Friday, July 24, 2009

Becoming a Little Richer

Most of us want to be in the happy state of knowing each night as we drift off to sleep that we are a little bit richer than we were when we woke up that morning. Can you relate to that desire? Of course, you can. After all, the importance of money in our interconnected world grows each day. Yet, I still believe that if you hope to live a happy, balanced life, you'll be smart enough to consider that wealth is only an instrument to be used, not a god to be worshipped.

It is not just a man's domain, women are also responsible in balancing and managing the cash flow. So, if you wish to sustain balance in your life, retain a sense of deep joy, and successfully grow richer and richer over time, focus on enhancing two personal quantities: your cash flow surplus and your net worth. Strengthening the first will automatically beef up of the second.

The way to ensure that you grow a little bit richer each day is to focus on your cash flow patterns over just one day, then over one week, later over one month, and so on. If within each time segment you always make it a point to spend less than you bring in on a net basis (after tax and other standard deductions) then you will be transforming the unutilized portion of your net earnings into a personal store of capital; and you will be acting as a capitalist in the finest sense of the word!

Possessing a growing store of capital will empower you to further load up your net worth statement with fruitful or productive assets like bank savings, money market funds, bond funds, equity funds, property funds, rental-yielding properties, dividend-yielding stocks, and the like.

In essence, you will be choosing to exercise deferred gratification by giving up a portion of your capacity to consume today for the opportunity to possess far more (and to enjoy a lot more) tomorrow.

It is important to realize that a net worth statement has two parts, as does a cash flow statement. The net worth statement's twin components are assets and liabilities. In general, it is tempting to utter clichés and say that assets are good and liabilities are bad. However, that would be an excessive generalization. Let me explain:

Assets can either be appreciating or depreciating ones. Obviously, appreciating assets like growing bank deposits, investment funds, appreciating properties, and high quality stocks are good. Depreciating assets, on the other hand, lose value over time. These may include your cars, computers and mobile phones. The wise course is not to avoid owning depreciating assets, the shopping dilemna is quite hard to settle, but rather to ensure you have much more in appreciating assets.

Liabilities also can be good or bad. Good forms of debt might include well-structured mortgages on second or third pieces of property that you earn rental from. Bad types of liabilities most certainly include all unpaid, regularly carried over credit card debt and loans.

It is a tremendous eye-opener to understand that unpaid credit card or loan balances are dreadful liabilities for regular people like you and me to have, but are wonderful assets for the banks and lending investors!

So ask yourself if your goal in life is to sacrifice your personal long-term financial health to bolster the bottomline of some faceless financial institution, or is it to manage your money wisely to ensure you grow a little richer everyday? As Confucius said: When prosperity comes, do not use all of it.


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