Taking Control of your Finances

To find money to invest for your future, you need to make sure that your outgoing expenses are less than the income that you are receiving. You need to develop an excess that you can have free to invest.

Now before you start to think.”well I don’t have any excess leftif I was earning more money.then I would have some free”. Let me dispel this mythand tell you that it is a known and excepted fact that the amount of money that people earn has little if any bearing on whether or not they have an excess left to invest. The only way to create an excess it to spend less than you earn, instead of spending all that you earn.

Even doctors and lawyers, who earn well over $100,000.00 per year, often end up at retirement with little more Net Worth than factory or office workers.

Net Worth is calculated by deducting the value of all the liabilities or loans you have from the income-producing assets owned to give you the net value of your income-producing assets.

Why aren’t high-income earners retiring wealthy? Why don’t they end up with a greater Net Worth than someone on a low income? It is quite simple. Human nature seems to dictate that whatever anyone earns.they spend.some even spend more than they earn and charge it on their credit card.

The higher your income growsthe more you spend and the only way to get out of this cycle is to realise that it is happening, and make a concerted effort to reverse this habit.and to begin reducing your expenditures so that you can free up money to invest.

The best way to do this, is to try the 10/90 plan. This plan simply means that as soon as you receive your pay.you put aside 10% of it for investment.and then use the other 90% to live off of. Put aside the 10%, and then pay all the bills and do the grocery shopping.and then after that whatever is left over you can spend.

Most people do it the wrong way aroundthey pay the bills, do the shopping and spend what is left over, never leaving any left to save or invest. By taking the investment money out first you will alleviate the temptation to spend it.

The road to wealth is not determined by how much you earn, but by how you utilise the income you have and how much you save and invest.

You need to take control of your finances. One of the best ways to start having more control over your money is to find out where it has all been going, and then amend your spending habits to allow you to live within the 10/90 plan.

If you write down a list of your monthly net income, then in another column write down a list of the essential items that you have to spend money on. You should be able to work out an average for telephone, gas, electricity, insurances and rates, from your previous bills. Work out an average of how much is spent on grocery shopping and petrol. If there are any other necessary utilities include them as well. Then deduct the second column from the first - and this will give you the maximum potential savings for each month.

It can be quite startling how high this figure can be and make you wonder where all the extra money went.

Another good learning experience is to simply write down for a fortnight every dollar spent and write next to it what it was for. You will soon find that there are a lot of unnecessary expenses, often caused by impulse buying, where you have spent money on items that you neither needed or really wanted, and could easily have gone without.

When you can begin to recognise these areas, and start to consider whether or not you are spending your money wisely, before you hand it over, then you will be beginning to take control over your money and are well on the way to embarking on your investment journey, which will enable you to have a financially secure future for you and your children.

Debra Lohrere is an author of several books on property investment and how to create financial security. Please visit. http://www.debra.lohrere.com/home.shtml

Debra Lohrere works as a Commodity Trading Logistics Administrator. She previously spent over ten years working in an Accounts Administration position with her primary roles being collections and financial forecasting. She also ran her own computer retailing business for many years.
Knowing the vital importance of cash flow in business led her to begin investigating the benefits of personal investments. She decided six years ago that it was time to start taking control of her personal finances and begin building a wealth base for her future.
She began researching the powerful medium of property investment as a means of bringing financial independence into a reach and began to build her own property portfolio.
Within the space of four years she was able to go from renting a house, to owning her own home and three investment properties, while having contributed very little of her own money to secure these.
She built up a large base of contacts with fellow property investors, which has proved to be an invaluable source of information.

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Rethinking Retirement Not Just Sitting on the Porch Sipping Lemonade

What does retirement mean to you? Sitting on your porch, rocking and drinking a lemonade, watching the world go buy? Or do you want an active retirement, still engaged in the world, travelling, starting a business, and spending time doing what you really want to do? Are you thinking of retiring early? Are you thinking of retiring now?

With increasing life expectancies and improving health and an increase in planning, the nature of retirement is changing for the better. So, how do you make sure that when it comes time to retire, you’ll be able to enjoy the lifestyle that you’ll want to lead? The answer is effective goal setting and planning for those specific goals.

While once retirement was seen as the culmination of one’s working life, today retirement is increasingly viewed more as a life transition. Retiring “early” (usually defined as before eligible for Social Security) means you are still young and healthy, able to pursue hobbies, business interests, and travel.

Today, people in their 60s are generally healthier than past generations and this will only increase further as we live healthier lifestyles and benefit from advances in medicine. Life expectancies are also increasing. In 1935, a 65 year old could expect to reach age 77

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Travel the Path to Financial Independence

An “activist” is someone, who, seeing a need for change or improvement, becomes involved in promoting that change or improvement.

I suppose that makes me an activist, of sorts.

More than thirty years ago my heart hatched a dream. I wanted to travel a path that would help me to become financially independent. But I did not stay the course. I did not continue to search, research, act and follow through.

So here I am. One of the typical statistics of the general population of the nation. I have virtually no savings and very little put away into a retirement vehicle.

But it is not too late. It is never too late. And I am still determined to make a better future for myself. The difference is, I have actually begun. I have a plan for my future success and my future prosperity.

We have a “term” life insurance policy in place to cover our immediate needs if we died, and we have opened some tax advantaged retirement programs.

My current job has had a retirement program available for a long time. They offer to put in 2% of my gross pay check if I will put in 3% of the same pay check.

Think of it.

If I contribute $150, the company adds $100. Then I have it invested in a mutual fund with a track record of about 10%. At the end of the year, using simple numbers for illustration, I will have put away $1800, the company will have added $1200, and the interest would have contributed about $300. We have a total of $3300. The return on my investment of $1800 has been over 83%!! Would you like an 83% return? Check into it. Ask about employer matching funds investments for retirement.

We are also putting into place a Roth IRA, a short-term savings plan, and a long-term savings plan. These are all in mutual funds, where we can not only get the greatest growth, but have access to our savings, when needed, as well.

Everyone has the right to aspire to live well and retire properly. One of the saddest tales of financial failure are found in the lives of those who, having had the best of intentions, ended up doing nothing at all.

Take matters into your own hands. Make your own choices for a better future. You are fighting the war on poverty terror, and financial freedom isn’t free.

You must choose to pay the price. A few dollars today will grow to secure peace of mind tomorrow. But you must make that choice to begin right away. Compound interest works it’s best magic when given the most time to perform.

Purchase “term” insurance to cover your current potential needs now, then invest in mutual funds to control and secure your future.

Do not risk becoming one of the faceless casualties of financial unprepared ness. The real risk is in doing nothing at all.

A devastating risk.

Bob Curtis has a bachelor’s degree in Psychology, and has been writing about the elements of relationships for a number of years. He is the manager of the Essential Sunshine Association, a new website for positive relationship development at http://www.essun.blogspot.com

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