Articles

Filter by Category:

All Risk Sentiment Debt Retirement Mindset Geopolitics Bonds Investing Life

Points and Miles

Points and Miles

Here is the thing with miles and points: People spend a lot of mental energy trying to figure out how to get the miles and points, and then they get the miles and points but never use them.

Read more

It Might Be a Bad Year

It Might Be a Bad Year

2024 might be a bad year. We might get a recession. We might get a bear market. We might get a housing collapse. We might get a war. We might get political turmoil. Actually, that is definitely going to happen.

Read more

New Year’s Resolutions, Etc.

New Year’s Resolutions, Etc.

Lots of people make plans to improve their financial lives in the new year. They generally fall into two categories:

  1. Paying down a substantial amount of debt

  2. Saving for a big purchase, like a car or going to school

Some people might also resolve to:

  1. Get better at investing.

But nobody really gets better at investing. Your time is better spent on #1 and #2.

Debt and Pie

Let’s say you have $20,000 in credit card debt. You are paying about $4,000 a year on this balance (which is incredible). If you make $80,000 a year, you can easily clean this up. You can put aside 25% of your income to pay down debt. No problem. That is a very attainable financial goal within the span of a year. But if you had $40,000 in credit card debt, you couldn’t realistically pay this down in a year—you would have to do it over two years.

Some people get themselves in a big financial jam, like with six figures in credit card or other debt. Then they feel stuck—it will take a decade to pay this off. It is pretty close to checkmate. Well, there is a way out: You will have to make more money. Cutting expenses will only get you so far—you will have to increase the revenue side to get out of this debt.

The amazing thing is that this never occurs to people in this position. It never occurs to them to make more money. They will eat ramen noodles, turn off all the lights, and turn down the thermostat, but it won’t occur to people to get a second job, a third job, a higher-paying job, or start a business.

Instead of slicing and dicing the pie into smaller and smaller pieces, why not make more pie?

About five years ago, I saw a 60 Minutes episode on student loans, and it featured a woman who had over $300,000 in credit card debt, with not a lot to show for it. She had gotten a few third- and fourth-tier degrees, but they hadn’t increased her earnings potential at all, and her monthly payments—already lowered through the income-based repayment plan—were pretty much swallowing her entire income. 

Bankruptcy wouldn’t have helped, as student loans cannot be discharged in bankruptcy. She was stuck. The only way out was to figure out a way to make significantly more money. It hadn’t occurred to her to do that.

Save First, Buy Later

As for saving up for big purchases, this is the right approach. Save first, buy later, rather than the other way around. 

I want to buy a BMW X5. My Toyota Highlander has 110,000 miles on it, and it is a rattletrap. I have a high credit score, and I have capacity—I could easily go to the BMW dealership and finance the whole thing at a reasonable interest rate. But I don’t do that because it would be irresponsible. 

The responsible thing to do is to save first and buy second. I have had a couple of car loans, and in the second case, I wish I didn’t. The interest I paid was a complete waste of money.

One caveat: The credit reporting agencies like it if you have some car credit outstanding. If you take out a car loan, and you pay it off, it will make your credit score go up. But think of it this way: If you are going to be paying $15,000 in interest to get your credit score up 20 points, is that really worth it? If your credit score is above 740, you don’t need to obsess over it.

Avoid Finance Charlatans

As far as getting better at investing goes, there’s a big marketplace full of books and newsletters and YouTube videos. But how do you know who is the real deal? 

I can tell you that a lot of the stuff on YouTube is full of charlatans. I spend pretty much zero time looking for investing education on YouTube. And just because someone has written a book, well, there are bad books written all the time. 

I can tell you that anything you get out of Jared Dillian Money is the real deal, and No Worries is probably the best personal finance book ever written. It comes out in just a few weeks. Preorder it here:

http://buynoworries.com

Be careful on New Year’s Eve. It’s amateur hour out there. You don’t want to regret something you did on the first day of the year. So, maybe stay home, light some candles, pet the cats, and watch the ball drop?

And finally, check out my new mix on SoundCloud—maybe you can play it on December 31.

Jared Dillian
Jared Dillian, MFA

 

Let Jared Help! Depending on your comfort level, we suggest picking one of these four options to get started:

  1. SHORT PRIVATE EQUITY: Jared Dillian’s new site aggregates critical stories on private equity’s downfall. With so much content, we had to create its own site—updated almost daily. Jared’s conviction in shorting private equity is stronger than ever. It’s completely free. Just bookmark and share it: ShortPrivateEquity.com.

  1. How Do I Start Investing? FREE Course: The thought of learning how to invest can seem intimidating. But it doesn’t have to be.

    With the right approach, you can kickstart your investing journey with the certainty you’re getting exactly what you need. How Do I Start Investing? is the perfect guide for when you’re ready to dive in.

  1. Jared Dillian’s Strategic Portfolio: Get access to Jared’s stress-free portfolio with this monthly newsletter.

    Timely, actionable investment ideas on exchange-traded funds that can help you mitigate volatility and build a resilient and profitable core portfolio, protecting you in bad times while prospering in good times. Yearly subscriptions available.

  1. The Daily Dirtnap: Jared’s macro newsletter for investing professionals. This daily letter takes a top-down approach, looking at the various asset classes, including stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities. Join over 4,000 readers who read his market insights every weekday.

  1. Street Freak: As the most active of Jared’s portfolio products, Street Freak is an aggressive stock-picking newsletter. It’s written for astute investors who crave creative, fresh macro analysis and forward-looking trade ideas so they can invest more opportunistically, without much hand-holding along the way.

    Adjusted for risk, of course. But this is not for the faint of heart. Jared and his readers are trying to make a lot of money here.

 
Buying a House in Today’s Interest Rate Environment

Buying a House in Today’s Interest Rate Environment

Even if you’re not up to your eyeballs in the financial world, you have probably heard that interest rates have come down a bit. Ten-year interest rates have dipped about 1%. Thirty-year fixed-rate mortgages are benchmarked off 10-year interest rates, so mortgage rates have come down about 1%.

Read more

This Deli Tray Is Unacceptable

This Deli Tray Is Unacceptable

Say you are having some people over to your house to watch a football game, so you go to the grocery store to get a deli tray. Nothing fancy—one of those cheap round circular plastic containers with sliced-up ham, turkey, and cheese.

Read more

‹ First  < 6 7 8 9 10 >  Last ›