Racing Rival Shack Heatss

Money stress to money management: A guide to financial confidence | Local Business

Money stress to money management: A guide to financial confidence | Local Business

Money worries keep folks up at night — 64% of Americans fear running out of cash more than death, per the 2025 Allianz Center for the Future of Retirement Study. But you don’t have to join them.

Whether debt has you in a chokehold or investing feels like a foreign language, simple moves can shift the tide. Drawing from my work at Arbor Capital Management in Fairbanks, here are seven ways to tame your finances and build confidence — no finance degree required.

Let’s be honest — for some of us, budgeting every dollar feels like wrangling salmon out of the water with your bare hands. A 2025 Gallup poll says 68% of Americans skip it, and if that’s you, no sweat. Try a “skinny budget” instead. Track the big stuff — rent, groceries, bills — and let automation do the heavy lifting. Set up auto savings to pay yourself first: into a high-yield savings account for emergencies and into an investment account for your future.

“The reason most people don’t become rich is they pay everyone else first,” says David Bach.

How Can I Pay Off Debt Faster?

The average American holds around $6,000 of credit card debt. It’s like trying to swim upstream — your money works against you. Most cards charge about 20% interest. Pay off your cards in full every month. If you’ve got balances piling up, get after it. Look into the debt avalanche method (highest interest first) or the debt snowball (smallest balances first). Either way, don’t ignore it.

How Do I Build an Emergency Fund?

About 60% of Americans can’t cover a $1,000 emergency without borrowing. That adds stress. Start with a $1,000 goal, then aim for 3–6 months of expenses. Your stress will drop when you’re no longer redlining the financial tachometer each month.

How Do I Start Investing as a Beginner?

Investing isn’t just for Wall Street hotshots — it’s your path to long-term wealth. The stock market has averaged 7% returns after inflation, turning $125 a month into roughly $150,000 over 30 years.

No workplace 401(k)? Open an account with a trusted brokerage or work with an adviser. A total stock market index fund is a simple starting point. Automate your contributions, ignore the market noise, and remember: time in the market beats timing the market.

Snag any 401(k) match — it’s free money. With your skinny budget doing the automation, this becomes set-it-and-forget-it investing.

“Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin” (Zechariah 4:10, NLT).

How Much Do I Need for Retirement?

A quarter of Americans have zero retirement savings — don’t be one of them. A good rule of thumb: save 25 times your annual expenses by the time you retire. If you plan to spend $40,000 a year, aim for $1 million.

Many retirement plans now offer automatic increases — start at 5% of your paycheck and bump it to 7% next year. Small steps become big leaps thanks to compound growth.

How Can I Boost My Credit Score?

Folks fuss a lot about credit scores, but it’s simpler than it seems. Pay your bills on time. Use autopay to never miss a due date. Keep credit card balances under 30% of your limit. Save to borrow less. And check for errors at AnnualCreditReport.com. You don’t need perfect credit — you just need solid habits.

How Do I Reduce Financial Stress?

Money stresses 73% of Americans, but you can break the cycle. Spend less than you earn, invest steadily, and give thanks for what you’ve got — your job, your home, a Fairbanks sunset.

Use technology to simplify: automate savings, investments, and bills. One less thing to track means one more breath you can take.

Confidence comes not from having it all figured out, but from taking steady steps forward. The goal isn’t perfection — it’s peace of mind.

Joshua Church is an investment advisor representative with Arbor Capital. This article is for informational purposes only and not investment advice. Views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Arbor Capital.

link

Exit mobile version