One of my previous posts I talked about the fact that Madara offers a stock owners loyalty programme sending them newly developed Madara cosmetics before these items will be available to be purchased individually. This is the mystery box they also offer on their site. But people owning at least 26 stocks get it for free. 
At that time I had no idea how this sending out of the boxes is organised, but I was curious. 

Now I know. 

I got an email to the email address I used when registering to the Madara insider programme. The email reminded stock owners that the insider perk needs to be ordered before 30th of September and should arrive by the end of October. So it is an easy process, you go to the Madara online shop, add the mystery box to your shopping cart, add a species discount code reducing the value of your order to 0€, then just complete the purchase like normal by choosing how to receive your order and that is it. Very easy and efficient. So now I just have to hope I really love what is inside as I am supposed to get two boxes because I had ordered the autumn box way before deciding to buy the stock (and before I knew of the stock owners perk they offer).

I will post about the contents when I receive the box. 
What is considered persons Net Worth is quite simple in theory. It is all your assets minus all your liabilities. Have you ever calculated yours? If not, you should.

There are many theories on what you should and should not include in these calculations. Some include cars, others say that a car is just an expense. Some include the house or flat they live in. Others believe you should just include investment property and not the ones you actually live in. If you decide to include such things you need to include the current market value (not the purchase value) of the said car / flat and then in the liabilities side, of course, any mortgages/loans you have. As I do not own any real estate nor a car it is an easy decision for me not to include such things.

I do remember some time last year I did this exercise as well, but I can not find my notes anywhere. So this time they are going online so I have a place to look them up when I reevaluate things.

I started looking at my assets with the cash in my wallet, money on my bank accounts, as well as, the emergency fund. As I recently booked a hotel for myself and several people for later this year and paid it on my credit card so I also added this as money owed to me to the plus side as I do expect to get this back within a week or so. Most people have already paid it so just few to go.
Then I remembered I have a coin collection - these are limited issue Euro coins, mostly just picked up from circulation. I have never bought any over the coin face value. I have not had the collection professionally valued so I do not know the full value of it, so I just calculated what it would be worth if I spent the coins as normal. Although when looking them on coins shops most of them are valued at least 3 times over the face value, many even 10 to 20 times more. So it is an understatement, but it is a number I can easily calculate. This is the moment when a person who owns (sellable) art or expensive jewellery would add this to the value of the assets.
When I looked at my pension account value - it is a mandatory account in Estonia for people of about 35 and younger. I looked up the current value of my stock portfolio, my investments in Bondora, Mintos, Grupeer, EstateGuru and CrowdEstate platforms (I grouped these for the graph).  And then I wrote down the LHV Growth Account value.

So these are all the assets I could think of owning (did I miss something obvious?) and the values:

wallet 105,84
money owed to me 165,70
bank accounts 1613,15
emergency fund 4221,71
coin collection 298,02
pension account 9006,94
stock 730,00
p2p 3971,79
p2p realestate 7667,09
LHV GrowthAccount 4859,06

There are of course things I could add here like the more expensive things I own such as my photography equipment, my guitar, my computer etc. But I do not see any value in this. These are things I would not in a pragmatic situation sell to make money, I would use other assets, so I do not think you really need to calculate such things. Some do, I did not.

So now we come to the liabilities, there are just 3 things there. 
My credit card is most of the year all paid up but as I just booked and paid hotels the balance is -770,18, which will be paid back on the mandatory date. I have never kept a balance over to the next month there. No need to take up these expensive debts. 
I took up student loans in university due to the reason that I really needed them but also as there was a programme that if you then moved to the state sector the state would pay it back (it was extremely likely in my selected field). So my heart was a bit more relaxed on taking out the loan. Fortunately, I did not take it out every year and some years I took just the amount I needed not the full amount offered. I say fortunately as (like many people) I got fully screwed over. They changed the law so that people who had taken out the loans expecting the state to pay it, had to pay it back themselves. In many majors like teachers, for example, you would work in the state sector and were 100% sure to have the state pay it back. Well this was not what happened. They added a deadline that if you had not been employed full year by that date state would not pay, and of course, I missed the deadline by about 15 days as signing my contract had dragged on for months... So I had to pay back thousands of euros from my small state sector paycheck. Fortunately, the balance isn't too bad any more. Just 502,51 still to pay.
Last liability is my mobile payment. I have never taken out any type of consumer loans. But as telecommunications companies sometimes make offers where taking out 1 or 2-year payment plan is CHEAPER than actually just buying the phone you want out right at the moment I have used this type of offer twice now. So 78,75 owed to my telecommunications operator. 
If you have a mortgage, any type of loans, car lease, credit cards to pay back - all of this should be written down here. I now for some people the final balance might come out negative, especially if you have a huge mortgage. But it is important to know what your net worth is and are you making progress on it. Calculate it, and then look at it ever 6 months or so. It is important to remind yourself to pay back loans and increase investments. 

