As Founders of the Wealth Builder University ( WBU),we welcome you to this new and exciting blog, www.WealthBuilderUblog.com .
As Founders of the Wealth Builder University ( WBU),we welcome you to this new and exciting blog, www.WealthBuilderUblog.com .
I loved the subject line of the email I received from Bank CD and Investing News -
"9 Dumbest Moves To Ruin Retirement"
These are the headings of the 9 'dumb moves' found in that article:
I have a feeling most of us 'baby boomers' relate to some, if not most of them.
Discuss your plan with your significant other to make sure you are both on the same page.
Good luck
Alex Weiss
Co-Founder, www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
PS Have you used the WealthDollars Detector at www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
Every once in a while it's nice to see that the little guy wins.
Below is an article from a mortgage industry newsletter we subscribe to that had a sad story with a relatively happy ending.
Good luck.
Alex Weiss
WealthBuilderUniversity.com , co-founder
Couple Awarded $1 Million For Bad Credit Reporting
With spotless credit, Reed and Mary Ann Fisher had always paid their
mortgage on time, but a two-year nightmare began when Wells Fargo
started to falsely report them as delinquent.
Even after the mortgage was transferred to Freddie Mac, the original
lender did not clean up the credit report as they had told the couple,
but rather went on reporting them to the credit agencies and even began
foreclosure proceedings on the property to which they had no claim.
The rest of the article can be found at http://www.mortgageledger.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2463
One of my business associates sent me a great calculator.
It calculates you Real Age (sometimes called Health Age) which is different from your current physical age.
Check it out. http://www.peterrussell.dreamhosters.com/Odds/RealAge.php
It was an 'eye opener' for me.
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
If you were planning to rely on social security to help fund your early retirement (age 62), perhaps you should make other plans.
The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College has released a new Issue in Brief:
"Promoting Work: Implications of Raising Social Security's Early Retirement Age"
The bottom line is that the thinking at the ivory towers might be the sign of the direction our government in Washington is thinking about.
Retiring at 62 may soon be a thing of the past - as if it's not already.
Check out the full report at http://clicks.581z.com/v/?u=b33cb9e91571e6c859599334b84ca154&g=417&c=711&p=0f9fe2a8a5ea9d2087ae3b42afa57aa2&t=1
Good luck to us all.
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
Bernanke provided additional context and information surrounding the Fed’s decision on August 17 to lower the discount rate, broaden the terms on discount window borrowing and issue a revised economic statement. In particular, the deterioration of financial market conditions combined with the tightening of credit in the first two weeks of August had appreciably increased the downside risks to growth. More specifically, the further tightening of credit conditions increased the risk that the weakness in the housing sector would be deeper and more prolonged than expected, with possible adverse affects on consumer spending and housing more generally. |
“This whole thing, I have to say, is tremendously unfair, that it hit. But it did hit, and what do you do now? You make the best of it.”
|
Greetings from the classic musical city of Vienna, Austria, where my wife Eva and I are visiting relatives, before returning home to LA.
The world is sooo small if you have access to the internet.
I came across an intriguing question on the bank rate website.
Your Boss Can Pull Your Credit. Who Else?
By Steve Bucci • Bankrate.com
|
Carol |
See the continuation below for Steve Bucci's answer.
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
Greeting from Jerusalem.
I am looking out of my hotel room window with a view of sunrise coming over the Tower of David in the Old city of Jerusalem.
It's awe inspiring thinking of the great people of history that have seen the exact same sight.
All of this while reading an email from a friend who is in the business of helping people improve their financial position, Dave Ireland of InvestInYourDebt.com . His goal is to "eliminate all debt on the planet".
There is so much danger facing people who want to make the right decisions but just do not have 'Trusted Advisors' that know what they are doing and have the client's best interest as their prime objective.
Dave's client asked him if he should use the extra money he has to pay off his mortgage or put it someplace where he has-
" an investment which will get me a min. of 5% per month".
NOTE: A good idea without good implementation is not really a good idea.
Regards from across the ocean.
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
PS Click on the continuation for the question and Dave's answer.
One of my guru's is Todd Ballenger of KendallTodd, Inc.
Below is part of a recent post to his BLOG which speaks for itself.
What will the standards of financial literacy look like for the next generation?
Good luck to us all.
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.WealthBuilderUniversity.com
Last
week, I purchased a combo meal at a Burger King NC. The cost was $4.57.
I handed a $5 bill to a young man at the counter, and reached into my
pocket to see what spare change I could liberate from the dark and
noisy front left pocket. He had rung up the 'out of $5.00' when I
handed him $.07 in lose change. Expecting him to hand me back $.50, he
paused - and calmly called for his manager.
This reminded me of an email I got some time ago about the shifting evolution of math education. Our continued orientation and focus relates to using arithmetic and their own goals to help the consumer navigate through their decisions related to borrowing. Borrowing from an industry that lowered eligibility requirements over the last several years while continuing to the ignore suitability requirements of that borrowing - hence the subprime hangover.
I learned math (basic arithmetic) in the 70's, and really related to a math teacher's recent perspective on how math was being taught in some schools ...
Teaching Math In 1960:
A logger sells a truckload of lumber for $100. His cost of production is 4/5 of the price. What is his profit?
Teaching Math In 1970:
A logger sells a truckload of lumber for $100. His cost of production is 4/5 of the price, or $80. What is his profit?
Teaching Math In 1980:
A logger sells a truckload of lumber for $100. His cost of production is $80. Did he make a profit?
Teaching Math In 1990:
A logger sells a truckload of lumber for $100. His cost of production is $80 and his profit is $20. Your assignment: Underline the number 20.
Teaching Math In 2000:
A logger cuts down a beautiful forest because he is selfish and inconsiderate and cares nothing for the habitat of animals or the preservation of our woodlands. He does this so he can make a profit of $20. What do you think of this way of making a living?
This posting is for those of you might have concern reading the recent headlines about the turmoil in the mortgage industry.
As a Certified Mortgage Planning Specialist, I am a proud member of the CMPS Institute.
I received the attached article , "Saga of the US Mortgage Industry", today from the CMPS chairman and CEO, Gibran Nicholas.
Read the article and you will agree, the sky is not falling. As a matter of fact, it is still up there and "very secure".
Alex Weiss, co-founder
www.wealthbuilderuniversity.com
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