Ryan D'Souza is a 24-year-old data analyst in Toronto, nine months into his first job. He wants a $3,000 emergency fund but keeps ending the month at zero. This walks through where the money went, what counts as waste, and how he gets to $3,000.
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The month opens with a small balance and a full paycheque, and closes below zero. Each downward step is a group of spending. Amber marks the groups that carry the waste.
Waste is not the same as spending. This separates money that bought nothing from money Ryan cannot see, and both of those from lifestyle he chose. Every figure opens to the transactions behind it.
Every dollar of spending, grouped. Amber marks the categories that carry most of the waste.
A frontier model categorized every transaction. A separate rules engine did the same, independently. The score below is the model against a hand-labelled ground truth. The table is where the two methods disagreed, which is where a person should look.
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… transactions. The model was right on …, the rule was right on …. Neither is trustworthy on its own.
This is the whole reason for the cross-check. A single wrong category can flip Ryan's decision about what to cut.
| Transaction | AI said | Rules said | Truth | Right |
|---|
Low-confidence calls the model would not make on its own.
Choose what Ryan changes and watch the timeline move. The first three are the no-sacrifice cuts. The last two are his call.
… after one year, of which … is interest he is leaving on the table today.
Plain steps, ordered by effort. The first four take an afternoon and cost nothing to do.
LinkedIn Premium, Disney+, Amazon Prime, and the Netflix add-on. He named Netflix and Spotify as the only two he uses. Sort out the Crave double-charge with the provider.
The overdraft fee happened because he did not see zero coming. A free alert at $100 removes it.
Automate a transfer to a separate savings account the day salary lands. He never sees it, so he cannot spend it.
Three withdrawals were at non-TD machines that add a surcharge. The bigger issue is that $560 in cash left with no record. A weekly cash cap makes it visible.
At one or two visits a month he is paying $30 to $60 a visit. Commit to using it, or switch to a pay-per-visit pass.
Steps 1, 2, and 4 alone recover about $417 a month with nothing Ryan enjoys removed, which reaches $3,000 in roughly seven months.
The statement runs through two independent analyses and an evaluation, then into a static page that makes no live model call.