2/19/2018

Neighbour Joe - February 2018 - $1,577.33/Year Passive Income



All, here is the latest update of my passive income. I have recently purchased more shares of Enbridge since the price has been dropping making it a attractive buy. The row with the green highlights indiciates that those are in USD. The total amount is show in CAD here. I used a 1.25 exchange rate for my calculation. I've also added a column to show much return I am currently getting from my book value of my investment. For those that don't know, the book value is the amount that was actually invested and will not change with market price. Have a nice winter day.

2/10/2018

Market is performing poorly, what should you do?

For those that have been following the market lately, you'll know that this past week it dropped significantly. All major index in North America were seeing double-digit percentage drop, Warren Buffet's net worth dropped by 11 billion dollars as a result.

So if you are looking at investing or have invested what should you do. The answer is don't panic and keep investing. Here is a quote from the guy who just lost 11 billion dollars.

“Be Fearful When Others Are Greedy and Greedy When Others Are Fearful”― Warren Buffett

The best time to purchase anything is when there is a sale or discount. Therefore whenever a market-wide correction happens all business will be affected, even those that are operating very efficiently. If you just look around you'll be able to see a lot of solid big cap company being sold at a bargain right now. Big Canadian Blue Chip such as Fortis, Enbridge, Bell are all selling at a discount right now. My advice will be don't invest all at once, spread your investment out since you don't know if it'll go higher or lower. By Investing at a consistent and regular interval you'll be less affected by market volatility. 

2/09/2018

Poor man's Asset vs Wealthy Mindset Asset



If you know anything about accounting then its probably that Asset - Liability = Equity or Net Worth. In our monthly update here at Slowly But Wealthy we use this equation to calculate our net worth. However, what different from traditional accounting is that we choose to omit certain items in our assets category. For example, both Thirty Salaryman and I do not include our automobile in our asset.

This not because we are too lazy to do a straight line depreciation for our automobile. The main reason is we want to highlight that certain items are not what I'll call "wealthy mindset" assets. In this post, I wrote last year I talked about a similar topic. Here I want to expand on that topic.

Definition:
"An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual, corporation or country owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide future benefit. Assets are reported on a company's balance sheet, and they are bought or created to increase the value of a firm or benefit the firm's operations. An asset can be thought of as something that in the future can generate cash flow, reduce expenses, improve sales, regardless of whether it's a company's manufacturing equipment or a patent on a particular technology." - https://www.investopedia.com/terms/a/asset.asp
This is actually a pretty good definition of assets, pay attention to some keywords, "future benefit" and "generate cash flow". From a personal finance perspective, those two are key when you are trying to understand assets.

Poor man's Asset vs Wealthy Mindset Asset 
I have personally further subcategorized asset into these two categories. Wealthy mindset assets are things that either provide future benefits or generate cash flow. Poor man's assets are things that don't. From a wealthy building perspective, benefits are defined as things that will increase your wealth. Therefore, if something will increase your wealth down the road then it's a wealthy mindset asset.

Let's talk about Poor man's asset first. Simply put, most of the "stuff" we "want" will fall into this category. Stuff like the latest iPhone or brand name fashion items will fall into this category. Some will argue that most wealthy people spend a lot of money in this category, that's true but in a relative scale, this is usually a very small portion of their asset. Another argument that I often hear is that you need to look wealthy to be wealthy, my response to that is no, you need to be wealthy to be able to look wealthy. These assets do not appreciate over time or generate cash flow and usually depreciate rapidly. 

Wealthy mindest assets are things like equity in a big company, rental property or anything that will generate wealth. The key for this category is that it has to "generate positive wealth gains", so if you have assets that are not generating any value then it will not be in this category.

Summary
The key is to have more wealthy mindset assets in comparison to your poor man assets. You want to start using assets to generate more wealthy instead of just trading your time for money. The accumulation of good wealthy mindset assets is the key to becoming financially free.

2/01/2018

Neighbour Joe - February 2018 Net Worth

As we enter the month of love, here is my latest net worth update.

Asset
Chequing: 2407.63
TFSA Investment: $61,344.23
TFSA Mutual Fund: $3,872.25 (Invested in TD e-series index fund)
Real Estate: $224,000 (Purchase Price of my house)
Define Benefit Work Pension (Current Transfer Value): ~$153,000 (Last checked in Jul 2017,aprox $1000 a month of contribution)

*Automobile is not included (No monthly car payment)

Liabilities
Mortgage: $135,126.07

*Credit Card is paid in full every month

January Net Worth: $303,480.88
Current Net Worth: $309,498.04 (+1.98%)

I have recently realized that during my monthly net worth update I am giving a false impression that all my gains are soley based on my investment. Just want to clarify that my monthly paycheque greatly contributes to my gains every month. Have a good February!