• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Wealth Building Tips

Make Plans To Succeed

  • Money Management
  • Income Ideas
  • Banking
  • Discount Center
  • Investments
  • Stories

Twila Van Leer

Robust Economy? Not For Everyone

June 28, 2018 by Twila Van Leer

Robust Economy
While the economy appears in print as encouraging, there are problems to address before the benefit can blanket all Americans

Unemployment is down. Spending is up. Inflation is manageable. Taxes are down. Demand for new homes is up. Household wealth is higher.

Why Are Americans Feeling Insecure About The Economy

So how come many Americans are not feeling secure, even though the last major recession is nine years in the past? Too many of them are falling into categories where high child care costs wipe out the advantages, or the expanding costs of travel wipe out any pay raises, or those pay raises have not materialized, or . . .

Some Are Using Savings To Live Month To Month

Analysts at Oxford Economics who studied American spending patterns found that those in the bottom 60 percent of earners were drawing from their savings to maintain a standard of living. Many are living paycheck-to-paycheck. Even those who have found jobs as the jobless rate dipped are not feeling financially secure.

Here’s how the current economy looks to these folks:

Even though inflation is not a current concern, the prices of some indispensible items is rising. Gasoline is up 24 percent since a year ago. That can eat away as much as a third of what people hoped to save.

Owning A Home Has Become Harder

Owning a home has become harder, not easier. Many areas of the country are seeing a dearth of listings in the affordable range. Prices are rising more than 6 percent annually overall and even higher in some areas, increases that effectually wipe out the 2.7 percent increase in most hourly wages. Thirty-year fixed-rate mortgages are growing costlier. Average interest rates have jumped too 4.62 percent, from 3.95 percent at the beginning of this year.

At the root of the problem is the decline of America’s middle class. Wealth is increasingly lop-sided, with the ultra-rich sector growing while those at the other end of the scale see little benefit from the great economy. The top 10 percent of the country controls 73 percent of the personal wealth. The gains are concentrated in the top 1 percent, which lays claim to 39 percent of the wealth.

Where the middle class once included some 40 percent of the overall population, the figure now is just 27 percent. In the lowest 40 percent, Americans have a negative net worth and few have cushions sufficient to offset an emergency. They can’t look to stocks, rental properties, capital gains or home equity to shore up the budget if needed. Hourly wages haven’t risen over the past year for most of them.

Times are particularly tough for people who lack an advanced educational degree. Those who ended their education with high school find themselves scrambling as most of the jobs go to college grads. Those minimally educated make up less then 1 percent of the job gains that have boosted the overall economy.

Student Debt Affects Home Buying

At the same time, it isn’t all rosy for those with a college degree. Ever-higher student debt has wiped out some of the advantage. Since 2004, total student debt has increased 540 percent to a startling total of $1.4 trillion. That doesn’t include graduate school debt. That debt is influencing the ability to buy homes. Realtors have reported home-buying delays of about seven years among those burdened with education debt. College graduates dealing with debt also tend to delay the start of families, another factor that impedes full economic health in the country.

Children are, in fact, very expensive. Nearly a third of families put out at least 20 percent of their income for child care. Some families go into debt to cover child care expenses. Average cost of care for one child is $10,486 a year and it can be as high as $20,209. Many women have dropped out of the job market to stay home with children rather than pay the high costs of outside care.

The percentage of American women in the workforce has dropped from 77 percent in 2000 to 74.8 percent now. A return to the higher figure would see some 1.4 million more women in the workplace.

So while the economy appears in print as encouraging, there are problems to address before the benefit can blanket all Americans.

Filed Under: Economy, Finances, Saving Money, Spending Money

Netflix Clout Showing in Media Wars

June 24, 2018 by Twila Van Leer

Netflix
With Comcast and Disney dueling over Rupert Murdoch’s Fox media, Netflix could benefit from the bidding war.
With Comcast and Disney dueling over Rupert Murdoch’s Fox media, Netflix could benefit from the bidding war.

