FREE NEWSLETTER

The harder we try to beat the market, the more likely we are to fail, thanks to the hefty investment costs we incur.

Latest PostsAll Discussions »

Penny Wise, Pound Foolish

"I get anxious about using too much sticky tape, Blu-tack, glue or myriad other low cost consumable things. But I spend with seemingly no limit on food, drink and good times! I nee to keep reminding myself to use as much sticky tape as I want to."
- greg_j_tomamichel
Read more »

The High Price of Success

"Dan, thanks for taking the trouble to check. Always skeptical of anything that starts with “It has been reported that…” with no basis or attribution."
- Michael1
Read more »

My sister’s will and what it taught me.

"Deepest condolences on your losses, Andrew. It's amazing, isn't it, how these tragedies come in clusters? And my I offer strongest endorsements of your warnings. My story is not dissimilar to yours. Please forgive the length, but I think it's illustrative. My dad kept a metal box on the top shelf of the linen closet in our family home near Chicago, where he now lived with his girlfriend. The box contained his will and the house and car titles and every other document that his passing would require. And every time I came home from wherever I was living around the country doing TV news, we did a quick review of the box. On July 2, 1993, two days after my dad and his girlfriend had come out to visit me in Rhode Island (we had stuffed ourselves at the Lobster Festival), she called me to tell me he had died suddenly, shockingly, at 58. I was on a plane to Chicago the next morning, and she and I walked into the bathroom together to get the box down from the shelf. It was empty. Empty. They'd been planning a trip to Arizona, and as best I could guess in later years, he'd been planning to surprise her with a marital side trip to Vegas. I still assume that to keep it a complete surprise, he had taken all the papers to some lawyer to change his will, add her name to the house title and bank accounts etc. without telling her. We tore his home office apart but never found the name of a lawyer or any indication of where all the documents were. So legally he had died intestate. What followed was six months of probate hell. I dealt with two lawyers, an accountant, various city and county legal authorities, a judge, and two acidic siblings who didn't trust me to give them their fair share -- as well as the onerous realty process Andrew describes in his article. All at a distance of a thousand miles while the girlfriend stayed in the house to keep it safe. Even when I could sell the house, it sat on the market for weeks. I finally sold it in the middle of producing the 5:30 newscast at WJAR-TV in Providence. My dad's girlfriend's realtor called me on the studio phone at 5:35 with the buyers in the house. Between news stories and giving directions to the live reporters, I negotiated with the buyers, and by the end of the weather segment, we had a deal. The remaining financial processes in probate were still to be completed, but nine months after his death, I finally had my dad's slender estate money distributed, all the debts paid off, and my dad's car towing a U-Haul full of his furniture to California... where I started a new life with it."
- Mike Gaynes
Read more »

Financial regrets about parenthood?

"What a great question. I can’t wait to read the answers"
- Nick Politakis
Read more »

Taxes Season 3

"As a tax nerd, I am shocked at how little people know about the tax code. All the IRS publications are available online, and they're not that difficult to understand."
- Ormode
Read more »

Financial Planning

"30 basis points is 0.30%, and did you mean your annuities will increase payouts 50%?"
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Avoid the noise, buy the market and stay invested

"Glad to see you made it to the "two-comma club" as well. Welcome, new member, and Congratulations. It really is a simple process. NOT easy, but simple."
- Mike Lynch
Read more »

“We did everything right.” Maybe not. Retirement income should not be an unpleasant surprise.

"I was fortunate to work with five unions who supported me in our efforts to communicate to their members on how to obtain the most value from their employee benefits. They wanted appreciation from members for what they had negotiated and we both wanted value for the cost of the benefits, the unions well aware they gave up some pay to obtain those benefits. We were both frustrated at the high level of indifference by many workers."
- R Quinn
Read more »

