Happy Labor Day… Work Toward Justice.

Obtain your freedom. Become financially free, because we all have Potencial Millonario.
Happy Labor Day my friends.

Best Regards,
Felix A. Montelara
Author: Potencial Millonario

The Huffington Post
By: Les Leopold Author, “How to Make a Million Dollars an Hour” (Wiley 2013)

Labor Day, established in the late 19th century, “is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers,” according to the Department of Labor’s website. It is a “tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.”

But today, much of the “strength, prosperity and well-being” of our hard labor is being siphoned into the coffers of Wall Street. Perhaps, in honor of our labor we should remind ourselves how we are being robbed blind.

The Financialization of the U.S. Economy:
The story starts in the mid-1970s when Wall Street began its long and highly successful campaign to eliminate New Deal financial controls that for a quarter of a century brought stability and prosperity to the nation. By the year 2000 Wall Street had achieved nearly total freedom to run a vast international set of casinos for its own enrichment, just as it had done before the 1929 crash.

Along the way virtually every aspect of the productive economy fell into the financial net. Corporations no longer were about making profitable products. Instead they were designed to please investors with short-term stock price gains. Vast conglomerates like GE made more money from finance than from production. Leveraged buyouts loaded our productive capacity with layer after layer of debt. The net result was the enrichment of CEOs and their Wall Street handlers.

One chart shows clearly how well deregulation worked for Wall Street. During the era of tough financial controls, average incomes in the financial sector and in the rest of the economy were about the same. But as regulations disappeared, Wall Street incomes soared. Making money from money replaced making money from things.

Globalization and Free Trade: The Bankers’ Dream
As banks financed the rapid the globalization of production, more and more of our productive capacity was shipped overseas along with good paying jobs. In fact Wall Street encouraged “free trade” so that developing nations could export to the U.S. in order to pay back their big loans to Wall Street banks. The bigger the debts of these struggling nations, the more Wall Street pushed for free trade. Meanwhile, our middle class standard of living stalled and decayed while Wall Street incomes soared along with CEO pay.

By 2006, Wall Street gobbled up more than 40 percent of all corporate profits. We were well on your way to becoming one of the most unequal countries in the world.

The Wall Street-created crash.
All that gambling and all those toxic assets finally came home to roost just like in 1929. Wall Street imploded taking down the rest of the economy and costing 8 million workers their jobs due to no fault of their own. For the first time in a generation Wall Street was on its knees. This was the time to take the country back from our financial elites. Instead our two Wall Street political parties bailed them out and asked almost nothing in return.

In fact, we asked so little from the $475 billion TARP bailout in 2008, those same bailed banks awarded themselves $140 billion in bonus money in 2009 for a job well done!

How much is that? That’s enough to hire 2.8 million entry level nurses. That’s enough to provide free tuition at every public college and university. That’s enough to prevent all the state and local service cuts that took place due to the Wall Street implosion. Instead we let the richest bankers in the world take our money as a reward for gambling our economy into the ground. Happy Labor Day!

Even Hank Paulson, the former chair of Goldman Sachs and Bush’s Secretary of the Treasury found such raw greed unbecoming: “To say I was disappointed is an understatement,” he said. “My view has nothing to do with legality and everything to do with what was right, and everything to do with just a colossal lack of self-awareness as to how they were viewed by the American public.”

To Paulson, the bonus robbery was basically a bad PR move causing financial elites like him to be viewed negatively by the American public. But really this was just Wall Street being itself, grabbing as much money as possible while adding negative value to the real economy.

The Big Banks Get Bigger
Not only did we bail out the criminal banks who ruined our economy and unemployed nearly 8 million workers overnight, and not only did we let them grab their obscene bonus money, but also, our two Wall Street political parties allowed the biggest banks to become even bigger and to continue to gamble with impunity. (Today, more bank money is used for gambling — proprietary trading — that is used for business loans.)

They are so big that they will have to be bailed out again when they crash and burn. They will keep the upside, while we pay them another round of Labor Day bonuses!

This colossal rip-off won’t be fixed on its own. No magic market forces will tame rising Wall Street-created inequality. No fairy-tale return to the gold standard will rectify the power imbalance between Wall Street and the rest of us. It will take enormous struggles by and for all working people to reverse these incredible injustices.

