Wednesday, January 25, 2012

5 Top Tips for Keeping Your Belongings Safe When Traveling

Although it would be nice to think that we could all travel safely without the fear of being separated from our belongings en route, airports, train stations and bus stations make easy pickings for the light-fingered.  Here are a few top tips to ensure that you arrive at your destination with all of your belongings in tow:

1. Attach a few small bells (like the ones on Christmas decorations) to your hand luggage so that if anyone tries to move it while it is stowed, you will hear instantly.
2. Invest in a few items of clothing with concealed pockets, and wear them while traveling and while out and about in busy places when you reach your destination.
3. Whether you are seated during your journey or waiting around to board planes, trains or buses, place your foot through the handles of your luggage, if possible, to ensure that it doesn’t stray.
4. Don’t let any type of commotion distract you from your luggage.  Thieves often use distraction techniques to buy them the few vital seconds that they need to grab and run.
5. Avoid removing your wallet from a purse or from your person when in public, otherwise would-be thieves will know exactly where to target.  Go somewhere private such as a restroom to remove whatever cash you need, and immediately hide your wallet again.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Buying Organic Without Breaking the Bank

As anyone who has checked out the prices of organic produce in his or her local supermarkets knows, switching to foodstuffs that are free of pesticides and chemicals can be a very expensive business.  With these few simple tips, you can eat more healthily for less:

1. Don’t assume that supermarkets offer the best value for organic produce.  Check out natural food stores too, because they can often be cheaper overall or for certain items.

2. Instead of shopping for the ingredients for a particular recipe, buy the cheapest organic ingredients and devise meals around them.  Also, adapt traditional recipes so that they use the cheapest organic produce.

3. Design your meal plans around seasonal produce, because it is always less expensive.

4. If you have relatively easy access to local organic growers, then buy directly from them to cut costs.

5. Remember that organic produce that is frozen is still better than nonorganic produce that is fresh.  Consider buying frozen if the ingredient that you want is out of season.

6. Some foodstuffs are more heavily contaminated with pesticides and chemicals than others, and it is estimated that we can reduce our exposure to contaminants by 90% simply by buying the organic versions of these alone.  Even if you can’t afford to go fully organic, try cutting out nonorganic apples, strawberries, peaches, nectarines, grapes, blueberries, spinach, celery, sweet peppers, potatoes, lettuce and kale, because these are the worst offenders.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Hidden Financial Mistakes … And How To Fix Them

You pay your bills on time. You try to save as much as you can. You even follow the advice which you read in books and hear on the radio about how to keep your finances in check. But you’re still not getting ahead. Well, sometimes, it’s the unchallenged assumptions about how we’re handling our money which rise up and bite us in the keister.
Hidden Mistake #1: Inappropriate Mental Accounting
Definition: Tendency for families to divide money into separate accounts based on subjective criteria.
Typical Example: Treating $100 you received as a gift from Grandma, differently than a $100 bill earned.
Typical Example #2: Having money languishing in a savings account earning 0.25%, while carrying high-interest debt to pay off at 12%.
Cure: Funnel income, no matter the source, into one savings account.
Any “found money”, such as a tax refund or gift from Grandma, quickly decide where that money is best utilized. As for expenses, occasionally change how you pay. If you always pay with a credit card, try cash. This will get you remembering that all of it, for the purposes of your mental “books”, should be lumped into one, monthly bucket.
Hidden Mistake #2: Manipulative Price Anchoring
Definition: Our tendency to relate the value of a purchase to a price point which, rationally, should have no bearing on the amount spent.
Typical Example: The “rule of thumb” to spend two months’ salary on an engagement ring.
Typical Example #2: A realtor will tell you that “in 2007 this house was going for $500,000 and is now listed at only $350,000!” … causing you to think this house is undervalued.
Cure: For big ticket purchases like a house, car, or engagement ring, ask a friend whose financial values you respect for their input.
For everyday purchases, avoid looking at the MSRP or sticker price. Ask yourself:
Can I afford this today?
What do I really want to spend?
What is this really worth to me?
Marketers are experts at this sort of price-anchoring, and we really should know better … but yet we still fall prey to it. Try not to let outside sources set up the comparison by which you should be considering such large purchases.
Hidden Mistake #3: Loss Aversion Costing You
Definition: Our consistent tendency to avoid loss, rather than acquiring gain.
Typical Example: An investor is more likely to sell a stock which has increased in value, rather than selling stock that decreased. Over time, her investment portfolio is made up of investments that have decreased.
Cure: Don’t think of selling a stock for less than you paid for it as being a loss. It can actually work as a gain for two reasons:
* Tax deduction (which can really help!)
* The other side of opportunity cost: opportunity GAINED (i.e. you can better utilize that money elsewhere)
So, don’t check your portfolio so often. If you don’t know you’ve lost money, you don’t experience the pain. (And riding the roller-coaster of your portfolio’s value is a waste of emotional space.) Since stock prices go up in the long-run, the longer you go without looking at your portfolio, the greater chance of seeing a gain. Sometimes taking that loss really is the best thing you can do.
Hidden Mistake #4: Following the Herd
Definition: The tendency for us to want to do the same thing as a large group of others, with no thought to whether that action is rational or irrational.
Typical Example #1: Buying when prices are high because everyone else is.
Typical Example #2: Selling when prices are low because everyone else is.
Cure: Warren Buffett said, “Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”
Keep this in mind when making your next financial decision. If everyone is telling you to buy this or buy that (i.e. gold, silver, real estate) do the opposite. In the financial investment world, if it’s too good to be true, it usually is. Write up an investment policy statement or contract. Include factors such as:
* Investment objective
* Investment goals
* Desired asset allocation and diversification
* Summary of your risk tolerance
* Rebalancing schedule
Before making any changes, consult with this contract. You can also take advantage of this inherent tendency to do what’s approved by others to affect positive behavior. For example, let’s say you trying to pay off debt. Tell your 3 closest friends, make an informal contract, sign your name at the bottom, and then email it to them. The pain you would incur from breaking that contract is high relative to the pain of breaking your behavior if you went about it alone.

Thursday, January 5, 2012