Resist the Urge to Act

BEFORE WE GET into it, a brief word. We lost Jonathan last year, and those of us who followed his work felt it more than we perhaps expected.  He had a saying that I always liked - that there are really only twenty stories in personal finance, and the financial industry spends most of its time telling them on repeat in slightly different hats. He was right, of course. He usually was. It struck me that a fitting tribute might be to take his core principles and do something with them, not quote him at length, but wrestle with the ideas in our own words, from our own lives. I've chosen "Resist the Urge to Act," and had a go below. If the idea appeals to any readers posting on the forum, I'd love to see others pick a principle, whichever one speaks to you, and write about it in your own voice. No need to be an economist. Just be honest. I suspect Jonathan would have approved of that approach more than most. There's a strange truth lurking at the heart of personal finance that nobody tells you about, possibly because it would put a large number of people out of work. The more urgently you feel you ought to do something with your investments, the more damage you will probably do by doing it. I find this deeply satisfying, not because I'm wise, far from it, but because it seems my instinct to do very little was correct all along. Vindication, when it arrives, should be savored. Jonathan Clements spent decades writing about money for the Wall Street Journal before founding HumbleDollar, which if you're reading this you already know, and if you don't, welcome, you've somehow stumbled into excellent company by accident. One of his core messages, boiled down to its purest form, was this: The secret to successful investing is to be comprehensively, almost aggressively boring. He had a list of principles, and one of them was deceptively simple: Resist the Urge to Act. I have a suspicion he knew it was one of the hardest ones, which is perhaps why he saved it for near the end of his various lists. Telling people to do nothing runs headlong into every instinct the modern world has carefully cultivated in them. The financial news industry has a business model, and it is not, I would suggest, your long-term wealth they're hoping to help. Their holy grail is your attention span, and attention without action doesn't keep the lights on. So urgency is manufactured. Alarm is engineered. The moment a headline about Federal Reserve policy or market volatility lands on your phone screen, the correct and sophisticated response, according to Jonathan, is to put the phone face-down and go and make a cup of tea. This is not what the headline wants you to do. The headline wants you to feel that failure to react immediately constitutes negligence. It doesn't. The information has already been digested, debated, and priced in by people who got it considerably earlier than you did. Acting on it now isn't smart. It's like arriving late to a party that ended an hour ago and wondering why nobody's offering you a stiff drink. Jonathan was a firm believer in market efficiency, the rather humbling idea that you, me, and most professional fund managers with their impressive offices and Bloomberg terminals, cannot reliably outthink the combined judgment of millions of other investors. Once you genuinely accept this, something might shift for you. You'll probably stop checking your portfolio three times before lunch. Which matters more than it might sound, because there's a fairly direct relationship between how often you look at your balance and how likely you are to do something regrettable with it. He had a line I've shamelessly adopted as my own: Your portfolio is like a bar of soap, and the more you handle it, the smaller it gets. My wife Suzie heard me say this recently and pointed out that I've never shown this level of restraint with actual soap. She's not wrong. But then again, I liberate hotel soap. The other temptation Jonathan warned against was treating the market as a hobby. There's a certain thrill, I understand, in hunting for the next great stock, the overheard tip, the sector everyone's talking about. The feeling that you've spotted something the rest of us turkeys have missed is a powerful one. He was fairly blunt on this point. If you want that kind of excitement, go to the cinema. Go to a casino. These are perfectly respectable venues for the willing suspension of rational judgment. Your brokerage account is not. The urge to act, dressed up as diligence and research, is still the urge to act. The actual solution is somewhat anticlimactic. Broad index funds, bought automatically and regularly, regardless of what the television talking heads are shouting about. When the market drops and the headlines turn an alarming shade of red, the correct response, the disciplined, intelligent, sophisticated response, is to turn the television off, close the laptop, and take yourself for a walk. Jonathan was clear on this point: Doing nothing, at the right moment, is one of the harder things an investor can do. It only looks like laziness from the outside. From the inside, when every instinct is screaming at you to move, to switch, to sell, to “do something,” holding still takes genuine effort. I have found, in my own modest experience, that retirement makes this philosophy considerably easier to live by. Urgency has a way of evaporating when you no longer have somewhere to be. The news cycle hums along without me. The market does whatever it decides to do. And I go for my walk. By strange coincidence, the halfway point often coincides with a bar serving decent Guinness. I consider this a stroke of luck. It seems I was a follower of Jonathan's advice for many years before I stumbled upon his name and writing. There's something to be said for arriving at the right answer through a combination of temperament and mild indifference. I'm choosing to call it wisdom. This piece was never meant to be anything more than one person's attempt to retell one of Jonathan's principles in his own words, a tribute of sorts, filtered through lived experience rather than expertise. The voice is mine, for better or worse. The wisdom, unambiguously, was his. There are more principles still sitting there, waiting. Each of them deserves exactly this kind of treatment, personal, honest, and a little bit imperfect. So, who's next? Because if there are no takers I'll have a pretty big task ahead of me.
Mark Crothers is a retired small business owner from the UK with a keen interest in personal finance and simple living. Married to his high school sweetheart, with daughters and grandchildren, he knows the importance of building a secure financial future. With an aversion to social media, he prefers to spend his time on his main passions: reading, scratch cooking, racket sports, and hiking.
Read more »

