Auld Lang Syne and A Financially Independent New Year!

Happy New Year!

This day tends to force us to reflect on the past and as a result, there is no shortage of top ten lists out there. We have instant access to the top 10 movies, games, news items, victories, blunders,the sexiest, the ugliest, the best dressed, etc…

I wanted to take a different tack and focus much more on the coming year. In that vein I have chosen one area of reflection and several more items to help plan for an amazing 2011. I hope you find these ideas useful.

The Past:

Consumerist has a tidy list of their most read stories of 2010. Since I got a Best Buy gift card for xmas, this article popped out as one of my favorites. They are all good as there are few things more satisfying than hearing about a little guy beating a corporate Goliath. As their tag-line reads: shoppers bite back.

OK, enough about the past…

The Future:

J.Money at Budgets are Sexy posted a great looking forward article.

Entrepreneurship:

Is this the year you are going to get that business started?

Now would be a great time to visit SCORE.

What is SCORE you ask?

SCORE, Counselors to America’s small business, is a nonprofit association dedicated to educating entrepreneurs and helping small business start, grow and succeed nationwide. SCORE is a resource partner with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).

As I mentioned in The Hero with a Million Dollars, SCORE is all about finding a mentor to help you with your business.

Should you incorporate? Form a multi-member LLC? Go in as a Sole Proprietor? Should I set up in my home state or in Nevada? Delaware?

These are questions every potential entrepreneur faces from day one.I have 2 things that helped me and could serve as the launching point for your great idea:

1. Get a copy of Limited Liability Companies for Dummies by Jennifer Reuting and (after you read it) head over to her site: MyLLC to set yours up.

2. Don’t be afraid to Ask the Business Lawyer about specific issues related to your chosen endeavor. Nina Kaufman has tons of excellent articles, a free E-zine and if you are considering a partnership of any kind, you absolutely need to check out The Entrepreneurs Prenup.

Investing:

1. Open an account with Vanguard (Disclaimer: I have zero affiliation with Vanguard other than some excellent investments). They have the best low fee mutual funds in the industry. Whether you are starting a Traditional IRA, Roth IRA or a Tax advantaged Bond fund, you should be working with Vanguard. Do you want to learn about ETF’s? Check this out. It is the single best overview of ETF’s I could find anywhere.

2. Do you already have an IRA? Don’t worry, you still have until April 15th, 2011 to max out your 2010 contributions. Nice!

3. Pick up a copy of The Richest Man in Babylon and check out my review of The Elements of Investing. Both of these small, easy to read books should be on your bookshelf.

Taxes:

1. Get a copy of Sandy Botkin’s Lower Your Taxes: Big Time. It is an eye opener and will pay for itself in the first chapter.

Frugality:

1. Check out inexspensively.com and clean out your cupboards already!

Giving Back:

I believe giving should start at home, in your neighborhood and in your community. Give to your church, your school, your firehouse. Buy local when possible and help employ one of your neighbors. The following organizations are amazing in their creativity and cause. Give till it hurts then give some more, you will never regret it! Here are my favorite charitable groups:

1. There is nothing quite like Operation Homefront. Helping out those who bravely and tirelessly defend our freedoms is possibly the best kind of giving back.

2. The Giving Effect:

from The Giving Effect’s about page: Most of us have lives filled with things we don’t use — shoes, food, clothes, computers, and more. At the same time, thousands of non-profits and civic-minded people are struggling to get basic items to people in their communities. We see an opportunity to connect these groups together.

What a great concept!!!

3. LoveDrop:

You’ve heard of micro-transactions right? Small amounts of money from a large enough pool of people can add up to some huge results. Well, Love Drop is a micro-charity concept. With as little as $1 a month, you assist the love drop team in helping one person or family a month.

-WR

Please Comment

How to Follow Your Bliss

It is no secret that I am a fan of the late Joseph Campbell. My book adheres closely to his concept of a monomyth. I do not pretend to be an expert on the subject matter that so fascinates me. I consider myself a student and will always be one. Comparative mythology studies the myths that people live by. It is as much concerned with paleolithic cave drawings as it is with modern middle eastern strife. The breadth is staggering. With our big brains and our assorted accoutrements of modern life it is easy to forget how closely linked we are to our rich mythological past.  While there is an anthropological slant to many of the approaches I have studied, Joseph Campbell brings passion and more than a little dramatic flair to his chosen life-work.  We all live by a myth, this is our personal story, our personal narrative. Sometimes this is a part of a larger worldview as in the case of membership in one of the great world religions. Sometimes we try to find our way by other means.

