Keeping Financial Planning Simple

“The first step towards getting somewhere is to decide you’re not going to stay where you are.” J.P. Morgan

The earlier you get started on your financial plan to save, invest and accumulate wealth, the more influence you can have on attaining the financial life you desire. Individuals at any stage of life will benefit from a plan that will allow them to take the wheel and get pointed in the right direction.

The good news is that we have more control than most of us realize. All that matters is that you are ready for a positive change. And, that you take definitive systematic action to fulfill your financial and life goal.

People need to plan their financial lives. Otherwise, they more likely to arrive at a financial destination that they neither expect or desire. And when people don’t plan, it becomes harder to achieve their goals, if they have goals, and more difficult to save, invest and accumulate wealth.

Keep it simple

There is a great value and benefit in simplicity. It is important to simplify your personal financial plan. Whatever your goals and desires are, you must reduce the often unnecessarily complicated and complex to something simple. The simple steps are to create a purpose statement, describe your vision of the future, determine your current situation and develop specific commitments to journey to the destination.

Pursue big audacious goals and dream big, but keep it simple.

Focus on the few things that matter most

People need to focus on the few things and actions that actually make you more finally secure and improve your financial well-being. It is often the few little things that make the biggest difference.

Focus on the most important thing–how could I save more money, invest more wisely and accumulate wealth.

Master the fundamentals of the financial game

Typically, the difference in scope between being successful versus being average or unsuccessful is often small infinitesimal.

  • About not spending more than we earn,
  • Saving what we can, and
  • Splurging occasionally and mindfully

Desire is the key ingredient

“Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any other one thing.” Abraham Lincoln

Desire is about wanting to win or succeed so badly they can’t stand it. Those who do win and succeed have unyielding desire and most successful people have two things, they set specific goals and devise a plan for achieving those goals.

“Where there is a will, there is a way.” Never forget that life does not always gives you what you want, but it always gives you what you will accept.

Believe in yourself

It important to recognize the power of believing in yourself and your God given potential.

Bottomline, if you have a plan, you know where you’re going and it’s easier to achieve your goals. The following adage still applies, “A failure to plan is a plan to fail.” 


Sources:

  1. https://www.goodfinancialcents.com/financial-planning-basics/

Maintain a strong immune system to fight off the coronavirus

According to the most recent information from the CDC, for most people, the immediate risk of being exposed to the coronavirus (COVID-19) is thought to be low. Coronavirus (COVID-19) is an illness that has infected more than 100,000 worldwide — including more than 650 confirmed cases in the United States — and killed more than 3,000.

Many of those affected by coronavirus develop only a mild illness, while some develop no illness at all. That may be an indication of what happens when the virus meets a well-functioning immune system.

When it comes to keeping our immune systems healthy, a lot of it comes down to healthy habits. So no, you are not doomed if infected by the coronavirus; Most are sailing through the epidemic just fine.

It is nothing you haven’t heard before, but it certainly bears repeating during this cold and flu season: If you want to meet the coronavirus or any infectious agent fully armed eat well, sleep well and de-stress.


Resource:

https://www.wsbtv.com/news/trending/how-keep-up-strong-immune-system-fight-off-coronavirus/RYAMQYGFT5FZLKT7V65I4QALZ4/?outputType=amp&amp_js_v=0.1&usqp=mq331AQCKAE=&utm_source=taboola&utm_medium=feed-trending

Jobs, Coronavirus, and the Budget | First Trust Economics Blog

Brian S. Wesbury, Chief Economist

Date: 2/10/2020

In January, US payrolls expanded by 225,000, not only beating the consensus forecast, but also forecasts from every single economics group.  Since January 2019 (12 months ago), both payrolls and civilian employment – an alternative measure of jobs that includes small-business start-ups – are up 2.1 million.  The labor force – those who are either working or looking for work – is up 1.5 million, while the jobless rate fell to 3.6% from the 4.0%.

The labor force participation rate (the share of adults who are either working or looking for work) increased to 63.4% in January, the highest reading since early 2013.  Participation among “prime-age” adults (25 to 54) hit 83.1%, the highest since the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in 2008.   

Meanwhile initial claims for unemployment insurance hit 202,000 in the last week of January, and initial claims as a percent of all jobs are at the lowest level ever.  In other words, the job market and the economy look strong.

Only a few months ago, some analysts were saying that the inversion of the yield curve – with short-term interest rates above long-term rates – was signaling the front edge of a US recession.  Now a recession seems nowhere in sight.

Lately, financial markets have become very jumpy on any news – good or bad – regarding the coronavirus.  We aren’t immunologists (or doctors) and would never make light of a virus that has killed more than 900 and infected over 40,000, but data released by the World Health Organization (WHO) cautiously suggests a positive turning point has been reached.

— Read on www.ftportfolios.com/retail/blogs/economics/index.aspx