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Article
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"Cents
and Sensibility"
A
cash counselor puts your money where her mouth is
BY
SUSAN GREEN
photo:
Matthew Thorsen
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The Bible warns that "love
of money is the root of all evil," but playwright George Bernard
Shaw suggested the lack of it is responsible for the world's woes. As
a woman wary of most extremes, Christine Moriarty disagrees with both
ideas. The Lincoln-based financial planning consultant sees no significant
rich- man-poor-man dichotomy when it comes to fiscal well-being.
"I have clients who
are $30,000 in debt and others with $16 million in the bank," says
Moriarty. "Believe me, money doesn't solve all the problems you
might think."
Are the best things in life
really free? Or, in this time of plentiful credit cards, bankruptcies,
Wall Street jitters and Enronitis, doesmoney continue to talk?
"The rich just have
more of it," the 39-year-old Moriarty contends. "They struggle
with their comfort level and self-worth and what to do with what they
have. The poor are struggling because they have different and more limited
choices. Individuals in both groups are foggy and overwhelmed."
She points to anecdotal studies of lottery winners and people who inherit
vast sums. Five years later, most regretted their big windfalls. In
many instances, the cash was quickly squandered due to lack of experience
with managing money on a grand scale. Sometimes friends and relatives
began "a feeding frenzy," which led to hard feelings all around.
Moriarty believes acquiring
more money does not necessarily solve the problematic "emotional
relationships" people have with the elusive lucre. "Money
is just a tool that helps us in this world," she explains. "The
confusion starts when we give it the ultimate power in our lives."
People can recapture some of that power, according to Moriarty, if they
follow several basic pointers for improving the money-and-me relationship:
- "Stop using credit
cards," except when absolutely necessary
- Make sure to put some
cash in a bank account, "even $5 a week, so you can build a good
savings habit";
- "Figure out your
priorities - if it's family, friends and golf, then maybe stop eating
out so you can pay for the golf"; and
- "Think about the
long-term future and look at the big picture."
The big picture looks good
for Moriarty. In June, she'll get an award from the federal Small Business
Association - it's the Vermont 2002 Financial Advocate of the Year -
as a result of a nomination from Senator Patrick Leahy. Moriarity spoke
at several women's economic conferences he sponsored in Randolph.
Moriarty's holistic vision
in money matters seems to reflect a combination of economic common sense
and self-help spiritual wisdom. "I really do have a unique style,"
she acknowledges. "I did a lot of personal-growth work that I can
use in my business."
Her worldview might be New
Age, but Moriarty's roots are solidly Irish Catholic. From a family
that owned a Cheers-like neighborhood bar in suburban Boston, the Massachusetts
native was "always good with numbers." After attending the
University of Vermont as a business major specializing in finance, she
did not want to pursue a career in the corporate world - which at the
time seemed like her only option.
While working for the school's
dean of students after graduation in 1984, Moriarty was intrigued to
hear about a friend's roommate who was enrolled in an American Express
financial planning class. The money counseling seed was planted.
She then spent a year as
a ski bum at Sun Valley before returning to Beantown to help out at
the bar and toil in the urban canyons of high-stakes moolah: Moriarty
was a profit-sharing coordinator for employees at a mutual fund company,
and then an auditor of employee benefits at a certified public accounting
firm. Mean-while, she took a correspondence course for a certificate
in financial planning, got a "Series Seven" license that allowed
her to sell stocks and bonds, and earned a master's degree in business
administration at Babson College in Wellesley.
After a dry period without
a job in the mid-1990s, she was hired as a financial planner by a small
accounting firm - which laid off her entire division after three months.
A friend advised Moriarty to make use of a business idea that she'd
devised in graduate school. On a shoestring, she opened Moriarty Financial
Services in Needham to advise people about investment, retirement, education,
tax and estate planning. It flourished. But Moriarty had another goal.
"Since the day I left Vermont, I always knew I'd come back,"
she recalls. "So I moved to Lincoln in 1997, at first traveling
to Boston for a few days every two weeks. All my income was there for
about six or eight months."
Moriarty soon built up a
clientele in the Green Mountain State as well. Recently, she established
a triumvirate of work locations. "It's my Boston-Burlington-Bristol
connection," she explains. "Although I did - and still do
- all my paperwork at home in Lincoln, I meet clients at my offices
in those three places."
