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Personal Finance Essentials

Foundational concepts for managing money and building long-term stability.

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Net worth

Front

Assets minus liabilities; a snapshot of your financial position.

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Emergency fund

Front

Liquid cash buffer for surprises; reduces reliance on high-interest debt.

Back
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Compound interest

Front

Earnings on principal plus prior earnings; growth accelerates over time.

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Inflation

Front

Prices rise over time; the same money buys less (focus on real purchasing power).

Back
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Diversification

Front

Spreading risk across assets; reduces dependence on any single outcome.

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Cash flow

Front

Income minus expenses; the fuel for saving and investing.

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Fixed vs variable expenses

Front

Fixed are stable (rent), variable fluctuate (food). Knowing both helps planning.

Back
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APR

Front

Annual Percentage Rate; includes interest and some fees (useful for comparing debt).

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High-interest debt

Front

Debt with high APR tends to dominate finances; prioritize paying it down.

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Minimum payment trap

Front

Paying only the minimum maximizes interest paid and time to payoff.

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Credit utilization

Front

Percent of credit limit used; high utilization can hurt credit scores.

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Index fund

Front

A fund that tracks a market index; typically low-cost and diversified.

Back
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Expense ratio

Front

Annual fee as a % of assets; small differences compound over time.

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Fee drag

Front

Fees reduce compounding; lowering fees increases long-term outcomes.

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Asset allocation

Front

Mix of stocks/bonds/cash; primary driver of risk and return.

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Risk tolerance

Front

How much volatility you can emotionally and financially handle.

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Time horizon

Front

When you need the money affects how much risk you can take.

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Dollar-cost averaging

Front

Investing a fixed amount regularly; reduces timing risk.

Back
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Liquidity

Front

How quickly you can convert an asset to cash without major loss.

Back
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Insurance

Front

Paying a known cost to reduce risk of rare, large losses.

Back
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Real return

Front

Return after inflation; what matters for future purchasing power.

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Nominal return

Front

Return before inflation; can look better than real outcomes.

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Opportunity cost

Front

Money spent in one place cannot be used elsewhere; compare alternatives.

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Margin of safety

Front

Keep buffers (cash, time, lower fixed costs) to reduce fragility.

Back