Sunday, July 15, 2018

Summer $ Reading

Many newspapers and magazines offer book lists for light, summer reading.

As you know, if you want to learn something, read.
Read books. Read magazines. Read websites.

Perhaps reading about money and investing is not considered light reading but when you are determined to care for your money and make it work for you, it is essential reading.

Here are a few books to consider:

The Little Book of Common Sense Investing
by John Bogle, the father of index investing.
Mr. Bogle, also the founder of Vanguard, offers timeless and sensible advice.

A Random Walk Down Wall Street
by Burton Malkiel, helps you understand the workings of Wall Street.

The Investment Answer
by Daniel Goldie and Gordon Murray, give easy to understand investment knowledge.

The Little Book of Main Street Money
by Jonathan Clements (often seen on PBS) provides good, basic financial advice.

One book I suggest for widows or newly divorced is
On Your Own: A Widow's Passage to Emotional and Financial Well-Being
by Alexandra Armstrong and Mary Donahue, offers easy-to-follow advice with step-by-step guidance.

If tackling a book is too heavy for your summer schedule pick-up a financial magazine like MONEY, Kiplingers or FORBES. Read it all - read the ads, the comments, the table of contents, the articles, cover to cover. The more you read the more familiar you become with the terms and the language of finance. The better you understand the language, the less intimidated you feel.

Be $ Smart - Build your confidence. Grow your assets. Learn about investing. Your future is yours to create.

Sunday, July 8, 2018

The Magic Of Compound Interest

Here's a topic we've addressed before. It is a topic worth repeating. I took the simple explanation directly from the U.S. Department of Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration.

Compounding investment earnings is what can make even small investments become large investments given enough time.

How It Works – The money you save (either in a savings account, a mutual funds or in individual stocks) earns interest. Then you earn interest on the money you originally save, plus on the interest you've accumulated. As your savings grow, you earn interest on a bigger and bigger pool of money.

Start Saving Early - For every 10 years you delay before starting to save for retirement, you will need to save three times as much each month to catch up.

Starting at 20 - If you put $1,000 a year into an IRA every year from age 20 through age 30 (for 11 years) and stop - and the account earns seven percent annually - your savings will equal $168,514 at age 65.

Starting at age 30 - If you don't start until age 30, but save the same $1,000 amount annually but for 35 years straight at the same seven percent rate, you will have saved three times as much money but your account will grow to only $147,913 at age 65.

Where you might obtain a steady 7% return puzzles me, especially in this low interest rate environment but the point is clear even on a lesser scale:
- Start early!
- Save regularly or automatically!


The difference is significant if you wait. Even small amounts saved early have many more years to grow.

Be $ Smart
- Start saving now! Any amount is better than none. Your future depends on it.