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  • Let's say you get a windfall thanks to your excellent contributions to your employer like

  • me, or even inherited a chunk of change from your distant uncle, or you found a few grand

  • in a suitcase on a side of the highway, whatever.

  • You got some extra bread.

  • Let's figure out what to do with that extra scratch.

  • It's not easy to make sense of your finances.

  • I'm Shahien Nasiripour, and I want to meet people with an obsession to beat the system

  • and never leave money on the table.

  • And who better to tell me what to do with my money than a finance expert?

  • And luckily enough, I've got three of them right here.

  • Hi Shahien.

  • So we've got some extra money burning holes in our pockets.

  • What should we be thinking about?

  • Do you have toxic credit card debt?

  • Attack that first.

  • It's your double-digit interest rates.

  • It's moving you backwards very quickly.

  • Please get rid of that.

  • Don't even think about it.

  • If you've got a 15% credit card or a 23% credit card, and at the same time you've got a three

  • or 4% student loan hanging out there, we might be looking at your credit cards first and

  • think about where those dollars are best spent going forward.

  • Right now, we're concerned about the highest costing dollar.

  • Your credit card is a debt that is typically based on money that you've already spent.

  • Your finished.

  • It's time to pay off the debt.

  • You'll hear financial planners often talk about an emergency fund.

  • Then you'll hear them all say, "Three to six months is what you need."

  • Three to six months.

  • Three to six months of your living expenses in cash.

  • So the most important thing about portfolio construction is understanding which risks

  • your portfolio is open to.

  • So if you bought 100% of one individual stock and then that business goes out of business,

  • you go to zero.

  • That's go to zero risk.

  • Volatility, drawdowns, economic events.

  • This is part of the game.

  • If you're not equipped to handle the inevitabilities of markets going down and economic cycles

  • turning over, you better reassess your situation.

  • So you don't have to be emotionally impacted by these types of events.

  • Ideally, these will be diversified mutual funds, index funds, diversification, diversification,

  • diversification.

  • Make sure that you do have some fixed income in the portfolio even though fixed income

  • is not going to give you the rate of return that stock market does.

  • It serves as a temper in your portfolio.

  • It reduces the volatility.

  • It's not there to make you rich, but it's there to help you sleep at night.

  • How much volatility are we talking about when it comes to what allows you to sleep at night?

  • If your bonus has a sizable tax impact or even takes you into a higher tax bracket,

  • check to see if your employer has a deferred compensation plan.

  • The advantage of that is that your compensation, this bonus that you'll receive is not taxed

  • too, but goes into an account which will only be taxed to you when you begin taking the

  • funds out.

  • So you've paid off your debt and built a solid rainy day fund.

  • Bravo.

  • Now you're ready to invest.

  • If you're anything like me and terrified about managing your money, you may want to hire

  • someone like Douglas, Erica, or Ian.

  • Let's ask Bloomberg Reporter Suzanne Woolley about what we should be looking for if we're

  • looking to hire a financial advisor.

  • Fees, sometimes, we might not pay so much attention to it because sometimes they don't

  • seem like they're that big.

  • Over the years, they really can mushroom and eat away at your investment, particularly

  • if we're going into a slower growth environment.

  • A lot of people like fee-only planners, and part of that is just because it's so transparent.

  • You want to know what you're paying.

  • The real key is just to be very upfront and ask your planner, "What are your fees?

  • How they structure?"

  • Whether they are a fiduciary.

  • This means that they have to sell you the product that is in your best interest.

  • Maybe it's time for a financial tuneup, and for you, maybe that's saving cash or paying

  • down debt.

  • But personal finance is personal, so see what's right for you.

Let's say you get a windfall thanks to your excellent contributions to your employer like

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