ORMAN: PH would soon shine in global arena.
ARNOLD ALMACEN
She chooses to live in a New York apartment that can fit in her
friend Oprah’s bathroom, even if she could afford to buy a penthouse
residence. She wears the same set of earrings and holds on to the same
purse for decades until it’s worn out and beyond repair. If she sees a
penny on the road, she will stop and bend over to pick it up because she
believes every penny must be respected.
That’s American personal finance guru Suze Orman—a woman who
emancipated herself out of poverty and made a career out of helping
others do the same—practicing what she preaches. This multiawarded
television host, motivational speaker and best-seller author who was
once described by USA Today as a “one-woman financial advice powerhouse,
Orman was in town last week to fulfill a promise made for the last five
years to her friend Doris Magsaysay Ho, chair of Asia Society
Philippines, to help inspire Filipinos in their quest for financial
freedom.
While Orman herself chooses to adopt a lifestyle that’s much more
Spartan than her means, many other people in the world do the opposite
and she gained fame, fortune and influence for her advocacy to help
people who are caught in the debt trap. The host of the award-winning
Suze Orman Show which airs every Saturday night on CNBC earns around
$190,000 on speaking engagements in the United States but she agreed to
speak before Filipinos for free and expressed interest to come back and
help draft financial literacy programs for the country pro bono.
‘Highway to poverty’
In a speech before employees of Ayala-led Bank of the Philippine
Islands which backed her visit to Manila, Orman says the Philippines
would soon shine in the global arena. She says, however, that Filipino
consumers must avoid going the way of the United States, which has
allowed its economy to grow on credit, lending to people who could not
afford homes, driving more people “on a highway to poverty.”
“Build this country on cash so that it could never collapse, then you
can change your lives,” says Orman, who was raised in an unruly Chicago
neighborhood and who used to wait on tables before transcending poverty
as a securities broker at American investment house Merrill Lynch.
“You’re going to be taken note of in other countries, see investment
money come and you’ll see that the time for the Philippines has just
about arrived. The question is, will you be able to hold on to the gifts
that are about to come your way?” she says.
Good and bad debt
The American personal finance guru spoke strongly against incurring
debt to purchase non-essential things, noting she had watched her own
country fall apart because of this.
She said consumers must distinguish between good and bad debt, good
debt being amortizing to one day own a home. On the other hand, she
said that credit card debt was “very bad debt.”
“If you have credit card debt, what that says about you is that you
are buying things that you can’t afford,” she says, urging banks to
issue credit cards only to those who can responsibly use credit.
Ideally, she says credit card users should use their card all they want
but pay everything when the bill arrives.
In the US, she says it was a common mistake for banks to even
increase the credit limit when somebody had maxed out his ceiling and
only paying the minimum due.
The best way to help these people would be to stop charging interest and as the borrowers pay off, reduce their credit limit.
For overseas Filipinos, Orman says her advice would be to consider
whether sending money to adult brothers or relatives would only be
encouraging dependence. “Is it possible that it’s hurting them rather
than helping them?” she says, adding that some people may not reach
their potential or may not be driven into making contingency plans
because they have remittances to fall back on.
But she stresses that for parents, it’s a whole different light, as
she herself would want to take care of her mother. Orman herself has
Filipino helpers in the US and also taps Filipino call center agents in
Manila to service her own voice call outsourcing needs.
Best commodity is time
For young people, she says they should realize that their best
commodity is time and that by starting to regularly save a portion of
their earnings regularly, they will accumulate more wealth with the help
of compounding, which means earnings from an initial investment are
reinvested over and over.
With the help of compounding, she says a person who sets aside $100 a
month starting the age of 20 would end up with $1 million when this
person is 60. But if one waits until age 30 to start saving, the same
person will end up with only $300,000 at age 60. This 10-year delay in
starting an investment plan has thus cost the person $700,000, she
notes.
On insurance, she says it’s a must for young people who have
dependents—spouses or young children—and who have yet to build enough
wealth that these dependents could live on if something happens to them.
But she says the only type of insurance that would make sense would be
term insurance with tenor approximating the time that one’s dependent
would have reached adulthood.
From rock-bottom
Before becoming a prominent personal finance expert and inspirational
speaker, Orman used to earn $400 a month as a waitress and at one point
in time, slept in her car because she could not pay the rent. She
waited on table for seven years until the age of 30, when she dreamt of
opening her own restaurant. She asked her mother for $20,000 to open
her restaurant but her mother was unable to help her. One of her
regular customers took a pity on Orman and pooled $50,000 from other
customers to lend to her for 10 years without interest. She brought the
money to Merrill Lynch but the attending broker convinced the then
naive Orman to speculate in the stock market. She says she was made to
sign papers to make it appear that she was a sophisticated investor who
was qualified to invest in stock options. Within three months, she lost
all the money.
“If I hadn’t lost that money, I won’t be standing here today. Nothing
ever goes wrong, everything happens for the best,” she says.
Realizing she still owed $50,000 to her customers, she thought of
getting a job as a broker at Merrill, which at that time never hired
female brokers. She was hired but with a caveat that she would be fired
in six months.
One Merrill Lynch executive took a liking at Orman and advised her to
sue Merrill Lynch for the bad handling of her $50,000 investment even
when she was still an employee. This she did and because of the ongoing
case, Merrill Lynch could not fire her. As the case dragged on, she had
become one of Merrill Lynch’s top producers and realizing that the firm
was earning more money than Orman’s $50,000-suit, the brokerage gave
back her money plus interest. This in turn allowed Orman to pay back
her kind-hearted friends.
Orman says this only showed that any wealth that she had made was
something she had worked for. Even as she has gone a long way since
then, Orman is not fond of splurging on jewelry or clothes. She had to
change her purse recently, after 15 years, only because it was beyond
repair.
‘Horrible’ investment
Jewelry, for her, is a “horrible” investment. Orman says that if you
purchase jewelry and try to sell it when you need to cash in, you
usually end up selling lower than your original buying price. But for
her, investment in gold as a commodity, is “fabulous” and noted that
gold is part of her personal portfolio.
On real estate, Orman says she had homes in different parts of the
world but does not consider them as investments because they were for
her own use. She did not care whether their values go up or down. On
taking out equity in a home to buy another home, she says this was a
no-no unless the owner had money backed up somewhere.
“Every single person in this world has the ability to be more and
have more and it’s the choices that we make about ourselves that become
our net worth,” she says.