It’s enough to do your block

August 21st, 2011

I’ve just watched the final episode of the reality TV show The Block. For those who are unfamiliar, it’s the one where four couples compete against each other in doing the best renovations on four run down properties adjacent to one another, which are offered up for sale at auction after all the work is complete. The couples are average people and the renovations are done quickly under heaps of pressure.

I guess in a way it is meant to reflect what lots of people do all over the country – buy a run down property, do it up then sell at (hopefully) a profit.

When the four properties in The Block went up for auction, three of them were passed in (they didn’t sell). The one that did sell sold for only $15,000 above the reserve. The reserve price in a normal auction is the lowest price the seller will accept, but for The Block properties, the reserve price was based on what the properties were professionally valued at before the renovations were done (yep, when they were dumps – holes in walls and floors, etc).

Why did only one property sell? Was it because auctions will never get you the highest price, because the renovations were done too quickly or not to the potential buyers’ liking, because the property market in the area has dropped significantly since the valuations were done, or because potential buyers did not want their face to appear on TV? Perhaps it was a combination of all these factors.

And here is a scary thought for people holding lots of debt laden investment properties: will the millions of Aussies watching tonight’s program think to themselves that this is signalling a turn in the property market? What effect do you reckon that will have on investment properties, particularly if they are ones that have had lots of time and money spent on doing them up?

Workaholic

August 1st, 2011

There’s a corner store just near our place, owned and run by a family. The couple who have served me on many occasions are lovely people, always smiling and giving great service. Despite having young kids, they work long hours, seven days a week. I don’t know how they do it.

When I first wrote Financial Freedom years ago, my main aim was to be able to show people that working hard, long hours was not the only way to get the bank off your back. In fact if you choose to live this way you may end up gaining financial independence but losing those most dear to you. I have found that a little bit of the right information, delivered in a way that’s easily absorbed, makes a huge difference to people’s lives.

My favorite saying (not sure who said it) is “Nobody ever said on their deathbed – I wish I had spent more time at the office.” I hope the people at the local shop never regret the hours they have worked and I hope you never regret not spending more time with those most important to you.

An open letter to my spammers

July 20th, 2011

Dear spammers,

I understand that you need to make money and I understand that you wish to do it with little personal exertion. I can also understand you being easily led by non-personal emails promising huge amounts of cash paid into your bank account for only a few hours of work from the comfort of your home. I understand that it’s tempting when you read the bit that says “all you need is a computer” ’cause that’s what you are reading the advertisement on.

The bit I can’t understand is why you reckon it’s a good idea to target the blog from my website. After all, Financial Freedom For Gens X and Y is a site that actually shows you how you can achieve a comfortable lifestyle that you seek, albeit at a slower pace than is promised in the ads you blindly believe. By the way, there is no promise of lavish lifestyles contained in my website, just a way to show you how to live without money being a worry. And the best thing is I show you how to do it without clogging other people’s inboxes with promises of larger appendages that last longer than John Holmes could go for.

Ps Sorry to my Russian spammer for not translating this post, but hey, I couldn’t read your website either.

Happy New (financial) Year!

July 1st, 2011

I reckon the best thing about July 1 is not seeing Paul Harrigan’s head in every single ad break on the telly informing us how much better off we will be if we take up nib’s health insurance before June 30. I suppose that is the best thing to look forward to when you remember that as of today the flood levy kicks in.

The levy is a once off tax increase to pay for the natural disasters that hit the Eastern states (mostly Queensland) around the start of the calendar year. If you earn over $50,000 you will be taxed an extra 0.5%, and if you earn over $100,000 an extra 1%. As it’s for this financial year only, who knows how the next natural disaster will be paid for.

Like it or not, tax time means you should start thinking about gathering receipts and other bits of paper and submitting your tax return. Actually, you are probably better off not just thinking about it, but actually doing it. Wednesday’s Wealth lift-out in The Australian had a statistic in it that raised my eyebrows. It stated that 4.3 million Aussies had yet to lodge a tax return for 2008-09. If the numbers were the same for the previous financial year (2007-08) it would’ve meant lots of people missing out on getting an extra 900 bucks. That was the time when the federal government handed out $900 cheques to those people who had done their tax in ’07-08 as part of the stimulus payment. That too was a one off.

So the moral to this story is: do your tax and you have a once in a lifetime chance of getting $900. It also means you can apply for a job with the tax office and run for parliament without fear that the media will find out you owe 4 years worth of tax payments. Hmm, I’m not really selling this one am I?

Tax discount

May 2nd, 2011

It’s pretty rare to get something for nothing, especially when it’s the federal government handing you a cheque or giving you a discount on your tax. Well, if you have a FEE-HELP (HECS) loan from studying early childhood education, maths or science, you could get a discount on any debt you still have of up to $1,600. But you had better get your act together as the offer lasts only until June 30 this year. You can find the link to the form you need under the FEE-HELP topic.

Mean medians

April 13th, 2011

Women have it pretty rough. They have to carry the baby, then push it out, they have to find a man who will not be unfaithful, and they have to juggle family and career in a way that’s acceptable to society. The statistics are against them.

At retirement, the amount that the average woman has in her super is half that of the average man. This is shocking enough ’til you look at these stats a bit closer.

If you have 10 people sitting in a room, one millionaire and 9 bankrupts, the average (mean) amount of money held by all these people is $100,000. But the median shows the amount of money the person in the middle has. Huh? Ok, your 10 people are spread out evenly across Australia from Perth (where the millionaire is) to Sydney (where the last of the bankrupts is). The median is the worth of the person who is (roughly) in Adelaide. The median tells you a bit more about the evenness of the spread – in this example the Adelaide person has $0. So if you have a small number of people with a lot of money and a large number with bugger all, the average will not show you this but the median will.

