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Dreaming is fun, isn’t it? Part 3

October 5th, 2010 No comments

Welcome back.

Follow up to previous blog post.

Once you have actually seen yourself spending and enjoying your newfound financial success, you can move on. Please don’t fudge—OK, let’s move on together. Let’s change your visual focus. Where do you live in your new life of prosperity? What does your house look like? How many bedrooms does it have? Can you see it? If you can see it, spend a few minutes creating details. If you can’t see it, spend a little more time with the exercise until you can.

Someone once said that what the mind can see, the body can achieve. I believe it. I go a step further. I believe that the mind must see it before the body is able to work for it. Look at another realm of human endeavor: sports. When Roger Bannister broke the four-minute mile, he saw it long before he did it. Over and over in his mind, he later recalled, he visualized doing what had been deemed to be impossible. Interestingly enough, once Bannister did what no one else had ever done before, others quickly succeeded in doing it. Why? Because in minds all around the world, mental barriers had been broken. People understood that the impossible was now possible.

The same analogy applies to wealth creation. There is a process one must go through to achieve it. Bill Gates, in his best-selling book The Road Ahead, writes about his “play” with computers in high school. Even then, when computers were the size of large rooms and far less powerful than our miniature hand-held PDAs, he dreamed about what they would be able to achieve in the future.

His dream was so strong, in fact, that he feared missing out on the revolution he saw in his mind. He dropped out of Harvard University—dropped off the safe path he was on—to get a quicker start. There was simply no way that he was going to let the software revolution start without him.
Bill Gates saw the future of computers in his mind long before it became a reality. He saw a role for himself in that future. He dreamed the dream, developed plans to fulfill that dream, and then took action. This could be called the “science of success.”

It’s not restricted to Roger Bannister and Bill Gates. It’s something that each of you can participate in and benefit from. But before you can do it, you have to knock down the mental barriers to your financial success. You must learn to envision your achievements. Once you do, the achievements will follow. So far, so good? Are you beginning to see the mindset you need to have if you are to achieve financial freedom? Let’s go a little further.

What about a family? Will you have a spouse? Children? What will they be like? These are extremely important thoughts to consider and plan for. You must see it before it happens, but once you do; financial freedom will be more than one step closer.

All of the questions I have posed to you so far will become an important part of creating your dreams and ultimately achieving goals based on those dreams. Now that you see the process unfolding, you can also see how the end results will be different for everyone.

More to follow don’t miss reading the most important aspect of how this exercise can make such an impact on your financial life.

My Best
James Dicks

Strategic Foreclosure

August 10th, 2010 No comments

As 2011 approaches, some predict that by the end of that year 48 percent of the nearly 50 million mortgages will be underwater. WOW! That’s a lot. We are all affected by this whether we rent or own, want to own or know someone who does own a home. The effects are far and wide.

What do you do if you are upside down on your property and the bank is running you around and around? You know…asking you to send in the same documents over and over again. Well you can do a Strategic Foreclosure.

What is a Strategic Foreclosure? Another word for tell the bank come get my property and you are tired of their crap. You have to take a step back first and decide where your moral compass sits. What is the right thing to do, make your payments, as promised? Sure financial responsibility is admirable, but it is hard to maintain that kind of thinking when the very financial institutions you owe money have little to NO financial responsibility. What happened to lead by example?

Hire an attorney and it will take one to three years for a foreclosure to happen.
Now think for a moment about your situation. If you do what all the big corporations do, you put business first. If that is the case, you may want to consider a business decision on your biggest investment, your home. I can better explain this with an example, which happens to be a real life example from someone I know.

Okay, you buy a modest home in 2006, 4 bedrooms two baths, two-car garage about 1600 square feet, relatively new. You pay $225,000.00 put in about $30,000.00 in upgrades. All of a sudden the market starts to pull back, and it did. Next thing you know you are paying way more than you can rent the property for, the house across the street just sold for $112,000 and there are ten more on the street for the same price. What do you do?

Well, you first try and call the bank to see if you can get approved for one of the many home mortgage modification plans. But you are not so lucky since you don’t meet any of the requirements, and it wasn’t from a lack of trying. You were told “sorry” so many times you quit counting. Now all of a sudden your job has reduced your hours and pay. You are lucky enough to still have a job but nonetheless, you are now struggling to make your mortgage payment. You decide enough is enough and can’t make your current mortgage payment. One month turns into three and so on. You are still trying hard to get a modification but to no avail.

Finally you are making headway with the bank and you believe you can see a light is at the end of the tunnel you think, the bank says “no problem, we will lower your payment and you can keep making payments on your original note.” WOW, thanks but no thanks, don’t do me any favors! But why say that?
Let’s look at why.

