Saturday, May 31, 2008

NewsFlashr is Great



I wanted to point out that I highly recommend Newsflashr; more specifically, their business blogs page which displays the latest postings by many of the best blogs on the web. I visit the site on a daily basis to see who’s writing what about the market, people's latest research or even more stock links. Everything is updated in one place and it is readily available anywhere I search the web. I understand that other RSS tools exist to monitor all your favorite blogs but there is something about Newsflashr that keeps me coming back.


I promise you that I am not plugging their website for any reason other than I use it myself. I am not getting anything in return to plug the site (that’s not my style). Take a look and perform your own opinion (let me know what you think).


newsflashr network


On another note, please take a few seconds to sign up for my free RSS feed and receive my latest posts in your e-mail, if you haven’t done so already.


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2008 BAH rates will be available next week



I never quite understand why it takes so long for the Basic Allowance for Housing rates to be published. Base pay figures are usually available by October of the preceding year, but BAH tables aren't available until mid-December. It can make it very difficult for incoming families to decide where to live, as they don't know if the BAH will adjust downwards before they arrive or not. It can also complicate the decision whether or not to move into base housing in the face of higher rents. Plus, it's just plain annoying for people who are trying to create a budget for 2008. Why all the suspense? I'm ready to know!

Anyway, a week from now or so, you'll want to head over to the official pentagon site to see if your new housing rates have been published. The site will undoubtedly crash due to high visitor volume (as it happened in 2005 AND 2006), but eventually it will work pretty well. Other sites like about.com also publish tables, but I'm more trusting of the actual Pentagon page.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Laundry Room Savings



The following is a guest post from Kimber Chin (http://businessromance.com/) who writes romance novels based in the business world. Her book, Breach Of Trust, is available now. She also blogs at http://www.nolimitsladies.com/.


Do you remember the theme song from that 1980's movie The Neverending Story? I sing that each week about laundry. The neverending laundry. I shouldn't complain. There is only the hubby and I. My Mom had 6 kids. She did laundry, several loads, every single day.


That can add up. So how to save money?


I'm very choosy about the clothes I purchase, avoiding dry clean only material. Dry cleaning seems to be mostly a North American phenomena. Europeans hand wash their suits. Unless the outfit is ultra expensive or sentimental, I try to do the same. Yes, I've ruined clothes that way.


I also stretch the amount of time between washing. I wear shirts under my blazers. If I have a choice between a sweater and a cardigan, I wear the cardigan with a tee underneath.


I use less. I use less than the recommended amount of laundry detergent. A washing machine repairman once told me that if you see bubbles in your final rinse water, you're using too much soap. Too much soap can leave residue on your clothes and damage your washing machine.


I use cheapie shampoo to get rid of the hubby's nasty ring around the collar and pit stains. Yeah, gross. Shampoo is specially designed to remove oil. Very effective (and gentle) on clothes too. If you travel a lot, use the tiny bottles of shampoo left in your hotel room. Any self respecting hotel discards these after each desk (for fear of people tampering with them).


I always wash in cold. I come from the farm. We didn't have running water, we drew our water from wells and the nearby river. We certainly didn't heat the water up on our wood stoves to wash clothes in. If cold water is good enough to take stable muck out of farm clothes, it is good enough to wash my city folk clothes. If there's a stain, I'll leave it to soak overnight.


I usually hang my laundry. That lint in the dry lint trap? That's your clothing, eaten away by the dryer. Dryers are very hard on your clothes. They also cost money to run. Hang drying doesn't take any more time than using the dryer. If I do have to use the dryer, I only use half a fabric softener sheet. I haven't seen any difference.


Finally, the nasty part, ironing. I save up all my ironing for one big iron-athon. I blast music, I dance around, I save money. Why? Because much of the cost of ironing is heating it up. Oh, and I save time because I only have to set up the once. Very efficient.


I'm always looking for some great tips on how to save time and money in the laundry room. What are some of yours?



