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Is it possible to not be homeless in Washington DC working minimum wage?
I'm mid-twenties, no kids, no pets, no debt, no car. DC is my best shot at getting a good job with my education and experience but I'm in a different state and don't have time to do long-distance applications. What can I expect?
You probably need to do both of the following Rent a small bedroom in someone's home. Work more than 40 hours a week at minimum wage don't set your sights at minimum wage though. Look for physical jobs, maybe a factory or an Amazon distribution warehouse or roofing (warm seasons) or road construction crews.
The metro system in DC extends a decent distance into the suburbs of Maryland and Virginia. It's much cheaper to live outside the city and commute in for work or fun. Definitely find a roommate to keep costs down - it helps!
personalfinance
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What is the best platform for a total novice to start trading stocks?
I am looking for the best platform (preferably something with an app) to start trading stocks. I’m COMPLETELY new to this - I took some finance classes in college so I have a very small working knowledge of finance - so I want something that is user friendly for a beginner. What is important to me: fees/commission aren’t too high - I will only be investing ~$100 a few times a month just to get my feet wet and see if stock-trading is right for me. ease of use I am currently using E-Trade (the app) and it is NOT clear what I will expect to pay per transaction and when I pay. I also deposited $100 on Tuesday of last week and STILL my account says that I have $100 in my account but $0 available to invest. I tried chatting them and while I was waiting in line, E-Trade disconnected my chat. Now I am on hold with them for ~20 minutes to speak on the phone. Can anyone recommend something better or is E-Trade good and I just don’t know it yet? Many thanks in advance!
Please do not trade stock, especially as a total novice. You are almost certainly going to lose a ton of money. Read the wiki which will have some suggestions for how to invest. Low fee, passive index funds are your friend.
td ameritrade from my experience hasnt had any of your problems. Commission is free now and they have videos to teach you about stock trading. I say only way learn is to try but definitely heed others warnings and only use money you dont need to practice.
personalfinance
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StaLo_Kee
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Which companies do you consider most innovative?
I'm not talking about long-shot penny stock that might have the cure for cancer. I mean companies with an overall "innovative" vision. For example, GOOG is obviously extremely innovative; driver-less cars, home integration, web, etc. AMZN is very innovative; online shopping, the drone concept, their server farms, cloud, prime video, etc. TSLA is innovative in their one product, but I don't know if I'd call the company altogether "innovative" as they're really just pursuing one singular (granted large) innovation. I realize this is /r/investing and that a lot of these products (Amazon drones, driver-less cars, etc) may not be profitable or relevant to corporate p/l any time soon, but I personally like innovative companies. Companies that push the envelope and don't put themselves in a "box". Google doesn't say "We're a search engine", Amazon doesn't say "We sell books online", etc. They're companies that are constantly looking to push boundaries and societal norms, they question the status quo, etc. Anyway, curious what innovative companies may be out there that aren't as obvious as the cop-outs I listed.
Solazyme. They, hopefully, will be the Exxon of the future. They use algae to create everything, from biofuels to oils for the human body. They even have plans/already synthesized proteins from algae fit for human consumption. They've fueled Navy ships and airplane flights, they have contracts with Chevron, Tyson, Johnson and Johnson, etc. Seem like a solid company. What does everyone else think about the future prospects of this company?
These larger, successful companies that have experimented with egalitarianism in their personnel practices also fit your other definitions of innovation (probably no coincidence): Mondragon Corp Valve W.L. Gore and similarly, if to a lesser extent, some major corporations using a lattice organizational structure which is in part intended to fuel innovation: Deloitte SAS Cisco Thomson Reuters
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Refinancing student loans: which organizations would you recommend or not recommend?
My husband has a total of ~$118,000 in private student loans, of which the most monstrous has a balance of $30,000 and an interest rate of 11.75%(V). This is our only debt. As of right now we are tackling these using the Avalanche Method but would ultimately like to bring the interest rates down by refinancing. We looked into options such as Earnest, SoFi, Laurel Road, etc., but don't want to go into anything blindly. Those of you who have refinanced in this kind of situation, who did you go with and why? A couple things we're looking for: * No fees, especially no early payoff fees. We're tackling these loans as fast as we possibly can to be out of debt ASAP. * Cosigners allowed. While my husband makes good money himself, I do make a little more and have a little higher credit. * We're open to reputable online organizations as well as local banks, but will probably steer clear from nationwide banks. * We're willing to refinance into multiple smaller loans and avalanche those if it were highly beneficial, but otherwise a single lump sum would be fine. We'd very much appreciate any advice we can get, particularly with personal experience in the matter. TIA!
I'm partial to SoFi but acknowledge that they are pretty strict in their acceptance. I've heard good things about commonbond as well. Most of these organizations point you to the same agencies, like Mohela, there are only so many orgs that can take on student loan debt. almost none will have early payoff fees.
With private loans, I cannot think of any reason not to refinance if you can get aloaer interest rates. 11.75% is crazy. Advise you did not ask for. Don't cosign on your husband's loans. It is better to have them in only one name. Unless you need to for a really low interest rate, but even then think about all the implications.
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I drive a $3500 car. Should I pay for collision insurance or just keep enough in my emergency fund to replace it if it gets wrecked?
SSIA.
Most will advocate just holding liability on a car with that low of a value. The reason is that if your car actually does get in a wreck, it will almost certainly be totaled unless it is extremely minor. After that, you can bet the insurance company will argue that the value is no where near the 3.5k you think it is. After you settle that, you still have to pay the deductible, plus it counts as a claim on your record which will likely increase premiums. When you calculate just how little you will get if you actually have to make a claim and weigh it against the increased premiums for the coverage and the increases if you actually claim it, it becomes difficult to justify the expense for a car that old.
I'm an advocate for strictly Liability for a car like that. I mean think about it, iff you take a gamble on the fact you won't be using it, its like an extra ~$130/month in your pocket. do that for 8-9 months without making a claim and you have saved enough to pay for a repair.
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College Senior, Opened a Roth IRA, Where to Invest?
College Senior (21) with a well paid internship, no debt, ~20k in expendable savings, need to start investing it, I opened a Roth IRA and don't know where to begin, I've never been advised on this and through my hours of research it is still overwhelming. I've read to keep a portfolio of around 80-90% stocks and 10-20% bonds for my age, but can anybody be more specific about which investments are best, preferably low risk? I just want to protect my funds for retirement rather than do a bunch of financial engineering. My account is with Vanguard.
Honestly, if you don't care to manage it too much and trust the investment companies, then a target date fund is fine. They manage it so that they move money more conservatively as you get older. Look for a 2051+ target date (I'm 23 and my target date fund is 2055). I don't want to mess with it too much and I don't know enough currently to split the funds up myself.
The single most important thing you can do is minimize your fees. Multiple studies have shown that fees are the 1 predictor of performance. Second thing I would recommend would be invest early, don't bother trying to time the market or anything, you're better off putting it in early and getting the early earnings. Compound interest is your friend. My specific advice, invest all of it in a 500 index fund or a 500 Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) - Vanguard has one: VOO. The ETF will likely have lower fees than what you can get with their regular 500 Index given your portfolio value (0.05% for the ETF vs. 0.17% for Investor Level shares of VFINX; if you have $10K then you can get Admiral Shares at 0.05%). At your age you don't really need bonds, you can be exposed 100% to the stock market without much excess risk. You can easily transition a portion to bonds in 15-20 years if you want - honestly it's not difficult enough to balance that you need to pay someone to do it for you. Any stock market investment is going to be considered "risky," but a 500 index fund is about as low risk as you can get - essentially you're investing in the market as a whole, and it has a long history of increasing in value over (given a long enough timeframe, which you'll have). DON'T do the target date fund - it's not going to be complex enough to provide significant returns, and the fees are too high to justify it (Vanguard's 2060 fund is at 0.18%).
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At what salary can you realistically max out your tax advantaged accounts?
With the option of a 401k , IRA, HSA there is a substantial amount you can save (tax advantaged ) a year. As the title says at what salary can you realistically max them out and live a decent life style. And what ~$ left do you have as disposable income? I know there are a lot of unknowns and assumptions that can be made, but assuming "regular/frugal" expenses. Bonus- 2 people married/couple whatever. Is it simply double or can you get away with less? Thanks !
I'm able to do it at $75K annual salary. 24%(18k) goes to 401K, 4%(3k) to HSA, this leaves ~38k after taxes, 5.5K of that goes to roth ira so I'm left with $32.5k for expenses and other savings. My expenses total 28.6k annually so there is some money left there for other unexpected expenses.
The answer is location-dependent, with cost of living and state/local taxes being the two biggest variables I can think of. E.g., if you live somewhere that costs $20k/year to live comfortably you can max out your accounts at a lower salary than if you lived somewhere that costs $30k/year to afford the same lifestyle. If you have to pay significant state tax (e.g., CA), then you'll need to earn a higher salary, in part because states don't permit exemptions for all account types (e.g. HSA contributions are not CA income tax-deductible).
financialindependence
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do sellers really blacklist buyers if offer is too low?
I was reading another post here: [ _low_is_too_low/]( &x200B One person mentioned that they (seller or seller's agent) would blacklist buyers if offers are too low - [ _low_is_too_low/ei7tmhf]( &x200B My question - does this really happen?? I've sold real estate a few times, and I take no offense to low ball offers, I merely tell the buyers agent that the offer is not competitive, and they are welcome to submit higher offers if they wish. I can't imagine blacklisting a buyer just because they were trying to get a good deal...in my opinion the more offers the better. Would any seller / sellers agent really blacklist buyers, unless the buyers are outright fraudulent or have no financial approval?
Depends, but I know agents who blacklist buyers, appraisers, loan officers, and other agents lol. (not usually for lowball offers tho, for other reasons) This is a relationship business, and what I’ve learned is you want to have good terms with people in general. But if I have a lowball offer to submit, I usually ask the listing agent verbally. It saves everyone time and courtesy.
By law no matter what the offer, if you send it to the realtor they HAVE to present it to the Seller, unless instructed by the Sellers in writing, or they can lose their license
RealEstate
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The-One-N-Only
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My girlfriend (16F) just got a job and her mom wants to withhold all of her pay
Last week, my girlfriend filed for a work permit with her school and employer as required by Indiana law for minors. It's signed by all parties including herself and her mother with agreed upon hours with the employer. Today her mom said that she is not going to be able to have any of her money, and that she(her mom) is going to do "what she deems best" with the money(meaning some would go towards family needs like utilities and the rest would go towards my girlfriend's savings). Is it legal for her to take my girlfriend's checks every two weeks? My girlfriend doesn't even have her own bank account yet. If anything wouldn't it be illegal for her mom to cash the checks that are in my girlfriend's name? Googling about wage withholding by a parent only returned results about child support wage withholding.
Is it legal for her to take my girlfriend's checks every two weeks? Yes If anything wouldn't it be illegal for her mom to cash the checks that are in my girlfriend's name? As a parent, she can. It might be bad parenting depending upon the facts, but it is not illegal. When she turns 18 she can have complete control of her money and can support herself.
As others mentioned I guess she can until she is 18. Hopefully she can get a job that pays under the table or get a job that gets cash tips (waitressing,bartending, etc) and keep her Cash.
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How long should I wait before asking for a raise?
Here’s the situation: I’ve been with the company for 7 months and I pretty much run all the day-to-day marketing operations. That consists of planning and executing email campaigns, webmaster duties, SEO updates, graphic design, all event coordination, public relations and being an admin for our CRM. I make $41,000 per year plus $1,000 bonus with full benefits. I have 1 year of professional experience in an office and a bachelors from UMD in public relations. About how long is it reasonable to wait before negotiating a raise?
I would wait for your annual performance evaluation. At the meeting with your supervisor, I would presume, a raise would be offered based on specific metrics your company uses. This is a great time, in my opinion, to negotiate or ask for a little more money as your employer is laying out all the things you do well, pretty much making your points for you
I think it can be posed as "what would I need to do to get a raise.". It is good to know the "going rate" for your skillset and local economy. glass door.com is (I hear) a good resource. It is technically illegal to keep people from discussing their wages with co-workers (not illegal to ask, but illegal to enforce) so you might go in armed with knowledge. It is your boss's job to say "well, Larry gets here early and stays late and there are never any problems, that's why he is paid more..." Right now, wages are going up, in order to attract skilled people (and hurt stock prices). You may be perceived as too good to lose, right now.
personalfinance
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Is there an ETF that invests heavily in bananas?
I've read that the Cavendish banana has a virus that may wipe them out. I'm thinking before that happens the price is going to rise. Any ideas on a way to invest in that?
Just buy as many bananas as you can and store them in your home. In a few years when the harvests are wiped out you can sell yours for a premium.
I cant believe this is the 2nd time I've discussed going long on bananas today, but Feb 8 is the chinese new year and 2016 is the year of the monkey. If you find one, buy it!
investing
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Is a “Travel” credit card actually worth getting?
I have been hooked by retailer credit cards before which promise rewards and deals for using their financing but they always cost more in the end with ridiculous finance rates. I was just wondering if any of the travel rewards (flight miles etc.) were actually worth using a card for and if anyone has good or bad experiences with redeeming said rewards.
Based on your first paragraph I would be hesitant to recommend a travel card for you since the interest rates are usually around 25-30% People who effectively use travel cards are people who pay their balances "always". Not usually, not mostly, always. One hit of interest from that card has a good chance of wiping out pretty much any cost savings you got out of that card.
For the sake of having one? No not really. The "miles" or "points" aren't really much better than a cash rewards most of the time either. The big difference is going to come from side-perks and benefits. For example I have a friend of mine who booked a vacation for last fall down to the Caribbean. TLDR of his vacation plan is they were chartering some guy's boat to take him around to various locations for a week or so. Then the Caribbean got hit by back-to-back hurricanes last fall, and the boat he was supposed to be chartering was lost, along with the money he paid for the trip. The guy/business he paid in advance was wiped out and had no ability (or willingness) to refund him. If they had paid with a travel card, most of them insure your trip against that kind of loss and would have reimbursed the full cost of the cancellation. Unfortunately they paid via debit and were shit out of luck for that $3500. but they always cost more in the end with ridiculous finance rates. If you pay interest on a credit card you're using it wrong. The balance due should be paid in full every pay period, and they won't charge any interest. (They still make their money via the transaction fees, and from referrals to participating travel partners)
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Moving In & Sharing Expenses
I'm moving in with my partner soon, and am looking for some advice on how to split expenses. We've had some discussions about this, but I'd like to gain some outsider perspective. I'm looking for advice on how to share our expenses 'fairly', given our unique circumstances. My partner makes about twice as much as I do, and has children from a previous relationship. Expenses for the children are split between their two parents, who have similar incomes. Custody is 50/50. So far our discussions have centered on the idea that I would pay 'rent' to cover living expenses. My question is how much should that 'rent' be, as a portion of mortgage payments, utilities, groceries, etc. Thanks!
Whatever works for the two of you is what you should do. I've been on both sides of an income disparity and each of you paying half is rarely feasible. The partner with the higher income typically wants or needs a higher standard of living than the lower income partner is comfortable with. I imagine with kids involved that's even more true.
This is going to totally depend on the two of you, your personalities, viewpoints, etc. But to give you an idea of how I did things, I was living with someone who made easily about 3 times what I did. We split rent 60/40 (however we later moved to a much more expensive area and that shifted to more like 70/30) and we split groceries, taking turns buying.
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Why retire early?
Considering everything you dream about regarding early retirement, what are you looking forward to the most?
I took ten years off between 42 & 52. It was awesome, rehabbed my house & sold it for $100k profit, bought land in FL, designed and built my dream house on 4 acres in the middle nowhere. Went back to school, got my nursing license and make bank watching people sleep for a living.
Doing things I actually like? Not having to wake up at 6 AM every day? Going to sleep whenever I want? Go wherever I want? Not having to work while getting old and brittle? What I can't see is an advantage to retiring LATE.
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The US Tarrifs on China officially begins today, How does this movie end?
CNBC Reports, Trump launches the opening salvo in US trade war with China as tariffs take effect China is all set to slap tarrifs tarrifs back about the same time. We might see more right away or over sometime. China has a trump card, which is the US. Bonds they have worth over a trillion.
Industries affected by the tariffs will likely see an immediate impact, especially those dependent on an input (e.g., Chinese pork farmers on U.S. soybeans). The secondary industries will probably see a mitigated effect provided the initial industry facing the tariff absorbs the cost. Consumers probably won't see much of an effect in the short-run, but long-term it'll probably begin to break down supply chains and both economies will begin to suffer and become sluggish with decreased consumption. Personally, this isn't something I foresee lasting a long time. Frankly, if Trump's strategy works, it might end up lowering tariffs across the board, which will be great for both sides. But that's a big "if".
I think this will drag on until the Dems either take away his tariff powers or, if they can't win, his presidency ends. The real strength of China here is that Xi is here basically for life and has no opposition to speak off. His country is flush with cash to sustain a long trade war. He can wait. Trump will sooner or later leave and it's unlikely his replacement will be as stupid (knock on wood)
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I Need A New Job So That I Can Work On Myself
Currently, I work at a job in customer service that I had to take so that I wouldn't be homeless but it's gotten very stressful over the past 8-9 months. It's heavily contributed to my depression and anxiety. I am even starting to have noticeable physical reactions to stress that I thought I contracted an illness. When I was in high school, during a summer I took an internship and I absolutely loved it. All I did was sort old documents in a room by myself for 9 hours a day. Really relaxing and had fun. My question is, are there any jobs that anyone knows about where I can do a job with limited contact with others while sorting or filing documents? Or any other job that was like the internship that I had before? Pay isn't really as much of a concern as a less stressful environment. Any advice is appreciated.
Try construction. I have had issues w anxiety/stress and construction is a good job. Pay is decent. Get forced to get plenty of exercise. Time goes quicker the harder you work. Feels good to see the things you help build. At the end of the day you are exhausted and proud. No time to have anxiety.
I work in tax accounting and our administrative staff mostly sort, file, and mail documents. Tax season gets very busy, but I think the admin staff is pretty shielded from the crazy hours that the preparers have to put in.
personalfinance
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Over 300K in equity due to speculation bubble. Sell?