The change-partners dance includes a plan by Disney to launch a family-friendly Netflix rival next year. It also plans to use content it is going to purchase from 21st Century Fox, including movies and TV shows, to fortify streaming competitor Hulu, which Disney partly owns. In conjunction with Disney’s ESPN Plus sports-streaming service, the Disney/Fox deal seemed destined to create a real force in the streaming word.

Enter Comcast and its bid to steal Fox out from under Disney and the picture changes. Comcast offered $65 billion in cash, considerably more than the Disney offer of $52 billion in stock. A bidding war is the likely result. As of mid-June, Fox was considering whether to cancel or postpone its shareholder vote on the Disney-Fox merger.

Netflix could benefit from a split of Fox’s assets. A break-up of some key assets to a bevy of bidders would negate regulatory hurdles could make things nicer for competitors, according to media industry gurus.

Should Disney win, it would control about 40 percent of the box office, more than a dozen of the top TV networks and Hulu, one of Netflix’s top rivals.

Netflix has been poaching creators from Disney, Fox and other media outlets to improve its content. And Disney is coming to the end of a deal to send its new movies to Netflix in 2019.

Ultimately, insiders say, the winner in the push-pull contest will take all. Netflix is watching from the sidelines to see which way the battle leans.

Filed Under: Business, Media, Technology

Wise Shopping For Groceries

June 19, 2018 by Twila Van Leer

Grocery Shopping
Essential ingredients are placed at opposite ends of the store so you must pass through the inner aisles to reach the dairy products at one end and produce at the other

Grocery stores are strategically designed to tempt the shopper into spending more money. Try to avoid some of the pitfalls by following these tips:

Avoid Impulse Buying At The Grocery Store

Essential ingredients are placed at opposite ends of the store so you must pass through the inner aisles to reach the dairy products at one end and produce at the other. Try to focus on what you need and don’t spend unnecessary time in the central aisles.

Coupons Really Do Save You Money

Don’t shun coupons. You can save serious cash if you are willing to spend a little time and effort to accumulate coupons for items you routinely buy. Watch the store’s ads to magnify the benefit of coupons. Staying current with sales will save you money. Be aware, however, that coupons are most likely to give you a break on brand-name products when there may be cheaper alternatives. Don’t buy something you don’t need because there is a coupon.

Toiletries generally are cheaper at a pharmacy than in the grocery store. Stock up with an occasional trip to the pharmacy.

Brand Names Are Not Always The Best For You?

Don’t become addicted to brand names. Often, a generic or house brand is of comparable quality and costs less. Often, they are the same product under a different label. Check the ingredients to be certain you are not sacrificing anything.

Remember that the eye-level shelves are likely to contain the more expensive items. Grocery store managers know that what the shopper sees at eye-level is most likely to catch their attention. Look up or down before buying the first version you see.

If an item you have seen that is currently discounted, but you can’t find it one the shelves, don’t hesitate to ask for a rain check. Some stores offer the option of getting an extension on sold-out sale items.

Don’t go to the grocery store hungry. You’ve heard it before. After work or before dinner is the worst time to go. If it’s possible, shop on weekends.

Eat with the seasons. Not only will fresh products taste better, they’ll be mulch more reasonable priced. If you opt for fruits and veggies that are out of season, you pay for the transportation costs that get them to your store.

Filed Under: Discount Center, Saving Money, Shopping, Spending Money

Mortgage Lingo Requires Study

June 11, 2018 by Twila Van Leer

Mortgage Lingo Requires Study
A higher LTV could represent a greater risk for the lender because it suggests the assets behind the loan are lower
Buying a home can thrust you into a realm where the language is about like being in a foreign country. The alphabet soup of acronyms and the jargon that peppers the conversation can leave you feeling a little lost.

Understanding just one factor, the LTV or loan-to-value component, can be a big help. Basically, it compares the size of the loan you are signing to the value of the home.