Even if they lowered your principal you are wasting your time as far as a business decision is concerned. The house is only worth what someone is willing to pay, and right now that’s $112,000.

So you walk away from this house, the one you owe $260,000 on. You live in it for say 3 years total before it is foreclosed on. Yes, your credit will be affected, you will have a foreclosure, along with about 50 percent of the other Americans out there that owned a home and experienced a foreclosure. But you are better off saving your money and renting at a price you can afford for the next few years. Get your feet back under you and then buy when the job and the housing market has improved a bit.

If you end up buying a home similar to yours, let’s say the one next door, for say $112,000 in the next five to seven year, it will probably be back to the levels you currently owe – $260,000.

So, a sound business decision encourages you to walk away, make a deal with bank, turn over the house and owe nothing. Save a little money, put down 20% on a new house in two years. Even if your credit is affected you can do a rent to own or a lease purchase. After 12 months of good payments, you can refinance it as your primary residence.

The $112,000 house you will buy for $120,000. You put down $10,000.00 and owe $110,000 over the next six years. Your house goes up in value to say $200,000 and your mortgage goes down to say $95,000.00 and you have $105,000.00 in equity. Meaning if you stayed in the old house that you owed $260,000, it is now worth $200,000.00 and your mortgage is down to $230,000.00 give or take. Which scenario, as a business decision, seems better, upside down or positive?

You have to weigh the pros and cons the decision to be moral and ethical make your payments or make a sound business decision and be ahead financially. Only you can make that decision. I will tell you that the banks and big companies make these decisions every day and they always choose the business decision. That’s not a reason to condone it, but a reason to seriously sit down and consider your choices.

One thing is for sure, the real estate market will come back, until then look for the opportunities they are always present.

Recovery or No Recovery? That is the Question.

December 11th, 2009 No comments

We are inundated on a daily basis by the 24-hour news and business channels that the United States has experienced the worst of the economic downturn and is now coming out of the greatest recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s. But if you ask your neighbor, you’re likely to discover that the typical American family just doesn’t buy it; they aren’t feeling any better today than they did yesterday.

In a recent poll of more than 1,000 Americans conducted by CNN/Opinion Research Corporation, 84% of those surveyed believe that the U.S. economy is still very much in recession which is s slight improvement from September’s poll where 87% felt the recession was still alive and well. This kind of public sentiment, while heartfelt, seems to be just the opposite of what the nation’s economists are telling us; that the “Great Recession” has finally come to an end.

Economists are in almost universal agreement that, according to the numbers, the worst of the economic slowdown appears to be behind us. According to the latest reading on gross domestic product, the U.S. economy grew at a 2.8% annual rate in the three months ending in September, the broadest measure of the nation’s economic activity. And while job losses continue, the number of jobs lost in November fell to 11,000, the smallest amount of any month since the start of 2008, while the unemployment rate fell to 10% from 10.2%. Plus a recent survey of top economists from the National Association of Business Economists found 81% agreed that the recession was over.

So, why the discrepancies?

While there have been some economic improvements, economists believe that it will take a long time, perhaps even years to dig out of the economic upheaval that this recession caused. Because the improvements have been slight, the average American family just doesn’t feel it yet. One economist put it this way, “The hole is a very big hole this time and the recovery is very modest so it might take us a number of years to get out of the hole.” And this startling result also came to the surface recently. While economists are getting more optimistic, the consuming public appears to be getting even more pessimistic. The same poll found that only “15% believe the economy is starting to recover from the problems it faced in the past year or so, down from 17% who saw improvement in the previous poll in September.” And the public also believes that things will get worse before it gets better.

This is something that the retail industry didn’t want to hear during the biggest shopping period of the year. Holiday shopping so far has been less than stellar. A recent Christmas Retail Survey released during the first week of December by America’s Research Group (ARG) and UBS showed that sales were weaker this year than in 2008. Of those consumers not shopping, an overwhelming number, 95.1%, said they will wait until just before Christmas (some even said they’d wait until December 24) to get more items on sale.

And further evidence of a shaky American consumer base, the most recent Consumer Credit report released by the Federal Reserve showed that Americans borrowed less for a record ninth straight month in October, another sign that consumer spending will remain weak and make it more difficult for the economy to produce a sustained rebound. And unless the U.S. consumer develops some confidence in the nation’s economic foundation, the chances for recovery are probably negligible.

We are all hoping for a more profitable 2010, and the last thing I want to be is pessimistic (it just goes against my nature). But until our national housing and mortgage industry is repaired, until the banks start loaning money again, until jobs start picking up, until the confidence of the American consumer is bolstered by a feeling that our economy is, in fact, returning to normal, this country could continue to experience the same economic doldrums in the New Year. Let’s hope the effects of the technical economic improvements economists are seeing today will soon show themselves fundamentally to those of us who live on Main Street USA.

