84740296169
84740296169 t1_jegqloz wrote
Reply to My job is not for me, by Straight_Comfort1205
The more related to your future career your job is the better.
I have so many random jobs that I never listed on my resume after I got my first relevant job in my field.
84740296169 t1_jegqeju wrote
Suspiciously close to a COVID stimulus check value.
84740296169 t1_jefr72a wrote
Reply to comment by MikeyMike01 in Is this normal after an accident? by Impossible-Cry-495
I would disagree. Consumer-Facing insurance like Personal Auto and Homeowners is very regulated on how much they can charge and what is covered.
84740296169 t1_jefpnw1 wrote
Reply to comment by Mayor__Defacto in Is this normal after an accident? by Impossible-Cry-495
That was my guess as well. That there would be a release from liability attached to this but does not sound very ethical.
84740296169 t1_jeeyktx wrote
Reply to Is this normal after an accident? by Impossible-Cry-495
That's very weird. Typically you either:
- Go through your insurance, pay your deductible, and your insurance company subrogates the other party's insurance. If your insurance company successfully subrogates, then you get your deductible back.
- Go through their insurance initially.
I've never heard of an insurance company offering to pay your deductible and rental but not pay for the repairs. They are ultimately liable for the repairs.
Edit: To add a bit more, if this is to get you to sign a release, then that would be a violation of your policy (most likely) with your insurer. If you sign the release, your insurer can deny your claim. A subrogation clause in your policy typically says you cannot prejudice the insurer’s subrogation right.
84740296169 t1_jed7di2 wrote
leases, you pay the depreciation cost of the car + profit to the owner.
financing, you pay the entire cost of the car and eat the depreciation cost but own the car while paying interest to a financing company.
they should be pretty neutral options for the same car.
84740296169 t1_jed4ugq wrote
Homes in that range would be $2000 - $3000 a month. That's a large portion of your take-home pay. That's not even accounting for property taxes.
Edit: I didn’t factor in your downpayment so it’s be more $1500 - $2500
84740296169 t1_jed173g wrote
Those are people who dropped out of Harvard. Not Community College.
84740296169 t1_jae504w wrote
Basically you give them the full amount back and you correct it on your taxes. That’s typically how these sign on bonus paybacks work.
84740296169 t1_jae4uhd wrote
Reply to Question about bond rates by rwaterbender
Those look like annualized yields
84740296169 t1_jadxqfa wrote
Reply to comment by redditenjoyer737 in Pay off the rental house mortgage or continue investing? by corumgold
That's just annual savings, in terms of present value (assuming he goest through the whole loan this way) it's about $10,000 in savings. PV of $800 payments a month for 11 ish years at 4.61% compared to $95000 on the loan.
84740296169 t1_jacr4fm wrote
Reply to comment by corumgold in Pay off the rental house mortgage or continue investing? by corumgold
Yearly Interest on $95k loan a year @ 2.625% = $2493.75
Yearly Interest on a Treasury bond earning 4.6% on $95k = $4350
Difference of $1876.25
84740296169 t1_jacq2jk wrote
Reply to comment by corumgold in Pay off the rental house mortgage or continue investing? by corumgold
If it makes you feel better and that feeling is worth ~$2000 a year then go for it
84740296169 t1_jacpi29 wrote
At that interest rate it make zero sense to pay off the mortgage
84740296169 t1_ja8x7p1 wrote
Depends on the Interest Rate of the Loans.
84740296169 t1_ja8wtdp wrote
I do everything at one Online Bank. I don't handle cash very often though, so it works for me. If I ever need cash, I just got to any ATM.
Then have a brokerage for retirement savings and non-emergency fund savings.
84740296169 t1_ja8dps3 wrote
Reply to Where do you keep important documents? by GSDBUZZ
In a fireproof lockbox with in a fireproof envelope in the back of a closet. I assume thieves will try to steal something smaller and more valuable before they find and take this.
84740296169 t1_ja8djt9 wrote
Reply to (US) Where should I open a 529 account - through my state's program, Fidelity, Vanguard...does it matter? by tobesjax
It only matters if your state gives tax breaks for 529 contributions.
84740296169 t1_j6pj7u7 wrote
Reply to What stocks to buy for my Roth IRA? by [deleted]
The advice generally would be to not invest in individual stocks and put your money into low cost index funds.
84740296169 t1_j6p6spj wrote
Usually, Hard Inquiries only counted once (I think it's like 45 days), even if it's run multiple times, so probably not that.
84740296169 t1_j6p4zqq wrote
Reply to Stupid question...why diversify? Why not dump all investment money in one low cost index fund? by [deleted]
The only asset allocation that matters is between stocks and bonds.
84740296169 t1_j6ofa3i wrote
Reply to Borrowing from Other Categories by thmsra
the idea is to budget prospectively what you actually need in each category but moving money retrospectively is fine. I wouldn't make too detailed of categories though. I try to keep it buckets >$200 or so. So you could just combine the clothing and makeup budgets in one category.
84740296169 t1_j6o6rnp wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How should line 4b on w-4 affect my take home pay? by [deleted]
You gotta factor in the standard deduction. Your rate is basically at 12%
84740296169 t1_j6o5veb wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How should line 4b on w-4 affect my take home pay? by [deleted]
Oh then the numbers check out. $4800 * .12 / 12 is about $48 less in tax a month.
84740296169 t1_jegqyl1 wrote
Reply to comment by Straight_Comfort1205 in My job is not for me, by Straight_Comfort1205
Money is a consideration. If you can find something that still keeps you comfortable then yeah.