Posts Tagged ‘principle’
I came across a great website yesterday titled “Outside The Lines” that has two great videos. One on how to have fund and enjoy life http://www.eightprinciples.com/ and the other on the 5 big questions in life we avoid http://www.fivebigquestions.com/. Both are really great videos and point out some things we tend to forget. Like don’t take things to seriously. Rather than listing the prionciples or questions, I will let you watch the videos. Please leave comments and let me know what you think.
The simple answer…..Maybe. It really depends on your situation. Those who have no debt should be saving as much as possible, and the younger you are the more aggressive your investments should be. The reason is that you have many years to make up for down years.
For those of you who have debt, then you should only be saving if you can make a better rate on investing than you are paying in interest. If you are making less in your investment than interest, then your investment is costing you money. Especially for those who are just putting money into savings accounts. This seems simple, but a lot of people are doing exactly this. I think it is smart to keep a small amount of money saved for emergencies, but besides this, it is usually best to pay off your debt before investing. That is especially true for credit card debt where the interest may be around 20%.
Below I have done a few calculations to show exactly how much you are loosing if you are putting money in savings with debt. I have used the amount of $10,000, and the difference will be even great the more money you have saved.
Savings account
Principle= $10,000
Interest=$3%
Time=1 year compounded monthly
Value in 1 year=$10,304.16
Debt
6%=$10,616.78
Total investment= -$314.62
10%=$11,047.13
Total investment=-742.97
19%=$12,074.51
Total investment=-$1,770.35
So as you can see, the higher the interest rate the worse off you are to put money in savings. The only case where this would not be true is if you can make a higher rate than what you are paying on your debt. The ability to do this is more difficult the higher the interest rate you are paying for your debt.