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Economy Travel

Buying Your Own Car in 2021- Luxury or Necessity?

Is buying a car a want or a need? In 2021, it is the purpose and type of car that determines whether it is a necessity or a luxury. If you are buying a car for the essential requirement of getting to places, then it is a necessity. If, however, the vehicle is fitted with all the latest features beyond functionality, it is a luxury.

With the automobile industry booming in recent years, we begin to wonder whether people are fulfilling their urgent need for transportation or indulging in the ‘car status’ luxury. 

A car allows us to travel quickly and securely wherever we need to go, whether to work, to the hospital, to family or for daily errands. It even provides us the bonus of getting to the park or the mall for our day off.

While car manufacturers have been adding more features in regular models too, the more luxurious features are still exclusive to the more luxurious cars. It could include heavy-duty tires replacing the factory ones, fancy rims, smart features, sunroofs, among many others. 

So, let’s tackle the question of where we draw the line here with some educated opinions.

Car is a Need, But can also be a Luxury

“Buying a car is typically viewed as a need, but it doesn’t have to be; what people want more than a new car is the security of knowing that the car they have can handle their daily commute. So making the choice to buy a 10-year-old used car and skip a new one is a personal decision. Everything beyond that I would consider a want. So ideally you split your car costs into the basics you need and classify them as needs and everything you buy beyond that you classify as a want. I know this adds complexity to the calculations, but it reflects the truth the best.”

Daniel Penzing, Maze of our Lives

Car is a Need In 2021

“Buying your car would be considered a need with the many pros of it in our modern world. A car gives you the convenience to travel anywhere you want, and at any time you want. Moreover, you get the freedom to live and work anywhere within reach. Owning a car allows you to enjoy some luxuries like road trips and saves you the expenses of having to book flights, especially in the presence of family. Additionally, having your car saves you time compared to having to wait in line for a bus transit or a ride-share. Cars are great for family and emergencies. In case of an emergency, you could drive the patient instead of waiting for an ambulance. In the long run, cars are a good way of being responsible for the service and maintenance of purchasing one.”

Harriet Chan, Co-founder & Marketing Director of CocoFinder

Owning a Car is a Want

“Having a car may feel like a need, but in truth it is usually it is a want. Many people think of their cars as a reflection of how successful they are. People take pride in having their own cars and in how their cars look because these things give them a sense of self-worth. I often come across people who seek out new wheels because they’re looking for an appearance upgrade, as well as people who are very passionate about cars in general. People get really excited about the next new models and features.”

Matt Seaburn, President of Rent-a-Wheel

Both a Luxury and a Necessity 

“Initially, a car was nothing more than a precious possession. It was a sign of success and hard work. Moreover, you don’t have to wait for specific times for the public transport, just get the keys, fill the tank and you’re on your way! That’s when I realized it’s more than just a mode of transportation, it was your key to freedom. It was your able companion and a way to free yourself from the busy world. Going from point A to B was the least you could do with a car. You can actually cut yourself off from the world and explore new places, people, and ultimately yourself. Drive away, go to a serene place, spend time observing nature, the sunsets, and the snow-laden peaks. Additionally, the love of driving a car is not only because of the horsepower the engine throws, the fun of shifting the lever and working on pedals, comfort, and ride quality; but is much more than that. It’s because of the beautiful memories we make in with the vehicle, those awesome places visited along with the masterpiece of Engineering.”

Cody Crawford, Co-Founder Low Offset

Owning A Car in the U.S is a Need at Present

“For most people in the United States, a basic vehicle is a necessity. You need transportation to reliably get you to and from work. A car also helps transporting children and for grocery shopping. The average commute time in the US is 27 minutes. Without a car, that time goes up significantly. The reason is that most of the US is set up for a car-driving society. City planners in most towns and cities laid out the design with cars in mind, and public transportation was an afterthought. For people that don’t drive, this is an unfortunate reality. There are some trends that may change this. As working from home becomes more common, cars become less necessary. And self-driving cars may eliminate the need that most people have for a car. The cost per mile for self-driving cars is less than what most people spend on their own cars. Owning a car may not make financial sense in the near future.”

