If owning foreign stocks is especially risky for U.S. investors, is owning U.S. shares especially risky for foreigners?
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.RISK VS. REWARD. To earn high returns, we need to take high risk. Over the long haul, someone with 80% stocks will likely earn far higher returns than an investor with 80% bonds. Still, it’s called risk for a reason: The extra reward isn’t guaranteed—especially if we take unnecessary risk, such as betting on a handful of stocks rather than a diversified portfolio.
NO. 68: WE SPEND our days focused on goals, but achieving them rarely delivers the happiness we imagine. Instead, it’s the journey we truly enjoy. This is captured by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s notion of flow. We’re often happiest when engaged in challenging activities we’re passionate about, consider important and feel we’re good at.
THROW STUFF OUT. Almost all of us have too many possessions. Those possessions come with an ongoing cost if, say, we rent a storage locker or we feel compelled to own a larger home. A suggestion: Make it a rule that, for every item of clothing or every tchotchke you buy, you have to give away at least one—and perhaps two—items that you already own.
I ALMOST NEVER MAKE fast decisions. But I bought a used car in August immediately after seeing it. If I hadn’t, I might still be looking.
Inventories for new cars are at record lows. Prices for used vehicles are at record highs. This was not the year to buy another car, but I wanted to replace my 14-year-old Mazda sedan with a more reliable vehicle for long trips to see my children. I was tired of months isolated at home,
THIS PAST YEAR marked my 50th anniversary of driving. Over that time, our family has owned 19 cars and driven them roughly 1.9 million miles. While latte purchases frequently evoke financial debate, cars seem less discussed, despite being Americans’ second-largest expenditure after housing. The purchase, ownership, maintenance and sale of cars can all get pretty complicated.
Cars are considered a depreciating asset, but not always. My first car was a 1967 Mercury Comet, which I bought for $400 in 1973.
WE JUST PURCHASED a new car. The whole buying process has been upended by the pandemic and today’s chip shortage, and we learned seven important lessons.
My wife and I view car buying as an unavoidable chore. We know financial experts recommend buying a car that’s a few years old, so someone else takes the big hit on the initial depreciation. We haven’t done that. We like to buy a new vehicle and keep it for 15 or 20 years.
My 2014 Honda Accord recently hit 99,000 miles. It’s nothing fancy to look at, but it drives well. Recently I’ve been having an issue with the starter. The push start works intermittently. Sometimes it starts on the first push, sometimes it takes multiple tries. I think the most it has taken is 6 tries. I’ve kept up with the maintenance, but I drive it infrequently, so the time between service has spread out. It was due for an oil change,
I’M DEBATING whether my life is better described by Tom Cochrane’s Life Is a Highway or Eddie Rabbitt’s Driving My Life Away. In a recent article, I noted that our family has driven our cars about 1.9 million miles. Since I’m the family’s King of the Road, I’ve been along for at least two-thirds of that ride.
I’m also, alas, the king of lost time.
The average commuting speed in the Washington,
CONSUMER REPORTS and other authorities will tell you that you get the greatest value for your car-buying dollar by purchasing a two- or three-year-old vehicle. They also often recommend selling your current car after you’ve owned it for about seven years.
We favor a different strategy—one that suits our family but certainly isn’t for everybody.
My wife’s No. 1 priority is that her vehicle be reliable. She insists that every time she gets in the car,
2025 Tax Return Time – Overview of Changes
Suzee | Feb 9, 2026
The Monthly Mystery of the Vanishing Paycheck
Mark Crothers | Feb 10, 2026
Helping Adult Children
gnussen623 | Feb 8, 2026
My toe in the water again – with hesitation.
R Quinn | Feb 10, 2026
Should You Stop Contributing To Your IRA?
William Housley | Feb 9, 2026
2026 Charitable Contributions
DAN SMITH | Feb 9, 2026
When $2100 is not what it appears. The Medicare Part D trap
R Quinn | Feb 5, 2026
Choices, choices everywhere
greg_j_tomamichel | Feb 8, 2026
The High Cost of Financial Advice: A Tale of Two Portfolios Revisited
Mark Crothers | Feb 6, 2026
Value of Waiting
Dennis Friedman | Feb 7, 2026
High Interest Savings Accounts vs Bond funds
Brian Kowald | Feb 7, 2026
A Message to Young Readers: Your Crisis Is Coming.
Mark Crothers | Feb 8, 2026
Perfect Portfolio
Adam M. Grossman | Feb 7, 2026