The Blog

Capital High School Students Learn to Save and Invest

January 26, 2010

Wow. For all those adults out there who think teens couldn’t be bothered to consider their financial futures: You need a wake up call. At least you do if you’re living in Olympia, WA.

73 students in Ms. Fabritius and Ms. Elam’s classes at Capital High school benefited from the Investor Protection Trust sponsored and Dept. of Financial Insitutions Consumer University presentation. Learning all about saving and investing and how to acheive short and long term financial goals, students were blown away by how easy it is to accumulate long term rewards if they begin to consistently save and invest for the future while they’re young.

The number of students that expressed a desire to begin saving for the future now far outnumbered those who didn’t.  Teachers like Ms. Fabritius and Ms. Elam are inspiring students to make a change by bringing this important, non-commercial information in to the classroom.

Turn Checks From Grandma Into Gold

December 28, 2009

Filed under: Credit University — Tags: , , , — Alicia @ 6:06 pm

By now you’ve probably sorted out all those awesome gifts you received over the holidays.  Gift cards from your sibs in one pile, purple fuzzy bunny glitter slippers from Auntie Eloise in another, and if you were really lucky, a new iAnything from your parents.

One of those small gifts that’s easy to overlook, not often mentioned to our friends when reciting the list of cool things we received, are those checks from extended family.  The $25 from Grandma Jo, the $15 from Uncle Wiley… these are often the gifts from relatives living on a fixed income.  They want you to know they’re thinking of you during the holidays, and they’ve wisely decided money is a better gift than a pink Snuggie.

We often take these checks for granted because they’re a bit awkward to spend on one item.  They aren’t large enough to get us into a new pair of ski pants, but they’re a bit more than the price of  an album. 

I’d like to suggest that instead of spending these small checks the second we get them, we consider another possibility: Invest them.  Yeah, that sounds super boring… until you crunch the numbers and realize the possibilities. 

As teens, you have a serious advantage over adults when it comes to creating wealth.  We all have to spend two things to become wealthy:  Time and Money.   Time is free, Money has to be earned.  When you’re young, you are rich in time, but short on funds.  When you’re an adult, you’ve got more money, but you’re older so you’re short on time.

So how do you get started?  Easy.  First, if you don’t already have a ROTH IRA (a type of account where you can purchase investments for your future), ask your parents to go to a local credit union and get one opened up for you.  Second, deposit $50 into the account.  Third, add to that $50 when you feel like it and watch your interest compound over the years. 

If you do that this year, then add just $13 a month to it over the next 50 years, an 8% return on your money (TOTALLY doable over a 50 year period) will turn Grandma’s check into $105,000!

Reasonable rates of return (or ‘percent yields’) for teens who save over several decades range from seven to ten percent. Crunch the numbers on this calculator for yourself and decide how wealthy you want to be.