Stock Tokens

RECENTLY, The Wall Street Journal ran a story about a new type of investment known as a digital stock token. For now, they aren’t available in the U.S., but they’re coming soon, so it’s worth taking a closer look. What are stock tokens? At the most basic level, they’re a technology designed to make stock market investing quicker and easier than it is today. With tokens, trading won’t be limited to traditional business hours. Instead, investors will be able to trade 24/7. And token trades will settle instantly, allowing investors to deposit or withdraw funds from an investment without the overnight delay imposed by traditional stock exchanges.  An additional benefit: Tokens will allow investors to purchase fractional shares. To see how this would work, consider Microsoft. Today, its share price is around $370. Through the token system, though, an investor with a modest budget could gain exposure to Microsoft with just $5 or $10. There will also be index-based tokens, so an investor could gain exposure to the S&P 500, for example. In many ways, stock tokens are the equivalent of cryptocurrencies but for stocks, allowing investors to trade more quickly and easily. That’s their key appeal, and it’s part of the broader trend toward digitizing the financial system. Along the same lines, a number of retailers are pursuing so-called stablecoins as an alternative to costly credit card networks. Stock tokens do carry risk, though. You may recall an episode that occurred in 2022, when a digital currency called TerraUSD, which was designed to maintain a fixed value of $1, suddenly lost most of its value. In that case, there was a breakdown in the algorithm that was supposed to prevent Terra from dipping below $1, and that caused the equivalent of a run on the bank. Supporters of stock tokens will tell you that Terra’s failure can be attributed to its primitive structure and that today’s technology wouldn’t be similarly vulnerable. That may be true, but stock tokens carry other potential vulnerabilities. For starters, they’re complex and rely on a significant amount of financial engineering. Unlike a share of stock which is simply an ownership stake in a business, tokens are more of a synthetic financial instrument. That’s why the recent Journal write-up referred to them as “digital avatars.” When you buy a token, you aren’t buying an actual share of stock. It’s more like a chip issued by a casino or a gift card issued by a retailer. It looks like real money, and under ordinary circumstances, it probably will function like real money. But in times of stress, they may not perform as expected. The financial firm Robinhood, which has already created a family of stock tokens for international investors, acknowledges another risk: Because tokens don’t represent actual shares of stock, they carry what’s known as counterparty risk. Under the hood, tokens are actually financial contracts, which means that the party on the other side of a given contract needs to remain solvent in order for a token to maintain its value. On its website, Robinhood includes this disclosure: “Investors may lose up to the full amount of their invested capital due to market conditions or the insolvency of Robinhood.” To be sure, counterparty failure is usually a low risk, but it isn’t zero, and actual shares of stock don’t need disclaimers like this.  Even under ordinary circumstances, stock tokens’ prices likely won’t move in lockstep with actual share prices. That’s for a few reasons.  First, because tokens aren’t real shares, they don’t pay dividends. While that might not seem like a significant factor, dividends do add up. Over the past 15 years, they’ve accounted for about 20% of the total return of U.S. stocks. Also, stock tokens don’t carry the voting rights associated with real shares. That might also seem insignificant to everyday investors, but because it is important to larger, institutional investors, it means that tokens will probably always trade at a bit of a discount to real shares. A final risk is one that is longer term but much more serious: Stock tokens are built on blockchain technology, and that means they’re vulnerable to hacking. Of most concern is the fact that blockchain technologies rely on cryptography to secure investors’ holdings. While blockchain encryption has never been cracked, advances in computing power—and specifically, a technology known as quantum computing—could one day compromise a blockchain. Most experts believe this is 10 or more years away, but companies including Google and IBM are actively working on it, so it’s worth bearing in mind. The bottom line: In thinking about this new innovation, I’d lean on a concept known as Lindy’s law. This is a rule of thumb which postulates that the future life expectancy of an idea is proportional to its current age. In other words, the longer an idea has stood the test of time, the more likely it is to continue to stand the test of time in the future. That’s how I’d look at stock tokens. They might or might not be a good idea, but it’s too soon to tell. And since the benefits they offer are more in the category of convenience rather than investment performance, I see no particular need to own them. For that reason, it might make sense to wait and watch until any bugs are worked out.   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 »

