Want parental popularity? Buy them stocks when you buy them diapers—and let decades of compounding work their magic.
Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.NO. 23: IF WE DON’T have much money, we should compensate with time—by starting to save when we’re young, holding stocks for decades and encouraging our children to do the same.
NO. 10: WALL STREET always strives to look its best. To ensure mutual fund expenses and advisory fees appear small, they’re expressed as a percent of the dollars we invest, not as a percent of our likely gain. To make their results appear more impressive, money managers pick their benchmark indexes carefully and use cumulative return “mountain” charts.
LONGEVITY RISK. Spending down a retirement portfolio is tricky: You don’t know how long you will live—and hence there’s a risk you’ll run out of money before you run out of breath. To fend off that risk, limit annual portfolio withdrawals to 4% or 5%, delay Social Security to get a larger check and consider an immediate annuity that pays lifetime income.
ROUND UP the mortgage check. If you’re paying $1,512 a month, send the mortgage company $1,600 instead. It’s a painless way to increase savings, the extra $88 a month could allow you to pay off your mortgage years earlier and you’ll earn a pretax return equal to your mortgage’s interest rate. That return could be higher than you can get with high-quality bonds.
NO. 23: IF WE DON’T have much money, we should compensate with time—by starting to save when we’re young, holding stocks for decades and encouraging our children to do the same.
To my best recollection, I first came across the book Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely while on vacation. While my wife was checking out clothing and jewelry stores—a mild form of torture for me—I found a local bookstore and flipped through some of the more interesting chapters in Ariely’s book. One chapter’s thesis is that getting free stuff can be “a source of irrational excitement.” While the chapter is mostly about how our penchant for free things can be manipulated by marketers,
My challenge to you: List your top financial mistakes. Not sure you want to invite the ridicule of others? To make everybody a little more comfortable, I’ll go first. Here are my top six:
When I started investing in the late 1980s and early 1990s, I bought individual stocks and actively managed mutual funds. Admittedly, I went this route because it allowed this cash-strapped investor to get started in the financial markets with a few hundred dollars,
MY RETIREMENT finances today are based on actions I took over six-plus decades, starting at age 18. Early on, I tried my hand at picking stocks and beating the market—to my regret. As time went on, I became more sensible.
Want to avoid my mistakes? Here are 10 tips based on my lifetime of managing money:
Start saving as soon as you have cash—it might be from shoveling snow, raking leaves or loose change—and never stop.
This is the time of year when financial writers dish out advice for the year ahead. But who wants another to-do list? Here are five things I won’t be doing in 2025:
Flying economy on international flights. Our 2024 trip to Ireland finally broke me. Sitting upright on an overnight transatlantic flight is just too much for my ailing body. I can manage economy on a daytime flight, but now find it pure misery when flying overnight.
Regular HD readers know how old I am, but just for fun how about a trip down memory lane to a very different time.
When I was a child an ice cream cone was a dime, a slice of pizza was $0.15. There were no malls. Where there are malls today, there were dairy and cattle farms.
When I was really young our milk was delivered by horse and wagon kept cool by blocks of ice.
A QUOTE OFTEN attributed to Mark Twain goes as follows: “It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”
This certainly applies to personal finance, and it’s why it can be helpful to take a step back sometimes to revisit widely held notions—including these six.
1. Social Security. You may have heard of Social Security’s “earnings test,” which can reduce the size of monthly checks for those who continue working after claiming benefits.
Forget the 4% rule.
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