Showing posts with label investing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investing. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

4 Mindful & Savvy Uses for Rebate Checks: Avoid the Mall

"Getting a Rebate? Focus not on more, but on more of what matters." Bottom line: Don't overspend. That's the word from the folks at Center for a New American Dream, a consumer organization that targets meaningful living and spending plans.
Here's a guest post from New American Dream about frugal and mindful uses of rebate checks:

"In a few weeks, Americans will receive their rebate checks—part of a $168 billion effort to bolster the economy through increased consumer spending. Author and sociologist Dalton Conley, however, notes in a New York Times op-ed piece that “Consumer overspending got us into this mess. More spending won’t get us out.”


Before Americans use their checks to prop up sagging sales of unsustainable products, New American Dream and the Conscious Consumer Marketplace would like to offer four things everyone can do that will be smarter for and kinder to our pocketbooks, the planet, and the economy:

1. Pay off your credit card. Author and personal financial journalist John Wasik writes for Bloomberg.com: There's no personal economic benefit to carrying a balance on a credit card. It's an albatross. So pay them off and shed the seabird. Then download a free New Dream Wallet Buddy credit card sleeve to remind you to consider carefully before you charge: www.newdream.org/walletbuddy.pdf.

2. Invest it. Recently, the national savings rate dipped below zero, the first time since the Great Depression we were spending more than we saved. Conley suggests citizens should invest the money, not run to the malls. Why not do some social goodwill while saving for your future? Learn more on Marketplace’s Socially Responsible Investing page: www.newdream.org/consumer/sri.php.

3. Buy wisely. If you buy something, make it count—for you and for the environment. Writing for MSNBC.com, personal finance journalist Laura Coffey (after cautioning first to get debts under control) says consumers should “consider buying an energy-efficient appliance, especially if you’re now relying on older, less-efficient appliances.” For more on energy efficient appliances and other ways to support the Green Economy, visit the Conscious Consumer Marketplace at consciousconsumer.org.

4. Give it away. No, don’t send it back to the government with a “Thanks, but no thanks” note. But if you are out of debt, investing responsibly, and satisfied with the state of your stuff, then maybe it’s time to help build a sustainable society by supporting causes you believe in.

Remember, when the check comes, you are not just a consumer. You are a citizen. Think of the rebate as an opportunity to keep afloat and support your values."

source: www.newdream.org.
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Friday, April 11, 2008

Kiplinger’s 25 Best Mutual Funds: Low Fees & No Fees

Why pay extra fees for a mutual fund? Kiplinger’s Personal Finance has put together a list of top mutual funds that do not hit you up with upfront or back-end sales charges. Details about the list --featured below-- are available in the May issue and online.

Kiplinger’s 25 Best Mutual Funds:

Large-Company Stock Funds
§ Dodge & Cox Stock (DODGX)
§ Longleaf Partners (LLPFX)
§ Marsico 21st Century (MXXIX)
§ T. Rowe Price Equity Income (PRFDX)
§ T. Rowe Price Growth Stock (PRGFX)
§ Selected American Shares S (SLASX)
§ Vanguard Primecap Core (VPCCX)

Small- and Midsize-Company Stock Funds
§ Baron Small Cap (BSCFX)
§ FBR Focus (FBRVX)
§ Vanguard Selected Value (VASVX)

Overseas Funds
§ Dodge & Cox Intl Stock (DODFX)
§ Julius Baer Intl Equity II A (JETAX)
§ T. Rowe Price Emg Mkts Stock (PRMSX)

Global Fund
§ Marsico Global (MGLBX)

Go-Anywhere Funds
§ Bridgeway Aggr Investors 2 (BRAIX)
§ CGM Focus (CGMFX)
§ Fairholme Fund (FAIRX)
§ Kinetics Paradigm (WWNPX)
§ Legg Mason Opportunity (LMOPX)

Commodity Fund
§ Pimco CommodityRealRet Strat D (PCRDX)

Bond Funds
§ Dodge & Cox Income (DODIX)
§ Fidelity Intermed Municipal Inc (FLTMX)
§ Harbor Bond Institutional (HABDX)
§ Loomis Sayles Bond (LSBRX)
§ Vanguard Infl-Protected Secs (VIPSX)
Here's how the magazine puts together its annual list of top mutual funds:

