Tagged: Goals

Carnival of Financial Goals #2

After reading almost 50 posts of the Carnival of Financial Goal #2. I am bit tired now, but I think Sam has done a very good job. There were some quite interesting posts and goals to be found on the carnival. I also secured a place in the carnival, with my post which i could find using Ctrl+F ;)

The most inspiring were as follows:

Pinyo at Moolanomy has posted a really inspiring and a structured goal.

The Little Dough Girl started with goals that are very conceptual. You stick to concepts ad you’ll achieve your goals.

The Goal at Digerati Life, I would call it as a big goal and shows her futuristic thinking for a better future.

The goal posted at Plonkee inspire us to analyze ourselves for our own future

The goals posted by Millionaire Mommy Next Door were methodical and well planned.

Goals at Cash Money Life were special in their own way and induce a positive optimism in the reader.

The dividend Guy presented a scenario analysis which can be applied to many situations.

Early Retirement Extreme provides us with the purpose with which we can achieve out goals. Passion!

Yoopersmith want us to change our attitude towards money and does a pretty good job with examples.

The last post that I like very much was of Adam Freedman at Investor Journal just that I had to add to his post that I would put the Dont’s first and then the Do’s as I’ll probably learn the Dont’s first by making mistakes and then rectifying them to arrive at the Do’s

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Year End Review Of Financial Goal

This blog and I started our journey for managing my finances in the beginning of this year. I planned certain goals in January my financial goal for 2007 one would surly come to know that no money management has taken place.

Today I can see that I got digressed from what I had planned originally. My Financial Goal for 2007 is far away from accomplishment. A look at the table below will tell you clearly.

review.PNG

So what is there to be reviewed when I have failed miserably to achieve my goals and that too with a huge margin of more than 50 percent. The review can be done for my existing situation, the mistakes I made during this year and the learning that I should take from this year to the next year.

Existing situation
Though I may have a similar networth as that of the beginning of the year the good news is that I have removed my credit card debt. My total assets have increased and my standard of living has also been improved.

I refer to my improved standard of living because I have accumulated some physical assets. Today I have got my own television, a desktop, a washing machine an iron. All these I have purchased is a preparation for my yet to commence married life.(I have not purchased a double bed yet :) )

The basic necessities that I don’t have today is a refrigerator, a bed, a sofa, a watch, a good quality phone. I still live in a rented house and I have to buy a car too. To carry out my hobby I have to buy a D-SLR.

Well these are the distant dreams that I have to plan for.
Continue reading

A Five Stage Process of Getting Debt Free

It’s over a year and a half that I am in a bad debt situation and surprisingly it’s nearly one and a half years that I am into a paid job. If I correlate the two then I can conclude that steady income flow increased my debt taking tendency. In other words I will say that the security of getting my paycheck made me to overspend.

When I gave it a thought so as to find the reason for the above I could come up with only one reason I can pay it later when I get my paycheck. If I talk in time frames then I was spending future money into present but the problem with this concept is that you cannot account for future expenses (always) which come as an emergency e.g. bike/car repairs, health problems and many such unforeseen incidents/events.

So what happens next? I have already spent that money in the past and now I am stuck with a high credit card bill with no money to pay for, the result a bad debt and more importantly a way to a debt trap.

The cause: credit card spending! No, the cause here is trying to afford that you can’t just by assuming valid reasons for buying at that moment, but later in debt trap you feel that you could have deferred your purchase. For example, I need a new car, (mental process: the car I am driving is making sound, the mileage is very less and asks for more maintenance so why not replace it, I am getting a good deal with XX dealer). Next day you are with a new car along with a big debt on your head.

Now you are desperate to get out of it but you can’t as you cannot overclock your debt reduction process due to a simple reason, you don’t have any extra source of income and the debt brings interest and other charges with itself which further enhances it.

In this case my mind stopped thinking constructively for alternatives for reducing the debt as it is already preoccupied by the huge debt. The result, time wastage over trivial things and not be able to devise a plan. So what should I do? Well there is a way, which I am following and trying to get out of debt. Continue reading

Financial Goal 2007

The Benchmark Index BSE Sensex is expected to reach 15000 levels this year. Seeing the current levels of 13500, I feel this is an indicator of strong economic growth for this year. Based on this assumption I have set my financial goal for the current year.

Before setting a plan I need to define what Financial Planning is for me:

Right Financial Planning is must for Wealth Creation.

The process of establishing financial goals of an entity (individual or her family), and achieving them through management of personal finance.

The goals may involve; planning for education, medical treatment, buying a home and retirement. The general perception for financial planning is that of tax planning, insurance planning or investments. But it also includes asset allocation, debt management employee benefits, etc. Continue reading