Quantcast
Category Archive 'Money Makeover'
03.07.08

Lunch with Buffett for $2.1M? The two sides of generosity

- Lifestyle, Money Makeover, Smart Habits, budgeting, corporate governance, spending habits, taxes -

You all love Warren Buffett, right? Would you pay $2.1 million to have lunch with the oracle of Omaha like this Chinese investment manager who decided to pick up the tab by taking part in a high-stakes online charity auction?

Zhao Danyang, 36, will have lunch with the US billionaire at a Smith and Wollensky steakhouse restaurant in New York. He can bring seven friends to enjoy Buffett’s company for, oh, maybe two hours. Three hours max… maybe.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

01.07.08

An awakening from a face-off with death

- Money Makeover, insurance -

(This piece is written by Bianca, one of the readers of MoneySmarts who has been chosen for the one-year Money Makeover challenge by INQUIRER.net. Bianca’s real identity is confidential, so that MoneySmarts can share her family’s financials and the lessons she has learned with the rest of the world. Read more about Money Makeover here.)

I am faced with the possibility of death.

I never felt I needed life insurance, always resisted it, reasoned that under the mass law’s hierarchy of needs of Filipinos, it was way below –- after all, I had other more important bills to pay, I had properties under my name that I can pass on, and I never really cared much for the pestering of insurance agents who only saw me as their next paycheck. Okay, I did have it at one point, a P750,000 investment, which I lost because I did not give a damn. I was young and immortal.

Now, ten years after, I began to see it in a new light. I had undergone psychological-financial overhaul courtesy of Joe and Salve, and realized that, yes, I might actually need it. The tipping point, however, was a seminar on estate and trust that I attended. I learned that insurance is a great tool to transfer wealth –- there was no income or estate tax payable (provided the beneficiary is irrevocable), it was better than a transfer via a donation or a sale, or setting up a corporation to hold property, better than other very complex methods to hide and transfer wealth which would entail the assistance of lawyers and accountants, and yes, paying their fees. I realized too that I was not getting any younger and should consider these things seriously.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

13.06.08

GUEST POST: Carnapped

- Money Makeover, scams -

(This post is written by Bianca for Money Makeover)

May you live in interesting times, is one Chinese saying, or curse, whichever way you want to look at it. We do live in interesting times. Just when we thought that we are probably getting it right, calamity struck. Our car was taken. It was not insured.

A little background.

The hubby drives a 9-year-old truck that was the apple of his eyes. His brother handed it down to us four years ago. We paid the balance whenever we could and had already given a total of P90,000, the last installment just very recently. There is, of course, the cost of maintaining it which ran up to some P200,000 over the years. He had dreams of “dressing” it up – in March, he bought it a P20,000 set of wheels filled with nitrogen. He wanted it “lifted”, repainted, made into a macho monster truck. It was a constant companion when we moved furniture, or people, from here to there, and a comfort in the many times that my much-older car has broken down or was being repaired. He never wanted a new one. He was content and happy, my boo.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

23.05.08

Guest Post: Lessons learned from an unscheduled, expensive vacation

- Money Makeover, budgeting, family finance, vacations -

(This piece is written by Bianca, one of the readers of MoneySmarts who has been chosen for the one-year Money Makeover challenge by INQUIRER.net. Bianca’s real identity is confidential, so that MoneySmarts can share her family’s financials and the lessons she has learned with the rest of the world. Read more about Money Makeover here.)

I am stumped.

I had been meaning to write about our recent family trip to Hongkong and Macau. As a matter of fact, my computer bears the digital imprints of so many lines and pages written. But for the life of me, I could not strike the “send” key. It struck me why one night. I never could justify – even to myself – why we did it. A family undergoing financial overhaul simply does not go on trips. What example would I be? What message would I send? The shudders would not stop (even as I grin at the memories).

But, hey, we did it. And it, oh, set us back a few months. But there were valuable lessons we learned along the way.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

15.05.08

GUEST POST: Why I am keeping my timeshare

- Investing, Lifestyle, Money Makeover, buying tips, vacations -

(This piece is written by Bianca, one of the readers of MoneySmarts who has been chosen for the one-year Money Makeover challenge by INQUIRER.net. Bianca’s real identity is confidential, so that MoneySmarts can share her family’s financials and the lessons she has learned with the rest of the world. Read more about Money Makeover here.)

A financial planner (not Joe Ferreria) told us: sell your timeshare. My husband and I communicated silently the way old lovers do – with a look (or a glare, but that is another story) – and made a decision.

We will not.
[Read the rest of this entry »]

09.11.07

GUEST POST: Madam Auring

- Investing, Money Makeover, stock market -

auring1

I met Madam Auring today.

