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Financial Literacy 101 Todd Jorns www.flip4u.org.

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Presentation on theme: "Financial Literacy 101 Todd Jorns www.flip4u.org."— Presentation transcript:

1 Financial Literacy 101 Todd Jorns www.flip4u.org

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3 What’s Happening Today Familiarize you with various financial terminology and principles. Inform you of the difference between “saving versus investing.” Inspire you to become investors. Challenge you to share this knowledge with family and friends.

4 Waiver I am not a certified financial planner or accountant. All information I share with you are things I have researched and practice myself. I have a passion to share my financial knowledge with anyone who will listen. My goal is to help others get on the path towards F 3 (future financial freedom).

5 Quiz Have you heard of these financial terms? –Savings Account –Checking Account –CDs –Stocks & Mutual Funds –Interest, Dividends & Capital Gains –Compound Interest –Rule of 72 –Debt

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7 Questions Does anyone have a savings account? Does anyone earn money? Does anyone know if they earn interest? Does anyone know the current balance of their savings account?

8 Investing versus Saving How to Have a Net Worth of $1 Million at Age 55 Interest Rates and Their Effect on Your Investments The Magic of Compound Interest Rule of 72 – Lump Sum Investment

9 How to Have a Net Worth of $1 Million at Age 55 Bloomberg Personal, September 1994

10 Interest Rates and Their Effect on Your Investments $10,000 Lump Sum

11 Interest Rates and Their Effect on Your Investments $100 Per Month

12 The Magic of Compound Interest Jimmie –Opens IRA at 12% interest at age 22. –Invests $2,000/year for 6 years = $12,000. –After 43 years IRA is worth $1,348,440. Joel –Spends $2,000/yr on himself for six years. –Opens IRA at 12% at age 28. –Invests $2,000/yr for 37 years = $74,000. –After 43 years, IRA is worth $1,363,780. Difference of $15,340 (start early!).

13 The Magic of Compound Interest

14 Rule of 72 The rule of 72 says if you take the interest rate you are receiving and divide it into 72, it will give you the number of years it will take for your investment to double. Example, 72 divided by 4 (interest rate at a bank) = 18 years for your money to double. Another example, 72 ÷ 2 = 36 years.

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16 Rule of 72

17 Give Your Money a Job! You worked hard for your money, so why not let your money work hard for you! –Savings Account (<1%) – ok job (short term). –CDs, Money Markets, Bonds (2-5%) – better job (medium term). –Stocks, Mutual Funds (4-10%) – even better job (long term). –Mixture of all three types – priceless!

18 Debt: the Good, Bad & Ugly House Loan (Mortgage) Auto Loan (Car or Truck) Personal Loan Credit Card

19 House Loan (Mortgage) Mortgages are usually good debt because equity in the house is built up over time. Only borrow what you can reasonably afford to pay back each month. The shorter the term (15yr vs. 30yr) the less interest you pay over time. Shop around for lowest interest rate.

20 Auto Loan Auto loans are considered not so good debt because the value of the car goes down over time. The shorter the term (36 mo vs. 60 mo) the less interest you pay over time. Shop around for lowest interest rate. Better to buy a used car or save up and pay cash for your vehicles.

21 Personal Loan Personal loans are considered bad debt because you pay interest with no return. Only borrow if it is a true emergency. Shop around for lowest interest rate. Pay back the loan ASAP. Better to create your own “emergency” fund and borrow from and repay yourself.

22 Credit Card Debt Credit Card debt is ugly debt because you pay enormously high interest rates. Interest rates can range from 0% - 30% Credit card debt is one of the leading causes of personal bankruptcy. Don’t carry balance over each month. Better to only charge what you can easily pay back each month.

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24 Credit Card Debt How long to pay off credit card? –$5,000 balance –10% interest rate –$100 monthly payment

25 Credit Card Debt How long to pay off credit card? –$5,000 balance –10% interest rate –$100 monthly payment Almost 5.5 years to pay off the debt. –$1,495 of interest –$5,000 principle –$6,495 total money paid – Ugly!

26 Credit Card Debt How long to pay off credit card? –$5,000 balance –20% interest rate –$100 monthly payment

27 Credit Card Debt How long to pay off credit card? –$5,000 balance –20% interest rate –$100 monthly payment Over 9 years to pay off the debt. –$5,840 of interest –$5,000 principle –$10,840 total money paid – Uglier!

28 Resources Retirement Options Retirement Contributions Web Resources What’s Most Important

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30 Retirement Options/Vehicles 401(k) (corporations) 403(b) (not-for-profits-education/hospitals) 457(b) (government) Roth IRA IRA Annuities U.S. Savings Bonds CDs Savings Accounts Others

31 Retirement Contributions *Catch-up contributions: Workers age 50 and above are permitted to contribute an additional $1,000 to their IRAs and $5,500 to their 403b and 457b plans in 2009.

32 Web Resources for Kids http://www.younginvestor.com/ http://www.strongkids.com/ http://www.youngbiz.com/ http://www.kidsmoney.org/ http://www.marketwatch.com/pf/started/Ge ttingStarted_KidsMoney.asphttp://www.marketwatch.com/pf/started/Ge ttingStarted_KidsMoney.asp

33 Other Web Resources www.fool.com/ www.morningstar.com/www.morningstar.com/ www.bankrate.com/www.bankrate.com/ www.savingforcollege.com/www.savingforcollege.com/ www.collegesavings.org/www.collegesavings.org/ www.flip4u.orgwww.flip4u.org

34 What’s Most Important It’s not how much you make, but how much you keep! It’s not how much you earn, but how much you don’t burn! Pay yourself first (saving & investing) Invest 50% of your annual raise in you Work smart, Invest hard, Retire peacefully

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36 Questions tjorns@gmail.com www.flip4u.org


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