The LTV mathematics are relatively simple. You calculate it by dividing the amount of the mortgage by the appraised value of the property. The lender is interested in the LTV because it is an indicator of loan risk.

For instance, on a home appraised at $300,000, if you make a down payment of $40,000, the $260,000 mortgage represents an LTV of 86 percent. In other words, your mortgage is 86 percent of the value of the home. A higher LTV could represent a greater risk for the lender because it suggests the assets behind the loan are lower. Should you default or foreclose with a high LTV, it becomes more difficult for the lenders to recuperate the outstanding balance when they resell the property. Because of that risk, they may charge higher interest in the first instance.

Lowering the LTV has a number of benefits for the purchaser. It will make applying for a loan easier and could lock in a lower interest rate. You may not be required to purchase mortgage insurance, which usually becomes a factor when the LTV is 80 percent or lower. If the value of the property should drop, you could find yourself “under water,” a term applied when the balance on your mortgage is greater than the value of the home.

You can improve the LTV by increasing your down payment, building equity as you pay off the mortgage or by proving that over time, the value of your property has increased. That requires another appraisal.

As time passes, check the numbers to see if your LTV has improved. If so, you may be able to drop your mortgage insurance.

Filed Under: Finances, Homes, Mortgages

Leading Stocks Have Similarities

June 4, 2018 by Twila Van Leer

Leading Stocks
Each is making inroads into markets that have not been tapped out
Among the hottest stocks on the market recently, three leaders have some interesting similarities, according to the Motley Fool.

The three are Align Technology, Editas Medicine and Nvidia, a pretty diverse sampling of current stock leaders. They are fast growing, with Align soaring some 50 percent so far this year. Editas is up by 30 percent and Nvidia 20 percent.

The three very different companies have something in common. Each is a leader in its genre. Align is dominating a clear dental aligner market. Editas is pioneering technology in CRISPR gene editing and Nvidia is booming with new approaches to production of chips for artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency mining and gaming. With a fixed focus, each of the companies is thriving in its corner of the market.

Align has developed a product and then created mass customization processes so that tens of thousands of Invisalign clear aligners can be produced and adapted specifically for a particular patient. They are shipped all over the country every day.

Although several biotech companies focus on gene editing, Editas has created its own niche targeting Leber congenital amaurosis type 10, the leading cause of blindness in children. Editas has several patents for its CRISPR processing gene editing used to treat the genetic blindness., as well as other genetic diseases.

Nvidia set the standard for powering gaming applications years ago with its graphics processing units. Turns out the GPUs created for gaming also could be used for running Al and cryptocurrency mining software. Nvidia has many would-be competitors, but to date leads the pack in the field.

Among the similarities they share is huge market opportunities. Each is making inroads into markets that have not been tapped out. Editas is the only company that offers treatment for LCA type 10 or several other genetic diseases that are being targeted for biotech remedies. The potential for years of amplifying their approach appears almost endless.

Align also has a rosy future. At present, the company claims just 12 percent of the possible market and less than 5 percent of the teen orthodontic market. That leaves plenty of room for expansion. Research that will allow for treatment of the most severe cases of tooth misalignment is expected to lead to 40 percent expansion in the next few years.

Nvidia’s prospects likewise appear to be unlimited. How much the Al market will grow is unpredictable, but prospects are for a much bigger market in the future. Continued predictions of growth in gaming, particularly in the areas of augmented reality and virtual reality all point to continuing success.

All three of these leading stocks are expensive and growing based almost solely on future prospects rather than current productivity.

Should you buy expensive stocks in high-growth markets? Not necessarily. The market has many examples of stocks with similar promise that have not performed as well as expected. And some of stocks that don’t meet the same criteria that have done unexpectedly well.

It’s the nature of playing the stock market.

Filed Under: Investments, Stocks, Technology

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 9
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search

Categories

Copyright © 2024 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in