Posts Tagged ‘DebtGoal’

The Next Economic Bubble to Burst? Take Your Pick

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

It may seem strange in the current financial environment to already start looking at future economic bubbles, but there are several areas for concern. CNBC identifies health care technology, commercial real estate, treasury bonds, and tools for student finance as potential troublespots. In the article DebtGoal’s Scott Crawford takes on student finance, identifying the persistent problem of student credit card debt and historical highs in debt from educational loans are problem areas.

But student debt issues can be dealt with in much the same way as other debt problems: identifying the details of debt accounts, organizing data and paperwork surround outstanding debts, and formulating and executing a systematized debt reduction strategy. In forming a strategy, identifying and evaluating options to determine the best course of action is key, including any government-sponsored programs or alternative financial tools that are available. The DebtGoal product takes the mystery out of debt elimination, providing an easy-to-understand and automated system for reducing debt.

Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

DebtGoal.com inspires Thriftaholics on Facebook! 3 Competition Finalists Announced.

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

We’re thrilled to announce the 3 finalists in the first ever DebtGoal.com facebook competition – “Confessions of a Thriftaholic”!

 
A. The best thrifty habit I have is…sitting down with my husband once a month and calmly reviewing our budget and credit/debit card history for the month. We talk about the purchases that did not contribute towards our financial goals and refocus ourselves. We give each other suggestions without accusing. Doing it monthly helps catch trends that could become problems. It really helps to work as a team.

B. The biggest impact I have on my family budget is to freeze my dinners. I have a significant savings ($2000-$4000) each year that I do this. I cut my grocery bill in half, save 300 hours a year and save money on gas. I recycle and cut my trash bill in half too. It only saves $120 a year.

C. The best thrifty decision I made involves traveling with family. We rent vehicles using the weekend specials, pay tolls, buy gas, food, and drinks for the road then split the total. Once there everyone covers their own motel rooms, meals, and spending money. We often qualify for family rates. We have reward memberships at Enterprise, Wyndam Motels, and various gas stations so we often get freebies plus we use coupons found locally.

Selecting only 3 finalists was a challenge; thanks to all the thrifty and creative DebtGoal.com fans who submitted high-impact ideas that really make a difference in saving money and achieving financial goals. We hope the tips are useful and entertaining too! Saving money can be fun, and DebtGoal is committed to engaging with our community to extend support, humor and valuable advice to help users achieve their goals.

Between now and the end of March, Facebook fans of DebtGoal.com can vote on their favorite finalist tip – and the winner will receive a prize of $250. to help them pay down debt!  Invite your friends to become fans, and they can join in the fun by casting their vote. Facebook and for more helpful tips and updates from DebtGoal, follow us on Twitter too!

Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Pay Off Debt More Quickly with Debt Stacking

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

If you have a debt problem, you may have considered other options such as bankruptcy, debt settlement, or credit counseling.  However, if you are current with your payments and can make minimum payments, your best alternative is to pay off debt on your own, as the alternatives are expensive and can damage your credit for up to 10 years.  In this article we will explain the different payment strategies for getting out of debt on your own and the pros and cons of the different techniques.

If you’ve decided to pay off debt on your own but are confused about the various strategies to best make payments, you’re not alone–there are many competing strategies claiming to be the best.  To keep this simple, we will review three popular strategies for making your monthly payments.  All three hold the total monthly payment amount constant but allocate this payment differently between the accounts.  We will compare these to making minimum payments which isn’t a very good strategy, but we will include it as a point of comparison.

  1. Constant Payments on each account: with this technique, the borrower pays the a constant amount on each account each month until the debt is paid off.  This is the simplest mechanism to execute, but doesn’t allocate debt to the highest interest debts.
  2. Snowball”:  with this technique, the user holds the Monthly Commitment constant, makes minimum payments on all accounts but the lowest-balance account and allocates as much as possible to this lowest-balance account until it is paid off.  After that account is paid off, the borrower shifts focus to the next lowest-balance account and continues to apply as much as possible to this account.
  3. “Debt stacking”:  this is the most efficient technique and is the one advocated by DebtGoal.com, as it can result in savings on interest costs of nearly 10% relative to the other techniques.  With this approach you hold your Monthly Commitment constant, but make minimum payments on all accounts but the highest-interest account (your Target account) which receives all excess payments to pay it off as quickly as possible.  After this Target account is paid off, you shift your focus to the next-highest interest account, making it your Target, and apply as much as possible to this account while paying only minimums on all others.

