prog: (coffee)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2003-01-30 01:40 pm

Fool

For a while I have felt like, from a financial perspective, my life has resembled the latter stages of a CRPG where the in-game economy breaks down because you have far too much money, and earning money to buy things ceases to become a challenge. This is not to say I'm filthy rich, but the fact is that I don't spend money on anyone but myself (not counting small loans and donations here and there to friends and allied causes), and my spending on myself is pretty minimal; I choose to live simply (if a bit messily), because my hobbies and personal projects don't require a lot of money. Oh, I could blow my bank account on stupid things if I wanted (does The Sharper Image still exist?), but I don't, and so I am left with a hideously bloated checking account and nothing else, because I have no clue what else I can do with my money. This makes me uncomfortable.

So: I have started to poke around The Motley Fool, which seems in some ways to be the O'Reilly of financial information. I've known about them mostly through the delightful NPR program Marketplace, which I've listened to for years, more for entertainment than education. But reading the start of their intro to banking article humbles me: Yes! I am stupid about all this stuff! Just as I suspected!

Anyway, it's something new to do, and it may end up being good for me. I wonder what will happen next.

Re: Diversify

[identity profile] magid.livejournal.com 2003-01-31 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
Also, take advantage of any free money you'll get if you use the employer's save for retirement plan: a lot of them match your contribution up to a certain percent, and it usually pre-tax dollars as well (double benefit: invest without having yet paid taxes on it, plus descrease the taxes you'll pay on income, since it'll be a bit less).
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