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“Planes are safer on the ground but they are meant to fly” by Anonymous

With some spare cash in the bank, most of us would contemplate on whether to put it in fixed deposits and earn a meagre 3% interest or to put it to greater use by investing it (but undertake a higher risk). After asking around, you find people investing in all kinds of commodities, from gold to bonds to properties.

So, what do you jump into and what do you dump?

Assuming you have limited resources (I mean cash here, and I suppose everyone has a limit), you would need to decide on what reaps the most profit, as in return on investment.

Before jumping into investments, determine how much risk you are able to undertake. Will losing half of what you invested threaten your retirement plans? Will losing 5% of your investment drive you nuts? In investments, risk and returns are almost always inversely related. Therefore, it is important that you find a balance between the two.

How fast and how much your money grows in a specified period of time depends on WHERE you place your cash. Well, you could place it under your pillow and earn zero interest with no/low risk (well, hopefully your house doesn’t get burnt down). Or you could place them in a savings account and earn 0.25% interest with low risk (hopefully the bank doesn’t go bankrupt). Or you could place them in fixed deposits and earn a relatively higher interest rate of 3% with low risk (hopefully you wouldn’t need to take out the money before the term ends and forfeit all your interest). Or you could invest them in less volatile bonds and funds and earn a non-guranteed 6% profit at low/medium risk. Or you could invest them in volatile stocks and earn a non-guranteed 20% profit at high risk.

Whichever option you decide on is mainly based on your financial goal and risk tolerance level. Placing your money in a savings account may be one of the safest places but it reduces the potential rewards that it could have generated if it had been invested appropriately.

Is this the right investment?
If you are staying up late all night watching over your investments or calling your fund manager every five minutes to check on the status (even in the middle of night), dump the investment and look for something within your comfort zone. You should be comfortable with the amount of risk involved and the returns accompanying it when dealing with investments.

The 3 Golden Rules
1. Remember that risk and returns are almost always inversely related. Look for the balance point.
2. Doing nothing about your wealth most probably means your wealth will end up with nothing more.
3. Find a comfort zone for your investments. Risking your health over financial gains is one risk you should never undertake.

      Cents and Sensibility 0

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Be sensible when dealing with coins

When I was younger, I used to think that coins are worthless, that I wouldn’t be able to buy anything with those few cents. Most of the time, I would waste them on little items like candies or snacks. It never occurred to me that if I had lots of coins, it could be a significant sum too.

The pure existence of the “piggy bank” (those coin boxes that looks like pig) suggests that someone intended for us to save the coins as well? “Piggy banks” have its roots tied to kids saving up their coins for rainy day. So why can’t an adult do the same? Not literally using a “piggy bank” maybe, but its the same idea I guess.

There’s a computer fraud called the salami method where a person (usually a computer programmer in a bank) rounds off a fraction of the cents to his own account. You wouldn’t notice the difference of $128.43 and $128.41, would you? Yes, 2 cents isn’t much, you can’t even get a sweet nowadays. But, what if he was siphoning from hundreds of thousands of accounts? Let’s do some mathemathics. Say he siphons from 500,000 accounts, 2 cents a month. Well, he would be getting $10,000 a month! This shows the importance of cents!

Start Saving your coins
I keep an empty can (Yah, those Campbell soup cans will do) for my coins. I have a coin pouch that I use when I’m out, to keep the coins I get during the day. After each day, I come back and empty the coins into my can. You will be amazed how fast the can fills up!

What next?
Once the can reaches the brim, pour them all out and start counting them! See how much you have saved! Bank in the coins along with your monthly savings. Do not splurge them on unnecessary items thinking those are extra cash. Keep them for your savings!

The 3 Golden Rules

1. Don’t waste your coins on small unnecessary items.

2. Get an empty can/coin box. Save your coins in it. Do not empty it until it’s full!

3. Once full, bank them into your savings account. Do not splurge them on anything!

I wouldn’t encourage you to keep several cans of coins just because you are too busy (or lazy) to bank them into your account. Keeping that extra cash in a can/coin box instead of your bank account means you are forgoing the interest that it would have generated (no matter how little it may be).