Friday, November 20, 2009

Is Bigger Better? Scaling Down The American Dream


By: Roshawn Watson

Builders everywhere are scaling down home sizes, amenities, and prices. Today's post-crash buyers are not willing (nor able in some cases) to extend themselves like before, and the impact on the housing market is substantial.

New Home-Buyers Forego the McMansions
No longer are 5000 square feet homes the expected norm for your typical upwardly-mobile middle-class family. Builders are axing private-theaters rooms, and grand "impress the neighbors sized" foyers, and unnecessary fireplaces.

According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, applications for mortgages have hit a nine-year low, plunging a seasonally-adjusted 11.7% in the week ending Nov. 6. New home sales in the U.S. have fallen sharply as well, from 1.3 million in 2005 to 485,000 last year. The latest Census Bureau data suggest that this year's sales will be even lower: only 294,000 new homes were sold through the first nine months of this year.

Builders believe most of today's buyers of new homes want smaller and simpler. Note that the average new single-family house peaked at 2,507 square feet in 2007 and has since slipped to 2,392 square feet (per Census Bureau data). Average new home prices are sliding, too, by 16% -- to $269,200 -- between the first quarter of 2007 and the third quarter of this year, the Census Bureau reports.

The Driving Forces Behind the Shift
Although it is true that Americans have been embracing a new-found frugality in the recession, there is more to this change in consumer preference than meets the eye. In the past, many Americans were clearly overextending themselves financially to purchase homes they couldn't afford, and mortgage lenders were all to happy to facilitate their indebtedness with a variety of "creative" financing products. As reported previously, 40% of homeowners were overextended. Some of us were completely ignorant while others were speculating on increased property values. The rationalization was if homes are assets, we should borrow to get as much home as possible, so that we can capitalize from the increasing values of our investments. However, the crash has awakened our awareness of the precarious state that all that debt placed us in.
Additionally, credit worthiness criteria has been tightened, so some buyers of new homes no longer qualify for the larger mortgages. Unemployment is also a factor, as some Americans struggle to put food on the their tables, there are simply fewer people in the market for new homes.

What all of this means is a need for more economized home models to fit the changing preferences of the American consumer. For example, many have undoubtedly questioned the financial wisdom of paying $15,000 annually in property taxes and exorbitant heating and cooling bills for a family of two with relatively low net worth. Being house poor for appearance sake seem silly, yet 73% of homes worth $1 million or more are occupied by non-millionaires. Perhaps, the market downshift may reflect a fundamental change in the way people want to live. Real estate is cyclic, so time will surely tell.

Lastly, if you like this post, please subscribe (upper left-hand corner), click here to get my eBook FREE, and Propel it, Stumble it, and tag it on Delicious.
Image Credit: Atelier Teee

Related Posts
ls Recession-Induced Frugality Sustainable?
Credit Card Companies Tightening Credit Worthiness Criteria
Forty Percent Of Homeowners Are Financially Overextended
Should You Buy A House Outright? 

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Uncommon Money News (Vol. 77)


By: Roshawn Watson

Brand New Post Coming Friday Nov 20:

In preparing to write my posts, I often come across noteworthy and sometimes bizarre financial and business news. Below are links to some of these sites. Enjoy!

I have participated in the Carnival of Financial Planning 115 ed hosted My Trader's Journal . The included posts was: Should You Buy a House Outright? and Save For Retirement or Avoid Student Loans. Thanks for including my posts in your carnivals.

To my readers: I am so honored by your support. Thank you for reading, subscribing, and for voting for articles from this site on social bookmarketing sites such as stumbleupon, reddit, delicious, digg, propeller, twitter, and yahoo buzz. Together, we are telling thousands of the importance of financial literacy. I absolutely could not do it without you. You are vital this this site, and I appreciate your help so much! Thanks.

Thanks for all of the support for Are The Wealthy Dishonest? The back links and other promotion for this post have been great. This post was linked to last week on Mademan, a men's lifestyle website. Thanks so much for the links.

Posts Of Week

Who is Paying Taxes? (INFOGRAPHIC)!

