Archive for June, 2009

Live within your means—not someone else’s

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 05, 2009 (6:00 am)

Learn to evaluate your financial options

Sometimes we look for easy and quick answers to fix our problems. With many things in life, each one of us has to figure out what advice and information applies to our circumstances.brick

As I pointed out almost 2 years ago:

I just write from my personal perspective. I’m not financial expert and do not claim to be one. If you’re looking at this blog or any other for that matter to get you answers for your personal situation, then you could be apply advice that has no merit with you. It like diagnosing yourself for a disease from the web. It can be bad for your health.

If you want to learn more about money management basics and enjoy hearing it from a personal view, then please continue reading this blog and the others on my blogroll.

I love hearing other people’s ideas and if you have a story regarding a post written, then leave a comment. Bouncing ideas off of one another is a great way to seeing how situation a bit more clearly.

Personal responsibility is a huge part of getting your finances in control. Focus on one change at a time.

I love to hear from you. Please feel free to contact me anytime.

Photo Credit:  Jam Adams

Personal Finance Interview with Man Vs Debt

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 04, 2009 (7:00 am)

I’m doing two part interviews with bloggers on two of my personal sites. I’m excited to have Baker from Man Vs Debt answer a few of my questions on this new project. The first part is here on Green Panda Treehouse. The second part is on Vega Baja Productions. If you’re a blogger and wouldn’t mind being interviewed, please feel free to contact me.

  • Adam, could you tell us a little about yourself?

Sure, I’m 25, been married for a little over 2 years to my high school sweetheart, and have a 13 month old daughter.  I’ve had lots of “occupational” experience in my young life, but have recently settled in on freelance writing and blogging, as my passion of choice!

My wife and I have recently sold all of our possessions and are moving to Australia with just our backpacks (and baby).  We plan on doing some frugal traveling for as long as we can stretch it.  We are balancing this with our personal War On Debt, which is now down to only student loans!

  • What motivated you to begin blogging about personal finance?

I love it…  Really that was about it.  I’m super passionate about personal finance, in general, but also with getting out of debt specifically.  I’ve been wanting to get started for a year or so, but finally just took the plunge.  I’m kicking myself for not starting sooner.  The community has been overwhelmingly supportive and I really love networking and writing the blog!

  • What are your favorite personal finance books?

Without questions, two have changed my life more than any other.  First, came Your Money or Your Life, which then led me into Dave Ramsey’s radio show and The Total Money Makeover.  As you can tell from my basic views on personal finance, these books struck a chord deep down inside of me.  They helped me quickly and effectively turn around my financial life.

  • What do you hope to accomplish in the next year with Man Vs Debt?

To be honest, I have pretty big goals.  I would love for Man Vs. Debt to be THE destination for people looking to passionately and aggressively eliminate their debt.  I hope it also will inspire people to take control of their lives and use any new found freedom to really tackle their dreams head on.  For us, right now, this is traveling.  However, different people have different objectives…  Ditch your debt, and live intentionally…  That’s the basics!

  • If you received a tax free $10,000 check, how would you spend/save it?

Right now, it would go into our emergency fund with our other roughly 15k worth of funds.  This fund is important to us right now as it will help bring the gap between our move and finding employment opportunities.  As soon as we secure a safe place to live and any decent employment, we will be dropping our reserves and immediately applying the access to our student loans.  So 99% of the time this would help punch out the bottom 2-3 student loans!

  • What topic do you notice your readers gravitate towards?

I think my readers enjoy several different topics.  Firstly, I don’t set out to write controversially, but rather just very passionately.  This often can generate some deep discussions about credit cards, debt reduction systems, and joint/separate finances.  I think my readers really enjoy thinking about and discussing these type of system that can sometime be personal and have multiple successful approaches.

In addition, we’ve received a ton of great feedback on the post about the upcoming Australian adventure.  I try to do one post a week on this topic.  Sometimes it’s about difference in budgets, our minimalist packing efforts, or other specific details.  People seems eager to know more about this, too!

  • What’s the most important/practical financial tip someone should remember?

Live within your means.  But there are multiple extensions of this.  For me, debt elimination plays a large role in allowing you to live a much fuller life despite how small/large your means may be.  There are many more doors that open when all of your income isn’t accounted for my your different forms of debt.  Start hating debt, slash your lifestyle, and live within your means!

Please subscribe to Man Vs Debt and chat with Baker on Twitter.