"In addition to raw returns, Kiplinger’s evaluates how funds perform against their peers, annual fees, their managers’ records and whether their results justify the risks they take. More details on the selection criteria are available at: www.kiplinger.com/investing/kip25."
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Saturday, December 08, 2007

Kiplinger's: 25 Green Investments: Good for Earth & Good For Your Wallet

Can green investments keep your investment accounts green with dollars? That's possible, according to this guest post from Kiplinger's

"25 Ways to Invest in a Cleaner World

——How Thinking Green Can Benefit Your Financial Well-Being——

Cleaning up the planet isn’t just a feel-good phenomenon. It’s big business—with plenty of opportunities for making money while promoting environmentally-conscious technologies. Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine identifies 25 solid companies that should profit big from international efforts to find alternative energy sources and clean up the atmosphere.

Some of the names on the Kiplinger Green 25 list may come as a surprise—the nation’s largest industrial conglomerate and a railroad, for example. Selected companies include:
Honda Motor
American Standard
General Electric
Burlington Northern Santa Fe
McDermott International

Additionally, Kiplinger’s profiles five up-and-comers—small, more-speculative companies that someday could grow into giants:
Nova Biosource Fuels
Fuel Tech
FuelCell Energy
Echelon
Orbcomm

Link for complete listing of the Kiplinger 25."
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The Frugal Duchess Booktique
The Frugal Duchess of Beauty Store

Book Shop of Fear
The Poetry & Drama Queen
Frugal Jazz & Blues
Frugal Comic Book Connection
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Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Carnival of Real Estate Investing

The Landlord Blog has put together a helpful string of posts about the real estate market in the Carnival of Real Estate Investing.

The selection of articles includes tips for getting the greatest real estateinvestment bang from Craigs List, the value of investment mentors, and a post about insanity & the mortgage market.

I'm pleased to be included on that menu. Thank You Landlord Blog.

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Monday, November 13, 2006

Carnival of Personal Finance: Diverse Money Menu

Tap into the Hall of Fame of Financial mistakes, 101 Ways to Save Money, checkbooks and kids, Fools & Their Money and other stories. With a wrist-cracking load of 71 posts, A Geek's World hosts the 74th Edition of the Carnival of Personal Finance. Very impressive line-up!

The host has done an excellent job of sorting and commenting on a large field of entries, which includes a post from me. Kudos to A Geek's World & thanks for including my work!

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The Frugal Duchess Boutique
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Friday, November 10, 2006

WSJ: Condos Falter & Spark Lawsuits

In Southern Florida, it's been tempting to invest in condos. With low interest rates, the ocean breeze and a constant wave of visitors, condos seemed ripe for flipping. And for a long time, many investors and homeowners made tidy profits by trading in and out of homes. But recently, the condo market has been ailing in Southern Florida and other parts of the country.

I've heard that the latest trend in condo conversions is "reversions" in which condo buildings revert back into rental units, where there has been a real shortage of frugal or affordable units. (Many residents in Southern Florida have been turned out on the street, while their rentals were "converted" into upscale condos.)

Today's Wall Street Journal has an excellent piece about the condo market and the rash of lawsuits that have been filed in the real estate market.

With once-hot condominium markets across the country in sharp decline and many real-estate professionals predicting a further weakening, some developers are facing more than a glut of unsold inventory. Angry condo buyers from Boca Raton, Fla., to San Diego are taking them to court, alleging everything from breach of contract to fraud.

Some of the lawsuits claim that the amenities featured in glossy marketing brochures and model apartments never made it into the final product. Others involve much-hyped projects that went bust, leaving hundreds of buyers with contracts for condos that will never materialize. --WSJ

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The Frugal Duchess Boutique
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Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Welcome to 1st Million at 33 Readers

Thanks to Frugal at www.1stmillionat33.com for providing me with a guest soap box at his blog. As a blogger, 1st Million at 33 provides a smart overview of the investment world with a few side trips into other areas.

Here are a few of my favorite posts from 1st million at 33.

This week he hosts the Carnival of Investing. Lots of informative pieces, especially the following posts: Social security is a Ponzi Scheme, Fine Art as an Investment Class, and Real Estate Investing 101. Check out the Carnival!

Other favorite 1st Million at 33 posts:

Effective Budgeting
Do you Carpool?
Two Must-Do Money Saving Tips


Frugal at 1st Million also appeared on my blog with a recent Friday Spotlight piece about Business Lessons from My Father.

And on the topic of Dads and Money, I also posted this piece about 10 lessons from a Millionaire Dad.