Showing posts with label Managing Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Managing Money. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2008

Saving money on your shopping

Taken from TodayTonight website and I'm putting it in my blog for future references. Right now, I can't cook but usually I make suggestions of 'healthy' food that we need to buy for our kitchens. So far, we've bought frozen stir-fry vegetables, canned vegetable soups, Original orange juice. Hubby would choose fresh fruits, meat pies, bread, cornflakes and pasta. We've given up on frozen pizza, prefering to order Domino's. We have tried Aldi, although we ended up buying cheap and good junk food :P But looking at the list below, prob we could try spray-on olive oil...

From time to time, we've all been shocked by what we pay at the grocery checkout. Figures suggest 20 per cent of all household expenditure goes on putting food on the table and fill the pantry.


So how can you reduce that amount?


One magazine claims it can do it by $50 a time.
They have come up with 33 money saving tips which are listed below, this information comes from the May 2008 edition of the 'Healthy Food Guide'.

1. PLAN A WEEKLY MENU

2. SHOP WITH A LIST

3. USE SUPERMARKET FLYERS - Grab the discounts and save

4. SHOP AT ALDI - save 10%

5. STOCK YOUR PANTRY - keep a list of essential items (buy these on special)

6. CHOOSE AFFORDABLE RECIPES

7. SNACK SMART - buy treats in packets and create portions for school or work.

8. USE SPRAY ON OIL instead of bottle

9. DRINK HEALTHILY - alternate juice or soft drink with water.

10. GO ALCOHOL FREE - if you skip 2 glasses of wine each week you could save.

11. THINK BULK ON REGULAR PURCHASES - it's cheaper in bulk!

12. KEEP YOUR FRIDGE WORKING FOR YOU - store fruit and veges in bags in crisper and use old first!

13. USE YOUR FREEZER - put extra wine, lemon juice, stock, tomato pastes, in unused icecube containers or packs

14. MAKE THE MOST OF LEFTOVERS - use in stirfries the next night eg

15. FREEZE FRESH HERBS - tear off and freeze in icecubes with water. Not good for salads but great for cooking.

16. IMPROVE STORAGE TECHNIQUES - choose right size, too big lets in air, separate into plastic bags, upturn jars.

17. DATE IT - keep on top what's best, and mark date of produce to save throwing out good or missing food before use-by

18. REVIEW YOUR MENU - replace a meat meal per weak with an egg-based or pulse-based meal - frittatas, salads etc

19. INEXPENSIVE INGREDIENTS - use rice, pasta, potatoes, breads, noodles, seasonal produce and less protein(meat)

20. REVIEW YOUR RECIPES - use cheaper cuts of meat and use seasonal veges in each meal. eg diff chicken cuts

21. ADD LEGUMES - make soups or casseroles go further by adding a tin of chickpeas, kidney beans etc.

22. EXTEND MINCE - add cooked red lentils to meat dishes eg Bolognese = healthier and cheaper!

23. STAY IN SEASON - eg. out of season beans $7 compared to in-season beans $3

24. LEFTOVERS SOUP - at the end of each shopping week, chop up leftover veges and make soup, puree and freeze

25. EXTEND YOURSELF - add extras to leftovers and change the meal - potatoes, mixed veges or tin of beans

26. PASTRY PARCELS - you can make food into pies, or as a topping to food or dessert: tinned apples and cinnamon

27. SAVOURY PANCAKES - turn leftovers into savoury pancake filling! chicken casserole, pasta sauces, veges!

28. CRUMBLE IT - too much fruit? cut up, drizzle with honey and bake in a dish, cover oats/nuts - instant crumble YUM!

29. SHOP ONCE - stops you from impulse buying and saves extra cost later at the corner shop

30. SHOP ONLINE - again it takes away the impulse buying - once you reach your budget you can add or delete. Simple!

31. HAND-PICK YOUR PRODUCE - pick individual items as made-up trays can have nasty surprises. select ripeness too

32. BUY FRESH FOODS WEEKLY AND AVOID WASTE - you'll soon work out how much you eat per week. No waste.

33. USE DISCOUNT CARDS - sign up to store loyalty programs - eg Franklins and Bakers Delight.

BUDGET SAVERS WE LOVE (ACCORDING TO HEALTHY FOOD GUIDE)