Garit Boothe, personal finance blogger for Digital Honey, and digital marketing professional in the FinTech industry

Conclusion

You’ve got a nice fund saved up in your bank account, now you want to know if you should buy yourself a car, or would that be considered excessive. If all things considered, the car possesses all the basic requirements and fulfills your basic travel requirements; then it is a need. On the other hand, it could be considered a luxury if you don’t really need it or buy one that comes with all the fancy bells and whistles. So your purpose, need and choice of vehicle are what really determine the difference between need and want.

Categories
Economy

What Makes An Economy Grow

What makes an economy grow? It seems that most people have the notion that the inner workings of an economy are impossibly complicated, too difficult for the average person to understand. But while it is true that an economy is complex in terms of how many different things are simultaneously interacting in it, the economic principles that apply to those interactions are pretty easy to understand. Let’s start with the simple economy. Suppose there’s a village of five people: a butcher, a cutler, a stonemason, a blacksmith, and a miner. 

Suppose the butcher starts with $100 and the other four are flat broke. But one day, as he’s trimming some meat, the butcher notices his knives are starting to dull and wear out, and he asks the cutler to make them a new set for his $100. The cutler agrees and starts working. As the cutler of sharpening the blades, he notices his grindstone and starting to crack, and so he asks the stonemason to make him a new one for the $100, and he gives it to the stonemason, and the stonemason agrees and gets to work. As he’s chiseling away, he realizes he could use a new chisel, so the blacksmith offers to make him one for $100. Before the blacksmith can get to work on the chisel, he has to refill his iron ore supply. So he asks the miner to give him another ton for the $100.

The miner works all day, and in the evening, he decided to give us a good meal after his long day of hard work. So he drops the iron ore off of the blacksmith and then swings by the butcher where he buys $100 worth of steak.

The blacksmith then makes the chisel for the mason, and the mason finishes making the stone for the cutler, who finishes making the knives for the butcher. Notice the $100 is back in the hands of the butcher and everyone else again has no cash. On the surface, it would appear that the economy is exactly the size that it was. After all, there’s still only $100 cash in it. But the butcher has a new set of knives, the cutler a new grindstone, the mason a new chisel, the blacksmith has the remainder of the ore, and the miner has some delicious steaks. 

So while the total number of physical dollars has remained the same, the economy has grown in value. See, real economic growth only comes when a value is added to the economy. Growth does not come from simply putting more money into it. Suppose, for example, that everyone suddenly received a big pile of money. Pretty soon, no one would want money as much because everyone has plenty of it. Inevitably, people would have to offer more money to trade. And at that point, prices and wages have risen together; only the numbers will have changed. The actual value has not seen that the only reason we use money is for its convenience. You may not want what the other guy offers, so he pays you in money. And we use that money as sort of an IOU (I owe you) passed from person to person. You’ll pass it on to the next guy whenever you find something you do want. You can feasibly envision an economy where there is no actual currency where people trade product for product. 

An economy such as this would still be able to grow despite there being no currency because it’s the value from the trade that grows it. After all, this economy didn’t grow from the money being passed around. It grew from the products that people created. It grew in the cutler made the knives for the butcher. It grew in the mason made the stone for the cutler. It grew when the blacksmith made a chisel for the mason. It grew when the miner dug up the ore for the blacksmith. And finally, it grew when the butcher made the delicious steaks for the miner. Now, because this trading of products and services is what grows in the economy, the way to improve an economy is to have more avenues of trade opened up rather than to be restricted to what politicians and bureaucrats believe is best for you. 

It’s not complicated. The easier it is to employ someone, the more employment there’s going to be and hence the more economic growth there’s going to be. And it’s important to note that even though all politicians sincerely claim to know what’s best for us and have our best interests at heart, many are only thinking of themselves.