We bought our house as a foreclosure in a very nice neighborhood for $205K. Due to tech industry speculation, housing prices have steadily climbed, reaching pre-recession heights less than 5 years after bottoming out. We would be house poor if we had to buy in this area right now. We currently have a little over $130K on the mortgage left, and if we keep paying the same amount we've been paying, it will take about 10 more years to pay it off. The neighbors just sold their very dated home with less square footage, and one less bedroom for $422K. I think we could probably get $445K - $450K for our house if we sold this year. That would net us over $300K in cash. We could then rent, or live with family for a couple of years, until the speculation dies, and then buy something else. I do think the speculation will die down, as people realize there won't be as many tech jobs as our governor promised when handing out the tax breaks, and our market will adjust. I guess I'd be a fool if it didn't though, and the "what if's" are keeping me from listing the house right now. Does anyone else feel like they're in a similar situation right now? What are you going to do?
You're speculating that the rise in home prices will reverse in a few years. It's equally possible that home prices in the area will continue to rise and you'll be priced out. If you want to stay in the area keep your home. You are paying way under market value to live in your current place, that's a huge win. If the market crashes, you still have your home.
Sell your house, buy a house for the same price as your first one but in a different area, use the remaining money to buy and fix up forclosures and then rent them. That is the best way to keep your mortgage payments almost the same while increasing your portfolio of properties/investments
RealEstate
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23 years old and saw my credit score for the first time, 552, am I in a bad place?
I've never seen my credit score before today, but I got a free report in the mail and it said 552 from experian. I know this isn't a good score, but I don't have much history. I use my credit card for gas and pay it off in full every month. I've only been paying my own bills for a few years and I'm late every once in a while (more out of laziness and forgetfulness than anything else). I just got my first real job and now make around $43k a year. Am I in a bad spot or is this normal for where I am in life? Thanks!!
and I'm late every once in a while (more out of laziness and forgetfulness than anything else). Put recurring reminders on your calender or something, and stop being late. Old bad spots will drop off your report after 7 years, but your credit history will never be great if you continue making late payments. Stop paying late and your credit report will improve with time.
I've only been paying my own bills for a few years and I'm late every once in a while (more out of laziness and forgetfulness than anything else). Good job...
personalfinance
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pentium4borg
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[deleted]
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How much of your net salary should your car cost?
There has been a plethora of information regarding the cost of rent as well as how much you should be saving a year; but I haven't seen any discussions regarding the cost of cars.
I'm gonna parrot one of Dave Ramsey's rules of thumb. He just made it up, its not conventional wisdom or anything, but I think it works pretty well. always pay cash (if you have to finance you shouldn't buy the car) all motorized stuff (cars, boats, motorcycles, quads, whatever) should have a combined value of no more than 50% of your gross yearly income. If you and your spouse are making 100k/year household, its not unreasonable for you to both have a 25k car. If you are both driving 50k Mercedes, though, you have too much money (compared to your income) wrapped up in things going down in value. The big issue is that you avoid the lifetime spiral of car payments everyone else seems to be in love with.
You're going to get incredibly varied answers to this question. For those that are financially comfortable and enjoy car stuff^tm, I'd say spend no more than double of whatever you have saved in your "no specific goal" account. That means if you want that $40k WRX STi, you should have $20k of 'extra' money sitting around. Not that it should be spent on the car, but it's a decent measure of what you may or may not be able to comfortably afford. Of course, if you obviously need to make sure whatever you've financed actually fits into your budget, there will be corner cases where the 'extra money' account isn't a good measure of income and stability. If you're just starting out, or trying to get things in order, I'd agree with everyone else who says spend as little as possible. Buy the 10+ year old Corolla, and view it as an appliance that gets you to work. In these cases, you generally want to reduce your debt burdens, aiming to minimize your car expenditure is the smart thing to do.
personalfinance
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[ADVICE] Grandpa needs to be put in nursing home, but has a couple hundred thousand in a tegular checking account. Grandma needs help making sure she doesnt lose it all.
So a little back story, my grandpa's mental health is declining rapidly. He needs to be put in a home, but has all of their money just sitting in a checking account. Idk the exact number but my best guess is 300K. They don't have any investments, no assets other than a really small house, and a 2017 Toyota Camry. Plus a checking account with their life savings. My grandma isn't going to be in a home for quite a while and is wondering what she can do to protect herself from the nursing home taking all their money. Can she withdraw a large amount without being penalized by the nursing home when they go through their finances? My mom is on her way to see a financial advisor, my grandparents are super old school and reserved about stuff like this, so she hasn't been taking anyone's advice or even planning anything because she doesn't know the first step to take. What's the best way for my grandma to maximize money for herself without raising any red flags? We are in Ohio if that matters. Any advice helps. EDIT: My mom just informed me the lump sum is in savings, and there's a small chunk in checking. Bank is PNC.
There are strict rules about this, she really needs to talk to a lawyer (an actual lawyer) who specializes in "elder law". Medicaid has a 5-year lookback period for all financial transactions. If you move money around or try to hide it, they will find out. Good luck.
Nothing, they're fucked. The nursing home can't take the house but, they'll take the cash, drain Grammy down to zero except her social security check and then Grandpa goes on Medicaid for the nursing home expenses. At 130K a year that money is gone in 2.31 years.
personalfinance
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Lawyer with solid education and $300,000 debt due to a scholarship.
Ok, this is my throwaway account since it might contain identifying info. Originally I am a 2 year redditor. I am a 30 years old guy from a European country (obviously non-English speaking as you could guess from my linguistic errors). I completed my first law degree in 2007, and became a bar admitted lawyer in my country (I am not admitted to any US bars). Afterwards, I won a terrific scholarship, which allowed me to receive language education, master's and doctorate within any country in the world. I came to the US, and had my language education. After that I had my Master's degree in Law in an IVY League well-known university. Upon graduation, I started my SJD (PhD in Law) in another good university (I believe in top 100 in world, not sure). My dissertation is about alternative settlement methods of disputes in international intellectual property. It has some groundbreaking findings (changing the patent settlement in some countries, as well as offering a so-far 100% successful dispute settlement method that is not used in IP cases. I also have a published article, which received citations from international law books, as well as US courts. I will receive my degree on December 2016, and my expected GPA is 3.94. I lectured in a US law school a few years ago for one semester, and had a visiting scholar position in one of the best Canadian law schools for 2 years. I was supposed to go back to my country, and work twice the amount of time, which is 7x2=14 years. However conditions in my country changed dramatically, and I do not want to go back. Should I want to stay in the US, I need to pay back all the expenses my sponsor did on my behalf withing five years (20% must be done in the first year). The amount is a whooping $300,000, and I have no money. my weakest point is that I have almost no network. I wonder if I have any chance to find a job within 2 months and start working in the US, and have enough money to pay $60,000/year for 5 years. I think I have no chance, but asking your opinion should not hurt. Thanks for taking the time to read!
First off, do you even have the required visa or immigration status to work in the USA? Such as OPT? Or will you require employer sponsorship for a visa? This will be a huge hurdle. Next, you've been in school in the USA for a while and you have no network? Doesn't your school provide you with career services?
Syria? Anyway, do you have at least a linkedn with some connections? Reach out to those connections and just ask if they know of any available positions. I'm sure with your qualifications landing a job won't be too hard. It's just not having us citizenship might make employers realize that they can pay you less, so be careful. Good luck
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I'm 27 and I have $225,000 invested currently in my IRA. I have 11 separate stocks. I make $23-$30,000 a year from these investments. I'm looking to make a change to real estate/apartment leasing. Need some advice
After 4 years of college I realized that there is a large profit margin for leasing apartments to college students. What are the variables that I need to consider? I know nothing about property leasing protocols and hope to put my cash liquid into an area where I don't need to calculate as much risk. Any advice would be appreciated.
Residential units are considered residential and require a 20% down payment if you are not living in one of the units (6-plexes+ are considered commercial and can require as little as 15% down, but often times for first deals lenders will request 20%). Considering you have $225,000 in theory you could buy $1.125M in real estate, however, you need to account for closing costs (land transfer taxes, lawyer, environmental fees [if commercial], etc.) so you can anticipate safely acquiring $750,000 - $900,000 in real estate as a result. Real estate, unlike stocks, is not a passive income. You need to find tenants, collect rents, deal with repairs and complaints, etc. and if you have little/no experience you really should start slowly by buying one unit/duplex/triplex and getting used to all of the nuances and comfortable first. When considering properties make sure to seek out properties in areas that are near schools, clean and not run down, but not fancy or high-end (students don't have large budgets) and try to cashflow on the property after covering the costs of a property manager who can take care of everything since you have little no experience in these areas (their fees are 5-10% but in my experience the experienced reputable ones that are hands-on always charge closer to the higher end of 10%; you don't want to skimp on quality). Can you make more than stocks? Oh hell yes. Leveraging other people's money (you get 100% of the appreciation of the real estate even though you are only putting down 15-20%; leveraging the lender's money); you also have the mortgage paid down by your tenants (leveraging your tenants money) and you (hopefully) have a healthy cashflow in the middle. I have triplexes that earn me $5,000 per year in cashflow but it's peanuts compared to the $25,000 in appreciation & mortgage pay down each year. These triplexes required me to put ~$70,000 down so as you can see my returns are safely at 40% and this is in a market where appreciations are averaging 2-3% instead of the historical averages of 4-5%. Now let's discuss cashflow assessments. Find a solid template, and make sure to double/triple check your numbers. You need to consider mortgage, insurance, heat & hydro (if paid by landlord), water bill, snow removal & lawn care (if not taken care of by tenants), vacancy allowance (6% of income), repair allowance (4% of income), vacancy advertising, accounting & bookkeeping (if not done by yourself), property mangement fees (10% of income), and take the time to consider both present case (e.g. mortgages at 2.7 - 3.7% rates) and potential future case scenarios so you know what could happen in the future when the interest rates inevitably rise (e.g. mortgages at 4.5 - 6.5% rates). Hope this helps, there's lots more to consider but I wanted to provide you a foundation for your considerations. If you have any questions don't be shy and feel free to PM me.
I'd avoid putting all my eggs in one basket that way, especially given how closely you have to watch the basket when it's real estate. I'm not sure your capital base is big enough to do this profitably and at a reasonable level of overall diversification. If you want to use leverage to operate and speculate on real estate in an efficient way, buy shares in a REIT -- they'll do all the work for you at a much lower cost. Once you figure out all the operating, transaction, and tax costs of real estate, it becomes a lot less attractive particularly given how much work it is. Real estate in an IRA is a bit dodgy too. Also, leasing protocols and hope to put my cash liquid into an area where I don't need to calculate as much risk Was this written by a bot?
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Kicked out of the house at 20. Friend had a place for me to stay but now needs it back. I don’t know where I’m going to stay.
The reason I’m posting this here is ultimately because of two things. One, because I have no credit as of right now (however I did apply 2 weeks ago) and two, I don’t know where I’m going to stay until then and really I have little savings. So, my dad blamed me for my parents potential divorce and basically made my every day a living hell. So I moved out. At the time I had a friend in college who moved in with her boyfriend and told me that she had an empty apartment that the lease was ending on Nov 28th for. And that if I paid her just $350+utilities for the time, I could just have the apartment. So I’ve been in there for about 9 days and have paid $200 to her already. Well now she needs the apartment back because they broke up... Originally she had offered for me to just sleep on her couch until I had a place but her friend made it very clear to me that it was apparently illegal to do so and that I needed all of my shit out by Thursday. She has agreed to just pay me $150 back plus pay for the utilities. But now, I have nowhere to go and no credit to get a place. PLUS I have my bed, my desk, 2 chairs, a dresser, and all of the food that I have in the fridge that I just bought.. what is the best next move for me here? I currently have 2 jobs that rake in roughly $1500 a month and apartments near me go for roughly $600 a month. Thanks and I apologize if this isn’t the subreddit for this.
Try to find a month to month ministorage for your stuff and find a hotel that has a cheaper rate if rented by the week. I'm talking like a Motel 6. No luxury by any means, but it'll give you a few days to Craigslist or Facebook or to find a place locally that shares housing information. That way your stuff is safe and you're not on the streets. Also, as said above, it's bullshit that you can't live somewhere if your name isn't on the lease. It's not illegal. Your friend just might not want to live with anyone and is using that as a way to deter you from staying. Considering your position, it wouldn't be out of line to ask to stay there for a week while you find somewhere else to go. Offer her some money for staying, be a good, quiet and helpful guest and don't overstay if she agrees to let you crash there for a week or whatever. Don't make her be the one who has to tell you it's time to leave. Contact your local housing authority and there may be a place they can direct you where people seeking roommates are posting. Google "best place to find a roommate". They provide many options.
Did you sign a sub-let contract with your friend prior to moving in? That could potentially change things here in that it would mean you have the legal right to the space and your friend that went through the breakup does not.
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My financial advisor ignored my request to invest conservatively and instead invested in risky stock options. I lost ~$100k and have almost nothing left. What can I do?
In short, I do not know much about investing or finances, so I trusted my financial advisor's decisions regarding which stocks to invest in and so forth. The money I inherited after my dad's death was approximately $160k, I have taken out approximately $40k, and now have less than $10k left. I have written documentation that states he invested in risky stock options despite my request to invest conservatively. Is there anything I can do? Can I sue him?
As a financial advisor, I can tell you right now that you need to contact FINRA. They take this kind of thing very seriously. Do not lose hope. If you have documentation that you told him specifically to invest conservatively and he went against your direct orders, you will get your money back. His firm is liable. He will lose his license and not be able to "play" with others money anymore. I will say it again, you willl get your money back. And they WILL be responsible for your lawyer fees
Sounds like at least a couple of potential issues: suitability and unauthorized trading (if it's not a discretionary account). You'll want to check the account form from when you opened the account. This will tell you a couple of things: what sort of risk tolerance they have on file for you, and what sort of recourse you agreed to in case of dispute. Check out the FINRA site:
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Need to help my (age 24) dad (age 57) who has money sitting around in a bank account
I was hoping someone could tell me what I can do to help him. He has ~40,000 just sitting in his bank account. He was never really too financially savy but after hearing about my ROTH IRA he became interested in them. Would a ROTH or Traditional IRA be beneficial or should he look elsewhere? The bank has a really low interest rate on his savings so he wanted to put it into something that could at least gain value for around 10 years.
Does your dad work? He can only contribute to an IRA if he has (1) earned income (from employment), or is a (2) non-working spouse. IRAs are fine for investing. Your dad is over 50, so he can contribute $7,000 a year into an IRA. Does he have access to a 401k from his work? In that case, he can contribute a lot more into retirement through his employer (total of $25,500 at his age). If he's self-employed he can contribute through other retirement vehicles like a solo-401k (total of $63,500 max at his age). Either way, the point of putting money into an IRA or 401k would be to invest it on the market. 10 years is a decent amount of time to grow money. How aggressively he wants to do it is up to him. The more aggressive, the more he can lose but also gain more; the more safe the money, the less money he'll make on what he contributes.
Definitely get him into a Roth IRA, maximum yearly contributions are at $6,000. Max that out and get him in some investments! That money won't be taxed when he needs it in retirement, and a properly managed Roth IRA should double in value every seven years! Best of luck to you and your dad!
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Why aren't people more pessimistic about TSLA?
TSLA has roughly $24bil in debt, $4.2bil in equity, and lost $1.9 bil last year. If this were a private company, you'd probably be contemplating bankruptcy. The reason tesla is alive at all is because investors keep pouring in money for the company to incinerate - its quite hard to go broke when you have unlimited access to dumb money. Unless TSLA is turning a profit, buying tesla at the current price seems like financial suicide.
It's a cult like following. Emotional investing at its finest with complete disregard for fundamentals and math. They make incredible electric cars. That's hard to argue. But I wouldn't invest a nickel into TSLA. Electric cars are competitive now and will get more competitive as the years go by.
What new investors are you referring to? When we buy Tesla stock they don't get the money. They got the money from the IPO, and that's it. That money IS their equity stake along with that used by owners to buy stock pre-public or any VC funding. They don't see a dime from investors buying shares from one another (regardless of how overvalued they may be). The cash they burn through is all debt financing and revenue. The bankruptcy option doesn't come into play unless they aren't adequately capitalized to reach profitability. (Or something like it). An investment in a growth company is inherently speculative, and always has been. The idea is that they will gain a large enough percentage of market share, benefit from economies of scale, introduce design and manufacturing improvements, all of which will pave the road to future profitability. They're not spending investor's money, investors are.
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What happens if I don't buy health insurance?
Basically, I'm wondering if the penalty for no health insurance vs. the most basic health insurance - which one is worth it, and if also there is any way to avoid getting it. [This is for United States] I have good health and live in a safe area. In past few years, I've never gone to doctor except to get a shot.
Well, first of all, if you get sick or need an operation and go to a hospital, you will owe a shit load of money. You will go bankrupt, most likely.
This is the biggest, most confusing thing for an Australian. If I don't have private health insurance, nothing happens. If I get into an accident, I get treated and I walk out with no bill. Private insurance only counts if I decide to get some voluntary treatment done, and even then it only covers the hospital stay. Or I want to have my own room in the hospital.
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I got rear ended while stopped at an intersection, guy wants to skip insurance but I dont. Problem is he has shitty insurance
First off, sorry if this is the wrong sub for this. Basically like the title says I got hit while stopped at an intersection. The guy (lets call him bob) is a delivery driver and is afraid he'll lose his job so he doesn't want to go through insurgence. I know what a pain in the ass it is to handle this type of stuff without insurance so I don't I dont want to skip it. I brought the car in for an estimate and the guy doing the estimate said that bob's insurance company is a tiny company and is a huge pain in the ass to deal with because they push back on everything really had and refuse to pay for stuff sometimes like rentals. He offered a piece of advice if I want everything to probably go smoother, to skip bobs insurance and just file under my own, pay my deductible and give them the info for them to deal with. He said this shouldn't affect my insurance because I was not at fault. My question for you all is, is this fair advice? is this course of action something I should consider?
There are three ways to handle any accident where you're not at fault. 1) Exchange contact info and get the other person to pay directly. Very risky and always a bad idea. 2) Exchange insurance info and contact their insurance agency. However, their insurance agency will always want to minimize the amount they pay out on behalf of the other person and if they decide to be crappy about it, it's you against a corporation - typically a losing prospect. 3) File a claim with YOUR insurance company asking that they subrogate the claim. That means that it's handled as a normal claim against YOUR policy and they do what they can to make you whole according to your policy rules. Then they go after the other company to get reimbursed. If the other company gets crappy about it, it's corporate lawyers against corporate lawyers and you have nothing to do with it other than possibly testifying if it ever goes to court. This is almost always the best option. It should also NOT affect your rates.
