T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
83.1 | MYM, Quicken, WealthBuilder | EPIK::FINNERTY | | Thu Feb 27 1992 08:52 | 34 |
|
the IBMPC notes conference has an extended discussion of both Quicken
and Managing Your Money. There is a short note on WealthBuilder in the
old INVESTING conference.
I have not tried Quicken or MYM, but the consensus seems to be that
Quicken is easier to use, particularly Quicken for Windows, but that
MYM is in a different league... if all you want to do is manage your
checkbook, then Quicken is cheaper and easier to use. If you want to
manage your portfolio, the rumor-mill has it that MYM wins hands down.
(Obviously, not everyone agrees with this statement, and each tool has
its passionate advocates.)
I have tried WealthBuilder, and wound up returning it. Not a bad tool,
really, but kind of hokey in its use of graphics, and limited in
strange ways. For example, the only non-taxable portfolio is a
retirement portfolio. Huh? Their asset allocation model is
graphically pretty, but the information about allocating your funds can
be derived less expensively by going to the library and getting the
recommendations of any of a number of advisory services. And most
importantly, for me, is how often I planned to use the tool; once
you've set up your financial plan (if you haven't already), then
there's not very much you can really do with it. If you already have a
sound financial plan, then its value, IMO, diminishes considerably.
There's a deal on now at Egghead for MYM 8.0 for $89, which is very
low. Maybe they have a Windows version waiting in the wings... (?)
/Jim
btw, while we're on the subject, what features are you looking for for
"managing investment portfolios"? What information do you plan on
putting in, and what information do you hope to get out?
|
83.2 | WealthBuilder and Others | MAIL::WIRTZ | John Wirtz @STO - GSG EIS - DTN 445-6507 | Thu Feb 27 1992 10:18 | 26 |
| As in .1, I too bought Wealthbuilder and have been a bit disappointed.
It really looks great but once you get deeper into it, you find some
limitations. Reality, INC. tries to strong arm you in getting the
subscription service at $150? for quarterly updates of 10,000
securities. I would rather have "timely" information of the few
securities that are important to me.
I understand there is a major release planned for Wealthbuilder in the
next few months. They are going to offer a dial-up service as well
as subscription services to get securities information. I will take a
good look at it when it becomes available but not holding my breath.
To continue with rumors, Investors Business Daily (competitor of WSJ
and Barons) is coming out with investment planning and management
software. Not sure when. I think it is ties closely to the way the
paper is organized. I will give this one a look as well.
I personnally use Quicken 5.0. It is cheap, easy to use and it does
give you some "reasonably" good investment performance reports.
However, I would like to get something a bit more sophisticated.
John
P.S. The AAII publishes a bi-monthly "computerized investing" letter
and a yearly compliation of all investing software. Have not seen any
of these, just know they exist.
|
83.3 | Some basic info on MYM | AUSTIN::RIST | SmallTalk--not small, doesn't talk | Thu Feb 27 1992 14:00 | 31 |
|
I own Managing Your Money (and don't intend to compare it with
Quicken). It does have what seem to me to be a reasonable set of
Portfolio functionality--let's you track your investments, knows
about IRAs, has the ability to link checking and investment
accounts, and more (I'm not a sophisticated investor at this point,
so I won't give opinions on the features).
MYM also has two other features which seem useful. The new one is
called "Asset Allocator" which it says is "based on the same 'Nobel
Prize Winning' strategies as some software costing $170" (Is that
WealthBuilder?). Unfortunately, I haven't used this in depth, what
this does is to ask you a lot of questions about your age, family
status, income, future needs, etc. and then propose an appropriate
investment strategy. Don't know yet what the output looks
like...Sounds kinda like a portion of what we'd all like investment
councilors to do for us. I'll put more in later after I play around
with it more.
The other feature, which has some additional cost is a link to
something called Managing the Market, which at the very least will
call a service via your modem and update all of the current prices
of your holdings. I'm sure that it does much more--just don't know.
These features are NEVER discussed in the IBMPC notes conference
(the point of interest being more focused on CHECKFREE type
services). But this stuff is getting to be of more and more
interest to me. Can anyone else give more information on this? If
not, again, I'll try to write more later (when I'm smarter???).
lance
|
83.4 | basic summary for those who are not familiar | STOKES::NEVIN | | Fri Feb 28 1992 11:33 | 6 |
| I am not familiar at all with these software packages but saw the note
and am curious. Could someone give a basic summary of what these
software packages do?
Thanks,
Bob
|
83.5 | MoneyPlans | SFC00::SFC04::SMITHP | | Mon Mar 02 1992 10:19 | 19 |
| I kept getting info from Parsons about their "MoneyPlans" They claim its a
personal financial advisor. If I recall their glossies correctly it will do
the following.
