Monday 9 July 2012

Shares already owned vs beers and chips.


Victor Billot NZ Alliance Party
 Advice to mum and dad investors
by Victor Billot

I was impressed and excited to read a local finance broker's advice to potential "mum and dad" investors in privatized public assets in the Otago Daily Times (Friday 6 July 2012). 
Mr Chris Timms of Craigs Investment Partners says any complaints about ordinary Kiwis not being able to get in on the sale of the 21st century are misplaced.
It comes down to lifestyle choices and priorities. 
Cut out the cigarettes and takeaways, and you can be in to win. 
As Mr Timms says, you can save money, be healthier and buy some shares.
I agree. 
It is a well known fact that the working classes of New Zealand expend their lives in a haze of cigarette smoke, while simultaneously pouring jugs of beer down their throats and stuffing their ample jaws with burgers and chips.
It's amazing they actually find time to work full time and raise families.
In some cases, they linger on well into their seventies on superannuation (another drain on the economy.)
We need to buy back the assets we already own because we needed to give tax cuts to high income people, like finance industry high flyers for example. 
These tax cuts encourage them to work harder at buying the assets, that they are kindly selling for us, back to us.
If ordinary Kiwis wish to own the assets they already own, they need to understand in order to own them, they need to buy them back.
Confused? Don't worry. The hard thinking has already been done for us. 
But this process will need sacrifice. It will need hard times. There will be no gain without pain.
Our Prime Minister leads by example. 
For many nights, he lay awake in bed all night long wondering if shoveling millions of dollars of tax cuts to millionaires like himself was the right thing to do.
In the end he did it. 
He made the tough call on our behalf and we all benefited from it.
Some benefited more than others, but as they say, life's not fair.
As a result we are now in a position where we are being permitted to buy the assets we already own. 
Some of us just need some cash. (The rest of us, not the millionaires, that is.)
I believe Mr Timms is being too soft when he gently suggests cutting down on the smokes or turning away from the siren call of the cheeseburger. 
Like many he has been seduced into easy solutions.
I have a number of "tough love" recommendations to assist the average Kiwi "mum and dad" to get involved.
Firstly, do you really need that house? 
A shift into a tent at a local camp site could free up useful capital which you can then use to invest in your assets. 
Tents are flexible and can be moved to a cheaper site if required. 
Freedom camping is another possibility for the serious investor.
Secondly, examine your food budget. 
Food is over rated. It is well known that food is a major outgoing expense for many families. 
In economic terms, food comes with an opportunity cost. 
Every mouthful is literally eating into your potential investment portfolio. 
It is scientifically proven that a low calorie diet will ensure good health. 
Bread and water never hurt anyone, as long as you have an occasional vitamin pill to counteract the effects of scurvy.
Don't get too healthy though, as then you will hang around on the superannuation benefit. 
Thirdly, winter heating. Lots of savings to be made here.
Firewood is out of course and electricity can be reduced to a bare minimum. 
Go to bed early to keep warm – around 5pm. You won't be missing much as TV, stereo and a reading lamp are out, and dinner is a cold tin of baked beans. 
This is known as extra fast food because all you have to do is open the tin.
Fourthly, entertainment expenses.
Sadly as a nation we have not yet weaned ourselves off sport, music, cultural pursuits and hobbies. 
But go they must if we are to invest in what we are about to divest. 
Keep an eye on other family members and look for signs of frivolous enjoyment. 
Remember the best kind of fun is free. 
Take the kids down to the library and check out how your $1000 of mum and dad shares are going in the free newspapers (of course you have cancelled your ODT subscription as well).
But hurry up about it. The library will probably have to be sold soon to pay for the stadium.
These are only suggestions and you should adjust them to fit your own circumstances. 
Finance industry leaders do not need to worry about reducing restaurant meals, wine cellars, private schools, holiday homes, golf club memberships, Elton John concerts, skiing passes, Pacific island winter getaways etc.
Thanks to John Key's tax cuts and corporate perks, this group should already have enough money to maintain a more than comfortable lifestyle, and invest in assets as well. 
Indeed you will be able to have more of the above very soon, as a "gold class" mum and dad with $100 000 plus to invest.
It's what the finance industry call a "win win" solution. 
There is another option, however. 
The people of New Zealand could rise up and say, actually, mate, these assets are already ours and they were built and maintained by us for the benefit of all future generations – not just to line the pockets of the greedy and already prosperous by ripping off everyone else.
But that is unlikely. 
Us Kiwi mums and dads are a trusting bunch, and we want to believe what men in quality suits with nice smiles – like Mr Key – tell us. 
After all, they have our best interests at heart.

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