Could you explain why you don't want to avoid going through insurance. I've done this before and it was as easy as showing the person my estimate and them paying me cash. If the guy refuses to pay, then go through his insurance. Maybe I'm missing something?
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Selling Vehicle with Upside Down Payments
Happy Monday, personalfinance! My live-in girlfriend and I are thinking about getting rid of one of our cars, specifically mine. I work from home and rarely drive somewhere during the day. We live in San Antonio, and Uber and cabs are relatively easy to use. When we're not working we pretty much always do the same activities and hang out together. My car and insurance payments are about $800/mo right now. Her's is $300. The issue I have is that I bought my car new in 2014 and currently owe 22k and it is worth 18k according to kbb.com. So, as I understand it, I can't really sell it to a third party because I can't get the title without paying off the loan. (Please, correct me if I'm wrong, or alternative suggestions.) Can I sell it back to the dealership and work out some sort of deal with them to pay off the remaining 4k? Or could I do that with NMAC? Obviously, we're looking to save about $500-800 a month here. So any suggestions would be greatly and graciously appreciated. Thank you in advance.
I just did this - isn't super complicated, but you need to be able to take out a loan (I'm hoping you can though if you qualified for the car.) Go to a Credit Union (or Bank, but CU are usually better for this) Take out a traditional loan for the $4000 difference Get a buyer for the car (dealer, or ideally 3rd party for max value) Go WITH BUYER to a branch of the bank that holds your car note Buyer pays the bank, you cover the difference using above loan Bank issues lien release to you You sign title over and give lien release to buyer Buyer goes to DMV to reregister car in their own name
It sounds like you already got your answer, but I'm not seeing anyone chew you out :) If you don't have the cash on hand to make the difference, it sounds like you really over reached. To me a car is never an investment, it's always a cost to be mitigated. With that said, good on you for noticing room to improve your scenario.
personalfinance
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nickburns2006
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rustbeltventures
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How autistic is this? ($MSFT)
I'm trying to determine if this fits in my Personal Risk Tolerance. I own a ton of MSFT shares. About a year ago, I decided to make some rent on them by selling covered calls. Through definite retardation on my part, I now rolled 6 calls @ 165 to Jan 2021. So, this is a loser move. I think it may be $165 in Feb. Shit only goes up. However, my new plan is to set up margin on that account and roll the calls into like $155 puts. The value of the shares should give me enough to cover this. Then, as time goes by, it just goes away and I get to keep the measly $1500 I made from all the rolls. Brilliant or retarded?
Think of it as two things. First, you made a mistake. Buy back the calls. Case closed. Now, is it a good decision to do the 155 puts? If so, do it. If not, you lost a few bucks. Make it up elsewhere.
Why not just let them get called away and buy in later on a dip? You lose some upside if it continues to moon, but you’d have already collected the premium plus whatever you made from when you bought in.
wallstreetbets
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LessThanCleverName
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Lowball salary offer?
Update 1: Hiring manager called 2 days after last chat. She said, “if I could come up to 80k would that be a deal breaker?” I said “no, I talked to my family about it/thought it over and I would love to work with the team.” She replied with, “great, I have a few more questions.” So I answered and she said she would contact me in 24h letting me know if I got the position as she kept telling me that there was another internal candidate during this whole process. I agreed to 80k because of your responses, so thank you! However, she said she was going to call today and let me know if I got the job or if it went to the other candidate.” No call. No email. Ghosted. I’m presuming it went to the other candidate first and she’ll only offer it to me if they decline. Thoughts? I’ve worked at the same company for 5 years. Non profit. I was lowballed upon hire as a fresh out of college grad with little experience and it was my first non contract job. I needed the money. Now, I make 20K more than when I started and have attained not only experience, but a graduate degree in my chosen field. My performance is excellent and I pretty much walk on water. So to speak. Dream job comes up for the same company. I’ve been through 4 interviews and I thought yesterday was the last. 5th interview, me and the colleague I’d be working with hit it off again and start bouncing ideas off each other. It’s a great meeting. Hiring manager comes back and flat out suggests that I requested on my application 70-80k. False. My application clearly stated 80-90k. *Background: I did research, both market and nonprofit/within organization and asked others in the same level of position their salary and she lowballed me, the average in the position is 85-90k for the department. The average market rate is 105-150k. My worth via pay scale is 97k in industry. I thought 85k was feasible and showed my value as the department just bragged about being able to offer employees 80% of market. We go back and fourth and she asks, “I don’t want to negotiate I just want to know, what is your bottom line?” In the importance of being candid, I tell her, “based on my experience, passion, and performance-85k.” There’s a long pause and she said, “I’ll have to go back and check what you wrote on your application but I’m sorry, we may be too far off.” I explain that’s okay, I loved meeting everyone and there’s always potential in the future.” What did I do wrong? Should I not have been honest? Tl;dr. Lowballed, was looking/hoping for 20k more than offered and gave my bottom line of 15k.
She is setting up that coming back at 85K was a massive push/ask for her so coming back at 80-85k should make you appreciative and stay with the company longer. Just a common negotiating tactic from slimy HR reps
Loyal for 5 years is my top end; maybe 6 for vesting purposes. Maybe it’s time to to start looking elsewhere. I’m sure industry will be able to offer better benefits and better salary which will increase your cash flow even more significantly.
personalfinance
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How do I stop feeling bad about declining social invitations because there's no more room in my budget for them?
I'm a pharmacy student with a growing student loan balance and have established a fairly tight budget (eg. $1100 in expenses/month) to reduce what I have to borrow. I set aside money each month for fun: dining, drinks, concerts, etc. but when I hit that limit I quit. Several times I've had to turn down friends' invitations to do things because I don't want to overspend. It's not that I don't have the money to do it...it's that I don't want to spend it. Sometimes it's challenging and a little awkward explaining this without coming off as a miser. For those of you on a stricter budget what do you do/say in these situations?
“Thanks so much for the invitation! Unfortunately that concert/club/restaurant/exhibit isn’t in my budget this month so I have to decline. I’d love to hang out though. Do you have any interest in going to a museum/taking a hike/packing a picnic/insert frugal activity here with me next week?” I think a lot of times people pick expensive things to do because the frugal alternatives just don’t occur to them and/or require more planning ahead, or they worry that other people won’t want to do the frugal things. The important thing is to make sure you’re communicating to your friend that you are interested in spending time with them so they don’t think you’re just using your budget as an excuse to avoid them.
Congrats to you for being responsible with your money. While I can't offer any advice to change how you feel about something, I can suggest simplifying your perspective. If you have $500 set aside to pay rent next week, then it would be irresponsible to spend that money on entertainment today in order to screw yourself next week. Maybe you need to be more explicit with your budget. I applaud you for saving to avoid future debt. So just remember that this money is spoken for and while you have but paid the tuition bill yet, this money is as good as spent. So be proud that you are responsible and are helping future you avoid the money off paying off student loans and at the cost of a night on the town every so often.
personalfinance
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MajorCreeep
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kvotheorkelsier
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How much are your monthly bills in total?
Just turned 20 3 days ago. Still live with my mom. I've been calculating my (future) bills alot lately. Looks like its gonna be at least 16-1700 WITH a few roomates. 2300 without (including food, free spending and whatnot) Id have to gross15-23 an hour to afford that with no savings. I'm going to school to be a welder if that helps. I also have 4-5k saved. I don't see how moving out on near minimum wage in the Denver area is a good option. Any advice?
A fellow Coloradan? Denver is definitely expensive, but everywhere in CO is at the moment. I'm 22 and live with a sibling in an apartment for $1400 a month split between us. So I pay $700 rent + about $350 in secondary bills like Xcel, internet, phone, etc. I make $15 an hour, so it's doable. You just might have to commute to Denver (as I'm assuming you go to school there). BUT if given the option to change my past decision, I would have stayed with my parents and saved as much money as I could. So advice, find apartments in Westminster.
I live just outside of Denver in Centennial. Am 28 years old, live with fiancee. Mortgage+tax+HOA: $~1100 ($404K house with $254k down payment. Cable: ~$140 Electric+Heat: ~$130 Water: ~$70 Monthly bills come in to just around $1450 ish. We allow around $250 a month for groceries but this is flexible. Advice: do NOT get an apartment in Denver. It's not worth it. Our housing / rent market is exploding far faster than our income. Stay with mom as long as you can until you can afford a mortgage. I'd recommend living outside of Denver, as the only "affordable" areas of Denver are VERY rough.
personalfinance
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Adigrat96
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FabledDead
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Getting into an apparently risky employment agreement. Seek advice.
I am an expat in the US, getting a job at a startup. On the employment offer letter, my employer has added a clause (and I paraphrase) that I will be receiving some training and if I choose to leave the company within 2 years for any reason, I will owe the company 20K USD for the training. I had insisted on making it pro-rated, but he stated that he will have to bear the cost of green-card etc. (which is not mentioned on the offer letter) and he cannot alter the terms in interest of protecting the company. It is otherwise a great offer and the work is interesting. But I am thinking that it might put me in a disadvantage if things go south. Though he kept assuring me that he will personally handle it should such a situation arise and the offer letter terms will not really be a binding, it feels like I am getting into a bonded labor situation. Do you think I should go ahead based on his verbal assurances? Can I demand to pay the actual training cost incurred (which should be less than 20K) if I decide to sever ties with them? Thanks a lot.
Though he kept assuring me that he will personally handle it should such a situation arise and the offer letter terms will not really be a binding, Do not fall for that one, even if they mean it, as he may not be there and then what do you do. What matters is what is in writing. Also what training will you be receiving or is this just an attempt to tie you to the job for 2 years without paying extra for the right. Is this training or a , you have the pleasure of being exposed to my awesomeness everyday, training Are you an H-1 or were you already in the states. I did not know there was extra cost for an employer for Green Card employees. Also do they require this "training cost" of all employees or just their Green Card workers. It may be, since they are a start-up, that investors may want personnel tied to the company if they invest. Do not want guy working on a key peace to bail at a critical junction. The fact they do not want to pro-rate it raises a red flag to me.
Sounds like indentured servitude. Also, eff his assurance, it's a contract. I would never sign that contract unless you're really hard up for a job or that training. At least try to contact other employees and see if they had to sign a similar thing and what it's like to work there.
personalfinance
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Stripcartoon
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Stedw
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RollX
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How come everyone's expense list is so simple?
I am new to PF and am working on creating a monthly budget, tracking where every penny goes and predicting expenses for the month. When I look at people's posts, they list the basics like rent, car payments, insurance, etc. And then they or someone in the comments always points out that they should have X left over to put toward debt or savings. My budget always looks good when I lay out the basics, and it seems like there should be plenty left over. But when you start thinking about having to buy a birthday gift or buy a bridesmaid dress or go to the dentist or stock up on contact lenses, suddenly that surplus is gone. I guess I'm just wondering if other people have this problem. I understand the surplus shouldn't be blown on restaurants or entertainment, but a lot of other random expenses can't be avoided.
Most people budget for expected, predictable expenses, not unexpected or unpredictable expenses. Some expenses which are predictable (contact lenses, doctor visits, etc.) should have their own category where you budget a prorated monthly amount even if you aren't buying it that month. Most people also have a "Fun Fund" which is a budget line that functions like a savings account so you can buy whatever the hell you want without worrying about that which you worry about (i.e., random weddings / vacations / trips).
I agree, my budget is complicated as well - and therefore I don't make one. That's not normal here obviously but to me it isn't helpful. I spend what I need and put away what's left over. I don't feel like I'm sacrificing my lifestyle, but of course, I'm still saving a lot in order to retire early. I'd be more conscious of a budget if all my bases (I.e. savings) weren't being taken care of.
personalfinance
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que-pasa-calabaza
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lukertin
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tommyboy319
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Move out of parents place and live on my own, or stay at home and save?
This question is asked a lot but I like hearing people's opinions. I am 23 years old female, and I make 65k/year. I have a nice living situation with my parent's in which I do not have to pay rent, and the only expenses I pay for is my car insurance and my phone bill. This has allowed me to pay off my student loans completely, and save up some money. The relationship status I have with my parent's are good... I actually rarely see them as I work full-time, but it does put a damper on my social life and dating life as I only have my childhood bedroom to work with... and at times when talking to them I still feel forever 16 living with their house rules and general life expectations/opinions. Despite that, I feel that I am in a good position right now to save/ start learning more on how to invest, like I have been doing...but another part of me is wanting independence and to explore as well while I am young and at my prime. From my parent's POV they are encouraging me to stay as long as possible so that I can save up for a future house,car or emergency fund. I have 2 older sisters that throughout their adult life lived independently, and came back home to live due to finances or life event. I am hoping that I can be different and once I leave the nest, I will never have to come back! :) What are your thoughts?
People in this sub need to realize there's more to life than living the exact mantra of what's in the wikis. You make $65k a year. You paid off your student loans. You have a bunch of savings. You have basically no bills. Go move out! Be 23! Have fun! Just keep saving money towards goals, saving towards retirement, and living frugally. Need to justify it financially? Spend more time at networking events. Hang out with people in your industry. If you work in a city, move near work, sell your car (pocket cash and save insurance) and walk to work. Need more justification? Learning how to truly live on your own, budget bills, and balance needs are skills you don't learn living at home.
i would say you are in a very good situation, if i were you i would maybe take maximum another year to stay at your parents, in the meantime take your time to look around for a place to move in. you have time and time is your friend here as it allows you to search for what you really want and at the same time each month you are searching on your own pace adds more money to your funds that will help you in the future.
personalfinance
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Pixelplanet5
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My dear option sellers
So this is a question to any one who consistently makes solid profits from selling options. How do you deal with a big outlier movement of the underlying? What is your exit strategy, as in if you had a losing position how do you get out of it. Thanks for all the responses, I forgot to add one question that is rly important. Do you let your profit cumulate? As in do you use capital that include your last trades profit? Or do you use a set amount of capital every time?
I've been trading for longer than I care to admit. These days, I tend to sell naked options at the 10% probability line. I use the strike price of the option as a mental stop. When that price level is breached, the plan is to take the loss. If the move happens quickly, the loss can be astronomical in terms of percentages vs. premium collected. The big losers are the offset for having 90% probability. Unless one believes those option buyers are stupid idiots, the main reason for buying those options is for a 10x winner. So hence, the 1000% losers (vs. premium collected). Most of the losers are smaller than that, a few a bigger. The more difficult times come when there is a gap move and liquidity vanishes. In those cases, having enough dry powder to trade the underlying is a backup. It is important to note that with the downward trend in volatility over the past nine years, selling premium has been a huge winner. If the reverse happens, vol starts low, ticks up, someone goes all in, vol continues to move higher, that account can get in a lot of trouble. Hard to say this will happen, or how long the moon stays in phase, but there will be future days, weeks, months, when buying premium is better. Rule 1 Live to trade another day If I have a streak of losers, I keep cutting positions (vs. rolling or doubling down or praying for a comeback). This means I have less and less exposure as the market goes against me, as losses pile up. It is important to focus on process. Some recent episodes of BAT vs. BAT on Tastytrade (Thu 6/8, Fri 6/9) go in depth on staying mechanical, vs. trying to guess when the market will turn.
Since I mostly sell covered calls based on dividend events of "Dividend Champions", I just wait it out and collect the dividends on my initial investment. For example, [this]( 10-day CC on COP is what I hope for. But [this]( CC on COP ended up taking 4 months.
options
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Sudeng1128
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I have been made redundant at 41 and have $100,000 in savings. I want to retrain / change direction..
I am a 41 year old UK guy, been made redundant from teaching in the UK and am looking to retrain or start something up. I have $100,000 savings to help me on my way. I don't want to go back to uni for four years, what lucrative trades could I retrain in to set me up for the rest of my working life ?
If you are good with math and computers there are lots of options. Ccna/networking certs, programming bootcamps, itil certs, project management certs all of these can help you get into a new career without taking 4yrs. Bear in mind however, that no course work will ever guarantee you a career.
Ideally make sure it is something you enjoy, also make sure it is an industry that is receptive to older people. Ultimately what you do is going to be dictated by what you want to do and will it provide the level of income you need.
personalfinance
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maroonmonday
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Anyone here interested in Homestead/Self sufficiency?
I've had the opportunity to see a relative acquire a good chunk of land in a beautiful location, build a fairly sized wood cabin and cultivate the land, collect water and use solar for energy, and I've never seen this relative so fulfilled, in fact he told me "I've never been this content with life", I've also had the great chance of experiencing some Homestead life for a few uninterrupted weeks and It changed my outlook on life in a pretty drastic way, akin to taking psychedelics for the first time, i.e experiencing a set of experiences you didn't know were even available, they were hidden, and now you know and while the afterglow will dissipate you will never be the same again. This is one of the reasons I'm interested in FI, anyone else in a similar spot?
The good news is that this lifestyle makes FIRE pretty easy, as it is a lot cheaper overall than a materialistic city life. The caveat is that you better be sure to try it before you pack it all in, as returning could be difficult. We live in an area known for forests and water, but we live in town still. Young family, just easier. We have plans to buy land and build a simple cabin, it may end up just being a retreat (which sounds funny, as we already live a slow life), or we may move there.
My dream is to have a small plot of land that is a good mix of forest and fields, preferably with a river or lake, on which I can grow vegetables, raise sheep and chickens, and forage/hunt/fish for subsistence.
financialindependence
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Father took me off insurance right before i had braces put on out of spite. 2200 in debt please help.
Without my knowing my father had taken me off his medical insurance plan because i found out that I was not his biological daughter, and he didn't have any reason to care anymore I suppose, right as I had braces put on, this was a few years ago. He did this right after he traded my car in that he co-signed for, and gave the new one to his biological daughter. I finally finished paying that off and now I have 2200 dollars in collection. I don't want to give them my bank information because they'll draw out however much they want, and I can't afford that right now living in a new state, on my own, at 20 years old. I have no idea what to do and any help would be greatly appreciated. I am currently paying 150 a month for rent at my amazing boyfriends mom's place. Phone bill is about fourty and car insurance is 131. I am a sever so it's hard to say exactly how much I make but usually I'll pull in about 1500 a month.