Frozen Veges - as good for you as fresh and last longer

Tinned Apples - make a cheap desert with filo pastry

Green vege bags - keep veges fresher longer

Minced Garlic - cheap and simple way to have this healthy ingredient

Red Lentils - Add to soups and casseroles to stretch food longer

Multi Pack Plastic Containers - cook in bulk and save time and money

Grated Parmesan - you can freeze this and pull out when you need it - never goes mouldy

Freezer Bags - buy meat on special and freeze to use when you're ready

Cans of Beans - and fibre, stretch a meal

Bag of Rice - buy in bulk and save. Cook and freeze portions

Filo Pastry - turn leftovers into another meal by wrapping them

Olive Oil Spray - versatile and inexpensive and you'll use less oil

Tinned Tomatoes - bulk up a casserole or soup AND get another serve of veges

Pasta - cheap to buy, goes with almost any leftover and is filling.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Bargain

I found this website while searching for Wii console, it shows bargains from coffee to electronic stuff.

Entertainemnt Book

I finally got the Entertainment Book 2008/2009 today.

I read about the book from some forum and decided to see what it's like. Apparently, I could only get it from Charities or fund-raising events, so I searched for the charities on the internet. It took me an hour to decide which charities to buy it from, and I almost couldn't decide. Each charity has a noble cause so I decide on Guide Dogs only because the website to purchase the book looked more reliable and easy to use.

I even had used the voucher today, buying milkshakes at Donut King and bought quarter-chicken from Nandos (both on a 1-get-1 deal). I am looking forward to use voucher for Ratu Sari and my friends may plan to try this Indonesian Restaurant in Kingsford. Most probably, I would used up the coffee vouchers by end of the month hehehee.... and I find the vouchers for Nandos, McDonalds, Hungry Jacks, etc, within my budget limit. As for the restaurants, I would need to get a job first before splurging on meals at restaurants.

Another good offer is the $5 off from $100 gift card from Coles. That's is a 5% savings immediately and I would shop at Coles one of these days anyway.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Bank West

There are a few products that I'm thinking of getting once I am there.

1) Hero A/c
This transaction a/c has no maintenance fees, higher interest rates (5%) and unlimited free electronic transactions.
The not-so-good part is that the interest is only up to balance of $5K, so I should not put too much money there. Also, there has to be a $2K deposit every month, which should not be a problem.

2) Regular Saver a/c
High interest (9%) but only limited to $500/mth regular savings with no withdrawals.


3) Telenet Saver
Savings accounts at high interest rate at 7.25% (promotional rate at 7.75%), with no minimum deposits and no fees :) Yippeeee... It's much better than ING a/c I'm having right now

4) tddirect
Fixed deposit a/c. I think it's a bit higher than ING too.

5) Zero Master card
I'm so used to not paying annual fees for credit cards so I may just get this one.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Private Health Insurance

I decided to buy PHI in early Jan as advised by my friends in Australia. Since we have been trying for a baby for quite some time already, it would be good to have some coverage to reduce our hospital bill in case I'm pregnant later. Also, it would help if we decide to go for IVF.

There's a waiting period of 1-year so that is the reason why I bought the plan now. Also, since I just turned 31 I would need to pay extra levy/charge if I don't get PHI by next June after turning 31.

I was quite in a hurry to buy the plan so I asked among my friends for recommendation and decided to go with Medibank.

Transaction Account

I have been doing some research here and there to decide which bank and account type we want to open in Australia. Currently I have one with INGDirect and Citibank but would probably need to open one for joint account with my husband.

So far, I think BankWest looks good, but I thinkn we'll decide there and then. I just realise that we can even open a bank account from Singapore, using Westpac. The bad thing is, the account has monthly fee attached.

That brings me to another issue, it seems most of the transaction accounts have monthly fees attached. In Singapore, it's zero if minimum balance is >$500. I would need to find a bank that has a good transaction account (low fee with free atm transaction, etc), a high-interest saving account and free-fee credit card.

A great website to do the comparison is http://www.infochoice.com.au/

So the search continues...

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Rents likely to increase in 2008

oh no...... please quickly build more new houses... I'm eyeing a 3-bedroom townhouse near my friend's place (20km away from city) at $420/week. I'm torn between renting an apartment nearer to the city or renting a townhouse (with garden for my FIL and pool for me) further away from city.

