Believe it or not some people knew the financial meltdown was coming but the “talking heads” in the media refused to listen…
Posted by Admin on October 28, 2009
Believe it or not some people knew the financial meltdown was coming but the “talking heads” in the media refused to listen…
Posted in African American, Black, Education, Money, Personal Finance, Retirement Planning, dow jones, mutual fund, wall street | Tagged: African American, bailout, Black, children, Finance, investing, meltdown, Money, Personal Finance, stimulus, wall street, Wealth | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Admin on October 22, 2009
So the man announced that he would now buy monkeys at $50 each!
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Posted by Admin on October 19, 2009
It was once said that “the more things change the more they stay the same.” Nothing can be more true than what continues to take place on Wall Street and “Main” street is none the wiser. Goldman Sachs continues to lead by example….
Posted in African American, Personal Finance, wall street | Tagged: 401k, African Americans, bailout, Finance, goldman sachs, investing, Money, Personal Finance, retirement, stimulus, wall street, Wealth | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Admin on October 13, 2009
For all you movie buffs I want you to think back to a movie entitled Trading Places. It came out in the 1980s and starred Eddie Murphy, Jamie Lee Curtis and Dan Ackroyd. It was a movie about wealth creation and wealth uncreation (for lack of a better term). The basic plot surrounded a bet made between two highly regarded commodities brokers on what would happen when you make a poor person rich and a rich person poor. While the movie plays out around this premise recall a line that Eddie Murphy made in the movie (paraphrasing) “the best way to hurt a rich person is to make them poor.” Sounds like it could apply to the times in which we currently live (insert your own Goldman Sachs punch line here).
The current debate taking place around health care really has to do with how people can lose everything when they fall ill and have to seek medical attention without insurance or insurance that does not cover a major health event that might take place. It got me thinking about one of the tenets of wealth creation…keeping the money you made over the years. We’ve all heard the old adage of “it’s not how much you make its how much you keep.” Nothing could be farther from the truth. I simply wanted to take a closer more far reaching look at that notion. After all what good is having a lot of money if you can lose it all…right?
September, as you might recall, was Life Insurance Awareness Month (LIAM) , a month dedicated to making people more aware of their potential need for life insurance or a reminder to take a second look at the coverage one might already have. If you stop and think about it, insurance plays a major role in the lives of everyday people so much so that many believe it to be a major obstacle to actually building wealth. I know it sounds absurd but think about how much you spend for the insurances you already have and then realize that in order to have proper insurance coverage you possibly need:
So when you look at this list and see all of the insurances that are recommended (some even required) a person wonders how they can ever save money when it is going out to all of these places? Therefore the typical person tends to forgo coverage in one of these areas in lieu of saving (or investing) during their lifetime. Remember “it’s not what you make …it’s what you keep.”
Truth be told an event that takes place in any one of these areas has the potential to wipe out the average American’s savings or retirement plan. Statistics (and the media) tell us this on a daily basis. The leading cause of foreclosure is disability. One of the leading causes of bankruptcy is medical bills. So when approaching the need for insurance coverage you should look at obtaining the “maximum” coverage not the minimum allowable or least expensive coverage you can get. I realize that cost will always play a factor but you must find a way to get the protection you need! Failure to do so could wipe you out… literally.
Think about your retirement plans and how much you will have contributed over your lifetime in an attempt to “build wealth.” Now think about the protections listed above…is it not scary to envision that at any point during your lifetime one event has the potential to erase all of your life savings? Imagine doing everything right (i.e. building that million dollar portfolio) then someone sues you and takes it all? Or perhaps you become disabled during your working career and don’t replace 100% or more of your income through disability insurance. Your house burning down because the dryer vent was not cleaned out (true story happened to a friend of mine). Having a stroke and staying in the hospital for weeks without medical insurance then getting the bills in the mail a couple weeks later. How about losing 50% of your retirement account the year before you were scheduled to retire? The list goes on and on…
The point I am trying to make is that having proper insurance protection protects you from losing your wealth. The conversation should begin with what is the MOST protection you can get AND then you work back from there to what you can afford. I realized this not too long ago with my auto insurance. When I initially obtained my auto insurance I had the “minimum required by the state” I believe it was 100,000 for bodily injury (capping at 300,000 per occurrence) and 100,000 for property damage with deductibles at $500 comprehensive and $500 collision. Then this thought occurred to me…how much extra would it cost to get the most insurance coverage my company would allow me to have? You see I have already been in that major car accident years ago, falling asleep while driving and going off a cliff waking up upside down in my car. I know the unexpected can happen.
So I call up my insurance company and simply asked ”how much extra would it be for me to get the MAXIMUM coverage you will allow and what would that be?” It was as easy as that. The lady on the phone told me essentially I could get 2,000,000 across the board for everything and my monthly premium would increase by around $11 per month. Yes ONLY $11 PER MONTH! Needless to say I increased my insurance coverage (with $1000 deductibles) and immediately thought about the insurance agent who initially recommended my coverage and how exposed I had been left for a measly extra $132 a year.
Note: Raising your deductibles is a good way to get maximum protection and keep the costs down at the same time. Remember a deductible (or waiting period) is your out of pocket expense and where applicable should be as HIGH as you can afford.
So could the same thing be happening to you? Do you have maximum protection through your insurance policies? We are all simply one event away from a financial disaster and obtaining proper maximum insurance protection in all aspects of your financial life will allow you to keep what you have worked so hard to acquire.
Posted in African American, Black, Education, Money, Personal Finance, Retirement Planning, insurance, life insurance | Tagged: afican american, Black, disability, Finance, insurance, investing, lawsuit, Money, Personal Finance, Retirement Planning, Wealth, wealth creation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Admin on October 7, 2009
All this talk about “stimulus packages” and “bailouts”…
A billion dollars…
A hundred billion dollars…
Eight hundred billion dollars…
One TRILLION dollars…
What does that look like? I mean, these various numbers are tossed around like so many doggie treats, so I thought I’d take Google Sketchup out for a test drive and try to get a sense of what exactly a trillion dollars looks like.
We’ll start with a $100 dollar bill. Currently the largest U.S. denomination in general circulation. Most everyone has seen them, slightly fewer have owned them. Guaranteed to make friends wherever they go.

A packet of one hundred $100 bills is less than 1/2″ thick and contains $10,000. Fits in your pocket easily and is more than enough for week or two of shamefully decadent fun.

Believe it or not, this next little pile is $1 million dollars (100 packets of $10,000). You could stuff that into a grocery bag and walk around with it.

While a measly $1 million looked a little unimpressive, $100 million is a little more respectable. It fits neatly on a standard pallet…

And $1 BILLION dollars… now we’re really getting somewhere…

Next we’ll look at ONE TRILLION dollars. This is that number we’ve been hearing so much about. What is a trillion dollars? Well, it’s a million million. It’s a thousand billion. It’s a one followed by 12 zeros.
You ready for this?
It’s pretty surprising.
Go ahead…
Scroll down…
Ladies and gentlemen… I give you $1 trillion dollars…

Notice those pallets are double stacked.
…and remember those are $100 bills.
So the next time you hear someone toss around the phrase “trillion dollars”… that’s what they’re talking about.
Source: Pagetutor.com
Posted in African American, Black, Money, Personal Finance, Retirement Planning, black business, wall street | Tagged: bailout, Finance, investing, Money, Personal Finance, retirement, stimulus, trillion dollars | Leave a Comment »