I know $1500 a month is pretty low income, but so are your expenses. You only listed $311 in expenses, so if you spend $500/month on food & entertainment, that still leaves $689 a month you can save up towards this debt. Save up $1300 as quickly as you can and tell them you will consider giving it to them if they agree in writing to remove the debt entirely from your credit report. If they agree to those terms, go buy a money order and pay them! Also, start putting $300/month into an emergency account, so if anything else happens you're ready to deal with it as it comes.
When was the car he traded in bought? Were you over 18 at the time? If not, it's legally his debt, not yours. Which, you know, is pretty awesome karma, I think. As for the rest, braces can be paid for on a monthly basis. It's how I paid for braces for four kids, one at a time. Medical insurance doesn't cover them, nor do all dental insurance plans. I only had coverage for 1/2 the cost of one of my kids' braces. It happens. Where is your mom in all of this? You are not obligated to give collection people any information at all, unless they obtain a judgment against you. But, again, if the loan was taken out before you were 18, it's your dad who's on the hook for it.
personalfinance
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What's your favorite finance/econ blog and why?
Just trying to get a good list of what people are reading and why they like it. Zerohedge is my personal favorite for its perma-bear counter view.
<<< pure entertainment right here. Dr. Fly is hilarious and is a permabull. The opposite whom is a perma bear is I don't read into every article Zerohede has, but they do post somethings that other news source are either afraid of or won't.
One of my favorite economics blogs is Carpe Diem, published on AEI by Mark Perry. He is a conservative/libertarian economist, but he posts great content and shares links to other notable blogs, such as Mankiw (which I also enjoy). Sometimes he can get a bit political, particularly when he addresses certain topics like the CEO-Worker Gap and the Gender Wage Gap, but you can kind of easily read through it or ignore the politics. Also love reading qz.com, though Quartz isn't necessarily a blog. Likewise, Matt Levine at Bloomberg is pretty impressive. Don't have access anymore, but for a while I read the Gartman Letter. This was my favorite. Even got to meet Mr. Gartman. Funny guy. I avoid ZH and Krugman like the plague.
investing
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Could we ever get to a point where it is no longer necessary for companies to ever go public?
I was listening to Bloomberg radio a few days ago and they had a guest who explained how growing start up type companies no longer need to go public because there is so much venture capital/private equity money sloshing around that entrepreneurs no longer need public assets to grow their business. Then, when they do decide to cash in, and go public, the public doesn't have much discretionary capital to spare, so the future could end up being all private funding for new businesses. He said that as more and more capital is concentrated in fewer hands (sovereign wealth funds, billionaire investors, pensions, endowments, etc....) there is plenty of money to go around via concentrated, private ownership. What worries me about this development is that it will create a barrier to entry for the general public to take advantage of a growing economy and reap rewards from capitalism. Stock ownership among the general public has been [declining lately]( which is also concerning.
That’s also why private debt funds are popping up everywhere. It’s an opportunity for an investor to reap the rewards of lending to non public companies. Just because they aren’t publicly listed on exchanges doesn’t mean you can’t invest. Sure, private equity has high minimum, but more and more firms are creating these alternative strategies for retail audiences.
Honestly, I believe this is a serious risk that hasn't been discussed. I almost feel this was the point Michael Burry was trying to warn us about index funds but I think he wasn't clearly communicating it well enough to the general population. I feel like perhaps he was trying to point out the easy money from index funds will funnel into the high valuations private investors/initial retail investors give private companies like lyft/uber at IPO/etc. Granted, index funds could put more fundamental controls such as not investing until all lockup agreements expire, and X quarters of earnings announcements to give the market a chance to price things accurately. One big problem is the $1m accredited investor networth/$200k salary requirements the SEC created in the 1930s to reign in fraudulent security raising practices (good old Mr Ponzi...), was never indexed to inflation. So $1m in the 1930s is around $19-$20m today. Were those requirements adjusted for inflation then we'd have a lot less accredited investors around and perhaps money wouldn't be flowing as easy into all these startups, so more companies would have to raise publicly and get scrutinized closer. It's hard to say though as there are plenty of pump & dump penny stocks on the public market you could throw your life's fortune at and no one would stop you, a lot of stocks that the market pumped up (pets.com), etc. There is a longer and longer trend of private companies to stay private as the accredited investor base grows every year. Ultimately it comes down to if the company thinks it can make more money remaining private or going public.
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17 years old, debt free. What’s next?
17 years old, have 15k of my own money saved up and fully invested in the stock market. Going to college on a full athletic scholarship, so I’ll be debt free coming out. What are some hidden expenses i should be looking for during/ right after college?
Get a tattoo of this flowchart and reference it whenever you have a question (joke, but seriously, read it) Get a credit card (may need to wait until you're 18). Don't go into credit card debt. Pay your bill in full every month. Invest in index funds rather than individual stocks, and preferably invest in retirement accounts (IRA, 401k) rather than taxable accounts Consider every textbook that you buy for college a defeat, and fight to pay as little as possible for your books. Buy used instead of new, rent instead of buy. Check out the textbook from your university library. Search for pdfs on Google. Don't drop out. Don't lose your scholarship. Try to major in something that has good job prospects. Get a high yield savings account to store your emergency fund (Ally, Alliant, Discover, and credit unions offer these). Don't invest your emergency fund.
Yeah I mean you definitely face a period of uncertainty and some moving costs, of course. I can't think of anything specific aside from that as far as hidden costs. You do have to worry about not getting a full time job at the terms you'd like. I'd look at the sidebar, prime directive, as a good guideline going forward. I do think people in college should err more on the side of having too much emergency fund rather than too little, since there's a ton up in the air.
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Seller offers to back out of a deal.
$108k condo sale appraised at $110K Seller offered me to take $2500, he's going through a "job change". I think it's crap, but what does it matter. I have invested about $1000. It is not clear if my bank will be happy with condo docs either, they are reviewing atm. So there's a chance I won't get it anyways. Let's say $2500 is not enough, what about $3500? It feels weird to negotiate that. What if I say no? Can seller become stubborn and make it complicated? Purchase and sales was signed weeks ago.
Basically, the seller is handling the scenario in the best way he can & is being pretty forthright about it. His situation changed, through no fault of his own, and he's going about asking you if you'll cancel out mutually & is even offering to compensate you for your time. That's a stand up guy, in my book (if all his previous dealings have been in good faith thus far). The alternative (which, btw, is how most sellers proceed) is to simply stonewall you, cut off communication, refuse to sign closing papers & yell "sue me" while peeling out of the parking lot with both middle fingers raised through the sun roof. Anyone with any experience in specific performance suits knows good & well that it's an uphill battle & your chances of triumph are very small -plus it will eat up your funds in attorneys fees & the like. Usually it's not worth it to sue. I'm not saying it's cool or that you deserve what's happening & should just roll with it. It sucks. You obviously want the condo. I'm just saying that the guy is handling it in a mature & forthright manner & that is respectable. Consider what it's worth for your time & efforts (and other options on the market) to comply with his request & possibly walk away a little richer for your time spent. Just a suggestion.
In theory you can basically hold him to the contract and either get the house, or get litigation going, but you've got to consider negotiations to be done and you better not miss any deadlines.
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Can a company that has paid you a bonus for last years performance require you to pay back the bonus if you quite a week after receiving it?
My wife is getting ready to quit her job. She receives a monthly, quarterly, and yearly bonuses based on performance from her current job. She just received her yearly bonus for the work she did last year. She has heard about her employer electronically pulling bonuses out of people's accounts if they quit shortly after receiving the bonus. She did quickly transfer the money in my account, which she is not on. We have separate checking accounts and a combined account all same bank. (Bill money goes in to combined account, spending money stays in separate account) She is afraid they will go after her for the bonus money. $6k. Edit> Thank you everyone for your input. I'm in agreement that they cant withdraw the money back. Just wanted other input first. Also there is no contacting HR. The company terminates employment very quickly. Double edit> Wow this has blown up. I'm trying to reply as much as I can. I'm going to have put this on pause for 4 hours while I head towards Cheyenne. Thank you all very much.
Employers are allowed to reverse incorrect ACH direct deposits within 5 banking days. An unscrupulous employer could do what you suggest though absent any policy that you must remain employed with them after receiving a bonus for x number of days doing so would likely be invalid. Some states, such as California, don't allow employers to reverse an incorrect direct deposit. &x200B &x200B
I've had more than one employer do this same thing - it keeps people from waiting for the bonus before quitting. It's usually 30 days after receipt of the bonus. That being said, it was always in the employee handbook/HR policies, but maybe it's not obvious.
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How do you evaluate a stock?
I consider myself an amateur. I've read, I've invested, I've made some money, and I've lost some money. I'm working hard to develop positive habits that will help me in this game. I LOVE to research, to learn everything about an investment I possibly can before pulling the trigger. It's fun. It reduces stress to go in prepared. I look at the fundamentals and the technicals. Recently I've been using a combination of [finviz.com]( for screening and news, [tradingview.com]( for charting the technicals, and cruising through reddit for commentary from peers. First I decide what sector to research. I like value stocks right now. I think we're in [mid to late cycle]( The Fed is going to squeeze us and earnings are slowing accross the board. I'm looking for reliable companies with defensive attributes. I like utilities, industrials, healthcare, telecom, secular growth consumer goods. I like the boring stuff that's going to pay its 2% dividend without fail. I like a clean balance sheet and a company with a reliable history of earnings beats. I love a company that meets all of this critera, but still sports a Price/Earnings ratio 20% beneath the sector average. Add quarter/quarter earnings growth and a positive outlook, and we've met my critera. Bonus points for institutional ownership and insider buying. Once I'm satisfied with the fundamentals, I chart the technicals. Where is this Stock trading relative to its 50, 100, 200 day SMAs? To its 52wk high/low? I like a beat down stock looking to break a key resistance. I won't pull the trigger, though, until I get a technical signal to confirm my fundamental analysis. Maybe that insider buying triggers some market interest and leads to a run, I see a volume spike and the price shoots through the 200 day SMA and breaks a key resistance, formation, or trend-line. Then I'm in. I'm looking at $SNX right now, by the way. How do you evaluate a stock?
Doing a full analysis takes too much time. I just screen on finviz, and check their BS and IS. If eveyhting is pointing upwards aling with good news then we're good and its a buy.
Industrials aren't often Reliable comapneis. They are cyclical as they have economic cycle exposure. Just be careful with that sector. There are often long sector or industry cycles that ppl mistake for secular growth. You gotta look at a companies market share, its competitors, its employees, it ceo, and most of all it's long term growth patiential. Consistent earnings bests, I dont always love. Could mean mgmt is cooking books just for wall street. Amazon never gave a shit about wall street. GE used to always beat.. Charting is ok. But it's always going to just tell you what already happened. If you want to know where it will go you have to use your imagination ;) ( or some advanced statistical techniques )
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(PA) Landlord unresponsive-but there's HOA!
Hi all, I currently rent a condo with my boyfriend in a beautiful community. The landlord is completely useless. We've had trouble with him since we signed the lease, but have overlooked many things because it really is a spectacular place and priced perfectly for a young, working couple. This community has an HOA. The landlord told us this and said at some point he'd send over their info so we would know who they were and the whole deal, ya know? That never happened - 6 months in now. We've asked repeatedly to no avail. We are unable to utilize the pool since that is covered in the HOA fees (which the landlord promised we could use in the summer). We cannot get a parking permit since that is also done by the HOA (so yes, we're basically parking illegally everyday, waiting for a ticket or to be towed). Amongst many other questions we have regarding this HOA... We cannot find any info online about them. The neighbors have been very rude to us, as were thinking we are the only young couple renting, whereas most people there are much, much older and own their condo. They have left nasty notes on our cars about the way we park (backed in a spot opposed to parking head in a spot) and that we have no permit, and these things are "against the HOA rules.". We don't know the rules!!! We are a quiet couple and keep to ourselves, ideal tenants, honestly. We don't know what else to do. Can't find them online. Have no phone number. Landlord can't be reached. Neighbors unwilling to communicate. What can we do? Is this more of a legal issue? We still have 6 months left on this lease and want to make the best of it.
Bylaws are posted in the county records for anyone to read. You could go by your county courthouse and see if one of the filing clerks could help you pull everything related to that condo. Beware, you might find out subtenants aren't allowed.
Is there a clubhouse type thing near the pool? Look for a bulletin board, perhaps the HOA officers would be listed there or the date/time of the next meeting. If it's a decent sized community there is probably also a property management company.
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Could this virus outbreak be the bane of commercial real estate?
At first, it was online shopping when people realize they don't need to leave their homes to get what they wanted. Now, companies and employees are realizing they don't need the thousands and millions of square footage to conduct business. Could this be the bane of commercial real estate? *Don't get me wrong, commercial real estate will always exist...at least in our lifetimes. But, more and more people are realizing that it's not as necessary as once thought. Therefore, the demand will not be as great.
My wife who loves grocery shopping already commented "why would I ever step foot in the store again?". I myself am sitting here going "why do I need to ever sit in an office again?" This is 100% right. Life as we know it may never be the same.
There was already an excess in the US (5X more square feet per person compared to Europe). I think this will drastically change the landscape. In the best case maybe some can be converted to housing or something.
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(CAN) Am I liable for debts incurred when I was a minor? How can I have them removed?
Throwaway account because I don't want it attached to my main. Backstory: I turned 19 (the age of majority where I live) earlier this month and I filed an Equifax report because I'm interested in applying for a credit card (ideally to build a good credit score). Currently, I have a near full time job and I'm going to full time uni relatively debt free. Currently, I have $150 in Provincial student loans and the rest of my tuition costs so far have been covered by scholarship and grants. However, credit score is 494 and there is a collection record on my account for Shaw Cable through the collection agency NCO Financial. The amount due is $924 dated for 2014. In 2014, I was 16 years old and my understanding of the law is that minors cannot enter into contracts. I never signed up for a Shaw Cable account, but I believe I know what happened: In 2013/14, my aunt was paying for internet for me because my mom couldn't afford it and I fear that she might have put the account into my name but my mom was expected to pay for it-- which she clearly didn't. Am I liable for this amount even though I was underage when it was put in my name? How can I go about clearing this? A lot of the information in the PF wiki is American-based I also want to make one thing clear, I cannot expect my mother to clear this debt for me because she doesn't work and lives off social assistance. She is not good with finances (as might already be clear) and I have barely any personal savings because of it (I often end up buying food/paying bills). I also cannot afford to pay this $924 currently. Equifax says that debt goes away after 6 years. Is that correct? Is there a penalty if I ignore this debt? I would rather like to dispute it because it's been incurred wrongfully, but I am just curious. With this credit score would I be able to apply for a credit card? One targeted at students? Money really stresses me out and causes me a lot of anxiety, so I'm having a really hard time with this.
I would dispute the record with Equifax. They'll determine whether it's valid or not. This kind of thing is sadly common, it won't be the first time they've heard this story.
Shaw Cable will get their money one way or the other. Your disputed is with them, but they will go after your then guardian (mom or grandmother) and you probably don't want that. I would set up monthly payments and be done with it.
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New to investing
I'm a 14 year old and gonna be studying BTEC Business next year, just wondering if anyone could give me some basic tips about business and investing? Cheers, George.
I strongly suggest you to start by making an idea of what the whole thing is, a good starting point are investopedia's basic tutorials, that you can find here: Suggested to start: Personal Finance, Investing, Stocks, Bond, Mutual Funds, ETFs. Clearly these great introductory topics are only a starting point, more has to be consolidated by books, again a nice selection from investopedia: Start using demo trading platforms and simulators too. Good luck with your journey to investing and business.
Everyone has to start someday. Spend a lot of time doing some paper trading, grow your confidence. This can last for several months. There is no rush unless you are willing to lose money and give it away to the real money makers. Not everyone has what it takes to besome a succeful trader.
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Post on r/fitbit about a watch that exploded/popped on redditors arm, leaving burns. Short $FIT possibility?
link to post on r/fitbit I can see this story gaining traction, between any recall possibility and just bad press, surely the stock could see some downside
Could be an isolated incident, haven’t heard of FitBits catching fire at all really OP will get restitution for burns and property damage but I can’t imagine the entire company will take a hit because of one device Many of the reasons other companies took a large hit is because the fires were so widespread and reported day after day after day
If it's a one of and not a design flaw, I doubt it will have much impact. Lithium ion batteries sometimes explode, in any companies products. It's just so rare that we don't think of it. But what made something like the Note saga different was that it was a design flaw creating many many times the normal risk.
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Companies likely to still beat earnings in Q1?
Is anyone actually considering making a play like this? I remember that one guy loaded Nike calls And made 15K from one day to the next. Who, if any, do you guys think will beat the earnings estimates in Q1? (Possibly AMD?) SPY $240 4/17p
$PII I work at a powersports dealership in Southern California and despite having a skeleton crew and a quarantine restriciton, people are still buying RZRs, Can Ams, dirt bikes, etc. and lots of parts too. Most OHV trails are still open to the public, but even then, there's a few "riding spots" that are open and are extremely busy during the weekends. Since everything is closed down and people have more free time since being furloughed or laid off, the retards who are bored and have money to spend are going out to the desert and ride. As far as I remember, we are currently selling more parts and products than we did during this past holiday season.
Even when companies beat in this environment stonks still go down. After a few months of vix being dead then you can start buying. Until then everything is a pump and dump.
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Can I please get help on how to pay off my credit card?