Categories
Business Economy News

15 Trends That Are Expected To Drive Small Business In 2021

By Expert Panel® Forbes Councils Member, Dec 11, 2020


To say that Covid-19 has been a game-changer for small businesses in the United States would be an understatement. Facing financial constraints and other limitations imposed by the pandemic, many small businesses have had to come up with creative solutions to maintain a steady stream of revenue.

The pandemic hasn’t subsided yet, and it is bound to continue influencing small businesses in the year to come. Below, 15 Forbes Coaches Council members discuss the trends they believe will drive small business in the year 2021 as well as ways to prepare for them.

Featured members discuss trends that will drive small business in 2021.
Forbes Coaches Council members discuss trends that will drive small business in 2021. PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS.

1. Visible Digital Footprints

An excellent digital footprint and visibility will be a must for the small business next year. As everyone is spending significant time on the internet, having a great digital presence and branding will help when competing for new projects, contracts, partnerships and opportunities. This is an excellent way to highlight your product or service, engage and build community. – Izabela Lundberg, Legacy Leaders Institute

2. Agility

Restrictions will still be around, heavily affecting small and medium-sized enterprises. However, they have an advantage over the big corporations: A smaller size means potential for quick shifts of focus, be they in service delivery, marketing or team structuring. The quicker small businesses are able to pivot and adapt during these ongoing turbulent times, the higher their fitness and success will be. – Ruben Crawford, Empowertale Ltd

3. Virtual Efficiency And Productivity Experts

Small businesses will need efficiency and productivity experts that specialize in virtual teams. During the pandemic, every business has faced being forced to digitize, virtualize and dematerialize. There are huge opportunities to help businesses recover from lost revenue and use new technology more effectively with virtual teams. – Mike Koenigs, The Superpower AcceleratorMORE FOR YOUThe 10 Biggest Business Trends For 2021 Everyone Must Be Ready ForSeven Digital Marketing Trends For 2021Business Trends To Embrace In 2021

4. Talent Problems

Small businesses will continue to battle talent problems in the foreseeable future. The war for talent was only paused during Covid-19, and it has already resumed in most industries. Organizations have a choice: They can build learning and people-development cultures to keep teams engaged long-term, or they can build recruiting empires to address the constant turnover of employees. – Brad Cousins, Ingage Human Capital Strategies

5. Pre-Meeting Packs

A trend that will drive small businesses is the use of customized pre-meeting packs. These pleasant surprises take advantage of snail mail in a time of digital saturation. Many organizations send their board members these packs a day prior to a long online meeting. The packs can include a mix of food snacks, office accessories or stationery. Highlighting local businesses is a big opportunity for small firms. – Natalie Nixon, Figure 8 Thinking, LLC

6. Workplace Culture

Workplace culture is a trend for leaders to optimize, capitalize and maximize. What people believe, think, say and do as well as the collective output of their behaviors define their company culture. The evolutionary impact of recent events is driving leaders to align budgets and priorities to support organizational health, resulting in better alignment to vision, values, goals and prosperity. – Lori Harris, Harris Whitesell Consulting

7. Customer Reviews

Customer reviews will be key. As people feel the financial pinch caused by this year’s pandemic, they will be looking for ways to save. They might forgo buying the big brand names and look around for alternatives. This opens the door for small businesses to step in. While they might lack the credibility of a big brand, a list of glowing reviews from customers can definitely sway the sale. – Gabriella Goddard, Brainsparker Leadership Academy

8. Clarity

Our time seems to be eaten up with virtual meetings and webinar training. Be absolutely clear about whether a meeting or training is going to be paramount. We are tired of being on virtual meetings that waste our time, leaving us frustrated and overwhelmed. Before the meeting, collaborate on a clear agenda, clear objectives and desired outcomes. Also, start and finish on time. – Frances McIntosh, Intentional Coaching LLC

9. Creative Joint Ventures 

I think more small businesses will seek out creative collaborations and joint ventures with other small businesses. Diversifying the risk via another collaborator and entering markets not previously considered will increase their chances of longer-term survivability. – Karan Rhodes, Shockingly Different Leadership

10. Local Community Networking

People buy from people, especially now that we’re limited in where we’re able to go. If small businesses want to compete with the big brands and online options, they’ll need to connect with their communities more than ever. Nothing helps a business more than locals spreading the word to their friends. So get “out there,” network on sites like LinkedIn and watch your business thrive! – Miranda VonFricken, Miranda VonFricken – Masterminds & Personal Growth Coaching!

