Investment
Investing should be easy – just buy low and sell high – but most of us have trouble following that simple advice. There are principles and strategies that may enable you to put together an investment portfolio that reflects your risk tolerance, time horizon, and goals.
Understanding these principles and strategies can help you avoid some of the pitfalls that snare some investors.
In my decades of financial planning experience, I've observed that clients often misallocate their financial priorities. They focus on optimizing investments or tax strategies while carrying high-interest credit card debt. With today's average credit card interest rates around 22%—and some store cards charging up to 30%—addressing this debt should be your primary financial focus.
Credit card debt creates a silent but relentless drain on your financial future. Consider this perspective: If you're carrying a balance on a card charging 22% interest, you're effectively losing money at a rate that far exceeds what most investments can reliably earn.
Let's put this in concrete terms:
$10,000 in credit card debt at 22% interest = $2,200 in annual interest costs
$10,000 invested in a diversified portfolio with an average annual return of 7% = $700 in potential growth
The net difference is a $1,500 annual loss. No investment strategy can overcome this mathematical reality.
Many cardholders fall into the minimum payment trap, believing they're making progress by making regular payments. The reality is far more troubling.
Let's look at a real-world example:
$5,000 balance on a card with 22% interest
Minimum payment of 2% of the balance ($100 initially)
Time to pay off: Over 30 years
Total interest paid: More than $13,000
This means you'll pay more than three times the original purchase price by making only minimum payments. Store cards with 29-30% interest rates create an even more dire scenario.
High credit card balances affect more than just your monthly budget. They:
Lower your credit score: High utilization rates negatively impact your credit rating
Increase other borrowing costs: Lower scores mean higher interest rates on mortgages, auto loans, and insurance
Reduce financial flexibility: Monthly payments limit your ability to save or invest
Create financial stress: Money worries are consistently ranked among the top sources of relationship and personal stress
Today's economic environment makes addressing credit card debt even more urgent:
Rising interest rates: Credit card rates have increased substantially and may continue to rise
Inflation pressures: Higher costs for essentials make it harder to allocate extra funds to debt reduction
Economic uncertainty: Job security concerns make carrying high-interest debt particularly risky
If you're carrying credit card balances, here's a straightforward approach to address them:
List all cards with:
Current balance
Interest rate
Minimum payment
Focus additional payments on the highest-rate card first while maintaining minimum payments on others. This "debt avalanche" approach minimizes interest costs.
Explore options that might lower your overall interest rate:
Credit union personal loans (often 7-12% vs. 22%+)
Balance transfer offers (watch for fees)
Home equity options (if appropriate and used responsibly)
Once you've made progress:
Create a cash cushion for emergencies
Develop a spending plan that prevents future credit card reliance
Consider using cards only for planned purchases you can pay in full
I worked with a client who had accumulated $22,000 across five credit cards during a period of reduced income. The average interest rate was 24%, costing her $440 monthly in interest alone.
By consolidating through her credit union at 9.5% and adding $200 to her previous minimum payment amount, she eliminated the debt in 3.5 years instead of the 25+ years it would have taken making minimum payments. The total interest savings exceeded $40,000.
Financial progress often comes down to prioritization. With limited resources, focusing on high-impact actions first creates momentum for other goals.
If you're carrying high-interest credit card debt, I encourage you to make its elimination your primary financial focus. The mathematical reality is clear: No investment strategy, tax planning, or budgeting approach will have a greater positive impact on your financial future.
Would you like to discuss strategies for addressing credit card debt in your specific situation? I'm here to help you create a plan that puts you back in control of your financial future.
In my decades of financial planning experience, I've observed that clients often misallocate their financial priorities. They focus on optimizing investments or tax strategies while carrying high-interest credit card debt. With today's average credit card interest rates around 22%—and some store cards charging up to 30%—addressing this debt should be your primary financial focus.
Credit card debt creates a silent but relentless drain on your financial future. Consider this perspective: If you're carrying a balance on a card charging 22% interest, you're effectively losing money at a rate that far exceeds what most investments can reliably earn.
Let's put this in concrete terms:
$10,000 in credit card debt at 22% interest = $2,200 in annual interest costs
$10,000 invested in a diversified portfolio with an average annual return of 7% = $700 in potential growth
The net difference is a $1,500 annual loss. No investment strategy can overcome this mathematical reality.
Many cardholders fall into the minimum payment trap, believing they're making progress by making regular payments. The reality is far more troubling.
Let's look at a real-world example:
$5,000 balance on a card with 22% interest
Minimum payment of 2% of the balance ($100 initially)
Time to pay off: Over 30 years
Total interest paid: More than $13,000
This means you'll pay more than three times the original purchase price by making only minimum payments. Store cards with 29-30% interest rates create an even more dire scenario.
High credit card balances affect more than just your monthly budget. They:
Lower your credit score: High utilization rates negatively impact your credit rating
Increase other borrowing costs: Lower scores mean higher interest rates on mortgages, auto loans, and insurance
Reduce financial flexibility: Monthly payments limit your ability to save or invest
Create financial stress: Money worries are consistently ranked among the top sources of relationship and personal stress
Today's economic environment makes addressing credit card debt even more urgent:
Rising interest rates: Credit card rates have increased substantially and may continue to rise
Inflation pressures: Higher costs for essentials make it harder to allocate extra funds to debt reduction
Economic uncertainty: Job security concerns make carrying high-interest debt particularly risky
If you're carrying credit card balances, here's a straightforward approach to address them:
List all cards with:
Current balance
Interest rate
Minimum payment
Focus additional payments on the highest-rate card first while maintaining minimum payments on others. This "debt avalanche" approach minimizes interest costs.
Explore options that might lower your overall interest rate:
Credit union personal loans (often 7-12% vs. 22%+)
Balance transfer offers (watch for fees)
Home equity options (if appropriate and used responsibly)
Once you've made progress:
Create a cash cushion for emergencies
Develop a spending plan that prevents future credit card reliance
Consider using cards only for planned purchases you can pay in full
I worked with a client who had accumulated $22,000 across five credit cards during a period of reduced income. The average interest rate was 24%, costing her $440 monthly in interest alone.
By consolidating through her credit union at 9.5% and adding $200 to her previous minimum payment amount, she eliminated the debt in 3.5 years instead of the 25+ years it would have taken making minimum payments. The total interest savings exceeded $40,000.
Financial progress often comes down to prioritization. With limited resources, focusing on high-impact actions first creates momentum for other goals.
If you're carrying high-interest credit card debt, I encourage you to make its elimination your primary financial focus. The mathematical reality is clear: No investment strategy, tax planning, or budgeting approach will have a greater positive impact on your financial future.
Would you like to discuss strategies for addressing credit card debt in your specific situation? I'm here to help you create a plan that puts you back in control of your financial future.
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Have you ever needed Financial Guidance, but instead got a sales pitch for specific products or service without the Advisor even understanding your specific situation or what you wanted accomplished?
My passion for helping clients get better financial outcomes came from years of being a single parent balancing work and children. I experienced firsthand the lack of personalized financial guidance in running my household and consequently, made costly mistakes.
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