To make this simple, let’s assume that you only have two credit cards:  one with $4,500 at 15% with a current minimum payment of $180 and a second account with a balance of $6,700 at 18% with a current minimum payment of $268.  Let’s also make the big assumption that there are no new charges on the card.

Minimum Payments

As mentioned, this is not a good debt reduction strategy, but it’s a useful point of comparison.  With these two cards, you will start with a combined minimum payments of $448 in the first month.  However, since each payment reduces principal, your payment in the second month will be less than the first.  And since you will pay off some principal in the second month, your month 3 payment is still lower.  Although your payments start at $448 in the first month, in month 12 the total payment has decreased to $338.  resulting in $110 less being paid toward principal in this month than if payments were held constant.  You get the picture…your payments keep declining and although this may sound good, it will take you a long time to pay off your debt: about 11 years, during which you will pay $5,704 in interest.  Grade F.

Constant Payments

With constant payments, you simply hold the payment on each account constant over time, even though your minimum payments decrease.  This has the advantage of not reducing your payments over time and therefore paying an increasing amount of principal off each month, getting you out of debt quickly.  It’s also easy to execute, since you just hold your payment constant on each account.  But you could do better by taking the difference between the constant payment and your new, lower minimum payment on your lower-interest card and applying it to your highest-interest card.  If you hold your payments constant at the amount of the initial minimum payment, this approach will pay off your debt in 32 months, during which you will pay $2,900 in interest.  This is a savings of $2,840 compared to paying only minimum payments, but not top of the class.  Grade B+.

Snowball

Thanks to Dave Ramsey, the Snowball approach may be the best known of the three approaches.  Under this scenario, total payment amount is held constant over time (here at the sum of the initial minimum payments) but reallocate the amounts freed up by the declining minimum payments to the lowest-balance debt.  This can be seen in the payment graph where payments toward the lowest-balance account increase over time.  This has the advantage of being the quickest mechanism to paying off an account and giving you a motivational boost, but does not guarantee that this money is being applied to debt efficiently.  In this case, it allocates more to the lower-interest debt.  Holding your total payment constant at the combined initial minimum payment of $448 pays off debt in 32 months with $2,943 in interest.  This option may make you feel good for paying off your first account and you’ll save $2,800 compared to only making minimum payments.  Grade:  B.

Debt Stacking

This is the most efficient approach of the three.  Like the others, we hold the monthly amount constant at $448, but allocate the money freed up by lower payments on the 15% card to the higher-interest card, which we call your Target account.  Because it is the most efficient payment strategy it pays off debt earlier, in 31 months with only $2,660 in interest–a savings of 11% compared to the snowball technique.  This option is the most efficient and saves nearly $3,100 relative to making minimum payments.   Grade: A.

Summary

All of the payment techniques that hold your monthly payment amount constant are dramatically better than just making minimum payments.  The most important conclusion is that just by holding your payments constant at the current level of minimum payments you can pay off your credit card debt in just under 3 years without expensive Debt Management or Debt Settlement services that will negatively impact your credit score long after your debt is gone.  In short, just by making constant payments you can get out of debt on your own very quickly.

The only disadvantage to any of these techniques is that you will have to maintain a monthly payment schedule.  For many people, this can be a daunting task.  It is for these people that we have developed DebtGoal.com, an online application to help users create and track against a Debt Stacking plan.

The Impact of Constant Payments with More Accounts

We walked through this example with a fairly simple scenario.  With more accounts and different types of debt, the power (and savings) of technique grows.  If we add a $320K mortgage at 6.5% to the mix and again hold the payment constant at the minimum amounts over time, the savings become truly impressive.  Debt Stacking will save you $119K in interest and get you out of debt nearly 8 years earlier.  All without spending more on your debt than you do today.

