A Guest Post From A Dog

 

Occasionally we run guest posts. If you’d like to submit one, see our requirements here. Today’s is written by one of the very few submitters capable enough to meet all our criteria, Froofy the Dog.

 

He already writes better than most Carnival of Wealth submitters

Hi, this is Froofy! My brain can do the following, and not much else:

-remember which people I can trust
-know where my food and water are
-allow me to whimper so the people mentioned above will open the door and let me out when required.

 

Yet even I know that you’ve got to be some kind of lower vertebrate to take to heart half the tripe I read that’s passed off as personal finance advice. (Yes, I occasionally read. That contradicts what I wrote earlier, but I want you to suspend your disbelief, at least until the end of the post.) These self-styled experts and bloggers repeat the same incessantly dumb stuff and think that a) it’ll make a difference if executed, and b) anyone’s going to act on their awful advice anyway. Here, I’ll list some of the most offending personal finance mantras I’ve come across. I’ll use point form, the preferred method of communication for dimwits:

  1. Create an emergency fund.

What’s an “emergency”? Yes, I know, it’s a relatively simple word, but what, specifically, could it mean in this context? Give me an example, humans.

Medical bills?
Car accident?

Wow, you folks are unimaginative. Then again, you cite the same emergencies repeatedly because there just aren’t that many occurrences that can legitimately qualify as “emergencies”. That’s if you define an emergency as something that requires you to draw down funds that you’ve set aside for such an unfortunate occasion.

Let’s examine the examples above.

You can buy health insurance. Yeah, I know, it’s too expensive. Waah, waah, waah. Get off that doughy posterior of yours, eat better, and maybe your premia will decrease.

Besides, if your finances are so tight that you consider insurance to be expensive, why do you want to sock away money in an inert account anyway? Shouldn’t you be growing that money instead? Explain this to me. I’m just a dog.

Okay, #2. Car accident. You have insurance for that, too. In fact, it’s required.

I know what you’re thinking. What about an unforeseen expense that insurance doesn’t cover, something like a cylinder head assembly that needs replacing?

This is easy. You withdraw the $3000 or so that that’ll cost out of one of your investments. Dropping $3000 is something you’d obviously rather avoid doing, but when the time comes, you’re going to have to do it anyway. To quote business author Harvey Mackay, you’re supposed to dig your well before you’re thirsty. That’s not a retroactive argument for creating an emergency fund. Rather, it’s a retroactive argument for putting your money somewhere it could grow.

Confused? I usually communicate in barks, so you need to work with me here.

When someone recommends an “emergency fund”, they mean a highly liquid account – one you can take money out of easily. Most of the time, that’s going to mean a savings account that earns either no interest or minimal interest. This is stupid. If you’ve got the discipline to sock away $5000 or whatever and not touch it, good for you. But it also means you’ve got the discipline to amass $5000 and actually, you know, do something with it. Five large is a down payment on a condo. A cheap one, anyway. Or it’s a substantial piece of a real estate investment trust. Or it’s 223 shares of Hewlett-Packard, which is trading at close to a 52-week nadir. They recently switched out CEOs, can’t possibly make any more dumb acquisitions anytime soon, and probably should have been selected by the folks behind Control Your Cash in Financial Uproar’s stock-picking contest. Not sure why they didn’t.

When you create an emergency fund, you’re saying, “I want my money to stagnate.” If I get lucky, something costly will happen and it’ll all be worth it. Dang, Mark Twain wasn’t kidding. You people really do love to rationalize.

2. If you can’t handle credit, freeze your cards in a block of ice.

Come on. You’re screwing with me, right? This is like a personal-finance version of the hidden-ball trick, isn’t it?

Why do you have credit cards if you’re not going to use them? Oh, for emergencies? See above. To build credit? Don’t you have to occasionally use them, then?

I know a guy, a Dobermann. Nice fella. From Germany, which is why he uses the additional “n”. His owner tried to quit smoking once. Well, several dozen times. He’d buy cigarettes, then get his girlfriend to hide the packs in the house. Why you’d possess something and not use it, we couldn’t tell you. Flirting with lung cancer seems at least a little more straightforward than trying to fool yourself into being tobacco-free. If you’re afraid that being able to access your cards means you’re going to go on a spree and end up thousands of dollars in debt…well, have you tried being an adult? Try it and see how that works.

3. Create a budget and stick to it.

How does this one work, exactly?
Let’s say you get a call from a friend on the 30th of the month. He asks if you’d like to meet him for lunch. At a restaurant, which presumes you’ll be spending some amount of money.

