Spike's Bitches 40: Buckle Up, Kids! Daddy's Puttin' the Hammer Down.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Susan, if you are coming into a large chunk of money, I strongly suggest you talk to a certified financial planner about how best to make the money accomplish your overall goals in life. And while you're in the meeting, just ask about the Europe trip.
Signed, is possibly getting very boring on the subject of financial planners.
Anyway, Hi all. I've been mostly dark for a while.
I had asked to have Wednesday the 23 off so that Andi and I could celebrate the 3rd anniversary of our first date (and, coincidentally, the 5th anniversary of the day we met online).
I got it off, true, but then my boss decided he could not spare me and instead of PTO, scheduled me on my normal day off. Because of this I have been working on the helpdesk the last 8 days straight.
Add to that the fact that on my previous day off I stepped on a thorn and in the middle of my 8 days I was limping so bad, I went to the clinic last Saturday and got it taken out and my foot X-rayed.
Then I still had to grimace my way to work that day and the rest of the days.
Two days later the cold from hell started. It's still not gone. I'm in day five and it's in the sniffle-cough, on and off hard to swallow part.
OTOH? Almost walking normally. Slight ache in foot, but it's getting better daily.
Hugs and well wishes for all those ill, infirm and needing the usual doses of ~ma.
holy cow I just learned a lot of new stuff.
We're planning to talk to a financial planner. We just already have a spreadsheet with the amount of shares we expect that DH is updating daily with the current stock price, and I was just playing with my "stupid money."
Really, I'm just hankering to plan out my dream itinerary and make it sound productive by planning a budget for it.
Susan, check your bank's Web site and see if it has something like this: [link] and/or go in and talk with a banker. That's a good place to start, at least.
As for where to save, if you're going to be adding money over time, check out the online savings accounts at places like ING or HSBC or Emigrant Direct -- they have the best APYs going for a standard savings account.
t edit
And/or money markets accounts, depending on how much you'll be socking away at the beginning.
A CD might have a better rate, but you'd have to put the whole amount in all at once, and it sounds to me like you don't have that just yet, that your goal is to build the amount. Although you could take your initial chunk of money and put it in a short-term CD, and then open an online savings for the rest of your incremental savings.
Just my (ha ha) 2 cents.
t edit again
And, in reading your most recent post, it sounds like you don't need this kind of advice. Sorry! (I know nothing about how best to budget for a European vacation 7 years in the future when the US dollar is currently in the shitter.)
Thanks for the tips, Teppy! (ETA I do need this kind of advice! I've been broke so long it's a whole new mentality to think of actually saving money over and above bills toward a medium-term goal instead of putting every extra $ I can find toward the credit card debt.)
I think I might do the dream itinerary thing, just so when I meet with the financial planner/banker, I can say, "This is what it would cost to do this today. I want to do it in 7 years."
Susan, what Steph said. If you have a little more appetite for risk, I've done well over the years in a short-term corporate bond mutual fund. I'd say there are too many variables to set a hard and fast budget amount now.
Other ideas to toss out -- you might want to look at travel-based rewards programs, if you aren't a member of any already. In seven years, you should be able to amass quite a few benefits.
And let us know when you start looking at specifics. I for one would be more than happy to toss out ideas on wheres to go, whats to do, hints to save $.
I have my emergency fund in HSBC Direct, which, when I opened it last year, had an APY of 5%. I think that, given the Fed's recent rate cut, now it's down to 3%.
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Okay, 3.05%, which is a full 2% drop in only 1 year. Jesus. Which sucks, but it's still better than the crap rate my local bank offers for savings accounts.
I don't agree with everything that Dave Ramsey (financial guru, apparently) says, but I am following his emergency fund advice, which is: if you have debt (other than a mortgage), then put $1,000 in an emergency fund for car troubles/root canal/etc., and then pay down your debt as fast as you can. (That's why mortgage doesn't count -- it's sort of hard to pay down a 30-yr quickly).
For people who don't have debt, I think the standard emergency fund advice is 3-6 months of living expenses (not necessarily 3-6 months of your current salary).
The good thing about the online savings accounts (in addition to the higher interest rates) is that most don't require a minimum balance in order to earn that rate.
As of right now, HSBC is 3.05%, ING is 3%, and Emigrant Direct is 2.75%. I know that there are others out there that are just as good (and also FDIC-insured, etc.), but those are the first 3 that came to mind.
WaMu has some good free options as well. One that I have that might work for Susan is called Savings for Success - you do automatic deposits for a year at a set rate and it pays 6%. They limit the amount you can put in the account - opening balance from $1 to $500 and monthly additions $1 to $500. So, it's not where your retirement goes, but it could help you put away up to $6,000 a year at a higher than usual rate.