Monday, January 31, 2011

How to Retire Sooner

For millions of baby boomers, the financial gap between today and a successful retirement is deep and wide. When confronted with this reality, many folks simply give up, lamenting that they will never be able to retire or will continue working until age 75. But it may not have to be that way, if you are willing to adopt radical strategies to accelerate your retirement plan and close that financial gap. Here are a few ideas to consider:



• 4 Social Security Changes Coming in 2011

• 10 Winter Wonderlands for Retirement

• 7 Tips for Baby Boomers Turning 65 in 2011

1. Work a second job. You need more income now so you can save more for retirement. If you are healthy and the nest is empty, fill some spare time with more work. I am friends with a couple who each work full-time in conventional 9-to-5 office jobs. One spouse also works evenings and weekends selling ladies shoes in a mall department store on commission. She makes more money from that part-time job than she does at her regular job.

2. Become a single car family. Most married couples are two car families, even if the kids are gone and one spouse is not working. Operating costs including gas, insurance, maintenance, and repairs and carrying costs such as depreciation, taxes, and interest for a car or SUV can easily average $6,000 to $10,000 per year and even more for luxury vehicles. (Check Edmunds.com or ConsumerReports.org for data for your vehicle.) Gas prices are on the rise. Getting rid of the second vehicle can save you thousands of dollars for retirement. Commute with others, take public transit, share a ride with your spouse, or ride a bike instead. It can be done with careful planning.

3. Push your kids off the payroll. Many boomers find it emotionally difficult to completely cut the ties that financially bind them to their children. It starts with college expenses that drag on as the kids fail to graduate on time or need help paying off student loans. It continues with supporting boomerang kids. I know folks who continue to pay their kids car insurance or cell phone bills, even after the offspring are gainfully employed. When your child-rearing days are done, love your children, but be politely and firmly selfish about your money. You will need it when you retire more than they will now.

4. Start a spending fast. Most of us eat too much. We also spend too much. We often combine those vices by eating out regularly. Look at your budget and see if that's you. If so, go on an extreme spending fast. Vow to go an entire month without restaurant food. Also, avoid the drive-through and skip the exotic $5.00 cups of coffee. Stash the money you don't spend in your retirement savings. Think about what it will buy when you really need it. The next month, start another spending fast, this time targeting your cell phone or cable bill.

Most people who read these suggestions will roll their eyes and vow not to take such radical actions in their own lives, even if their retirement hangs in the balance. My message in response is this: The pain of financial discipline will be far less than the pain of retirement regrets.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

2011 Finances

Don't tell Borders or Liz Claiborne that the retail business is getting healthy. Despite years of industry cache, both lose money, tout share prices in the single digits and just couldn't close down stores fast enough in 2010.

More from Forbes.com:

• In Pictures: Where You Might Not Shop in 2011

• Old Brands That Are Making a Comeback

• The Hottest New Tech of 2011

Chalk it up to fierce competition and customers' continued refusals to part with cash very easily, even as they loosen the purse strings a bit. Things are certainly less bleak. The latest results from the Commerce Department show that sales rose 6.6% for all retailers in 2010, the best year-over-year result since 1999. Wall Street has been responding. The S&P Retail Index is 23% higher than a year ago.

The downside: the sales increase came off a low base, thanks to the disaster of 2009, and the 0.6% rise in December sales over last year was less than expected. Customers are paying with cash, not credit cards, an indication that they're still watching money closely. And given all the stores that are still closing doors, it's clear that some of the excess capacity from the go-go years is still around. Ask an industry expert about the current state of retail, and the feeling is better, but not great.

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"You can't tell me it's good," says Howard Davidowitz, chairman of Davidowitz & Associates, a New York-based retail consultant and investment bank. "Given that Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT - News) is down for six straight quarters, that Target (NYSE: TGT - News) missed [profit expectations] by a mile, and that Best Buy (NYSE: BBY - News) had a major earnings miss, how well can retail be doing?"

Borders Group (NYSE: BGP - News), delaying payments to publishers and distributors as it struggles to refinance its debt, shut down approximately 200 of its Borders and Waldenbooks stores in 2010. With book readership declining in general and Amazon snagging a lot of the remaining business, things aren't easy for traditional booksellers. Rival Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS - News) recently completed the shutdown of its low-volume B. Dalton unit, once a staple of shopping malls across America. The last 50 B. Dalton stores were closed this past year.

