<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>				<article id="-1949359285"><artname>Setting Personal Financial Goals</artname><image file="KS78166_ec.jpg" align="left" alt="Photo of a Family on College Graduation Day" /><p>If you do not know where you are going, how <nodef>will</nodef> you know when you get there? This is very true about financial goals. You need to set financial goals to help you make wise financial decisions, and also as a reward for your efforts. Goals should be clear, concise, detailed, and written down. Unwritten goals are just wishes. Those who set goals and fail <nodef>will</nodef> find that they didn't set realistic goals to begin with. So, the first step in setting any goal is to determine what is realistic and what is not. In this article, you <nodef>will</nodef> learn how to set realistic and achievable financial goals.</p><callout align="right">You achieve your financial goals when you have the cash or assets available to satisfy some immediate financial need, want, or desire.</callout><p>You achieve your financial goals when you have the <glossary def="1. Currency and coins. Cash is also known as legal tender. 2. The currency, coins, bank balances, and (negotiable) money orders and checks that a business owns." primary="Cash">cash</glossary> or <glossary def="Anything of value that a person or organization owns. Examples include cash, securities, accounts receivable, inventory, and property such as land, office equipment, or a house or car. (Compare with liability. The same item can be both an asset and a liability, depending on one's point of view. For example, a loan is a liability to the borrower because it represents money owed that has to be repaid. But to the lender, a loan is an asset because it represents money the lender will receive in the future as the borrower repays the debt.)" primary="Asset">assets</glossary> available to satisfy some immediate financial need, want, or desire. The key is to be prepared to have the required cash or assets when the time comes to achieve the goal. For example, suppose you want to buy a <nodef>brand</nodef>-new car costing $30,000 using cash five years from today. In five years and one day, you <nodef>will</nodef> know whether you achieved that goal. If you have the $30,000 five years from today, you might achieve your goal. That is all pretty definite, but is it realistic?</p><p>You <nodef>will</nodef> have more than one financial goal to achieve. Besides the new car, you might be considering buying a home, funding higher education, paying for a wedding, taking a vacation, or accumulating <glossary def="Termination of employment due to age, choice, or physical limitation. Certain benefits, such as Social Security payments, are available to those who retire. In finance, retirement is the paying of a debt when or before it is due." primary="Retirement">retirement</glossary> nest savings. Each financial goal has its own price and <glossary def="The span of time over which an investment is held before being sold, redeemed, or liquidated. " primary="Investment Time Horizon">time horizon</glossary>&#8212;when you need the <nodef>money</nodef>.</p><p>In order to achieve all your goals, you <nodef>will</nodef> need a plan. Starting from assets you already have available, you <nodef>will</nodef> need to determine how much more you need to accumulate and when you <nodef>will</nodef> need it. Don't neglect to consider that the price of your goal items might actually increase as well. Depending upon how you invest your savings over time, you might receive <glossary def="A charge for using another's money. Interest is usually stated as a percentage of the amount borrowed and can be charged in a variety of ways, such as accrual, compounding, or simple interest." primary="Interest">interest</glossary>, <glossary def="1. A portion of earnings paid to the owners of a credit union.  The board of directors decides what the dividend rate, or percentage, will be. 2. Corporate earnings paid out to shareholders. Dividends may come from company profits, interest on securities (bonds, stocks, etc.) that the company holds, the sales of securities held by the company (capital gains dividends), etc. " primary="Dividend">dividends</glossary>, or <glossary def="The profit from the sale of an investment asset. The opposite of a capital gain is a capital loss." primary="Capital Gain">capital gains</glossary> to help you along&#8212;you should consider this as well. Do you have the means to make additional <glossary def="The purchase of a potentially appreciable asset such as a stock, a bond, a property, or a unit of production. The purchase provides funds for the growth of businesses and governments." primary="Investment">investments</glossary> necessary to accumulate the required assets? Don't neglect to consider the effects of <glossary def="A payment to federal, state, and/or local governments based on the sales price of a product, on worker income, or on other property and activities." primary="Tax">taxes</glossary> on your savings. After considering the foregoing, you might determine that you can achieve some goals in less time. Or you might find that it could take longer. The time horizon is important to setting realistic goals.</p><p>Consider how important it is to achieve your goals on time. Some goals are so important that not achieving them would be not only disappointing but also disastrous. When a goal must be achieved by a specific date, you must plan conservatively, save more <nodef>money</nodef>, and take less <glossary def="The risk that underlying assets will default, depreciate, or lose purchasing power over time." primary="Investment Risk">investment risk</glossary> to ensure against <glossary def="1. In financial terms, the result of expenses exceeding income. 2. A reduction in the value of an investment." primary="Loss">loss</glossary>. However, if the timing isn't as important or if you have discretionary assets and can take some investment risk, you might be able to invest more aggressively. Let's say you needed to save an additional $15,000 in five years to buy the car mentioned above. After five years, you only manage to accumulate $27,000&#8212;you're $3,000 short of your goal. So, it <nodef>will</nodef> take you longer to buy the car. Had you invested more aggressively, you might have made the goal, but you might also be worse off. In this case, let your <glossary def="The amount of loss an investor can sustain in an investment. " primary="Risk Tolerance">risk tolerance</glossary> help you determine your time horizon.</p><p>Goals should be grouped as <nodef>short-term</nodef> (three years or fewer), <nodef>intermediate-term</nodef> (three to seven years), and <nodef>long-term</nodef> (more than seven years). Generally, the longer the time horizon to achieving a goal, the more aggressive you can be in your investment approach. However, you should never exceed your <glossary def="The chance of loss due to the uncertainty of future events. Risks can be in political systems, unforeseen changes in management, investor emotions, etc. Uncertainties in exchange rates, interest rates, inflation, loss of principal, etc. are also considered risk." primary="Risk">risk</glossary> comfort level&#8212;the amount of risk you can take without abandoning your goal. This is your risk tolerance. If you approach setting financial goals in this way, you <nodef>will</nodef> make better financial decisions about setting goals and ways to invest to achieve them.</p><p>You should always monitor your goals to be sure they are on track. Set up a way to measure your progress. If you see that you are lagging behind, you may need to make an adjustment in the amount or way you are investing. If you are way ahead, you may want to be more conservative, shorten your time horizon, or add a new goal.</p></article>	