Why do we track Net Worth?
Be sure you know the condition of your flocks, give careful attention to your herds; for riches do not endure forever, and a crown is not secure for all generations.
Proverbs 27:23-24
As Christians desiring to be stewards, the reasons for tracking our net worth may be different for us then for the rest of the world. While many people look at their net worth as a financial scorecard, we need to understand it as a summation of what we have been placed in charge of. As stewards, part of our job is to keep track of and manage everything that has been entrusted to our care, and nothing makes you look more closely at everything you have like estimating your net worth. Net worth is also a valuable tool for evaluating the effectiveness of financial decisions and analyzing our financial strategies. But it is important to remember that our net worth is not what determines our success as stewards, nor is it something to get emotionally attached to, it is only a tool to be used to make us better stewards.
Your net worth, in the strictest terms, is the cash value of everything you own, minus everything you owe i.e. if you sold everything including the clothes on your back and paid off every debt, how much cash would you be holding. This number is important because it sums up your financial life. If your individual accounts and assets are battles, your net worth is what lets you know who’s winning the war.
How we track it
The bad news is that your net worth changes every day and to keep an exact figure pretty much requires you to be both an accountant and a prophet. The good news is that it’s possible to get a fairly reasonable figure without that much work. Sense Mint.com is already tracking our major accounts for us, all we have to do is figure out what other assets and liabilities we have and do the math. Fortunately, Mint will do most of the work for us. If you played around with Mint.com for a little while after you set up your account, then you may have noticed that there is a place for you to track the worth of your property. In fact, you can track everything from the value of your home to the value of your dishes if you so desire. If you haven’t found this feature yet, click on the My Accounts link at the top of your Mint.com home page and you’ll find a place to add financial accounts, real estate and other.
Now I have no intention of making you sit down and estimate the value of your clothing, curtains and cookware because even if you remembered how much you paid for them, chances are you aren’t familiar with the laws of depreciation and who knows what you would be able to sell them for anyways. There are things that we can find out about though, your house and car for example. In fact, the house is the easiest, and if you have a mortgage payment, you definitely want to make sure to include this. All you have to do is put your address into Mint and it will estimate the value for you. It won’t be exact but neither will any other number that you get short of actually selling your house and writing down what was paid for it. I do follow real estate in my area fairly closely though ( I still have dreams of flipping houses for a living) and the estimate that Mint came back with was in the ballpark for what I had figured – if anything, it was about $4 – $5000 high.
Next we figure in our cars. The easiest way to do this is to look up its Kelly blue book value. Again, this is not an exact value but it is an estimate based on what other similar cars are selling for. So go out to www.kbb.com and answer the questions. I usually use the Private Party Value because I have no intention of ever selling my Jeep to a car dealership. If you regularly trade in your cars or are planning on doing so in the next few years, you may want to use the Trade-In value. Once you have an estimated value, go ahead and put that in Mint.
Next we put in our property. Like I said, it’s almost pointless to put in everything we own because there is no way of knowing how much we could really sell most of our stuff for (assuming we could sell it at all). But there are things you should be sure to find the value of and include, such as boats, RVs, jewelry, collectables, artwork, antiques or anything that is not likely to depreciate in value. Also, there are certain things that should not be included such as items that you could not sell or things that only have sentimental value. Do not include household fixtures or appliances that would stay with the house if sold, those are understood to be included in the value of the home. Also, do not try to attach a value to non-material things such as work experience or the potential value of your education (do include college loans though).
Now that you have the “Big Picture” items in, feel free to add anything that you want. If you really want to do the research and find out how much your curtains are worth, then go for it. Just remember that it’s only an estimate and if it really came down to it, you may not be able to sell them for as much as you think. That being said, it’s a good idea to update the information included in your net worth at least once a year to keep it relatively recent. So if you don’t want to figure out the resale value of your bath mats each year, don’t add them, or in accountant language, assume their resale value has depreciated to $0.
Important
This was where I originally planned on ending this post but I felt it was important to touch on something again. Many people get very emotionally attached to their financial net worth and use it as a scorecard to determine their successes. As Christians, we need to understand that our worth does not determine our success as stewards. Suppose for a moment that a man’s net worth continued to fall year after year because his amount of giving continued to increase. From a worldly standpoint this would be considered financially unwise but from a Christian standpoint he is simply giving what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
Matthew 6:19-21
The world acts from a position of ownership, we must act from a position of stewardship. Our goal is not to become wealthy even thought our duty as stewards may include increasing wealth. So do not use your net worth as anything other than what it is; a tool for determining your financial position and for tracking the direction or your finances. It is not a measure of your stewardship, it is not a scorecard of your wealth, and it is not a figure to devote unhealthy amounts of your time obsessing over.
But godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out of it. But if we have food and clothing, we will be content with that. People who want to get rich fall into temptation and a trap and into many foolish and harmful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
1 Timothy 6:6-10