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Launched "new" Ask All About Money

I just launched a new Q&A section only for money matters similar to Yahoo! Answers. Our motto, no question is silly or dumb when it comes to money matters. We all have questions time and time again about money matters and this is a simple platform to ask them.

If you are a guru/expert in any money related areas, we could use your help from your contributions by answering questions.

Don't forget to check out our new Q&A section at Ask All About Money

finance literacy

Money Smartness - Do's and Don'ts for any year

This year just started off and half of January is almost over now. Days are moving fast so you better focus on things you want to get accomplished.

Do a quick check on your goals or Resolutions for this year. Did you ever get started with any of them? If you did, how far along are you? Do you think you are moving along as planned or just dragging yourself, waiting to quit? If you never got started, you still got till 31st to do something about it so you can atleast brag that you started something new this year. If you are chucking along, good job and keep it going!!

Moving on to Money smartness, it is not only about making and saving money right. It is also about doing things which could help to manage and preserve the wealth you earned. It is about getting ready for emergency situations and planning for proper wealth distribution when you are gone. In this post, I like to share and remind few Don't and Do's which most of us take it for granted in our everyday busy life. We don't consider them serious enough until it hits us hard.

Don'ts

Don't lose your 401 (K) contributions

I called my friend who lives in East coast to wish him Happy newyear. During our conversation he was mentioning about his 401k from his previous employer. It has been almost 2 years, he still not moved his funds over to new account. He don't know where to start because his previous company had gone through few mergers after he quit and don't know how much the account worth now and where exactly the funds are held.

I strongly urged him to get on it, start working first thing otherwise he might lose his hard earned money. Many of us fail to roll over my 401 (K) when change jobs. We forget about it, while we struggle to find a new job. With some many job losses last year, I am sure money of you aren't thinking about 401K accounts yet. If you get a chance, do take time and start working on rolling over to Roth IRA account or mutual fund.

Don't be a Identify Theft/Scam/fraud Victim

Identity theft, Ponzi schemes and scams are the talks all over the internet last year. Many millions of people get affected by identify theft every year especially via phishing over Internet. Whether you use online banking to check your account or make your credit cart payment, be careful in protecting your identity by protecting your computer from getting hijacked by the hackers. There is more to avoiding a identify theft than just virus protecting your computer and will talk more about it in my later posts.

Avoid Impulse buying

Beware of persuasive or forceful sales pitches. If it seems too good to be true, it might very well be, so avoid taking action at the spur of the moment. Try to be wise by not paying more for what it's worth and always do comparison shopping. There is a reason why Milk cans are stored way back in any grocery store! Try to always compare different offers whether you are on the street shopping for car or expensive items.

DO's

Pay yourself First

That's the mantra of many Money Guru these days. First take out some money from your pay check for yourself and put it away in a saving account before it disappears. Start small and stretch it out slowly. With automatic saving with online banking, you can do it easily in minutes. By saving periodically, you are also taking advantage of time to work for you. Magic of compounding is the be8th wonder invented by Einstein..  I like to say, Saving is an habit not an hobby, so start a habit this year. Once you get started with saving, you can expand to invest the savings for future purpose like kids education or retirement.

Plan to be Debt free

Are you debt free? I would be surprised if you were. Everybody has debt in  some sort or other whether it is home mortgage or just credit card debt. But you can plan to be debt free and try to get out deep debts avoid paying high interest rates charges.  Don't let your revolving debt to shift as long time debt. That will reckon your financial wealth. If you are in deep credit card debt, try to contact national credit counseling agency and work out a plan to get out of debt and shift to revolving debt situation.

Prepare a WILL

Last but not the least item in the list, Estate planning. Do not think estate planning is only for wealthy individuals. Estate planning is all about preparing for unexpected. It is just about preparing Will/Testament or Trust for the benefit of your dependents.These paper works are very important especially if you are married and have kids. You can make a will in just few minutes using Willmaker by Quicken and execute according to your state law. It is a cost efficient solution compared to Trust but not cost saving solution if you have big estate. Consult your CFP for more details.