Joseph Campbell used to like to say “mythology is referred to as other peoples religion and that “religion is simply misunderstood or misinterpreted mythology“. He felt that the emphasis on the historicity of religious texts often got in the way of the spiritual message. While many people get caught up on both sides of the fence trying to either prove or disprove a finite act of religion, trying to tie a religious event to a real historic place, date or person, I believe that it is the abiding, guiding message that matters most in our lives. For example, flood myths preceded the Bible by many centuries. Deucalion of Greek myth was the son of Prometheus and Pronoia. Pelasgians were the neolithic culture that preceded the greeks and the story goes that Zeus let loose a heavy rain, the rivers swelled and the seas rose. Deucalion and his dad Prometheus built an ark and was saved from the deluge. Noah and the Sumerian Xisuthros are both heroes of the same myth, the same story. There are strikingly similar stories in the Koran, in China,  in Aboriginal Australia and even with the North American Indian tribe the Menominee. These stories hint at both a universal threat of flood on the ancient world stage and the need for humans to mythologize about it. Our shared stories and ritual bring order out of chaos and help us relate to each other in meaningful ways. We destroy these relationships when we throw out the story and the ritual and instead cling simply to the historical vessel that carried them.

Any of Joseph Campbell’s densely academic books require dedication and commitment to thoroughly absorb. Among his pantheon of wisdom regarding comparative mythology he states that one needs to follow their bliss in order to live a fulfilling life. It is the history of the world as seen through the eyes of the great story tellers that bind us all together and in that vein Campbell drew heavily on the Hindu Upanishads to form his belief on this subject. Earlier, both  Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau espoused transcendentalism as a kind of personal mythology.

I try to view Campbell’s admonition within the scope of his greater body of work. He seemed to firmly believe that we are all intrinsically connected. We all share a common background that reaches back far beyond recorded history might suggest. The roots of the human condition dig deeper than many of feel comfortable admitting. Despite our apparent differences we all share a closely held need to help others. Our bliss is a reflection of that.

Another way of saying follow your bliss could be to follow that which holds you in rapture, that which arrests your soul. It is imperative for us to define our purpose in life and get to the business of following our bliss. Your bliss takes you by the hand and pulls you where you’ve always wanted to go but were afraid to tread there yourself.

What is my bliss?


What draws you forth?

What would you gladly do for free if your bills were paid and you had no obligations?

Imagine that after you die, there is a giant brass plaque erected in your honor…What would you like it to say?

In the ceremony, the great mayor of the city gives a speech in your honor…What does he say about your life, your contribution?

What does your family say?

To follow your bliss is to do what you are.

To follow your bliss is to help others with the gifts you were given, the skills you acquired and all the strength you can summon.

Write a one-page plan on how to follow your own bliss.

please comment

Should I Stay Or Should I Go?

If I go there will be trouble
An’ if I stay it will be double

-The Clash

A short while ago, John Courson told the Wall Street Journal that underwater homeowners “should not walk away from lawful debts”. He went on to ask “What about the message they will send to their family and their kids and their friends?

Five Years ago I would have heartily agreed. Fulfilling obligations, I believe, is a mark of one’s character. While I still firmly believe that every person should strive to fulfill their obligations, my definition of what constitutes individual responsibility has changed in the realm of home ownership. The unrelenting greed of mortgage lenders and the abject failure of our government to regulate them has severely harmed the average U.S. homeowner. It is true that a subset of homeowners could have been more aptly described as ‘speculators’ during the run-up to the crash but I still am convinced that the vast majority just wanted a nice place to live and raise their families. These ‘innocents’ were directly harmed by the collateral damage from a war that they did not sign up for.

So who’s John Courson? He is president and C.E.O. of the Mortgage Bankers Association. A group with an enormous vested interest in folks paying their home loans, no matter how big and unwieldy they happen to be. You see, Courson represents the very people who created the meltdown and even profited from the cleanup. The MBA members demolished the value of your home but refuse to reduce your principal balance. He does not want you to default, this would send the property back to bank ownership and they would be forced to sell it for what it is actually worth. Courson also pointed out on a separate occasion that “defaults hurt neighborhoods by lowering property values“. This was before, of course, before the Mortgage Bankers Association stiffed their lender in Washington D.C. to the tune of 25 million. Read the -Wall Street Journal Article

Here is the bottom line: corporations aren’t immoral, people are. The Banks and the MBA were  just doing the job of any corporation, to make as much money as they possibly could. Their perceived responsibility to shareholders was to get as many heartbeats into the funnel as quickly as possible so they could slice the ensuing mortgage up into Mortgage Backed Securities. After all of the qualified home buyers had homes, banks went after people who weren’t qualified to buy. Since these loans were sold almost immediately, the original lenders did not assume the risk of a loan default. That’s how an unemployed person could buy a 4 bedroom, 3 bath house with cash out at settlement. The bank simply did not care if they defaulted. The loan would go into the slicer with thousands of others and be a part of the CDO pool.

