Saving big when your cash stash is small

posted in: News | 0

By Margarette Burnette | NerdWallet

If your savings fund balance isn’t currently where you want it to be, don’t be discouraged. Having any amount saved for an emergency, no matter how small, means you’ve already taken the most important step to protecting yourself from a financial setback.

The next step is also important — maximize how much your money grows. Here’s how you can do it.

Put your funds in a high-yield account

Maximizing the interest you earn in emergency savings is crucial. These days, some of the best high-yield savings accounts have an annual percentage yield, or APY, of more than 5%. At that rate, you’d earn $5 in interest for every $100 deposited. That’s definitely having your money work for you.

A lot of people are earning far less interest on their savings. The national average savings rate is only 0.46% as of April 15, 2024, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. With that percentage, you earn less than 50 cents for every $100 in an account over the course of a year.

It is worth noting that savings rates can change at any time, so you’re not guaranteed to earn 5% forever. But you can capitalize on that high APY for as long as possible. And even when overall rates eventually dip, you’re still better off putting your money in a high-yield account. Those accounts tend to consistently offer better rates than their low-yield competition.

Review your budget

Once your money is working for you in a high-rate account, take a look at your last few bank and credit card statements and see if you can squeeze a little more to stash away. For example, if you’re paying monthly bank fees, switch to a bank that doesn’t charge monthly fees.

Monthly subscriptions could be another area to trim. According to a 2022 study from market research firm C+R Research, 42% of respondents admit they “stopped using a subscription service(s) but forgot they were still paying for the service.” If that applies to you, canceling one or more subscriptions you don’t use would be like finding free money.

Play the bonus game

Cutting back on spending isn’t the only way to come up with extra cash. If you’re planning to switch banks (say, after reading the advice above), you could find one that offers a bonus for opening a new account. There may be some requirements, such as setting up direct deposit, but if you qualify, it’s a nice way to give your savings a boost.

Set and forget savings bumps with auto transfers

Commit to setting money aside regularly. The amount isn’t as important as the consistency. To make it easier, set up an automatic transfer from checking to savings at regular intervals. If you deposit $45 a month (savings from a few canceled streaming subscriptions, maybe?), you would save $540 after a year. And with that money in a high-yield account, your actual bank balance would be higher. You can use a savings calculator to figure out exactly how much you can save, based on the interest rate and how much you put away each month.

Jump-start your savings habit with a challenge

You could also build your emergency fund in a more hands-on way with the 52-week money challenge. This is a strategy for starting small and building the savings habit as time goes on. You save a specific amount of money each week, starting with $1 and increasing the figure by $1 with each deposit. In a year, you would save over $1,300.

Celebrate early

Building your savings balance will likely be more a marathon than a sprint, so it’s important to celebrate passing mile markers along the way. Did you save consistently for two months? That’s a win! Did you reach a savings milestone? Hooray! Wins can help motivate you to keep going.

By saving consistently and maximizing interest, you can boost your cash cushion and take solid steps to protect your financial future.

 

Margarette Burnette writes for NerdWallet. Email: mburnette@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @Margarette.

A Kremlin shake-up of Russia’s Defense Ministry comes at a key moment in the Ukraine war

posted in: Politics | 0

By The Associated Press

Standing in his dress uniform in the back of his Aurus convertible, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was driven around Red Square to review the troops during last week’s Victory Day parade. It was to be his last inspection in that role.

Over the weekend, President Vladimir Putin replaced Shoigu — the 68-year-old was the longest serving member of his Cabinet — in a rare Kremlin shake-up that took place even as a Russian offensive in northeastern Ukraine was making gains.

Just as stunning was the choice to replace Shoigu — Andrei Belousov, a 65-year-old economics expert who has never dealt with the military or other law enforcement agencies.

Putting Belousov in charge of the Defense Ministry was seen as a way to tighten control over military spending and put the burgeoning defense sector in sync with the rest of the economy, hit hard by Western sanctions.

The reshuffle caught more than a few pundits by surprise, and some mysteries are yet to unfold.

SHOIGU’S WOES

Shoigu’s job seemed to be in jeopardy early in the 2022 invasion as Russia suffered battlefield setbacks that drew the ire of Russia’s hawks. He and the chief of the military’s General Staff, Gen. Valery Gerasimov, were widely blamed for the failure to capture Kyiv as well as a hasty retreat by Russian troops from northeastern and southern Ukraine amid a stiff counteroffensive.

Last year, Russian mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin unleashed a blistering and profane verbal attack on Shoigu and Gerasimov, accusing them of incompetence and corruption. In June, Prigozhin launched a mutiny to demand their ouster, seizing the military headquarters in the southern city of Rostov-on-Don and sending his soldiers-for-hire on a march on Moscow that he called off hours later.

Two months later, Prigozhin and his top lieutenants died in a suspicious plane crash widely seen as Kremlin payback, while Shoigu seemed to shore up his position. The Kremlin denied involvement.

