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Luck, Stupidity, and Getting Ripped Off

"Mark, I think many of us got our start like you, I know I did. I understood the loads, after all, the salesman had to get paid somehow, and they were transparent (if you read the  prospectus). What wasn’t transparent was that the salesmen were often using 4th quartile proprietary funds. I guess those  were the days before strict fiduciary regulations.  One thing is for sure, I do not want to know how much  more money I could have had sans loads and lousy managed mutual funds. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Automatic Income stream? How important to you?

"Rental property can be an alternative way to generate an income stream in retirement. It has other challenges, but maintaining control of the underlying asset and a level of inflation protection are valuable."
- Michael Swartley
Read more »

Luck, Stupidity, Automation and Inertia

"I've wondered sometimes what my situation would look like today if I'd never crossed paths with that salesman. Would I have started a retirement account at all? And if so, at what age would I have finally got around to it? My honest guess is that it would have been my thirties — though maybe I'm being a little hard on the younger version of myself."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Why can’t more people plan for their retirement future?

"it was also a great time to be a white male in the US. That’s an important fact."
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

What’s in your portfolio ?

"John, Thanks for providing the link! Very good article, I enjoyed the read…covers a lot."
- Andy Morrison
Read more »

The Price of a Cool Pillow

"I am traveling and dont have time to cut and paste etc, however, while downloading articles to read on the plane i noticed that The Atlantic has two articles on AC, for those with access."
- Mark Bergman
Read more »

Four Walls

"Thank you David, a double wow!"
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

How do you prepare for the long term care cost as retiree?

"The LTC deductions must also exceed the standard tax deduction make a difference on your taxes. To claim this medical expense deduction you must itemize on schedule A to utilize tax-deferred IRA or 401K dollars to pay for long term care (LTC) expenses on your taxes that exceeds 7.5% of your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)."
- dhack11
Read more »

