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Saturday, August 2, 2008

Another Jeep Liberty?

I've told myself ever since that New Year's Eve day in 2002 when I purchased an '03 Liberty brand new that I would run that puppy into the ground. The original terms of the SUV were 66 months at 5.9%. I got out of that pretty quick, switching it to a CC with 3.9% BT for life terms, then 0% for life, which is what it's been at for a few years now. Well, I continued making original payment amounts for a long time even though with the reduced rate, I didn't need to. Lo and behold, 66 months have just flown by and the Jeep is technically and financially all mine, even though the 0% card has other large purchases on it mixed in with the two car payments. One thing I regret doing about a year ago was losing the actual payoff figure on the two cars. I'm paying about $400 a month since that is the minimum payment, but the cards are 0% for Life and I'm not in any rush to lose that cushion by paying more than I have to. One day I am going to have to figure that out, but the cars are in good shape and not going anywhere.

Well, the other day I was talking to my father, another Liberty owner, who trades in his Jeeps every other year, pays it off completely, and then uses the barely two year old, great condition Liberty Limited to offset the new Jeep's price. I got to thinking that maybe this next time around, in February, I can get in on this somehow and come out with a two year old Limited with 30K miles. I know he takes care of his cars (oil change, washes, drives easy) too. Something to think about - he could take my car and trade it in, and whatever the difference between the two trade-in values I would owe him. I'm mulling it over.

Another Day, Another Deal...

I got my first bit of income in August today. PNC Bank was running a promotion that gave you $100 for opening up a checking account, and it finally paid today, one day after my direct deposit went through. One of the fastest payoffs I've seen, although it did take awhile for the account to open and to get the paperwork. The hundred went to the Summer Savings, which stands at $3938, not bad for August 2.

Another opportunity I took advantage of today was a Discover Card promotion with Fandango. Any movie ticket you buy at Fandango with a Discover Card is buy one, get one free. I used it a couple weeks ago to see the IMAX Dark Knight with a friend. I got two tickets for $12. Pretty sweet, and I got the popcorn free too. Anyway, that deal ended pretty quickly, but I got word on Fatwallet that the promotion was back up and running. Today my daughter and I went to see Wall-E for $7. Again, can't beat that.

Just started contributing to my Roth again. Took some time off because I was getting behind in some bills. So far in 2008, I'm at $800 and putting in $300 a month. I'm planning on putting a grand in from the Countrywide CD maturing this month. Keeping up $300/month, that will put me at $4200 for tax year 2008 of the limit of $5000. Hopefully, another $800 will make its way in there to max out the contribution, and I can work out a plan for my wife's as well.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Summer Lovin'

Yes, I know. February to August is like half a year. So what? We've been living just like everybody else. Time passes.

With our summer vacation half gone and the year more than halfway through, I figured a financial update was due. My summer savings goal of 7K was almost reached; I squirreled away roughly $6200, of which $3800 is left. I have a mortgage payment and big credit card bill due in the next two weeks, which will eat up all but $1000 of that so the belt tightening has begun.

I'm not quite as worried this summer as in year's past, which is curious because I'm not even working! Usually, I would have gotten my first summer school paycheck today and that cash would help get me through to our first paychecks in September. This year, however, I didn't get the summer school gig and didn't care all that much. My aces in the hole were two CDs maturing in mid-late August, earning me roughly $4000. Knowing I have that money to fall back on has really eased the annual financial pressure as school just starts. Next year, though, I'm going to try a bit harder for that summer school job.

The summer started pretty well financially. I keep forgetting my wife gets an extra paycheck at the end of the year, which was pleasant like always. Also, I earned some extra professional development hours through a special opportunity at work and the $800 stipend I was expecting turned into $1400. Some financial deals happened to work out right at that time as well like a BOA Keep the Change award ($250), two Chase rebate checks ($200), Chase checking account promotion ($125), Discover Card promotion ($100), and an AMEX error in my favor ($200)*. This all happened over a 10-14 day period of time - made me feel like we were rolling in iti for awhile. I have regularly been getting about $200 a month in interest from a couple accounts as well, which I have been putting to unexpected bills like tires for my wife's car and expected ones like the next 6 months car insurance.

The AMEX error thing was pretty cool. Late last year I got an offer from AMEX stating that if I opened up one of their Business Gold Rewards Cards and spent a thousand, I would receive $200 back as a statement credit. Sweet deal, too good to pass up. Technically, I didn't apply for it quickly enough though in my conversation with the CSR, he assured me the timeframe wouldn't come into play. Fast forward a couple months. It took me awhile to put the grand on it. I was right in the middle of using the Citi CashReturns cards that gave 5% rebate on everything, and it bothered me that I would waste $50 of rebate money to do this deal. So I waited until those 5% deals ended.

My spending was still within the allotted time so I felt pretty good. But when statements kept going by with no credit, I started getting antsy. The paperwork (which I kept thankfully) did say the credit would take 6-8 weeks, but when 8 weeks came and went I started contacting them. It took a couple phone calls and they brought up my late application time. I argued a bit, sounded upset. They took pity on me and credited me the $200 as a "courtesy". Happy day. Well, guess what? A couple weeks ago, I just happened to look at this account, which I don't use, and I see a $200 negative balance. Seems like the promotion got fulfilled anyway. Should I give the other $200 back? What would you do?