 minutes and set up a small automatic transfer towards this goal today. Open an online savings account. Washington Mutual, Citibank, ING Direct, whatever - They are all earning around 5% interest right now, are FDIC-insured, and you only need $1 to open. Or depending on your goal, start an automatic transfer into your 401k or an automatic billpay to a credit card.

With most of these services you can set up automatic transfers weekly, biweekly, monthly, quarterly, whenever. No matter what your goal is or what your budget is, you can make some sort of commitment. If you can only do $10 a week, that’s still a start. After a while, that $10 will feel like nothing and you can increase it.

As for me, I am going to set up an automatic transfer of $125 to my savings account every week. This won’t make me reach my goal 100%, but it will get me moving and build some momentum.

Free Online Foreign Language Courses

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Here’s a great find - learn a new language for free (well, your taxes may have paid for it) at FSI Language Courses:

These courses were developed by the United States government and are in the public domain. This site is dedicated to making these language courses freely available in an electronic format. It is an independent effort to foster the learning of worldwide languages.

Included are Arabic, Cambodian, Cantonese, Mandarin Chinese, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, and Vietnamese. If you have problems downloading like I did, try using Internet Explorer and Right Click > “Save File As…”. The audio should show up in mp3 format. Thanks to DumbLittleMan for the tip.

TEDTalk Videos: New Ideas In Economics And Business

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

I’ve just spent the last hour watching various talks from previous TEDs, which from what I can gather is a symposium about exchanging ideas from innovative people from around the world. If you have an iPod, these would be great videos or podcasts (about 20 minutes long each) for a commute.

While not necessarily all money-related, many of them touch on economics and business. Here are a few that I found intriguing:

Rethinking Poverty: Novogratz
Jacqueline Novogratz is the founder and CEO of Acumen Fund, a non-profit that takes a business-like approach to improving the lives of the poor.

Read the rest of this entry…

Advice From A Successful Real Estate Investor

Tuesday, November 28th, 2006

Over Thanksgiving holidays we met up with a family friend who is a very successful real estate investor. She has millions of dollars of property both here in the U.S. and internationally. We started talking about investing and here are some of the points that I recall:

Get started as soon as possible. When she found out that we were without kids, making a decent income, and still renting, she looked at me like I had three eyes. I think most successful real estate investors are like that. When I explained that we’d be moving in 6 months, she still said that we need to start as soon as possible. Think long-term, but get on that property ladder!

Learn more about taxes. If you want to have rentals, you need to keep great records and take advantage of all the numerous tax breaks. She said she once took H&R Block’s income tax course and it was the best money she ever spent. That way, it forces you to examine all the byzantine forms step-by-step.
Read the rest of this entry…

You Have Some Money. Where Do You Put It?

Monday, November 27th, 2006
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I went over understanding your spending and also free budgeting tools. Once you start managing your money better, you should be spending less than you earn. Or maybe you have come across a lump sum of money somehow. Now what do you do with the money? Although everyone’s situation is different, I think that a good discussion can evolve from this.

Here’s a list of possibilities:
Read the rest of this entry…

My Money Guide: A New Project

Sunday, November 26th, 2006

A few publishers used to ask me for book proposals on my views on money management, but have stopped bothering since it is quite apparent that I just don’t have the time or discipline to do such a feat. Instead, a new ongoing project for this blog is to try to collate all the knowledge that I have gained so far (and am still gaining!) into a sort of free online finance book. The ongoing rough draft will be housed here (Update: I moved it to it’s own domain — and then moved it back :P). Tentatively, I am going to call it “My Money Guide”, but I don’t really like that name.

My Money Blog Thanksgiving Giveaway Winners!

Sunday, November 26th, 2006

First all, thanks for everyone who participated in my Thanksgiving Giveaway. I think it was a huge success, and I was overwhelmed by the response. As for my weekend, my family was in town and despite all my anti-consumerism ramblings we did a fair bit of shopping. It was great to see them and I look forward to seeing the other half of my family over the Christmas holidays. I truly have much to be thankful for.

