Morningstar’s 30-Minute Money Solutions: A Step-by-Step Guide to Managing Your Finances
Add comments- ISBN13: 9780470481578
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
Quick financial advice for long-term financial stability-no matter where the stock market is heading Individuals face money challenges today that were unimaginable just a few short years ago. How can you meet the money demands of housing, college savings, retirement, and other financial goals without spending all of your spare time focused on them? Morningstar’s Director of Personal Finance, Christine Benz, gives you the tools for tackling your money challenges. This practical guide breaks down important financial tasks into digestible, doable chunks-each task taking just 30 minutes or less. To keep your finances on track, you’ll also receive access to Benz’s exclusive online tools and worksheets that allow you to apply her principles to your specific financial situation. Lays out the tools to get organized, including setting up a system for tracking your money and important financial documents, setting financial goals, and developing a … More >>
Morningstar’s 30-Minute Money Solutions: A Step-by-Step Guide to Managing Your Finances


April 16th, 2010 at 3:54 pm
Based on the reviews I was expecting advice which I hadn’t seen before in my financial education. The advice in this book was ok, but very basic and I didn’t learn anything striking….there were no “moments of illumination”. This is a good book for someone with no financial knowledge who is just starting out.
Rating: 3 / 5
April 16th, 2010 at 6:41 pm
I am a retired banker and I get asked financial management questions a lot, and I was looking for the perfect book for someone who is starting to manage their financial affairs. Not just young people, but people who have no financial training, such as new widows or divorcees or those worried about retirement planning…… or engineers or liberal arts majors.
The pluses with this book start with the fact that it assumes NOTHING, and the breadth of subjects covered is impressive. She has also done a good job of breaking a possibly daunting project into 25 tasks of 30 minutes each. It is also reasonable to skip over things you know and just go to the things you want to learn as chapters more or less stand alone. Christine is one of my favorite columnists and she writes in a VERY approachable style unlike many financial gurus.
Why 4 stars and not 5? I personally get a little tired of each chapter starting with “Samantha and Charlie had such-and-such a problem….” as I think no one is going to read this book unless they already know they need help…. trying to convince them there’s a problem seems like a waste of time. Secondly, the “30 minutes” for each task starts after you have assembled the necessary records and paperwork. In my experience very few people have the necessary paperwork readily available - or even available at all - so you may have to do a lot of background work before the 30-minute task is possible. Also, don’t be surprised that some of the more complex topics (taxes, estate) give you just a surface view and refer you to your CPA or attorney. Finally there is little discussion of picking/buying individual stocks or bonds…. all of Christine’s investment recommendations relate to mutual funds. This is no surprise: she has worked most of her career as an analyst of mutual funds and there are many advantages to using such vehicles. But if you are looking for even basic advice on owning individual bonds (which can be very viable solution even for beginners, in certain situations) look elsewhere. And I think her discussion of the risks in bond funds is somewhat brief. As to picking/buying individual stocks, it may well be that mutual funds or ETFs are the best solution…. just be aware that this is her approach.
So a good book for beginners (and therefore good as a gift) but it stays pretty basic.
Rating: 4 / 5
April 16th, 2010 at 6:49 pm
This is a very well-written and practical book, as I hope to describe. Morningstar is a reasonably well-known and well-regarded investment research firm, and the author, Christine Benz, is Morningstar’s Director of Personal Finance. Benz rose rather quickly through Morningstar’s analyst ranks–she eventually became the director of all Morningstar’s mutual fund analysts–and she would have had a crack at a top corporate job, had she not decided to work in the area she loves best, financial planning.
The “30-minute” part of the title does not mean that you can read this book in 30 minutes or that you can build a personal financial plan in that short a time, either. The book is divided into 11 parts, and each part has several chapters that are oriented to help you accomplish specific goals in 30 minutes. So, the book’s title might have been “36 Chapters of 30-Minute Discussions about Financial Planning.” But that doesn’t grab me very well.
If you have a particularly complex financial situation, this book isn’t going to solve all your problems. Indeed, it won’t tell you everything you could possibly know about a number of financial topics. (If it claimed to cover everything completely, I’d be very suspicious.) However, it will help a large majority of the public. A key attribute of the book is that it breaks down the financial planning process into manageable, doable steps. You can make a list of the steps relevant to your situation, check them off one at a time, and move on. Here is how the book is organized:
Part One: Find Your Baseline. (1) Calculate your net worth, (2) See where your money goes, (3) Set your financial goals, and (4) Create a budget.
Part Two: Get Organized. (1) Create a bill-paying system, (2) Create a filing system, and (3) Create a master directory.
Part Three: Find the Best Use of Your Money. (1) Determine whether to pay down debt or invest, and (2) Decide where to invest for retirement.
Part Four: Get Started in Investing. (1) Find the right stock/bond mix, (2) Create an investment policy statement, (3) Invest for short-term and intermediate-term goals, and (4) Create a hands-off long-term portfolio.
Part Five: Invest in Your Company Retirement Plan. (1) Determine how good your company retirement plan is, (2) Decide between a traditional and Roth 401(k), (3) Select the best investments for your company retirement plan, and (4) Make the most of a subpar 401(k) plan.
Part Six: Invest in an IRA. (1) Determine what type of IRA is best for you, (2) Identify the best investments for your IRA, (3) Determine whether to convert your IRA, and (4) Roll over your retirement plan into an IRA.
Part Seven: Invest for College. (1) Find the right college saving vehicle, (2) Find the right 529 plan, and (3) Select the right investments for your college savings plan.
Part Eight: Invest in Your Taxable Account. (1) Identify the best investments for taxable accounts, (2) manage your portfolio for tax efficiency, and (3) Harvest tax losses.
Part Nine: Invest During Retirement. (1) Determine your portfolio withdrawal rate, (2) Build an in-retirement portfolio, and (3) Find the right sequence of in-retirement withdrawals.
Part Ten: Monitor Your Investments. (1) Conduct a portfolio checkup, and (2) Rebalance your portfolio.
Part Eleven: Cover Your Bases on Estate Planning. (1) Get started on your estate plan, (2) Handle beneficiary designations, and (3) Create a personal legacy.
Obviously, you don’t need to read the various chapters in sequence. This book does not emphasize complex solutions. Indeed, Benz is convinced that some of the best-laid plans are often the simplest ones. For example, just because there’s minute-by-minute coverage of the stock market doesn’t mean that successful investing involves frequent, rapid changes to your portfolio. Simplifying myself, I would say that a basic theme of this book is to save enough and have sensible investments.
Importantly, there is a companion website that’s “free and exclusive” to readers of this book. The website provides downloadable worksheets, useful financial calculators and other planning tools, and lists of Morningstar’s picks of investments for various goals. That’s a good idea.
In short, this will be a very helpful book for many individuals. If it merely starts you off on the right track, that’s an important accomplishment. Regardless of one’s age, it pays to know something about finances, yet this stuff is hardly taught in schools. Obviously, the best time to have planted an oak tree is 20 years ago. But the next best time is now, and that’s where this book comes in.
Rating: 5 / 5