|
The Big Capital Gain or The Meagre Cash
Flow Avenue?
Net Income Over Cash Flow
Real Estate by the Numbers: Closing Costs
The Keys to Obtaining and Refinancing Your
College Loan
There's a New 401k Coming to Town
The San Diego Condo Market: Number Two and
Rising?
Now Is the Right Time to Consolidate
Student Loans
Online Debt Consolidation Applications
Seeking a Debt Consolidation Loan?
|
You will also be asked about your risk tolerance
so that the planner can determine what kind of annual rate of return
to factor in for your investments. If you say you have a low risk
tolerance, the planner will consider low-risk investments that will
give you a lower rate of return. If you say you have a high risk
tolerance, investments that could provide a higher rate of return
will be considered. You can't have it both ways. If you don't take
risks, you can't get a very high rate of return on your investments.
Then all that information will be dumped into a
financial planning software program. The software will print out a
plan that will say you need to accumulate several million dollars by
the time you're 55 years old. Oh, and it will be exact to the penny.
For example, $5,387,234.23.
You will look at the plan and you will think, "My
gosh, there is no way I can do this!" You may get started doing a
few things that the planner recommends. But it won't last very long
and you'll go right back to doing things the way you've always done
them.
So what's wrong with the traditional financial
planning process? Plenty! First of all, it's ridiculous to try to
look decades in the future to predict what's going to be happening
in your life. I don't know about you, but I don't know what's going
to happen tomorrow, much less decades from now. Also, traditional
financial planning doesn't take into account what financial freedom
actually is. You're financially free when your passive income (money
you don't have to work for) equals your expenses.
So if you have no passive income right now and
your expenses are $50,000 a year, and you can get a 10% return on
your investments, you need to accumulate $500,000 to become
financially free. If you can get a higher return on your money, you
can reduce the amount that must be accumulated. If you settle for a
lesser return because you're risk averse, you will need to
accumulate more. You should also consider inflation. Of course, if
you invest for inflation, it will already be factored into your
investments.
Understanding financial freedom as the point
where your passive income equals your expenses is a much more
realistic way to look at it. Most people who are committed to being
financially free can achieve their goal in a matter of a few years,
not decades.
Visit
http://www.Money-Management-Wisdom.com
for your common-sense guide for debt-free financial freedom.
Copyright 2005
Larry Holmes is a Wall Street trained financial
advisor with over 30 years of experience. He is also an accomplished
public speaker who has presented well over 1,200 financial seminars
and keynote addresses to audiences throughout the United States and
the United Kingdom.
|