Hey everyone. I’m sorry I know this is a probably repetitive question. I’m trying to figure out what to do and so far the posts I have searched and found are for much larger amounts of debt or multiple credit cards. I would really appreciate any suggestions or feedback even if it’s directing me to another thread! If this isn’t appropriate I can remove as well. 2 years ago I got a first credit card through Wells Fargo to build my credit. 1 year no interest then I believe 13.40 variable APR. 1500$ spending limit. Everything was smooth sailing until I got into a car crash. I had to put 1.2K on the card. I make 800-1200 bi weekly from work. I was supporting my unemployed SO at the time so I could only pay off 100 at a time max. Then we had to move to a new apartment so I put what I couldn’t afford on the card, still intending to pay it off. As my budget got tighter I could only make the minimum payment. The interest finally broke through the spending limit and my credit score dropped 40 points to 639 and Wells Fargo increased my spending limit to 2000$. My current debt is 1545.91. My SO Is just now employed again and so now I’m trying to pay off the card. I’m wondering. Should I talk to the bankers at Wells Fargo to help me calculate how much I need to pay each month so get it paid off? Should I take out a loan with a fixed APR to pay it off? Any help and suggestions would be greatly appreciated I don’t spend any money on it and I don’t have any intention of racking up any more credit card debt. Thank you for reading and I hope your day is going well! 🏼 peace 🏼
You don't need a banker to figure out how long it will take to pay. Play with this calculator for a few minutes. You can go by what you can afourd to pay, or by when you want it paid off by.
how much I need to pay each month so get it paid off? the answer is always "as fast as possible". the minimum payment is technically enough to "pay it off", it just takes forever. make your budget for necessities, then throw as much into your credit card payment as you can afford. after its done, roll that monthly payment into a savings account for emergencies so you don't dip into debt when the next emergency arises.
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I’m a sucker and fell for the whole life insurance scam
A family friend convinced me that bank on yourself via a whole life insurance plan was the best thing for my retirement. After paying in for 3+ years, my wife and I have just over $50k in cash value. The returns have been absolutely abysmal: we’ve invested a total of nearly $90k. Supposedly at year 7 years of investment we break even. Maybe that will happen, maybe not. If I cut my losses and cash the whole thing out, where should I put that money? Since I’m stupid I haven’t invested much my 401k. It’s sitting pretty at $2k. I’m thinking the first thing I should do is max that out for the year. Our only debt is a $90k mortgage at 3.8%. Should I make a huge payment on the house? I’m obviously financially illiterate so any help you all can provide would be massively helpful. I hope this post serves as a guide to others. Also, I don't care about the life insurance aspect. -- Edit I'm 31 years old. -- Edit I've put together a few graphs to help show the financial situation of the accounts. Paid Premiums vs Cash Value - Cash Value Less Paid Premiums - Cash Value as a Percent of Paid Premiums - Percent of Contribution Applied to Cash Value - -- Edit The company I'm working with is Northwestern Mutual -- Edit The combined values of the policies is $2.7M -- Edit One redditor suggested calculating continued investment in the life insurance plan vs taking the loss and investing the cash value in an index fund. The assumption of the life insurance fund is that it “breaks even” at 7 years (4 years from now). At the current investment level, the final value would equal $185K. Surrendering the account today would leave me with $51K. If the cash was used to invest in a 5% index fund while maintaining identical additions, the total equals $162K. At 7% 171K. At 10% $187K.
I am an actuary who design insurance schemes. Personally I do not like the endowment style of life insurance that you have purchased. What you need to understand is there is a significant timeline for these policies. These are really old style insurance policies. A better arrangement in modern times is a yearly renewable life insurance cover with a separate investment fund. What is your sum insured and at what age will this pay out? How long away is this? The cash value is the amount that you get back if you quit now. You have been paying in the first 3 years monies for the agents commission (up to 100% of your first year premium) inaddition to paying for future increased risk of dying when you are older. (Premiums stay flat for all years of your policy although risk of death increases). Its not a scam its just not well understood. Generally I would stick it through as you will be out by 50k if you leave right now. Call up the insurance company, ask to speak with an actuary if you can. Ask them to do a forecasted projection to show you at what year will the premiums and cash balance come to equal. Redecide at that time. Note if the agent missold you on any aspect you may bring this to your regulator (ombudsman) depends on your country. Sorry all typed up on mobile happy to answer anything else.
My brother in law almost got suckered into buying a policy like this. The salesmen who sell life insurance as an investment are so good, I think in part because they drank the Kool aid. No one here in this forum will likely be able to give you solid advice on what to do now. You really should find a financial planner who is not commission based just trying to sell you something, who can go over your whole financial situation with you. You need a true financial plan. With priorities, goals, etc. Not just throwing stuff at the wall seeing what sticks based off what someone on reddit says or what some snake oil salesman says. Just my 2 cents.
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Just found out my girlfriend is 5 weeks pregnant. What can/should I do to prepare?
Of course this was not planned. We are in our early to mid 20s. I have a stable job currently with about $30,000 in the bank. Currently I cover most living expenses including rent and groceries. She has a part time job and was working to pay down some old loans that aren't too substantial but have taken up most of her paycheck to date. Trying to think of things to prepare for and to save for to make things easier when the time comes. First thing that comes to mind is a larger living space, as we currently live in a single bedroom apartment that is about 750 sq feet. Saving money shouldn't be an issue as I've made more than I've spent just about every month since I've been working this job unless it was a month where I had a large purchase thrown in. I'm just looking for advice on how to save it and what else I may be able to do financially to be ready. Thanks for any advice!
I would stay in that one bedroom for now. You won't "need" the extra space as much as it sounds nice just yet. The difference in rent will go a long way considering your gf won't be working for immediately once baby arrives.
I think people tend to grossly over exaggerate the cost of taking care of a baby, so take some of the advice here lightly and don't freak out at some of the numbers. As some others have said you don't need to buy everything new, but right now with the seasons changing might be a good time to get out and start buying some unisex items while they are on a good discount. If you look around there are some great secondhand stores you can buy things at as well, some of them are more picky than others. The place I stop at once in awhile pretty much only takes in pristine clothing but they sell it at garage sale/thrift store prices which is great. Unless she isn't planning on working for like the next 13 years, be prepared for daycare costs each one of those years as well. In my area 40 hours in a daycare for infants is around 1300 dollars a month so you might want to start calling around in a few months to get some information from providers in your area. Some people try and work opposite shifts so one parent is always home, but for your relationships sake as a family I do not recommend doing such a thing. If your only buying what the baby needs then it really isn't that costly to raise the first few years.
personalfinance
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How can I go about increasing my $1,500 credit limit?
I've had a Credit Card with Bank of America since 2011 with a $1,500 limit. Current balance is $1,000. I make regular, higher-than-minimum payments. It's mostly used for car maintenance I can't pay for up front. Age: 23 Salary: $40k Cr
Hospitals also let you do payment plans, yes. Contact them directly and you can probably set something up, interest-free. That's a better approach than dumping it on a card you WILL be charged interest for.
Hospitals definitely have payment plans, they would rather have you pay the debt eventually than not at all. Call the billing department, and let them know that you can't pay it all up front, but can pay $x per month. It takes less than 10 minutes.
personalfinance
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Financially Literate - Can you translate
I read this article and can't make sense of the analysis. Can the more financially literate translate and answer my below questions? Thank you! "The Fed has bought treasuries and mortgage-backed bonds to inject liquidity into the markets. These purchases have caused the Fed’s balance sheet to explode from about $700bn in 2008 to $4.5tn and left the Fed holding about 15 per cent of US government debt and a third of long-term bonds. Today, the Fed promised to reduce the Federal Reserve’s holdings of Treasury and agency securities. Yellen plans to let those bonds expire when they come due. Then the Fed will mostly just sit on its hands, rather than replace those expired bonds with new bonds, as it has done in recent years." Where did the Fed get the money to buy bonds and what does it mean to let them expire when they come due instead of replacing them with new bonds? The government bought shitty home loans that were packaged and is now trying to sell them back into the market? What is a treasury or mortgage backed bond? Thanks again
Where did the fed get the money to buy the bonds backed by home mortgages? They literally just created it! That's why Quantitative Easing is sometimes pejoratively referred to as "printing money". Institutional investors, like large banks, insurance companies and hedge funds, bought up CMBS and MBS loans like crazy. When the lending market got completely out of control, people defaulted on their loans and the bonds were now receiving a fraction of what they were supposed to (the principal and interest payments from the mortgages). So in order to make the markets more liquid, the fed bought all of these crap bonds from the large investors so that banks would continue to be able to loan money (the multiplier effect) and invest other portions of the money. When a bond expires on its "maturity date", the person with the bond will receive the principal amount of the bond's value. You can think of treasury bonds as kind of like giving a loan to the government. Assuming you were the first buyer of the treasury bond, you would "lend" the money to the government, say $10,000 and they promise to pay you interest on your money for 10 years, at say 2.2%. This is not a very attractive rate of return but the appeal of treasury bonds is that it is a very safe investment, after all, the US government has never defaulted on its debt. After 10 years of receiving the interest payments, you would then be paid your $10,000 back on the bond's maturity date, when it expires. I assume that the article is saying when they say they will let the bonds expire when they come due is that there will not be any money paid back to them when the bonds mature but I could be wrong. If they did receive what was left of those bonds, it would be pretty much nothing, as I assume most of the properties were foreclosed on and liquidated in foreclosure sales, which the bond holders would get a piece of, in theory, if there was any liquidation cash left after the loan servicers get their fees and if the purchase price was high enough to produce enough cash so that their was something left over for the investors. I don't think the Fed is selling these mortgages back to the market. The MBS loans and CMBS loans are more complex than treasury loans, but its similar. Banks were making loans to whoever with little screening or quality checking on the assets or the borrowers themselves because they would just collect their fee for getting all the mortgage paperwork done and providing the funds and then sell those mortgages to investment banks, who then packaged 1000's of them together so they could then sell all the pieces of the bonds to investors. So the Fed didn't "buy the loans" but they bought the bonds that were secured by the loans.
Where did the Fed get the money to buy bonds-- The fed has a bank account what always has a "zero balance" however when they withdraw money from it, its is literally created new money. The Fed can create new money out of nothing! what does it mean to let them expire when they come due instead of replacing them with new bonds--- So when you buy a bond you buy it for a certain period of time and you get interest paid back. When the bonds expire with interest and principal paid back the FED isn't going to re-invest their money they are just going to take the money and not buy any more bonds with it. The government bought shitty home loans that were packaged and is now trying to sell them back into the market--- Yes when they did this they were trying to lower the interest rate and prop up banks that previously held these. So they started buying up trillions of dollars of bonds. What is a treasury or mortgage backed bond?-- A treasury is a goverment bond , the government spends more money then it takes in so it hast to borrow money and it does this by issuing bonds . treasury are just goverment bonds. what is a mortgage backed bond--- people borrow money to buy a house, all these loans are grouped together in a bond so investors could buy them. The issue with these bonds is if home owners stop paying their mortgages these bonds loose money.
investing
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At American firms is the adage, 'Employers pay for hard work. Never ask for a raise.' a valid strategy?
I was given this advice by my uncle, who is quite successful in the chemical industry. He said, people pay for hard work. I've never asked for more money and yet I was recognized for my efforts and promoted several times. Now I manage 2 chemical factories. Is this adage still true in American corporations? Was it ever true?
I don't think it's true at all. I never got a raise I didn't ask for. Exceptional managers recognize and reward hard work, but in my experience the vast majority of managers vary from mediocre to how-the-fuck-did-they-get-this-job. /recently retired software developer
Possibly during the 50s or 60s when employee and company loyalty was much more of a thing. Nowadays, it's the opposite: "Employees pay you as little as they can get away with. Always ask for a raise."
personalfinance
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Best Account to save for house
What type of account should I be saving money for a house? At 10,000 so far and should be able to save at least 15 a year for the next 3-4 years. I was thinking a high yield savings account?
I was thinking a high yield savings account? Yes. Your timetable is short enough that your contributions will be much more significant than any expected gains. You can get close to 3%/year today for sure. If you put the money into the stock market, you could lose 18% in a quarter, like we did the end of last year.
You are correct that a high yield savings account would be appropriate. Decent rate and you can get to the funds quickly when you find a house you like. Good luck!
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Making an offer with an expiration
I saw a house last Friday that has been on the market only for a couple days. During my viewing, the listing agent stated to wait until the end of the following Friday (This week) before submitting any offers. Her strategy was that she wanted to email all potential buyers and let them know that there are multiple offers on the table. At this point no offers have been submitted yet.   Well I'm not too inclined to get into a bidding war and I know my max price already. This is a house I really want but I can't go above my max to make it happen. I am planning to tell my agent today that I want to submit an offer now and give the seller 24 hours to decide. I plan to offer a few percentage points above listing. I've already looked at comps so I know this is a good offer. If she rejects, then I am OK because I know this was the max I can give. I really don't want to get into a situation where there may be multiple offers and if I wait until Friday to submit, I don't want my offer to be the one that prompts other potential buyers to increase their bids.   Is this a legitimate strategy? I may lose out on the house but I figure at least giving the offer now gives me some leverage. Also if my offer is rejected, I plan to move on and make an offer on a 2nd house that I was thinking strongly about.
I don't know if this is a legitimate strategy, but it's the one we used in a fast moving market and it worked. We felt the house was worth what we offered, and we were prepared to walk if the sellers wanted more. One nice thing about it was that any and all repairs we asked for were done without question - I think they were grateful to sell 3 days after listing and at a little above asking. Transaction was smooth and everyone was happy.
Though the strategy may be legitimate, I don't think it is one that will be consistently successful in a tight market. Your strategy of making a preemptive offer "they can't refuse" may backfire. In my experience, sellers with a popular listing will sit on offers without paying any attention to expiration dates. They review them when they get around to it, unfortunately. Many buyers will proceed with a transaction, if the seller accepts their offer beyond the expiration, as long as they have not moved onto another property. Selling a property is not so much a race to get an offer, but rather an intensive effort to attract the best offer in the marketplace. The listing agent's best strategy for the seller is to publically decline to review all preemptive offers and announce an offer due date and time deadline at some time in the future and stick to it. This creates a sense of urgency and allows everyone to get their best offers in and have the seller review all the offers together, at once.
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College Graduate looking for some advice
I just graduated from college and just got a job in Huntington Beach, California. I am 21 years old and am looking for some advice to avoid the financial miscues most 21 year olds have. Here is a breakdown of my situation: Income: 53k Debt: 0 Savings: 5k I am about to apply for a credit card this week and begin looking for apartments. My company matches 6 percent on 401k. No car payment and I have a very reliable Civic which gets great gas mileage and has little maintenance costs. Any tips or suggestions would be much appreciated thank you!
It sounds like you are off to a pretty good start, and as a result, I'm guessing you know most of this already: If you can, get a credit card with good rewards/cash back. Pay off your credit card statement balance in full every month. Set up automatic payments to make sure you don't forget. The cost of living in southern California is very high. $53k is not much money there. Keep your housing expenses as low as possible. Housing is the generally the biggest contributor to a region's high cost of living, and it's most people's largest expense. Therefore, keeping it low will be a huge help for your budget. Make a budget and follow it, at least as you are adjusting to your post-college life. A lot of people may disagree with me about this, but I think if you are naturally frugal, a budget may become largely unnecessary after you settle into healthy spending habits (especially if you are single). Never spend money just because you have some left in a budget category at the end of the month. Don't buy stuff you don't need. Be especially wary of anything with recurring fees. Don't get cable. Eating food that someone else prepared should be the exception rather than the rule. Contribute enough to get the full company match on your 401(k). Build up an emergency fund to cover 3-6 months of expenses. Build your entertainment life around cheap and free hobbies and activities. Surround yourself with friends who don't draw you into overspending. Remember that you don't have to spend a lot of money to be happy; I don't know about you, but I loved my college years, and I spent very little money during that time. When you get a raise or a bonus, don't inflate your lifestyle to match. Instead, focus on increasing your savings rate. EDIT: A couple more thoughts: Don't borrow money for anything but a house. Years from now when you replace the Civic, don't buy a new car.
You're in pretty good shape. You didn't make the first mistake that usually happens, financing an expensive car, so avoid that. You also didn't make the second mistake, racking up credit card debt. Or the third mistake, racking up medical debt. Do you have college loans? It's a good idea to go ahead and make a plan to tackle those. Set up a budget. I would recommend this before using the credit card. Establish a budget that works for you taking in to consideration your fixed expenses (rent, phone, internet, etc) and your varible expenses (food, entertainment, etc). Make sure you take full advantage of your company match on your 401k, that's free money. Next, build up 6 months emergency of emergency savings, this will be for unexpected car repairs, medical expenses, etc. Try to reach your yearly match on your 401k. Keep your own future savings/investment account. This could be used for taking a nice trip, saving for a down payment on a house, getting married, whatever, just save the money, you'll probably be able to find something to spend it on in the future. Finally, watch out for lifestyle creep. You know how you used to survive on a $20/month beer/fast food budget? Somehow you'll start going to bars and nicer resturants more, your friends will get big houses with big mortgages and fancy cars with big monthly payments, try to avoid that. Enjoy the money that comes with a "big boy" career without falling into the trappings and big expenses that will tempt you.
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Looking for first home. Want a little farm land. How long do I wait for "the perfect home?"
I'm a first time buyer. Already preapproved for FHA and working with a local realtor. He has emailed me a few properties that pique my interest [basically any decent little house with 4-20 acres, <175,000]. Two of the homes have less than my desired acreage but I imagine 3 acres is enough for some pigs and chickens for a few years. That being said, do I modify my "perfect home requirements" and settle with a home that I might grow out of in a few years [maybe 5 or so years]? Or do I wait [and wait and wait and wait] for a home that will feel less like I'm settling? My main concern isn't having to sell a house. The market here right now is pretty decent. My main concern is that we will probably want to build some outbuildings if the house doesn't have any and it would just really stink to build outbuildings exactly the way we want them and then potentially have to build them again once the perfect house comes along. And then, of course, I dont really wanna deal with selling and buying again for a good while lol. I'll take any first time buyer advice! The house hunt is just really eating at me, especially because I feel like my standards are too high. Thanks for the advice everyone! We are def trying to weigh options. Maybe even considering building. The SO works for an insulation company and my parents have built a few houses. And we don't plan on having kids so we could go as small as reasonably possible when it comes to sq ft. 🏻‍️ we will see!
There is no perfect home. There will always be something that doesn't live up to your expectations. My advice after 4 house and 4 rentals is buy something you can afford and then put your spin on it. Better to make it perfect than buy someone else's idea of perfect.
No house is perfect, but I must say that I'm excited about waiting a few years after talking about it, then a couple years of looking, to get something that ticked many of our boxes. What that mostly means for me is that there is less to do ourselves, which is my preference and and most realistic. It helps that our living situation was fine, no urgency to move, and that our financial situation improved each month... You can change a lot about a home, but generally not where it is, which is why so many folks emphasize location. Changes can be expensive too, though there's an entire generation and consumerism around making significant changes so it is a "thing" now to drastically change a house.