. Develop short-term financial plans
. Develop long-term financial plans (retirement planning?)
. Compare and analyze your investments
. Insurance planning
. College planning
. Organization of personal records
. What if analysis
.
.
.
All for the introductry price of $29.00 and a 30 day money back guarantee. Don't
recall their normal retail price. I have not purchased this package but thought
I would pass on the information. If your interested in their a 30 day free trail
Parsons number is 1(800)223-6925.
|
83.6 | Follow-on to MYM reply | AUSTIN::RIST | SmallTalk--not small, doesn't talk | Tue Mar 03 1992 14:13 | 46 |
|
> -< MoneyPlans >-
>
> . Develop short-term financial plans
> . Develop long-term financial plans (retirement planning?)
> . Compare and analyze your investments
> . Insurance planning
> . College planning
> . Organization of personal records
> . What if analysis
> .
Managing Your Money does all of that.
I looked again at the Managing the Market part. They say it lists
at $79, which gets you modem access to Dow Jones information (for as
little at $0.16/min). It will go out and update all of your stocks
(or those you tell it to), log whatever news you are interested
in, and that sort of thing. It looks like it creates a file with
updated prices that Managing Your Money can then read. They do
appologize for is lack of sophistication--they term it a plain
"workhorse" type of program.
The Asset Allocator function contains historical information on 9 or
10 different types of investments, including risk, average return,
highest and lowest returns to be expected, and more (this is per
class, not per stock). It will extract information elsewhere in the
program (current investments, insurance, cash, lots more) and take
you through a Q&A session to fill in the blanks and let you change
the extracted portion. You pick up to 5 investment types and it
will suggest some ways to reach your goals. It will also allow
what-if scenarios so you can play with it.
The results "look" reasonable and match the general rules I know
(e.g. high risk is better for long term, liquidity affects income).
Again the disclaimer that I am not an investment whiz and have
little to compare this with.
The more I work/play with MYM, the more interesting features I find.
For instance, it evaluated my rental house situation (I'm renting my
home while on assignment) and told me how much money I'm losing
compared to sale/investment of equity. It has home trade-up
evaluation aids, too.
lance
|
83.7 | What about MYM <--> Quicken? | SCAACT::RESENDE | Spit happens, Daddy! | Tue Mar 03 1992 22:29 | 3 |
| Does MYM interface with Quicken files?
Steve
|
83.8 | MYM no speaky QUICKEN | AUSTIN::RIST | SmallTalk--not small, doesn't talk | Wed Mar 04 1992 12:15 | 23 |
| >
> Does MYM interface with Quicken files?
>
One disappointing feature of MYM is that it does not take much of
any input at all. In fact, the Managing the Market information is
the only that I know of that MYM reads. I'd love to eventually get
electronic bank statements and have MYM (or whatever) input that
data and balance the old checkbook. The same would go for my
investment reports. WE HAVE THE TECHNOLOGY, just not the incentive
yet.
MYM will output information. You can write numerous ASCII reports
to files, output Lotus123 readable files, and output info for
various tax packages. I have not tried many of these (a few reports
only).
I also don't know what, if anything, Quicken might input. I have
never heard of a database converter between Quicken and MYM. I
believe that it is an apples and oranges kind of situation. Most
information won't match exactly.
lance
|
83.9 | "Retire ASAP" | DECWET::DEROSA | I = not(number); | Mon Jun 29 1992 12:21 | 4 |
| The Wall Street Journal had a review of five retirement planning
packages a couple of weeks ago. The top-rated one was "Retire ASAP".
Has anyone used it? And/or any experiences with the company, Calypso
Software?
|
83.10 | VMS money mgmt solution? | ZENDIA::FERGUSON | Your recipe is so tasty | Thu Apr 29 1993 11:17 | 27 |
| I would like to find a software package that:
- runs on the VMS
- is available internally so I can install it freely
(i have a 3100 at home)
to help me track my investments. In particular, the data i'll be entering
is:
- trans date
- share price
- cash investments
- dividend re-investment
- selling a position
- load paid (front-end abd backend)
I have several mutual funds, dec stock, and a couple of bank accounts that
I want to track. At the end of the month, i'll enter the data, then I'd
like to produce a report showing the value of everything. it would be nice
to produce graphs on the entire portfolio's value or per-investment. also,
i'd like to compute monthly RIO (if applicable), etc...
I'm not going to use it for: what-if analysis, etc. just plain old tracking.
suggestions?
fwiw, i'm a software engineer by trade.
|