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Saturday, November 21st, 2009

ren

BANKING BASICS & WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR 6

August 14, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

As much as possible, even when you are already in deficit on your monthly expenses, put away some amount into an emergency fund. With hard times worsening from week to week, you have to prepare for a future when your finances drop to near zero. Or, worse –if you or a member of your family gets sick or meets an accident or some disaster strikes, immediate funds will be required. Don’t just keep your emergency fund in a piggy bank, in a cookie jar, or under your mattress. Place it in an earning certificate of deposit, a money market account, or a simple savings account. Even if the yield rate on your emergency fund may be lower than the inflation rate, you are at least mitigating the effects of an erosion of the value of your... [Read more]

BANKING BASICS & WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR 5

August 13, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

Banks provide necessary services, but they are there for the money –your money. They are always cooking up new ways to charge you fees: miscellaneous fees, maintenance fees, online banking fees, excessive transaction fees, teller fees, etc. Do not be taken in by offers of “no monthly fees” checking accounts. You can bet your bottom dollar the bank will make up for this freebie through some other fee. Take time to shop around for a bank. Scrutinize their fees. Read the fine print. Keep records and study the entries. Avoid the charges that you can do without the next time around. Talk to the bank manager. Choose only the services that you really need. image from Microsoft Clipart [Read more]

BANKING BASICS & WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR 4

August 12, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

No such thing as a free lunch, specially in bank services. You do a bank a favor by opening a checking account and letting them earn on your money through loans & mortgages, and it charges you a monthly fee (which, in some banks, can go over $10 per month). On opening an account, you get a free checkbook. Subsequent checkbooks are charged a fee for which some banks collect as much as $15, and this is for the plain checkbooks. The personalized versions (with background scenery, etc) cost much more –an extravagance and a needless expense. The important thing is that the check is filled out completely and correctly. You want to make a long distance payment and it won’t get there in time if you send it through the mail. So,... [Read more]

BANKING BASICS & WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR 3

August 12, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

You don’t always have your checkbook with you and you don’t want to carry cash around. So, you use a debit card. Remember, however, that every time you use your debit card you are charged a fee. The fees vary from institution to institution. Some charge less than a dollar, other charges much more. So, the more often you use your debit card, the more costly this bank service becomes. How about ATM cards? If you withdraw from the ATM machine at the bank’s premises, you don’t get charged a transaction fee. Outside the bank premises, you are charged as little as a quarter or as much as a couple of dollars (depending on the location). image from Microsoft Clipart [Read more]

BANKING BASICS & WHAT TO LOOK OUT FOR 2

August 11, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

You receive a check payment which you deposit in your bank account. Don’t assume that you can immediately withdraw or write a check against it. Out-of-town or out-of-state checks take as much as a week before the amount is actually entered into your account for withdrawals or writing checks against. If you happen to write a check before the amount is actually in your account, your check will bounce –which, in addition to causing much embrassment, will cause a penalty to be charged against your account and do some damage to your credit standing. To save you from overdrawn checks, banks offer overdraft protection. Fees for every overdrawn check that the bank honors can be costly (in some banks, as much as $35). In addition, interest... [Read more]

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