Financial Guru Review: Dave Ramsey

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 03, 2009 (7:00 am)

If you’re looking to get out of debt, handle your finances, and build long term wealth; you may be tempted to see what the financial gurus are saying on what to do.

One of the most popular financial gurus out now is Dave Ramsey. He has reached millions with his Total Money Makeover system, Financial Peace Univerity classes, his radio program, and TV show.

Dave Ramsey on Getting Out of Debt and Credit Cards

Dave Ramsey is aggressively focused on paying off debt. He encourages his readers and listeners to have gazelle intensity.

Dave Ramsey is against credit cards. He advocates using check cards/debit cards instead of credit cards because they take money directly out of your checking account.

He is a big believer in the psychology of personal finances and notes that the pain felt in a wallet from using your debit card has a bigger impact than just borrowing on your credit card.

Dave Ramsey and Building Wealth

Dave Ramsey has a pretty consistent message on debt reduction and wealth building. He outlines a direct and clear 7 step program that he calls ‘Baby Steps’.

1. Save up for a small emergency fund. For most people Dave mentions saving up $1,000 to cover for emergencies while you aggressively work to pay down your debt.

2. Pay off your debts with the debt snowball strategy. Dave is a big believer in paying down debts according to amounts owed rather than interest rate. It’s due to his firm belief that handling personal finance is about focusing on changing behavior.

If you’re more of a numbers person, you may not agree with Dave’s approach as it can cost more money than a pay by interest rate plan.

3. Grow your emergency fund 3 to 6 months of expenses in savings. After you paid off all of your non-mortgage debt, Dave wants you to go back and really build your emergency fund. He also suggests that the size of your emergency fund is determined by the more financially conservative spouse.

4. Save and invest 15% of your household income into Roth IRAs and pre-tax retirement. After you have paid off your debts, you should have some ‘extra’ money ready to be used to build wealth. Dave Ramsey advises directing that money to retirement investing and specifically into growth mutual funds.

5. Save for your child’s(or children’s) college fund. Some people feel they have to put their kids’ college funds ahead of their retirement invensting. Dave points out that kids can receive scholarships and financial aid if neccessary; parents have no safety net.

6. Pay off your home mortgage early. Not being a fan of debt, Dave suggests paying the mortgage as soon as you can; after taking care of earlier steps of course.

Some people disagree with this step as they think that investing would give bigger returns. Again, Dave is looking at not just the numbers, so his advice may go in a different direction than some other financial gurus.

7. Build wealth and give! This step is taking the habits you develop and using your money to reflect your values. Dave Ramsey is a huge proponent of giving to worthy causes and highlights stories on his radio show where people share their success.

What Dave Ramsey Says About Buying a Home

Dave Ramsey’s thoughts on buying a home is based on his financially conservative values. He favors a 15 year fixed mortgage with a payment no more than 25% of your monthly net pay.

He also advises for at least 10% down for your house, but if you can afford more, the better.

My Thoughts On Dave Ramsey

While I don’t agree with everything he says (no investing at all until Baby Step #4), I think Dave Ramsey’s Baby Step system is a great guide for those looking for a way to dig out of debt and build their finances.

It’s clear and the guidelines looking at the psychology behind personal finances and works.

With everything, find out if this advice is useful for you. No one is going to care about your finances like you do. Following the guidelines of a financial guru doesn’t get you off the hook for personal responsibility.

What are your Thoughts?

Do you listen to financial gurus’ money advice? If so, which one? Is there a financial guru you’d like me to review?

Four Pillars has a post out today: Is Dave Ramsey A “Financial Expert”? He shares his thoughts on Dave’s financial skills. You should check it out.

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Battling Confirmation Bias in Investing Decisions

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 02, 2009 (7:00 am)

This is a guest post by Carson Brackney, writer for Personal Finance Analyst. Personal Finance Analyst is an online community of bloggers dedicated to taking the mystery out of money and helping you to live a happier, more successful life with the money you have.

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What’s Confirmation Bias?

We usually look externally when discussing investment opportunities and smart money management. We look at companies, financial markets, trends, products, retirement investing, legislation and everything else under the sun in hopes of finding the most efficient route to financial well-being.

That external focus is an absolute necessity, but it’s only part of the process. Dealing with money inevitably involves personal decision making and individual psychology. If we don’t combine an outward focus with some introspection, we compromise our ability to make good decisions.

One of the classic examples of the need for more introspective thought with respect to investment involves what behavioral psychologists terms “confirmation bias”. Put simply, confirmation bias is the human tendency to seek out and process information that supports pre-existing beliefs.