[5 Items You Should Never Pay For]

Apparel sales are doing better these days, but that doesn't mean there's room for everyone. Not when so many players are out there competing for dollars that consumers are still parting with cautiously. TJ Maxx just shut down its A.J. Wright discount line, taking all 162 stores with it. Bebe Stores (Nasdaq: BEBE - News) closed its PH8 unit at a cost of 48 stores.

And Liz Claiborne (NYSE: LIZ - News), struggling with losses selling through its outlet stores, shut them down altogether (87 in all) in favor of putting out their product through J.C. Penney (NYSE: JCP - News) and QVC. "They really had no choice," says Davidowitz. "This at least gives them some cash flow for awhile."

Meantime, in case there was any doubt about the influence of Netflix (Nasdaq: NFLX - News) and iTunes on the entertainment front, movie and music sellers Blockbuster, Movie Gallery and Trans World Entertainment's (Nasdaq: TWMC - News) F.Y.E unit have all been high-tailing it out of many U.S. towns. Movie Gallery, which once boasted almost 5,000 stores, completed the liquidation of its remaining 2,400 units last summer.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

New Zealand Dollar

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand is widely expected to refrain from raising its key overnight lending rate in January as the economy continues to battle slow wage growth, weakness in the housing market, and a high unemployment rate. As market participants rule out a rate hike, comments subsequent to the rate announcement are likely to dictate price action.

Ahead of the release, traders are pricing in a zero percent chance that the RBNZ will raise its key overnight lending rate twenty five basis points, according to the Credit Suisse Overnight index swaps. Taking a look at the fundamental developments leading up to the rate decision, annualized consumer prices rose less than economists’ expectations in the fourth quarter. The report is concerning due to the fact that inflation is expected to pusher lower in the first quarter of 2011 as business and consumer demand scales back, while housing pressures remained weighed by slow house growth. Recently, house prices in the region fell an annualized 0.9 percent in December to mark the first decline since September 2009. It is also worth noting that credit card spending slid 1.4 percent during the last month of 2010as consumers remain cautious about spending, adding further concerns to New Zealand’s recovery.

All in all, as the economic recovery in New Zealand is slightly off track, I expect the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to refrain from raising its borrowing costs twenty five basis points later on today. Thus, comments trailing the rate decision will likely dictate price action and dovish commentary from the central bank will validate the bearish NZDUSD technical outlook.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Future Investments

About this Calculator

Calculate future value of investment accounts based on periodic, constant deposits, constant withdrawals, and a constant interest rate compounded daily. See the notes below.
Notes on Future Value Calculations:

1. Initial Account Balance
* Enter the current account balance or the amount you will deposit to start the investment account. When entering the account balance, enter the balance on the 1st day of next month. This calculator will have a start date on the first day of the month that follows today's month.
2. Annual Interest Rate
* Enter the Stated Rate. This calculator will compound interest daily. For example, an annual interest rate of 7% will be approximated as a daily rate of [ 0.07/365 days = 0.00019178 or 0.019178% ]. We round the daily rate to 3 decimal places so will use 0.019% in this case.
* Interest for this calculator is calculated at the end of each day so will include the net account amount after any deposits or withdrawals.
3. Monthly Withdrawals
* If you will be making monthly withdrawals from this account, enter it as a positive number, not a negative. Also, choose the day of the month that withdrawls will be made on. This calculator does not allow days of the month for 29, 30 or 31 since not all months will have these days.
4. Monthly Deposits
* If you will be making monthly deposits into this account, enter it here. Also, choose the day of the month that deposits will be made on. This calculator does not allow days of the month for 29, 30 or 31 since not all months will have these days.
5. Future Value at the End of X years

* Enter the number of years in the future you want to calculate the value of this account for.
* To simplify our calculations we start on the first day of the month that follows today's month.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Get Life Insurance

Consumers feel they are faced with a double-edged sword as many claim they cannot afford life insurance.

But without financial protection in place they could face financial devastation if the worst happens, warned Louise Colley, head of protection marketing at Aviva.

Overall, the Aviva report painted a picture of UK families who are surviving but are in debt, apprehensive about additional costs and unwilling or unable to put aside money for the future.

The report showed that on average 61 per cent of families confessed they do not have basic life insurance, with 87 per cent saying they are without critical illness cover and 89 per cent do not have income protection. Just seven per cent of UK families felt completely financially protected.