So, back to the average woman’s super balance. The median woman, at retirement doesn’t have half the average man’s amount. She doesn’t have a quarter. The median account balance for a woman at retirement is zero. Not a brass razoo. Looking at this another way, at least half of retiring women have no superannuation. Bloody scary stuff.

Does your super need some attention?

Get your wallet back to good health

March 18th, 2011

I’ve just come out of a short stay in hospital and wanted to share part of the experience (don’t worry if you get a bit queasy with this sort of stuff as I’ll spare you the gory details). While I was there it struck me how getting myself out of hospital is so similar to achieving things in life.

In hospital I just wanted to get the hell out – get back home to my family as quickly as I could, but to do that I needed to do a number a steps. First I needed to get off the morphine and sit up unassisted in bed. My aim for day 2 was to have a standing shower without help from a nurse. By day 3 I aimed to be back on solid food, and day 4 to take longer walks around the ward. The goal for day five was to explore further and actually go outside the front doors to the hospital, and day 6 was the ultimate goal to go home.

My longer term recovery is also filled with small steps, small goals to get back to the physical state I was in before I walked through the doors of the Emergency Department, and it will take about 2-3 months to get there. I know I can do it and I also know that it would be so much harder to get there if I didn’t break down the recovery into small, easy to achieve steps.

Whether it is your aim to get back to a place you were previously with your health, to purchase a car or pay off a debt, getting what you want is so much easier if you know exactly what that is, then break down the steps to achieving it. Small payments every week pay off seemingly insurmountable debts. Putting a little bit aside is easier to do if you remind yourself that it is for that well deserved holiday.

And being able to do 50 push ups isn’t so hard when you start with 5 today, 6 tomorrow, 7 the next day…….

Your lucky numbers are…..

February 12th, 2011

A while back my mum received some interesting unsolicited mail in the form of a letter from a woman who described herself as a clairvoyant, medium, numerologist and about 6 other things on similar lines. This letter was really quite amazing. It said that in exactly 29 days mum would receive the amount of $432,784! It gave the exact date of this windfall and then went on to say that another windfall would occur again on 13 Feb that same year. In fact there were 17 dates specifically given over the next 12 months (from the date of the letter) where 17 important life changing happy events would occur.

I don’t know a great deal about things like astrology but I reckon that predictions as accurate as these are extremely rare (it stated as much in the letter). Now, I hope you are sitting down, because here’s the really amazing and true thing – my mum kept the letter! That’s right, she didn’t just shred it immediately and feed it to the worms, she actually held onto it, then passed it on to me.

A closer inspection of the letter reveals something interesting. Of all the dates that year, where 17 happy events would happen, not one of them coincided with the birth of mum and dad’s granddaughter, their son’s wedding or any of the days when they were on their first overseas holiday in 16 years. Perhaps none of these events were happy (dad did get a cold when they were cruising down the Rhine River).

Admittedly, mum didn’t pay the $30 for the “Grand Special Reading” mentioned on page 8 of the letter, right above the section on payment options and spaces where you can confirm your date of birth, email address and phone number, and perhaps this effected those special dates and predictions. And, strangely, the $432,784 never crossed mum’s path.

A quick Google search reveals something very interesting about this clairvoyant – she doesn’t have many fans in Australia. In fact there are many sites out there saying she’s a scammer, including one from the WA government.

In reality, your lucky numbers are likely to be 16 single digit ones in the form of a credit card number which are best kept away from unsolicited letters and emails from con artists.

I’ve won the lottery!

January 23rd, 2011

I have won the lottery. I’m male, white, employed, living in a developed country and my wife has just given birth to the light of my life. We are all well, happy and free from flooding, drought and bushfires. We are also average Australian income earners, which means we are very rich on world standards. So much of the rest of the world cannot enjoy the simple things that we are currently experiencing. Really, what are the chances of having all those boxes ticked in a world with over 6 billion people?

You might be reading this and noticing that you can also tick most or all of those boxes too, but, unlike me you may not feel like a lottery winner. One of the things that allows me to feel so good right at this moment is that my wife and I are able to focus on and enjoy our little bundle of joy without worrying about money. We have just gone to one income (we’re getting a bit of help from the new Paid Parental Leave Scheme) and our expenditure has increased. But that doesn’t worry us at all.

Sorting out your finances gives you the feeling of winning the lottery, especially when it allows you to forget about money worries and the ability to take heaps and heaps of photos of the most gorgeous little face you’ve ever seen.

Don’t get mad, get even

November 3rd, 2010

In the last few days we have seen some interesting things happening in Australia. Official interest rates have risen and at least one major bank has moved their mortgage rates higher than the official rate rise. It’s likely the other big banks (who hold around 80 per cent of mortgages in Australia between them) will follow suit. These same institutions have also just announced their latest round of profits and they are BIG numbers. The last 12 months has seen more than $20 billion profit go to the big 4 banks. Massive increases from companies who are crying poor about increased funding costs (which are being passed straight onto mortgage holders).

It’s enough to make the average Aussie spew.

What can you, the little guy do? You could complain to the government (who will “strongly urge” the banks not to screw their customers, but not stop them by legislating). You could chuck a brick through the front window of a bank (then get arrested, fined and be worse off for breaking the law). Or you could beat them at their own game. Pay off your credit card. Pay off your car loan. Pay off your mortgage. Don’t let a bank win by taking more money from you.

If you don’t know how to pay off your mortgage quickly, then you need to learn how. Sign up to this website. There has never been a better time.