Personal Finance - Personal Cash Flows
Posted: Mon Mar 26, 2012 8:41 am
This is one of those oddball questions which really has nothing to do with investing per se but the responses might be interesting. Rather this is a question about behavior with money.
The question is, what does your personal cash flow look like?
I will use myself as an example. Being a salaried stooge, I have the benefit of a boring, constant stable pay check at the first of every month. This shows up in a checking account.
Now before I see it, chunks are flayed out by the government, and then a chunk is set into my tax deferred savings.
The take home pay comes to me. Immediately three things happen in this order:
1. I shove some of it away into a special savings account. We'll call this the Special Account.
2. A big chunk of it goes into another savings account we'll call Annually Recurring Expenses. These are things I tend not to have to buy every month necessarily, but they do tend to come up once or more within 12 months. I do have one item that's every 24 months, but since it's pretty predictable I just save cash for it anyway. I tweak this amount slightly each month as my goals and circumstances change. It's really only one account but I break it out to something like 35 sub accounts on a spreadsheet.
At this point I am left with the money that's going to blow out the door in 30 days or less. This just stays in the checking account it was deposited into.
At this point the lion's share of my spending is done almost as immediately. It just goes right out the door since a lot of my bills come in around the 5th-7th of the month. Honestly in the first week of a given month I do 70+% of my spending for that month.
The entirety of the month I keep a running tab of all money spent for anything. Once I reach as much as I got paid on the 1st, I'm done. Seriously I'm done. I can't buy anything else. I count anything I put in a savings account as an expense for these purposes.
I have set limits for how much I can spend on certain categories too, but some months I rob from one to add to another. Like this month I took some extra trips so I would up driving more so I used an extra 10 gallons of gas, but efficient grocery shopping meant I didn't spend very much on food so I diverted funds accordingly.
At the end of the month I sweep all allowances for any unspent amounts. This goes into yet another account, one I keep in case I should go over in a category one month. If the balance in this account ever got very high I'd sweep it into the Special Account, but it's never very much because I keep it running as lean as possible to begin with; mostly what gets put in there is a result of credit card rewards. The idea is that if we have another record hot snap in July again, I have budgeted enough to pay the power bill but on an average basis, so I need to keep the surplus from cheap months.
What happens in reality is I do everrything in my power to not go over the allowance ever or find ways to save in other categories that month so this little account keeps building up here and there. I'm not consistently good at figuring out the exact pattern of the kinds of expenditures but I generally have a strong feel for the total.
I then check the Special Account balance. If it's enough to invest that month (I don't like to invest terribly small amounts due to fees, costs etc.) I then do so.
I track all expenses to the penny, save for cash purchases. When I take cash out, I expense it right away to whatever category. I record all expenses immediately. If I incur an expense that will be paid later, I record the expense, write the check ahead of time, schedule the payment online, etc. etc.
The impetus here is that I have been told all of this is absolutely unnecessary and that it is, quite frankly, batshit insane and sensible people have one checking account and one savings account and do not do such things. Well I'm not changing I don't care if it is crazy.
It's certainly poor (non)accounting, all I'm really doing is adding up a column of numbers until things get to equal to another number. I used to keep a personal general ledger and could actually generate personal financial statements for myself. But that was ridiculous and too much work for no real purpose.
But I am curious if I'm really that complex compared to others.
The question is, what does your personal cash flow look like?
I will use myself as an example. Being a salaried stooge, I have the benefit of a boring, constant stable pay check at the first of every month. This shows up in a checking account.
Now before I see it, chunks are flayed out by the government, and then a chunk is set into my tax deferred savings.
The take home pay comes to me. Immediately three things happen in this order:
1. I shove some of it away into a special savings account. We'll call this the Special Account.
2. A big chunk of it goes into another savings account we'll call Annually Recurring Expenses. These are things I tend not to have to buy every month necessarily, but they do tend to come up once or more within 12 months. I do have one item that's every 24 months, but since it's pretty predictable I just save cash for it anyway. I tweak this amount slightly each month as my goals and circumstances change. It's really only one account but I break it out to something like 35 sub accounts on a spreadsheet.
At this point I am left with the money that's going to blow out the door in 30 days or less. This just stays in the checking account it was deposited into.
At this point the lion's share of my spending is done almost as immediately. It just goes right out the door since a lot of my bills come in around the 5th-7th of the month. Honestly in the first week of a given month I do 70+% of my spending for that month.
The entirety of the month I keep a running tab of all money spent for anything. Once I reach as much as I got paid on the 1st, I'm done. Seriously I'm done. I can't buy anything else. I count anything I put in a savings account as an expense for these purposes.
I have set limits for how much I can spend on certain categories too, but some months I rob from one to add to another. Like this month I took some extra trips so I would up driving more so I used an extra 10 gallons of gas, but efficient grocery shopping meant I didn't spend very much on food so I diverted funds accordingly.
At the end of the month I sweep all allowances for any unspent amounts. This goes into yet another account, one I keep in case I should go over in a category one month. If the balance in this account ever got very high I'd sweep it into the Special Account, but it's never very much because I keep it running as lean as possible to begin with; mostly what gets put in there is a result of credit card rewards. The idea is that if we have another record hot snap in July again, I have budgeted enough to pay the power bill but on an average basis, so I need to keep the surplus from cheap months.
What happens in reality is I do everrything in my power to not go over the allowance ever or find ways to save in other categories that month so this little account keeps building up here and there. I'm not consistently good at figuring out the exact pattern of the kinds of expenditures but I generally have a strong feel for the total.
I then check the Special Account balance. If it's enough to invest that month (I don't like to invest terribly small amounts due to fees, costs etc.) I then do so.
I track all expenses to the penny, save for cash purchases. When I take cash out, I expense it right away to whatever category. I record all expenses immediately. If I incur an expense that will be paid later, I record the expense, write the check ahead of time, schedule the payment online, etc. etc.
The impetus here is that I have been told all of this is absolutely unnecessary and that it is, quite frankly, batshit insane and sensible people have one checking account and one savings account and do not do such things. Well I'm not changing I don't care if it is crazy.
It's certainly poor (non)accounting, all I'm really doing is adding up a column of numbers until things get to equal to another number. I used to keep a personal general ledger and could actually generate personal financial statements for myself. But that was ridiculous and too much work for no real purpose.
But I am curious if I'm really that complex compared to others.