Carrying Humble Dollar Forward

"That's very true -- bigger problems. Recall that it took from 1929 to about 1945 for that come back. Sixteen years for someone retiring in '29 would usually have been a lifetime."
- John D.
Read more »

Penny Wise, Pound Foolish

"I get anxious about using too much sticky tape, Blu-tack, glue or myriad other low cost consumable things. But I spend with seemingly no limit on food, drink and good times! I nee to keep reminding myself to use as much sticky tape as I want to."
- greg_j_tomamichel
Read more »

The High Price of Success

"Dan, thanks for taking the trouble to check. Always skeptical of anything that starts with “It has been reported that…” with no basis or attribution."
- Michael1
Read more »

My sister’s will and what it taught me.

"Deepest condolences on your losses, Andrew. It's amazing, isn't it, how these tragedies come in clusters? And my I offer strongest endorsements of your warnings. My story is not dissimilar to yours. Please forgive the length, but I think it's illustrative. My dad kept a metal box on the top shelf of the linen closet in our family home near Chicago, where he now lived with his girlfriend. The box contained his will and the house and car titles and every other document that his passing would require. And every time I came home from wherever I was living around the country doing TV news, we did a quick review of the box. On July 2, 1993, two days after my dad and his girlfriend had come out to visit me in Rhode Island (we had stuffed ourselves at the Lobster Festival), she called me to tell me he had died suddenly, shockingly, at 58. I was on a plane to Chicago the next morning, and she and I walked into the bathroom together to get the box down from the shelf. It was empty. Empty. They'd been planning a trip to Arizona, and as best I could guess in later years, he'd been planning to surprise her with a marital side trip to Vegas. I still assume that to keep it a complete surprise, he had taken all the papers to some lawyer to change his will, add her name to the house title and bank accounts etc. without telling her. We tore his home office apart but never found the name of a lawyer or any indication of where all the documents were. So legally he had died intestate. What followed was six months of probate hell. I dealt with two lawyers, an accountant, various city and county legal authorities, a judge, and two acidic siblings who didn't trust me to give them their fair share -- as well as the onerous realty process Andrew describes in his article. All at a distance of a thousand miles while the girlfriend stayed in the house to keep it safe. Even when I could sell the house, it sat on the market for weeks. I finally sold it in the middle of producing the 5:30 newscast at WJAR-TV in Providence. My dad's girlfriend's realtor called me on the studio phone at 5:35 with the buyers in the house. Between news stories and giving directions to the live reporters, I negotiated with the buyers, and by the end of the weather segment, we had a deal. The remaining financial processes in probate were still to be completed, but nine months after his death, I finally had my dad's slender estate money distributed, all the debts paid off, and my dad's car towing a U-Haul full of his furniture to California... where I started a new life with it."
- Mike Gaynes
Read more »

Financial regrets about parenthood?

"What a great question. I can’t wait to read the answers"
- Nick Politakis
Read more »

Taxes Season 3

"As a tax nerd, I am shocked at how little people know about the tax code. All the IRS publications are available online, and they're not that difficult to understand."
- Ormode
Read more »

Financial Planning

"30 basis points is 0.30%, and did you mean your annuities will increase payouts 50%?"
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Avoid the noise, buy the market and stay invested

"Glad to see you made it to the "two-comma club" as well. Welcome, new member, and Congratulations. It really is a simple process. NOT easy, but simple."
- Mike Lynch
Read more »

“We did everything right.” Maybe not. Retirement income should not be an unpleasant surprise.

