There’s only 1 week left until we say “Welcome!” to 2024. My gift to you this holiday season is a step-by-step plan for your money. As always, take what you want and leave the rest.
First off, I want you to open atleast 3 bank accounts. Each of these will have a very specific purpose. You can add more if you want, but you need atleast three.
First Account – Your Chequing Account
This is the account that will be the center of your financial life. You will deposit your paycheque money into this account. You will deposit your tax refunds into this account. If you get birthday money, it will go into this account. In case I’m not being clear, all of your money will flow into this account.
Next, all of your automatic transfers will flow out of it. These are the transfers for plumping up your emergency account and for sending money to your investment accounts, aka: the Care and Feeding of Future You accounts.
Once the automatic transfers have been completed, you can spend the remaining money in your chequing account however you see fit. As you know, I’m not a fan of budgets.
If you see a need to budget whatever’s left over after your transfers have gone through, then more power to you.
Second Account – Your Savings Account
This account will hold your emergency fund. These are the funds that you will rely on in a true emergency, which I’ve defined as the loss of your income. If your paycheque goes away, then you will use the money in your emergency fund to pay for your life until such time as you get another paycheque.
How much should you have in your emergency fund? Well, I’m quite traditional on this subject. I think you should have between 6-12 months of take-home pay in your emergency fund. If you can replace your paycheque quickly, then it’s okay to have closer to 6 months of take-home pay. However, if it would take you longer to replace your income, then aim for the higher amount.
Don’t expect that building an emergency fund is going to be easy or quick. It’s simple to create one. After all, the only thing you need to do is set aside money from every paycheque and then not spend it. However, as we can all agree, it’s not always easy to keep our mitts off a growing pile of money.
Easy or not, you still need to do it. Set up an automatic transfer from your chequing account to your savings account. Make it for $100 (or whatever amount you can reliably handle) and send that money to your savings account every time you get paid. The higher the amount, the faster you fill your emergency fund.
Trust me when I tell you that absolutely no one in the history of the world has ever complained about having too much money during an emergency.
Third Account – Your Investment Account
This is the account where you’re going to invest money for Future You. As I’d mentioned above, Future You is still going to want food everyday and warm place to sleep once you’ve stopped working. You owe it to your future self to start investing for tomorrow.
By now, you know the drill. Set up an automatic transfer from your chequing account to your investment account. I would advise that the transfer amount be atleast 20% of your net, take-home pay. If you’re under 25, then it can be 15%. And if you’re older than 25, aim for 30%. Again, if you can’t hit these targets right now, then set the automatic transfer amount for whatever you can afford. Then, work up to the target percentages as your income grows and as your debts are paid off.
You can hold your investment account with your current financial institution, with an online brokerage, or with an investment company. In the interests of transparency, I hold my accounts with an online brokerage where I do a single trade, once a month, to buy more units in my exchange-traded fund of choice.
Once your transfer goes through, do not leave the money sitting around. Invest it! The only way to make your money grow is to invest it. I recommend exchange-traded funds for the following reasons:
- they’re less expensive than mutual funds and offer the same level of diversification;
- they’re way less risky that picking individual stocks;
- they allow you to invest in hundreds of companies at once and in different countries; and
- they permit you to benefit from dividend re-investment plans immediately.
When you go to buy exchange-traded funds or mutual funds, pay attention to the management expense ratio. You should never be paying more than an MER of 0.40% without a damn good reason. MERs paid to someone else are money that is leaving your pocket. The higher the MER, the less money that you have invested. The MER shouldn’t be the only reason that you pick an ETF or a mutual fund, but it should be a factor that’s given a lot of weight when you decide where to invest your money.
Next, your ETF or mutual fund should have a DRIP feature. The dividend re-investment plan is one of the tools that’s going to help you stay invested. You see, at first your annual dividends are going to be very small. Think dollars… or cents. But within 2-3 years, you’re going to be receiving hundreds and then thousands of dollars on an annual basis. With a DRIP, those dividends are automatically re-invested while you, Dear Reader, are spared the temptation of spending them. The dividends don’t land in your investment account. Instead, they promptly re-invested before you ever get a chance to consider withdrawing them and spending them.
Finally, keep investing no matter what. The pandemic taught many of us that the stock market can plunge deeply within the span of a few weeks. And 2022 was no picnic either for investors. Even today, the Talking Heads of the Media are expending a lot of chinwag on “the recession”.
Listen.
No one knows when the recession will get here, how long it will last, nor how bad it will be. The only thing that they can all agree on is that it won’t last forever. When the recession is over, the stock market will start going up again. It’s what the stock market does, and what it has always done. If you’re not invested, then you won’t benefit from the stock market recovery.
So invest. And stay invested. Do not stop contributing to your investment account. Transfer your money to this account and continue to invest your money so that it can grow. Future You will thank you for doing so.
Additional Accounts – Your Sinking Funds
These accounts are where you will accumulate funds for both un-sexy stuff (car insurance, annual property taxes) and irregular payments that make your life better (travel, theatre subscriptions, concerts, fine dining, etc…)
In short, you will prioritize your short-term goals and set aside money to pay for them. I can’t tell you how much easier it is to pay may insurance premiums when I know that there’s money sitting in a bank account just for that purpose. The same goes for my annual subscription to Broadway Across Canada, my vacations, my property taxes, etc, etc, etc… You get the drift. If a certain item or service has made it onto my priority list, then I have an account set up to pay for it.
You should do the same. Sinking funds force you to allocate money to the things that are most important to you getting closer to your dream life. And one of the keys to a dream life is not having to worry about how to pay for the things that you want.
That’s the Plan.
Those are the steps. Everything else is a detail. I admit that it’s not glamorous, nor particularly snazzy, but I can assure you that this plan works. I’ve been following it for most of my adult life, and I’m pretty satisfied with the outcome. I’ve made mistakes along the way… many mistakes… but sticking to this plan for my money has tempered their impact on my financial life.
[…] Lobster at Millionaire on the Prairie has A Gift for [Us]–A Step-by-Step Plan for Your Money in 2024. She also reminds us that Automatic Savings Plans Perform Better Than Promises, which might be why […]