For $30 A Year You Can Have A $10,000 Rainy Day Fund To Make Your Life Secure

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It's raining champagne! EuroMillions winners Gareth and Catherine Bull, from Mansfield in Nottinghamshire, celebrate their £41Million win.

Whether you're a lottery winner or not, everyone needs an emergency fund.

A major car repair, job loss, an accident around your home, costly renovations you didn't expect... all this can make a serious dent in your cash flow.

Most financial planners say you should be putting money away regularly to cover these "rainy day" problems.

But I don't agree. I have a contrary view on this ever since I heard a multi-millionaire give a different viewpoint...

You choose whether it will work for you or not.

Saving for these unlikely events just doesn't make sense. We spend a great deal of our working life putting money into the bank just to get a small amount of interest back.

Then it sits there doing nothing maybe for years. It's just a waste.

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This lump of money doesn't do anything except represent a large period of earning in your life that is gone forever.

Only when you use the sum does it become valuable. Money is designed to be in motion.

Otherwise it's useless as a chocolate fireguard.

But I do agree that you need some rainy day reserves.

So what's the alternative?

SECRET: You must build several lines of credit - and never use them - except for that rainy day.

Let's say you need $10,000 to keep you going for six months without a job or for an emergency. Instead of saving up that amount, find a way to get the same amount in credit.

You can do it 2 ways:

1- Get a new credit card, or two, but never use them. Put them in a safety deposit box if you ever think you'll be tempted to use them. Pay the annual fees and consider the $30 a year or so as a bonus for having that amount of money available to you on call.

2- Extend a line of credit on your mortgage. If you haven't revalued your house in the last few years, you might be surprised at how much it's gone up. Take out a $10,000 line of credit.

Now you've got the security of an emergency buffer - without sacrificing a couple of years of your life to save for it!

(I'm no Suze Orman - my financial views are sometimes unconventional. So always get advice from a qualified financial expert first).

Ken,

i got your lifetime membership and it has been a great move because i have been winning constantly,, the biggest has been $21600 but a lot of others for $300 and same. So you see i have made it back in a month and the rest is free!! thanks for everything you do, Tony W.

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