I could not believe it was her beyond the gossamer curtains.  What is this famous (or dare I say infamous) madame doing, encamped, in the crowded walkway of Ever Gotesco Commonwealth? Behind her was a stall selling shirt for kids – 3 for 100 (your name in textile glue – for free).  And what am I doing here?  Should I entrust my future to a P250 session – unlimited questions – with a madame known more for her beauty enhancement procedures and penchant for younger men than her magical prowess?

Joe said we should, so I did.  I held out my hand and then came a barrage of hula.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

25.10.07

GUEST POST: Money and Math

- Investing, Money Makeover, Saving money, budgeting, credit cards, family finance, shopping, spending habits, stock market, women and finance -

(This post was written by Bianca, a MoneySmarts reader who was chosen among a long list of candidates to be part of our Money Makeover. In Money Makeover, we match financial planners with reader-volunteers and chronicle their one-year journey to their financial goals. Generali Pilipinas’ senior executive vice-president Augustus J.V. Ferreria has agreed to coach couple Bianca and Diego for 12 months pro-bono. In Money Makeover, we aim to show readers that finding financial freedom is really possible. Read previous Money Makeover articles here.)

I do not do math.

Addition

It started simple enough.  Joe wanted us to list all of our expenses every day forever.  He did not warn us that our hearts could suffer anxiety attacks because, for one, we were confronted by the fact that our expenses overshot our income by some P30,000 every month.  He also provided no explanation as to how we could have survived all this time – but our zero-balance savings, credit card debts, frequent lifeline calls to mom and dad could possibly provide a clue. It is a stressful exercise trying to figure out where our money went every day because with it comes the understanding that it went to excesses of the flesh and vanities. Want and need are becoming very delineated concepts at this time (but concepts all the same).

credit cards

[Read the rest of this entry »]

03.09.07

GUEST POST: Our genetic pool

- Money Makeover, spending habits -

Norma's Cranberry-Orange Muffins

By Bianca

It was not your run-of-the-mill first meeting. True, there were muffins and sodas and a lot of getting-to-know-you questions but then Joe posed this query: “Who are your parents?” And he did not mean their names.

Joe explained that we are our parents – how we spend, earn, our attitude toward money – they are mainly because of what we were taught, what we observed from our parents, what we hated but imbibed anyway, whether consciously or unconsciously. That if we understand them, we understand ourselves.

I began to understand. [Read the rest of this entry »]

28.08.07

Know yourself: the first baby step to financial security

- Financial Planning, Money Makeover, spending habits -

You’ve all heard of the expression “know yourself.” Experts believe this should be the first baby step of people who want to successfully get off their little gerbil wheel of consumerism, where it is custumary to work like horses the whole week and spend everything on weekends. No matter what investing prowess we have achieved, or what superior knowledge about wealth accumulation we have attained, if we skip this process, there’s a likelihood we may crash and burn and perhaps question whether financial independence is really an achievable goal.

Thing is, facing reality is tough. Nevertheless, knowing our inner financial blueprint could bring us closer to financial happiness or hinder us from getting there.

From the perspective of the financial planning professional, taking this route requires more work and dedication. Cookie-cutter financial plans will not work. A financial plan that folds in clients’ money personalities addresses their inner money demons and strengths, and hopefully builds on those strengths to create a more financially responsible and happy person.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

28.08.07

Finding your financial personality

- Financial Planning, Money Makeover, spending habits -

A very wise man wrote that money is more about the mind, more than the math. I tend to agree, considering the results of recent Money Makeover sessions with volunteers Diego and Bianca, and Sheldon.

As I recounted in this post, financial planner Augustus J.V. Ferreria began his Money Makeover sessions by asking our three volunteers about their childhood, parents, siblings and major milestones in their lives. During that meeting, several initial analyses came out.

Diego and BiancaDiego was deprived as a child, having grown up in poverty as the eldest among his siblings. His father’s sudden business success during his teen years flipped the situation over and allowed him to enjoy the comforts of financial security – a generous allowance, a good car, and an expensive course (Fine Arts in UP Diliman).

The initial analysis: Diego may have difficulty curbing his spending appetite because of his past. A history of deprivation raises the risk of splurging and uncontrolled spending to feed unresolved longings.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

Welcome to
Money Smarts, where people can talk freely about personal finance, business, financial independence, the economy and my personal favorite, giving the rat race a kick on the butt. INQUIRER.net business editor Salve Duplito has the floor, but you can freely ask questions and take the mic.
Disclaimer: Readers are solely responsible for their investment decisions; conduct proper due diligence and obtain professional advice. Money Smarts will not be liable for any loss or damage caused by a reader's reliance on information obtained from this blog. Money Smarts receives no compensation of any kind from any company or individual mentioned.
INQUIRER.net VDO

Search

Archives
You are browsing
the Archives of Money Smarts in the 'Money Makeover' Category.
Categories
Close
E-mail It