So, all in all, I have 32 639,30 € in assets,  -1 351,44  in liabilities and my net worth is currently 31 287,86 €. Could be better of course, but it is a work in progress.

And remember whatever your net worth is, that it does not and never should affect your self worth!
After Mogo gathered a lot of money from other sources and bought back many loans, the Mintos interest rates fell a lot. I take on just loans with buyback guarantee and before July and August I was investing in loans with 14% interest rate, after the Mogo buyback, the interest rates dropped even to 9,5%...
I put on a single graph all my loans on the site from 2nd of September 2016 when I started in this portal. The graph shows both finished and current loans. As it turns out I have invested in 1416 loans these two years. The trendline I added shows the 30-point average line. It shows quite clearly the dip what happened at the end of the summer but it also shows that there are first 11% and above loans coming back to the market. I hope this will keep up and not fall back again.
The two odd 6% loans which stick out as a sore thumb are from the punch of loans I took in the beginning with no buyback guarantee. I was greedy as the interest was better there... These were invoice financing loans which defaulted and were changed from 12% to 6% just to be able to get something out of them. Both are in court. My shares on them are 5€ and 9€, so not huge losses. But hey, maybe I will get at least some of it back. If not, I'll live. Can't compare these two Mintos mishaps to the Bondora hundreds of euros of reds... Still love Mintos, especially the >10% interest rates...

As I mentioned in one of the previous posts August was personally challenging month for me due to health issues. I am much better now but not fully recovered. I hope to fully recover but at the moment there is also a possibility of it becoming chronic disease as the recovery has not been as quick as the doctors would have hoped. The chronic disease tends to progress towards being wheelchair bound or even becoming a quadriplegic, which I am sure is less interesting than the French movie Intouchables depicts. So future of financial freedom in a wheelchair? This thought is really depressing - so I hope not. I hope my body can and will heal.

As I was living quite cheaply in the hospital for almost half the month I deposited 530€, so slightly more money than usual towards my investments.
I withdrew 155€ from Bandora, which means I need to get 270 more out to get back the money I put in. I am struggling to decide whether I should try to sell at much higher discounts or try to wait it out. At the moment the account value they show is around 430, but this does not include the 170€ of principal overdue. "Fun" how if the person does not pay, they seem to think it is an acceptable loss? But somehow they still think that the same person will pay for the next months- as if the payments from this time to the final deadline are somehow still sure to come?

But getting back to the real deposits I made. I deposited 350€ to the LHV growth account, and 285€ to the CrowdEstate and also 50€ to the Grupeer which I still enjoy with its 14-15% interest and guaranteed payments.

August was a tricky month, I did not pay much attention to what was happening to my investments and hoped they would be doing fine while I was away. And of course they were, but income was low which surprised me somewhat. It was the lowest month of this year with just 58,48€ or 1,89€ a day. The largest income came from Mintos with 33€, all others were really low. This comes from several things. As I have mentioned that both CrowdEstate and EstateGuru tend to have quite uneven payouts for me as I have a limited amount of projects there and some have just one of few payouts within a project. I really love that CrowdEstate both has a list of expected payments as well as a nice graph showing past and future returns. From there I can clearly see that all the rest of the year will be also very slow and things will pick back up in January- so I know what to expect.  Due to the higher entrance barrier (100€), I am involved in just 25 projects there which makes the unevenness quite bad there. In EstateGuru I am involved in about 60 projects due to the lower minimal payment (50€). Also the fact that you can pay uneven sums such as 57€, for example, I can make sure that even small sums are not just sitting on my account. But I really wish I had some way to see when I am expected to receive payments in the EstateGuru or just even the expected amount for a month. Such graphs are really useful to see cash flows. So I do not know what is happening there. I am not so interested that I would make a google doc or something by looking through the payment schedules of all my 60 contracts there...
In general, I expect the next month to be better for me as I hope to get some dividends on my LHV Growth Account. One has posted the ex-date and one always pays some in September- hopefully, ower 30€ for these two funds, so half of this months income would next month come just from that.

The portfolio value was 16959,74€ on 31.08.2018

Exact numbers are here, as always.