1 / 37

Basics of Personal Financial Planning & Money Management

Basics of Personal Financial Planning & Money Management. Ya Gotta Save!. SAVE MONEY! Make it a priority Pay yourself first Save for 3 reasons: Emergency Fund Purchases Wealth Building When do I start? NOW!!!. Ya Gotta Save!. At least $1000 in your emergency fund Savings Account

ian-chavez
Download Presentation

Basics of Personal Financial Planning & Money Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basics of PersonalFinancial Planning & Money Management

  2. Ya Gotta Save! • SAVE MONEY! • Make it a priority • Pay yourself first • Save for 3 reasons: • Emergency Fund • Purchases • Wealth Building • When do I start? NOW!!!

  3. Ya Gotta Save! • At least $1000 in your emergency fund • Savings Account • Easy to get to when emergencies happen • Then 3-6 months expenses saved • Money Market • Where do I get the $1000 • Sell something • Cut back – pizza & coke money • Work extra – 2nd job/overtime

  4. Other Uses for Your Savings • Purchases • Purchase with cash • Don’t borrow money to buy the things you want • Wealth Building- Retirement, College Funding, etc. • Be consistent over time • 40 years of saving $100 per month, at 12 %, will build to $1,176,477!! • Direct deposit some of your paycheck into savings, and some into checking • It’s easy when you never see the money

  5. The Dreaded “B” Word • Make a written budget! • Know before the month begins where your money is going • Pay necessities first • Food • Shelter – rent/house & insurance • Transportation – car & gas • Clothing

  6. The Dreaded “B” Word • “Learn to manage money, or the lack of it will manage you” • Keep your checkbook balanced • Duplicate checks • NO Hot checks, EVER!! • CAREFUL with your DEBIT or ATM card!

  7. Why Must I Budget? • A budget removes the “management by crisis” from your finances • Managed money goes farther • Removes money fights, guilt, shame, & fear from marriage & life • Removes a lot of stress and over-spending • Use a zero-based budget & an envelope system

  8. Dumping Debt • Stop borrowing money! • Credit Cards • Cars • Houses • Boats, SeaDoos, Motorcycles • Student Loans • Start paying off any existing debt as soon as you start drawing a paycheck

  9. The “Nevers” of Smart Money • Never loan money to family or friends • Never co-sign a loan for someone else • Never use Cash-Advance, Rent-to-own, Title Pawning, or Tote-the-Note Car Lots • Never lease a vehicle • Never buy a new car (until you’re rich!) • Never get a Home Equity Loan • Never take out a 30-year mortgage • Never take out an ARM or Balloon mortgage

  10. The “Nevers” of Smart Money • Never get a credit card to “build your credit” • Never carry a balance on a credit card • Never get or allow your kids to get a credit card • Never get a debt consolidation loan “How much could you give, save, blow, and give if you didn’t have any payments?”

  11. Steps Out of Debt • Save money! • Sell something! • Part-time job or overtime • Use the Debt Snowball

  12. Debt Snowball

  13. Investing • Keep your investments DIVERSIFIED • Save long-term with tax-favored dollars. • Tax deferred • Pre-tax • 15% of your household income to retirement • 401k, 403b Retirement Plans • ALWAYS contribute amount = the company match

  14. Investing • IRA – Individual Retirement Account • Must have earned income to participate • $4000 per year (changes yearly) for worker • $4000 per year for non-working spouse • SEPP – Simplified Employee Pension Plan • Self-employed may deduct up to 15% of their net profit & put into a SEPP • Roth IRA • After-tax IRA that grows TAX FREE!

  15. Roth IRA • Only available at certain income levels • Single – income up to $95,000/year • Married filing jointly – income up to $150,000/year • More choices • You’ll be in a higher tax bracket at retirement (saves you thousands!) • More invested • More flexibility

  16. Flexibility of the Roth IRA • Tax free and penalty free withdrawals anytime equal to contributions • For emergency if emergency fund is dry • After 5 years, penalty free withdrawals if: • Over 59 ½ years old • Death or disability • First time home purchase (max $10,000)

  17. An American Dream • A 30 year old couple funds a Roth IRA at $3,000 each per year ($500/mo @ 12% growth). At 70 years old they have…. $5,882,386.26 TAX FREE!