Carol Tavris illustrated the concept in a political context in her book, Mistakes Were Made, by recounting a Lenny Bruce comedy routine. Bruce described two different groups of people watching the 1960 Nixon/Kennedy presidential debate. The Kennedy fans were ecstatic at JFK’s performance, convinced he was absolutely crushing Nixon.

In the next apartment, Nixon supporters were thrilled that their man was giving Kennedy a shellacking. Bruce claimed that even if one of the candidates had announced that he’d be a lousy President, that candidates supporters would say, “Now that’s an honest man for you. It takes a big guy to admit that. There’s the kind of guy we need for President.”

In other words, everything uttered by either man was going to be filtered through the confirmation bias of those who had already made a decision.

Confirmation Bias and Investing in Stocks and Mutual Funds

Confirmation bias exists in all areas of decision making. It’s subject to a great deal of scrutiny in the scientific and medical fields, where strict application of the scientific method is believed to minimize its effect. It’s also a topic of discussion in the investment and finance field. BloggingStocks lists confirmation bias as one of the three common investment mistakes, noting:

This so-called confirmation bias plays out in investor’s portfolios every day. That’s because if an investor buys a stock, he or she tends to look for information that makes them believe the stock will rise. Investors filter out any negative information. What they should do is ask an objective analyst to weigh all the pro’s and con’s and make a recommendation about what to do. But thanks to confirmation bias, most investors would ignore such advice anyway.

We become personally invested in our financial investment decisions. That leads us, quite naturally, to look for ways to make us feel better about our decisions and to support the conclusions that produced them. If we decide to sink our retirement savings into a particular mutual fund, for instance, there’s a strong likelihood that we’ll continue to seek out information that supports our decision.

The risk in all of this is that reinforcing our decisions at the expense of information than might influence us to make changes can leave us “married” to bad choices that harm our financial well-being. ArriveMoney explains the consequences of unchecked confirmation bias:

When it comes time to execute your trade, confirmation bias can be detrimental to your portfolio. If your confirmation bias leads you down the wrong path, your financial decisions may be prompted by psychological underpinnings – not unbiased market analysis.

Confirmation bias can undo all of that smart, outwardly focused investigation and research we do when making decisions in the first place.

How to Avoid Confirmation Bias in Our Financial Decisions

So, how can we actually avoid this pitfall? How can we consciously attempt to avoid a natural subconscious tendency? In the multivariate and inately human world of investment, application of the scientific method or some other objective strategy is impractical. There are, however, a few things we can do.

We need to make a conscious effort to seek out and to evaluate information on all sides of any money management argument. That can involve meaningful discussions with those who hold opposing viewpoints. It also means that we should try to understand “the other side of the trade“. Someone is willing to sell and you’re willing to buy (or vice versa). What are they thinking and why are they thinking that way? Understanding that can reduce the likelihood of falling victim to confirmation bias. We should also apply critical thinking skills to the materials we do encounter in our research, approaching them with a healthy degree of skepticism regardless of whether they support our preferences or not.

If you aren’t challenging your perspectives and testing your opinions regarding the decisions you’re making, you’re taking a risk. You may be giving your subconscious tendency toward confirmation bias an opportunity to significantly damage your bottom line.

Photo Credit: epicharmus

Personal Finance Interview with Budget Pulse’s Craig

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 01, 2009 (3:00 pm)

I’m doing two part interviews with bloggers on two of my personal sites. I’m excited to have Craig from Budget Pulse answer a few of my questions on this new project. The first part is here on Green Panda Treehouse. The second part is on Vega Baja Productions. If you’re a blogger and wouldn’t mind being interviewed, please feel free to contact me.

Craig, could you tell us a little about yourself?

I am 23 years old and am the marketing manager for BudgetPulse.com, a manual personal budgeting software.  I joined the team in August 08 after moving from NY to the DC area.  I have a marketing background from Penn State, love watching my sports teams, connecting with others online, and always looking for my next backpacking trip.

What motivated you to join BudgetPulse?

I really enjoy working with online marketing and the internet industry as a whole.  Growing up with the internet and social networking I have really taken a liking to it and wanted to get involved with it post college.  BudgetPulse stood out for me because it is a software that personally has helped me get on the right track with my finances.  It was a very young and new site when I joined the team and saw the potential that it has to be developed into something that truly can help a lot of people out.

With the Rudder situation, how does BudgetPulse compare?