Investment Wisdom

THE INVESTMENT WORLD is full of storytellers. And while these folks might be entertaining, they generally aren’t very helpful. There’s one category of stories, however, that I do think is useful: They’re what I might call investment fables. They’re apocryphal stories that likely aren’t real. But they’re helpful nonetheless because each carries a useful lesson. Here are some of the more popular ones. Consumer choice. In 1999, Richard Mille and a partner launched a company to make wristwatches. By 2001, the company was ready to begin taking orders for its first model, the RM 001. They knew they wanted to target a high-end market, so they chose the Financial Times for their first advertisement. According to legend, however, a graphic designer at the newspaper made a mistake. Instead of including the watch’s intended price of $13,500, an extra zero was added, making the price $135,000. At first, the company was furious at the newspaper for the mistake. But then the phone started to ring. The sky-high price turned out to be attractive to a certain class of buyers, and the initial run of the 001 quickly sold out. Today, Richard Mille sells several models priced in the hundreds of thousands, and some limited editions carry price tags north of $1 million. For its part, the company denies this story, maintaining that $135,000 was always the price it intended. But whether this story is true or not, it illustrates a concept in personal finance known as the Veblen effect. This occurs when the traditional shape of a demand curve gets turned upside down. Instead of consumers buying less of something as its price rises, when it comes to Veblen goods, consumers want to buy more as the price increases. Hermes handbags and Ferrari sportscars are other examples. What should we make of the Veblen effect? To answer this question, it’s worth examining its origins. Thorstein Veblen was a sociologist and economist. Perhaps owing to his background as the sixth of 12 children growing up in modest, rural surroundings, Veblen became broadly critical of capitalism. In his 1899 book, The Theory of the Leisure Class, he coined the term “conspicuous consumption.” And while Veblen didn’t explicitly see himself as a socialist, he leaned in that direction. He would have been bitterly critical of something like a Richard Mille watch. In making spending decisions, though, I wouldn’t worry too much about value judgments like this. The reality is that each of us is different, and we each value different things. That’s why I prefer to stick to the numbers. The most important thing, in my view, is simply to have a framework for your household finances, to ensure that your overall spending level is in line with your long-term plan. Other people’s subjective judgments, in my opinion, shouldn’t factor in. Investment gains. When it comes to investing, what’s the best strategy? According to lore, Fidelity Investments once looked into this question by examining the performance of all of the accounts on its platform. What did they find? The accounts that had done the best were those that had been abandoned due to the death of the owner, with the result that the investments hadn’t changed for years. There’s no evidence that this story is true, but it’s repeated frequently because it aligns with real data. In studies going back more than 25 years, research has shown that frequent trading is generally associated with worse investment results. This is true for both individual and professional investors. To be sure, some active managers have delivered impressive results. In the past, this has included the likes of Warren Buffett and James Simons. More recently, a 24-year-old named Leopold Aschenbrenner has delivered returns of more than 1,000% in the two years since he founded a hedge fund to bet on AI stocks. But cases like this are the exceptions that prove the rule. For most investors, most of the time, the data tell us that it’s better to trade less rather than more. Market tops. On a related note, there’s a tale about Joseph Kennedy—President Kennedy’s father. He was an active investor in the 1920s, but he said he realized it was time to sell when the fellow giving him a shoeshine one day started offering stock tips. What’s interesting about this story is that Kennedy did actually sell his stocks and even took a short position early in 1929, earning him a fortune when the market dropped. The shoeshine aspect of this story likely isn’t true. But it’s a favorite because it carries a useful message. Veteran investor Jeremy Grantham has often talked about the market signals he pays attention to. In addition to P/E ratios and other quantitative measures, he’s noted that he looks for “signs of craziness”—things like the GameStop mania in 2021. When the stock market begins to look more like a casino—and when we see YouTube influencers making stock calls from their gaming chairs—Grantham gets nervous. Intuitively, this does make sense, but it may not be very useful. Consider how the market has performed in recent years. After Grantham urged caution in 2021, the market did drop in 2022. But then it rose in 2023, 2024, 2025 and in the first half of 2026. So an investor who sold in 2021 would have missed out on significant gains. The bottom line: Just as the number of world-class stock-pickers is limited, so too is the number of tactical traders who have profited in the way Joe Kennedy did by getting out at just the right moment. Market forecasts. What’s a better way to think about the stock market? According to another Wall Street tale, J.P. Morgan was once asked what he thought the market would do over the coming year. His reply: “It will fluctuate.” There’s no evidence that Morgan ever actually said this, but in this case too, the story is popular because it sounds right. And in my view, this is exactly the right way to think about the stock market. At the end of the day, the only thing we can know for sure about the stock market is that it will either go up, go down or stay about the same. If we can structure our portfolios so we won’t be too negatively affected whichever way it goes, that, in my opinion, is the road to success.   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.
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Lessons Learned Along the Way

"It was quite an adventure. I can't have any regrets because I have ended up in a very good place. I am grateful for that."
- Dan Smith
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Does Vanguard Know Something?

"Well, quick solutions are either an equal weight fund (not quite 493, but minimizes the concentration issue) or an S+P fund plus 7 put options. The risk is real; are you willing to pull the trigger on a change, though?"
- Mike inLA
Read more »

Luck, Stupidity, and Getting Ripped Off

"Mark, I think many of us got our start like you, I know I did. I understood the loads, after all, the salesman had to get paid somehow, and they were transparent (if you read the  prospectus). What wasn’t transparent was that the salesmen were often using 4th quartile proprietary funds. I guess those  were the days before strict fiduciary regulations.  One thing is for sure, I do not want to know how much  more money I could have had sans loads and lousy managed mutual funds. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Automatic Income stream? How important to you?

"Rental property can be an alternative way to generate an income stream in retirement. It has other challenges, but maintaining control of the underlying asset and a level of inflation protection are valuable."
- Michael Swartley
Read more »

Luck, Stupidity, Automation and Inertia

"I've wondered sometimes what my situation would look like today if I'd never crossed paths with that salesman. Would I have started a retirement account at all? And if so, at what age would I have finally got around to it? My honest guess is that it would have been my thirties — though maybe I'm being a little hard on the younger version of myself."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Why can’t more people plan for their retirement future?

"it was also a great time to be a white male in the US. That’s an important fact."
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

What’s in your portfolio ?

"John, Thanks for providing the link! Very good article, I enjoyed the read…covers a lot."
- Andy Morrison
Read more »

The Price of a Cool Pillow

"I am traveling and dont have time to cut and paste etc, however, while downloading articles to read on the plane i noticed that The Atlantic has two articles on AC, for those with access."
- Mark Bergman
Read more »

Four Walls

"Thank you David, a double wow!"
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

How do you prepare for the long term care cost as retiree?

