Connect with us

Finance

Have You Set Financial Goals For 2025? Here’s Why It Matters More Than You Think

Published

on

Have You Set Financial Goals For 2025? Here’s Why It Matters More Than You Think

Have you set your financial goals for 2025 yet? The end of the year is the perfect time to reflect on what has happened to date, it’s a time to review your progress against past goals and set financial intentions for the upcoming year. Setting financial goals is the foundation for success and growth.

Why Financial Goals Matter

The value of setting financial goals can often be underestimated, but financial goals are important. Here are a few reasons why financial goals matter:

  • Clarity and direction: Financial goals offer you a clear roadmap for where you want to go financially. Finances are an important pillar to your overall health and having a healthy financial plan will reduce financial stress and keep you happy. Financial goals provide focus and help prioritize spending, saving, and investing your money.
  • Motivation and accountability: Financial goals create a sense of purpose for your money and keep you motivated to stick to your plans. It gives your money a job. You can easily track your progress against your goals and that can keep you accountable as you check in on your progress and ensure you meet your targets.
  • Financial security and freedom: Financial goals ensure you are saving for emergencies, retirement, and investing your money. Without a plan your money won’t do anything, but when you plan for where your money needs to go, it allows you to build wealth intentionally rather than hoping that it will all work out.

What Happens If You Don’t Set Financial Goals?

Not having financial goals may feel harmless but there are consequences to not giving your money direction and purpose. Here are some ways your finances suffer from not setting financial goals:

1. Lack of focus leads to wasted money

Without goals, money often gets spent impulsively rather than strategically planning and saving for purchases.

Advertisement

2. Missed opportunities for growth

No financial goals mean no plan for investing in your future. You may fail to take advantage of wealth building opportunities.

3. Financial stress and insecurity

Living paycheck to paycheck and constantly worrying about money is stressful, and unexpected expenses can derail your finances.

4. Slower progress to retirement or big dreams

Without a goal you risk delaying retirement or never achieving major financial milestones that can bring joy to your life.

How to Set Financial Goals for 2025

Now that you see how setting financial goals can help you, here are some tips on how to set your financial goals for 2025:

Advertisement

1. Reflect

Asses where your finances are now, and what has worked and not worked for you in the past. Identify areas for improvement and opportunities for growth.

2. Set SMART goals

SMART goals are more specific and measurable. For example, rather than stating you’ll build an emergency fund you can set a goal of saving $10,000 for an emergency fund by December 2025.

3. Break goals into milestones

Divide larger goals such as retirement into smaller, manageable steps and be sure to track your progress monthly or quarterly. And don’t forget to celebrate your small wins to keep you motivated on your progress.

4. Prioritize wealth building strategies

Debt eats away at wealth so prioritize being debt free and building passive income streams to help you build wealth.

The bottom line is that you win when you set financial goals and stay accountable to them through the year. Goals give you the clarity, focus, and motivation needed to turn your financial dreams into reality. Without a plan, it’s easy to drift and let opportunities slip away. But with clear goals and consistent tracking, you create the foundation for long-term financial security, growth, and freedom. As 2025 approaches, take the time to define your goals, map out your strategy, and commit to the process. Your future self will thank you.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Finance

Paramount ally RedBird says using Middle East money to help buy Warner Bros. could be a good idea

Published

on

Paramount ally RedBird says using Middle East money to help buy Warner Bros. could be a good idea

  • Last year, Paramount said it would use $24 billion in funding from Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, and Qatar to help buy WBD.
  • Now that Paramount has won that deal, it won’t say whether that’s still the plan.
  • A key Paramount backer suggests that Gulf money would be a good thing for this deal.

We still don’t know if Paramount intends to use billions of dollars from Gulf states like Saudi Arabia to help it buy Warner Bros. Discovery.

But if Paramount does end up doing that, it wouldn’t be a bad thing, says a key Paramount backer.

That update comes via Gerry Cardinale, who heads up RedBird Capital Partners, the private equity company that helped finance Larry and David Ellison’s acquisition of Paramount last year and is doing the same with their WBD deal now.

In a podcast with Puck’s Matt Belloni published Wednesday night, Cardinale wouldn’t comment directly on Paramount’s previously disclosed plans to use $24 billion from sovereign wealth funds controlled by Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, and Qatar to help buy WBD.

Instead, he reiterated Paramount’s current messaging on the deal’s financing: The $47 billion in equity Paramount will use to buy WBD will be “backstopped” by the Ellison family and RedBird — meaning they are ultimately on the hook to pay up. The rest of the $81 billion deal will be financed with debt.

Advertisement

Cardinale also acknowledged what Paramount has disclosed in its current disclosure documents: It intends to sell portions of that $47 billion commitment to other investors: “We haven’t syndicated anything at this time,” he said. “We do expect to syndicate with strategic, domestic, and foreign investors. But at the end of the day, that alchemy shouldn’t matter because it’ll be done in the right way.”