11. E-Commerce

If they aren’t already, small businesses must get into the world of e-commerce. Everything a business offers should have an e-commerce component, and training, onboarding and other aspects of leadership have to be e-commerce ready. As 2020 has proved, you have to be ready to pivot on a dime to survive in an ever-changing landscape, and it starts by getting everyone e-commerce-facing. – Jon Dwoskin, The Jon Dwoskin Experience

12. Data-Driven Digital Strategies

Small companies will work intensively on digital strategies to adapt to new forms of consumption and other consequences of the pandemic. It will be especially important to carry out market studies that allow us to know the new demands firsthand. Additionally, small businesses should work on the flexibility of structures and costs to make them viable and competitive. – José Luís González Rodriguez, ActionCOACH

13. Technological Disruption

Pandemic-fueled technological disruption will continue to shift the very nature of work, affecting how organizations maintain a sustainable competitive advantage in the marketplace. This will be particularly true for small businesses, which, in an increasingly interconnected virtual world, will be competing not only with bigger players in the market, but also with other small businesses from around the globe. – Jonathan H. Westover, Ph.D, Utah Valley University & Human Capital Innovations, LLC

14. Unique Online Courses

Online courses have been a great way to pivot business during the pandemic. If you have a unique knowledge base and a customer engagement model, pouring knowledge into do-it-yourself courses can independently save your business this coming year. It is not limiting, and it becomes passive income, as long as you use quality cameras in the creation of original course content. – Amera McCoy, McCoy Consulting LLC

15. Investments In Infrastructure And Customer Engagement

Next year will pay dividends to small businesses who invest wisely now in themselves and their customers. The small businesses that are operating out of fear right now will face even more fear and losses to competitors who are investing in their infrastructure and customer engagement to stay relevant now. Don’t let fear drive you. Find the opportunity and capitalize. – Dhru Beeharilal, Nayan Leadership, LLC


SOURCE: Expert Panel®
VIA: forbes.com
MAIN IMAGE SOURCE: pexels.com

Categories
Economy Healthcare News

Vaccine progress is trumping bad economic news

By Julia HorowitzCNN Business November 23, 2020


London (CNN Business) Investors have made up their minds: For the time being, vaccine euphoria is outweighing bad economic news triggered by coronavirus restrictions.

What’s happening: Drugmaker AstraZeneca announced Monday that its experimental Covid-19 vaccine is highly effective in large scale trials — the latest of several vaccine trials to post promising results this month.

US stocks rose in early trading, with the S&P 500 last up 0.5%. Last week, both the S&P 500 and Dow registered modest losses, while the Nasdaq Composite rose slightly.

But markets will have to sort through two competing impulses in the coming months. Monday’s gains come despite a harrowing outlook for coronavirus cases and new data that shows related restrictions are taking a toll on the economy.

In Europe, which has enacted strict lockdown measures in recent weeks, the composite Purchasing Managers Index from IHS Markit — a closely-watched gauge of the manufacturing and services sectors —has hit a six-month low.

Declines, which in October were isolated to the services sector, are now also affecting industrial output.close dialog

“The eurozone economy has plunged back into a severe decline in November amid renewed efforts to quash the rising tide of Covid-19 infections,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit. “The data add to the likelihood that the euro area will see GDP contract again in the fourth quarter.”

While the November contractions aren’t as severe as those seen this spring — in part because economic output hadn’t fully recovered from the last plunge — they could still prove damaging.

It’s a warning to the United States, where policymakers are grappling with how to handle soaring cases and record hospitalizations from the virus. At least 83,870 Covid-19 patients were hospitalized Sunday — the 13th straight day the US has broken its record, according to the Covid Tracking Project.