The Need for Hopefulness

September 2nd, 2009 No comments

I’ve noticed recently that we seem to be worrying about everything.  Yes, the past year has been tough on a lot of people and a lot of businesses. We agonize about the current state of the economy, we are concerned about the horrific possibility of terrorism in our local communities, we worry about whether we’ll be ready for retirement, and we are very concerned about how our children will fair in this highly demanding and , at times, difficult world. 

 

I usually find that if I’m not certain of where I’m going or how I’m getting there, I will tend to have more concerns than if I actively sit down and plan for the future.  We hear on the financial news programs every day that investors are “worried” about a variety of things that will move the markets lower.  What’s the point?!  Let’s start planning our personal situations and stop creating the anxiety.  The summer months are over and we are now preparing for autumn and the changing colors of the trees, feeling a nip in the air, and the smells of the season from cinnamon to evergreen.  I don’t know about you but I think this is a great time of year.  

 

Sure, there are some challenges ahead which could complicate our national and personal finances.  The negative scenarios that the U.S. economy is pushing through today along with the ever-increasing cost of energy could certainly cause a drain on our personal finances and put tension on the retail sector as well as pressuring the trade gap.  But there’s not a lot we can do personally to generate solutions for these hot topics.  The one thing we can do to sustain our personal “corner of the world” is to develop a positive and constructive attitude.  It really does help.  When you decide to carve out your personal path using even a small amount of confidence, you can’t help but develop the belief that you can succeed at anything you set out to do, no matter what the odds.  Believe me, I’ve done it. 

 

Positive thoughts and actions create positive results. If you have the wrong attitude then your trading could also be affected.  Doing anything with the wrong attitude will lead you in a direction that will be a burden rather than a blessing.  Individually, things can be tough to deal with but collectively – as an encouraging population – we can do anything.  As we approach the final quarter of the year, I’m hopeful for the months ahead and I hope you are too.  We’ve proven this factor in the past and I have no doubt that we will bear it out again in the future. Become proactive and cheerful by developing your attainable goals while staying focused on the situation(s) at hand.

 

The improvement of anything you do in life requires you to get the education you need, whether formal or informal.  If you feel like you need to improve your personal investing skills why not find a trading group in your local area and work with others to perfect your skills or take a formal class.  You’ve heard me say it before – it’s all about education.  If you are learning to play golf, I’m sure you have to practice.  If you are trying to master algebra, you have to study.  The same is true for an effective and profitable financial life.  Never give up! Determine your direction, get educated and you will get results! 

 

Happy trading!

The Rewards of Risk Taking

August 28th, 2009 No comments

When it comes to making something happen in business, or in life for that matter, taking a calculated and creative risk is necessary to get to the next level.  While this might sound frightening, it is a part of entrepreneurship that must become second nature if you are ever expecting to achieve any semblance of success.  Entrepreneurs must put their time, their ideas, and sometimes, their very reputation on line to realize success in something they believe.  

 

Anything you do in this life requires some risk.  There are very few things that offer us a 100 percent guarantee and a certain amount of risk will normally be required and inevitable.  There are methods of limiting the effects of potential volatile decisions but the time always seems to come when we must make a choice; decide to move in one particular direction and hope for the best.  If things cave in, as they sometimes do, just regroup and take responsibility for your mistakes and select a new course of action.  Then, once you’re satisfied with your new position, cast off again and try to make big things happen.  That’s part of the spirit of an entrepreneur.  There are times when your personal courage will set the pace of who you are and determine whether your company will progress forward. 

 

Especially in today’s business world, there is a danger of becoming too complacent when we stay in our personal comfort zones.  I took a risk when I decided to join the U.S. Marine Corps and that ‘risk’ helped to create the person I am today.  I have found that generally top-notch performers and those who excel are relentless risk takers.  Those who take the risk always see the possibilities that others can’t even begin to imagine.  I constantly strive to take the road less traveled and pull away from the crowd. 

 

Although risk can create energy and bring you to a much higher level of accomplishment, there’s more to it than that.  There’s the satisfaction that the risks that we take will create rewards for those we serve.  I hope that the decisions I’ve made over the years and the corporate directions my company has taken have helped to improve the financial lives of our customers and our employees.  Important financial improvements that will help to send their kids to college or might help a family discover a method of creating a successful and needed cash flow. 

We have no idea what kind of rewards we will enjoy by taking that first step into the unknown; by looking risk in the face and moving forward with head held high.  But one thing I do know; there will be no rewards unless we’re willing to take the risk.  So, plan on leaving your comfort zone today.  No matter what your profession, commit yourself to success, enjoy the passion you possess for your job and get ready to reap the rewards that taking a risk can bring.