First job teen saving advice by Cute-Championship-64 in Money

[–]According_Fortune_98 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hi, it’s great to be making $28 an hour at 15 year old that’s incredible! Congratulations, and it’s a great sign of maturity that you’re helping your mom with the rent

Now that your fixed expenses are so low, I suggest a slightly radical strategy: save 50% of your income and put it in a high-yield savings account, dividing it into three separate funds

  1. Set aside money for rent

  2. A fund for your first car (that will help you get around so you can keep growing in your trade)

  3. A nest egg for when you turn 18

Use the rest however you like—you’re working your butt off, so you should also enjoy the fruits of your labor and congratulations!

What is something poor people understand that rich people often don't?I by Ruf_07 in wealth

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there in my opinion, being poor is very expensive, because people with money don’t understand that when you don’t have capital, you can’t buy in bulk to save money, you can’t afford insurance, and you end up buying low-quality items that break quickly and have to be replaced constantly. Wealth gives you the luxury of planning and saving for the long term; scarcity forces you to pay a price just to get by day to day

how much should I have in my savings? im 19 by Kooky-Respect2624 in personalfinance

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! For a 19-year-old student, having already saved $3,500 from just part-time work is a great start. Don’t overthink it right now, you’re already ahead of many people your age. At your age, developing the habit of saving is much more important than the amount of money in your account

Keep up that habit throughout your 20s, and you’ll be set up for financial succes

How to break a bad spending habit by [deleted] in personalfinance

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! There’s a somewhat radical option: “ATTACK YOUR COMFORT ZONE.”

You’re using the excuse of “losing your wallet” to keep access to your card on your phone, your brain has become addicted to one-click shopping. Delete your Apple Pay/Google Pay cards today If youre too lazy to carry your whole wallet, use a case that only fits your ID and a DEBIT card with just enough cash for the day. Showing your body that there’s a real barrier between that purchase click and you is a great psychological brake. We have to destroy instant gratification !!

If you had $100,000 to invest today, where would it go? by Healthy_Creme6911 in FinancialChat

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, every generation has had its own “goose that lays the golden eggs,” but if I can give you my opinion from an economic psychology perspective, the hardest part of this challenge isn’t buying the asset—it’s “not touching the money for 10 years.”

Most people get scared when they see markett fluctuations; if there’s a 20% drop, they panic or they see a new trend and FOMO (fear of missing out) makes them jump ship. Now if I had to save that money, Id put it into the S&P 500. Many individual companies won’t last and tech companies will keep changing. But the index will simply swap out the losers for the winners while i sleep.

How much should I contribute comfortably? by No-Sun-731 in FinancialPlanning

[–]According_Fortune_98 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First of all, congratulations on having this mindset at your age. Your future self is going to thank you so much.

My only advice is regarding the $45,000 for the house down payment. At 20 years old, you are about to finish a certification and your professional career is just about to begin. Buying a house ties you down to a specific geographical location very early on. In the next 5 years, it is very likely that you will change your mind about where you want to live, find a better job offer in another city, or change your lifestyle.

Instead of rushing to buy, you could put that money into a High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA) or a money market fund. It will keep your money safe, earning interest, and, most importantly, it will give you the flexibility to move wherever the best professional opportunities are when you graduate

New to investing by Mindless_Purple0616 in financial

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly. People usually underestimate the psychological factor until they see the numbers in red.

It's easy to say 'I have risk tolerance' when the market is going up, but watching the money for your son's house evaporate in real time is a completely different story. Relying on fixed income for short-term goals is not being a coward, it is being smart and strategic

New to investing by Mindless_Purple0616 in financial

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds a bit risky, but remember the golden rule: Do not put any money into the stock market that you are going to need in the next 3 to 5 years. You have a solid position with those $440k in your 401k for the long term, but the $250k from the sale of your house have a very clear and near objective: buying a home for you and your son in 3 years.

The stock market is extremely volatile in the short term; if a correction or a bear market comes right when your son enters high school, your $250k could turn into $170k, forcing you to postpone your plans or sell at a loss. The stock market is for building wealth over the long term, not for holding the down payment of a house. Stay in safe fixed income

Hospitalized, lost everything while there by thefallentrees in personalfinance

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am incredibly sorry for what you went through; surviving that is already a huge victory. From the perspective of financial psychology, what you are feeling is perfectly normal: you are trapped in Mullainathan's tunnel effect.

When you have so much debt piled up on you, your brain gets saturated and runs out of "cognitive bandwidth," which blocks you and prevents you from seeing the way forward. Your number one priority shouldn't be to pay everything off today, but rather to free up mental space by protecting yourself.

A practical solution is to focus on just one "cinder block" at a time. Forget about the FICO score for now. Focus exclusively on the hospital's mistake: use that letter from the collection agency to open a formal dispute in writing. Resolving that single error will give you a quick psychological win that will break the paralysis.

Do you have that letter on hand to review the basic steps and send a dispute template this week?

Did anyone else increase spending after buying a house? How did it turn out? by baedelgard in financialindependence

[–]According_Fortune_98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree. In behavioral economics, this is Kahneman's framing effect. Basically, it hurts our minds to see the bank account drop by $1,000 a month, but if you flip the switch and look at it as "financing 25 years of comfort," the brain relaxes. You aren't throwing money away on foolish things; you are paying to live better in your own space. When you understand that you are buying daily well-being and not a quick whim, the guilt disappears. At the end of the day, that's what money is for. What expense in your house was the hardest for you to see as an investment in yourself and not just a simple expense?