And when asked about concerns about Middle Eastern countries owning part of a media conglomerate that includes assets like CNN, Cardinale suggested that could be a plus.

“I think we want to be a global company,” he said. “You look at what’s going on right now geopolitically. What’s going on right now geopolitically out of the Middle East wouldn’t be, the positives of that would not be happening without some of those sovereigns that you’re referring to.”

He continued:

“The world is changing. We can stick our head in the sand and pretend it’s not, or we can embrace globalization and the derivative benefits both geopolitically and otherwise that come from that. Content generation coming out of Hollywood is one of America’s greatest exports.
I firmly embrace the global nature and orientation that we bring to this from a capital standpoint, from a footprint standpoint, etc. At the end of the day, I do understand some of the concerns that you’ve raised, but that will work itself out between signing and closing because at the end of the day, worst-case scenario, Ellison and RedBird are 100% of this thing.”

All of which suggests to me that Paramount still intends to use money from Gulf-based sovereign wealth funds to buy WBD.

What I don’t understand is why the company won’t say that out loud. Does that mean it’s still negotiating with potential investors? Or that it’s reticent to disclose outside investors, for whatever reason, until it has to? A Paramount rep declined to comment.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Finance

Crypto bill hits new impasse, raising doubts over its future

Published

on

Crypto bill hits new impasse, raising doubts over its future
Talks on landmark crypto legislation have hit a new impasse after banks said they could not back a compromise pushed by the White House, a development that cast doubt on whether the bill will pass this year and sparked criticism from President Donald Trump ​who accused lenders of trying to undermine it.
Continue Reading

Finance

Stamford Finance Students Wow Judges, Take Home Trophy in Regional CFA Competition – UConn Today

Published

on

Stamford Finance Students Wow Judges, Take Home Trophy in Regional CFA Competition – UConn Today

A tenacious team of finance majors, who sacrificed most of their winter break to prepare for the CFA Institute Research Challenge, took first place in that regional competition last week.

Students Hunter Baillargeon, Dylan Fischetto, Richard Opper, Philip Ochocinski and Rushit Chauhan were tasked with researching and analyzing a major utility company, and then producing a 10-page report about whether to buy, hold, or sell its stock. They chose to sell.

One of the CFA judges said both the team’s report and presentation were among the best he had seen in many years.

“As a team, we were thrilled our hard work paid off and our many hours of work allowed us to achieve what we did,’’ Baillargeon said. “What we accomplished couldn’t have been done without working with such a cohesive and collective unit.’’

“From a technical perspective, I realize how valuable true analysis is and the importance of looking where others don’t for a differentiated approach,’’ Baillargeon said.

Advertisement

The first round of competition featured 24 college teams from the Stamford-Hartford-Providence region. The Stamford team, composed of seniors all of whom all participate in UConn’s Student Managed Fund program, received its first-place award Feb. 26 in a ceremony in Hartford. The team will advance to the East Coast competition later this month.

Stamford Finance Program is Robust

“The Stamford team’s advancement in this competition reflects not only the students’ exceptional talent and work ethic, but also the rigor and applied focus of the UConn finance curriculum,’’ said professor Yiming Qian, head of the Finance Department.

“Our Stamford campus hosts approximately 200 financial management majors. The Stamford program is a vital part of the School and continues to demonstrate outstanding strength,” she said.

Professors Steve Wilson and Jeff Bianchi, who combined have 75 years of experience in the investment industry, were the team’s advisers and were supported by academic director Katherine Pancak.

Wilson said the task of analyzing a utility is particularly complex because of the company’s structure and the regulatory environment in which it operates.

Advertisement

“I believe the Stamford team stood out because of the depth of their research, and willingness to take a bold stand, including the decision to ‘go out on a limb’ and recommend selling the stock,’’ he said. “They didn’t ‘play it safe.’’’

“This clean-sweep was a true team effort. They were tireless throughout, and sleepless too often, but they never wavered from their desire to always dig deeper and uncover any information that would strengthen our investment case,’’ he said. “What a phenomenal job they did!’’

Competition in Hong Kong Is Ultimate Goal

The Stamford team will compete against Loyola, Canisius, Sacred Heart; Seton Hall, Villanova, St. Michaels, Western New England, University of Maine, Fordham and Penn State next. In total, some 8,000 students are expected to participate in various competitions worldwide, culminating in a championship round in Hong Kong in May.

Wilson said the financial industry is always welcoming of new talent. And when one of the judges told him that the Stamford team produced some of the best work that he’d seen in years, Wilson felt tremendous pride for the students.

“Finance is an open playing field. In investments, the best idea wins,’’ he said.

Advertisement

Baillargeon said he will always appreciate the whole team’s dedication.

“What I’ll remember most is the help of our advisers and our cohesive, close-knit team where everyone pulled their weight,’’ Baillargeon said. “We put in long hours, did a tremendous amount of research, and collaborated well together. I hope when I enter the workforce I get to work with a team as committed as this one is.’’

Continue Reading

Trending