It was a tough hit for the whole online budgeting software companies when the Rudder news broke.  I have personally met the owners and they are good guys and I feel for them in their situation.  But it is an isolated event and hopefully users can not look down on the industry as a whole.

Our situation is different because we do not and will never sync with banks.  Identity theft is very serious and something we do not want to risk for ourselves, and do not want to put our users at risk either.  Their situation was also based off the fact that there was issues with the email system something that we currently do not do.  Especially with a start-up it is hard to develop trust from users, and we are taking all security measures to prove we are trustworthy to our users, and that is one of the main reasons we do not sync with banks.

What are your favorite personal finance books?

“I Will Teach You to be Rich” by Ramit Sethi is a book I recently finished and thought it was terrific.  Sethi is another personal finance blogger who speaks directly to his audience, most which like myself are younger.  His language and sarcasm fit perfectly with his ideals he preaches about playing it safe and trying to build savings over time vs. trying to get lucky and beat the system.  I personally directly took action based off of a few of his recommendations and they are simple and easy to understand for anyone at any level.  He even offers dialogue’s for how to handle customer service reps.  Everyone in their twenties should be reading this book.

What do you hope to accomplish in the next year with BudgetPulse?

We have worked extremely hard over the past few months to develop a completely brand new revamped site for BudgetPulse that will be released in mid June for everyone.  The site will be visually enhanced, easier to navigate, will have improved content and functionality, and even video tutorials.  For the fun of it as well we are working on some humorous videos for everyone to sit back and enjoy for a quick minute.  Once the new release is out in June, we will get right back to working on our next release which will bring a group fund functionality, working on an iphone app, more extensive charts, and in the future will look to have the site in multiple languages for all our international users.  This is just a small list of items we will be working on.

If you received a tax free $10,000 check, how would you spend/save it?

I have really taken strides on setting up both my short term and long term financial future.  With the check I would first max out my Roth IRA for the year and put a bulk of the rest into savings or an investment account.  I don’t think that everything should go into savings though, we are entitled to enjoy money and can spend it consciously.  I love traveling and am working on planning an adventure trip for later in the year that the money would go towards, or for a future trip down the road.

What’s the most important/practical financial tip someone should remember?

This may be very simple and something that has been put in my head so many times as well with everyone else, but simply, you can’t spend what you don’t have.  That’s as downright simple advice as I have received and stick to it with my life and my purchases.  If there is a big item I want to buy, I make a schedule and save up a little each month till I can pay in full.  Collecting debt and watching it grow can hurt in so many ways that the advice has really stuck with me and I don’t want to develop bad spending habits.  It is advice that everyone needs to know and can easily follow.

Please subscribe to Budget Pulse’s blog and chat with Craig on Twitter.

May 2009: Progress Update

By: Green Panda | Date posted: June 01, 2009 (10:42 am)

May has been an eventful month for us. First off my brother in law and one of my good friends announced their engagement. She came down and we looked at wedding dresses, which is a lot more fun when it’s not your own wedding. I’m also volunteering and learning a skill through my congregation’s building program.

Bad news this month: We had one of our cars broken into this weekend, so this week is about getting the car back into shape. I’m currently waiting on the insurance claims representative to call me and the glass repair shop to set up an appointment.

Our Financial Goals for 2009

  • Debt: We would like to pay off my car loan by March 31, 2009. Goal Met.
  • Debt: I’d like to reduce our expenses in May by 10%. Goal Met.
  • Spending: We’re going to limit eating out for dinner to twice a month. Not Met This Month.
  • Savings: We want to have 6 months worth of expenses saved by July 31, 2009 . We also want to build our house fund. On track.
  • How We Did in May on Our Financial Goals

    Debt: Our power bill has decreased in the last few months, a nice change.

    Spending: We went out more than normal this month, mainly due to three movies premiering. I’m going to modify this into a dollar amount goal of $100/month. We sometimes eat out and spend less, so if we go out three times and still spend $100, we’ll be fine.

    Savings: My blog income will be going towards joint savings and personal expenses.

    Health: *New Goal* Man vs. Debt has a PF Blogger Weight Loss Challenge.The challenge will start June 1st, 2009 and finishes on July 31st, 2009. I signed up to lose 12 lbs. Check Man Vs Debt’s site on Sunday to see how I progress weekly.

    I’m looking forward to seeing good things happen in June. Stay with me as we work toward our financial goals.

    How is everyone else doing with their 2009 goals? Have you had some unexpected changes?

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