I hope these Do's and Don'ts help you to start thinking about few things which are important always not just in a new year. I am planning to touch upon these topic in more elaborate manner in my future posts. Please check back periodically.

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Saving - It's a habit, not a hobby

Personal savings rate is a key measurement of the amount of resources American household have available to contribute to the national saving.  A low personal saving rate limits how much the nation can invest and so ultimately limits future economic growth.

Bit of History

From 1960 until 1990, households socked away an average of about 9 percent of their after-tax income, government figures show. Americans got out of the habit in the 1990s as they saw their wealth build up in other ways, first through surging stock prices and then soaring home values.


The annual personal saving rate (effectively, income minus spending) averaged around 10% during the early 1980s, when the economy was in a severe double-dip recession. It then began to fall steadily, even as the economy weathered two more recessions, averaging about 7% around the time of the 1990-91 recession, then falling below 2% for the first time in 2001. It averaged about 0.6% from 2004-07. Americans also spent more than they earned in recent years which is another reason for pushing the personal saving rate below zero. Check out the link for a detailed clear picture.

Current Mindset

A change in money mindset has emerged again from this recession. That has resulted in a rise in the personal saving rate, which the government calculates as the difference between earnings and expenditures. Economists now expect the rate to rebound to 3% to 5%, or even higher, in 2009, among the sharpest reversals since World War II. Goldman Sachs last week predicted the 2009 saving rate could be as high as 6% to 10%. (Wallstreet Journal article - See “Hard-Hit Families Finally Start Saving, Aggravating Nation’s Economic Woes”.)

Many banks and financial institutions are sending out flyers and phamplets encouraging customers to save money. Actually they need deposits to increase their reserver which is different story. Money gurus recommend various methods and techniques which are hard to follow strategies. It doesn't always fit all types of people and lifestyle. We need a simple, realistic, and ideal plan to reach the saving goal, whether it is short to long term.
 
Whether you are looking to save money for your first Ipod or little bit more for your first car or  bigger target to buy your first home. Just three simple steps to follow to create a good saving plan. Before that, you better set your mind set by realizing the truth.  "Saving is a habit and not a hobby." It is hard to start saving and never easily comes off the cuff.  Many of you do not like to hear it, but that's the fat.
 
How to Realize your goal?
 
Many of our habits are product of constant practice whether its from child hood or teens. If you don't have that saving habit built in you, it is going to be take time start one so you better show some patience. Making something habitual needs determination and constant practice. 

I like to mention a quote by Frank Outlaw.

"Watch your thoughts; they become words.
Watch your words; they become actions.
Watch your actions; they become habits.
Watch your habits; they become character.
Watch your character; it becomes your destiny."

You need to first cultivate thoughts about Savings. Keep thinking about saving money in different ways whether from your paycheck or reducing electricity bill or credit card bill. You just keep thinking about saving something every day or month. Next, talk to your spouse and friends about money saving ideas and plans. Finally, take action by following your own idea or any of three ways mentioned below.

1. Don't spend your dimes and quarters. Start putting them in a piggy bank or digital money jar. Digital money jar will give your amount. Every month, take the change to nearby bank and deposit it in you savings account. You can Open a savings account either with Nationalized bank or local banks with just minimum deposit of $1. I would recommend Credit unions for small saving accounts. 
 
2. On every ATM withdrawal, take $10 out and put it away in the secret wallet/purse compartment. Don't ever touch it whatever happens. At the end of the month, take it all out and deposit in your savings account. 

3. This one is the easiest of all, called Blind savings - Set up automatic withdrawal to put away a small amount from your paycheck as Payroll deduction or Auto deduction from your checking account to your CD or Savings account. You will never see this money and it is blindly saved.

Once you start taking action and sticking with it rain or shine. Everything will fall into picture automatically, transforming yourself. Your savings habit gets built into you slowly. Once you get into the habit, it just comes as a second nature. 