  18. An American Dream, continued • The same 30 year old couple made $40,000 and saved 15% in a 401k ($6000/year, $500/mo @ 12% growth). At 70 years old they have…. $5,882,386.26 in the 401k

  19. An American DREAM!! • That 30 year old couple, DEBT FREE, saved $1000 per month. At 70 years old they will have $11,764,772.51!!! This can be your American REALITY!

  20. An American DREAM!! • If their investments are making 12%, they can draw out 8% per month (leaving 4% for inflation) and live on $40,000 per month!!

  21. Big Bargains • Negotiate everything! • Ask for a good deal! • Use the power of cash • Have patience • Find good deals • Trade something of value, goods, services

  22. Where to Find Bargains

  23. Buyer Beware • Marketing, Marketing, Marketing • Personal Selling • Financing (in-house/90 days same as cash) • TV, Radio, all Media • Product positioning • Brand Recognition • Color • Shelf Position • Packaging

  24. Buyer Beware • Wait overnight before making a purchase • Carefully consider your buying motives • No amount of stuff equals contentment or fulfillment • Never buy anything you don’t understand • Consider the “opportunity cost” of money • Seek the counsel of your spouse, parent, or friend • If you can’t pay for it, don’t buy it!

  25. Buying a House • Owning a home is a great investment • Forced savings plan • Inflation hedge • Grows virtually tax free • Buy at bottom of price range in neighborhood • Location, location, location • Have the VISION! (carpet, paint, landscaping)

  26. Buying a House • Attractive from the street & good floor plan • Have the home inspected and appraised • 15 year mortgage only • Payment no more than 25% of take-home • At least 10% down

  27. Buying a House

  28. How to Finance a House • Conventional • Down payments from 5% - 20% or more • 20% down saves you PMI • FHA – Insured by HUD-The government • Charges MIP (Mortgage Insurance Premium) for the life of the loan • Lower down payment • Higher interest rate

  29. How to Finance a House • VA – Insured by the Veterans Administration • Designed to benefit the veteran • Owner Financing – you pay the owner • Can be creative in the structure of the loan

  30. How to Finance a House • ARM – Adjustable Rate Mortgages • Interest rate changes on a schedule (every X number of years) • BAD DEAL!!! • More than 35% of ARMs are adjusted inaccurately • Fixed Rate Mortgage – • Interest rate is fixed for the term of the loan • BEST DEAL!!

  31. Gotta Have Insurance! • Insurance is used to transfer risk • Homeowner’s or Renter’s • Auto • Health • Disability • Life • Long-term Care

  32. Gotta Have Insurance! • Homeowners • Home – replacement cost • Contents – update this as your stuff increases • Liability • Renters • Personal belongings • Liability

  33. Gotta Have Insurance! • Auto • Liability • Full Coverage (comprehensive/collision • Umbrella • Can be purchased if you have auto & home • Need once you have some assets

  34. Gotta Have Insurance! • Health • Buy through work to get best rates • Self-employed can use an MSA (Medical Savings Account) or HSA (Health SA) • Disability • To replace lost income due to short term or permanent disability • Should be for 65% of your take home pay • Know what the elimination period is

  35. Gotta Have Insurance! • Life • This is really death insurance for your family • Term Life Insurance • For a specified period • Cheaper than other types • No savings plan built in • Cash Value Insurance • For life • More expensive in order to fund the savings

  36. Why Not Cash Value Insurance? • Much more expensive than term • Historically Low Returns • When you die with cash value, the company keeps the cash in most cases • Very high fees

  37. How to Buy Life Insurance • Buy low-cost level term • Do not forget your spouse • No fancy options • Need about 10X your annual salary

More Related