INCREASING demand and lower vacancy rates will cause rents to increase during 2008, the Real Estate Institute of Australia predicts.

High demand for rental properties - caused by population growth and declining investor interest - suggests vacancy rates, running at an average 1.7 per cent, are unlikely to improve, it says. Increases in median rents can be expected in all states, the institute says in its 2008 real estate market outlook released today.

The likely increases follow across-the-country increases last year with rents for three-bedroom houses increasing by an average of 12.6 per cent to September 2007.

The institute says rental affordability is already a significant issue in several cities, notably in Darwin where the median rent for houses is $440 per week and for other dwellings $340 per week.

Darwin is now the most expensive rental location in Australia, although Sydney and Canberra renters also pay $340 median weekly rent for two-bedroom other dwellings.

The cheapest rental location is Adelaide at $255 per week for a three-bedroom house and $205 per week for a two-bedroom dwelling. But even there rents rose more than eight per cent in the year to September 2007.

The institute says investors have shied away from the housing market as interest rates have risen and to take advantage of other investment opportunities which have more favourable taxation treatment.

The slower transition from renting to buying, caused by the lowest first-home affordability rate in 22 years, was also impacting on the number of properties available for rental

A simple salary sacrifice

We may need to explore this when we got our job there. Do we have to decide what we want to 'salary sacrifice' before we sign our employment contract? hmm... not sure yet... gotta do more reading...


Discussions about the salary-sacrifice of non-cash employment benefits typically revolve around such big-ticket items as superannuation and cars. But wait a minute.

One of the fastest-growing benefits is the packaging of lunches and accompanying drinks – the tax benefits of packaging do not extent to salary-sacrificed alcohol.

In short, employers can enter arrangements that allow so-called in-house catering to be provided as an FBT-exempt benefit in their employees’ packages. This means that you pay for your lunch on pre-tax terms.

Under the tax rules, the food must be provided by your employer, and eaten on its premises. In practice, employers are increasingly entering arrangements for local shops to deliver the lunches of their employees’ choice from the shops of their choice. And the cost is charged against the employees’ salary packages.
Astute large employers are sending the daily orders through to selected shops electronically, and then the costs are electronically charged against the employees’ packages.

Just think that if your tax-rate is 31.5% a year, including Medicare, you would save almost a third of your lunch costs. This means a typical savings of hundreds of dollars a year for those who buy their lunches each day.
In a tight labour market – unemployment is at a 33-year low – employers have a big incentive to make such benefits readily available to their staff. And from an employee’s perspective, this is smart personal budgeting at one of its most simple levels.

Personal budgeting can begin in saving money in small ways. And slicing the cost of your lunch by almost a third – or more if you pay tax at a higher marginal tax rate – makes much sense.
Here’s to a cheap lunch.

(taken from: http://blogs.news.com.au/news/smartinvesting/index.php/news/comments/a_simple_salary_sacrifice/)

TOP 20 TIPS TO CUT REGULAR EXPENSES

1. Top up the car on Tuesdays, or Monday nights at a pinch - the cheapest time to buy petrol.

2. Join a car pool for work or use public transport.

3. Swap, don't buy - exchange books, DVDs and the like with friends.

4. Hunt for presents all year - so you can buy when they're on sale.

5. Put new soles on shoes - they'll last a lot longer.

6. Shop on the net - it's an easy way to compare prices and is often cheaper.

7. Drink tapwater - filtered if need be, instead of buying bottles or, worse, softdrinks.

8. Buy in bulk - especially fruit and vegies, even take it in turns with friends.

9. Scratch the Scratchie or Lotto ticket - unless you're super lucky you'll pay more than you win. Ditto for the pokies.

10. Cut back on takeaways.

11. Check the auctions in your newspaper - there could be a bargain couch lurking. Pay for the newspaper with a cheap subscription offer.

12. Hire a DVD instead of going out to the movies - or if you do want to see a new flick, take your own snacks with you.

13. Shop in one go - so you're not dashing off to a shop when you run out of something.

14. Cut out a packet of cigarettes or a drink a week.

15. Take your lunch to work more often.

16. Cook more than you need - and freeze the rest for future meals.

17. Don't take the kids with you to the supermarket - then they can't nag you for goodies.

18. Get the pets to tighten their collars - give them scraps and offcuts from the butcher rather than cans.

19. Pay cash only at the supermarket - then you're forced to stick to your budget
20 If you've got this far, well done - give yourself a treat.