JPMorgan’s chief economist Bruce Kasman said these shifts will inevitably hit global growth, slowing the overall recovery.

“With the US and Europe now projected to contract and with the pandemic worsening, the rest of the world is likely to buckle,” Kasman told clients Friday.

So why are risky assets like stocks rising? Looking at Europe, Florian Hense of Berenberg Bank offers three explanations. The setbacks have been largely priced in, he said, and while the near-term outlook in the region isn’t good, it hasn’t gotten worse (the same can’t be said for the United States). Meanwhile, the medium-term outlook has only gotten more positive, bolstered by “calmer US foreign and trade policy [and] vaccine progress.”

He also noted that according to the IHS Markit survey, business expectations for the next 12 months recovered most of the slump seen in October, and are at their second highest level since February.

Investors have been looking ahead to 2021 for some time. For now, alarm about this winter isn’t changing the focus.

US travel surges despite Covid warnings

Despite record numbers of new Covid-19 cases and a recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control against traveling for Thanksgiving, Sunday was the busiest day at US airports since the pandemic began.

The Transportation Security Administration said it screened more than 1 million people. Add in Friday and Saturday, and more than 3 million people took flights last weekend.

That’s 57% lower than the volume screened during the same period last year. But a TSA spokesperson said it’s still the highest level of travel observed since March.

United Airlines (UAL) said Thursday that it’s seen some increase in flight cancellations and a drop-off in bookings as Covid-19 cases rise. Southwest and American Airlines have also reported a decline in bookings.

Even so, US airlines are bracing for a busy period. American Airlines (AAL) said it will increase its schedule by about 15% during Thanksgiving week, with plans to operate more than 4,000 flights.

The airline industry is neither encouraging nor discouraging holiday travel, the head of the industry’s trade group said Thursday.

“Do we want to see [people] travel? Yes, but only if it’s safe for them,” said Nick Calio, CEO of Airlines for America. “There’s a variety of factors involved in that for each individual traveler.” You can see the latest guidance from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention here.

The pandemic is spurring new trials of ‘utopian’ ideas

Christine Jardine, a Scottish politician who represents Edinburgh in the UK parliament, was not a fan of universal basic income before the pandemic hit.

“It was regarded in some quarters as a kind of socialist idea,” said Jardine, a member of the centrist Liberal Democrats party.

But not long after the government shut schools, shops, restaurants and pubs in March with little warning, she started to reconsider her position. And she’s not alone, I report from London. As the economic crisis sparked by the coronavirus drags on, support in Europe is growing for progressive policies once seen as pipe dreams of the political left.

In Germany, millions of people applied to join a study of universal basic income that will provide participants with €1,200 ($1,423) a month, while in the United Kingdom, more than 100 lawmakers — including Jardine — are pushing the government to start similar trials.

That’s not all: Austria, meanwhile, has launched a first-of-its-kind pilot program that will guarantee paying jobs to residents struggling with sustained unemployment in Marienthal, a long-suffering former industrial town about 40 miles southwest of Vienna.

Whether the spike in popularity and research will translate into a wave of action is an open question. But some, like Jardine, see reason for optimism. One study conducted by Oxford University in March found that 71% of Europeans now favor the introduction of a universal basic income.

“For an idea that has often been dismissed as wildly unrealistic and utopian, this is a remarkable figure,” researchers Timothy Garton Ash and Antonia Zimmermann wrote.


SOURCE: Julia Horowitz
VIA: edition.cnn.com
MAIN IMAGE SOURCE: pexels.com

Categories
Business Economy News

Short sellers lost billions as travel and leisure stocks rallied Monday

By Tommy WilkesSaqib Iqbal Ahmed
NOVEMBER 11, 2020


LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Short sellers betting against European and U.S. travel, leisure and bank stocks lost billions of dollars on Monday, after news of a COVID-19 vaccine triggered a rally in shares of companies that have suffered under months of virus-fueled restrictions and lockdowns.FILE PHOTO: The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, October 15, 2020. REUTERS/Staff

Investors positioned to profit from declines in European travel, leisure and bank stocks alone lost more than $500 million on Monday, according to data provider ORTEX Analytics.