Some 57 per cent were concerned about inflationary pressures on everyday living costs and 39 per cent said they were too financially stretched to take on any additional financial obligations.

Ms Colley said: ""Families need to think what would happen to the family if the worst happened? Many families have debts, such as a mortgage, so they need financial protection the most. But they are not taking action as they claim it's unaffordable.

"There will be far less impact on the family if something happens if they have life insurance in place. No one is immortal and people need to plan for this."

This week Aviva launched a national TV advertising campaign to highlight the importance of taking out life insurance.

Ms Colley said: "Aviva offers life insurance for as little as £5 a month and we have launched an advert promoting this.

"Life insurance is there to protect the family and people need to step back and realise this. People need to overcome their barriers to life insurance - it is not confusing and it is affordable."

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Forex Trading

Danske’s technical analysis:
Market is in a downtrend. Suggested strategy is to attempt long (buy) if price breaks 1.6201 with first profit target at 1.7235. Place the stops at 1.5530 or change trade direction if price breaks it. Profit target for this sell (short) entry is 1.5400.

Ino MarketClub’s Trend analysis:
Strong Down Trend (score -100)

Points to watch from my pivot-calculation are the 3rd resistance (1.6207) and 1st support (1.5533)

At the time I wrote this, gbp/usd price was ranging around 1.5770. My plan is to place long order if price breaks 1.6200. Anticipate-stops will be at 1.6100. I will place short order if price breaks 1.5530. Anticipate stops will be at 1.5630.

Please note that this is just a trading idea, I do not execute trade solely based on this. I write this in purpose to show you (especially novice traders) about how I make use of the free technical analysis data for my intraday trading.

Tags : gbp-usd, intraday trading, technical analysis, trend analysis
8
Daily Free Forex Signal 10-11-2008
Free Forex Signals

Today’s GBP/USD Forex Signal (10-11-2008)
Best time to place this order is at 05.00 GMT

buy @ 1.5745 ( Stop/Limit/Market Order)

Set Stop Loss @ -30pip
Set Profit Target @ 20 pip

Daily Pivot: 1.5705

Previous day’s HLC Price and today’s Support-Resistance Levels

Friday, January 21, 2011

Forex Guide

Forex Trading vs Stock Market

Two of the main differences between (and some would say advantages over) the forex market compared to the stock market are:

1. Trading hours. The forex market is open 24 hours a day. Trading is done over three continents, allowing a trader to trade continuously and to react immediately to events and new developments. The market opens on Sunday evening and closes Friday night.

2. Commissions. Electronic trading and competition have brought about a sizeable reduction in the bid-offer spread (the equivalent of commissions). The spread covers the risk of the market maker. The spread for the majors remain very low, but can increase as the liquidity of a specific currency drops. Despite recent reductions of commissions through online stock brokers, the Forex market is considered, by some, to have the lowest commissions relative to trade size when compared to other financial markets. This is also in part due to the 100:1 leverage offered by most trading houses. A client with a $10,000 deposit can leverage this to $1,000,000. Some electronic communication network brokerages have introduced a per trade commision alongside a narrow pip spread.

Many retail trading houses would suggest that the large size of the market makes it impossible for a speculator to affect the market. This is not quite the truth - the stakes are higher, larger quantities of money are involved, and the bigger banks spend a lot of time and effort trying to manipulate the market. Governments have been known to step in and affect prices.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

1. Income for dummies

1. Income for dummies.

Getting a job and trading your time for money may seem like a good idea. There’s only one problem with it. It’s stupid! It’s the stupidest way you can possibly generate income! This is truly income for dummies.

Why is getting a job so dumb? Because you only get paid when you’re working. Don’t you see a problem with that, or have you been so thoroughly brainwashed into thinking it’s reasonable and intelligent to only earn income when you’re working? Have you never considered that it might be better to be paid even when you’re not working? Who taught you that you could only earn income while working? Some other brainwashed employee perhaps?

Don’t you think your life would be much easier if you got paid while you were eating, sleeping, and playing with the kids too? Why not get paid 24/7? Get paid whether you work or not. Don’t your plants grow even when you aren’t tending to them? Why not your bank account?

Who cares how many hours you work? Only a handful of people on this entire planet care how much time you spend at the office. Most of us won’t even notice whether you work 6 hours a week or 60. But if you have something of value to provide that matters to us, a number of us will be happy to pull out our wallets and pay you for it. We don’t care about your time — we only care enough to pay for the value we receive. Do you really care how long it took me to write this article? Would you pay me twice as much if it took me 6 hours vs. only 3?