"I was fortunate to work with five unions who supported me in our efforts to communicate to their members on how to obtain the most value from their employee benefits. They wanted appreciation from members for what they had negotiated and we both wanted value for the cost of the benefits, the unions well aware they gave up some pay to obtain those benefits. We were both frustrated at the high level of indifference by many workers."
- R Quinn
Read more »

Stock Tokens

RECENTLY, The Wall Street Journal ran a story about a new type of investment known as a digital stock token. For now, they aren’t available in the U.S., but they’re coming soon, so it’s worth taking a closer look. What are stock tokens? At the most basic level, they’re a technology designed to make stock market investing quicker and easier than it is today. With tokens, trading won’t be limited to traditional business hours. Instead, investors will be able to trade 24/7. And token trades will settle instantly, allowing investors to deposit or withdraw funds from an investment without the overnight delay imposed by traditional stock exchanges.  An additional benefit: Tokens will allow investors to purchase fractional shares. To see how this would work, consider Microsoft. Today, its share price is around $370. Through the token system, though, an investor with a modest budget could gain exposure to Microsoft with just $5 or $10. There will also be index-based tokens, so an investor could gain exposure to the S&P 500, for example. In many ways, stock tokens are the equivalent of cryptocurrencies but for stocks, allowing investors to trade more quickly and easily. That’s their key appeal, and it’s part of the broader trend toward digitizing the financial system. Along the same lines, a number of retailers are pursuing so-called stablecoins as an alternative to costly credit card networks. Stock tokens do carry risk, though. You may recall an episode that occurred in 2022, when a digital currency called TerraUSD, which was designed to maintain a fixed value of $1, suddenly lost most of its value. In that case, there was a breakdown in the algorithm that was supposed to prevent Terra from dipping below $1, and that caused the equivalent of a run on the bank. Supporters of stock tokens will tell you that Terra’s failure can be attributed to its primitive structure and that today’s technology wouldn’t be similarly vulnerable. That may be true, but stock tokens carry other potential vulnerabilities. For starters, they’re complex and rely on a significant amount of financial engineering. Unlike a share of stock which is simply an ownership stake in a business, tokens are more of a synthetic financial instrument. That’s why the recent Journal write-up referred to them as “digital avatars.” When you buy a token, you aren’t buying an actual share of stock. It’s more like a chip issued by a casino or a gift card issued by a retailer. It looks like real money, and under ordinary circumstances, it probably will function like real money. But in times of stress, they may not perform as expected. The financial firm Robinhood, which has already created a family of stock tokens for international investors, acknowledges another risk: Because tokens don’t represent actual shares of stock, they carry what’s known as counterparty risk. Under the hood, tokens are actually financial contracts, which means that the party on the other side of a given contract needs to remain solvent in order for a token to maintain its value. On its website, Robinhood includes this disclosure: “Investors may lose up to the full amount of their invested capital due to market conditions or the insolvency of Robinhood.” To be sure, counterparty failure is usually a low risk, but it isn’t zero, and actual shares of stock don’t need disclaimers like this.  Even under ordinary circumstances, stock tokens’ prices likely won’t move in lockstep with actual share prices. That’s for a few reasons.  First, because tokens aren’t real shares, they don’t pay dividends. While that might not seem like a significant factor, dividends do add up. Over the past 15 years, they’ve accounted for about 20% of the total return of U.S. stocks. Also, stock tokens don’t carry the voting rights associated with real shares. That might also seem insignificant to everyday investors, but because it is important to larger, institutional investors, it means that tokens will probably always trade at a bit of a discount to real shares. A final risk is one that is longer term but much more serious: Stock tokens are built on blockchain technology, and that means they’re vulnerable to hacking. Of most concern is the fact that blockchain technologies rely on cryptography to secure investors’ holdings. While blockchain encryption has never been cracked, advances in computing power—and specifically, a technology known as quantum computing—could one day compromise a blockchain. Most experts believe this is 10 or more years away, but companies including Google and IBM are actively working on it, so it’s worth bearing in mind. The bottom line: In thinking about this new innovation, I’d lean on a concept known as Lindy’s law. This is a rule of thumb which postulates that the future life expectancy of an idea is proportional to its current age. In other words, the longer an idea has stood the test of time, the more likely it is to continue to stand the test of time in the future. That’s how I’d look at stock tokens. They might or might not be a good idea, but it’s too soon to tell. And since the benefits they offer are more in the category of convenience rather than investment performance, I see no particular need to own them. For that reason, it might make sense to wait and watch until any bugs are worked out.   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 »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 64: AS WE GROW wealthier, we should seize the chance to save on insurance—by raising deductibles, lengthening elimination periods and perhaps dropping some policies entirely.

