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  • Worst Financial Mistake

    Your Worst Financial Mistake

    My husband and I have managed, so far, to avoid making a truly devastating financial mistake. I wish I could say this is because we’re super savvy about money. But the truth is that, while we are diligent about saving, cautious with debt and try to do our homework on investments, there’s a strong element of luck involved.

    That’s not to say we haven’t made boneheaded choices that have hit our bank accounts — sometimes hard. Take my brilliant (not) decision 12 years ago, at the height of the Internet bubble, to put $2,000 in the Janus Mercury fund, which had dazzled us with its soaring performance. (I know, I know! All I can say is that I wasn’t alone. At the peak of the dot-com bubble in early 2000, half of the money flowing into mutual funds went to Janus funds, according to the Times columnist Joe Nocera.)

    We all know how that story ended: Mercury burst along with the tech bubble, and so did most of my hard-earned money.

    So I was somewhat comforted to read the results of a study just released by the Consumer Federation of America and the financial services firm Primerica, which found that two-thirds of middle-class Americans admit to having made costly financial mistakes.

    Sixty-seven percent said that in the past they had made at least one “really bad” financial decision, and nearly half acknowledged making more than one. The median, or typical, cost of these blunders was $5,000, but the average was $23,000 (apparently because a few of those errors were real whoppers).

    The analysis is based on a national telephone survey of 2,015 adults, conducted in July by ORC International. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points for middle-class queries.

    Despite conceding such errors, though, large majorities of those surveyed said they thought they were “good” or “excellent” at managing their finances, like budgeting their income, managing credit card debt and saving for retirement.

    Maybe that’s because they learned a lesson from their mistakes. (My painful Mercury debacle taught me a hard but important one, about the folly of following the crowd and chasing hot returns.)

    Or, maybe they’re just all in denial.

    What’s the worst financial decision you’ve ever made, and how much did it cost you? Do you still think you’re good at handling your finances, despite your mistake?

    http://bucks.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/...al-mistake/?hp

  • #2
    Re: Worst Financial Mistake

    Originally posted by don View Post


    Despite conceding such errors, though, large majorities of those surveyed said they thought they were “good” or “excellent” at managing their finances, like budgeting their income, managing credit card debt and saving for retirement.



    Filed alongside throw all the bum out of Congress, but my guy is good.

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    • #3
      Re: Worst Financial Mistake

      Originally posted by cjppjc View Post
      Filed alongside throw all the bum out of Congress, but my guy is good.
      I remember my Driver's Ed teacher in high school telling us about a survey. IIRC, something like 90% of drivers consider themselves to be above average in driving skill.

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      • #4
        Re: Worst Financial Mistake

        I've done much worse than that. *sigh*

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        • #5
          Re: Worst Financial Mistake

          My biggest financial faux pas - the perfect storm. I just made a tidy return on a property sale and an endeavor I had heard about through a friend for some time - showing zero interest - was buying used machinery in the US and selling it to Mexican sugar processors. He had brochures, rode the campaign train with Bush up the coast, was often in Mexico - he only needed a little more capital to close the deal. Because I was flush - not pressured, it was MY IDEA - through someone I trusted (his nephew got burned as well) I bit. It was all a hoax. Lost $25K. Within a week I knew I had made a blunder, as soon as the afterglow from the property sale faded. My friend would have killed him if he hadn't suffered a fatal heart attack first. Naturally the shill came to the funeral . . .

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          • #6
            Re: Worst Financial Mistake

            I used to buy a roll of junk silver dimes or quarters from time to time, but stopped when it went over $5.25 in the mid- 90's. Thought it had gotten too expensive. If I had only bought a roll a month all those years...

            Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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            • #7
              Re: Worst Financial Mistake

              I sold my stock in Apple computer in 1987.

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              • #8
                Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                I bought a small position in Apple computer in 2004 and sold it in 2006

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                • #9
                  Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                  3x leveraged short S&P 500 ETFs, I'm embarrassed to say.

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                  • #10
                    Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                    yup been there, bought 2x inverse long treasuries (TBT) a few years ago because rates have to rise right?
                    I also bought UNG when it was cheap? Just to see it get cheaper. Fortunately they were nibbles an not large allocations.

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                    • #11
                      Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                      I worked 3 doors from the original Wendy's. Someone talked about getting a franchise. I decided it was not going to make a go of it

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                      • #12
                        Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                        Originally posted by jiimbergin View Post
                        I worked 3 doors from the original Wendy's. Someone talked about getting a franchise. I decided it was not going to make a go of it
                        I know exactly where that Wendy's was in Columbus, at the corner of Fifth and East Broad.
                        They closed it in 2007.

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                        • #13
                          Re: Worst Financial Mistake

                          Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
                          I know exactly where that Wendy's was in Columbus, at the corner of Fifth and East Broad.
                          They closed it in 2007.
                          I worked at Columbus Mutual Life right up the street.

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