SPENDING FUTURE INCOME 5
July 30, 2008 by ren
Filed under Corporate Finance
If your household’s lifestyle pushes you to keep spending income several months into the future, to live beyond your means and to rely heavily on credit cards, you probably have a credit score below 600. This puts the interest on your credit cards higher than 18% or at least an addtional annual expense of more than $2000 for every thousand dollars of credit card balance. This does not include penalties for late payments which you probably incur for almost every bill. This adds another $1440 to your annual expense for every thousand dollars of late payment.
So, set …read more
SPENDING FUTURE INCOME 4
July 30, 2008 by ren
Filed under Corporate Finance
If your household’s lifestyle pushes you to keep spending income several months into the future (i.e., live beyond your means and rely heavily on credit cards) and are unable to save at least 5% of your monthly income, you are in DANGER.
You are living on the edge of a financial disaster. If any kind of emergency hits, you will need cash in a hurry; i.e., sudden sickness in the household (not covered by insurance or company benefit), a disaster such as a fire (even a small one which will need some repairs), a fire at your neighbor’s house which …read more
SPENDING FUTURE INCOME 1
July 28, 2008 by ren
Filed under Corporate Finance
Credit cards enable you to spend future cashflow, income that you haven’t earned yet but expect to earn with some certainty (e.g., regular paying job, income from own business, etc).
Credit cards are temptations to live beyond your means. You are living within your means if you are able to pay off the entire balance in your monthly bill. This is the best position for you. You are, in effect, getting a 30-day loan from the credit card company interest-free.
If you are not able to pay off your entire balance and this balance grows from month to month, …read more
TAKING CHANCES 3: Betting on a sure thing
May 14, 2008 by ren
Filed under Corporate Finance
Whenever you use your credit card for a purchase or any expense payable through a credit card, the issuing bank or credit card company is betting that you will not pay your whole balance within the free 30-day grace period and they will earn revenues from your account. By paying the whole balance before the 30-day interest free period, YOU WIN THE BET.
The greatest income of issuing banks and credit card companies come from the interests and penalties they charge for outstanding amounts at the end of the 30-day period.
So, bet on a sure thing. Pay your whole credit …read more





