Showing posts with label Balance Sheet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balance Sheet. Show all posts

Monday, 12 March 2018

The Financial Statement Foundation for Being Rich

The key to financial success is understanding the relationship between the income statement and the balance sheet

What does it mean to be rich?
This is perhaps the most important question you can ask and answer. For most people, being rich means making a lot of money. They think that if they can just make a little more each month, all their problems will be fixed. They’ll live like kings and queens.

Living like kings and queens?
So, let me ask you this, would making $100,000 a year make you rich? My guess is that the average person making $59,000 a year would say yes. But like beauty, being rich is in the eye of the beholder.
NPR recently profiled the lives of people living on $100,000 a year. The article sheds some surprising light on the struggles these so-called rich people have. In most cases, the money is quickly eaten away by things like mortgages or rent, student loan debt, and family obligations. In most cases, the people are trying to keep up with the Joneses…but at quite a cost.
One mother, Theresa Sahhar, whose husband’s salary of $100,000 (equivalent to $250,000 in Manhattan cost of living) still works various odd jobs in the gig economy to put her son through a private high-school. She shares with NPR, “I was really surprised because from the outside, it looks like we have plenty of money. But then when you really look underneath it all, you see that people are working overtime. They’re working second jobs and even third jobs to try to put together the money just to stay in the middle class where they’ve been in the past.”
It would be tempting to say that these are just extreme examples…except they’re not. The reality is that $100,000 really doesn’t go that far—especially when you don’t have a robust financial education.

Where financial literacy begins

The reality is that money doesn’t make you rich. What does make you rich is your financial IQ. Give the same $100,000 to a person with a low financial IQ and a person with a high financial IQ and I guarantee you’ll see a vast difference in how that money is spent and grown.
Central to the difference between those with low and high financial IQs is a simple but profound literacy: the ability to understand a financial statement.
One of the most important things you need to know in order to be financially successful is to read an income statement and balance sheet.
Income Statement and Balance Sheet
But even more important is understanding the relationship between them.
Many people learn in accounting classes how to read an income statement and balance sheet separately. I’ve always found it fascinating, however, that these classes don’t teach why one document is important to the other or how one affects the other.
My rich dad, however, felt that the relationship between the two was everything. “How can you understand one without the other? How can you tell what an asset or liability really is without the income column or the expense column?” he asked.
For rich dad, understanding the relationship between the two allowed you to easily see the direction of your cash flow to easily determine if something was making you money or not.
If something was making money, it was an asset. If not, it was a liability.
“Just because something is listed under the asset column does not make it an asset,” said rich dad. “The reason people suffer financially is that they purchase liabilities and list them under the asset column.”

The magic words are cash flow

It’s this simple insight that explains why those with a low financial IQ are still poor even when they make more than $100,000 a year. They don’t know how to move their money into assets that make them more money. Instead, they spend it all on liabilities and live large paycheck to large paycheck.
To rich dad, the most important words in business and investing were cash flow. He would say, “Just as a fisherman must watch the ebb and flow of the tides, an investor and businessperson must be keenly aware of the subtle shifts in cash flow. People and businesses struggle financially because they have poor control of their cash flow.”

KISS (Keep It Super Simple)

One of my rich dad’s greatest skills was to take complex things and make them super simple. It was one of his rules for investing—KISS, keep it super simple. He had a way of taking complex financial subjects and making them easy enough for even a nine-year-old boy to understand.
I know this because when I was nine, rich dad used the following simple diagrams to teach me the relationship between the income statement and the balance sheet. I still use them to this day.
If you can understand the following diagrams, you have a better chance of acquiring great wealth.

Cash flow patterns

An asset is something that puts money in your pocket. It’s that simple. This is the cash-flow pattern of an asset:
Cash flows from the asset column to the income column
A liability is something that takes money out of your pocket. This is the cash-flow pattern of a liability:
Liabilities take money out of your pocket through your expense column

Where it gets confusing

Rich dad pointed out that confusion happens for many because accepted methods of accounting allow for the listing of both assets and liabilities under the asset column.
To explain this, he again drew a simple diagram:
A simplified balance sheet showing a $100k house in the assets column and the $80k mortgage in the liabilities column.
“This is why things get confusing,” rich dad would say. “In this diagram, we have a $100,000 house where someone has put $20,000 cash down and now has an $80,000 mortgage. How do you know if this house is an asset or a liability? Is the house an asset just because it is listed under the asset column?”
The answer is, of course, no. In order to know for sure, you would need to refer to the income statement to see if it was an asset or a liability.

The house as a liability

To illustrate this, rich dad drew this diagram:
Income Statement showing expenses but no income from the property. This shows the house is a liability.
“This is a house that is a liability,” said rich dad. “You can tell it is a liability because it’s only line items are under the expense column. Nothing is in the income column.“

The house as an asset

Rich dad then added to the diagram a line that read “rental income” and “net rental income,” the key word being “net.” That addition to the financial statement changed that house from a liability to an asset.
Income statement showing expenses of the property, but this time with a line item under the income column for rents collected. Now the property is an asset.
Very simply, rich dad explained, if the rental income of the house, minus the expenses of the house, equaled positive net rental income, the house is an asset. If not, it is a liability.
These simple lessons are profound. And they are the basis for building all great wealth. Going back to my earlier comment, a person with a high financial IQ and $100,000 would be able to know how to invest it in assets that are true assets—ones that put more money back in the pocket each month. The person with the low financial IQ would spend that same money on liabilities, but wouldn’t be able to diagnose what was wrong. Instead, they would try and work harder to make more money—a vicious cycle we call the Rat Race.
Understanding the relationship between the income statement and the balance sheet allows you to quickly understand if an investment is an asset or a liability—and this understanding will allow you to make the right investment every time.
Think you understand how a financial statement works? Test your knowledge and Play CASHFLOW Classic for FREE.