Among U.S. shares, just seven travel-linked companies, Carnival Corp CCL.N, Expedia Group EXPE.O, Booking Holdings Inc BKNG.O, Royal Caribbean Group RCL.N, American Airlines Group AAL.N Wynn Resorts WYNN.O and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings NCLH.O, accounted for $2.35 billion in losses for short sellers, the firm’s data showed.

Total short-selling losses across industries are likely to have been much higher.

European travel and leisure stocks .SXTP are up 12% since the start of the month while shares of banks .SX7P, which are sensitive to the state of the economy and among the markets’s worst performers since the coronavirus outbreak in March, reached a five-month high on Tuesday.

The Dow Jones U.S. Travel & Leisure Index .DJUSCJ jumped 8.2% on Monday and is up nearly 15% for November. On Tuesday, the index fell 1.7%.

This week’s dramatic rebound in beaten-up share prices followed Pfizer’s announcement of positive data from its vaccine trial, raising hopes of an economic recovery.

Calculations by ORTEX Analytics showed short sellers of European travel and leisure companies lost $284 million based on positions held on Monday. Losses for European bank short-sellers totalled $233 million.

Rolls-Royce RR.L, Carnival CCL.L and British Airways owner IAG ICAG.L rank among the biggest winners of this week’s rally, while bank stock risers include Societe Generale SOGN.PA, Barclays BARC.L and Lloyds LLOY.L, all up between 10% and 25%.

But for short sellers the rebound equalled pain after several months of profitable bets — they lost an estimated $101 million on Deutsche Lufthansa LHAG.DE on Monday, $52 million on TUI TUIGn.DE and $66 million on HSBC, ORTEX data showed.

“Whilst Pfizer described yesterday as a great day for science and for humanity, it was anything but for short sellers who look to have been caught out by the market adjustment.” said ORTEX co-founder Peter Hillerberg.

Hedge funds profit when they borrow a stock and sell it back when the price falls, pocketing the difference, a practice known as short-selling.

Funds with significant short positions in travel and leisure stocks include D.E. Shaw, GLG Partners – which had a net short position in Rolls-Royce of 0.92% on Nov. 4 – and Marshall Wace, according to UK regulatory filings. The funds either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.

STILL SHORT

Betting against travel and bank stocks had been a winner for hedge funds since governments shut down swathes of their economies in March.

Short sellers had made an estimated $1.87 billion from bank shorts since March to Nov. 6 and $140 million from wagering against travel and leisure companies, ORTEX calculates.

Investors have banked profits and reduced positions since August. But significant outstanding short exposure remained as some bet on further falls following another round of government lockdowns.

“Companies whose business models have been most impaired by COVID are yet to fully recover from their lows,” analysts at Barclays said in a note on Tuesday.

“They could therefore be the biggest beneficiaries of a successful vaccine deployment, as their depressed revenue and earnings are yet to recover,” they added.


Reporting by Tommy Wilkes in London and Saqib Iqbal Ahmed in New York; Editing by Rachel Armstrong, Jonathan Oatis and Tom Brown

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

SOURCE: Tommy WilkesSaqib Iqbal Ahmed
VIA: reuters.com
MAIN IMAGE SOURCE: FILE PHOTO: The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, October 15, 2020. REUTERS/Staff

Categories
Business Economy

6 Tips for Managing Small Business Finances

Every company, big or small, is always concerned about one thing: Managing money. Proper financial management is crucial to surviving a volatile economy and industry competition. Small businesses especially need to exercise caution with their financial decisions from the very beginning; it takes more than just a good idea to run a business. 

Every business needs a financial structure that generates a profit to stay credible. Entrepreneurs need to be equipped with good money management abilities to turn their venture into a success story. Not all business owners, however, are adept at handling finances. But that doesn’t mean all hope is lost. Here are six tips for managing small business finances. 