What do you say? “Sorry. Went a little crazy at Chili’s last Monday – I ordered an appetizer and an entrée. Long story short, I reached my allotment for the month (Expenses: Food & Entertainment category) and can’t meet you. Unless you want to pay for me, or perhaps you’d rather I just order water while watching you eat.”

You’ll lose a friend, and you’ll deserve to.

Budgets are for business entities. They have to have them. Businesses have multiple decision-makers pulling in different directions, and not everyone can have their way. The research & development team would love to have an extra few hundred thousand to experiment with, but the CFO has owners to answer to and finite resources to manage. The factions have to reach a compromise, thus every department gets a budget.

But you’re not a company. You’re one person, with no one else to answer to. Try this: spend necessarily. Don’t squander your money. Make a conscious decision every time you take out your wallet. Don’t freak when you’re in line at the supermarket and you find that that 60¢ bag of cilantro put you over your self-prescribed limit. Life’s too short. And are you really going to spend time fixated on a spreadsheet, categorizing your expenses for the sheer fun of it? Come on. Unless you’re naturally inclined to do so, you don’t. Stop kidding yourself.

Those 3 useless pieces of advice just perpetuate bad habits among people who were never going to change anyway. You don’t need an emergency fund: you need assets. You don’t need to save yourself from yourself: you need to grow up. And you don’t need a budget. You just need to stop spending stupidly.

That wasn’t so bad, was it? (It wasn’t.) Told you we were smarter than cats.

Carnival of Wealth, Tim Duncan Edition

And he's a mime, too! Here he is doing "Stuck In Center Alignment On Control Your Cash"

 

Why can’t everyone be like the big man? Year after year of quiet excellence, and no desire to share his personality with the world at large. Consistency and aptitude still count for something, right?

We could give a damn who wins the NBA title; not that we’re not fans, rather that we have no emotional investment nor rooting interest in something that only tangentially affects us. But it’s hard not to pull for the stoic giant who forever redefined the power forward position. Would that everyone on the planet knew what they were good at, and didn’t waste their time trying to be something else. Besides, he could use one more ring for the thumb.

There are blog carnivals. There are personal finance blog carnivals, and most of them are horrible. Cut, paste, present. You can read one of those if you want – it won’t take long – or you can stay here and at least be entertained and possibly learn something. Doesn’t that sound better? Of course it does.

The Carnival of Wealth. A week’s worth of posts from around the personal finance realm. Some are great, some are not. None are average, or they wouldn’t be here. Submitters, go here. Readers, sit back and ingest:

Week after week, Ken Faulkenberry of AAAMP Blog has an uncanny ability to submit his post seconds before we decide we’re going to start writing the CoW. That’s why he’s usually at the top, and remains so this week. Ken argues that you do well in a bear market by losing less than everyone else does. That isn’t technically true, but his point is undeniable – understand the difference between a secular bear market and a cyclical bear market. You can start by guessing which we’re in now.

Here’s an example of what not to submit to the CoW. It’s someone’s middle school essay on investing in oil and gas. Someone going by the name “Lynn Jackson”, writing at One Cent At A Time. “Lynn” explains what you need to do before buying shares of, say, ExxonMobil:

You will be faced with evaluating different companies for their experiences, success rates, and their fits with your needs.

Using “needs” as a noun, -1 point. “Lynn” continues:

In turn, these companies will want to get a lot of information about you to assess your suitability. You will need to work with a lawyer, because this weight of investment requires a considerable amount of regulation and compliance.

Huh? A post written for the most novice of investors, claiming that a company you’re interested in buying a piece of will keep a dossier on you? There were 2 comments on this post last we checked, and neither commenter challenged “Lynn” on this falsehood. If you’re looking to do a hostile takeover, then yeah, this post might be valuable to you if you can get past the unspeakable liberties “Lynn” is taking with the English language. “Lynn”, we’re trying to delight readers, not scare them away.

Good Lord. Speaking of middle schoolers, this next one opens with the last resort of every 12-year-old who has a report due Monday morning and it’s now Sunday night: a dictionary definition!

Purpose – what does this word mean to you?

The dictionary defines purpose as ‘The reason for which something is done or created or for which something exists’

That’s from Savvy Scot. Have at it.

Someone at UPromise wrote an advertorial for Jason at One Money Design, and allowed him to put his name on it. Or maybe he really did write it himself. No way to prove it. Either way, he got paid. Oh, did we forget the link? Oops. Remind us to go back and insert it.