think

CONFLICTS of interest. It’s hard to get unbiased financial advice. Insurance agents collect bigger commissions if we buy cash-value instead of term life insurance. Brokers make more if we trade frequently and buy high-commission products. Advisors who charge a percent of assets earn more if we keep money in our portfolios, rather than paying down debt.

humans

NO. 60: WE TEND to ignore low-probability events. But low risk isn’t the same as no risk, so it’s crucial to weigh the potential financial impact. For instance, it’s unlikely we’ll suffer an illness or disability that prevents us from working. But if that happened, the financial consequences could be devastating, which is why disability insurance can be a smart buy.

act

FREEZE YOUR CREDIT—which you can now do at no cost. This will prevent data thieves from taking out loans and credit cards using your identity. But it also means you’ll need to contact the three credit bureaus and unfreeze your credit temporarily whenever applying for credit. Sound like a hassle? As an alternative, consider setting up a fraud alert.

Basics

Manifesto

NO. 64: AS WE GROW wealthier, we should seize the chance to save on insurance—by raising deductibles, lengthening elimination periods and perhaps dropping some policies entirely.

Spotlight: College

Kids These Days

A FEW WEEKS BACK, Jonathan Clements wrote an article reminding readers that they, too, likely made financial missteps in their younger days. His article was in response to comments by HumbleDollar readers about the perceived lack of financial discipline shown by those currently in their late teens and early 20s.
Before my recent career change, I would’ve had the same opinion as many readers. With my new job teaching accounting to undergraduates,

Read more »

A Real Education

WE’RE A SINGLE-INCOME family with five children, so the prospect of paying for college for all our kids is daunting, to say the least. Yes, our oldest is now in her second year of college. But we still have a long way to go before they’ve all crossed the finish line.
Our kids are ages 19, 17, 12, nine and six. We’ve been homeschooling them since the beginning, with a few brief exceptions, including one daughter in a Department of Defense high school in Korea for a year and another daughter in a private high school for two years.

Read more »

Ranking Colleges

I’VE TAUGHT BEHAVIORAL economics, which holds that even our most important decisions are influenced by unrecognized biases. For my students, there’s no better example than the choice of where they went to college.
Although the cost is enormous, the decision of where to go hinges on the smallest things. A teenager who says, “I want to be close to my boyfriend,” will zero in on a nearby college, even if her high school romance is fading.

Read more »

College Math

WHAT’S THE REAL PRICE? In September, I wrote about the potential tab for sending our first child to college in 2025. The four-year cost was estimated at anywhere from $65,000 to $430,000, depending on the college chosen.
This wild disparity led me to conclude that college financial planning was like saving to buy a car—when you don’t know if you’ll drive off the lot in a Honda or a Lamborghini.
Since then, I’ve tried to put a sharper pencil to college costs.

Read more »

Getting a Break

STUDENT LOANS ARE a hot topic—one that’s fraught with confusion and complexity. Still, many borrowers should consider taking action this year. Want to get a better handle on what’s happening? Let’s start with three changes that have lately been in the spotlight:

Federal student loan payments, along with the interest charged, were paused from March 2020 to September 2023. That gave borrowers more than three years to make principal-only payments or, alternatively, to potentially accrue credit toward loan forgiveness without the need to make payments.