Even though he has held the defense minister’s job for 11 1/2 years, Shoigu’s fortunes seemed to take a further downturn last month. His deputy, Timur Ivanov, was arrested on bribery charges and hauled into court still in his military uniform. Ivanov had been Shoigu’s top associate since before becoming defense minister, and Kremlin watchers saw it as a serious blow.

A SOFT LANDING

But Putin is known to abhor firings under pressure, and the staunchly loyal Shoigu — who has accompanied the president on vacations in the Siberian mountains over the years — was no exception. Shoigu got a soft landing, shifted to heading the presidential Security Council and replacing Nikolai Patrushev. The role is roughly similar to the U.S. national security adviser.

Patrushev, a longtime hawkish and powerful member of Putin’s inner circle, will get a new appointment to be announced soon, the Kremlin said, leaving another unanswered question.

“Shoigu is moving into a respectable and powerful position because he is loyal, and he and Putin are friends,” Dara Massicot, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment’s Russia and Eurasia Program, said on the social media platform X.

AN ECONOMIST AS DEFENSE MINISTER

While Shoigu gets a dignified exit from the Defense Ministry, Belousov “will probably make organizational changes,” Massicot said.

Putting an economist in charge of the Defense Ministry was seen as a way of better managing what is an increasing drain on Russia’s wealth as the war’s third year drags on.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov emphasized the need to integrate the military sector more closely with the economy to “put it in sync with the current dynamics.”

Belousov graduated from the economics faculty of Moscow State University and held a succession of senior government jobs before serving as Putin’s economic adviser in 2013-20. Since then, he was a deputy prime minister in charge of economic strategies, advocating stronger state controls.

Deeply religious, Belousov has talked repeatedly about needing to uphold “traditional family values” putting him in line with Putin’s conservative agenda.

When Moscow illegally annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014, Belousov reportedly was the only member of Putin’s economic team who immediately supported the move.

Belousov isn’t Russia’s first civilian defense minister. Although Shoigu loved wearing the uniform, he had no military background; before becoming the minister, he had led the Emergency Situations Ministry, responsible for civil defense and addressing natural disasters. Previous defense ministers were Anatoly Serdyukov, the head of tax police, and Sergei Ivanov, the former foreign intelligence chief.

But Belousov’s predecessors all got the job in peacetime while he takes over in what many military analysts see as a decisive moment in the war — when Russia is trying to take advantage of a slowdown in the West sending weapons to Ukraine.

EASING HAWKS’ CONCERNS

The Kremlin sought to ease the widespread bewilderment over choosing Belousov as defense minister by emphasizing that Gerasimov — the chief of the General Staff — actually directs the fighting in Ukraine.

“The chief of the General Staff is in many ways the key person who reports directly to the commander-in-chief, Putin, and the minister is really just to ensure that the military have what they need,” said Mark Galeotti, head of the Mayak Intelligence consultancy.

“Having an economist, someone who has been speaking about the need to basically subordinate much of the economy to the needs of the defense sector, actually makes a certain amount of sense. It’s now essentially a financial administrator’s job,” he said in a commentary.

Galeotti said Putin could still replace Gerasimov, describing him as “unimaginative, prone to truly wasteful operations,” and “absolutely unwilling to actually tell the commander-in-chief, to tell Putin, some of the realities of war. The Ukrainians must be hoping that he stays.”

Belousov is widely expected to purge the ministry of Shoigu’s top associates -– a move that would hardly encourage stability at a key moment in the conflict.

Still, Massicot and other observers believe that some popular commanders whom Shoigu saw as rivals and tried to sideline — including Gen. Sergei Surovikin, known to have longtime links to Prigozhin and credited for building multilayered defenses that stymied Ukraine’s botched counteroffensive last summer — could again get senior positions.

Sergei Markov, a pro-Kremlin political analyst, said Putin’s key motive was to rein in graft in the top brass, embodied by figures like Ivanov, who was arrested in April and accused of taking massive bribes.

“The situation with Timur Ivanov has shown that corruption has exceeded all limits,” Markov said. Another task for Belousov will be to work more closely with industries to modernize the military quickly, he added.

GIRDING FOR A LONG WAR

Putin likely expects Belousov to better integrate the Defense Ministry’s agenda with broader economic policies, according to the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think-tank.

“This effort sets conditions for a fuller economic mobilization, suggesting that the Kremlin continues to prepare for a protracted war in Ukraine,” it said.

Alexandra Prokopenko of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center also sees Belousov’s appointment as a sign the Kremlin envisions a long war.

“Putin’s priority is war; war of attrition is won by economics,” she wrote. “Belousov is in favor of stimulating demand from the budget, which means that military spending will at least not decrease but rather increase.”

Melinda French Gates resigns as Gates Foundation co-chair, 3 years after her divorce from Bill Gates

posted in: News | 0

By THALIA BEATY (Associated Press)

NEW YORK (AP) — Melinda French Gates will step down as co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the nonprofit she and her ex-husband Bill Gates founded and built into one of the world’s largest philanthropic organizations over the past 20 years.