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Investment advice needed (AU)
Hi Guys, I know asking for advice of such an important matter on a public forum could be considered madness, but I'm sure there are more than a few intelligent people that can share their knowledge with me. FYI I am also seeking other advice through professional means, but as we know even the professionals can get it wrong and be completely off track... I am in my early 30's, married with 2 little rugrats and I live in a major city in Australia. My financial position is quite simple actually, we as a family have no debt, we own a nice newish family car and we are leasing a house at the moment. Now the twist, my wife and I are both not working at the moment, 3 years ago I had a serious accident from which I broke my back amongst other things and still suffer today. My wife is my carer and obviously a full time mother. I was formally employed in a government position and was quite well paid. I am currently going through the red tape of Medical Retirement in which I should receive an annual CPI indexed pension payment of $50,000 (until retirement age of 67) which is not guaranteed at this moment but I'm very positive this will be the outcome. Aside from this, in the next coming month I am also going to receive a lump sum compensation payment of $2 million AUD... I know there is a multitude of options that I can explore. Its quite daunting actually and I'm a little overwhelmed at the moment with the options. I know that I will need to buy a home and I will require an income. We are happy to start a business, trade shares, buy property and even use a hedge fund and or investment banker. We are open to all ideas! We even considered moving to the states as property is much better priced and due to the sheer population we thought there may be more or better opportunities. My number 1 priority is my kids and would love to lay the path for there future. Any help will be greatly appreciated and I apologies if I have posted this in the wrong section.
Let's put it into some perspective. $2 million invested in 4% term deposit will give you an annual income of $80,000 - a decent income even before your pension. Anything you do to chase a higher return will increase the risk of losing it all - a loss you don't appear to have the capacity to recover from. If I was in your situation, capital preservation would be my first priority. Starting a business, trading shares, buying property, using a hedge fund or investment banker are not investment options that would meet that strategy.
Presumably you will need ongoing medical care. The US has the most expensive care in the world. It will suck up your $2mil very quickly. In addition, your pension would probably be cancelled if you leave the country permanently.
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Where to Start?
I turned 18 in March and have never had a job before. I volunteered twice for "Kids Backporch Productions", a local NPO, but other than that I only have freelance work to show for my name. At this very moment, I have 50 dollars, which I've been saving over the past few months since my birthday. Usually, I'd spend this money, but I figured it'd be better to save it this year. So yeah, I understand to save not spend, and that type of stuff... But when it comes to actually using the money to (hopefully) gain more, where does a person start? I've gone through the sidebar, but none of the links quite answer what I'm asking entirely. Thanks for any help.
I hate to be a dick, but $50 isn't even worth discussing. You're going to need quite a bit more money than that before you start putting your money to work in a meaningful way. This means wealth creation (job.) I understand to save not spend, and that type of stuff... It doesn't sound like you have even close to the amount of money experience for that statement to be true. Get yourself on good ground with personal finance before you start trying to invest. This means: getting a part time or full time job, using the money you make to pay your phone bill, car insurance (if you have a car), and other misc. bills. Then save a portion and spend a portion. Set financial goals and do your best to actually understand the tenets of personal finance, such as debt. Because you're starting at 18, debt will be a bigger part of this then if you were 15-16. Lenders want you. Bad. Learn about credit and debt, you will probably be targeted with credit card offers and student loan is something that you might have to deal with that I don't think enough kids take seriously. Just remember that it is very easy to make a decision now with the stroke of a pen that can hurt you in a big way for the next 10-20 years of your life. REAL personal finance is about the big battles, not so much the small ones.
I used to hate working in my parents restaurant as a kid, but now i'm glad i'm not some fat kid with no experience and can't even search for a job anywhere. There are jobs literally EVERYwhere.. You have to start small to earn big
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How Many CCs is too many?
I have opened 3 credit cards in the last year and I want to know what the effects would be on my credit if I were to open another. 2 are completely paid off and I don’t plan on ever using them again (I just opened them for the initial offer - $200 after spending $1000, etc.) None have annual fees so they don’t cost me anything. My main questions is: how many Credit Cards is too many and how long should I wait before I get another? Also, should I close any or just cut up the card and let them be?
I believe i have 7 credit cards but i don't carry a balance on any of them. I use a credit card for groceries and restaurants because it gives me 5 percent cash back and i use a different credit card on Amazon because i get 5 percent back on there too. My credit score is still good because of the credit to debt ratio. I usually wait 6 months to a year to open a new one. My suggestion is to never keep a balance on your card and if you do have credit card debt, transfer it to a new card that has 0 percent interest for 18 months, i think most cards offer this.
I’m a churner with a credit score > 800. At my max I’ve had 32 credit cards. Keep them open as long as they don’t have annual fees. The revolving credit and low utilization boosts your score. You may see a 5-10 point hit when you close but it recovers in the next month or two.
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When planning a six month emergency fund, do you consider saving money, too?
I'm trying to determine what "6 months of expenses" looks like to my fiancée and I. I know how much our bills, rent, loan payments, etc are. But during a normal, non-emergency week (i.e. - one where one or both of us are getting a regular paycheck), we also put some money towards savings. Do you consider that part of the sum of your six month emergency fund? When/If I have to use this fund to completely sustain us for six months, should I be using some of it to reinvest back into or savings? Or if I'm down to an emergency fund, do I just pause my savings until I'm back into non-emergency waters?
Assuming the emergency is loss of income, no, I personally don't consider savings goal part of emergency fund. Just expenses. And yes, in a job loss emergency I wouldn't be adding to savings, because I'm living off the savings.
I consider this too friend. The idea is to cover all expenses to live while disturbing the minimum of your investments. I wouldn't have additional for 'saving' as that just means you are investing less with the plan to invest it during an emergency... Invest everything you can EXCEPT these funds in the dire situation you need them. Just my thoughts.
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Father doesn’t have much money saved for retirement what should I do?
I have about 2 years left at University and I was wondering since my dad is around retiring age soon, with barely any money saved and living off pay check to paycheck. Im concerned not just for him but for my self that I will have to be liable to also financially support him and my mother who hasn’t really worked most of her life. Is there anything he can do within his last 3-4 years? Also what do you suggest I should do since this is very frightening that me and my sibling have to worry about this. Of course I will support them but as I will have my own family in future it would get tougher and I wanted some advice on what we/I should do.
if he doesn't have money saved for retirement, then he doesn't get to retire. that's basically what it comes down to. so he should get out of the mindset that he'll be done working in 3-4 years. he and your mom will need to live within the means that social security provides along with whatever you can afford to help them with, without putting your own future at risk.
you need to put your own retirement first. make sure you're at-least putting away the ~5500/year in an ira/roth ira so you're not in the same boat as your parents in 30 years. if you can do that, and have leftover to help them, go for it. i'm 28 and started a roth ira this year, wish i'd started it 10 years ago lol.
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Lord_Teapot
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Wife froze credit with Equifax, no PIN was given.
I successfully froze with all three yesterday. Today, the wife and I sat down to do hers. Experian and Transunion were okay, but we put all her info into Equifax and we got a 500 code system unavailable. So we did the other two and came back to Equifax. We put her info in again, and uh oh, its frozen and we can only lift the freeze. Problem is since the website said that it was down, it never gave us the pin, but it did issue the freeze. Anyone else run into this?
Something similar happened to me when I called them. I went through the whole freeze and got to the end and the system never asked me to create the pin then just disconnected. I’m waiting to see if I get anything in the mail from them for a week or so then I’m going to call and find out what the deal is. This company is just completely incompetent in my opinion.
From what I understand Equifax mails the pin. I froze my account over the phone and was told it would be sent out in the mail in the next few weeks. (As opposed to Transunion and Experian which both used the automated phone system to confirm on the spot.) Did you submit your address successfully online?
personalfinance
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Simplyradishing
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Tricky Salary Situation
I've gotten an offer for a "Research Analyst" position which is an entry level investigation job with an FBI contractor. It requires a Bachelors degree (which I have) and Top Secret clearance that I don't yet have but the company will provide that clearance. However it will take 9-18 months to come through, meaning I can't work the job before then. That said, if I sign the offer letter I'm not bound to the job as its all contingent on that clearance anyway. I have almost 10 years of working for another government contractor doing software, technical support, and more but no prior experience in this field. However, the pay seems low (49k before taxes) given the clearance level but due to the secretive nature of the job and therefore the vagueness of the job description, I'm having a hard time researching a compensation rate other than a few postings on Glassdoor which put my compensation squarely in the average range. Also, I've never had an actual interview besides a video interview where I responded to some canned text questions - never spoke to an actual person. I had assumed I would have an in-person interview later but I only learned of my compensation in a flatly stated line in the offer letter. Sounds fishy but I'm quite sure this is a real job as I learned of it from a friend in the FBI. Its just odd. So my question is, given that I won't really know the true depth of the job until I'm cleared in 9-18 months, have no prior experience in this field, and appear to be right in the average compensation range, do I have much room to negotiate a salary here? I'm inclined to go with the offer as is and hope for a better position in two years or so, once I've gotten the clearance and some experience. Meanwhile I could look for other work and have this opportunity as an almost sure source of income in the near future. Thoughts?
Clearances are worth money, especially in SW. There's something to be said for applying/taking it, letting them do your clearance, and once you pass it, start applying for jobs at other places. As a developer, I've heard/seen people note that a pre-cleared developer is worth 50K/year more than an uncleared one. This, in short, would help make you a cleared one. Thing is, you lose your clearance (as I understand it) if you're not actively working for a clearance-required company. Thus, you essentially need to take this job, and while working it, start applying other places, and move through the cleared-jobs market. There are many special websites for clearance-related jobs. This is especially relevant if you're in the Maryland area, which is a hot-bed of this type of work.
You don't have much room to negotiate however its worth asking for anyways. Try and translate your current experience with what you know about the job or can drawn out of them about the work. You said its entry level and you must receive a final clearance before you can start... So they probably aren't having the easiest time placing those with experience and a clearance at that salary. If you think this is a path that will help you in the future i say go for it.
personalfinance
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I am trying not to mess up before it is too late
So I am a senior in high-school & I am planning on going to college. As I start on a whole new part of my life I don't wanna mess anything up. What is some stuff finance wise I can do to start off right so I don't have to be in horrible amounts of debt later?
What is some stuff finace wise I can do to start off right so I don't have to be in horrible amounts of debt later? Read the sidebar Save an emergency fund Choose an affordable school Minimize student loans (no more than 1x starting salary) Go to school with a purpose (have an exit strategy or career in mind, or at least a fall back plan if underwater basket weaving doesn't pan out) If money is a concern, do 2 years of community college.
You’re going to mess up. How you deal with it is more important. See if you can go to a career college for 2 years then transfer to a state college. You mention going for education degree. Just try to have a side income. Educators aren’t known for being wealthy.
personalfinance
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Tom000009
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Werewolfdad
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null
How Do I Ensure Parent Plus Loan Isn't Refinanced Into My Name?
Long story short, my parents took out a large parent plus loan during my college and used it for themselves. I have been repaying it for 4 years without making a dent. I am going to stop paying it, but am concerned they will fraudulently refinance it into my name from theirs. Is there anything I can do to stop that from happening? Thanks
You can put a freeze on your credit so that no one can open new credit in your name, which would be necessary in order to refinance the loan. If they do fraudulently refinance it into your name, you can dispute the account as fraudulent and file a police report for the identity theft and have it removed from your credit report and you will not be responsible for it.
Pretty unlikely. Not a lot of lenders will even do a refinance into only the student's name. Even then, they'd need more than just your SS. They'd need your ID, paystubs, etc.
personalfinance
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Building concrete homes on vacant land?
[ Came across this link for a simple concrete home that claims to have been built with a total cost of 109K. Why don't more people use concrete to build homes like this? Would it be practical to buy a cheap vacant lot and build this type of home in the right market, what kind of problems do you think you might run into?
That home would cost you $500k in the US. I do my own concrete, and concrete is a huge chore. There is no going back when you screw something up. Unless you are doing that yourself, you will never even come close to that price. This article has no information about what is included in that price as well. I would only believe it if I saw itemized receipts, and this guy's tax deductions. Otherwise, no way! edit, excavation alone would run $20-$40k, because you need some pretty stout footers to support that weight. Then form rentals, for that whole house... Maybe $1000-$2000/day, then concrete, which is very expensive these days out by me... Rebar, special tools, wire mesh, road mix base, various equipment rentals... That is ONLY the concrete here, then that lumber costs a pretty penny too. The windows I estimate to be like 10'x8'... Those are $4k commercial windows right there... edit2: we also don't know how it was poured, it could be one monolithic pour, it could be footers, then the walls on a 2nd trip, or it could be poured horizontally, and stood up... Who knows. The third option would be the best for a 2 story structure, and cheapest, but still not cheap, not even close to 110k.
Where we live, it costs the same to build a single story out of concrete as it does out of wood... Although that's mostly because in Florida, you have to engineer the sticks to survive a hurricane, so you may as well just build blocks. It gets trickier on the second story, which is why you tend to see large ranches in the tri-county area, and sticks on stone in North and Central florida. Having said all of that, and having grown up in the midwest where stick mcmansions are the norm, I have no idea why anyone chooses to own sticks over an in ground foundation. We had almost no issues whatsoever with our slab on grade CBS house, and have almost no issue with our slab on grade stick over CBS house. In the stick house we had a basement flood, settling of the wood (which led to cracking), and general noise issues. I'll never go back to stick houses after this.
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Just got fired from my job, no emergency fund, and around $3,000 in monthly expenses. Advice greatly appreciated.
Hi all, Just as the title says. I was working a dead-end job that I was unhappy with, and finally got the boot this past Wednesday (7/31). It was a sales job and I was pulling in approximately $3k-$4k per month. The reason I was fired was because I was "late", so I'm unsure if that qualifies me for unemployment where I live (New York State). I've never been fired before, so although I feel a degree of freedom (at the moment), the weight of my financial situation is definitely starting to take hold. Yearly salary: Approx. $52,000 Here is a breakdown of my current monthly expenses: Expenses: Rent: $621 Car (including insurance): $305 $175 car payment, $2,559 left to pay, 3% APR, pay off date: Oct. 2020 Student Loan: $159 $33,866.13 total, 3.4%-6.8% fixed rate on each loan Streaming/Subscriptions: $48 Phone Bill: $41 Food: $681 Medical (braces): $97 Entertainment: $163 Miscellaneous: $360 Gas: $163 Total: $2,792 Credit Card Minimum Monthly Payments: Citi: $143 Amex: $35 MC: 117 Barclay: $194 Total: $489 Monthly Grand Total: $3,281 Total Credit Card Balances (APR): Citi: $5,940 (17.74%) Amex: $2,766 (0% until February, then 23%) MC: $2,149 (15.99%) Barclay: $1,355 (0%) Total: $11,907 I plan on significantly cutting back on my food/miscellaneous expenses, as well as gas. I was also told I'd be receiving severance pay for the next 3 weeks (the company paid on the 15th and last day of every month). I should receive around $2,000 on the 15th, and I'm unsure how much I'll be receiving (if anything) on August 31st. I also plan on pulling from my 401k; I can pull from it after my employment status becomes "inactive", which occurs after 2 unpaid payment cycles. I have about $4k that I can pull from. What would you recommend I do to manage the debt I currently have, and avoid it ballooning as I try to gain a foothold on my employment status? I know I dug myself into a hole, but I'm hoping this situation will teach (or rather force me) to reevaluate my spending habits going forward.
Do not pull from your 401k. Cut every expense to the bare bone. You're spending almost a grand on food, gas, and "stuff", no more. Your full time job is job hunting now. You search for jobs 8+hrs a day. You've been living beyond your means for a long time now with all that debt and no efund. Hopefully this is a real eye opener for you.
Looking at your outgoings is one way to balance the books, the other is your incomings. Others have already mentioned Uber. How about your living situation, can you Airbnb all or part of your apartment?
personalfinance
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TSLA as a 30 year investment?
I’m 24 years old and am starting to contribute to my Roth IRA. I love Elon’s vision and think in 30 years, Tesla will run the world. Would it be ridiculous to invest 100% of my retirement savings into Tesla? I think in 30 years time, a $4,000 share price is possible.
TSLA is either going to a $1TN energy conglomerate or natta. There is no in-between. Do your own research and avoid the noise. EDIT: For clarification purposes, I'm so deep in TSLA that whenever it drops Mark Spiegel's friends & throwaway accounts message me and mock me about it.
I was out downtown the other night and had to watch the gymnastics Uber driver's had to do to pick people up. If you think autonomous vehicles are "close" you are kidding yourself.
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ValueInvestingIsDead
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My girlfriend missed one loan payment of seventy dollars and it dropped her credit score by 164 points.
So, as the title states, my girlfriend missed one small payment and it significantly impacted her credit score. I was recently unemployed for months and missed multiple payments and my credit score didn't drop as much as hers has from this, so it feels a bit extreme. Is there anything that she can do to either reverse or ease the impact? Any help would be appreciated.
She can send a letter to the credit company asking them to take the delinquency off the account as a courtesy since it was her “first offense” so to speak. This isn’t mandatory for them, but often they are willing to do it as a courtesy. As far as the size of the drop, if her credit score was decent before this then it makes sense that she’d experience a large drop. From the creditor perspective, the point of the score is to signal the borrower’s ability to repay future loans and if she suddenly starts missing payments that might be a sign of financial distress which would make her a poorer credit risk (which is what the drop is intended to signify).
It's possible that your girlfriend's credit file is much thinner than yours, and that that is why one bad action (which is what she did) is worse for her than for you. We have a wikipage on how to improve your credit score, that might help both of you.
personalfinance
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Just informed yesterday I will be receiving 100k to do with what I chose, help me do the right thing!