T-Mobile admits its staff illegally sold personal records of thousands of customers to competitors.

Business

GM to start repaying debt to U.S.

Fed Reserve bans most bank overdraft fees

FedEx to Break Records: 13 Million Packages Shipped in 1 Day

T-Mobile admits its staff illegally sold personal records of thousands of customers to competitors. (POW)

"We don't know how to build a sub-$500 computer that is not a piece of junk." -Steve Jobs

U.S. Postal Service posts $3.8 billion loss - Nov. 16, 2009

Economy

Median home prices fall in 8 out of 10 U.S. cities

Entertainment Money News
Aaron Carter's Manager Responds to Pop Star's Back Tax Lien

Nicolas Cage: Movie star, foreclosure victim

Gosselin sues TLC for $5 million

Cindy Crawford, Husband Targeted in Extortion Plot

Eddie Cibrian's Ex Wants Him to Pay $49,000/month

Paranormal Activity Scares Up $100 Million

Offbeat Money News
Who is Paying Taxes? (INFOGRAPHIC)! (POW)

Five Painless Ways to Cut Expenses

How the middle class are shoplifting to keep up appearances

The professor offers to sell the class a $20 bill. Bidding starts at $1 and goes up in $1 increments. The winner pays the professor whatever the high bid was, and gets the $20. Here’s the catch: the second-highest bidder also has to pay, but gets nothing in return.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Stop Investing To Get Out of Debt

By: Roshawn Watson

Savings rates have increased dramatically over the course of this last year, and so has investing. At least 26% of consumers believe their more frugal ways will be permanent. We have gone through the financial grinder and emerged more frugal. Unfortunately, many of us are also in debt. It is difficult enough to encourage people to save anything, so the thouoght of stopping investments in order to get out of debt seems like a bad idea, especially given the turmultuous economic environment. However, it is still the right choice for many individuals. When is it advisable to suspend retirement investing to get out of debt?

Do You Want To Be In Debt Forever?

Do you want to be in debt forever? It is a legitimate question. Since our incomes are not infinite, we will undoubtedly have to make some decisions regarding spending. It would be nice if we could pay our bills, fund our retirements, pay off our debts, contribute to college education funds for our children, and have a ton of fun with our money simultaneously, but it is not feasible for most people. We accordingly need to financially prioritize our spending, and one of the first priorities is getting rid of consumer debt. Otherwise, the debt will linger on. When I look at my old student loans records, Sallie Mae was all too happy to extend my repayment period to 300 months! With a term that long, I would not make much financial traction and would have paid them tens of thousands in interest. I'm glad to have that monkey off my back. By eliminating your consumer debt, you are removing one of the biggest constraints to your cash flow. It is one of the fastest ways to finally to build wealth because your dollars will go farther. Don't take my word for it. According to the 400 richest Americans (Forbes 400), 75% believe "the best way to build wealth is to become and stay debt-free."

Do the Math

Additionally, the math often works out better for those who pay off their consumer debts. In most cases, the interest rates on your debts are likely higher than the return on your retirement. Historically, the stock market averages around 12% per year. If your the interest rates on your credit card is 17%, you save yourself 5% per year by paying off the credit card first. Also consider the price of all of the debt. If you have an average car payment of $480 (per Edmunds.com) and a second car payment of $200, an average student loan payment of $250, a credit card payment of $200, and miscellaneous (furniture, stereos, or personal loans) debt of $120, you are paying over $1000 monthly towards consumer debts. If you were to invest this instead, you would have over $1.3 million in 25 years, assuming a conservative 10% average return. Thus, the sooner you get out of debt so that you can do some real investing, the sooner you build some real wealth.

Debt Equals Risk

Most people are mired in credit card debt, have student loans, and car notes. In fact, 61% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck just to make ends meet. Most people are just one or two paychecks away from financial ruin. All it takes is one misstep, and your low interest credit cards can go sky-high thanks to universal default clauses. I have unfortunately heard of credit cards charging as high as 79.9% interest. By keeping debt in your life longer for the sake of investing, people are risking repos, late fees, high interest, and worse. Consider how vulnerable to a job loss if you have a lot of payments. I have heard 100% of the cars that were repoed had a car note on them. If you mathematically adjust for risk, the answer is clearly to get rid of the debt in most cases.

