Chattanooga Times Free Press

Got a savings goal? Consider forming a savings circle

- BY HAL M. BUNDRICK

A breezy January morning made the mid-30 temperatur­es feel even chillier. But it was an important day for the young man pushing 30 himself. He was about to face his entire family to ask for a loan to seed his new business idea.

He had contribute­d to the family’s savings circle, but he was asking for a withdrawal this time.

WHAT IS A SAVINGS CIRCLE?

A savings circle is a group of family members or friends who regularly contribute to a collective fund. Members gain access to a share of the proceeds on a rotating basis or as needs arise.

A savings circle can also be called a money pool. Or flip the benefit, and it’s known as a lending circle. The practice carries many names worldwide and among American immigrant communitie­s, including tanda, sou-sou or tontine.

It can be an informal gathering with regular monthly contributi­ons and one disburseme­nt or one individual’s request for funding approved by the group. Some savings circles predetermi­ne automatic withdrawal­s for each member in a particular order.

SAVINGS CIRCLE THAT ROCKED THE WORLD

Berry Gordy was 29 that cold Detroit day in 1959 when he faced the family’s pointed questions regarding a $1,000 loan from the Ber-Berry Co-op — named after his parents, Bertha and Berry. After a lengthy discussion, the group voted to give him $800.

And with that seed money, Motown Records was born.

David Ellis, a digital media curator at the Motown Museum in Detroit, says Gordy’s parents created the savings effort to help seed family business ideas. Each family member, including spouses, contribute­d $10 monthly to the fund.

“The funniest part … is the interest that Berry Gordy had to pay. They were family, but they were still very profession­al people,” Ellis adds.

Unlike many traditiona­l family and friends savings circles, Gordy had to repay the loan and would be charged 6% interest if he didn’t pay off the note within one year.

However, repayment wasn’t a problem. Motown Records became a music institutio­n, and Gordy sold the label for $61 million in 1988. A 50% share of the Motown song catalog garnered an additional $132 million in 1997.

HOW TO START A SAVINGS CIRCLE OF YOUR OWN

If you are looking to start your own savings circle, enlist trusted friends and family. Emphasis on “trusted.” In 2020, the Federal Trade Commission issued a consumer alert about pyramid schemes tied to sou-sous.

Your group will need to determine the amount and frequency of deposits and the order of individual withdrawal­s. For example, if 12 members put in $100 per month and distributi­ons occur monthly on a rotating basis for one year, who gets the first $1,200? It’s an important considerat­ion because early withdrawal­s are essentiall­y zero-interest loans, while later distributi­ons are effectivel­y interest-free savings plans.

A few savings circle apps have been developed in recent years, such as Esusu Savings and MyMAF, which manages lending circles set up through Mission Asset Fund. And later this month, Gilliam and a team of fintech developers in Washington, D.C., are set to release a savings circle and social banking mobile app called Wellthi. While group savings goals will be shared, funds in Wellthi will be tied to individual digital wallets, linked to a payment card and never commingled.

And it all began with that chance encounter when the Korean woman was looking to start a business in America.

“It really kind of changed my life, to be honest. And I had almost denied that woman a visa,” Gilliam says.

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