Read more »

The Places You’ll Go

MY TWIN DAUGHTERS just finished sorting through college offers and making their decision ahead of the May 1 acceptance deadline. With nearly 3,000 four-year colleges to choose from, how did they decide?
It wasn’t easy. The pandemic didn’t just close our local public schools. It also ended visits from universities and limited school-based college counseling. Counselors compensated with lunchtime workshops, links to webinars, and lots of robocalls and emails urging students to fill out and submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

Read more »

Spotlight: Sayler

From Mali With Love

FELLOW HUMBLEDOLLAR contributor Marjorie Kondrack concluded a recent article by saying she’d “never been to Paris or Prague, Timbuktu or Tokyo.” I had always thought of Timbuktu as an imaginary, faraway place. Only recently did I discover that it actually exists. Timbuktu is a town in Mali with a population just north of 50,000 people. But according to Wikipedia, thanks to gold and salt that could be found in the area, it was once a “world-renowned trading powerhouse” with a population of 250,000. From the 1200s through the 1600s, “Timbuktu was a world centre of Islamic learning.” Even in the best of times, Timbuktu is not a place I’d want to visit. It sits on the southern edge of the Sahara desert. In May, the average daily high temperature is 108 degrees Fahrenheit, with an average low of 79 degrees. January is the coolest month, but it still has an average high of 86 degrees. Timbuktu gets virtually no rain at all for six consecutive months. For the other six months, rainfall totals only seven inches. But assuredly, it is not the best of times in Timbuktu. Beginning in 2008, rebels started kidnapping—and occasionally killing—tourists. In 2012, rebel forces briefly seized control of the town. The entire country of Mali is suffering. For more than 10 years, there have been various coups. In June, the Mali government announced it’s kicking out the United Nations peacekeeping forces that have been in the country for the past decade. I imagine most HumbleDollar readers have heard of Timbuktu, at least in the way I knew it, as a mysterious, perhaps mythical place. Have younger people even heard of Timbuktu? Based on a sample of three—our teenage granddaughters—they haven’t. My brother Kenyon told me that, for about $15, I can have a postcard sent…
Read more »

Get What’s Yours

AFTER THEY MARRY, some people discover their spouse has hidden debt. We had the opposite situation. Several years after we were married and while living in Illinois, my wife got a letter from the New York Secretary of State saying she may be the owner of an unclaimed savings account in the town where she was raised. This was before the internet. We had no idea how New York found her. Neither my wife nor her parents remembered the account. My wife filled out some paperwork and a few weeks later she received a check for a few hundred dollars. Apparently, it’s common for people to forget about things like bank accounts, retirement accounts and utility deposits. Because states don’t want financial institutions and other companies sitting on this money, with no incentive to track down the owner, they require that unclaimed assets be turned over to the state. As a result, states hold billions of dollars in unclaimed property. Today, thanks to the internet, searching for unclaimed assets is easy. Recently, I spent an evening checking for unclaimed assets in the six states in which my wife and I have lived. Using Google, I typed in the name of a state and “unclaimed property.” One of the first suggestions was always the official secretary of state site for unclaimed property. Most sites—though not all—had a “.gov” suffix, indicating it’s an official government website. Alternatively, you can locate official state sites by going to Unclaimed.org. The sites varied slightly, but usually I could simply type in a name and then hit “search.” I used only my surname. If you also enter a first name, you may not find assets where the first name is listed only as an initial. I never knew there were so many folks called Sayler. It…
Read more »

Motivated by Money

"WE BEHAVE BETTER when we know others are watching—so be sure to tell friends if you’re aiming to exercise more, lose weight or save more." I love the pithy sayings that appear each day at the top of HumbleDollar’s homepage. This statement appeared Oct. 19. A few years ago, when I was still working fulltime, some colleagues and I adopted this philosophy. Suppose one of us had a goal, such as losing five pounds by the end of the month. We could have simply told our coworkers the goal. But being type-A personalities, we took it to an extreme. We decided it was more effective if we backed our intentions with money. “If I don’t lose five pounds by the end of the month, I’ll give you $20.” None of us really wanted to take a colleague’s money, so we soon changed this to, “If I don’t reach my goal, I’ll give $20 to a charity of your choice.” This led to some interesting discussions. If we were of the same political party, had the same views on abortion or shared the same religion, the penalty for not meeting the goal was to give a contribution to an organization we both supported. That wasn’t much of a penalty. Someone pointed out it would be more motivating if the loser had to make a financial contribution to an organization with which he or she disagreed. If we were a staunch member of one political party and we lost our bet, we had to give $100 to the other major party. Now, that was motivating. Maybe we were exceedingly cheap, but the person always met his or her goal. I don’t recall anyone ever paying a penalty. Of course, we were on the honor system. The person making the contract simply self-reported…
Read more »