So do not procrastinate and think it is impossible. You already took your first step thinking about saving, you just need make an habit. Sart working towards your next step by talking, planning and taking action. Try it out and share your thoughts.
 

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Cash for Clunkers, Is it Runaway Success?! - A look back - Part I

While the Obama administration and auto dealers are claiming a runaway success of the 3 week's Cash for Clunkers program, there are lot of things went wrong on the side lines.  This program lasted only a short time, but it apparently will have a long-lasting negative impact on nonprofit organizations and businesses. The program should be evaluated so that similar programs in the future can be more effective.

As usual, I picked my magnifying glasses to look closer and research deep enough on various areas to  identify were all this program created the spark. Just a take ride along with me for quick look back. In my previous post on the same topic, I questioned the credibility of this program on 3 main context like whether it is helping consumer, economy or environment as it promised. Let me address those points again with more facts and figures and in my next post share some more interesting stories.

Economic Sense

Let us take a look at some final numbers released on CARS.gov by the government,

Dealer Transactions
Number Submitted: 690,114
Cars sold: Around 700,000
Dollar Value: $2,877.9M

Top  5 New Vehicles Purchased

Toyota Corolla
Honda Civic
Toyota Camry
Ford Focus FWD
Hyundai Elantra

The program accomplished what it was set out to do, which was to get consumers back into the showrooms and to jump-start new-vehicle sales. It also created lot of buzz around nation on spending with expense of 1 billion tax payers dollars set out by the congress. The funds was reloaded with another 2 billions again. It is all well and good but does it really had an economic impact is the major debate. When the foreign car companies like Toyato, Hyundai and KIA topping the list in sales, how it actually made an effect in US economy is many people question.

Spending 3 billion dollars in 3 weeks to replace 700,000 cars in the road cannot be considered as proper measurement to evaluate the success of this program. Yes, it did create a short spike in the consumer spending and had an impact but it just short-lived. According to an analyst, if we assume an average selling price of $25,000 for the program, and total unit sales of 700,000, the cash-for-clunkers program generated at least $17.5 billion of economic activity, not including incremental sales of additional products, such as extended warranties, alarm systems and financing revenue for the dealerships — as well as roughly $875 million in sales-tax revenue for state governments.  That's a pretty good return on $2.6 billion in government spending.

When we add in the fiscal multiplier effect, the net impact of the program was easily north of $25 billion — if not much higher.  Motor vehicle sales in the U.S. account for more than 18% of total retail sales. NADA estimates that dealers generate in excess of $20 billion in annual sales tax revenue from the sale of vehicles. This revenue is an important part of the budgets for state and local governments across the country.

What's more, the sales represent only a portion of the economic impact. Ford, for example, announced that it is increasing production of some models. GM brought back around 1300 workers to start production on its new car models. However, the impact has a short life expectancy and once the program is over, the impact is pretty much over as well.

Of course, it's possible that car sales will simply revert to their pre-Cash for Clunkers numbers in September. But that won't mean the program was a failure. Fiscal stimulus is supposed to be a bridge between a period when people aren't spending to a more prosperous future, when, with a growing economy and (presumably) an improving job market, people will start spending more on their own, without special inducements. So it will be the next challenge for auto manufacturers and dealers to take this momentum and convert into the actual sales in future months to come. 

Consumers Aspect

I argue this program is actually putting many consumers into debt by tempting them to buy newer cars when they don't have job and cannot afford to spend for big purchases at the first place. But auto dealers have a different point. Let see.

Average Fuel Economy

New vehicles Mileage: 24.9 MPG
Trade-in Mileage: 15.8 MPG
Overall increase: 9.2 MPG, or a 58% improvement

According to stats from automotive dealers on the CARS Program shows clunker consumers getting a 69% mile-per-gallon (mpg) improvement which saves them an average of $750 in gas bills a year by replacing their clunker with a new fuel efficient vehicle. "After gas and repair savings many consumers will spend less to drive a new car then they were spending to keep their clunker on the road," says Sharon O'Connell, the director of www.CashForClunkersInformation.org. The program worked far better than anyone anticipated at moving consumers out of old, dirty trucks and SUVs and into new more fuel-efficient cars.

