Saving for rough times is a crucial part of your financial planning as having some spare cash stashed in an easily accessible place to cover disasters is a good idea. At a certain point common sense dictates that you’re going to run into an unforeseen expense and not having funds to pay for it you’re going to have to use poor borrowing practices. The average surprise cost when such events do occur is thought to run a few thousand dollars however whether it’s a gigantic amount or a very minor amount a disaster fund is needed to cover it.
You don’t need to hide this money under the mattress for it to be available. The best way to conserve this fund is by using a quick access savings account that pays a good rate of interest and hopefully is tax exempt. You could set up a simple bank transfer and allot a small amount into your bank account each pay check. You should also be sure that your savings account is low risk as you wouldn’t want to lose the money by trying for high interest payments. For example: don’t invest the money in the stock market, as stocks and shares can change in value, depriving you of much needed money at a critical moment.
Treat any interest your disaster account earns as a perk and not the main reason for having the account. In a pinch you’ll need quick easy access to your money and this is more useful than a little more money in interest can ever bet. Do not allow your disaster fund to grow into a fortune as the extra money would be more wisely invested, growing more in a better investment vehicle. Keep just enough to cover a rainy day so a few thousand should be more than enough.
Don’t be tempted to use your existing account to create up your rainy day fund. Your existing account makes it easy to “borrow” from the savings without knowing it and this usually means you won’t have enough money when you really need it. Also most checking accounts don’t pay high interest rates. To avoid the accidental spending of your disaster fund keep your checking account for normal bills and expenses.
By: Joe Duggins
Posts Tagged Thousand Dollars
Saving For Hard Times
Nov 11
The world of treasure hunting and gold can posses people. It has me and many other people. But the fact remains that treasure hunting can be funded and successful if they step back from the enthusiasm of the project, and operate on a rational level.
Treasure Hunting is a business as well as a passion. If you can be grounded on the numbers and the research, your enthusiasm will sell the project.
Anyway this guy and another guy were trying to raise money in $20-$100 per person. I simply could not understand why the were trying to raise such a small amount of money from like 500 people. It just seemed like a waist of time when they could have asked for $2-$5,000 from each person. I would not have invested and money with these 2 people because they are lost in a dream and not organized.
They had no plans and there research was weak. They also had no idea on how much is needed for treasure recovery or even how much money they needed at all. They had no planning so there is little to no chance of them being successful.
Just because you think you know where a treasure is does not mean you have any idea on how to pinpoint and recover it. That takes money…Lots of it.
For an underwater pin pointing and recovery takes time and money. The fact is they were looking for about $6,000 total from 500 people. There is no way this is enough money for their projects. Also getting 20 bucks from 500 people is going to be a huge problem.
It would be so much easier to find 5 people who want to invest $2,000. They would have fewer people to deal with and $10,000, that is 4 thousand dollars more than they would have got at $20 from 500 people.
They are disorganized and trying to get money from the wrong people. There are people who have thousands of dollars lying around just looking for the right way to invest it. They can be sold the dream if your numbers and organization is sound.
I just do not understand some people.
http://roguetreasurehunter.blogspot.com/
By: Eric Thomas