On Oct 27, 2008, at 2:01 PM, Bryan wrote:

> Ah, you just answered my question!!
> Since I was setting up the account with downloaded transactions that
> went back BEFORE I started using Moneywell, the software was not
> calculating those older transactions in the bucket total.  Mystery
> solved.
>
Bryan,

I'm not sure what I said but if it answered your question then I guess  
it'll do.

> And now for a RELATED QUESTION....  after using Moneywell primarily
> for my checking account and cash, I am now trying to add other
> accounts such as savings and investment accounts.  What kind of bucket
> should I use for these types of accounts that do not have very many
> outflows?  Should I use income buckets for both savings and investment
> accounts?  Or should I use expense buckets?
>
> Could there be multiple income buckets for a savings account?  For
> example, let's say I am saving to buy a home and also for my kids
> college education.  Could I have an income bucket "Savings-Education"
> and another one "Savings-House"?


First, you don't want to think of your buckets as "account specific"  
containers. Buckets are designed to manage your cash flow and not your  
bank statements. You probably get this but I like to clarify this once  
and a while.

If you are trying to improve your savings, you would create a bucket  
called "Savings" and make sure that you allocate a portion of your  
income each month to it. Then when you transfer money from your  
checking to your savings, you'd assign the outgoing transaction the  
the Savings bucket to show that you have met your planned commitment  
to save that income.

If you have specific savings needs, you can create multiple savings  
buckets (as expense buckets), plan, and allocate income to them  
monthly. If you make a deposit to one savings account for all these  
buckets, you can use a split transactions to assign the appropriate  
amounts. If you have multiple savings accounts then it's one  
transaction per account.

If you spend money directly from your savings account(s) then just  
create your transactions from that account and assign the expense  
bucket as necessary. If you're transferring that money first to your  
checking account, you can assign the incoming transaction to the  
expense bucket you will use to spend that money and you won't have to  
deal with allocating income.

Peace,

Kevin Hoctor
No Thirst Software LLC
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://nothirst.com
http://kevinhoctor.blogspot.com

Check out our MoneyWell video tutorials:
http://nothirst.com/moneywell/tutorials/

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