"The LTC deductions must also exceed the standard tax deduction make a difference on your taxes. To claim this medical expense deduction you must itemize on schedule A to utilize tax-deferred IRA or 401K dollars to pay for long term care (LTC) expenses on your taxes that exceeds 7.5% of your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)."
- dhack11
Read more »

Investment Wisdom

THE INVESTMENT WORLD is full of storytellers. And while these folks might be entertaining, they generally aren’t very helpful. There’s one category of stories, however, that I do think is useful: They’re what I might call investment fables. They’re apocryphal stories that likely aren’t real. But they’re helpful nonetheless because each carries a useful lesson. Here are some of the more popular ones. Consumer choice. In 1999, Richard Mille and a partner launched a company to make wristwatches. By 2001, the company was ready to begin taking orders for its first model, the RM 001. They knew they wanted to target a high-end market, so they chose the Financial Times for their first advertisement. According to legend, however, a graphic designer at the newspaper made a mistake. Instead of including the watch’s intended price of $13,500, an extra zero was added, making the price $135,000. At first, the company was furious at the newspaper for the mistake. But then the phone started to ring. The sky-high price turned out to be attractive to a certain class of buyers, and the initial run of the 001 quickly sold out. Today, Richard Mille sells several models priced in the hundreds of thousands, and some limited editions carry price tags north of $1 million. For its part, the company denies this story, maintaining that $135,000 was always the price it intended. But whether this story is true or not, it illustrates a concept in personal finance known as the Veblen effect. This occurs when the traditional shape of a demand curve gets turned upside down. Instead of consumers buying less of something as its price rises, when it comes to Veblen goods, consumers want to buy more as the price increases. Hermes handbags and Ferrari sportscars are other examples. What should we make of the Veblen effect? To answer this question, it’s worth examining its origins. Thorstein Veblen was a sociologist and economist. Perhaps owing to his background as the sixth of 12 children growing up in modest, rural surroundings, Veblen became broadly critical of capitalism. In his 1899 book, The Theory of the Leisure Class, he coined the term “conspicuous consumption.” And while Veblen didn’t explicitly see himself as a socialist, he leaned in that direction. He would have been bitterly critical of something like a Richard Mille watch. In making spending decisions, though, I wouldn’t worry too much about value judgments like this. The reality is that each of us is different, and we each value different things. That’s why I prefer to stick to the numbers. The most important thing, in my view, is simply to have a framework for your household finances, to ensure that your overall spending level is in line with your long-term plan. Other people’s subjective judgments, in my opinion, shouldn’t factor in. Investment gains. When it comes to investing, what’s the best strategy? According to lore, Fidelity Investments once looked into this question by examining the performance of all of the accounts on its platform. What did they find? The accounts that had done the best were those that had been abandoned due to the death of the owner, with the result that the investments hadn’t changed for years. There’s no evidence that this story is true, but it’s repeated frequently because it aligns with real data. In studies going back more than 25 years, research has shown that frequent trading is generally associated with worse investment results. This is true for both individual and professional investors. To be sure, some active managers have delivered impressive results. In the past, this has included the likes of Warren Buffett and James Simons. More recently, a 24-year-old named Leopold Aschenbrenner has delivered returns of more than 1,000% in the two years since he founded a hedge fund to bet on AI stocks. But cases like this are the exceptions that prove the rule. For most investors, most of the time, the data tell us that it’s better to trade less rather than more. Market tops. On a related note, there’s a tale about Joseph Kennedy—President Kennedy’s father. He was an active investor in the 1920s, but he said he realized it was time to sell when the fellow giving him a shoeshine one day started offering stock tips. What’s interesting about this story is that Kennedy did actually sell his stocks and even took a short position early in 1929, earning him a fortune when the market dropped. The shoeshine aspect of this story likely isn’t true. But it’s a favorite because it carries a useful message. Veteran investor Jeremy Grantham has often talked about the market signals he pays attention to. In addition to P/E ratios and other quantitative measures, he’s noted that he looks for “signs of craziness”—things like the GameStop mania in 2021. When the stock market begins to look more like a casino—and when we see YouTube influencers making stock calls from their gaming chairs—Grantham gets nervous. Intuitively, this does make sense, but it may not be very useful. Consider how the market has performed in recent years. After Grantham urged caution in 2021, the market did drop in 2022. But then it rose in 2023, 2024, 2025 and in the first half of 2026. So an investor who sold in 2021 would have missed out on significant gains. The bottom line: Just as the number of world-class stock-pickers is limited, so too is the number of tactical traders who have profited in the way Joe Kennedy did by getting out at just the right moment. Market forecasts. What’s a better way to think about the stock market? According to another Wall Street tale, J.P. Morgan was once asked what he thought the market would do over the coming year. His reply: “It will fluctuate.” There’s no evidence that Morgan ever actually said this, but in this case too, the story is popular because it sounds right. And in my view, this is exactly the right way to think about the stock market. At the end of the day, the only thing we can know for sure about the stock market is that it will either go up, go down or stay about the same. If we can structure our portfolios so we won’t be too negatively affected whichever way it goes, that, in my opinion, is the road to success.   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.
Read more »

