Carnival of Wealth, Perseid Meteor Shower Edition

It's raining glowsticks! Hallelujah!

It’s raining glowsticks! Hallelujah!

 

It’s happening RIGHT NOW! Look outside your window! (Please wear a helmet.) The Perseids – called such because they come from the constellation Perseus – are visible around this time annually. Look in the right part of the sky during the right time of day (early, early morning) and you can see a meteor every minute. Helps if you live in the Northern Hemisphere, too.

On with the show. We checked the archives, and Barbara Friedberg hasn’t stopped by since last June. She’s back with a primer for building wealth in 15 minutes a day. Specifically, she’s talking to the people who’d rather do absolutely anything else in the world than experience the tedium that is thinking about money. Think about it this way: keeping a ledger and collecting financial statements may not sound like fun to most of us, but the benefit to doing so is down the road. You like delayed gratification, don’t you?

I do like delayed gratification. -Hank Hill

Then that settles it. Follow Barb’s easily adoptable advice. Also, read this.

Pauline Paquin is an inspiration to anyone who dreads the idea of exchanging a few hours of life every day for a paycheck from an employer. The woman behind Make Money Your Way (among others) argues that if you own a house, and have at least one bedroom you’re not using, you’re denying yourself an chance to earn. Personally, we at CYC would rather sleep under a bridge than live with strangers, but the opportunity to turn your domicile into cash flow still exists for those of you who are less fussy about who you live with. Now to start charging our cats rent.

[Post from something called FrugalPortland.com rejected. As we told the submitter, “We’re going to do you a favor and not run this. We have standards here.]

FI Pilgrim at FI Journey (it stands for “financial independence”) has maybe the saddest opening line of a bio we’ve ever seen:

FI Pilgrim has been working his way towards middle management since he was 16 years old.

His post discusses lifestyle choices, and advocates that you…well, we’re not really sure what. Reflect, and maybe act.

Hell is nothing but questions like the one Daniel at Sweating the Big Stuff poses this week: “Would You Gain 25 Pounds To Get Rid Of Your Debt?”

It’s similar to a question someone asked Drew Magary at Deadspin last week: Would he wear a single rollerblade for the rest of his life, or have sex with his mother once? (“I’d try the rollerblade for a few days, then get frustrated, give up, and go for the incest. Sometimes, you have to do what’s practical.”)

Alright, the questions are only superficially similar, but Daniel’s was more than just a mental exercise. Incredibly, he said he’d stay with the $50,000 student loan hit he’s incurred over temporarily blowing up. (Note: Daniel is $50,000 in the red? We had no idea. To his credit, his site does more than just obsess over his debt.) Some people left inane comments (but we’re being redundant), e.g. “The answer to this question is different for everyone”, “Very interesting!” and “Well, it depends. lol”, but the question did spur us to answer it. Hypothetically, of course, since we’re not carrying any debt.

Give us the corpulence. For most people, erasing 25 pounds is far easier than making $50,000 in debt disappear. Heck, if you train hard enough outside on a hot summer day it’s possible to lose 10 pounds and make it 40% of the way to your goal right there, whereas earning $20,000 in a single day is beyond the capabilities of most of us. Then again, that’s in theory. As a rule the people who are undisciplined enough to pay down their debts are the same ones who are undisciplined enough to stay fat.

He’s being funny, right? Evan at My Journey to Millions asks if you have a right to decide your kid’s college major. You do, because Junior almost certainly isn’t paying out-of-pocket. And if your kid is paying out of pocket, then congratulations: you’ve raised someone extremely responsible. Who thus, by extension, has earned the right to study whatever. Which, because she is responsible, is almost certainly going to be something with a high return on investment. No one who spends the summer working her tail off to pay the next year’s tuition is going to major in comparative literature. Or photography.

Or you could insist on trade school, which would not only be easier for your kid to pay his own way for anyway but would offer a more promising return than a liberal arts degree.

Matt Becker of Mom & Dad Money asks if peer-to-peer lending will supplant banks and other financial institutions. Well, we’re exaggerating, but you get the idea. Banks do a little more diligence than Lending Club does, which is why bankers are rich and people throwing their money around on the internet are not.

Start saving early, and by 65 you’ll be piloting your own yacht to Norway and eating solid-gold lutefisk. We’re told to believe some version of that, but Michael at Kitces.com points out that there’s more to investing than just biding one’s time for as long as possible. That’s because as you approach your retirement date (if you’re employing a conventional strategy), a greater chunk of your nest egg’s growth will derive from market returns. Should the market take a dive when you start receiving AARP mailings, you could be in for something unpleasant.

Even engineers get sick of the daily grind. Harry Campbell of Your PF Pro quit his job – on a Tuesday, no less – and says “being unemployed has been pretty awesome.” We can only hope that he left a pile of non-collated TPS reports on his boss’s desk before waltzing out the door.

