Tue, July 29, 2008
In the last four years or so, there has been explosion of newly created exchange traded funds (ETFs) in the financial marketplace. What are these investment products, and how are they different from the more familiar mutual funds? Read the full article
Sat, July 26, 2008
The Senate bill passed today provides aid for homeowners on the brink of foreclosure, relief for beleaguered mortgage finance firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and something else: tax breaks for first-time homebuyers and a deduction for homeowners who normally aren't able to itemize their deductions.
Read the full article
Sat, July 26, 2008
Well, it seems late in the year for this, but today I received the first phony IRS e-mail of the season. The message appears to be a "phishing" scam in which I'm suppose to click on a fake IRS link provided in the message. Clicking the link would take you to an official-looking site that would collect confidential information - most likely, the thieves are looking for Social Security numbers. The IRS has noted a number of e-mail and telephone scams involving IRS impersonators; the stimulus rebates this year provide another premise for identity thieves to use as they "reach out" to potential prey. Read the full article
Tue, July 22, 2008
Today I'd like to offer a simple explanation for how life insurance works. This discussion will also lay a foundation for discussing the difference between term and permanent life insurance.
The first post in this series, on the reasons someone might need life insurance, is worth reading if you're not sure whether you need life insurance. Read the full article
Fri, July 18, 2008
One solution to soaring gas prices: walk there.
A new website that rates how walkable city neighborhoods are gave Boston the number three slot. The site has a nifty mapping feature tied into Google Local that rates "walkability" on the basis of proximity to amenities: parks, restaurants, grocery stores, and the like. Read the full article
Fri, July 18, 2008
Yesterday the Labor Department released updated regional figures for inflation from June 2007 to June 2008. Nationally, the CPI-U, which measures inflation for all urban consumers, was up 5%. Read the full article
Thu, July 17, 2008
If you have a longer-term CD that is now coming to maturity, you've probably been disappointed to discover how much interest rates have dropped since you last locked in your CD rate. What are the best options for those with short-to-medium-term cash to invest these days? Read the full article
Sat, July 12, 2008
Well, this is a bit creepy. Earlier today I wrote about American Express' arrangement last year with IndyMac Bankcorp and another lender to let mortgage holders make their monthly payments with credit cards. I made a point of saying that IndyMac was still in business. Oopsie - they were in business yesterday, but not today. Read the full article
Fri, July 11, 2008
Many homeowners struggling to keep up with mortgage payments are probably using their credit cards to make ends meet. Now, apparently, people who can't pay their mortgages have a new alternative: they can charge their monthly mortgage payments to a credit card directly. I wish I were making this up, but I'm not. Read the full article
Tue, July 08, 2008
It wasn't that long ago that mortgage lenders were eager to extend credit lines to anyone with a pulse and a property title. Alas, the industry's mood has turned with the swooning of housing prices: frugal caution has displaced wild abandon. Many homeowners, unaware that their lines of credit could be curtailed summarily, have been unpleasantly surprised. Read the full article
Tue, July 01, 2008
Everyone has heard of life insurance and most people have some; it’s not an exotic concept. Yet for the average person, buying life insurance means signing the most complex contract you'll ever enter into. This will be the first of a series of short primers on life insurance: why people need it, how it works, how much to buy, what kind to buy. Read the full article
Mon, June 30, 2008
The IRS announced last week that the business mileage rate, often used to determine the deduction for business use of a car, will go up effective July 1st.
Read the full article
Sat, June 28, 2008
Wall Street is licking its wounds this weekend, no doubt, after being pretty badly clawed by what is almost certainly a bear market. In the coming days you’ll see all sorts of articles offering you free advice, e.g. identifying “Bear Market Stocks You Should Buy Now,” providing lists of the mutual funds into which you should put all your money, and so forth. What should you do? Read the full article
Thu, June 26, 2008
The studentloanconsolidator.com blog noted a while back that new rates for Stafford and PLUS loans have been set; these are based on the Treasury Bill auction rates. There's further information in their Stafford loan blog. Starting July 1st, consolidation loan rates will drop significantly. Read the full article
Thu, June 26, 2008
Over the last fifty years, suburban neighborhoods outside of cities grew for a variety of reasons: families wanted more space than city homes provided, urban crime rates were higher than now (peaking in the 1960's and 70's), and the idealized vision of suburban life grew in popular imagination to become a mark of prestige. Less consciously, perhaps, suburban living was enabled by cheap gas and good roads; the "driveable suburb" within striking distance of city jobs became the ideal place in which to build a home. In the 1948 film, "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," Cary Grant played an advertising executive whose family flees its cramped New York apartment for a country home in Connecticut. For Jim Blandings, trains enabled the commute; that wasn't the case for most workers who decamped from the cities. The ability to drive to and from work relatively cheaply made the suburban "dream house" possible. Read the full article
Wed, June 25, 2008
Most middle-class parents aren't looking forward to the cost of sending their kids through college. For those of you who really want to get a head start, here's a scheme that will help maximize your college savings, albeit via rather quirky means. Read the full article
Mon, June 23, 2008
One of the consequences of the subprime debacle is a sharp rise in foreclosed properties. Some areas are especially bad off; in May, the majority of homes sold in the Sacramento area were foreclosures. Foreclosures nationwide were up 48% in May vs.the previous year (RealtyTrac.com), and in Massachusetts they were up 32% (ForeclosuresMass.com) over the same period. The rate in MA would have been higher but for a new law that went into effect May 1st, forcing lenders to delay foreclosure proceedings by an additional 60 days. There seem to be quite a few ads claiming that great deals are available through foreclosure sales. Is buying foreclosed property a "can't-fail" way to make money? Read the full article
Sat, June 21, 2008
On three occasions since 2002 the Santa Monica-based Milken Institute has ranked the states on the basis of how well they’re competing in the knowledge economy. For the third time in a row, Massachusetts ranks #1, while California slid from second to fourth place. Encouragingly, four of the top ten states are in New England. Read the full article
Thu, June 19, 2008
Most people understand that the FDIC insures certain kinds of bank deposits, like bank CDs. There's no way to “guarantee” an investment against losses, but an FDIC-insured deposit is probably the closest most of us will ever come to a guaranteed investment. However, consumers are sometimes a bit confused about how much FDIC insurance coverage they can have. Read the full article
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