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Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 15: WE SHOULD retire our debts before we retire from our job. Paying off debt cuts our living expenses, plus that debt is likely costing us more than we’re earning on our bonds.

humans

NO. 34: WE overestimate our investment results. Got folks boasting about their portfolio’s performance? They may be ignoring the losers they’ve sold, bragging based on a few winners and failing to compare to an appropriate index. They may also suffer from the endowment effect, believing their winners have performed better than they really have.

act

INVEST YOUR TAXABLE account thoughtfully. If you purchase the wrong investments in your taxable account, you may be reluctant to sell because you’ll trigger capital gains taxes. A good choice: low-cost U.S. and international total stock market index funds, which should be tax-efficient—and which shouldn’t ever lag far behind the market averages.

think

ARRIVAL FALLACY. We strive mightily to get that next promotion or amass $1 million, confident we’ll be supremely happy once we achieve our goal. But the resulting happiness quickly slips away. What to do? We should pursue goals where we know we’ll enjoy the journey—and we should make sure we have new goals to replace the ones we achieve.

Forum

Manifesto

NO. 15: WE SHOULD retire our debts before we retire from our job. Paying off debt cuts our living expenses, plus that debt is likely costing us more than we’re earning on our bonds.

Spotlight: College

Goodbye Assets

MY TWINS ARE SENIORS in high school. That means, pandemic or no pandemic, we spent the fall applying to colleges.
Here in California, the pandemic closed public schools in March and most did not reopen for in-person teaching with the start of the current academic year. That forced parents to stand in for college counselors. The preparations high school juniors usually engage in, such as visiting colleges and taking standardized tests, didn’t occur this past spring or summer.

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Eyeing College

INVESTING FOR education costs has never been more popular, as evidenced by recent Morningstar data. The research company found that 2021 was a record-breaking year for assets in 529 college savings plans. At almost $500 billion, total investments are up nearly fourfold over the past decade.
A big reason is the tax advantages—investments grow tax-free if they’re used for qualifying education expenses—plus 529 accounts are treated relatively leniently under the college financial-aid formulas. You can learn more about the accounts from other authors who have real life experience saving through 529 plans.

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Strings Attached

WITH NO DISRESPECT TO our representatives in Congress, a new rule taking effect in January reminds me of a scene from The Jerk, an old Steve Martin movie. Playing the role of a carnival huckster, Martin shows off a wall of attractive prizes, but then narrows the choices to an impossibly small set of options.
Congress did something similar when it instituted a new rule governing 529 education savings accounts. The rule in question opens up greater flexibility in how surplus 529 funds can be used.

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Quinn ponders the College Conundrum

Connie and I had four children between July 1970 and September 1975. That was a fun decade especially given I was going to school three nights a week until 1978 when after nine years I received a degree.
Those fun times were only surpassed by the ten years when we had one, two or three children in college at once. Our oldest went to Carnegie Mellon on a required five-year program and the others all went to Franklin and Marshall –

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Playing Defense

TRUTH HAS A FUNNY way of punching you in the gut. I received my punch thanks to the 2022 decline in the stock market, which put a dent in the “funded” status of the 529 college-savings plans for my two sons, ages 16 and 14.
Buy and hold is all well and good if you have an infinite investment time horizon. Strict adherents will argue that mark-to-market gains and losses are just noise. Time will smooth out the ripples.