Hats off to the fast food workers lighting the way with their strikes for a modicum of justice for low-wage workers. Each and every low-wage worker knows what it means to be “working for the man.” Sooner or later we’ll realize that all of us are working for the man on Wall Street, and maybe then we’ll join our fast food brothers and sisters and head to the streets in the name of justice.

That will be a joyous Labor Day indeed.

Les Leopold is the executive director of the Labor Institute in New York. His latest book is How to Make a Million Dollars an Hour: How Hedge Funds get away with siphoning off America’s Wealth (Wiley, 2013).

We Have Reached 1000 Views World Wide. Wow…

I am so excited, Potencial Millonario the blog has reached an all time 1,000 views in over 30 countries in a very short time. I just want say thank you for your support and we will continue our quest to make you financially free. 

http://www.amazon.com/Potencial-Millonario-Libertad-Financiera-Spanish/dp/1441597379
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Do You Want To Become A Multimillionaire? – Grant Cardone

Seven Secrets of Self-Made Multimillionaires
Grant Cardone BY GRANT CARDONE
Learn More About : www.grantcardone.com/

Seven Secrets of Self-Made Multimillionaires First, understand that you no longer want to be just a millionaire. You want to become a multimillionaire.

While you may think a million dollars will give you financial security, it will not. Given the volatility in economies, governments and financial markets around the world, it’s no longer safe to assume a million dollars will provide you and your family with true security. In fact, a Fidelity Investments’ study of millionaires last year found that 42 percent of them don’t feel wealthy and they would need $7.5 million of investable assets to start feeling rich.

This isn’t a how-to on the accumulation of wealth from a lifetime of saving and pinching pennies. This is about generating multimillion-dollar wealth and enjoying it during the creation process. To get started, consider these seven secrets of multimillionaires.

No. 1: Decide to Be a Multimillionaire– You first have to decide you want to be a self-made millionaire. I went from nothing—no money, just ideas and a lot of hard work—to create a net worth that probably cannot be destroyed in my lifetime. The first step was making a decision and setting a target. Every day for years, I wrote down this statement: “I am worth over $100,000,000!”

No. 2: Get Rid of Poverty Thinking – There’s no shortage of money on planet Earth, only a shortage of people who think correctly about it. To become a millionaire from scratch, you must end the poverty thinking. I know because I had to. I was raised by a single mother who did everything possible to put three boys through school and make ends meets. Many of the lessons she taught me encouraged a sense of scarcity and fear: “Eat all your food; there are people starving,” “Don’t waste anything,” “Money doesn’t grow on trees.” Real wealth and abundance aren’t created from such thinking.

No. 3: Treat it Like a Duty – Self-made multimillionaires are motivated not just by money, but by a need for the marketplace to validate their contributions. While I have always wanted wealth, I was driven more by my need to contribute consistent with my potential. Multimillionaires don’t lower their targets when things get tough. Rather, they raise expectations for themselves because they see the difference they can make with their families, company, community and charities.

No. 4: Surround Yourself with Multimillionaires – I have been studying wealthy people since I was 10 years old. I read their stories and see what they went through. These are my mentors and teachers who inspire me. You can’t learn how to make money from someone who doesn’t have much. Who says, “Money won’t make you happy”? People without money. Who says, “All rich people are greedy”? People who aren’t rich. Wealthy people don’t talk like that. You need to know what people are doing to create wealth and follow their example: What do they read? How do they invest? What drives them? How do they stay motivated and excited?

No. 5: Work Like a Millionaire – Rich people treat time differently. They buy it, while poor people sell it. The wealthy know time is more valuable than money itself, so they hire people for things they’re not good at or aren’t a productive use of their time, such as household chores. But don’t kid yourself that those who hit it big don’t work hard. Financially successful people are consumed by their hunt for success and work to the point that they feel they are winning and not just working.

No. 6: Shift Focus from Spending to Investing – The rich don’t spend money; they invest. They know the U.S. tax laws favor investing over spending. You buy a house and can’t write it off. The rich, in contrast, buy an apartment building that produces cash flow, appreciates and offers write-offs year after year. You buy cars for comfort and style. The rich buy cars for their company that are deductible because they are used to produce revenue.

