#961
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- subscriptions, often apps and other electronic month-to-month things like movie services..... - eating out - cars and car payments - clothes - utilities where they can actually be reduced - anyone rent their modem? Or replace a cellular phone as soon as the next model appears? - Cable TV? It is not a necessity. Not even close. Much of what we think we need is the product of clever marketing. Go over literally everything you spend. It is easy to cut way, way back. I'm not judging at all but I will openly ask everyone where we can legitimately cut our daily costs. Go over every bill and/or subscription and ask 1. Do we need this? 2. If I need it, where can I reduce it. It can be done. I've done it. It may take some sacrifice but I'd bet hundreds of dollars per month can be cut with insignificant QOL change if we really think about it. That's my $.02 and it's worth whatever you paid for it. |
#962
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what have you done to cut cable? i've heard that term, but how is that possible? are you saying just order basic internet only and no tv?
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#963
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This is basically what I’m doing .
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***IG: mttamgrams*** |
#964
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High speed internet + YouTube TV for me. Cut my cost in half vs traditional internet and cable package from Comcast.
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#965
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I'm not a huge TV watcher anyway. If someone wants TV a digital antenna will pull in all your local channels in high definition for free. |
#966
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I want to cut cable, but I'm the only one in the household. Verizon has internet-only fios in this area, but they still haven't brought it down our street.
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#967
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What I did, internet only(comcast) and a flat plate UHF antenna..have an Apple TV and stream things like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, a lot of free ones also..use antenna for the local news. Saved about 1/2 of the 'cable' bill...
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#968
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And putting money into a bank savings account or a CD (other than for emergencies where you should have at least 3 months to as much as 6 months) for saving for retirement instead of putting it in the mutual fund markets is a fools game because you'll never keep up with the rate of inflation that the bank pays in interest for your money to be parked there. Does anyone think that your money just sits in a bank being unused by the bank waiting in a vault for you to come and get it when you need it? Hell no, their investing that money you put there so they can make money off of your money, their not stupid nor should you be! https://www.moneyunder30.com/how-banks-make-money |
#969
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I'm working towards technology in my house. I've got direct TV because I want the NFL ticket but I'm reevaluating that because streaming has so much to offer. When I moved here the only internet provider was Frontier via DSL. It's ok for internet but sometimes it's slow for things like Zwift and Amazon TV. Suddenlink high speed is now in my neighborhood and I have my own modem. It's $15 a month more than DSL but I think I'll get rid of my direct TV.
Overall, I live well below my means. I'd like to retire at 60 and unless our economic system totally collapses, I can do it. |
#970
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#971
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I'm talking about blue collar couple with two kids, trying to make a living and provide for their family. Paying for extended daycare, just trying to get by. Living in a city like NY, you meet and get to know all different types of people. They have prepaid cell phones, live in a 1 bedroom in the outer boroughs, etc. Nothing fancy. From a bare minimum - food, shelter and clothes, they are barely making it. When the market turns, they are the most affected, because the greedy board members will direct stores to cut staffing to make sure they have decent profits... I can go on and on having been on the inside. The easy answer is 'get another job', 'move to a cheaper place to live' etc. It's not that simple. That other job has 10 or 100 other applicants. I sound like a grumpy @ss old person. Back to the stock market. Still waiting for all these overvalued companies to correct/crash. |
#972
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If you have a high risk tolerance, cryptocurrency is also something worth considering. People got burned buying BTC at $20,000 and then having it collapse to $3,000 in 12 months but it's back to $9,000. If blockchain catches on (see FaceBook Libra) then definitely this is a ship that you want to have sailed on. Don't just think about Bitcoin, ETH, LTC, and NEO (among others) are also worth investigating. Downside is that all cyrptocurrency could become worthless. BTW. We cut cable 20 years ago and make do with internet. TV is not only an expense but it's an incredible time waster and brain killer. Instead of TV, we go to the public library. Books, magazines, CDs, DVDs all for free. Pinching pennies pays off: I'm still working but wife retired at 55. Last edited by summilux; 06-19-2019 at 10:17 AM. |
#973
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A majority of the US spends their money on food, transportation, housing, healthcare, and technology.
But also on their debt (student loan, mortgage, credit cards) FB, NFLX, GOOG all aren't going anywhere, but they are also all at or near their all time highs. If you think they can continue to monetize your attention then that is a nice place to park some money. Healthcare ETFs as well. Transportation/Oil/Gas- Might not be a bad play at the moment if you think Crude will go above the current $53/barrel. Housing- doesn't mean you have to invest in REITs, but some rental properties or a stake in one wouldn't be a bad idea as a silent investor. Debt- also not a bad place to park some money if you agree with that morally. AMEX/Visa, etc |
#974
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GOOG is much more than we see now. If Calico Labs ever creates a pharmaceutical or nutriceutical that is proven to extend human lifespan by 10% or if DeepMind Health creates an AI package that increases mammogram sensitivity or the probability of chemotherapy success, then GOOG's current revenue stream will appear tiny in comparison. And these are just three of many healthcare projects they have.
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#975
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Overall, investing should be a personal choice with time constraints. If you think GOOG will be worth more at Date XX/XX and you are OK with the risk associated with investing in a large public company with a wide portfolio spanning all areas of the economy- then go for it and stick to your guns when that time constraint is up. It is always OK to revisit your goals and current situation when the time comes. Example: If you invest $10,000 in GOOG and they absolutely kill it in 75% of their business, but spend 10x on new technology the balance sheet will reflect that. For everyone else, there are more specialized investments or investments in commodities, treasuries, etc that can be a bit more focused. |
Tags |
economy, freemoneyhouse, stonks, vertdoug for fed chair, wealth, yen carry trade |
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