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Spotlight: McGlynn

Package Deals

THE INSURANCE MARKET for long-term-care coverage has had a checkered history—and yet there’s an increasing need for LTC insurance among aging baby boomers. My advice: Forget the original standalone insurance products and instead focus on the new hybrid policies. What went wrong with the original standalone products? They proved to be underpriced. With policyholders living longer, insurers found themselves paying out more than anticipated. Policyholders also didn’t drop their policies as often as insurers expected—and the low lapse rate meant insurance companies had less chance to book profits while incurring no LTC expenses. In response, insurers dramatically raised premiums. This repricing led to a plunge in sales, scaring consumers away from all LTC insurance. Hybrid LTC policies, which twin a life insurance policy or a tax-deferred annuity with a long-term-care benefit, are the best solution I’ve found. They’re effectively high-deductible insurance policies. Let’s say a client buys a hybrid LTC policy with a $50,000 lump sum. The insurance company won’t have to pay out any of its own money until $50,000 of expenses have been incurred. Most hybrid policies are life insurance products that offer an LTC benefit, and that’s what I chose for myself. Why? A hybrid life policy provides greater LTC benefits per dollar invested. But if someone isn’t healthy enough to qualify for a life policy, the annuity might be worth considering. How does a hybrid life policy work? The LTC coverage is designed as an acceleration of the life insurance policy’s death benefit. These policies aren’t cheap—but they offer guarantees that standalone policies don’t. For starters, premiums should never increase. If policyholders change their mind and want a refund, they can get their lump sum returned. If they have LTC expenses, they can use a multiple of the original lump-sum payment for LTC expenses tax-free. Upon death,…
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Fatten That Policy

I WORKED IN THE investment department of three different insurance companies. But I never had any interest in buying a whole-life insurance policy. I knew term insurance was the best way to get the maximum death benefit for my premium dollars. Instead, as a mutual fund manager, I was always more interested in investing in the stock market. (That said, I didn’t invest in the first mutual fund I managed. Why not? I didn’t want to pay the 7% “load”—the upfront sales commission.) But my attitude toward whole-life insurance changed six years ago. In researching retirement income issues—and getting an insurance license along the way—I learned about “blended” life insurance. Many whole-life policies let you take the policy’s base coverage and combine it with a paid-up additions (PUA) rider. That way, you can design a policy that pays a lower commission to the agent and delivers better value to the consumer. Insurance agents can get commissions as high as 55% of the first year’s premium for selling a whole-life policy, whereas the commission on a paid-up addition might be as little as 3%. Result? If you add $1 to a whole-life policy using a PUA rider, almost the entire $1 gets added to the policy’s cash value. That’s a huge benefit. Most whole-life policies accumulate cash value very slowly, similar to paying down a home mortgage in the early years, when very little of your monthly payment goes toward principal. If you’re interested in whole-life insurance, be sure to ask your agent about blended insurance policies. But there’s a catch. In 1988, Congress changed the rules on life insurance to limit the premium amount that could be contributed to a policy in the first seven years, relative to the size of the death benefit. If you breach these legal limits,…
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Lump It or Leave It?

AS THEY APPROACH retirement age, workers sometimes get to choose between a monthly pension and a lump-sum payout. It’s a choice I recently made—one I researched carefully. In the end, I made an unusual decision that took a few extra steps. Let me start at the beginning. In 1984, I began working for American National Insurance Company as an investment analyst. I left the company in 1991, but still qualified for a small pension. Now, at age 62, I was offered three choices. I could receive a monthly pension of approximately $300 starting at 65, or I could take the pension earlier and receive a smaller monthly benefit, or I could take a lump sum of nearly $50,000. To start, I wanted to know if one offer was considerably more valuable than the others. To compare, I went to a website that provides quotes for immediate annuities. It turns out my company pension would pay more each month than an immediate annuity I could buy for $50,000, but not a lot more. Still, having an additional stream of monthly income sounded appealing. But there were other considerations. I’m already getting a larger monthly pension payment from another insurance company—Union Central, now part of Ameritas Life—where I worked from 1999 to 2015. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] I also plan to take Social Security at age 70, which will give me a healthy stream of inflation-indexed income. Finally, I’ve purchased three deferred-income annuities that will begin paying me income starting at ages 76, 80 and 85, respectively. Should I live until 85, I’ll be receiving guaranteed income from five different sources. Viewed from this perspective, another payment of less than $300 a month started to seem less significant. Besides, my old employer had announced it'll be acquired by another company. I didn’t want to monitor…
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Your 10-Year Reward