Ok so yesterday I received a phone call from my mother telling me the family trust was being dissolved and distributed to the children of the trustees(my mother and her brother and two other sisters) anyways there is apparently a lot of money in this trust which I have known about but was not available due to it being a generation trust which required basically my mom to die for me to see any of it ever. Sooo in the past year I have gotten married and had my first child, I am 31 along with my wife and my daughter is 5 months old, so in the past year my mother has been fighting with the trustee to release funds to be distributed to help with establishing my young family. Anyways the trust is in the process of being cashed out and distributed amongst the living heirs and my mother informs me she will be giving me 100k to do with what I will with hopes that I buy a home for my small family and use the money wisely. So that is my question what should I do with this money and how much should I spend on a house? Both me and my wife have decent jobs with a combined household income of about 95k a year and I personally have only about $300 in debt, seriously, she has a bit more but nothing crazy and we have the baby bill of about $1700. I want to put money in some sort of account for my daughter that can mature and gain interest and she can access when she is 21 and I am considering another one that she wouldn't know about at all and would be available when she is 30 also we want to take a honeymoon we never got so I want a few bucks for that but thats it really. Any help would be great I have never had this large sum of money put in front of me before and I want to make it work because I have watched people, like my father, squander large sums of cash due to ignorance and I will not let that happen. TL;DR- Just got informed I will be receiving 100k in the next 60-90 days to do with what I will, I am married 31 with a 5 month old and only about $300 in debt.
1) Pay off debts. 2) Max out retirement accounts for the year. 3) Max out 529 for your daughter for the year. 4) Put the rest in savings and don't look at it for a year. Preferably at a different bank than the one you regularly use so that it's out of mind. Seriously, do the first three and then forget it exists for a year. Come back to it then.
You might want to check on any tax implications of your mother giving you that money. It may be subject to a gift tax, which would be paid by her. If somehow you are receiving the money directly from the trust instead of a gift from her, that might not be the case. I'm not an expert but I think there is a $13K per year cap on gifts or else it is subject to gift tax.
personalfinance
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onehundredkthrowaway
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[deleted]
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auburnjohn
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Worth opening 0% Credit Card for furnishing new house?
I'm moving into a new house next month and will have a lot of money to spend on furnishing/painting/fixes. Nothing major but expecting to likely spend 3-6k in a couple months. I have money saved and make good money but I was thinking of opening a new Chase Freedom card with 0% down for 15 months. I would pay it off in 12 months and would use it to spread out the payment. What are the general thoughts on doing this? I have no doubts I would pay it and I am responsible with my money. Anyone suggest any other cards?
If you do this, wait until after you close on the house. With each house we have bought, every realtor has specifically said not to open any new accounts right before closing because that can cause issues with the closing.
I would prob just ask why you feel like a credit card is necessary if you have some saved, make good money and are responsible with it? Why not just save for it and buy it with cash...maybe even try to haggle a lower price for a cash deal?
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Preapproved for home loan, freaking the F out because I'm packing like I'm moving, but worried about the underwriting process.
So the short of it is, we're getting a loan, we've been pre-approved. Our loan is contingent on the sale of our mobile home. We're going to sell cheap to sell fast. We accepted a counter-offer today on a house we love. So tomorrow we have a home inspection and termite inspection. We're going to list our home for sale, pack like we're moving out because we have to sell it in like 45 days. I'm stressing out over the underwriting process though!! I've heard it's a nightmare. My husband's account went in the red last month, however mine has always had savings in it. I've had my loan officer go over the documents I sent as if he were underwriting it. He's being extremely conservative with our income. He says that's going to help us. My husband's credit score is shit but they're working with us on that, though the loan is still approved for what his credit score is. I need some support guys ha. I can't be excited yet because I keep thinking, we're going to pay 1200 out of pocket for all of these things, then what if we find out in two weeks - oh sorry, your bank account had a late fee, you're not getting the loan now. THEN WHAT. Sorry, I may just be venting? I'm packing and procrastinating now by turning to reddit.
The loan isn't approved until underwriting is done. Do not touch your credit cards. Do not take a loan for anything. Do not go buy furniture. Be prepared to write a letter about why your account went into the red or about any unusual deposits.
We are moving into a house that we closed two weeks ago. I know your feelings. I was scared until I got the final approval. You should be ok as long as they can find everything right away and address it.
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Madly_Maxie
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Closing Date Was Four Days Ago, Seller Is Still Not Out Of The House
UPDATE: Thank you all so much for comments and advice. You guys helped me feel much more confident in my decision. I spoke with my agent last night, and I let him know that we are walking away from the deal. He seemed pretty upset, and he pushed hard to try to convince me to pay the extra 14K, but I said no way, we're done with this mess. I considered asking him to "take a $7000 haircut on his commision" and I would also provide 7K, but I decided against that lol. I know there was lots of confusion in the comments about the earnest money, and I apologize for not explaining that better. To clarify, yes, the $2500 of earnest money is in escrow, and we will be getting that back without any issues. Our contract also specified that the seller will be required to match the $2500 if he backs out of the deal. We should be getting $5000 back total, and the seller owes us $2500 of that. My agent informed me that the seller is unable to pay that amount in a single payment, but that they can pay it to us in smaller payments over time. Sounds like they want to avoid court if possible, which I would prefer as well. Again, thanks everyone for your help. My wife and I were going through all of the comments last night, and you guys really made our horrible day MUCH more bearable. You guys are awesome. I'm sure we will be able to find an even better home. We have learned so much throughout this whole process, and we definitely won't be making the same mistakes again. ORIGINAL POST: My wife and I have been in the process of buying our first home for the past month and a half. Everything appeared to have been going smoothly, but then closing day came, and it became apparent that there were some serious issues with the sellers. I just found out today that they are upside down on the home, and they owe $14,000 more than the amount agreed to in the contract. My realtor told me that I can either pay the extra 14 grand, or back out. I would hate to back out at this point, because we have invested so many hours in this whole process... We have enough in savings to pay the extra 14 grand, but we really don't want to pay it. What are my options at this point? We put down $2,500 in earnest money, and the contract states that the seller would pay us that amount if he backed out, however, he does not have that kind of money to pay us. What would you guys do in this situation? Do I need to lawyer up?
If the sellers are unable to deliver a clear title they misrepresented the sale, and you should be getting back your earnest money, inspection fee, and appraisal, and any other out of pocket expenses you have. Or the sellers can come up with 14 grand.
What’s the price of the home and what percentage of it is $14k? That should makes a difference in your decision. I wouldn’t recommend giving up a half million dollar home over $14k if you really like the home and can afford the $14k, but I’d tell you to cut your losses on a $100k home even if it was your dream home. The seller misrepresented the sale. They’re in the wrong. However it would take a lawsuit for you to recover your money. If you’re ready to pursue that, talk to a lawyer. Bear in mind that seller bankruptcy is a real possibility and the lawsuit may not recover much money, if anything, so make sure your lawyer sets realistic expectations. Your title company and the seller’s agent should have known that the agreed to price would not satisfy the mortgage. Speak to a lawyer. It would be harder to win a suit against the title company and against the sellers agent (their broker, actually), but these lawsuits are more likely to make you whole. Again, make sure your lawyer explains if these are even options based on the details you have and if so, sets realistic expectations. Good luck OP. I’m sorry you’re going through this.
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I'm 22, in debt, and stressed. Any help would be much appreciated!
Hey PF, At the age of 19, I started living on my own. I had just moved out of my parents house and they weren't the best when it came to bills. I don't recall one moment in my childhood where bills were discussed and how/when to pay them, how to budget, etc.. I learned some of these things from a manager at an old job but it was very limited..meaning I didn't learn much. Anyways, I moved to Texas with my girlfriend, in a to attempt to get better jobs and continue school. I was able to get better jobs, therefore I decided on getting a 300 dollar Credit card and felt like I was the shit! After some life problems, moving and getting a couple new roommates (This is where I started to go in Debt) I was hopeless. With all of these life changes and stress, I paid my big bills but left some other bills (Such as my credit card) out to dry. Since then, I have left those roommates and live with my girlfriend of nearly 4 years. Since then, I have gotten a better job and currently make 13 dollars an hour and I get paid bi weekly. I typically use one paycheck for rent and one paycheck for most of the other bills, not to mention food,. Bills listed below. BILLS Rent - 520 Car loan Payment – 175.00 Electric - 80 Car Insurance - 115 Phone Bill - 120 Spotify - 5 Bed Payment – 38.80 – amount past due 180.00 Credit Card –closed- amount due 558 Gas - 40 I came from a poor family and was never taught the basics. That was the past, today is now and I can only man up to my debts. At the end of the day, I made some terrible decisions about not paying bills and still do to this day. Which is why I'm posting on here. I really want to be self taught in the correct way of paying bills and budgeting. I want to be bill - stress free! (If there is such a thing) If anyone has any advice on what I should do, please comment. Thank you so much. Edit 1 Thank you guys so much for all the love. Hell, even the hate. ALL of it will fuel me to get this small debt taking care of. My next edit will be a completed budget with all of the expenses some of you have asked about - Stay tuned!
I really want to be self taught in the correct way of paying bills and budgeting. First thing to do is to make a real, full budget. That will mean it has your monthly take home pay, all of your debts listed out with monthly payment due, interest rates, and total amount owed, as well as a listing of every single expense you have. Every dollar you earn is accounted for in your budget. No exceptions. Now that you have a budget, you can compare it to what you actually spend right now. Go through your last 3 months of expenses if you have been solely using that credit card and a debit card. Put every single transaction into one of your budget categories. Don't skip a single one! This will show you what you are actually spending, which, for most people, is vastly different than what they think they spend. It is extremely helpful in determining blind spots where you spend much more than you should. If you use cash normally or often, start tracking your spending with a notebook you bring around with you or an app on your phone. Again, every single time you spend money you will have to record it. This getting of actual spending data is crucial to taking control of your personal finances. Once you have an actual full budget, go ahead and post it and we can give better advice. And once you have done the tracking exercise you will be able to better arrange your budget categories to real life and to help curb any spending you don't actually want to make.
Your phone bill is far to high. For what you make and with paying your more important bills and also buying groceries I assume, you need to wise up and get a prepaid for 35 a month. You won't have the newest and best phone but you don't need that anyway.
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Can an HSA + 401k + (misc) be used to eliminate income to hide in the 15% tax bracket and, then, eliminate capital gains up to top of the 15% tax bracket?
My CPA just pitched something that appears correct but leaves me feeling slightly uneasy. Stats: I have a relatively high net worth and came out of a high paying job early this year. At this exact moment though, I have earned only ~30k this year in wages. I will have wages of an additional $10-20k this year through some light consulting work through a corp I control. Wife will have virtually no income this year but does assist me with the corp and could take some salary instead of me. I also have ~$50k of long term capital gains that will be realized this year. The problem: Wages this year: $50k LT Capital Gains: $50k If I understand the rules correctly, under this income amount, given that I am married, I would owe 15% capital gains tax on the $50k. My CPA tells me that if I contribute $6,550 to my HSA and $17.5k to my business' 401k in my name and $8k in my wife's name (who is technically an employee and can take whatever salary equal to her contribution), we get far enough into the 15% bracket to eliminate our capital gains tax. Is this accurate?
My CPA tells me that if I contribute $6,550 to my HSA and $17.5k to my business' 401k in my name and $8k in my wife's name (who is technically an employee and can take whatever salary equal to her contribution), we get far enough into the 15% bracket to eliminate our capital gains tax. Is this accurate? Yes, capital gains up to the amount it would take to fill the 15% tax bracket would be taxed at the very favorable rate of 0%.
Just to highlight this, since I don't see it elsewhere in the comments: it's only because they are long-term capital gains that you get this benefit. This would not help for short-term capital gains.
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My Canadian employer overpaid me over the course of two years.
My employer sent me a letter in 2015 stating that they've overpaid me eight thousand dollars over the course of two years, a slight overpayment on each paycheck. I honestly never noticed, it was my first ever job so I was just happy to be getting paid. I ended up quitting in 2015 because of school. Since 2015 to 2016 me and my employer had a few letters sent back and forth to each other. Though they always ignored whatever I said and just sent the same response back every time more or less. I was the last person to send them a letter, they never responded to my last letter which I sent in 2016. I thought maybe they agreed to my terms of settlement for something that was never my fault. Now at the end of 2017 I got a letter from a collections agency saying that I owe that money. I thought me and my employer were still in dispute over the issue, they just ignored my last letter and sent me straight to collections. What are my options now?
What "terms of settlement" were you proposing? It sounds like you acknowledge that you were overpaid, so there was really nothing to negotiate between you and your employer, except a repayment plan. You are obligated to repay the money, even if the overpayment was their fault.
If the overpayment is less than 10%, the company should just write it off. Why should the employee suffer just because you hired a terrible accountant? Anything above 10%, yeah sure. It also seems like the employee should have noticed that oversight as well.
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Company suspended 401K match until further notice. Is it worth it to continue contributing?
Good morning everyone. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, my company has decided to suspend employer match of 401K. My question is: Is it still worth contributing my usual 8% to this while the stock market continues to be volatile? I have student loans, a car loan, and a mortgage that 8% could be put towards.
If the question is 'Should I keep saving for retirement?' then the answer is, assuming that you have an adequate emergency fund, yes. If the question is 'I'm going to keep setting money aside for retirement. Should I put it in an IRA for my company's 401k (they don't match)?' then you need to compare the choices that you have in the 401k and the fees/expenses to what you could do with an IRA at Vanguard / Fidelity / Schwab. Also, keep in mind that just putting money in an IRA may not enough to fund your retirement. You may need to either put money in the 401k to get to an adequate level of savings or, if the choices or costs make it poor, have an after-tax brokerage account where you save for retirement.
Depends on the interest rates on your other debt Might invest in a Roth IRA in the meantime instead. The fees are usually elss than a work sponsored 401k, but YMMV
personalfinance
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What sectors are you bullish on and why?
I'll start! To provide context to my investment strategy, it is a mix of about 50% extremely defensive long-term income generating stocks and 50% high risk, high reward. My portfolio is structured based on a TOP DOWN approach and I prefer targeting specific sectors rather than individual firms. That being said, here are the sectors I'm bullish on and why. * extremely defensive income generating. Canadian banks and financials: Canadian banks have healthy balance sheets and provide 4-5% yield. Canada's top 5 banks have been around forever, won't be closing anytime soon and have a track record increasing dividends. Utilities: Companies that generate electricity and other forms of power sound like a safe bet. I also found a number of utilities stock that offer a 3-4% yield have a record of being consistent. REITs: There are many REITs with high yields which accelerates income generation. A lot of them have 5-8% dividend yield. My favorite is AX.UN on the TSX! Telecoms: Not sure if this is considered defensive but companies like AT&T, TELUS, BCE are looking attractive with a 4-5% dividend yield. * high risk, high reward. Technology: Although technology flash crashed Friday and maybe running out of steam, I'm a big fan of technology and think that it's only going to get more advanced. Also bullish on Chinese internet business. KWEB is an ETF that's invests in Chinese tech giants which is also one of my favorites. Read up on how Chinese internet is secluded and developed differently from the western world. Interesting. Marijuana sector: High risk, high reward! MJ stocks are volatile and they are in a a sector that i believe hasn't reached its full potential yet. What about YOU? What sectors are you bullish on? Any response is appreciated. Thank you for your advice.
It is normally useful to post negatives to your choices as well. If there is a bull case it should overshadow the risks correct (or bear case)? It also seems as if one of your major thesis is that they won't go away or bankrupt. This is dangerous thinking and a starting point at best. Canadian banks- Possible housing bubble, highly regulated, canadian's are actually starting to become burdened by debt which should limit loan growth, price to book indicates they are not as cheap as you think they are. Utilities- There is an issue with people already using these as a long term bond proxy. Beyond that they are deeply tied to interest rates. Reits- Beyond the Interest rate risk, and the major issues retail is having there is a case to be made that saying buy reits is useless information. It is a complex space where many are so completely different it is amazing. Compare O, BAM, NLY, and TWO. Telecoms- Not sure why you mention these but for the yield. The yield is the only growth you can realistically expect from them. Look at the prices 10 years ago vs today. (This is not to say you should not have any of these areas, they belong in a well diversified portfolio. I am not sure any of the cons are outweighed by the pros).
Hot Take Alert: Omnichannel retail. Yup. The retail rat race is moving toward sustainable DTC that more or less powers brick-and-mortar... or vice-versa I guess, but that seems a little further out.
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Why don't all seller's ask for counteroffers?
First time buyer here in California who just lost out, and my question is, "Why don't all seller's ask for counteroffers?" It seems like there's very little risk, only potential gain, to ask your agent to get on the phone and see if people can do better. Scenario: A house listed for $2.45M. Five offers came in, all above ask, two below $2.75M, and the rest came in above $2.75M, and within $100k of each other. All are competitive in that all contingencies are waved, and despite financing, a quick close. The seller's agent didn't give anyone a call other than the winning bid. Why wouldn't a seller ask for counteroffers at that point to try and get more $$$ for their client? What am I missing here?
Because then every deal becomes an auction. People would bid unrealistically low to get a seat at the table and hope to scoop up a good deal (what if there are no other credible offers?). As it stands, if you really want a house you need to make a strong offer right away. If you want the seller to come back to you if they have a better offer, put in an escalation clause, but many realtors advise against that.
First thought that comes to mind is that it can sell way more than the appraised value with this auction like method. Once the appraisal comes in low, it’s a waste of time and money.
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Life insurance policy for parents? Advise needed.
My 3 sisters and I are interested in setting up a life insurance policy for our parents. We will use the money to pay off any debit from our parent(s) and use the rest as an education and small business opportunity fund for our children. Parents are both 50+ Dad has some health issues: cancer scare but he beat it. He has diabetes along with high blood pressure. I belief a term life policy for 20 years would be ok. I am unsure of what policy amount to choose: 500k? Also unsure how much this would run. Im guessing a lot considering the age and health of my Dad although he is very active. Budget: $200 a month between us 4 would give use $50 a month is payments which is manageable for all of us. I belief it would be easier for us to pay annually or monthly automatically drawn from each family members bank accounts to ensure we never miss a payment. I am unsure what "structure" would be best for our goals: LLC, Trust, corp or holding company? You advise on how to set this up would be greatly appreciated.
I wouldn't. Insurance companies have actuaries who make sure that--on average--people like your parents will pay more into the system (inflation adjusted) than they get out. You all are far more likely to be better off investing the premiums.
I´m not sure how you expect this to play out, but I´m thinking the insurance companies will calculate this so they dont loose money on it. They are high risk insurers and (he at least) will probably not be eligible for a payout if he dies from anything related to cancer, diabetes and/or high blood pressure. This pretty much covers any way that he can die, short of dying in a accident/being murdered. Women on the other hand has a higher estimated life expectancy and will probaly live for longer. Like others have said you will probably be better off just saving up the money.
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Does this smell fishy?
