Archive for October, 2010

My 16 year old wants to do a summer exchange program to France. I want to empty her Coverdell ESA to finance this. Will just the gains be taxable and will it be taxable for her or me? We are only talking about ,000 invested 4 years ago with only a few hundred dollars in growth.

Comments (2)

You want to go to college.(Finish actually, you have some college.
You had an injury so you’re on sickness pay to cover daily expenses, you owe way more on your car than it’s worth, and it doesn’t drive on the freeway due to the transmission, you have bad credit-someone signed student loan docs in your name several years ago which are in default and therefore you can’t get financial aid or student loans due to federal student loan default. The bank did offer to help with student loans, only they denied the loans due to the credit.
What in this situation would you do to be able to:
a.) Travel (have a car to go places such as school etc, possibly work)
b.) Go to college
c.) own a home, or some type of place.
d.) Oneday start a buisiness(restaurant)
e.) Work, w/out sickness pay stopping too abruptly
Just curious to hear everyone’s own opinion and what they would do in this "Real life chose your own adventure" that I have presented for you. I wonder where I got the idea for it? :(
Thanks

Comments (2)

i live only 2,5years, can i lyie to them,and how they can check?

Comments (1)

Joel Podolny, Dean of the Yale School of Management from July 2005 to October 2008, interviews John Thornton. Mr. Thornton, Professor and Director of Global Leadership, Tsinghua University, Beijing, spoke to the Faith & Globalization seminar on the topic of “Faith and the Dynamics of Economic Development,” but first sat down with Dean Podolny for a one-on-one conversation. John L. Thornton has been a director of Intel since 2003 and is Chairman of the Finance Committee of the Board. He is a professor and Director of Global Leadership at Tsinghua University in Beijing.

Leave your Comment

You can choose from specific topics like law finance etc. Costs a little bit of money. Thanks

Comments (2)

In our financial canculator, there is a function call : e powered by x.
This function is obvious when it come to continuous compounding of interest rate where we have:

1 + effective annual rate = e powered by r

can anyone inspired me?
what does the "e" means?

Comments (1)