To determine average return values over a number of years, Michael at Financial Ramblings uses the geometric mean (the xth root of the product of x items) as opposed to the conventional arithmetic mean (the sum of x items, divided by x.) You should too, if you want to account for volatility and not overestimate returns.

Dividend Growth Investor has made a career out of finding undervalued companies with strong fundamentals, that pay high dividends. Can you do the same? Theoretically, maybe. But as he stresses, there’s more to successful dividend investing than knowing how to consume data. Practice counts for a lot. He explains his rationale for several of his latest purchases, all of which sound more than reasonable to us.

Sandi at Spring Personal Finance sent her post this week with the caveat, “I fear I’m becoming strident.” To paraphrase First Daughter Alice Longworth, “If you can’t say anything nice, come sit with us.” Sandi’s latest pet hate is mutual fund salespeople who claim altruism and offer you “free” planning. Which is as “free” as the drinks in the casino are.

Finally, Jason at Hull Financial Planning reminds us of the mathematical certainty that not every startup business can be successful. No matter how thoroughly you work and how convinced you are that your idea is solid and will earn the trust and patronage of millions, you can’t control everything. Knowing when to cut your losses and start again – or even better, setting a deadline with secondary quantifiable goals for such – is as much the hallmark of a smart entrepreneur as anything is.

Thanks again for reading. New Anti-Tip of the Day tomorrow, new post Wednesday (possibly an original and not a paid one), and other new one Friday. Repeat until the end of time.

They Paid Us

Ferratum_logo_blue.ai

 

 

 

(This is a guest post from Jacquie Dymock, the Country Manager for Ferratum Australia, payday loans and other short term cash providers. Connect with Jacquie on Google+ as well.)

 

Know Your Rights When Dealing With Payday Loan Debt Collectors

While payday loans can be helpful for some people, they turn out to be complete disasters for certain individuals who cannot make their payments on time. Once you start to get behind on these kinds of high interest loan payments, it is rather easy for you to get in over your head and not know how to find a workable solution to the problem. If you are someone who is in the midst of a battle with a payday loan debt collector right now, then you need to make sure that you know your rights before you continue. Let’s take a look at the straight facts of payday loan collection.

Check Your State’s Usury Laws

Although most payday loan debt collectors will not tell you this, there are actually limits to how much interest a lender can charge you on a yearly basis. The limits can change from state to state, so it is important to make sure that you understand the law in your state before you try to fight off a debt collector. If you have found that your debt collector is trying to collect an illegal amount of interest, then you should inform the debt collector about the laws in your state to get them off your back. If the debt collector continues to hassle you, then you may need to call a lawyer or your state’s financial board to get them off your back.

The Debt Collector Cannot Be Aggressive

If you are dealing with an aggressive debt collector who seems to think it is all right to call your home and place of business more than ten times a day, then you could be dealing with someone who is breaking the law. Payday debt collectors are only allowed to send you polite letters and leave you calm messages on your voice mail, so you should try to report any debt collector who is getting a bit too aggressive.

The Debt Collector Cannot Continue to Force Collections

If your payday loan debt collector has direct access to your bank account, then you should know that they are not allowed to send any charges to your account without your permission. If you do not have the funds in your account as they continue to try to collect your payments, you will be hit with massive amounts of fees from your bank. In certain situations, the debt collector will actually be liable for those fees because they were not supposed to be charging your account without your permission in the first place. If you have been charge overdraft and NSF fees for attempts by a debt collector to charge your bank account, then you may be able to get those charges dropped or sent over to the payday lending company.

The Debt Collector Has to Be Willing to Work with You

If you are trying to solve the collection problem by coming up with a new payment plan, then you should be in the clear of any more extra fees in the future. Some states actually require debt collectors to listen to their borrowers when it comes to restructuring their payment plan, so make sure that you are at least attempting to solve the problem instead of ignoring all those phone calls and letters. This is not the kind of problem that will go away on its own, and it is much better to take a proactive approach when it comes to dealing with an unlawful debt collector.

 

Ask for Legal Help

Once you have done everything you could possibly do to work with your debt collector and they are still not willing to budge on your collections, then you may want to ask for legal advice from a payday loan lawyer. There are some situations where a debt collector will simply not give up on harassing you on a daily basis, and it is important to take legal action in these kinds of situations. If your debt collector has been too aggressive or your payday loan was illegal in the first place, then you need to ask for help from a legal expert. Knowing your rights will only get you so far against someone who is willing to break the law while trying to intimidate you into making large payments. Sometimes you have to be willing to fight fire with fire and stand up for yourself against a payday loan debt collector.

Quick hit

A site called BHPH Prices (Buy Here, Pay Here. It’s referring to cars) interviewed us. Enjoy.