We're interested in a house that's bank-owned and has been on the market since October 2014. It needs a lot of work and we have a price in our heads that we won't go over. Listed at $230,000 in October Dropped to $218,000 in December Dropped to $200,000 in January Dropped to $185,000 in February Our agent has been in contact with the listing agent's assistant and has told her that we have interest. The agent's assistant said that someone made an offer a couple months ago "that was close to the asking price" and the bank rejected the offer. The assistant told our agent that an offer at $170,000 would even be too low. We decided we'd keep watching it since we're expecting it to drop in price any day now. They dropped the price within the first week of the past three months. Our number is $150,000 because we estimate that it needs about $50,000 in repairs and updates. We're not emotionally invested in it and we're in no hurry. We're fully prepared to walk away. So today the agent's assistant calls our agent and says that they have a verbal offer accepted. She said she couldn't say how much, but that it was close to the asking price. This smells fishy to me. It feels like they're trying to get us to submit an offer based on an emotional attachment we might have to the house and the thought of losing it. We're obviously not going to make an offer because it's not practical for us at that price. But I'm just wondering if anyone thinks this verbal offer seems convenient and if listing agents will do things like this to provoke an impulse offer by initiating a fake bidding war. Thank you!
You should submit an offer at a number that you feel comfortable with. If that number happens to be 150K, so be it. You won't know until you ask and if you don't get it, at least you tried.
Submit your offer at the price you are comfortable with. If your agent is not willing to submit a "low ball" offer then find another agent. I purchased a bank owned property last year for 30% of the original list price. I made 10 offers and counter offers over a 4 month period. When the bank was motivated to sell I was contacted via the listing agent that the price was about to be dropped to within $5K of my offer. I ended up getting the property under contract the same day as the price dropped.
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Having a mini crisis with potential credit score damage
Hi guys, Would love some advice or reassurance. I'm planning on applying for a mortgage in the next month and with all the stress I managed to miss a payment due date by two days with Citi. I paid a couple days before "due date" last month and made a couple more payments before statement close date. So I had about $50 in my "last statement balance." Racked up a couple more hundred dollars on my credit card over this past month. Normally not an issue but I lost track of time and just realized I missed a payment by two days. The mobile app gave me a "are you aware you're paying past the due date" notification. I'm heartbroken. Did I just fuck myself over with a late payment on my credit report? Edit: I reached out to customer service and he said not to worry! He said I could be hit by a late payment fee (and I don't particularly care about that compared to my score). All good now. Thanks everyone for keeping my sane until I got to call.
If you make a payment 2 days late it will not reflect on your credit report. You need to have an over 30 day late payment for it to show with the bureaus. However, when Citi does it's periodic reviews on your account, ie. being eligible for a CLI, you may not get it. You're fine. If you got a late payment penalty usually 30-40$ and its your first offense call them and politely ask them to take the late charge off because it is your first time and it will not happen again. More often than not they'll take the charge off Your credit score will absolutely not be affected
So not really a big deal... But also, why do you not have all your credit cards set to recieve automatic minimum payments (or full payments) so this isnt even possible?
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Young people, question your parents financial guidance
For some of us our parents can be a strong influence in our lives. A recent convo allowed me to realize just how misguided I was financially and the conflict within it created. Question their financial advice every step of the way. Do your best to not let a desire to please them cause you to make poor decisions. Attending the wrong college, taking on a major they prefer, spending habits, credit cards it goes on and on. Early into my professional career my father suggested I use a bonus to buy a boat. I wanted one, the idea of having one to take him out when he visited, connect when I needed repair advice was tempting. Instead that money was used as a down payment for a rental property. Last night we were talking and I could see more clearly the conflicts their advice would create within when I was growing up. I told him my plans to sell a car I barely use. It’s worth $17k and it’s a depreciating asset. To him it’s a future classic that’s sure to go up in value. I felt fortunate to see this now, but as a young adult this would have created a large internal conflict. The day I realized my parents gave poor financial advice stung a little, it sucked seeing my siblings and I making bad decisions from their guidance. It was also liberating as I knew I had to be aware, educate myself and seek advice elsewhere. Their intentions were good, but not helpful. I hope this can be helpful, the guilt I’d feel when not following their advice was very hard for me at first. Now I see their hearts in the right place, but I must educate myself and be true to my plan.
This is a timely topic for me. Just yesterday my family was discussing with my niece how her income is about to be higher than pretty much anyone in the family, and right out of college. She graduated from a decent field and will be making close to six figures right out of the gate after working a $15hr job through college and paying for everything out of pocket (no student loans, hell yeah!). My sister (her mother) told her to follow Dave Ramsey. That was the extent of her financial "education." I felt the need to nod and listen and then chim in that while Ramsey has some solid advice about living small and saving, that she still needed to learn about managing a credit score because credit should not be something to be afraid of. It should work for you, and a zero score like Ramsey preaches will work against you more than not. I gave her a five minute quick overview of how to establish credit now and let it grow, but definitely tried to impress on her that if she doesn't feel she has the self control at this point to pay in full on credit cards and not blow through her new-found income, then to absolutely hold off a little while before starting the process. I feel like Dave Ramsey is the "abstinence only education" of personal finance. Very few young adults fresh out of college have the self control to not apply/use ANY credit so they still need a solid ground work of financial education to fall back on.
this is good I too question have to fact check my parents' advice, especially my dad's everyone told me to go to him for tax advice, bc he was in the industry and almost every answer he said was idk and go see a cpa stunned at how little he knew or didn't care
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Im in utah, being evicted at 18; suggestions?
Im being evicted for my religious beliefs, fyi. No drugs, nothing bad. .I have about 7000 cash, dont plan on working, and am moving out late december. Rent will be 300 max with utilities. I need a car, I can get one for around 2K, I really need it for snowboarding mostly. I am a registered pharmacy tech, and when I start working in may for the summer, I will be making $15/hr. I have full tuition and about 2.5 years left of college before dental school. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Parents will be paying health insurance still.
You're being evicted, no place to live, no car, no steady job for the next 7 months -- and you're worried about snowboarding???? Lesson 1 about growing up is about to begin.
I would reconcile with your parents and go talk to your bishop. Even if you don't believe it, having a relationship with your family is worth more. Even if it means sitting at church for 3 hours a week.
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Moving without job offer
I'm miserable in my current job and I've been applying/phone interviewing for the past few months. I've only been out of uni 3 years, and have 3 years of experience at this job in a business analyst/project management job. One thing I've realized is that companies aren't really in the business of relocating people that don't have so much experience. I'm in the middle of Alabama and want to move to Atlanta and "move first, apply like mad when i get there" I have 15k in the bank and have found a nice apartment that would be ~$900 a month. I'm not a spender at all but do you personalfinancers think this is a feasible move? TLDR; Want to quit job and move, afraid of time it will take to find something else because of limited experience
After reading this sub and hearing from friends that have done this, it can be a terrible decision. There is substantial risk. This is how someone goes from a good place financially to a very bad place. Don't do it. Get a job first, then move. Why risk it? Why go without pay and chip away at your hard earned savings? The stress of your current job does not compare to the stress of being unemployed.
I am going to do this in August, moving from Boise to Tampa. I have been applying to jobs for the last two months and I do not hear back on anything. I spoke with a recruiter in the area and he told me most companies in the area only interview/hire locally, it's even hard for people from other areas of Florida to land interviews. So I'm just saving up what I can, packing what fits in my car, and hitting the road. It sounds like we may have similar experience levels in our fields, and as far as I can tell this is just how it is. Yes, if you have a highly demanded skillset I guess you can line up a job first - it's definitely ideal - but I've lost confidence that it's realistic. It's just me though, I'm 30 and single and financially sound, and I am not above splitting an apartment with someone and working in a call center or delivering pizzas while I look for work. Your mileage may vary. It's a risk. But I feel like the bigger risk is staying where I am at a job where I've plateaued, when I could open new doors elsewhere and as a bonus live closer to friends and family.
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My bank has apparently been charging me an "upkeep fee" of 12 bucks a month and I want to transfer to a place that won't. How do I do this? I have no idea.
Hello guys. I'm pretty young if you couldn't tell, so I don't have a ton of experience with this stuff. My bank has apparently been charging me 12 bucks a month to maintain my checkings account, which I'm not happy about because I'm a student. I would like to close my account with this bank, and move it over to a credit union. However I have only a vague idea of how to do this My parents are busy with some of their own problems, so I thought I'd ask here first.
Banker here. It is easy to switch bank accounts. One thing no one has said is to MAKE SURE if you have ANY bills or direct deposits coming in to update them because they will try to pull/deposit from your closed account resulting in fees. This is the most important and usually the reason most people are hesitant to switch banks. First, go to the credit union (usually the way to go), open an account with the minimum deposit amount. Order your debit card & checks if you use them. Then, along with what other people have said, withdraw money from your other bank via cash or cashiers check made out to you and deposit it into your new account.
I work in a credit union and this is a scenario we've often been on one end of. Moving banks can be easy but sometimes complicated if you have preauthorized transfers that move in an out of your account at Bloodsuckers Mutual. The first thing you'll need to do is open an account at a location of your choosing. Risking shameless self promotion, I recommend a credit union. The next step will be to reissue your route, transit, and account information to employers and bill payees you may have preauthorized transfers for. After you can be sure these stop charging the old account and begin charging the new one it's time to close the old account. When you go to close the old account there are a couple things you should check for at the old bank including patronage (if they offer such a program) or delinquent fees. They will probably try to ask you to do the closure with an advisor so that they can attempt some form of service recovery. When they close the account ask for a cashiers cheque for the balance made payable to yourself. Deposit it into your new account. Done!
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Renters insurance--what coverage to get
Hi /r/personalfinance! So I'm looking to get my first renters insurance and trying to understand what coverage I need. It seems like each company offers different services. I don't know the technical terms, but so far, my list contains: -damage to my stuff (minimum amount, I added it up and I don't have that much stuff) -liability (is 100,000 enough? I live in a building with about 20-25 apartments) -medical (is 1000 enough?) I don't need hotel insurance as I have where to stay if my apartment building were to burn down tomorrow. What other coverage should is important to have? And is medical 100% necessary?
Make sure you set your deductible low enough that you can afford it if something happens AND that you aren't spendingmkre to reach the deductible than it would cost to actually replace items. (AKA, don't count on the apartments to cover your deductible.)
Renters insurance usually comes as a package so you don't get to choose liability amount or hotel coverage. Get the cheapest option that fits everything they ask on the phone. Mine they asked value of my stuff and a bunch of questions about the building. I had 2 options, both had everything the same except one did "new replacement" where anything lost gets covered at the price of brand new comparable items. They would also cover data recovery.
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What items do you routinely buy online for cheaper that most others buy in local stores?
Hey guys, just curious if you buy any routine items like groceries, OTC drugs, or supplies online for much cheaper than one would normally buy in a store. Looking for some new ideas of ways to save on things that I normally buy locally.
Pretty much everything is cheaper online. The only reason I go to real stores any more is a matter of convienance, or because I just want to get out of my house. I bought amazon prime which gives me free two day shipping on most products on their site. It has definitely paid for itself. It's like $80/year I think.
Sally Hansen Salon Nails. The boxes of one set are $10 in stores; I buy them on Ebay by the box or in bulk and pay about $2 including shipping. A luxury, yeah, but I feel confident and more successful when my nails look nice.
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How to not go broke having a baby in a high COL area (US)
I'm a regular poster/responder here but now dealing with my own financial worries. We have a baby on the way! We've wanted this for a while so it's wonderful news, but I'm already reeling over the impact to our financial situation. Especially given the high COL - the best and most affordable daycare I can find is $325 for infants (I'm not going with some shady unlicensed daycare, and family doesn't live close enough to help). My husband and I can both contribute to dependent care FSAs so that'll offset a little bit of the burden. My big concerns other than that are the STUFF. I plan to breastfeed (although I know it might not work out). I'm stockpiling diapers and wipes when they're on sale. I have a whole nursery of gently used baby furniture we bought from the previous owner of our house. But for all the rest: What can I reasonably buy used? What should I buy new? What can I skip buying altogether? As a bonus - if anyone has a list of the absolute essentials for a new baby, I'm interested! Finally - maternity clothes. Any ideas for saving on those? My work will be pretty flexible with letting me get away with more casual clothes, and I just bought some simple stuff from Old Navy. I'm a bigger girl (Size 18) so my options are a bit more limited. Thanks!
You can buy basically everything used except a carseat. And that's just out of safety. Your kid isn't going to give a shit if there's a stain on their cloths or if they're designer brands. They don't need every new toy under the sun and half the time they're more interested in the box. Once you start on food, you don't need to buy baby food. Just put whatever you eat in a blender.
Don't stockpile diapers and wipes---a friend of mine did and her child was allergic to many brands. I bought my maternity clothes from Old Navy and Motherhood Maternity sales--you may find some at thrift stores also. Consider buying a convertible crib---maybe more expensive now, but will save future money.
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Happy married men and women of this subreddit, what are the things I need to do before marriage (like in career, money, savings etc), so that my life becomes good after marriage?
I am planning to get married after 2 years. So in the mean time I would like to plan for future like saving money for wedding, saving enough money for atleast 2 years, getting a house, having a reliable health insurance plan etc. Many married couples have a lot of problems - esp. with money. I do not want to be among them. So, any advice for people like me? EDIT: Thanks for all your replies. Honestly, I was expecting a lot more financial advice than relationship advice. But, most married men and women say that 'communicating properly' is more important for a good marriage than saving for future. I've never had this insight, so I'll just go with what experienced people say.
Marriage happiness isn't about money. It's about communication, and being with the right person. Being on the same page financially helps though. It reduces stress, if you have the same financial goals. It doesn't matter if you own a house or not, as long as both of you agree with the decision to own the house. If you are both happy in a small apartment, it works. Be aware that your goals will change after marriage, and you will have to communicate with your partner about those new goals. Whether it is the car, or the planned vacation, or kids, or whatever. The ever famous, can we afford this vs we'll make it work... and don't just assume all things are possible with love. Be able to use hard math and make hard decisions like... no we can't afford child number 3, no matter how we swing the math.
Marry someone with the same outlook on finances and financial goals as yourself. That is the number one key. You should be able to trust your spouse with finances and work together towards common goals.
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Ally as main bank account..bad idea or no?
Hey I haven't had a bank account for a few years and I'm looking into opening one. I have a check made out to me (a couple grand) and I want to open an Ally free checking account. Is it fine to create an Ally account, deposit the check and then use that as my main checking account? (with direct deposit from my new job). I know that a drawback to Ally is that you can't deposit cash but that isn't really necessary for me. Is Ally as respectable,reliable and safe as normal banks such as PNC or Wells Fargo? Also for anyone using Ally as a checking account, is there an option to have them decline any purchase that would overdraw the account? Thanks
Many people here use ally there's nothing wrong with using them as your primary Bank especially if you're comfortable with online and direct deposits. In regards to the overdraft servicing I believe following some regulatory they are required to give you that option though you may need to ask about it specifically
The only reason i dont use Ally is because im too lazy to leave Discover. But if you're looking to get back into it yes 100% do Ally and not WF,BoA or Chase.
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I am a college student who recently got a $2000 ambulance bill. How long do I have to pay it?
Several months ago I got into a car accident and took an ambulance to the hospital. Just this month I got a $2000 bill from the ambulance service, but it has no due date on it. I won't be able to round up enough money for another two months. How do I go about paying this without destroying my credit? Can I pay it down in increments or do I have 30days to pay it before it goes to collection? I am a college student who is fairly new to dealing with bills and such. Thanks!:)
Talk to the company. They will probably work out a deal with you. You may want to try negotiating the amount as well. Accounts generally go to collections in more like 6 months, but that could be from the time of service, so talk to them today.
I used to work for a consulting company that dealt with hospital billing. We were dealing with insurance companies but I learned a ton about the patient side as well. Most hospitals/medical companies offer something called a "prompt-pay" discount. Basically they will give you a steep discount (50%+) if you can pay immediately. I would start out by saying you're a poor college student all you can afford to pay is $200 (or some other number) and negotiate from there. By setting the first offer you get to anchor the discussion.
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I'm from the Netherlands but I have a USA passport. I want to move to to the Rust Belt of the USA for good wages in IT and low cost of living. Good idea?
Hey everybody, I'm currently a system admin working in the Netherlands. I make after taxes about 1500 Euro a month. I found out since I was born in the USA while my dad was on business I'm an American citizen. I am interested in Buffalo, Cleveland, Rochester and Pittsburgh. I have visited all of them and loved it. (I know I'm weird) I am especially interested in Cleveland as I have visited there many times and liked it. I also have a job offer for 65k USD which is below the median wage for the position but much more than I make now. My goal is to retire by 55. Can moving to the rust belt with the low cost of living help me achieve this? Anybody living there now that can help me fill in.
Moving from the Netherlands to the Rust belt can be a bit of a culture shock. Are you prepared for that? And, before leaving, make sure you have a good understanding of the cost of some things that are "free" or low cost in Europe (think child care, preschool and university if you ever have children and health insurance).
There are a lot of hidden costs for a European that we aren't always aware of until we get here. Health care is the biggest one ( $900 a month for me and wife ). Cellphone coverage and internet is piss poor and expensive. But you also pay for water, sewage, garbage collection and such utilities that I never paid in Europe and electricity is far more than I was used to. Housing is cheap and you pay less taxes so just run calculations on if you make less after all expenses. I'm making twice as much here but have tripled expenses.
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Relocating from the U.S. to Germany for 2 years. Looking for advice on banking in Germany and transferring money back to my U.S. accounts.
I will be relocating to Germany before the end of the year. I currently have a credit union bank account in the U.S. that I use for all my banking. I must maintain this account to pay taxes, SS, and address any other U.S. based issues. I am looking for advice on which bank to use in Germany. I will also need to transfer money between my U.S. accounts and my account in Germany. I've never done this before and I would appreciate any input on how to do this correctly. Thanks!
Deutsche Bank and Bank of America are partners. Set up A BofA account and you can take out Euros from Deut. Bank at exactly the exchange rate with no ATM Fees. Yeah Deut bank might have a monthly fee but there interaction with BofA is streamlined...
Fuck banks use P2P. Banks need to get right and thankfully recent advancements in FinTech are finally allowing us to work outside the asset monopolies they've maintained and abused for years.
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