Tuesday 28 July 2009

How do we get the best rate of return?

How do you get the “best rate” of return?


Hello and welcome to the Making Finance Work Blog.


In the article The Eradication of Debt, we talked about the importance of interest rates, and moreover the wonder that is compound interest.


From this we can understand that:


1. £1000 lay dormant in a savings account for 10 years with an interest rate of 6% will give us £1790.


2. £1000 lay dormant for 10 years with an interest rate of £3105.


Suffice to say, the higher the interest rate – the better.


But how do we get these sorts of returns? As we are more than aware at the time of writing we are stuck in a firm recession, indeed no bank in the land are willing to hand out the good old fashioned 5-8% savings accounts for the foreseeable future.


What about bonds?


Maybe.


Gilts?


Could do


What else?


The Stock Market.


Definitely.


Stop! Wait a minute! I am not gambling my money away! No chance. Stocks and shares are for gamblers – I am not one of those!


Relax. Please. Listen to me.


Over the last 50 years the annual return on cash/savings – 6%


Over the last 50 Years the annual return on S and P 500 – 10.92%


The S & P 500 is a conglomerate of the 500 largest companies trading in the United States, the same as the FTSE100


Amazingly, property, bonds and gilts all fall between these two brackets.


The stock market will always be a volatile place in the short term. You could have easily have invested £10,000 in 1996 only to find that it is now worth £4000. However, over time, the margins get wider and wider. Understand the difference in day trading, speculation and gambling. And understand the value of long term investing with compounding price rises and compounding dividends and you will position yourself to reap the rewards in retirement and beyond.


Next time we will look at the stock market in greater detail.


Someone's sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.
Warren Buffett


Speak Soon,


Oliver JonesMaking Finance Work

Saturday 18 July 2009

The Eradication Of Debt

The Eradication of Debt

Hi There,

Before we start - let us remember the rules

Let us say that you have a credit card. Incidentally, the chances are that you do and In America alone there are 1.5bn scattered around. If all these cards were added on top of each other you would have 70 miles of plastic. That is roughly the same height at 12 Mount Everest’s’!


But we digress already.


Let us also say that the balance on your card is £1000 in debit, which basically means that you owe the lender this amount of money. Let us then assume that the interest rate is 15%Apr (in reality it will be more like 12-16%). If you did not pay a penny off the amount in that year, you would owe £1150.


Are you with me so far? Very good.


So, you haven’t paid off your card; but you have decided to start saving some cash. You are concerned that retirement may not be as far away as you think and so you leg it to your local building society to see what is on offer. Against all odds you find a super, super saver rate with an outstanding interest rate of 10%! Well done.


You put the £1000 in and sit back.


12 months later you review your building society account. Your savings have accumulated an extra £100 – for free! An extra £8.33 per month has been saved on top of your original £1000. You decide to leave it there for 10 years and vow never to touch a penny.


Ten years pass and you return to the building society. You now have £2,593 in your bank account. While you are there you decide to add £10 a month to the account and leave for another 10 years.
Those 10 years have passed, and you return. Sitting in your account is £8,829.31p. Not bad for doing nothing. After all, you will be 20 years older, regardless of whether you put that money away or not. You could have bought a car for £1000. Would it be worth eight grand? Probably not comrade.


Oh dear.
You forgot something.


You moved house and whoops a daisy kind of accidentally on purpose forgot all about your credit card! At a rate of 15% per year you now owe them £16,366.54p.

This is also known as compound interest, or the rule of 72. The rule of 72 allows you a good estimate of how many years it will take a lump sum to double at a rate of interest. Simply:

Divide 72 by the rate of interest and you have approximately the number of years of doubling the investment.

72 / X% = years to double. If you (like me) are not mathematically competent in any shape or form then there is a handy calculator here.

Saving and investing is a must. But you must pay off any debt that has interest on it. Instead of putting anything into a savings account, it should be put to your debts first.

All extra money should go to paying off:
1. Car payments
2. Mortgages
3. Credit cards
4. Store Finance
5. Anything else that accumulates interest.

It is a simple case of using maths. You know that on one account you can gain interest, much like on your savings account. And on the other you know that the things you want, but not necessarily need are financed, costing you interest.

There is a reason why savings accounts are typically less interest accumulators than credit finance. So the lenders can make a profit!

So in summary:

1.Pay off debts. Debts that do not accumulate interest are not as important.

2. Start to invest.

3. Add regular contributions to your investment. Notice how the 20 year account illustrated above accumulated £8,829.31p after 10 years of £10 per month added? If that £10 had been added monthly from day one there would be a whopping £14, 287 in that account.

4. The better the interest amount, the more cash at the end.

£1000 initial investment, with £100 going into the savings a month, with an interest rate of 12% will give you £106,484.78p That is 5 numbers and the bonus ball guaranteed for you in 20 years.
Next time we will be looking at how to get those returns.


Speak soon,

Oliver Jones
Making Finance Work

Friday 17 July 2009

The Rules

Hi There,

There are a number of rules we need to consider when gaining wealth. Becoming instantaneously wealthy can only happen in a limited number of ways including: (but not limited to)

  1. Inheritance
  2. A lottery/Game show/Prize win
  3. Steal it.

Everything else will take time. As I mentioned in my first blog it may take 5 to 40 years. It may take less, it may take longer. There is no direct guarantee, but what we can do is prepare, plan and implement certain formulas that will save and make you money. If you get it half right, you will already be 50% better off.

If you are here because you want to get rich quick, then you are in the wrong place I am afraid. If you want to get rich quick and get ripped off in the process, try typing in "make money fast" in Google. You will probably be unpleasantly suprised when you realise you have to pay for the privelidge.

So In summary:

  1. There is no "quick fix".
  2. We must be dedicated.
  3. We must find the formulas that work for us.

Our next post will orientate around methods that will help us along the way.

Speak Soon

Oliver Jones

Making finance Work

The Welcome Edition

Hello, and a very warm welcome...

Making Finance Work is a new blog designed to make it easier for you to manage your finances. My goal is to educate, share and ultimately devise comon plans that can provide income streams for me, you, and everybody else out there who wants to get to grip with their fiscals. (Whatever that means.)

Over the coming days we are going to start with the basics. Ways to get your wealth, improve your wealth and keep your wealth.

It won't happen immediately. You may be 30 when it happens. You may be 40 when it happens. You may even be 70 when it happens. But you will be those ages anyway.

Isn't it better to be that age and wealthy.


Speak Soon.

Oliver Jones