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GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
jgakenhe16-Aug-17 3:07
professionaljgakenhe16-Aug-17 3:07 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
ZurdoDev16-Aug-17 3:08
professionalZurdoDev16-Aug-17 3:08 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
Joe Woodbury16-Aug-17 5:57
professionalJoe Woodbury16-Aug-17 5:57 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
ZurdoDev16-Aug-17 6:01
professionalZurdoDev16-Aug-17 6:01 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
User 842016-Aug-17 2:52
User 842016-Aug-17 2:52 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
Shameel16-Aug-17 4:01
professionalShameel16-Aug-17 4:01 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
KBZX500016-Aug-17 22:54
KBZX500016-Aug-17 22:54 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
kalberts17-Aug-17 1:02
kalberts17-Aug-17 1:02 
In my country (Norway), authorities think people should own their own homes, so spending your money on a reasonable - I am not saying 'luxurious' - home is a much better idea than piling up bank notes.

Right now, I have got a huge pile of bank notes, but within a year, I will spend it on my house, with two main goals: Upgrade it to 'Universal Access' standard, such as making sure that I can continue living there even if I end up in a wheelchair or loose my eyesight when I get old.

Second, I want to make it cheap to run the house. The day that I retire, I would like to spend my pension on pleasures, not on keeping the house warm. Even though energy (electricity in particular) is cheap in this country (in the range of 0.08 to 0.10 USD per kWh), a typical detached house requires 20-30.000 kWh/year, most of it for heating. Installing solar heat collectors, heat pump, improving insulation etc. can reduce the heating costs to a third.

Sure enough: The investments will be so large that they are not recovered until my grandchildren takes over the house. But I've got the money now: If I don't invest them in my house, I certainly will not be saving them to pay my power bills when I retire; I'd be left with high heating costs and less comfort.

Investing your money in your house is quite common here. If you really need to buy a Mercedes but haven't go all the money required, your bank will probably accept your house as a collateral for the loan to buy that car. (Actually, that is quite common here - the interest rate is much lower for a house loan than for a plain car loan.)

Advisors around here say that you should strive for maintaining a buffer the size of one month of income - by the end of the month, of course. So the day after payday, you have two months of income in you account (or pile of banknotes). Not very many people have that, though. They rather invest their surplus money in their house. The only reason for not doing that is if you consider your house to be perfect; there is nothing money can do to make it more valuable (to yourself, and/or if you plan on selling it some day).

I bought my house more than 30 years ago, when interest rates were in the 11-14% range. So I learned to pay back my loan as quickly as possible. I still do. A pile of money is worth nothing - the valuable stuff is what you can buy for the money. So go out and get yourself some valuable stuff!
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
Paul Kemner18-Aug-17 3:07
Paul Kemner18-Aug-17 3:07 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
kalberts18-Aug-17 4:27
kalberts18-Aug-17 4:27 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
Paul Kemner18-Aug-17 4:35
Paul Kemner18-Aug-17 4:35 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
kalberts18-Aug-17 4:51
kalberts18-Aug-17 4:51 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
J Tackkett17-Aug-17 4:03
professionalJ Tackkett17-Aug-17 4:03 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
agolddog17-Aug-17 4:04
agolddog17-Aug-17 4:04 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
MikeTheFid17-Aug-17 5:44
MikeTheFid17-Aug-17 5:44 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
TNCaver17-Aug-17 6:39
TNCaver17-Aug-17 6:39 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
SeattleC++17-Aug-17 14:28
SeattleC++17-Aug-17 14:28 
GeneralRe: Personal monetary reserves Pin
AlexTCP17-Aug-17 14:49
AlexTCP17-Aug-17 14:49 
Generalfeedback on keyboard Pin
theoldfool15-Aug-17 12:28
professionaltheoldfool15-Aug-17 12:28 
GeneralRe: feedback on keyboard Pin
OriginalGriff15-Aug-17 20:17
mveOriginalGriff15-Aug-17 20:17 
GeneralRe: feedback on keyboard Pin
devenv.exe15-Aug-17 23:29
professionaldevenv.exe15-Aug-17 23:29 
GeneralRe: feedback on keyboard Pin
theoldfool16-Aug-17 0:58
professionaltheoldfool16-Aug-17 0:58 
GeneralStill Not Safe To Read A Thread Pin
W Balboos, GHB15-Aug-17 7:15
W Balboos, GHB15-Aug-17 7:15 
AnswerRe: Still Not Safe To Read A Thread Pin
RickZeeland15-Aug-17 8:06
mveRickZeeland15-Aug-17 8:06 
GeneralRe: Still Not Safe To Read A Thread Pin
jeron115-Aug-17 8:11
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