Source: http://www.richdad.com/Resources/Rich-Dad-Financial-Education-Blog/December-2017/the-financial-statement-foundation-for-being-rich.aspx

Monday, 15 January 2018

Reasons the Next Financial Crisis Will Be Worse & How You Can Save Yourself



MARKETS ARE FAR MORE VOLATILE NOW IN THE WAKE OF BREXIT AND TRUMP'S ELECTION:

What will happen to you when your savings and retirement account are completely worthless? Gold is the only asset that cannot be created. It has to be mined and pulled out of the earth through a natural process. Against all odds, the U.S. has elected Donald Trump as its new president and no one can predict how the next four years will go. As a commander in chief, Trump now has the power to declare a nuclear war and nobody can legally stop him. Britain has left the EU and other European countries are planning to follow their example. No matter where you are located in the western world, uncertainty is in the air like never before.

THE U.S GOVERNMENT HAS ITS EYE ON RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS:

In 2010 Portugal seized retirement account assets to help plug holes with government deficits and debt. Ireland and France did the same in 2011, as did Poland in 2013. The U.S. government has been watching. Since 2011, Treasury has taken money from government workers' pension funds on four separate occasions to cover deficits in federal spending. Investing billionaire legend Jim Rogers believes that private accounts will be the next ones the government raids.

TOP 5 U.S BANKS NOW LARGER THAN BEFORE THE CRISIS:

You learned about the five largest banks in the U.S. and their systemic importance as the unfolding financial crisis threatened to collapse them. Legislators and regulators promised they would address this issue once the crisis was contained. Over five years after the crisis ended, the five biggest banks are even bigger and more critical to the system than before the crisis began. The government made the problem worse when it forced some of these so called "too big to fail" banks to absorb the failing ones. Any of these banking behemoths failing now would be absolutely catastrophic.




DANGER FROM DERIVATIVES THREATENS THE BANKS MORE NOW THAN 2007/2008:

The derivatives that crashed the banks back in 2008 did not disappear as regulators promised. Today the derivatives exposure of the five biggest American banks is a whopping 45% greater than before the economic collapse of 2008. The derivative bubble is over $273 trillion now versus the $187 trillion of 2008.

U.S INTEREST ARE ALREADY AT ABNORMAL LOWS SO THE FED HAS LITTLE ROOM TO CUT RATES:

Even after raising interest rates once last year, the Federal funds rate is still in the range of ¼ to ½ percent. Consider that before the crisis erupted in August of 2007, the Federal funds interest rates sat at 5.25%! In the next crisis, the Fed will have less than half a percentage point total it can reduce rates to stimulate the economy.

AMERICAN BANKS ARE NOT THE SAFEST PLACE FOR YOUR MONEY

Global Finance magazine puts out a yearly list of the top 50 safest global banks. Only 5 of those are U.S. based. The top spot an American bank commands is only #39.

THE FED BALANCE SHEET IS STILL EXPANDED FROM THE FINANCIAL CRISIS OF 2008:

The Fed still has nearly $1.8 trillion in mortgage backed securities on its balance sheet from the 2008 financial crisis. This is more than double the less than $1 trillion it held before the crisis began. When mortgage backed securities go bad again, the Federal Reserve has a lot less maneuverability to absorb bad assets than before.




THE FDIC ADMITS IT LACKS RESERVES TO COVER ANOTHER BANKING CRISIS:

The latest FDIC's annual report shows that they will not have sufficient reserves to adequately insure the nation's banking deposits for minimally another five years. This stunning revelation admits that they can only cover 1.01% of U.S. bank held deposits, or $1 out of every $100 of your bank account deposits.

LONG TERM UNEMPLOYMENT IS STILL HIGHER THAN BEFORE THE GREAT RECESSION:

Unemployment was 4.4% in early 2007 before the last crisis began. While the unemployment rate has finally reached the 4.7% levels seen as the financial crisis began to ravage the U.S. economy, the long term unemployment remains high and the employment participation rate significantly lower more than five years after the previous crisis ended. Joblessness could be much higher in the wake of the coming crisis.

AMERICAN BUSINESSES FAILING AT A RECORD PACE:

In the beginning of 2016, the Gallup CEO Jim Clifton announced that American business failures are now greater than new business startups for the first time in over three decades. The dearth of medium and small businesses has huge implications for an economy long driven by free enterprise. Bigger businesses are not immune to the problems either. Even American economic heavy weights like Microsoft (reducing 18,000 jobs) and McDonald's (shutting down 700 stores for the year) are suffering from this dismal trend.






http://productreviewhouse.com/buy-gold-bars-gold-investment-advice

Why Smart Investors are Adding Physical Gold to Their Retirement Accounts
1. Hedge against inflation AND deflation.
2. Safe haven in times of geopolitical, economical and financial turmoil.
3. Hedge against the declining dollar and money printing policies.
4. Store of value.
5. Limited supply. Increasing demand.
6. Portfolio Diversification and Protection.

Article Source: https://EzineArticles.com/expert/Raji_Muheez/2470974

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/9807744

Saving for the Future While Paying Off Debt

How can you save for the future when you're still paying off the past?