Many of those auto purchasers were already in the market for a car, according to the anlalyst. And it's possible that the incentives have just lured people who would have bought cars later this year into the showrooms earlier--thus stealing sales from future months. The real measure of the effectiveness of the program would be the degree to which it caused people who weren't even thinking about buying a car to take the plunge.

Based on the types of cars being purchased and his assessment of purchasers, NADA economist Taylor believes that as many as 40 percent of the cars purchased under Cash for Clunkers were bought by people who would not have bought a new car in this calendar year. For a significant number of buyers, he argues, the rebates of $3,500 or $4,500--depending on the car purchased after the trade-in--changed the calculation of whether it made sense to purchase a new car.

My argument on adding consumer debt through this program still holds true and strong. How? As per the analyst, 40% of the people who never even thought about buying a car bought one just because they are getting the credit. I am sure around 80% of them bought via financing adding to their debt. May be they saved up some money and will eventualy save lot more in the long run on gas and auto repair expenses. Still whether they really need this debt at this troubled times is the another big question. Government is suppose to help make people life easier not pile more debts on them!!

In a climate where people are buying school supplies on layaway many consumers need some extra prodding to make large purchases. In August, the Cash for Clunkers program clearly provided the necessary encouragement and I should push for a large number of consumers to buy a car which they could have avoided. We are still going towards spending economy instead of saving.

Enviromental Impact

The last and most important of all, enviromental impact of this program. It is the major push for this program to even get implemented at the first place. They wanted to reduce carbon residues and emission by taking out old cars/ gas guzzlers from the road. But many experts argued it is not going help much because it takes 5-7 years to just offset the carbon residue created by the new cars by their gas savings. Let look at the CARS.gov numbers again.

Vehicles Purchased by Category

Passenger Cars: 404,046
Category 1 Truck: 231,651

Vehicle Trade-in by Category

Passenger Cars: 109,380
Category 1 Truck: 450,778

If congress pushed for greener vehicles, they should have limited this program to purchase only cars with better mileage. You see the figure, around 40% Category Truck(SUV, minivan, trucks) are sold again which are true gas guzzlers even with 22 mpg and around 90% traded-in are trucks. Basically, lot people just traded-in their older truck and got a new similar kinda of toy. That's what it means. 
Lets look at some more interesting points I discovered.

According to NADA , as of June 30, 2008, there were about 250 million vehicles in operation. This program only replaced 700,000 cars, which is just 3% of vehicles with little energy efficient ones. The impact is merely a fraction compared to the overall numbers.

Another report by CTA (Center for Transportation Analysis),

Carbon dioxide emissions  emitted by United States  accounts for 5,982 million metric tonnes in 2005. Transportation share of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel consumption 2007  - 33.6%

Motor gasoline share of transportation carbon dioxide emissions  - 58.6%

The U.S. accounted for 23.5% of the World’s carbon dioxide emissions in 1990 and 21.3% in 2005. Nearly half (44%) of the U.S. carbon emissions are from oil use. The numbers tells us lot of things. Just by replacing fractional number of vehicles won't have a big impact on the carbon emission.

This program only affects a small portion of economy thorough auto industry by spiking the auto sales, added debt to consumers and only had fractional impact on enviroment. Is it a true success? I know some will argue, you cannot bring a big change all of sudden, changes can only be enacted slowly. But spending 3 billions for small impact is a costly affair. There should be a program which has broader impact similar to banning incandescent lights by 2012, controlling emissions from factories and so forth.

In my next week continuation post on this topic, I will share more on how this program caused uproar and upset many non-profit organizations, small auto sales companies and auto repair businesses by looking at another side of the coin.

Sources - newsweek.com, time.com, nada.com, cta.org, npr.org

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