How to save $10,000 on your current income

I might need to refer to this reading later there, so I'm saving it as an article first. It's taken from Essential Baby website.

SO it's not in the true spirit of the season but I'm going to tell you how to save $10,000. Besides nobody says you have to start right now. Although just between us, I would if I were you - after all Christmas is perfect for getting your priorities in order. But don't let me stop you writing out your gift list, since it'll be handy practice for what comes next. Oh dear, you're flagging already. Remember $10,000 is at stake here. There, that's better.

Christmas is one of the biggest expenses of the year but you can still enjoy it without going over the top. Ask people to bring a plate, says Lisa Montgomery, head of consumer advocacy at Resi Mortgage Corporation. "And consider introducing a Kris Kringle-style Christmas," she says. That's where everybody in the family buys one present. Um, yes, you only get one too. "The emphasis is then on spending time together, rather than simply spending money." Let's be conservative - and I take it as read you're normally very generous - and say this will cut your Christmas costs by $100. You can save this for next year, or how about donating it to charity?

EVERYDAY SAVERS ($1000)

Back to the list. You should draw one up for the supermarket as well if you don't already. The easiest way to stick to it is to leave the kids and the credit card at home. One's inconvenient in wanting stuff you don't need and the other's too convenient for the same reason.

Paying cash, after all, restricts you somewhat to your budget.
Once inside the supermarket, watch out for booby traps all over the place. Never go there on an empty stomach (for obvious reasons) and wear something warm (supermarkets are cooled slightly below comfort level because apparently this makes you hungry). Have you noticed the milk is always at the back? So are other essentials so you have to pass through aisles of temptation to get there.
"The end-of-aisle racks in supermarkets often given the impression of offering bargains. This is not always the case. The cheapest goods are often found on the top or bottom shelves," says Citibank in its http://www.usecreditwisely.com.au/ website of handy hints, though you might care to scan Investor's 20 tips (opposite) as well.

For basics such as sugar and flour Citibank says you can safely use cheaper house brands as well. Along with our 20 tips that's, say, a saving of $300 a year at least. Cut out the daily cappuccino on the way to work and don't hide the snack to go with it, so that's another $700. There, you've saved your first $1000 without having to do a thing. Well, going without having a thing or two perhaps but nothing you can't manage. And so to the heavy hitters.

MORTGAGE MAKEOVER (UP TO $10,000)
Giving the mortgage a makeover will do wonders for your finances and it doesn't necessarily mean paying it off faster though that is a help. Check what your interest rate is. My bet is you can do better and your lender knows it. The banks, for example, will knock up to 0.5 per cent off the standard variable rate for customers who threaten to take their debts elsewhere. On a $250,000 mortgage, that'll save you $84 a month, or a bit more than $1000 a year - $10,000 in about nine years. Wow, we're there already. Even if, like most borrowers, you're not paying the bank standard rate, there are still possible savings. For example, you might fix some or even all of your loan for five years at the best going rate which is a smidgin less than 8 per cent. Even after allowing for exit or switching costs, that's still potentially thousands over five years.

Making fortnightly instead of monthly repayments is another great way to save interest. But since that really means you're making one extra repayment a year (26 fortnights works out at 13 monthlies) that doesn't count on a technicality since the idea is to cut spending, not add to it no matter how great the reward.

CREDIT WHERE IT ISN'T DUE ($300)

The next target is the credit card. Forget the reward points if you don't pay off the card each month. You're better off ditching the fee and making sure you pay it off each month. The interest you save can then go toward a discount airfare. Check the zero or low-interest honeymoons as well. "Swapping a $2000 balance on a card with a rate of 18 per cent to a new card with a 12-month introductory rate of, say, 6 per cent could see you save $240 in interest for the first year," Citibank says.

A zero fee with zero interest - at least for a while - would have to be the credit card jackpot. The Coles Myer Source MasterCard has no annual fee and no interest for six months on transfers from other credit cards. That brings credit card savings to about $300 a year. Oh, one other thing. You can slash the interest on your credit card by re-financing it with a home equity line of credit. But there's a trap.

