Wednesday, February 14, 2007

general principle #1 to retire sooner: pay off consumer debt

Principle: Pay down all short-term consumer debt first, before even thinking about investing.

In fact, paying down consumer debt actually is "investing", in some sense, as we'll see later.

As guilty as I personally am of violating this particular principle, I can't stress it enough, even if my left hand is discplining my right hand for not behaving. That kind of deal.

What's short-term consumer debt? Basically, any account or balance whose interest is largely non-deductible, severely hinders equity growth or accumulation, and ultimately subtracts from your total asset is considered short-term debt.

The following are usually considered short-term consumer debt, in order of priority:
- Credit cards (which can be viewed as a "short-term loan")
- Personal loans
- Auto loans

Consumer debt encourages to borrow against your future earnings. You're short-term borrowing today, but you'll need to pay it back tomorrow. The later you pay back, the larger the interest penalty.

Obviously, the decision to draw these types of debt differs on a case-by-case basis. For example, if personal loans are secured to execute and start up a sound business plan, then the return (and its corresponding risk) of profits from that business more than offsets the risk incurred of accruing interest.

But, ultimately, think of paying off credit card debt as a way of earning indirect interest. If credit card interest is fixed at 15%, then paying off that credit card effectively yields a 15% interest *after-tax*, because you'd be using after-tax money to pay the balance. So, in a rather real and reasonable sense, paying down a credit card balance fixed at 15% interest is equivalent to the balance money actually earning *more* than 15% from stocks or mutual funds! That's impressive in its own right!

You may argue why car loans are considered short-term consumer debt. In many places in the world, a car serves pretty much as a necessity. However, it isn't *necessary* to buy the latest and greatest car that your bank account can stomach. Ideally, cars should be purchased in cash.

Additionally, there are many ways to trim the fat off your credit card balances, such as by balance transfers, or making mini aka micro aka partial-balance, intraperiod payments.

With balance transfers, however, do keep in mind the issuing bank's gotcha's such as promotional low or 0% APR's, transfer fees, balance transfer balance limits, overage fees, interest rate increase date, etc. Balance transfers only benefit if you discipline your financial house to pay off the balance transfer before the promotional APR's increase. Furthermore, if you find yourself sequentially conducting more than one balance transfer for a particular balance, take this as a red flag that perhaps your debt-to-income ratio, along with your spending habits, needs a good, hard look.

Regarding micro/mini/partial-balance payments, submitting multiple payments throughout the month to the credit card issuer before the monthly bill arrives reduces the finance charge / interest amount you would've ended up paying, even if the total amount of the micro-payments equals the one payment submitted at the end of a billing period. Since most credit cards nowadays allow you to either manually pay or set of periodic, scheduled payments online, micro-payments are one easy way to keep dollars in your wallet vs. giving them to a corporate bank.

That's it for Principle #1. Follow the included link to find out more ways to make your credit card debt more manageable, giving your better nights of sleep.

Please provide your comments and feedback on exactly how valuable, or how obvious and mundane, this post was for you.

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Next week will be a momentous one in my recent history: my credit card debt will finally decrease from 5 digits to 4! I'm so excited. Two weeks after that, I should witness nearly zero credit card debt for the first time in a year!

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