No. 7: Create Multiple Flows of Income – The really rich never depend on one flow of income but instead create a number of revenue streams. My first business had been generating a seven-figure income for years when I started investing cash in multifamily real estate. Once my real estate and my consulting business were churning, I went into a third business developing software to help retailers improve the customer experience.
Lastly, you may be surprised to learn that wealthy people wish you were wealthy, too. It’s a mystery to them why others don’t get rich. They know they aren’t special and that wealth is available to anyone who wants to focus and persist. Rich people want others to be rich for two reasons: first, so you can buy their products and services, and second, because they want to hang out with other rich people. Get rich — it’s American.
Do You Want To Become A Multimillionaire? – Grant Cardone
Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/222718#ixzz2bR5NWyxD

How to Save $1 Million Dollars (DailyWorth.com)

By Jocelyn Black Hodes, DailyWorth’s Resident Financial Advisor (Rebloged)

http://www.dailyworth.com

The elusive million dollar milestone…is it reachable? Well, in short, yes. But not without some careful planning and discipline. Time is a key factor, of course. It all depends on your age, when you plan to retire, what kinds of accounts you use, your investment costs, and your risk tolerance. The more you are able to save on a regular basis, the less risk you need to take and the less time it should take to hit that first million.

Start Saving Now

If you are 35 and starting from scratch, for example, you need to save around $735 per month to have $1 million by age 65, assuming an 8% average annual return. If you are 40, you need to save around $1,135 per month. If you were willing to take on more risk with your investments and managed to average a 10% annual return, you would only have to save around $506 per month from age 35, or around $850 each month from age 40. If you were more conservative, you would need to save more. You get the idea. (You can use the SEC’s calculator to plug in your age and determine monthly contributions.)

Keep in mind that these numbers do not take potential investment costs into account like management fees and fund expense ratios, which could decrease your annual returns by more than 2%. This means that you will likely need to contribute more and/or take on more risk to meet your goal. They also don’t take into account inflation and taxes (we’ll get to that in a minute).

Max Out Your Retirement Accounts

So, where is the best place to save this money for retirement? In tax-advantaged retirement accounts, of course! We’re talking about your 401(k), 403(b), traditional IRA and/or Roth IRA. These kinds of accounts allow you to avoid paying taxes on market growth (capital gains), which really makes a big difference in how much you can accumulate over the long run.

If your company has a plan available, the easiest thing to do is to save there through automatic payroll deductions. These types of plans have a 2013 contribution limit of $17,500 or $23,000 if you are over 50. If your company offers a matching contribution (a.k.a free money), you definitely want to put in at least as much as they will match.

If you have maxed out contributions to your company plan and still want to save more, you can put an additional total of $5,500 (or $6,500 if you are over 50) for 2013 in a traditional or Roth IRA. Remember that Roth IRAs — unlike their traditional counterparts — allow you to grow post-tax money that you can potentially pull out totally tax-free in retirement. Some companies even offer a Roth IRA option as well as a 401(k) within their company plan, which means that you could potentially save $23,000 per year of tax-free money (or more, if you’re over 50).

If you do not have a company plan available and are an entrepreneur, or even if you do have a company plan but also freelance part-time, you may be able to open a SEP IRA or Individual 401(k), two other types of traditional IRAs. These plans allow you to save as much as $51,000 (or $56,500 if you are over 50) on a tax-deferred basis, including any other potential savings in other retirement accounts.

Don’t Forget About Taxes and Inflation

It’s also important to remember that, while hitting that 7-figure mark is still a major milestone, $1 million today won’t be worth that much in 25 years. Assuming an average inflation rate of 3%, it would only be worth around $475,000 in 25 years. (Over the last decade, the average annual inflation rate was less than 2.5%, but over the last quarter-century, the average annual inflation rate has been a little over 3%.)

If you want an inflation and tax-adjusted balance of $1 million by age 65, you may need to save upwards of $2,600 per month from age 35, or $3,200 per month from age 40, assuming an 8% return, and not including investment fees or state taxes. (We know: GULP.) Of course, that’s also assuming that you’re starting from scratch and accounting for 3% annual inflation. (You can do your own calculations with Bankrate’s inflation calculator tool.)