Pay it off with the same amount as you were before, otherwise you're switching from high-cost short-term to low-cost long-term debt - and could eventually finish up worse off.

BANK ON IT ($1500)

Don't mess with the bank. There's a fee lurking around every corner, from dishonoured cheques to penalty interest for going over your limit.
But the most common and easiest to avoid fee would have to be using another bank's ATM which will cost up to $2 a pop.

If there's one of those a week, just walking down the street would save you about $100 a year.

Often accounts have a withdrawal limit which if you exceed it racks up more fees. The best way to cut the number of withdrawals is to take more out each time, especially at a check-out because the extra cash out doesn't count as another withdrawal. That should be worth another $100 a year, shouldn't it? Alternatively, choose an account with a flat monthly fee of $5 such as Citibank's which has no limits, plus the bonus of no ATM fees if you use another bank's.

There are also big savings to be made if you make the mortgage your banking hub. Pay your salary into the mortgage and draw it down as you need it, or link a fee-free credit card to it which you pay off once a month. "We found consumers can save over $1300 a year by using a package of mortgage, transaction account and credit card, compared with stand-alone products within the same institution," says financial analyst Harry Senlitonga of Cannex.
POWER IT UP ($250)

Merging electricity and gas with one supplier, or signing a contract for a fixed period, will save about $100 a year.
Unfortunately this won't bring lower gas or electricity prices, but it will take most of the sting out of future increases.

That's the easy part. There are ways of saving as much if not more but they require some, er, energy. You'll have to switch off all the stand-by modes on the DVD-VCR player, TV, stereo, CD player and computer. This might mean waiting an extra, oh let's say three seconds for the thing to warm up when you switch it on, or in the case of my computer a good 10 minutes, but you'll save $150 a year on average, a survey by the Greenhouse Office found.

TALK ISN'T CHEAP (UP TO $500)
The key to working out the best phone deal is to look at the rate charged per call, rather than how many free ones you get or the rental. Also check out the flagfall - this can be the cost of a couple of calls before you even get a line.
Fortunately it's not too hard comparing packages as http://www.phonechoice.com.au/ has done it all for you. The website also has some useful tips about mobiles. Such as: the phone companies are phasing out free handsets from their plans.

And choose the same provider as your friends - calls to the same network are a lot cheaper. Unless you're in the bush, that is, where you'll just have to choose whatever works.
For capped plans, the traps are whether SMS and voicemail count in the cap, the high call rate if you exceed the limit and the 30-second timed calling blocks which can result in a 31-second call being charged at one minute.
Speaking of timed calls, remember the most expensive calls you can make are from the home phone to a mobile.

If you make a lot of interstate or overseas calls on your home phone, look out for specials and find out the so-called override four digit code of other phone providers. That way you can get onto another network's special rates without losing your normal discounts.

Even without teenagers in the house, you should save at least $100 a year with the right phone plan. With teenagers make that at least $500.
Using the internet for phone calls, known as VOIP, will save even more but you need a broadband connection. Then again sending emails would be cheaper. Which reminds me, if you link your internet service with the home phone and mobile, you'll get discounts for all three.

DRIVE AWAY (UP TO $5000)

You don't need me to tell you one of your biggest expenses is the car and that's not counting the price you paid for it.
Motoring groups estimate the average weekly running cost of a car when you take registration fees, fuel, insurance, interest and repairs into account is $200.
That's more than $10,000 a year and shows what a drain having a second car must be.
Even if you add in the cost of using public transport, getting rid of a car would be a net gain of about $5000 a year. Or form a car pool with friends and workmates.

THE TALLY

So fat that's more than $10,000 saved and I'll even throw in washing your clothes in cold water which will apparently save about $400 a year though the price of a cold shower is, I'm sure you'll agree, not worth it. And don't get me started on private health or home insurance, broadband, vet fees, holidays, the grog fridge in the garage or air-conditioning.

One last thing. Don't forget if you, um, save the savings, compound interest will kick in.
Saving $10 a week and investing it in a balanced fund earning 9 per cent a year would grow to $7289 after 10 years, MLC calculates.
If you cut spending by $30 a week and re-invest it, you'll have $21,866 in 10 years.