Give and we will receive: Spending on others often delivers greater happiness than spending on ourselves.
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. 8: RETIREMENT may be our final financial goal, but we should always put it first. Why? It’s easily our most expensive goal, so it takes decades of savings and investment gains to amass enough.
PROVE YOUR LOVE. Today, we celebrate Valentine’s Day. Want to show your love for your family? Make sure you have enough life and disability insurance. Check that you have a robust, up-to-date estate plan. And talk to your family about how much financial help you can provide while you’re alive—and what they can expect to receive upon your death.
NO. 5: TIME is money. The younger you start saving, the more years of compounding you’ll enjoy. After a dozen years, you should reach a tipping point, where your investment gains each year outstrip the dollars you save. What if you put off saving until your 40s? You’ll get little help from the markets—and likely struggle to amass enough for retirement.
HOME BIAS. We’re most comfortable owning familiar investments. That’s why we often invest heavily in shares of our employer, local companies and corporations whose products we use, as well as in rental properties. Meanwhile, we shy away from foreign stocks. While the result may be a portfolio we’re happy to own, it’s often a badly diversified one.
NO. 8: RETIREMENT may be our final financial goal, but we should always put it first. Why? It’s easily our most expensive goal, so it takes decades of savings and investment gains to amass enough.
THE JUNE 16, 2021, edition of The Washington Post carried this headline: “Cristiano Ronaldo snubbed Coca-Cola. The company’s market value fell $4 billion.”
The incident in question had occurred a few days earlier, at a press conference in Budapest, where the soccer star was set to play in a high-profile championship game. Coca-Cola was a sponsor of the tournament, so when Ronaldo sat down at the microphone, he found two bottles of Coke positioned in front of him.
My family has been using HSAs as stealth Roth IRAs (with the added benefit of a tax deduction), in that after a couple of years in the beginning, we no longer make withdrawals for current medical expenses.
One neat trick we were able to pull off is that my son, while on our insurance before age 26, made the family contribution to his HSA (in addition to my wife’s family contribution and $1000 catch-up contributions for me &
A married couple that are both receiving Social Security will lose the low income advantage to reduce Social Security taxes if they file married filing separately. The designation creates an 85% tax on most of their Social security income. Once your income exceeds the point of making SS 85% taxable, there may be advantages to filing separate returns, but not when income is low.
AT THE START OF THE pandemic, we picked up a nice chunk of capital losses. I say “nice” because these were intentional. When the market dropped significantly, we realized losses and immediately reinvested the proceeds in other fallen stocks.
What about capital gains? In 2020, some of our mutual funds distributed capital gains, but we didn’t intentionally realize any other gains. Some of our realized losses offset the distributed fund gains. Another $3,000 was applied against ordinary income.
You betcha, but also necessary – unless you have a better idea to generate income for the Social Security and Medicare trusts.
You and I did not pay for our Social Security benefits. In the aggregate all beneficiaries have paid for about 15% of benefits received. I did not contribute toward my pension so it’s fully taxable. If I had contributed on an after-tax basis that portion would not be taxed.
I looked at the total I paid in FICA taxes as well as what my employers paid from 1959 until I retired in 2010.
A recent Wall Street Journal article presented the stories of a number of professional and volunteer tax preparers who are still going strong well into their 80s, 90s, and beyond. In my seven years supporting AARP’s TaxAide program I’ve worked with dozens of volunteer preparers in their 60s, 70s, and 80s who are extremely knowledgeable and quite sharp. I would trust them with my tax return.
The article could have been greatly improved by interviewing some HumbleDollar’s tax experts,
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