The
Four Mandatory Buckets Of Personal Finance
By: Francis Kier
I have
already written about the financial necessity of saving a portion
of any income payment that you receive. This means that a percentage
of every single source of income is set aside, marked, or tracked
as money that you cannot spend.
This
task isn’t optional if you want to have some basic financial
stability or start growing some serious wealth. Saving is the first
step and it is the easiest, simplest, but the most emotionally difficult
step. I know that starting to save money is emotionally painful because
spending money is easy and pleasurable, while saving money feels difficult
and challenging. But like any behavior, it becomes easier and natural
the more you do it.
As a review, the
billionaire John Templeton started out working during the Great Depression
but he saved 50% of his income. This guy was serious! OK, you may
have a lot of fixed expenses that you just can’t cancel immediately,
but at least enroll in financial nursery school by saving 1% from
all the income that you receive. Or start with only $3 a month and
then ratchet up your savings rate continually until you are at least
over 10%; or if you are ambitious get it over 30%. (If you are trying
to find the loophole, this savings is your after-tax income that you
can spend – don’t count your 401K or medical savings accounts
or any other qualified money that you don’t have full/immediate
access to spending).
The remainder
of this article is about what to do with that savings. Economics is
the study of allocating scarce resources. Personal economics are similar,
but I think that it is better described as: The allocation of your
income that you can’t spend. If you don’t spend this money,
and maybe have it setting aside in savings account, what do you do
with it? Do you pay down on a credit card, save it for a car, donate
it to a worthy cause, or purchase a bank certificate of deposit? How
do you go about deciding?
Well, I have given
this some thought and have reached a few conclusions. It is my view
that your monthly savings needs to be divided among four mandatory
categories. By this, I mean that among the zillions of things you
can do with savings, it is my view that four of them are absolutely
mandatory. For example, if you earn a paycheck (and after all of the
taxing authorities take their share) of $1,000 that you can deposit
into your checking account and you’ve chosen a personal savings
percentage rate of 8%, then you move $80 ($1,000 X .08) into a separate
savings account. Now, you will take this $80 and divide it up into
at least the four mandatory categories I am going to discuss, along
with any other categories that you value. In this way you’ll
have the whole $80 assigned to specific financial duties to meet your
financial goals.
Here are the four
categories in priority order:
1. The Vault –
this is your wealth account. Money gets deposited into this account
and it never leaves, like a one-way valve. The Vault is invested and
the principal is never spent. It will grow into the largest part of
your net worth, generating nearly all of your investment income. If
you don’t start creating wealth penny-by-penny, you’ll
never have any.
2. Soft Savings
– a delayed spending account. This money is marked for things
that you want to buy, but can’t afford to purchase with normal
pocket money. For example, a house, car, boat, vacation, college fund
for kids, planned medical care, clothing, jewelry, etc. But this also
includes maintenance to your home, like a roof, new appliances, new
siding, paint, landscaping, remodeling, etc.
3. Paydown Debt
Balances – making extra principal payments on your credit cards,
car loans, and your mortgage. By chipping away at these expenses you
will eventually eliminate them all, and then have more money available
for other categories. Personal debt is the opposite of financial freedom
and dramatically makes it more difficult to reach your financial goals.
If you doubt this, look at the interest charges you pay each month
and imagine if that money had been invested instead.
4. Financial
Education – books, magazines, newsletters, seminars, software,
investment memberships. Also, hiring professional financial advisors,
tax accountants, estate attorneys, etc. (Avoid a free advice buddy,
your cousin, or a friend’s neighbor – buy the best, most
expensive professional advice you can afford).
This might be a good time to ask you if you would like to have
over 52 e-books ranging from real estate to share trading sent
to you for free. And get notified of great articles when they
are posted.
Yes??
Subsciber
below it's that simple
P.S I won't share or sell your details |
As I
mentioned before, you can put your savings into places that are only
limited by your creativity. But it is my view that these four areas
are so important that they need to be continually fed money in a systematic
manner.
If you
are missing the first account, The Vault, you’ll never have
the money to start investing so you’ll never receive any investment
income. This is pretty much the goal of all personal finance, to help
you generate the most investment income. That is why this is the most
important of the four categories, to get your money earning money
so that you don’t have to. (I do not consider any retirement
accounts or qualified accounts to be Vault money. This is because
you do not have direct control to invest the money or receive any
investment income until the government decides that you can).
