The best money advice I heard this year as a CNBC reporter

Jack Hollingsworth | Tetra Images | Getty Images

As a personal finance reporter at CNBC, most days of the year, I’m at my desk talking to people about money.

Although the general topic stays the same, so many of the conversations I have with sources leave me with a new perspective.

When I got the idea to do a roundup of some of the most interesting and helpful money insights I’d heard in 2023, I knew right away the points I wanted to bring back. Maybe that’s one definition of good advice? Guidance you may ignore but can’t forget?

Well, here are some of the ideas and recommendations that stuck.

1. ‘When we don’t talk about money, we’re shielding ourselves from knowing reality’

“I find people are more private about money than their sex life,” psychoanalyst Orna Guralnik, who stars on the Showtime documentary series “Couples Therapy,” told me in May.

It can take years of therapy sessions, Guralnik said, for people to get around to the subject. I was amazed by that! Money is an unavoidable daily part of our lives, and so how could we not talk about it?

More from Women and Wealth:

Here’s a look at more coverage in CNBC’s Women & Wealth special report, where we explore ways women can increase income, save and make the most of opportunities.

Even more interesting was how Guralnik articulated the dangers of this avoidance.

“Money is a very important point of contact with reality,” she said. “People can have all sorts of fantasies and ideas about themselves. But money is feedback from the real world. So, when we don’t talk about money, we’re shielding ourselves from knowing reality.”

This really resonated. I’ve heard friends say they’ve gone months without checking their credit card balances, and I’ve noticed how I always underestimate my spending when I draw up a budget.

Psychoanalyst Orna Guralnik, who stars on the Showtime documentary series “Couples Therapy.”

Source: Showtime

Guralnik pushes people to be more real.

“You can’t take care of yourself if you don’t deal with reality,” she said. “We learn from reality. We grow from reality.”

2. How to still have $1 million at 100

Bill Stovall and his wife, Martha.

The only debts he ever took on, he said, were for his mortgages. To this day, he looks for discounts at the grocery store and orders the cheaper dishes on restaurant menus. He enjoys following the stock market but almost never buys or sells individual stocks.

His life story illustrates the benefits of consistency and frugality, two of the most effective financial habits.

“I always lived within my means,” Stovall said. “I’m not a gambler.”

3. Money struggles aren’t just on you

“But I think it’s the sociologist’s job, to quote C. Wright Mills, to turn a personal problem into a political one,” Desmond said. “Millions of people are facing this every year. This is not on you.”

Desmond’s wisdom applies to so much of the financial hardship people endure today in the U.S.

Whether it’s a layoff or food insecurity, understanding when your struggle is the product of a larger societal problem helps you to be less hard on yourself — and hopefully more compassionate with others.

4. Tiny financial changes are powerful

Rita Assaf, vice president of retirement with Fidelity Investments, provided one example. For someone age 35 who is making $60,000 a year, upping their retirement saving contribution by 1%, or less than $12 a week, could generate an additional $110,000 by retirement, assuming a 7% annual return.

More recently, as student loan payments restarted, higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz illustrated the same lesson with paying down debt. If a borrower owed $10,000, and had a 5% interest rate, an additional $50 a month would shave nearly four years off a 10-year repayment timeline.

Those numbers have stayed with me, as a reminder of the power of tiny changes we can work toward in the new year.

Good luck!

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Swift Telecast is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – swifttelecast.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment