5 great money ideas for 2011

What’s one of the country’s top New Year’s resolutions? “Get my personal finances on track.” It competes with “Lose five pounds” and way outdoes “Spend more time with family and friends.” If you get control of your money, you might even find it easier to control other niggling issues (like that extra Christmas weight). Here are five moves to make right now, to improve your personal finances during the next 12 months.

1. Cancel those dangerous rewards cards – the cards where you earn points for every dollar that you charge. On the surface, the points give you free airline miles, cash back, or discounts on catalog merchandise. But why would you think that a bank offers anything truly free? You’re paying for your own rewards, with the interest you’re charged on the balances that you carry forward every month.

What’s more, rewards cards tempt you to charge more than would otherwise be the case. A new study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago found that people with cash-back cards spend more, and build up more debt, than people with ordinary cards. Their debts grew faster than their spending, suggesting that they reduced their monthly payments. That would have added even more to their interest costs.

Rewards cards make sense only if they charge no annual fee and you pay every monthly bill in full. Only then are your airline miles truly free.

2. Use your Social Security tax cut to add to your savings or reduce your consumer debt. You might not notice the tax cut because you don’t get the money in a lump sum. It comes in the form of slightly more cash in your regular paycheck. Most likely, it will slip through your fingers in everyday spending. That’s good for the economy but not the best result for you.

The tax cut equals two percentage points of your earnings. Employees will pay 4.2 percent in 2011 instead of the usual 6.2 percent. The self-employed will pay 10.4 percent instead of 12.4 percent. If you earn $80,000, that’s a gain of $1,600 for the year. At $106,800 in earnings (the maximum amount that’s subject to the payroll tax) or more, you pick up $2,136.

Those amounts sound large but feel small when restated as an extra $61 or $82 in each biweekly paycheck. You can see why the dollars are easy to overlook.

To capture this tax cut for your own, personal future, first use the calculator at Kiplinger.com to find out exactly what it’s worth. Then arrange to have that amount of money saved automatically. You might raise the contribution to your 401(k) or Individual Retirement Account, add to the sum that goes automatically toward your debts, or pop it into a savings account. If it hits your checking account and stays there, it will vanish without a trace.

(Note that low-income workers, who qualified for Obama’s expiring Making Work Pay tax credit, will suffer a reduction in their take-home pay. The tax credit was worth more to them than the cut in the Social Security tax. Did you hear people fighting this tax increase? Neither did I.)

3. For adults and young people seeking higher education in 2011, chose a school whose costs keep you out of debt. Students don’t realize that, when they take a government or private loan, they’re potentially selling themselves into financial slavery. If you lose your job, or don’t earn enough to repay your student debts on time, late fees and interest charges mount fast. Delayed-payment plans only add to your debt.

You can’t escape an unpayable student loan by declaring bankruptcy. You’ll carry it, and a wrecked credit history, all your life. The same thing can happen to friends and relatives who co-sign student loans. No college or trade school is worth this risk. Choose a community college or a four-year school that will cover most of your costs. Schools – including famous ones – that turn a blind eye to the burden of loans should be taken out and shot.

4. Buy a home only if you’re putting down roots and feel happier owning than renting. Otherwise, don’t. Low as prices are, they could go lower. Homes are a lifestyle choice, not a good investment – even with the tax deductions.

Eventually, home prices will rise again but probably at a pace too slow to cover the huge expenses of owning, including closing costs, insurance, repairs, improvements, net interest costs, real estate taxes, and sales commissions when you move. There’s a dividend to home owning: you’re saving yourself the cost of rent. For investors, however, stocks pay dividends, too. Over many years, the stock market outperforms real estate, by far.

If you’re thinking of buying a “cheap” Florida or Arizona condo for investment purposes, make very careful calculations. What’s the vacancy rate on rental properties? Will your rents cover all your expenses, including renovations and ongoing costs when you are between tenants? Will you have positive cash flow? It’s a bad investment if you have to pay out-of-pocket each month.

5. Rekindle your affair with stocks. It’s hard to fall in love again, after the emotional breakups of 2000 and 2008. Investors have taken money out of U.S. stock mutual funds for four years in a row, the Investment Company Institute reports.

But look what you missed, during your long funk. Here are the stock market results through December 28 for 2010 alone, as measured by The Vanguard Group’s low-cost index mutual funds (with fees subtracted and dividends reinvested):

Stocks in Standard & Poor’s 500 index – up 14.8 percent; socially responsible stocks – up 14.9 percent; smaller U.S. stocks – up 28.3 percent; emerging markets – up 16.1 percent; total international stocks (counting stocks in both the developed and emerging countries) – up 9.6 percent; total U.S. stocks (both large and small companies) – up 17.2 percent; and Real Estate Investment Trusts – up 28 percent.

Vanguard’s intermediate-term bond fund returned 8.1 percent, so you might think that your flight to bonds was good enough. If you stay there, however, you’re looking backward. No one can guarantee which market will outperform. But the new federal stimulus program (more spending and more tax cuts), plus cash-rich corporations and more open consumer wallets, generally should favor stocks.

There’s never a world without risk. High on the list for 2011 is a meltdown in the municipal bonds of struggling cities and states and the certain appearance of a scary “unknown unknown.” But diversify anyway. Think of how much better your 2010 would have been if you’d followed that eternally accurate investment rule.

Read More:

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6 comments
Jim // 12/30/2010 at 5:34 pm

I totally agree with numbe 1 – we had ‘reward’ cards that cost us thousands in interest and fees each year, only for a few airlines points that we couldn’t use on the flights we wanted anyway! Far better to save the cash and get a cheap credit card.

Reply
jim harless // 01/12/2011 at 1:24 pm

Ms Quinn: I notice now that we can select from ETF, as well as mutual funds, here we have a but of mystery example. The Vanguard total stock market index mutual fund sells for VTSMX ( 32.02 as of market closed 1-11-2010) and yet the same total stock mk, in the ETF or Vanguard ( VTI) ( cost of 66.39 per share as of market closing 1-11-2011). Since both are Vanguard, and both seem to hold the same set of listed holdings from the web site listed holdings, why is one over twice the cost per share, as the other?

Reply
Jane // 01/28/2011 at 10:10 am

I put your question to John Woerth at Vanguard, and here’s what he says:

The prices (NAVs) of the two shares of Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund are largely a function of the initial price upon introduction and inception dates (adjusted, of course, for market gains/losses and any share price splits.) Both share classes (VTMSX is the Investor Shares and VTI are the ETF Shares) offer investors access to a broadly diversified basket of US stocks and will provide nearly identical returns (with the expense ratio difference accounting for the differential).

Share price aside, the major differences between the two shares are 1) expense ratio (0.18% vs. 0.07%) and 2) how they are purchased (via a mutual fund account or via a brokerage account [charging commissions when you buy or sell]). The link below discuss some of the other considerations your reader may want evaluate when considering between the two structures.

https://personal.vanguard.com/us/whatweoffer/etfs/etf-basics

Reply
Arlin // 01/12/2011 at 7:44 pm

Jane, the Big Short was a great read, but after that how could I ever buy bonds again? Your current post helps allay some fears, and stocks are high now, so a bond index fund looks better.

Reply
Wayne Rasper // 02/06/2011 at 9:11 am

Jane, Is it totally crazy to fund an IRA for 2010 with savings. I have failed to fund it Thank-you

Reply
Jane // 02/07/2011 at 3:14 am

It is never, ever, crazy to save tax-deferred!

Reply
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