Thursday, May 29, 2008

Getting To A Million Bucks



Most people don't get rich because they refuse to start small. Why bother? Just win the lottery. I can't believe people buy lottery tickets but they do. And the ones I see doing so don't look very smart. And they aren't.



The way to get there is simple, well, kind of. Save two times your annual salary and let the power of compound interest take over. Einstein said that compound interest was the eighth wonder of the world and most people think Einstein was, well, an Einstein.



Jonathan Clements gives the details in the following---



How to Save $1 Million for Retirement



The Wall Street Journal Online
By Jonathan Clements


If you're a newly minted college graduate, the $1 million-plus needed for retirement might seem impossibly large.

Feeling discouraged? Try lowering your sights, aiming instead to accumulate savings equal to two times your annual income.

Once you hit that milestone, the financial wind will be at your back -- and reaching your retirement-savings goal should be a breeze.

Breaking through. Suppose you expect eventually to earn $80,000 a year. Looking ahead to retirement, you reckon that -- in addition to Social Security -- you will want maybe $45,000 a year from your portfolio, adjusted for inflation.

To generate that $45,000, you will need a $1 million nest egg, calculated in today's dollars. This assumes that, in retirement, you use a 4.5% annual portfolio-withdrawal rate.

Investment Growth

"People wonder how they will ever accumulate enough money," says Charles Farrell, a financial adviser with Denver's Northstar Investment Advisors. "But what many investors fail to understand is that, once they reach a certain level of assets, most of the savings should come from investment growth."

Mr. Farrell figures the breakthrough occurs at around two times income. Let's say your salary has hit that $80,000, you have amassed $160,000 in savings, you are socking away 12% of your pretax income each month and your investments earn 6% a year.

Over the next 12 months, your $160,000 portfolio would balloon to $179,518, or $19,518 more. Your monthly savings would account for $9,600 of that growth. But the other $9,918 would come from investment gains. In other words, you've got to the crossover point, where the biggest driver of your portfolio's growth is now investment earnings, not the actual dollars you're socking away.

You should, however, keep salting away money. That sacrifice will be handsomely rewarded, as things really start to snowball. Using the assumptions above, your portfolio would soar from $160,000 to more than $418,000 a decade later. True, part of this gain would be lost to inflation. But inflation should also drive up your salary, allowing you to squirrel away more money.

Get Started Now

Getting started. That still leaves the initial task of accumulating two times income.

"It can take people 12 to 15 years," Mr. Farrell says. "The earlier you can start, the better. But if you're close to two times pay by your early 40s, you're probably in pretty good shape."

As you strive to amass that sum, your top priority should be funding your employer's 401(k) plan. In addition to the initial tax deduction and continuing tax deferral, you will likely receive a matching employer contribution, which will help speed your portfolio's progress.

If you can, save outside your employer's plan, by funding a Roth individual retirement account. That won't get you an initial tax deduction, but you will enjoy tax-free growth. A Roth also offers a heap of flexibility. At any time, you can withdraw your contributions -- but not the account's investment earnings -- without any sort of tax hit. That means your Roth could double as an emergency reserve or as your house down-payment fund.

Investment Ideas

Which investments should you buy? Check out broadly diversified no-load funds like AARP Aggressive and Schwab Target 2040, both of which require a $100 initial investment. Until you reach Schwab's $1,000 brokerage-account minimum, you will need to add $100 every month through an automatic investment plan, where money is pulled out of your bank account and invested directly in the fund.

Also consider Fidelity Freedom 2050 and T. Rowe Price Retirement 2050. The regular minimum at both funds is $2,500. T. Rowe Price will trim that minimum to $1,000 if you open an IRA and waive the minimum entirely if you sign up for a $50-a-month automatic-investment plan. Similarly, at Fidelity Freedom 2050, you can sidestep the minimum if you agree to invest $200 a month through Fidelity's SimpleStart IRA program.