Lack of Trust

RULES OF THUMB and conventional wisdom often serve us well. But we should make sure they’re truly applicable to our situation. Like many parents, my wife and I prepared our first estate planning documents when our children were young. The estate planning lawyer suggested a so-called AB trust. If we’d taken his advice, when one of us passed away, half of our joint assets would have gone into an irrevocable trust. The surviving spouse would get the income from that trust, but in most cases wouldn’t have access to the principal. When the surviving spouse died, the money in the trust would be distributed in accordance with the wishes of the first person who passed away. My parents had this type of trust. There are good reasons for using it. Let’s assume the husband dies first. He may want his estate to go to his children when his wife dies. If he doesn’t have such a trust and leaves everything to his wife, she may not leave everything to their children. Suppose she remarries. She might opt to leave everything to her new spouse, so nothing ends up going to the children. This happened to a woman I know. She was an only child and grew up on a family farm. Her mom died first. Mom’s share of the farm went to her husband. Dad remarried. He died. The farm went to the new wife. The new wife died. She had no will. Under state intestacy laws, the family farm went to the children of the new wife. My friend got nothing. This is probably not what my friend’s mom wanted. An AB trust would have prevented this outcome. Still, when the lawyer encouraged us to use an AB trust, my wife and I balked. Why? At the time, our…
Read more »

The Magic Number

WHEN SHOULD YOU start drawing Social Security? If folks want to maximize their lifetime benefit, I think the answer is fairly straightforward. Maximizing lifetime Social Security income isn’t always the goal, of course. Some people need Social Security to meet basic needs. These people usually claim benefits as soon as they reach age 62, the earliest possible age. Others view Social Security as longevity insurance. They want as much monthly income as possible in the event they or their spouse live a long time. These people typically wait until 70, the latest possible age, to start Social Security. But for many people, the goal is to maximize the amount they’re likely to receive during their lifetime. Financial nerds often toss around terms like “breakeven” or “cross-over.” More sophisticated analysts consider present values and appropriate discount rates. I like simple. Want to maximize lifetime income? I believe the decision rule is fairly simple. If I am likely to die early in retirement, I should start Social Security as soon as possible. If I know I am going to die at age 65 and I don’t have a spouse who will receive survivor benefits, I had better start Social Security at 62. It makes no sense to wait. On the other hand, if I am going to live a long time—perhaps to age 90 or even 100—I want the largest monthly check possible for all those years. I achieve that by waiting until 70 to start Social Security. If I have no reason to think I will either die early or live a very long life, it makes sense to start Social Security sometime between age 62 and 70. One might choose age 66, the midpoint between 62 and 70. Others might choose their Social Security full retirement age. For those born…
Read more »

True to Form

IS THE IRS NO LONGER able to provide basic services to the public? When my father passed away, he left his financial assets in a trust for my siblings and me. A trust is a good estate planning tool, but there are some disadvantages. Among them: A trust has to file its own income tax forms. My mother is the trustee. She uses a local CPA to prepare the tax returns for the trust. My mother recently received a letter from the IRS. “Thank you for your inquiry dated Aug. 06, 2020. We have processed the adjustment indicated on your amended Form 1041 and applied the payment of $108.00, which we received on Aug. 14, 2020, to the Form 1041 account tax period ending Dec. 31, 2019. The above referenced tax period is paid in full at this time.” That's not a typographical error: The IRS is informing my mother that it received a check she sent nearly two years ago. In August 2020, my mother sent the IRS an amended Form 1041, which is the tax return for trusts, along with a check for $108. Three months later, in November 2020, the check finally cleared the bank. Yes, it took the IRS three months to open the mail and deposit her check. My mother’s CPA tells me that the letter is simply an acknowledgment from the IRS that it has now processed and accepted the amended return. End of story? A few weeks later, my mother received a second letter about the Form 1041 from the IRS. It states, “We are required by law to charge interest when you do not pay your liability on time.” It informs her that the interest charge is 27 cents. But then it says, in bold, “Amount due: $0.00.” I assume that means…
Read more »