We know that may seem daunting; most people aren’t in a position to save $2,600 or more per month. But it does highlight the importance of starting early, or retiring a little later, in order to reach your retirement savings goal. Hopefully, you don’t have to start from scratch and you can build upon some base savings. You will help yourself a lot by saving extra cash (e.g. bonuses, tax refunds, inheritances) in tax-advantaged retirement accounts whenever possible, opening no or low-fee IRAs at a discount brokerage firm, and choosing lower-cost investments like indexed mutual funds and exchange-traded funds. Whatever your goal, the most important step you can take is to start saving anything you can now so your money can start growing and you’ll be that much closer to reaching $1 million, or whatever your personal retirement savings goal may be.

http://www.dailyworth.com

529 vs otros sistemas de ahorro educativo

kiplinger’s
This is an article from Kiplinger which I love to reblog. Thank you Kiplinger.Custodial Accounts vs. 529 Plans 

Which type of account would be best to save for a child’s college fund?

By Kimberly Lankford, From Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, May 2013

My wife and I would like to start college accounts for our grandkids. We had custodial accounts for our kids in the 1980s, but those accounts seem to be out of favor now. What vehicle gives our money the best chance to grow over 20 years while minimizing taxes? We plan to open each account with $1,000 and have $50 automatically deposited each month. Financial aid is not a concern. –Doug and Deb Scharp, Portage, Mich.

Custodial accounts—called UGMAs, after the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, or UTMAs, after the Uniform Transfers to Minors Act—are a less-attractive way to save for college than they once were. Until a few years ago, these accounts were taxed at the kids’ low rates; now any investment income above $2,000 for children younger than 19 and full-time students younger than 24 is taxed at the parents’ higher rate. The first $1,000 of the child’s investment income in 2013 is tax-free, and the next $1,000 is taxed at the child’s own rate.

Money in a 529 plan, by contrast, grows tax-deferred, and the earnings can be used tax-free for qualified college costs. You may also get a state income tax break for your contributions. To qualify for the state tax break, you generally need to contribute to your own state’s 529 plan (although Arizona, Kansas, Maine, Missouri and Pennsylvania allow a deduction for contributions made to any state’s plan). Some states let anyone take a tax deduction for their contributions; others give the tax break only to the owner of the account. In Virginia, the account owner even gets the break on contributions to the plan from nonowners.

In states where only the owner gets the tax break, it’s a good idea for parents and grandparents to open separate accounts so they can both deduct their contributions. There’s no limit on the number of 529 accounts that can be opened for one child. Seewww.savingforcollege.com

for details.

Got a question? Ask Kim at askkim@kiplinger.com.

Read more at http://www.kiplinger.com/article/college/T002-C001-S003-custodial-accounts-vs-529-plans.html#B5GzLJdcU48xDsuk.99

The Internet Guide to Funding College and Section 529 College Savings Plans. Savingforcollege.com
www.savingforcollege.com

Are You One of the TSP Millionaires?

This was from February 2, 2012 :  Are you one of the 208 TSP Millionaires? Yes it is possible and guess what 208 Federal Employees have done it.   According to Mike Causey WFED.

Are You One of the TSP Millionaires?

Enjoy, Felix A. Montelara Author: Potential Millionaire

http://www.fedsmith.com/2012/02/02/208-tsp-millionaires-enjoy-big-return-january/

Are You One of the TSP Millionaires?

Update: From Mike Causey | @mcauseyWFEDhow do we stack up against the 4,167 feds who have $1 million-plus accounts? Or the 21,000 who are almost there and the 21,458 whose account balances are between $750,000 and $999,999?”

As you can see we went from  208 TSP Millionaire in 2012 to 4,167 in 2015. I will keep updating this page as time goes by.

Are You One of the TSP Millionaires?

I hope this opens your mind to the possible.  Let me know if you are approaching the 21,458 or if you are one of the 4167 already there.

It matters because we all are Potential Millionaires.

Best regards,

Felix A. Montelara

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