Non-dummies often start out on the traditional income for dummies path. So don’t feel bad if you’re just now realizing you’ve been suckered. Non-dummies eventually realize that trading time for money is indeed extremely dumb and that there must be a better way. And of course there is a better way. The key is to de-couple your value from your time.

Smart people build systems that generate income 24/7, especially passive income. This can include starting a business, building a web site, becoming an investor, or generating royalty income from creative work. The system delivers the ongoing value to people and generates income from it, and once it’s in motion, it runs continuously whether you tend to it or not. From that moment on, the bulk of your time can be invested in increasing your income (by refining your system or spawning new ones) instead of merely maintaining your income.

This web site is an example of such a system. At the time of this writing, it generates about $9000 a month in income for me (update: $40,000 a month as of 10/31/06), and it isn’t my only income stream either. I write each article just once (fixed time investment), and people can extract value from them year after year. The web server delivers the value, and other systems (most of which I didn’t even build and don’t even understand) collect income and deposit it automatically into my bank account. It’s not perfectly passive, but I love writing and would do it for free anyway. But of course it cost me a lot of money to launch this business, right? Um, yeah, $9 is an awful lot these days (to register the domain name). Everything after that was profit.

Sure it takes some upfront time and effort to design and implement your own income-generating systems. But you don’t have to reinvent the wheel — feel free to use existing systems like ad networks and affiliate programs. Once you get going, you won’t have to work so many hours to support yourself. Wouldn’t it be nice to be out having dinner with your spouse, knowing that while you’re eating, you’re earning money? If you want to keep working long hours because you enjoy it, go right ahead. If you want to sit around doing nothing, feel free. As long as your system continues delivering value to others, you’ll keep getting paid whether you’re working or not.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Recession is Back

Ms. Norton is one of 1.7 million Americans who were employed in clerical and administrative positions when the recession began, but were no longer working in that occupation by the end of last year. There have also been outsize job losses in other occupation categories that seem unlikely to be revived during the economic recovery. The number of printing machine operators, for example, was nearly halved from the fourth quarter of 2007 to the fourth quarter of 2009. The number of people employed as travel agents fell by 40 percent.

This “creative destruction” in the job market can benefit the economy.

Pruning relatively less-efficient employees like clerks and travel agents, whose work can be done more cheaply by computers or workers abroad, makes American businesses more efficient. Year over year, productivity growth was at its highest level in over 50 years last quarter, pushing corporate profits to record highs and helping the economy grow.

But a huge group of people are being left out of the party.

Millions of workers who have already been unemployed for months, if not years, will most likely remain that way even as the overall job market continues to improve, economists say. The occupations they worked in, and the skills they currently possess, are never coming back in style. And the demand for new types of skills moves a lot more quickly than workers — especially older and less mobile workers — are able to retrain and gain those skills.

There is no easy policy solution for helping the people left behind. The usual unemployment measures — like jobless benefits and food stamps — can serve as temporary palliatives, but they cannot make workers’ skills relevant again.

Ms. Norton has sent out hundreds of résumés without luck. Twice, the openings she interviewed for were eliminated by employers who decided, upon further reflection, that redistributing administrative tasks among existing employees made more sense than replacing the outgoing secretary.

One employer decided this shortly after Ms. Norton had already started showing up for work.

Ms. Norton is reluctant to believe that her three decades of experience and her typing talents, up to 120 words a minute, are now obsolete. So she looks for other explanations.

Employers, she thinks, fear she will be disloyal and jump ship for a higher-paying job as soon as one comes along.

Sometimes she blames the bad economy in Jacksonville. Sometimes she sees age discrimination. Sometimes she thinks the problem is that she has not been able to afford a haircut in a while. Or perhaps the paper her résumé is printed on is not nice enough.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Project Payday

With the state of the economy these days along with the sky high price of Gas, groceries and other necessities of life, many people are finding that their money isn’t making it as far as it once did. So it’s not surprising that many people are turning to the Internet to make money fast. With Winter just around the corner, many people are worrying about how they will pay their Winter heating bill. Some have already been surprised by unexpected large energy bills. This leaves some families scrambling to find ways to make money fast in order to prevent something from going unpaid.

Here are quick and easy ways to make money on the Internet. Will you get rich? No. But you just might bring in a few hundred dollars a month and maybe keep your lights on this Winter!