First, educate yourself. One of the first things that you should do is educate yourself about the various aspects of Finance. For starters, learn how to read financial statements. Suppose you don’t know how, financial statements tell you all about your money; where it originated from, how many hands it changed, and where it is. Financial Statements contain four essential details: cash flow statement, income statement, balance sheet, and shareholders equity statement. 

The Cash Flow Statement analyzes operating activities, investments, and financial outflow. The balance sheet provides information related to the company’s assets, liabilities, and shareholders’ equity. 

The income statement reflects the revenue earned within a specific period of time. Shareholders’ equity represents how the company is financed through common and preferred shares to separate personal and business finances. Always keep your personal and business finances separate. This entails getting a business credit card and putting all related expenses on it. This should help you track your outlays and keep you in control. You will also do well in opening a savings account dedicated to your business, wherein you can transfer a certain amount of money from each payment that you receive and gradually build a considerable corpus. You can use this money to pay taxes three cut costs. 

Entrepreneurs must stay tight-fisted to keep their expenses in-check without hampering customer satisfaction. This especially holds true for small businesses. In every business, there are two types of costs- fixed and variable. Fixed costs have to be borne irrespective of whether your business is making money or not. There is scope for savings and variable costs. For example, instead of buying costly branded software, you can work with free, cloud-based open-source software, which is equally good. Conduct free online calls video conferences instead of traveling long distances. You can also try bartering your services with other professionals and cut costs for invest in cloud-based accounting software. 

While you can download regular accounting software to manage your finances, it will never give you the kind of convenience cloud-based accounting software can. Web-based software provides you with real-time insights as most allow you to store, update, track and access data from anywhere at any time. Whether you’re at home, office, or traveling, you can conveniently work with your data from anywhere you like. It is error-free, hassle-free, and dependable. 

Monitor and measure performance. As a business owner, you must keep tabs on the movement of your money, especially when large amounts are involved. Keep looking at your company’s financial performance compared to the past financial statements to project your future revenue, expenses, and cash flow. Being aware of these aspects will help you make informed decisions for your business. 

Also, hire professional help. Everyone needs help, especially a budding entrepreneur interested in making a huge success of his venture. Sometimes it pays off to engage an expert’s services, even if it is on a part-time basis. That can help you determine where your business is heading by using and analyzing your data. Ensure you hire someone you trust, though, whether it is tax planning for the next financial year or payment for the current year. Their expertise can go a long way and guiding you and bringing you peace of mind. 

Conclusion 

While owning and running your own business can be exciting, it can also be nerve-wracking, especially when handling finances in a lucrative manner. Don’t let your business suffer due to poor money management. Keep the above tips in mind and give your venture a bright future.

Every company, big or small, is always concerned about one thing: Managing money. Proper financial management is crucial to surviving a volatile economy and industry competition. Small businesses especially need to exercise caution with their financial decisions from the very beginning; it takes more than just a good idea to run a business. 

Every business needs a financial structure that generates a profit to stay credible. Entrepreneurs need to be equipped with good money management abilities to turn their venture into a success story. Not all business owners, however, are adept at handling finances. But that doesn’t mean all hope is lost. Here are six tips for managing small business finances. 

First, educate yourself. One of the first things that you should do is educate yourself about the various aspects of Finance. For starters, learn how to read financial statements. Suppose you don’t know how, financial statements tell you all about your money; where it originated from, how many hands it changed, and where it is. Financial Statements contain four essential details: cash flow statement, income statement, balance sheet, and shareholders equity statement. 

The Cash Flow Statement analyzes operating activities, investments, and financial outflow. The balance sheet provides information related to the company’s assets, liabilities, and shareholders’ equity. 

The income statement reflects the revenue earned within a specific period of time. Shareholders’ equity represents how the company is financed through common and preferred shares to separate personal and business finances. Always keep your personal and business finances separate. This entails getting a business credit card and putting all related expenses on it. This should help you track your outlays and keep you in control. You will also do well in opening a savings account dedicated to your business, wherein you can transfer a certain amount of money from each payment that you receive and gradually build a considerable corpus. You can use this money to pay taxes three cut costs. 