Additional Resources:

The power of compounding interest
The cost of making minimum credit card payments
Debt settlement
Create Your Debt Paydown Plan
DebtGoal debt reduction plan worksheet

Scott Crawford is CEO of DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs. DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Pros and Cons of Debt Settlement

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

You see ads frequently on late-night on TV promising to lower your debt to just a fraction of the current amount.  These ads are for a type of service known as Debt Settlement and while the service can offer legitimate help to overwhelmed borrowers, it’s not a solution for everyone nor is it a decision you should take lightly.

What is It?

So what exactly is Debt Settlement?  Debt settlement is a negotiated settlement between you and your lenders for less than the face value of your debt.  Although the experience can vary by provider, it generally resembles the following:

  • The debt settlement firm will qualify you to make sure you have a significant amount of unsecured credit card debt.  Generally speaking, you need to have at least $10-15K in credit card debt to qualify.
  • You will sign a contract with the settlement company under the terms of agreement.  This will lay out the amount you will pay for service, generally 30% of the amount that the firm estimates will be forgiven under a settlement program.  Most estimate that they can settle for approximately 50% of original loan balance.
  • You will then quit paying your unsecured lenders until you have paid the entire amount due to the settlement company.  During this time, you will accrue finance charges and late fees that will increase the balances of the debts significantly beyond the original amounts.  Your accounts will go to internal collections and then may be sold to aggressive external bill collectors who may call you frequently.
  • After you have paid the debt settlement company and have built up an additional balance, your settlement firm will go to your creditors and offer to settle with them for amounts less than the original balances.
  • This process will continue until the settlement company has contacted all creditors.

Pros and Cons

It should be clear from the above description that there are some fairly significant impacts.

  1. The service isn’t cheap–you’ll pay about 10-15% of your total balances to the settlement firm.
  2. You will be contacted frequently by collections companies and this can be stressful.
  3. Your balances will grow quickly with finance charges and penalties.  If you drop out of the debt settlement program or if your lender declines to negotiate with you, you may leave the program owing more than you did when you started.
  4. Success depends on the willingness of lenders to accept a settlement.  Some lenders will and others won’t.
  5. Your credit report will be very damaged for a period of 7 years.  If you’re desperate enough to sign up for a settlement program, your credit may already be so far gone that this may not be a major consideration.
  6. The forgiven debt is taxable in the year in which it occurs, so you will need to come up with additional cash to pay the taxes.
  7. Debt settlement only impacts unsecured debt.  I won’t help you with auto, student, or mortgage debt.

Is Debt Settlement for You?

So is Debt Settlement right for you?  Maybe, but it’s a more limited solution than the ads would have you believe.  In general, it’s better than bankruptcy but worse than credit counseling or getting out on your own.  In fact, many state statutes lay out guidelines for Debt Settlement that specifically describe when it is appropriate.  If your problems are confined to credit card debt and you are currently significantly late on your payments and will not be able to make minimum payments going forward, this may be a better solution for you than bankruptcy.  Like Ch. 13 bankruptcy, it can reduce your debt burden and allow to make progress against your debt.  But like bankruptcy, it comes at a high cost to your current and future credit.

If you are current on your debt and can make minimum payments, we encourage you to make every effort to pay off your debt on your own.  By creating and following your own debt reduction plan, you can save thousands of dollars in interest and pay off your credit card debt in just under 3 years.  DebtGoal.com can help you create and track to a personal debt reduction plan.

Additional Resources:

The power of compounding interest
The cost of making minimum credit card payments
Debt settlement
Create Your Debt Paydown Plan
DebtGoal debt reduction plan worksheet

Scott Crawford is CEO of DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs. DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Cutting Back on Discretionary Spending

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Each of us makes choices every day about how we allocate our money and most of us chose to spend a portion on discretionary categories like morning coffee or going to a movie. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that we spend approximately 17% of our after-tax income on such purchases.