The question comes up then. Should the individuals who were not ‘qualified’ have bought these homes in the first place? Probably not. Individuals should know their financial situation but when Real Estate Agents, Appraisers, Lawyers and Banks are all using their professional influence to convince people that buying a home is the best course of action, it would take the strongest of the best of us to resist that kind of pressure.

The crash affected everyone, qualified or not. I would imagine that the first wave of foreclosures happened to those with the least ability to pay their mortgage. Then, as the recession continued, some people lost their jobs and then their homes. Now, those  qualified individuals who still have a job find themselves punished for their responsibility. They kept their jobs, their loan costs more and now their job is less secure. What’s more, the value of their home has dropped so much that they are severely underwater on their mortgage.

No good deed will go unpunished.

So what are the options for these folks? What about “Making Homes Affordable”?

The HAMP program is completely inadequate for a number of reasons. First, It does nothing to address the extreme loss of value homes have suffered because of the banks unrelenting greed. It simply tries to get people to take on a new loan for a house they still cannot afford. The principle is not touched. Secondly, It is aimed at people with financial hardship. How evil can banks get? They want to preserve their earnings by roping in the least capable of protecting themselves. The folks who are still financially solvent pay an egregious penalty. Their good judgement and strong financial discipline are the very values that they are being punished for exhibiting.

Why am I punished for being responsible?

If you bought a house with a reasonable loan, good credit and find yourself 30, 40 even 50% underwater you have every right to be angry. With such a big meltdown and so many bad actors within the circle of responsibility it’s hard to assign blame. Even worse, the President of the United States is out there urging homeowners to take the moral high ground and continue paying their mortgages. Now, even your sense of civic duty comes into question. I understand the dilemma from a macroeconomic perspective. Are home values too high? In a word, yes! The only reason home values shot up so far and so fast was because the law of supply and demand was so hideously tampered with by these influential financiers.

Strategic Foreclosure

Some homeowners are making the decision to walk away from their loans. Good people. Hard working, morally upright people. How could they do this? It’s simple really. They found themselves $100,000 underwater on their home with no help from the Feds and no help from the banks, they made the decision to walk away from their mortgage. They know their credit score will be devastated but are not overly concerned. They can stock up on things they would ordinarily use credit to purchase (For instance, They could get an auto loan before default at a low interest rate and have a reliable car for the next 7-10 years). They know that even when the economy fully recovers, home prices will not reach the astronomical levels we saw from those artificially inflated prices.

Should I cool it or should I blow?

Brent T. White, a University of Arizona law school professor wrote a 55 page academic article called “Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis”. He said that a shame and social control agenda that extends all the way to the White House has been underway to keep people paying the mortgage on their underwater properties.

Laws differ from state to state on what you are responsible for after a default. Check your situation. If you remove the social manipulation coming from Wall Street and the White House and make the decision to strategically default a rational one, short term pain may result in a much more sustainable situation for you and your family.
Donald Bisenius, a Freddie Mac VP said on May 3rd “Knowing the costs and factoring in the time horizon, some borrowers have made the calculation that it is better to purposely default on the mortgage. While I understand how that might well be a good decision for certain borrowers, that doesn’t make it good social policy. That’s because strategic defaults affect many other families and communities. And these costs – or as they are known in economic jargon, externalities – are not factored into the individual borrower’s calculations.”

Allowing Wall Street to profit by manipulating home prices, converting mortgages into worthless strips of paper and even betting on the failure of this entire system is perhaps the worst social policy of all.

This indecision’s bugging me
If you don’t want me, set me free

Are you underwater on your mortgage?

What are the moral or ethical issues that would prevent you from strategically defaulting?

Should people who can pay their underwater mortgage be obligated to?

Please post your comments.

EDIT: I noticed that The Simple Dollar just posted an article which has developed into an excellent discussion on the same topic

-WR

( lyrics are from the song“Should I stay or should I go” copyright 1991 The Clash)

Welcome to WorthWild.net

Glad you stopped by.

Within the walls of this blog we will be taking a sometimes unorthodox approach to financial independence. We’ll look at wealth not as an end-goal but as a truly sustainable lifestyle.

First a definition:

Financial Independence: Living on the income generated by the semi-automatic streams you have established.

Q. What are ‘semi-automatic streams’ ?

A. Besides a good name for a rock band (this marks my first homage to Dave Barry), semi-automatic streams of income include dividends from your investments, profit from your business or royalty payments from a creative work. All of these require substantial initial effort but usually minimal ongoing attention.

WorthWild’s tagline is “Financial Independence on your terms” and I hope I can live up to this lofty Ideal. Achieving Financial Independence is hard. Anything worthwhile usually is. It takes dedication, sacrifice and humility but I think you’ll agree it is well worth it.

One important thing to note is that everyone has a different dollar amount that represents their threshold for financial independence. The more frugal you are, the faster you’ll get there. Period. This is why frugality constitutes a significant focus of this blog.

In the posts that follow we’ll revisit this definition and refine it for our purposes…