The Caveat

Perhaps, one of the few times that I personally would continue investing while paying off consumer debt is if I knew that I wouldn't be able to clear the debt in a reasonable time. For example, if it would take me over 2.5 years to pay the debt off. Otherwise, I would just get the snakes out of my life and move on to bigger and more prosperous endeavors.

Lastly, if you like this post, please subscribe (upper left-hand corner), click here to get my eBook FREE, and Propel it, Stumble it, and tag it on Delicious.

Related Posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Uncommon Money News (Vol. 76)


By: Roshawn Watson

Brand New Post Coming Friday Nov 13:

In preparing to write my posts, I often come across noteworthy and sometimes bizarre financial and business news. Below are links to some of these sites. Enjoy!

I have participated in the Carnival of Financial Planning 113 ed hosted at Simple Trading System and 114 ed hosted by the Skilled Investor The included post was: Should You Buy a House Outright? I also participated in the Carnival of Twenty Something Finances hosted by Foreigners Finances. Thanks for including my posts in your carnivals.

To my readers: I am so honored by your support. Thank you for reading, subscribing, and for voting for articles from this site on social bookmarketing sites such as stumbleupon, reddit, delicious, digg, propeller, twitter, and yahoo buzz. Together, we are telling thousands of the importance of financial literacy. I absolutely could not do it without you. You are vital this this site, and I appreciate your help so much! Thanks.

Thanks for all of the support for Are The Wealthy Dishonest? The back links and other promotion for this post have been great. Kudos to you.

Post Of Week

Home Tax Credit Extended

Business

Wall Street bonuses to rise 40%

Walmart Defends Sick Leave Policy Despite H1N1 Fears

15 Podcasts That Will Make You Richer

Senator Al Franken (D-Minn.) introduced a bill proposing that drugmakers no longer be allowed to deduct marketing expenses from their taxes, as companies generally can.

Chrysler drops three electric vehicles despite having touted them to get billions in government bailout cash

BofA quietly decides not to charge overdraft fees when accounts are overdrawn by $10 or less.

Capital One: Waive Your Rights, Get $10 Off Your Next Overlimit Fee!

Economy

Home Tax Credit Extended

Could Weak Housing Tank The Economy Again?

10% unemployment and $10M bonuses. Business as usual.

Entertainment Money News

Michael Jackson's $1 million burial

Celebs selling their homes at rock bottom prices

Offbeat Money News

237 Millionaires in Congress

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Are Wealthy People Dishonest?


By: Roshawn Watson


Are the wealthy dishonest? While it is certainly a fair question, it is also a polarizing one. The typical dichotomy is that there are some who feel like there is absolutely no way for honest people to get ahead financially while the wealthy often feel maligned for their prosperity.
Image credit: spock

What is Dishonesty?

It is important to clarify what is dishonesty. Some believe taking advantage of people and situations is dishonest. With this definition, many of us who do business efficiently are thereby dishonest, but the potential problem with this definition is that profiting from such opportunities forms the basis of capitalism. For example, if one buys a product at a discount and sells it at a premium price, they are capitalizing 1) on their own willingness to hunt down deals to make profit and 2) on someone's unwillingness or inability to put forth the same effort. Surely reaping the rewards of this relationship doesn't make someone dishonest in itself. In fact, both parties can benefit.

Another relevant distinction is between honesty and morality. They are not always the same thing. Some are completely truthful in business and but operate businesses that many consider immoral. The classic example is the senior executives in tobacco companies. Many believe that it is immoral to prey on others addiction to tobacco for profit; however, that belief does not make it illegal nor dishonest to sell cigarettes in itself. Although honesty and morality typically go hand and hand, it is not always the case. You can be an honest bad person. A reasonable (albeit not perfect) example is Mel Gibson in the movie Payback. He plays a character named Porter, who was completely honest as an assassin. You better believe when he says you're dead if you don't give him back his money, he meant it wholeheartedly. Obviously, he wasn't a moral person but just because he was a low-life doesn't negate the fact that he honestly got his money back.

