A British Man's Take on Debt, Saving & Investing


One in Four Households Struggling 1

Posted on September 27, 2009 by Lee

The Guardian newspaper published an article on Thursday with the headline “A quarter struggle to pay bills”.

“Around 25% of people claim they can no longer afford all of their essential outgoings, including mortgage repayments and food, according to insurance specialist Bright Grey.

A further 14% of people admitted their finances were so stretched that they would run into problems if their outgoings rose by just £50 a month, while 16% did not think they would be able to cope if they had to find an extra £100.”

This reinforces my belief that a huge proportion of the country is heading for financial meltdown in the not too distant future. Tens of thousands of families are less than a week away from ruin, if the Bright Grey report is accurate. Around 25% are already spending more than they are earning if they cannot make their existing monthly commitments.

“The frightening truth is that most Britons are already struggling to afford their monthly bills – and all it would take is a small increase in bills or drop in income for people to find themselves in trouble.”

We as a nation need to wake up to the fact that those small increases in bills will be coming. Energy companies have united together to say there will be no reduction in costs this winter, and that means your energy bills will be higher than last winter. Petrol has recently gone up at the pumps again. A new 50p broadband ‘tax’ will be applied to all fixed telephone lines in the new year. VAT is returning to 17.5% in January.

The cost of living in this country will be going up and up. Interest rates are expected to rise to around 2% next year from their current rate of 0.5%, how will that affect your mortgage? If you or your partner are made redundant, could you survive on one income instead of two?

Now is the time to be taking action. Reduce your outgoings, find out what you owe, and begin working your way out of debt. A little pain now could save a lot of pain down the road.

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My Financial Meltdown: Part 3 4

Posted on September 07, 2009 by Lee

This is part 3 of the Meltdown Monday series. You can catch up on part 2 here.

My solicitor (it still feels weird saying that) gave me a bit of a grilling about my personal finances, and how stupid I’d been to have been taken for such a ride in the first place. I think he felt sorry for me in a way, and I’m glad he said what he did. I walked out of his office very depressed, but inside me something clicked. I suddenly became very determined to beat my debt situation and turn my life around. I’ve since discovered this is commonly termed your ‘Light-Bulb Moment‘, particularly by the folks over at the money forum I frequent.

When I got home, my drive was still there to do it. I went over my bank statements again, except this time concentrating on my own spending; Every month there was hundreds of pounds of unnccessary spending of my own doing on there. Expensive organic food shopping, premium diesel, takeaways, gadgets, insurances and more. I was also paying off 2 credit cards and 3 personal loans with wildly varying interest rates, so I needed to work out what I owed and to whom. I worked up a spreadsheet (budget) of my essential spending, and vowed to cut out everything else, trying desperately to spend less than I earned. I drastically cut spending even on essentials: my food shopping allowance to myself dropped from an average of £300 a month down to just £50, my diesel average spend had to drop from £250 as that was an insane amount of money just to spend on getting to work and back.

Then, it was time to attack my debts.

One credit card I’d ignored for the best part of 3 years: it refused to work in the petrol station one morning and I buried my head in the sand from that point onwards. I assumed that as I was paying upwards of £100+ a month on it, the balance must be shrinking. Instead – after biting the bullet, phoning them and resetting my access details for online banking – it turned out I was over my credit limit and had been incurring £16 fees every month for the privilege for the last 3 years! I was also paying interest on these fees every month, so my balance was going up not down, despite my payments. £120 was taken automatically from me every month, but after £90 interest was added, £20 Payment Protection added, and then a £16 fee on top,  my monthly repayments were not touching the balance at all.

Despite this, my credit rating was still good. I arranged an appointment at my bank with a financial adviser and went down with my tail between my legs a few days later in the frigid January morning air. I’ve been with my bank since I was 12, and I honestly believe in this instance, loyalty paid off. I explained my circumstances, was brutally honest, and despite the bank earning loads off me, the lady I saw was keen to help me. She consolidated my existing loans (one at 19% APR, the other at 12% APR) into one loan at a much more preferable 8%, and said I was also showing as pre-approved for the Barclaycard Platinum card that carried a 15 month 0% balance transfer for new customers. She said it was unlikely I’d get a great initial credit limit due partly to policy and partly my existing credit commitments, but anything would be better than nothing for transfer purposes. She also made a point of saying that I shouldn’t be tempted to spend on the card, as despite it having 0% on new purchases for 3 months, the terms of the card meant my balance transfer would be paid first, meaning I’d be stung for interest on the purchases all the while any transfer remained.

Honest advice from a bank – how terribly refreshing!

I walked out instantly having saved £55 a month in loan repayments, and shaved 12 months off the term. Even better was the payment holiday the loan gave me to begin with; 2 months with nothing to pay. I needed this, as it helped me work out where I was without worrying I would end up in my overdraft again.

Shortly thereafter my new credit card arrived with a £1,000 limit. Not great, but £1,000 at 0% is better than £1,000 at 16.9%, so I transferred what I could off my old card onto the new one, and planned to pay off the remainder as quickly as I could. The other credit card I paid off and closed instantly, as it had a surprisingly low balance already. I upped my automatic payment to £400 every month, and made an immediate one-off payment to get me just under my credit limit again to stop the charges. For the first time in 3 years, my credit card balance would reduce on the next payment!

I felt terribly alone at this point. Despite having a good relationship with my family, it’s not a topic I personally feel comfortable discussing with them in great detail. I wanted to feel part of a group in my fight, and to know I wasn’t alone. I mentioned debt to a trusted friend at work and he introduced me to Money Saving Expert (or ‘MSE’ to its friends). The website is a goldmine of information, but the forums are the real feature; Thousands of helpful people from all industries, sectors and walks of life combine together to cut bills, reduce outgoings, help the environment, help each other and play big corporations at their own games. I was hooked instantly – I felt like I belonged – and with their help, I planned my way out of debt for good.

Quite arbitrarily, I set my Debt Free Day as New Years Day 2010. I knew I would struggle to meet that goal, and struggle a lot. I owed £16,000 (if I included my overdraft), or potentially £20,000 (if I include my projected divorce cost), but the difficulty of it is in part why I chose it. I work best under pressure, and it was a significant date, too. It was almost exactly a year after I moved out of my old home and back in with my parents, and it also signified a new beginning: A new year, a new decade, and a new, debt-free me.

Since that moment, I have been working every possible hour of overtime humanly possible, and saving every penny after paying off my debts according to my own plan.

Continue to Part 4…

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