Entrepreneurs must stay tight-fisted to keep their expenses in-check without hampering customer satisfaction. This especially holds true for small businesses. In every business, there are two types of costs- fixed and variable. Fixed costs have to be borne irrespective of whether your business is making money or not. There is scope for savings and variable costs. For example, instead of buying costly branded software, you can work with free, cloud-based open-source software, which is equally good. Conduct free online calls video conferences instead of traveling long distances. You can also try bartering your services with other professionals and cut costs for invest in cloud-based accounting software. 

While you can download regular accounting software to manage your finances, it will never give you the kind of convenience cloud-based accounting software can. Web-based software provides you with real-time insights as most allow you to store, update, track and access data from anywhere at any time. Whether you’re at home, office, or traveling, you can conveniently work with your data from anywhere you like. It is error-free, hassle-free, and dependable. 

Monitor and measure performance. As a business owner, you must keep tabs on the movement of your money, especially when large amounts are involved. Keep looking at your company’s financial performance compared to the past financial statements to project your future revenue, expenses, and cash flow. Being aware of these aspects will help you make informed decisions for your business. 

Also, hire professional help. Everyone needs help, especially a budding entrepreneur interested in making a huge success of his venture. Sometimes it pays off to engage an expert’s services, even if it is on a part-time basis. That can help you determine where your business is heading by using and analyzing your data. Ensure you hire someone you trust, though, whether it is tax planning for the next financial year or payment for the current year. Their expertise can go a long way and guiding you and bringing you peace of mind. 

Conclusion 

While owning and running your own business can be exciting, it can also be nerve-wracking, especially when handling finances in a lucrative manner. Don’t let your business suffer due to poor money management. Keep the above tips in mind and give your venture a bright future.

Categories
Economy News Travel

After a busy Labor Day weekend, airlines expect travel to slump

By Chris Isidore, CNN Business
September 8, 2020


New York (CNN Business)Labor Day weekend was the busiest period for US air travel in nearly six months, as more than 900,000 people went through TSA screening on both Friday and Monday for the first time since March.

But airlines are signaling they believe this won’t be repeated any time soon, as summer leisure travel comes to an end while business travel is expected to remain slow to return.

The number of travelers screened by TSA over the five-day period from Thursday to Monday was 39% of the number of the total of those screened during the same period a year ago.

While far from its pre-pandemic levels, this weekend’s Labor Day traffic was still far higher than levels recorded earlier this spring and summer.

Leisure travel fed this modest rebound. Business travel is down more than 95% compared with a year ago, according to analysis from Helane Becker, airline analyst for Cowen. And airlines are cutting back on their fall schedule relative to what they flew this summer.

For example, United Airlines (UAL) said it expects to fly 34% of its full schedule in September compared with a year earlier. In August it flew about 48% of its year-earlier schedule. And given that airlines always cut back their schedules after Labor Day, the cut in the September schedule is even deeper than it appears.

“The fall is normally a seasonally weak period, anyway. And this year people have gotten the vacation they had to have,” said Phil Baggaley, chief airline credit analyst for Standard & Poor’s. He said that early bookings suggested there would be a stronger summer travel season, but a subsequent rise in Covid-19 cases, as well as quarantine and travel restrictions imposed by some states on travelers from hot spots, slowed the recovery.

“The recovery in air travel stalled out in July,” he said. “What happens in fall and winter remains to be seen.”

Airlines desperately need people to fly. That’s why the top 3 US carriers are dumping change feesThe airlines have made clear they’re not expecting strong demand through the end of the year. American Airlines (AAL) said it will fly less than 50% of its year-ago schedule in the fourth quarter.

“Historically in this airline, about 40% of our revenues come off of business. And it’s pretty unreasonable at this point to think that we’ll get anywhere close to that,” Vasu Raja, the senior vice president of network strategy at American told analysts in July.


SOURCE: Chris Isidore
VIA: edition.cnn.com
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