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						Your Money: Ditch the Resolution - Do a year-end review 
						instead
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		 [January 03, 2020]  By 
		Chris Taylor 
 NEW YORK(Reuters) - It is hardly a secret 
		that people rarely stick to New Year's resolutions - only about 8% of 
		people actually make it to the finish line with their goals, according 
		to studies from the University of Scranton, in Pennsylvania.
 
 So here is a better idea for your financial life: Before you look 
		forward, look backward.
 
 A year-end spending review is a far superior way to revamp your 
		financial life. Instead of gauzy, improbable thinking about what you 
		might do, you face the cold, hard truth about what you actually did.
 
 “We can only manage what we measure,” said Sarah Newcomb, director of 
		behavioral science at fund research firm Morningstar. “If you're not 
		even measuring your own spending, then basically you're just flying 
		blind.”
 
		
		 
		
 This is especially true for the holiday season, when money seems to exit 
		our wallets at hyperspeed. Average holiday spending on gifts and travel 
		was slated to exceed $1,000 apiece for 2019, according to the National 
		Retail Federation. In fact, among those who took out holiday debt in 
		2018, 35% of us were still trying to pay it off this past fall, 
		according to personal finance site NerdWallet.com.
 
 “Use a big event like the end of the year as a catalyst to do something 
		you should be doing on a regular basis," said Dan Egan, director of 
		behavioral finance and investing at Betterment.com.
 
 If you have not been tracking your dollars, it can seem a daunting task. 
		A few ideas on how to figure out where all that money went in 2019 – and 
		how to do better in 2020:
 
 * Open that annual credit-card statement
 
 In the New Year, credit-card companies send out roundups of everything 
		you have purchased in 2019. Typically, you might just ignore it. Don't.
 
 For one thing, the documents are useful for tax planning, since 
		purchases are often divided into spending categories that can help 
		identify deductions. They are also excellent for shock value, to force 
		yourself to see how your cash was deployed.
 
 If an entire year of spending is too overwhelming to digest, break that 
		survey period into something smaller, like two months, advised Egan.
 
 You can also focus on specific pain points, like pulling up your Amazon 
		purchase history for 2019. Shocked yet?
 
		
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“Take an honest look at what your life is costing you,” Newcomb said. “If some 
of those costs are frivolous and are purchases you regret, that is a valuable 
thing to take away.” 
* Put fintech apps to work
 A typical excuse for those who do not keep track of spending: It is too 
complicated and confusing. But with all the fintech apps now available, that 
excuse does not really wash.
 
 “We encourage our clients to check their ‘You Need A Budget’ app every morning 
over a cup of coffee,” said Brenna Baucum, a financial planner in Salem, Oregon. 
“It takes only one or two minutes to sort their latest transactions. Then, after 
30 days, they have some handle on where their money goes. Most often, the 
results shock them.”
 
Mint.com is a popular app and one game-changer, according to financial planner 
Salim Boutagy of Westport, Connecticut, is its "Trends” section, where you can 
see how your spending has shifted over the last few months or years.
 * Calculate the unknown
 
 In performing an annual spending review, one thing will probably jump out at 
you: The sheer volume of expenses that were totally unplanned and unforeseen.
 
“We’re all pretty good at estimating common expenses like electricity and phone 
and internet access,” said Morningstar's Newcomb. “But we are very bad at 
predicting the size and frequency of exceptions.”
 That might mean car repair, or home improvements, or medical bills, or 
last-minute vacations. When you see how much of 2019’s spending was a total 
surprise, then you can build a similar buffer into next year’s budget.
 
 Once you have done your spending X-ray for 2019, it is time to rework what 
Betterment’s Egan calls your “Top-Down Budgeting.” That means setting broad 
guidelines – like committing to saving a specific amount every month.
 
 “The point is not to be as austere as possible and deprive yourself of all joy,” 
Egan said. “The point is to get to a right balance.”
 
 (Editing by Beth Pinsker; Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.)
 
				 
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