All tagged Simplicity

KiwiSaver for kids? YES, please!

I believe it is essential that we don’t just teach our tamariki to ‘save’, but we teach them to become ‘investors’ as well. That’s where the money is to be made over time. Since taking part in the Sharesies Kids and Investing webinar, one conversation thread has stayed with me. It was about whether it is worth signing your tamariki up to KiwiSaver or not. I am firmly in the YES camp.

My Top 4 KiwiSaver Growth Funds

This blog post took ages to research but should make your decision around choosing a KiwiSaver fund easier. Hopefully. This blog post title is a bold claim because the KiwiSaver market is fecking confusing. Still, I felt this was a blog that I had to write because frequently, I respond to emails or have conversations where people ask me point-blank what KiwiSaver fund should they use.

What I’ve learnt in five years of personal finance blogging.

To my surprise, I’ve chalked up five years of writing this blog! And I can’t quite believe it. I thought I’d blog today about what I’ve learnt, observed and what it’s like to write a blog because there is not a single day that has gone by that I’ve not emailed or spoken with someone about what I tend to refer to with my whanau and friends as ‘blog stuff’.

FREE MONEY! Have you contributed enough to your KiwiSaver?

In my email I wrote last week to all of the fabulous people who subscribe to my blog, a decent number of people got in touch to thank me for the prompt I gave them to look at their own KiwiSaver before the 30th of June. So I thought I would do a quick blog post this week, using my own KiwiSaver statement as an example to show everyone how you can make sure you have contributed enough to your own KiwiSaver by the end of June to get the full government contribution of $521.43.

KiwiSaver and First Home - Invest For Both

With our house prices continuing to climb, more and more pressure is going on first home buyers to save up the large deposit they need to buy a house. This is hardly news to you I know and this blog post is not really aimed at those of you who are poised and on the cusp of buying your first home, instead, it’s aimed at your far younger children, siblings, nieces, nephews and friends who might also want to both buy a home one day AND retire.

What does ‘locking in your losses’ mean?

In mid-March, I happened to have RNZ on in the background when one of their guests mentioned that they got such a fright at the drop in their KiwiSaver balance that they immediately switched from a Growth fund into a Conservative fund in an effort to stop themselves losing money. I remember stopping what I was doing and smacking myself on the head in a Homer Simpson ‘DUH’ moment and saying out loud to myself “Noooo. What did she do that for? And why did she have to say it on the radio where other people might think it’s a good idea to do the same?”