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How to Build an Emergency Fund
  + stars: | 2022-12-26 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +8 min
“Covid really drove home the importance of having an emergency fund,” says Diana Linn, a wealth advisor in Newton, Mass. But the rest of setting up an emergency fund, from estimating your needs to opening an account, is relatively simple. Chen recommends multiple emergency funds, with different time frames and purposes: a short-term fund for any last-minute necessary purchase like a new car battery that you’d otherwise charge on a credit card; a midterm fund for repairs, like a new water heater; and a long-term emergency fund for when you lose your job. Decide how to reach your savings targetThe surest way to build up an emergency fund is to regularly put aside a portion of your earnings into an emergency savings account, preferably as an automatic debit from a checking account. Decide where to keep your emergency fundThere are several savings vehicles you can use for your emergency fund, both online and otherwise.
BNP defies French banks’ interest-rate malaise
  + stars: | 2022-11-03 | by ( Liam Proud | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
A regulated savings rate, with roots tracing back to the French Emperor’s wars of conquest, is one reason why Gallic retail lenders could miss out on an interest-rate windfall that is boosting banks elsewhere. Ironically, 60 billion euro BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA) looks set to escape the curse because of some international expansion of its own. One-third of Gallic lenders’ deposits sit in savings vehicles with regulated interest rates, Jefferies analysts reckon. Combined with other interest-rate regulations and the fact that many French mortgage borrowers are on fixed rates, the upshot is that Gallic retail lending margins don’t rise as quickly as they might in Spain or Britain. Chief Executive Jean-Laurent Bonnafé, who is approaching his 11-year anniversary in the role, deserves credit for helping BNP to defy the lending malaise at home.
But when the pandemic hit I put off my trip, and my travel fund sat in a high-yield savings account. It was earning the highest interest rate of any savings account I could find at the time — a whopping 1.05%. Why not put my Italy fund in a brokerage account and get the double-digit returns I can in the stock market instead of 1% in a 'high-yield' savings account? I knew better than to put my vacation money — money I knew I'd be spending in the next two or three years, max — into growth stocks that are designed to be held for at least five years. Despite the small returns, I'll definitely be using a high-yield savings account for all future Italy savings.
Half of millennials and Gen Z expect employer-based savings plans to be enough for retirement, a TIAA study shows. Millennials and Gen Z could be in for a dire future unless they save differently. Duckett said that she wanted policymakers and employers to increase access to retirement savings plans, as well as educating workers about income options such as annuities. She also encouraged Gen Z and millennials to seek out savings vehicles like IRAs, which aren't dependent on an employer. It's a testament to how much employers have sapped their retirement packages over the past few decades that Gen Z and millennials could be in trouble.
Custodial accounts are investment accounts an adult manages until a child is usually 18 or 21. A kid's bank account is a type of joint bank account both a parent and child can use. Custodial accounts are ideal for long-term savings while kid's bank accounts help with money habits. Custodial account vs. kid's savings account: At a glanceCustodial accounts and kid's savings accounts are two different types of accounts you'll find available at most financial institutions. Custodial accounts will be better long-term savings options than traditional kid's savings accounts.
Whether you're self-employed or your employer doesn't offer one, 401(k) plans simply aren't available to everyone. According to financial planners, there are several ways you can keep saving or start saving, even without a 401(k) plan. Financial planner Kenneth Chavis IV of Lourd Murray recommends a Roth IRA for many people who are just starting to save. If you're self-employed, consider a solo 401(k)When you're self-employed, a solo 401(k) should be the first place to go, financial planners say. Advertisement"That's actually one of the best retirement savings vehicles there is if you know how to use it," said financial planner Brian Bruggeman of Baker Boyer Bank.
Persons: Roth, , Kenneth Chavis IV, Lourd Murray, Chavis, Brian Bruggeman Organizations: Service, IRA, Baker Boyer Bank Locations: Baker
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