New rules make it harder to file Chapter 7, carry credit card debt
By Michelle Singletary
Can it be another year is nearly over?
Typically at the end of December, I like to reflect on my personal financial life. I take stock of whether I followed all the advice I got during the year from my financial adviser.
Year-end also is a time to catch up on what's happened in personal finance.
Here are some noteworthy money matters from 2005:
Why the change? See next year-end development.
I had a reader ask if it was OK to take out a home equity line of credit instead of creating an emergency savings fund. His theory was if he got into financial trouble, he could draw down on the line of credit.
He could do that.
But the point of having a savings cushion is so that it can carry you through a financial disaster or hardship using your own money — not borrowed money. That line of credit the reader wanted to establish should be his second line of defense, not his first. As a goal, save enough to cover at least three months of living expenses. Six months is even better.
Life cycle funds are a way to diversify your retirement savings plan by relying on professionally determined investment mixes that are tailored to when you think you will need the money.
Surveys show people often don't change their asset allocations once they sign up for a retirement plan because they don't know what to do. Investing in a life cycle fund is essentially like putting your retirement account on automatic pilot — except there is a pilot, it's just not you. And we all know that saving for retirement is going to be important since there is a projected shortfall in Social Security in the near future.
If time is money, I hope in 2006 you'll take the time to learn more about personal finance.