The Trust Factor

Honesty and trustworthiness are important for any brand because we want to work for and do business with honest people. People typically do not do business with someone they can't trust (the one big exception that comes to mind is doing business with car salesman). Our inclination to want to trust the businesses we patronize suggests that in order to succeed in many businesses, you have to have some degree of trustworthiness. Indeed, if people believe you to be dishonest, they will simply not do business with you. This does not suggest that everyone who succeeds in business is honest and trustworthy but rather that it is a sweeping generalization to assume all successful wealthy people are dishonest. Sure there are some unscrupulous businesspeople who have become successful, but they are likely the exception not the norm.

There are plenty of people who have become wealthy and are honest. Consider all of the hard-working and honest actors, athletes, musicians and other entertainers who have become wealthy. The presumption that they are somehow dishonest just because they are wealthy is unfair. Also, consider the typical millionaire. The typical millionaire is incognito. He probably doesn't drive a luxury car. She doesn't live in a mega mansion. Only 27 percent of homes worth over 1 million are occupied by millionaires according to Thomas Stanley. The typical millionaire lives in a middle-class neighborhood where his net worth dwarfs that of his neighbors. The point is the wealthy are among us, and they are downright common. Most acquire their wealth over a long time through systematic investing. It is unsubstantiated that they're dishonest just because they have been responsible with their money and caught some breaks in life.

Why Do We Distrust the Wealthy?
I am aware of two main reasons why we do not trust the wealthy. First, I do believe that sometimes the sensational media gravitates towards scandal. You will hear about Enron a thousand times more than you will read about the thousands of business owners who are operating honestly and ethically. Another reason is that it is sometimes difficult to stomach that others are just better than us at accumulating wealth. Attributing their wealth to dishonesty rather than a good business model, hard or smart work, and good fiscal management is a defense mechanism of sorts.

Of course, none of this suggests that the wealthy cannot be dishonest. Wealthy individuals have the potential to be dishonest just as anyone else. However, the automatic assumption that just because someone is wealthy they must be dishonest is wrong.

Lastly, if you like this post, please subscribe (upper left-hand corner), click here to get my eBook FREE, and Propel it, Stumble it, and tag it on Delicious.

Related Posts

Creating Phenomenal Wealth Over Time

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Uncommon Money News (Vol. 75)


By: Roshawn Watson

Brand New Post Coming Thursday Nov 5:
Are Wealthy People Dishonest?

In preparing to write my posts, I often come across noteworthy and sometimes bizarre financial and business news. Below are links to some of these sites. Enjoy!

I have participated in the Carnival of Financial Planning 112 ed hosted at Zach Stocks and 110 ed hosted by Intelligent Speculator. Two posts were included: The Rich Get Poorer and Should You Buy a House Outright? Thanks for including my posts in your carnivals.

To my readers: I am so honored by your support. Thank you for reading, subscribing, and for voting for articles from this site on social bookmarketing sites such as stumbleupon, reddit, delicious, digg, propeller, twitter, and yahoo buzz. Together, we are telling thousands of the importance of financial literacy. I absolutely could not do it without you. You are vital this this site, and I appreciate your help so much! Thanks.

Business News

Home prices continue rebound

The Biggest Mistakes of Some of Today's Business Stars

PepsiCo misplaces letter, faces $1.26 billion judgment


CIT files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

55.5% of Consumers "Very Unlikely" to Pay for Online Content

Economy

Weak dollar driving up gas prices

U.S. Consumer Confidence Up for First Time Since 2007

U.S. Healthcare System Wastes Up to $800 Billion a Year

Entertainment Money News

Michael Jackson's This Is It Has $101 Million Reasons to Live On

Nicolas Cage Blames Advisor for Financial Ruin

Bob Barker Donates $1M to University to Fund Animal Rights Program


Levi Johnston's Playgirl Shoot Will Show All for Six Figures


Offbeat Money News

Stressful jobs that pay badly