If you
are missing the second account, Soft Savings, you either can’t
buy what you want, or you have to increase your personal debt. This
is moving in the opposite direction of financial freedom – you
are reducing the amount of money that you can spend each month by
the amount of the debt payment, and you are reducing your net worth
by the principal and interest that you’ll be charged. Another
symptom of a lack of Soft Savings is disrepair to your car, home,
and health because you don’t have the money for upkeep. Everything
physical needs to be maintained, from your teeth to your vacuum, and
it costs money to do so. This depreciates the financial assets that
you own, and puts at risk the most important quality of life –
your health.
If you
are missing the third account, Paydown Debt Balances, you are simply
going to be the patsy in the financial game of life. People that are
building their wealth collect lots of little interest payments from
the people that are destroying their wealth by making lots of little
interest payments – money is transferred every month from one
group of people to the other. Which group do you want to be in? Well,
your Vault can automatically put you into the group of wealth-builders
and your Paydown Debt account starts to extract you from the group
of wealth-destroyers.
The Paydown
Debt account puts you on track to permanently extinguish all of your
personal debt. The sooner a personal debt is paid off, the more rapidly
you can take all of this money and put it into the other categories.
If you
are missing the fourth account, Financial Education, you won’t
know how to captain your Vault, and you may run it straight into the
rocks. Only you will manage your money in a manner that will be to
your maximum benefit. So it is best if you pay to learn how to handle
money and learn where to put it. But not everyone has an interest
in these subjects, and that is fine. For them, instead of personally
managing your money, you are going to personally manage your financial
advisors. You’ll be spending money and time to hire and manage
the advisors to attend to financial details.
By allocating
your savings into these four categories you are addressing the four
most important elements of financial management. You’ll be making
certain that: Your investment income will always increase by adding
to your Vault; you’ll have money available for extra expenses
with your Soft Savings; your net worth will always be increasing with
a Paydown Debt account; and you’ll intelligently learn how to
lower your investment risk, raise your investment returns, and lower
your tax liability with your Financial Education account. The only
source of money to build these critical financial functions to increase
your income, net worth, and stability is your savings – you
simply have to do it.
I recommend
you fund these accounts simultaneously – do not focus only on
debt or only on education because I have seen how it is financially
detrimental to do so. For example, let’s say that you really
want to paydown your debt so you don’t contribute anything to
The Vault. I have found that if you don’t have any investments,
your investing skills will be under developed. You will not know how
to invest once your debts have been paid off, you’ll have no
investment income to manage, you won’t be looking for investing
opportunities because that is something you can’t afford right
now, etc. And as a result, it will be harder to get into the investing
game later, you’ll have more to learn in a shorter amount of
time, and may just avoid it altogether and put Vault money into a
low paying account.
How much
do you allocate among the four categories? Anything more that zero!
It is up to you, and your financial situation will fluctuate and be
different from others. Just to get some starting percentages, below
is my allocation. It is not a recommendation for anyone, it is just
what works for me right now.
My current
savings rate = 20% of all after-tax income.
(This
does not include 401K, medical savings accounts, or other deferred/qualified
withholding). This means that 20% of all cash income that hits my
checking account each month is set aside into these categories:
1. The
Vault receives 50% of total savings each month.
2. Soft Savings receives 20% of savings each month.
3. Paydown Debt receives 20% of savings each month.
4. Financial Education receives 5% of savings each month.
5. And that leaves 5% for other categories each month.
You may
receive continual, ongoing income, in addition to some rare, one-time
inflows of money. The percentages detailed above are how I allocate
regular income savings. But if there is any one-time inflow of money
(garage sale, bonus, extra project), then I take 90% of the proceeds
and split it among the four accounts, and the other 10% is just spent.
You can create your own money rules for different types of income;
you can tell by my allocation percentages that my primary focus is
to build up the balance of the Vault.
The amount
of money that you can save from every source of income is your key
to a brighter financial future. Contrarily, a risky and dimmer financial
future awaits those that refuse to systematically save money. So be
sure that you take the steps necessary to set savings aside and then
simultaneously divide it among the four mandatory accounts by consistently
allocating money to them. You don’t have a financial foundation
without these four accounts, but with them, you can build as high
as your ambition takes you.
Article
Source: Francis Kier has an MBA in finance and shares his two decades
of experience with investing and personal finance. More of his articles
are available at investing.real-solution-center.com
13thNet
proudly scours the Internet to bring you high quality content so that
you don't have to do all the hard work in order to find the GOOD STUFF
Didn't
This Article Help??
Back
to General Business Articles
If
you think someone you know will benefit from this article let them know
by clicking here