I
Money
Verified@ivangdavila
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SKILL.md
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Personal Finance Rules
Before Any Advice
- Ask about existing debts, income stability, and country of residence — generic advice without context is dangerous
- High-interest debt (credit cards, payday loans) must be paid first — no investment beats 20%+ guaranteed return of eliminating debt
- Emergency fund of 3-6 months expenses comes before investing — without it, any crisis forces selling at the worst time
Inflation Reality
- Cash in savings accounts loses purchasing power every year — 2-3% inflation means €10,000 becomes €7,400 in real terms after 10 years
- Long-term projections must use real returns (after inflation) — 7% real is honest, 10% nominal is misleading
- "Safe" bonds can lose to inflation — being conservative isn't the same as being safe
Investment Math
- Fees compound against you — 1% annual fee takes 25% of returns over 30 years
- Time in market beats timing the market — missing the 10 best days in a decade cuts returns in half
- Past performance predicts nothing — last year's top fund is often next year's loser
- Diversification is the only free lunch — single stocks are gambling, broad index funds are investing
Tax Awareness
- Every country has tax-advantaged accounts — ask which ones apply before recommending where to invest
- Capital gains, dividends, and interest are taxed differently — account type matters
- Tax loss harvesting and rebalancing have tax implications — don't ignore them
- Retirement accounts have withdrawal rules — early access often means penalties
Behavioral Traps
- Lifestyle inflation silently erases raises — a €5,000 raise that becomes €5,000 more spending changes nothing
- Loss aversion makes people sell winners and hold losers — the opposite of what works
- "I'll start investing when I have more money" is the most expensive delay — small amounts now beat large amounts later
- Checking investments daily increases bad decisions — less attention often means better returns
Insurance First
- Protect existing assets before growing them — health, disability, liability coverage
- Life insurance only matters if someone depends on your income
- High deductibles with lower premiums often make sense for those with emergency funds
- Insurance is for catastrophic risks, not minor inconveniences
Debt Hierarchy
- Not all debt is equal — mortgage at 3% is different from credit card at 22%
- Paying minimums on low-interest debt while investing the difference often wins mathematically
- Student loans and mortgages may have tax benefits — factor them in
- Debt-free feels good but isn't always optimal — opportunity cost matters
Practical Automation
- Pay yourself first: automate savings on payday — what's left is what you spend
- Automate bill payments to avoid late fees and credit damage
- Increase savings rate with every raise — split the raise between lifestyle and saving
- Annual rebalancing is enough — more frequent trading usually hurts
Red Flags
- Any "guaranteed" high returns — if it sounds too good, it is
- Pressure to decide quickly — legitimate opportunities don't vanish in 24 hours
- Complex products you don't understand — complexity hides fees
- Anyone who benefits from your investment decision giving you advice
Overview
Money offers practical personal finance rules for saving, investing, and avoiding traps. It stresses starting with your context (debts, income stability, country), paying high-interest debt first, and building a 3-6 month emergency fund before investing. It also covers inflation, fees, taxes, behavioral traps, insurance, and automation to help you act with discipline.
How This Skill Works
It codifies a decision hierarchy and habits: assess context, clear high-interest debt, fund emergencies, then invest in diversified index funds with low fees. It emphasizes real-return thinking (inflation-adjusted) and a disciplined automation approach: pay yourself first, automate bills, and rebalance annually.
When to Use It
- When you're deciding between paying down debt or investing
- When inflation erodes cash and you need real returns
- When choosing between single stocks and broad index funds
- When optimizing taxes and account types before investing
- When setting up automated savings and annual rebalancing
Quick Start
- Step 1: Assess debts, income, and country; identify high-interest debt to pay first
- Step 2: Build a 3-6 month emergency fund and automate savings on payday
- Step 3: Create a simple plan: invest in broad index funds, account for taxes, and rebalance annually
Best Practices
- Pay off high-interest debt first
- Build an emergency fund of 3-6 months of expenses
- Use real returns after inflation and beware misleading nominal returns
- Prefer diversified broad index funds; watch fees and avoid timing the market
- Automate savings, bill payments, and annual portfolio rebalancing
Example Use Cases
- Prioritize eliminating credit card debt before investing
- Calculate inflation impact: €10,000 with 2-3% inflation loses real value over 10 years
- Choose broad index funds rather than single-stock bets
- Use tax-advantaged accounts and understand differences in capital gains, dividends, and interest
- Set up pay-yourself-first automation and annual rebalancing instead of frequent trading
Frequently Asked Questions
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