“This is not a decision I came to lightly,” French Gates posted on the X platform on Monday. “I am immensely proud of the foundation that Bill and I built together and of the extraordinary work it is doing to address inequities around the world.”

She praised the foundation’s CEO, Mark Suzman, and the foundation’s board of trustees, which was significantly expanded after the couple announced their divorce in May 2021.

“The time is right for me to move forward into the next chapter of my philanthropy,” French Gates wrote in her statement. She organizes some of her investments and philanthropic gifts through her organization, Pivotal Ventures, which is not a nonprofit.

Bill Gates thanked French Gates for her “critical” contributions to the foundations in a statement, saying, “I am sorry to see her leave, but I am sure she will have a huge impact in her future philanthropic work.”

French Gates will receive $12.5 billion as part of her agreement with Gates, which she said would commit to future work focused on women and families.

The Gates Foundation did not immediately return a request for comment about whether those assets would come from the foundation itself. In an emailed statement, the foundation said that Suzman announced the decision to employees on Monday.

“After a difficult few years watching women’s rights rolled back in the U.S. and around the world, she wants to use this next chapter to focus specifically on altering that trajectory,” Suzman said of French Gates.

Suzman said he knew many had joined the foundation in part because of their admiration for her advocacy, especially around gender equity.

“I know how beloved Melinda is here,” Suzman wrote.

The Gates Foundation holds $75.2 billion in its endowment as of December 2023, and announced in January, it planned to spend $8.6 billion through the course of its work in 2024.

The Associated Press receives financial support for news coverage in Africa from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and for news coverage of women in the workforce from Pivotal Ventures.

___

Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP’s philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.

Boyfriend of former St. Kate’s dean also now faces charges for swindling $400K from the school

posted in: Society | 0

Prosecutors on Monday charged the boyfriend of a former St. Catherine University dean for his role in the couple’s alleged embezzling more than $400,000 from the St. Paul school through bogus contracts with his healthcare consulting company.

Juan Ramon Bruce, 56, of Shakopee faces the same charges as former university nursing dean Laura Jean Fero — six counts of aiding and abetting theft by swindle. Bruce appeared before a Ramsey County District judge on Monday and remained jailed in lieu of $100,000 bail.

Juan Ramon Bruce and Laura Jean Fero (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Fero, 54, who now lives in Apopka, Fla., and works as dean of nursing and chief academic nurse at AdventHealth University in Orlando, was arrested Wednesday and charged in Ramsey County District Court on Friday. She posted a $75,000 bond and was released from the county jail ahead of a June 7 court hearing.

Court records do not list an attorney for Bruce or Fero.

Monday’s complaint against Bruce says a review of Fero’s university credit card showed she racked up $26,189 in sham charges — airfare, rental cars, hotels and airport parking — while traveling with Bruce.

The criminal complaints alleged Fero entered into contracts with Bruce and his healthcare consulting company, JB & Associates LLC., between August 2020 and last August. The work purportedly included outreach, marketing and market and cost analysis for continuing education development and delivery for St. Catherine.

The charges allege Fero “transferred significant funds to Bruce over multiple years while Bruce provided little or no services to the university.”

The charges further allege that Fero and Bruce were “explicitly working together to take money from the university by abusing Fero’s position of trust and authority.”

Fero was St. Catherine’s dean of nursing from June 2019 through Aug. 28, 2023, when she left for AdventHealth University. It was then that St. Catherine officials discovered missing funds and conducted an internal investigation, the charges say. The university reported its findings to St. Paul police in late November.

A St. Paul police review of financial records associated with Bruce’s contracts revealed his company received six payments from St. Catherine’s, totaling $412,644, between Aug. 31, 2020, and Aug. 23, 2023.

The investigations by St. Catherine and police turned up additional emails between Fero and Bruce indicating they coordinated in submitting reports so he would continue to receive university funds, the complaint alleges. The emails consisted of Fero sending information to him to be included in his reports and invoices.

In an interview with police, Fero initially said she met Bruce from a “cold call” to St. Catherine about medical supplies and that they were not in a relationship prior to the university contracting with him. Fero later said she had met him on the dating website Elitesingles.com.

Fero admitted to “editing” documents that Bruce submitted to St. Catherine, the charges say.

Bruce also had a St. Catherine’s email account during the time he was under contract with the university. After Fero left St. Catherine, Bruce sent a message from his university email account to Fero’s personal email attaching a purported final report titled “JB Sept Final Rpt.”

Related Articles

Crime & Public Safety |


Walz names two women to fill vacancies on Ramsey County District Court bench

Crime & Public Safety |


Myon Burrell is arrested for second time since sentence was commuted in 2008 slaying

Crime & Public Safety |


St. Paul man charged with carjacking and shooting motorist in Cub Foods parking lot

Crime & Public Safety |


Former St. Kate’s dean accused of swindling $400K from the school

Crime & Public Safety |


Man shot, wounded during carjacking attempt on St. Paul’s East Side