Enough of that, let’s get to giving out some prizes! First, I had to split up them up between guessers and bloggers. This was simply done by Excel’s random number generator add-in. Here are the results:
Read the rest of this entry…

Discover’s Holiday Promotion Has A $100 Loophole

Sunday, November 26th, 2006

As part of the Discover Mall Holiday promotion, they are offering $20 for each $200 spent. However, there was no mention of what would happen if you returned the items after you “spent” the money. Since credit card companies are usually masters of the fine print, I figured they had some sort of mechanism in place to prevent this. Nope.
Read the rest of this entry…

Is Costco Executive Membership Worth It?

Saturday, November 25th, 2006

Over a year ago, I asked the question: Is Costco worth the money? In the end, we kept our membership. You know you’re getting a fair price (if not necessarily the best) on great variety of products, the customer service is great, and you gotta love their food court. So after spending another few hundred dollars on food and gifts today, amongst all those banners pronouncing “2% Cash Back for Executive Members“, I started to ponder if I should upgrade my membership level too?
Read the rest of this entry…

True Cost of Holiday Shopping Calculator

Thursday, November 23rd, 2006

Step 1: Pick Your Purchase:




Name Your Own Impulse Buy Price

Step 2: Pick your estimated annual return (default is 8%):

6%    
8%    
10%
Step 3: Pick your time horizon (default is 30 years):
10 years    
20 years    
30 years    
40 years
Assuming a 3% inflation rate, the inflation-adjusted TrueCost™ of your impulse buy in years is:   

Explanation: Read the rest of this entry…

Sunrocket VoIP - 2 Years for $199, No Code Required

Tuesday, November 21st, 2006

Today (11/21) only, SunRocket is offering 2 years for $199. This “special” seems to come around every other month or so. I’ve been using SunRocket instead of a landline for over a year now now and I remain very satisfied for the price - check out my SunRocket Review for details. My faxing now works 95% of the time.

Added: You can also get two years for $199 from ViaTalk VoIP.

For Those Not Sleeping Through Black Friday

Monday, November 20th, 2006

The Consumerist has a great before-you-go checklist for everyone who’s all hyped up for Black Friday shopping. Have fun and try not to get shot while in line. I’ll be rooting for you while under the covers.

My family is in town, so it looks like I’ll have to brave the hoards later in the day. Wee. (Or should I say Wii?)

Changes to Fidelity 529 College Rewards Credit Card

Sunday, November 19th, 2006

If you’re a Fidelity 529 College Rewards cardholder like me, you’ve probably already got the letter that talks about some of the changes to this card and also the 529 plans in general. To summarize:

Credit Card Program Changes

  1. The 2% cashback version of the card will no longer be offered to new customers. Existing customers are unaffected (for now).
  2. Although the 2% card is gone from the Fidelity website, the old application link still shows up. It is unknown if any new applications will be approved. (edit: the old application is now gone.)
  3. There is a new 1.5% cashback version of the card, but an American Express instead of MasterCard.

Changes to ALL Fidelity 529 Plans Read the rest of this entry…

Index Mutual Funds or Index ETFs: Which Is Better?

Sunday, November 19th, 2006

Ever since exchange-traded funds became popular, many index fund investors have taken notice. Should we try to take advantage of the often-lower expense ratios? Can we overcome the commissions from trading? For example, both of these track the S&P 500 index:

IVV - iShares ETF, expense ratio of 0.10%
VFINX - Vanguard Mutual Fund, expense ratio of 0.18%

I just ran across this article at IndexUniverse.com, which compares the performance of mutual funds vs. ETFs for various indexes.

The general conclusion was that the main ETF for an index outperforms the average mutual fund tracking the same index. However, if you choose the Vanguard fund version, you will get very similar or sometimes even better performance due to their superior index management. Read the rest of this entry…

net worth progress bar