Moriarity meets some clients
in the Lakewood Commons complex on Shelburne Road, where she works one-on-one
with older people about to retire, widows faced with paying the bills
their husbands once handled, parents who want to begin saving for their
children's college expenses, or even twentysomethings whose parents
are retiring without being able to afford such a luxury.
Moriarty has taught massage
therapists how to set up their own businesses; co-hosted "following
your dreams" sessions at the Kripalu Institute, a yoga retreat
in the Berkshires; and talked to employees of large companies like UPS,
Bank of Boston and Wyeth Nutritionals or cultural institutions like
the Shelburne Museum.
Nowadays, Moriarty only
visits Boston every other month. Her life is still very much on the
road, however, with speaking engagements all over the country. Last
weekend she flew west to give a speech on the benefits of fee-based
planning for Metropolitan Life Insurance agents at a conference in Las
Vegas - where money doesn't just talk, it screams.
Although her stay in Sin
City was likely to involve a little time in the casino, Moriarty is
not a fan of gambling with investments. "I have always told people
to be diversified," she says. "No more than 10 percent should
be invested with your own company. After the Enron collapse, I looked
like a soothsayer. I was once an auditor, so my heart goes out to all
those Enron and Arthur Anderson employees who lost everything."
Does that debacle make her
feel disillusioned with capitalism? "No. The laws on the books
were not being enforced," she says. "We can't just blame the
system, even though there's plenty that needs to be fixed. There's nothing
wrong with money per se. There's nothing inherently wrong with capitalism.
"We need to look within,"
suggests Moriarty, sounding rather guru-like. "We have to become
happier and more at peace with ourselves. What's our responsibility?
What can we change? My job is to educate people about how to do that."
Nancy Fulton, a Jericho
resident with a small publishing business, began consulting Moriarty
about five years ago for help in retirement planning and other long-range
strategies. "We just clicked," she says of their initial meeting.
"She asked me to consider both my material and non-material assets
- like life experience, education and talents, who I was as a person."
Last July, Fulton was also
impressed by Moriarty's public-speaking skills during a workshop called
"How Much Joy Can You Stand?" at the Kripalu Institute. "She's
knowledgeable, humorous and has provocative ideas that are woven in
with solid financial principles," says Fulton. "She tells
people that money is all about how you value yourself."
Another of Moriarty's clients
set that price tag too high. "She was spending money like wildfire,"
the financial planner remembers. "I got her to stop. A year or
so later, she called to tell me that someone had accused her of being
frugal. She was thrilled."
Moriarty frequently sees
couples with terrible communication skills regarding their money, artists
who think they don't have the savvy to manage their own finances, and
people afraid to make any investments at all "because great-aunt
Harriet lost her life savings in the stock market." She does recommend
additional help for clients with seriously dysfunctional money habits.
"I like to call myself a 'financial coach,' but you have to do
all the actual work," Moriarty says. "Some people need a psychologist;
others need mediation. I've told clients to try therapy or to go to
Al-Anon. I'm really clear on what's my role and what isn't. That shopper,
for example, had already been in counseling, so she knew what her issues
were."
Moriarty suspects that any
"sense of inadequacy" can create barriers between people and
their money. Once a person understands that block, "you can examine
it honestly," she notes, "maybe even figure out why that pattern
emerged in the first place... You position yourself for a new comfortable
feeling around money and an attitude of abundance, no matter what's
in your pocketbook."
Although she charges $115
an hour - the low end of the going rate for professional consultants
of any kind - Moriarty proposes that "almost every person I see
can save that much money within six months, if not sooner. Some clients
come only once; others need to come every month for a year."
In addition to her private
practice, Moriarty teaches an undergraduate entrepreneurship course
at the University of Vermont. Much of her free time is devoted to serving
on the board of the Burlington Boys and Girls Club or volunteering with
the Lincoln Library and the UVM Alumni Association.
She continues to ski, snowshoe,
hike, run, meditate, do yoga and occasionally nurture her nascent wild
side. Although always dressed for success in business settings, Moriarty
confesses to recently buying a pair of pants with a dollar-sign pattern
that glows in the dark. "Somebody told me about seeing them at
Ames," she says of this impulsive purchase, "and I couldn't
resist."
A more sedate Moriarty emerges
when talking about her philosphical book-in-progress, tentatively titled
Moneypeace - which is also the name of her Web site. "Moneypeace.
That is what I'm about," she says. "Whether in money or in
life, I believe in balance."
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