Tax time: Review your Income Sources…

It’s nearly tax time here, and as usual all the banks and financial organizations that you do business with have sent out their paperwork. So now is a good time to review those sources of income.

I received a tax paper from HSBC bank just last week. I took a quick gander at the paper only to discover that the interest that HSBC paid me for last year amounted to just NT$280 for NT$150,000+ deposits (and no, it wasn’t a checking account). That amounts to about 0.2% pa. How little is that? That’s like 3 Americanos at Starbucks.

So I decided to close that account and move that money into an account earning more than 10X that. It’s wise from time to time to check your savings accounts and make sure of the interest rate on each particular account. Banks are well known, especially in the UK and US, for having teaser rates that go down quickly, and some accounts become quite uncompetitive in triple time. So you have to keep checking online or in the newspapers about your bank account’s interest rate, to make sure you’re not losing out. There’s no sense in letting banks make free money off your investments.

Both Citibank and HSBC here offer higher rates than 0.2% on demand deposits, but both of these banks have minimum requirements for deposit amounts. I noted though on closer inspection that in Taiwan, the HSBC minimums were lower than Citibank, but that the Citibank interest rates were much more competitive than HSBC. In fact, HSBC has been running a promotion for their HSBC Direct service that promises to pay much higher interest rates than other banks. And it’s true, the deposit rate is much higher, but when compared to Citibank’s rates, it is about 25% less than you could get with more careful saving.

So it pays to shop around for your banking; it also pays to keep an eye on your savings, too; and don’t be attracted by teaser rates.

Making more than 6% on your checking – Now that’s evil!

In a post entitled Making 6% on your checking, John Chow writes:

What I want to talk about is making a return on your checking account. How is this possible when most checking accounts pay little to no interest? By taking advantage of the min balance required to waive the monthly fee. In my case, if I keep a $2,000 min balance in my account my monthly fee of $9.95 (now $8.95) is waived. That works out to a saving of $119.40 a year, just for maintaining the min balance. That’s a 5.97% return on my money, which is not bad for a 100% safe investment.

Actually, there is a way to avoid bank charges like John suggests AND make some money.

Some accounts, like HSBC or Citi, require minimum deposits, that’s for sure. But these kinds of accounts combine checking with other features usually, so the minimum is usually the minimum total deposit for a banking relationship, it may include a lot of other features, too.

So for my Citi account, I met the minimum easily enough, but then I opened Time Deposits, thereby avoiding charges and earning interest, at the same time. And interest rates on 6 month or 12 month time deposits are ATTRACTIVE.

Save AND EARN! Kind of 👿

(John! I posted this as a comment on your thread, but found the comments closed!)

Amazon Associates Introduces Context Links (Beta)…

For those of you who are interested in Amazon’s affiliates program, it seems that they are trialling a new poduct, called Context Links Beta! I’m including a quote from their website about Context Links and their benefits.

Context Links are a quick and convenient way to add links to your website and monetize your content. Context Links automatically identify and link relevant phrases within your page content to Amazon products, unlocking new ad inventory and saving you the time from having to manually create links. You can add the links to your pages in minutes, and we provide a wealth of options to customize how they are displayed. You create the content. We’ll link it.

How it works.
When you login to Associates, you are given the standard options or you can configure everything. You can also choose how many items you want underlined. I just went with the standard code at first. Anyway, the code that you are given is installed in your blog just once right before the final command (in WP, that’s in the Footer.php file in your presentation theme editor option), and voila! It works. Or it should.

The text of certain items is underlined on the page. I’m providing an example that shows how neat the whole program is. You’ll be able to provide context linked products from Amazon’s store within your blog without all the fuss of choosing and pasting actual links.

context links

For your readers, the whole graphic loads very quickly without holding up the browser. It also disappears quickly. I found it much more responsive than some of the intelliTXT ads that appear on some blogs. I’m installing it on this blog for a trial period (it is a BETA after all), and we’ll see. The first few pages I loaded didn’t display anything that I could see. You can comment any thoughts if you wish!