IF YOU’RE MARRIED, filing for Social Security can be confusing. But there’s one group who has it even worse—those who are divorced. In recent weeks, I’ve had a number of conversations with women who had no idea that they were even eligible for spousal benefits based on their ex-husband’s earnings record. (I also recently watched the television show Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story, which gave completely erroneous advice on benefits for ex-spouses.) My hope: Someone reading this may learn that he or she is eligible for spousal or survivor benefits from an ex-spouse. A divorced spouse is eligible for Social Security spousal benefits if he or she was married for 10 years or more. Period. Being married for only nine-and-a-half years doesn’t cut it. Every divorce lawyer in the country should be aware that it’s worth delaying a divorce, so the marriage officially lasts at least 10 years. There are other mistakes and misconceptions among those who are divorced. The ex-spouse isn’t informed that you’re filing. The ex-spouse can’t prevent you from filing. As long as you’ve been divorced for more than two years, you’re aged 62 or older and your ex-spouse is at least age 62, you would be eligible for Social Security spousal benefits, as long as the marriage lasted 10-plus years. There are also misconceptions about when to file for spousal benefits. Unlike filing for Social Security benefits based on your own earnings record, where it often pays to delay to age 70, there’s no advantage to delaying spousal benefits beyond your full retirement age, which is age 66 or 67, depending on the year you were born. If you’re planning to receive only spousal benefits, because the benefit based on your own earnings record is modest, you shouldn’t wait to age 70, but rather file…
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Fourth Time Lucky

I HAD PLANNED a trip to Vietnam for 2020—which coincided with the start of the pandemic and got scratched. I naively rescheduled the trip for this summer. Unfortunately, countries that lack vaccines have been forced to lock down and keep out even vaccinated tourists like me, so that trip also got nixed. Ever the optimist, I rescheduled for Europe in July. This time, it was the delta variant and changing travel restrictions that ended my third international trip before it even began. I asked my tour group what my options were. The folks there mentioned four countries: Iceland, Croatia, Costa Rica and Egypt. I chose Egypt. The positive: There were very few tourists at the pyramids and the temples. The negatives, however, were numerous: wearing a mask on 10-hour flights, the risk of frequent flight cancellations, and COVID testing when both entering and leaving airports, even though I’m fully vaccinated. This last requirement was the hardest to understand. For my flights, I had to have a negative COVID result within 72 hours. I also learned that there are two types of test—the rapid antigen test and the less rapid but more accurate PCR test. The PCR test was required to fly through London on the way to Egypt. I paid $220 for same-day PCR test results to ensure I could board the plane. My daughter, who was accompanying me, was able to get her PCR test at no charge from her university. The testing went smoothly for us. But others in our tour group were forced to take more tests at the airport because their results needed to be within 48 hours of departure. Just before returning from Egypt, our tour group provided us with another COVID test for $150. The results were delivered to our hotel just three hours…
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Roth While You Can

NEWS OF ENTREPRENEUR Peter Thiel’s $5 billion Roth account, which was funded with PayPal stock, has motivated Congress to look at restricting the growth and size of Roth accounts. There’s talk of limiting Roth account balances to $5 million or $10 million. There are also proposals to limit both backdoor IRA conversions and so-called mega-backdoor conversions. The latter involves funding a nondeductible 401(k) and then immediately converting the money to a Roth. There’s even discussion of not allowing high-income workers to convert traditional IRAs to Roth accounts. In recent years, Congress has nixed Social Security’s file-and-suspend option and compelled beneficiaries to empty inherited IRAs within 10 years, rather than over their lifetime. But both changes were grandfathered, meaning those already using the file-and-suspend strategy and those who already had inherited IRAs weren’t affected. Presumably, it would be a similar situation with existing Roth accounts. The upshot: If Congress limits the ability to take advantage of Roth accounts in future, it makes even more sense to convert to a Roth today, while the door is still open.
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