FREE MONEY! Have you contributed enough to your KiwiSaver?

In my email I wrote last week to all of the fabulous people who subscribe to my blog, a decent number of people got in touch to thank me for the prompt I gave them to look at their own KiwiSaver before the 30th of June. So I thought I would do a quick blog post this week, using my own KiwiSaver statement as an example to show everyone how you can make sure you have contributed enough to your own KiwiSaver by the end of June to get the full government contribution of $521.43.

Book Review: A Richer You - How to Make the Most of Your Money

I’ll cut to the chase for those looking for a five-second read: I loved it. Mary has taken the best letters from her newspaper column and worked them into a book. In each letter, the writer asks a short question about an issue they are having that involves personal finances. Mary then gives a concise and well-rounded reply. This makes it a book you can pick up and put down, just taking in a bit at a time.

Was I right or wrong? Checking ‘what if’ share investing scenarios.

This is a blog post about all the investing “What if’s”. Have you ever wondered what would have happened if you bought shares in a company when you first heard about it, but you didn’t do it? And you find yourself years later saying “oh, I NEARLY bought that stock, but I didn’t…” Now you are wondering what even happened to the company share price and what WOULD have happened to your own net worth IF you had actually purchased some?

Begin at the Beginning: Step-by-step Path to Financial Independence

Whatever it is that you are embarking on that’s always the best place to start in my opinion. The beginning. Then just follow the path, in my case, the path to financial independence and eventually not being tied to a job to earn my income. It’s a long journey but it’s one worth starting. I’m often writing emails that cover the same points over and over again, so I thought that today I’d put that information into a blog post for all of the people wondering where to start and how to string all the bits of information you have learned about money into a cohesive order.

KiwiSaver and First Home - Invest For Both

With our house prices continuing to climb, more and more pressure is going on first home buyers to save up the large deposit they need to buy a house. This is hardly news to you I know and this blog post is not really aimed at those of you who are poised and on the cusp of buying your first home, instead, it’s aimed at your far younger children, siblings, nieces, nephews and friends who might also want to both buy a home one day AND retire.

Should I buy VTSAX or US 500 in New Zealand?

This week I read a question on the Kiwi Mustachian Facebook page from a woman by the name of Kimberly who was asking a particularly good question. I thought that such a question required more than a social media soundbite and that it might also be useful to other Happy Savers. This is an important question and it needs a detailed answer because in my view Kimberly is on the brink of making one of the most important investment decisions of her life and she needs to feel comfortable with what she is doing.

I won’t lend my daughter money

It’s not something I’ve ever really thought deeply about before, but in the back of my mind, I’ve always just assumed that we would never let our daughter borrow money from us. It seems pretty obvious to me - and I’m speaking entirely about myself here - that’s because I feel particularly strongly about teaching good money principles to my daughter and I would feel like a failure as a parent if there comes a point that she has failed to plan ahead and I have to lend her money.