Based on government statistics, here how discretionary spending breaks out by category for various income bands. You can use this information to benchmark yourself against others in your income bracket and identify areas where you may be able to reduce expenses.

Average Household Lowest 20% Second 20% Third 20% Fourth 20% Highest 20%
Number of consumer units (in thousands) 118,843 23,738 23,773 23,765 23,770 23,796
Annual income before taxes 60,533 9,974 26,657 44,933 70,975 149,963
Annual income after taxes 58,101 9,969 26,346 43,799 68,497 141,738
Discretionary Spending Categories
Food away from home 2,694 1,055 1,660 2,404 3,292 5,058
Alcoholic beverages 497 213 294 474 534 971
Apparel and services 1,874 845 1,193 1,680 2,101 3,548
Entertainment 2,376 879 1,271 1,898 2,720 5,105
Personal care products and services 585 262 385 513 713 1,050
Reading 117 51 73 98 131 232
Education 888 505 295 477 879 2,281
Tobacco products and smoking supplies 327 266 345 367 374 282
Miscellaneous 846 454 510 674 939 1,652
Total 10,204 4,530 6,026 8,585 11,683 20,179
Percent of After-Tax Income
Food away from home 4.6% 10.6% 6.3% 5.5% 4.8% 3.6%
Alcoholic beverages 0.9% 2.1% 1.1% 1.1% 0.8% 0.7%
Apparel and services 3.2% 8.5% 4.5% 3.8% 3.1% 2.5%
Entertainment 4.1% 8.8% 4.8% 4.3% 4.0% 3.6%
Personal care products and services 1.0% 2.6% 1.5% 1.2% 1.0% 0.7%
Reading 0.2% 0.5% 0.3% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
Education 1.5% 5.1% 1.1% 1.1% 1.3% 1.6%
Tobacco products and smoking supplies 0.6% 2.7% 1.3% 0.8% 0.5% 0.2%
Miscellaneous 1.5% 4.6% 1.9% 1.5% 1.4% 1.2%
Total 17.6% 45.4% 22.9% 19.6% 17.1% 14.2%

Source: 2006 BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey

Since this is a large portion of spending, it’s easy for personal finance authors to recommend this as an easy category to cut, but it’s not always so easy. For some people, discretionary spending is so tight there’s not much to cut. And for most of us, discretionary spending is closely associated with the activities that add color and fun to our lives.

We recommend that you take a realistic approach to your discretionary spending. Rather than trying to eliminate all of it, try to make focus on the activities that truly matter to you while reducing those that don’t. For example, if you enjoy movies with your spouse, can you eat at home before the movie rather than doing movie and dinner? Can you reduce fast food convenience dining while keeping date night at a nicer restaurant? The trick is not to eliminate all spending, but to make your spending count.

The 2006 Consumer Expenditure Survey estimates that the median household with about $45K in pre-tax income spends about $8,500 per year in discretionary categories. Reducing this by 20-30% can free up $150-200 per month to apply to debt.

Actions:

  1. Identify five categories of discretionary spending that you feel you could reduce. Here are a few to consider.
    1. Entertainment (movies, concerts, magazine subscriptions, books, video rental)
    2. Clothing and apparel
    3. Dining (convenience meals, work lunch, morning coffee)
    4. Other (alcohol, tobacco, etc.)
    5. Personal case (hair styling, manicure, etc.)
  2. Estimate your current monthly spending in these categories
  3. Determine a realistic reduction for these categories and calculate a monthly total that you can save. Keep this realistic-you won’t be able to keep a promise to reduce all discretionary spending, so start small with some goals that you can achieve.
  4. Take a few minutes to write out your goal and think about how you will monitor it to make sure that you’re staying with your plan. Post your goal in a place where it will remind and motivate you.

When you have identified an amount that you feel comfortable that you can save each month, increase to your DebtGoal Monthly Commitment that you will apply to debt.

DebtGoal.com can help you create and track to a personal debt reduction plan.

Scott Crawford is CEO of DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs. DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.