I feel extremely blessed to have not made many money mistakes in my young life. No large ones to speak of. A little money education and a LOT of luck I guess???
BUT today I am feeling extra bummed about my big money mistake. If you have seen my posts today, it got me thinking. When I was 12 or 13 or I don't know I got a checking account and at 16 a credit card, with a credit union. My parents taught me that credit unions were free and that was the way to go. Now they did great in the whole don't use debt to buy what you can't afford, etc., etc. and they taught me well. They taught me about savings. I Couldn't have really asked for more. But they really dropped the ball on investing. I guess I Am on my own to figure that one out.
I opened an IRA when I Was 16 and put in $2k. It has been sitting making 0.4% at most for about 14 years. ?????? We have kept all of our savings in our credit unions money markets for the last 7 years. For at least 4 years we had a 30k balance. We made squat on our money!!!
So I Recently started watching Suze Orman and she kind of smacked me out of it. I decided to rollover our IRAs to ROTHs, get rid of my rinkydink 0.5% c.d., and put it in mutual funds. I am still young so I Don't think this will really hurt me that much. But it is still kind of sad to look back and see how much money you could have made the last few years if you were a little smarter. To see how far ahead you would be.
Anyway, so I put our savings in Virtual Bank to the tune of 4.60% APR and I Was feeling a lot better just to have the wind blown from my sales today. *sigh*
I am still figuring this all out...
I have just been shifting from the major mind shift in investing to go as cheap as you can go, to you get what you pay for. Sometimes all the talk of getting the highest interest rate possible and less fees possible, in many instances there is a trade-off. I am still trying to balance all that out in the investment world. I am also not sure if I want to open a new account every time some bank offers a higher yield, as they seem to change with the wind. On the other hand, I need to admit that I do need to review our accounts annually at the very LEAST (if not more often) and reinvest as things do change.
In a similar vein, as a CPA I can crack the tax code and all of it's intricacies, but it is maddening to try to figure out mutual funds and how the fees work, etc. It is so over my head, though I know if I just took the time to figure it out it would benefit me greatly. What I need is a mutual fund book for DUMMIES. Seriously - I am putting it on my christmas wish list. : )
& so I Am in transition trying to decide what changes to make and what my new investing strategies should be. I think by far & #1 I have learned is to reevaluate your options often. Investing is a big job, you just don't do it once and sit back and not think of it again...
Anyway, that is my money mistake with cash. I Am gonna get my dummies book, pay close attention to this site, and reevaluate all of our mutual fund holdings. I will probably find I have made some mistakes with our mutual funds too, I just haven't noticed yet, but I am ready to make some changes. So wish me luck!
Oh yeah, and do not go to your CPA for investment advice. Please please please. Investment is like so greek to me sometimes, it is just so different from accounting. I often come across that mistaken assumption that accounting = finance. It is like apples and oranges. Taxes and budgets we are okay with, but investing, blech. LOL. Not by nature anyway.
My Big Money Mistake
September 15th, 2006 at 11:07 am


September 15th, 2006 at 01:11 pm
September 15th, 2006 at 02:46 pm
September 15th, 2006 at 03:28 pm
I do have the book and skimmed it but seemed pretty basic to me. I want to learn all the dirty details. However, I will go back and read the mutual funds info - I didn't really pay close attention so there is probably something I Can learn. For example, I heard that no load funds were not always as profitable, etc. So I would like to understand more about the fee structures so I Can evaluate more for myself the cost and benefit of different funds. Thanks for the tip!
& I am sure I will probably love investing, I just don't understand a lot about investing. Once I understand it I will probably find it as interesting as accounting I guess. Just don't feel very knowledgable for now. & is weird when people assume that you do!
September 15th, 2006 at 03:32 pm