Does anybody proofread anymore? We’re not talking about an occasional typo slipping through. We’re talking about a post so replete with errors that it makes us want to find the college admissions officer who greenlit the submitter’s application and give her a Breathalyzer test. Sean at One Smart Dollar lists (bloggers love lists) 8 jobs that don’t require a degree. The funniest part of this post is that out of the millions of college dropouts who went on to wealthy and productive lives, the 2 Sean cites by name are Mark Zuckerberg and…Ryan Seacrest. Yes, with the right brand of hair gel and sufficient shiny teeth, you too can be a barely closeted no-talent. But don’t despair, because

While college can cost thousands of dollar, the cost to take a few classes to before a real estate broker is much less.

Read that aloud for full effect.

Keep in mind that being a real estate broker is not a 9-5 type of job.

Fine as far as it goes, but he follows that up with a Control Your Cash favorite – the utterly superfluous sentence:

Real estate brokers often work nights and weekends.

If you don’t read your own stuff, why should the rest of us?

(A post titled “How Many Keywords Should You Run On A Page?” Yeah, we can’t wait to run that.)

Did we run a submission last week on checking your credit score? You mean we missed a week? That won’t do. If the most overwritten topic in personal finance is “creating your emergency fund”, “checking your credit report” is a close second. We’ll let Squeezer at PF Success handle it from Oh God, we don’t even have it in us to write interesting comments on the inanity of this particular repetitive blog topic anymore.

Should we just tank at this point? If we run the worst carnival on the internet, do we get the 1st pick in next year’s carnival draft? Let’s try.

Complex Search lists 10 reasons the housing market won’t recover anytime soon. Most of the reasons are valid, even though the post is wildly self-contradictory. Opening line:

We’re all pulling for the housing market to recover.

Start of the next paragraph:

If you’re considering buying a home because you want to live in it for 30 years, this market is perfect for you.

So we’re not “all” pulling for the housing market to recover. Some of us want prices to stay low. You just said as much! Even better, this post was written by John Haller, the self-proclaimed founder of Fidelity One Credit Corp, “a socially responsible company.”

“We’re socially responsible” is like “I have a great sense of humor.” If you have to say it…

Socially responsible? Guess what Fidelity One specializes in. Car title loans! You can’t make this up.

At least one person’s going to send us an email this week saying, “Why do you have to be so critical?”, to which we’ll respond, “Click on the links in the CoW.”

And just like that, PKamp3 from DQYDJ.net has to come in and ruin everything. Original topic? Check. Readable English? Check. A little humor and lots of expertise? Check. And he slew at least one dragon of conventional wisdom, too. PKamp3 says you can’t look at a stagnant market level over a certain period and say you’d have been better off keeping your money in a mattress. Why? Because dividend reinvesting, that’s why. PKamp3 backs up his points with irrefutable data, too. Damn him. And we were doing so badly, too.

What’s this? Another good post? Now you’re just rubbing it in. Stephanie at Nerd Wallet shoots down a gimmick from C1 Bank. Buy a CD, get a Mercedes. Of course there’s a catch, and of course the smart folks at Nerd Wallet are happy to bring it to your attention. This post is so comparatively good, we’re not even going to point out the tired “car loses value the moment you drive it off the lot” mantra.

(sigh) From Liana Arnold at CardHub, an honest and critical review of the 3 latest travel rewards cards from Bank of America. Again, rewards are everything. Credit limit is close to everything. Interest rate is nothing. (Not “interest rate is zero”, but “interest rate is nothing.” Download our book if you think that’s a distinction without a difference.)

Now we’re in danger of squeaking into the playoffs.

And again. John Kiernan at Wallet Blog wants you to just buy a freaking house already, alright? Mortgage rates have a lower bound (zero). They’re rapidly approaching it. God, the universe, John Kiernan and the Control Your Cash principals all want you to buy a house. Just do it.

Andrew at 101 Centavos is back. He embodies all the traits we love here at Control Your Cash: strong opinions, original research, the ability to write without stultifying…he’s basically the opposite of a mommy blogger. This week he writes about institutional investors’ reluctance to include Walmart in their portfolios.

Did you know that only 31% of Walmart stock is held by institutional investors? You didn’t, and you probably don’t know what to make of that number because it’s meaningless without a frame of reference. According to Andrew, 60-80% of a typical stock that trades on the New York Stock Exchange is held by institutional investors. So we figured that maybe Walmart’s low number is a result of the company’s enormous market capitalization: there’s so much Walmart to go around that Ma and Pa Investor can’t help but own 70% of it. Andrew proves that that’s not the case, and explains why brokerage houses are largely insane.

(Seven Essential Navigation Tips for New Boat Owners? From something called BoatInsurance.org? That’s more like it.)

On balance, that was awful. Here’s your money back. The good news is we’re on Investopedia, all the freaking time. And you can follow us on Twitter (@CYCash). And we’ll have something of our own creation here on Wednesday. Stay tuned.