Project Payday

If you can use a computer to surf the Internet, chances are good that you can use Project Payday to earn extra money on the Internet. It doesn’t require a lot of technical knowledge and it’s pretty darn quick and easy to use.

Project Payday is free to join and they have loads of free training Video’s to help you get started. Plus they also have a mentoring program where you’ll get hands on tutoring if you need it. I’d highly suggest you watch the video’s and even consider the mentoring program to maximize your potential income opportunities. You can expect to get offers in the $15 to $30 range. I’ve seen some as high as $50 though, but those are rare. Most people can do several offers a day once they get the hang of it and get their routine down and become familiar with how the system works. Click here to learn more about Project Payday.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Forex Rates

Currency Symbol Buying Selling Charts
Australian Dollar AUD 84.3 85.3
Bahrain Dinar BHD 226.3 226.4
Canadian Dollar CAD 85.1 86.1
China Yuan CNY 13 13.5
Danish Krone DKK 15 15.1
Euro EUR 111.2 113.4
Hong Kong Dollar HKD 10.4 10.5
Indian Rupee INR 1.85 1.95
Japanese Yen JPY 1.01 1.03
Kuwaiti Dinar KWD 301.2 301.4
Malaysian Ringgit MYR 26.8 26.9
NewZealand $ NZD 62.3 63.3
Norwegians Krone NOK 13.8 13.9
Omani Riyal OMR 221.4 221.6
Qatari Riyal QAR 23 23.1
Saudi Riyal SAR 22.67 22.83
Singapore Dollar SGD 65.4 66.4
Swedish Korona SEK 12 12.7
Swiss Franc CHF 86.5 86.7
Thai Bhat THB 2.9 2.95
U.A.E Dirham AED 22.97 23.38
UK Pound Sterling GBP 132.1 133.9
US Dollar USD 85.65 85.95

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Money Savings

In The Recessionistas, a new novel by Wall Street financial whiz Alexandra Lebenthal, the economic crisis hits the Upper East Side — sending four socialites scrambling in their Manolos. As their worlds and their bank accounts take a serious hit, these fierce females power on, stopping at nothing to get what they want.

Related: How to Get (and Keep!) a Job in a Tough Economy

Lebenthal has first-hand experience with these kinds of characters in real life — as the President and CEO of Lebenthal & Co, a financial advisory firm, she entered the world of finance when she was just 23 and was running the company by age 31. A few years ago, Lebenthal began writing a column on NewYorkSocialDiary.com, where her witty commentary on the people who inhabit the world of Wall Street won an army of fans. One such fan happened to be a literary agent, who convinced Lebenthal to write a novel based on actual events. Three short months later, she delivered her manuscript. Here, she doles out some free money advice (thanks, we'll take it!).

1. Teach Yourself.

"One of the great things about the internet is that it really gives people the ability to learn things without having to expose themselves as a neophyte. So, whether it's a site like iVillage, which has a great basic money and investing section, or the website of a mutual fund company, you can go at your own pace and figure out what you want to learn and then have enough information to talk to somebody further. So I think that's a great place to start."

Related: 4 Money Questions You Must Ask Your Guy

2. Find a Financial Adviser You Feel Comfortable With.

"I think that a lot of times women really are better off dealing with women because there is just a natural comfort level and it's a natural conversation. Women like to talk, so you want to have a conversation about it, you want to ask questions and say, "What do you think about this/what do you think about that?" I think that sometimes when men are dealing with women, you don't get that kind of dialogue and that comfort level. There are some great male financial advisers, but I just do see a lot that women just feel more comfortable dealing with women."

Related: 12 Ways to Save Money Fast

3. Start Saving and Investing Early.

"I would recommend that people have both an IRA and 401K at their company. The great thing about a 401K is that most companies match the contribution to a certain point. So if you think about it, its really like you're making more money than you thought you were because your company is giving that money to you. The other great thing about a 401k is that it's not something you have to do consciously. So you make the determination about what percentage of you want to contribute and then it automatically happens. It's not like you have to make a choice, it just happens."

Related: Save $250 in 30 Days

4. Set a Budget.

"Take a hard look at your budget and determine how much you can really afford to save. Use the calculator at bankrate.com where you can put in, say, "I'm going to save $3,000 a year for the next ten years, and let me just say it's going to earn five percent." And then you can see what that builds up to. As I said before, the earlier you can start, the more time you have to let that money build up over time."