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Retirement Plan

""Different strokes for different folks.""
- Doug C
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Vanguard’s Transfer on Death Plan Kit

"I am glad I learned of the change and that sharing the change was helpful. Best, Bill"
- William Perry
Read more »

Forget the 4% rule.

"That's pretty much the gist of it, and it's something I have personal experience with. Before retiring, I purchased a ten-year term annuity to cover all my essential spending — and I really can't emphasise enough the peace of mind this has given me compared to drawing down from my portfolio for those expenses. It's simply like getting a paycheck every month. No hassle, no worry. I'm now reasonably certain I'll purchase a lifetime annuity when this one matures in ten years, because of the confidence a guaranteed income gives you to actually spend."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Sector Fund by Stealth

I'VE RECENTLY MADE the most significant change to my own portfolio in thirty five years. For the first time I've moved away from pure market-cap investing, tilting meaningfully toward Europe and Southeast Asia and bringing my US technology concentration down to around fifteen percent. I'm retired. I don't need to chase the outperformance that concentration might deliver, and I don't need the potential volatility that comes with it. This is a personal position rather than any kind of recommendation; it's nothing more than a risk management decision made at a point in life where I simply don't need the risk. What prompted it was a growing discomfort with something I suspect many everyday investors haven't fully reckoned with: the S&P 500 is no longer quite the animal it once was. A broad market index fund casts a wide net across the economy, and the S&P 500, which tracks the 500 largest US businesses by market value, has long been held up as the sensible default: low cost, well diversified, a bet on the whole rather than any one part of it. A sector fund works differently; it makes a deliberate, concentrated bet on a specific industry. If you believe technology is going to outperform the market as a whole, it gives you the ability to concentrate your capital into exactly the sector your research or gut instinct suspects is going to be the place to be and let it run. The theory behind each is straightforward enough. A broad market fund captures a larger slice of the investment universe and is generally considered the lower-risk path. A sector fund comes with a well-understood trade-off: higher potential returns in good times, sharper drawdowns when sentiment turns. Investors who consciously choose a technology sector fund know what they're signing up for. The risk profile is understood, accepted, and priced into the decision. The problem is that the line between these two things has become a bit fuzzy, and most everyday investors haven't noticed. A handful of technology and technology-related companies (Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet) have grown so dominant in their market valuations that they now represent a disproportionate share of the entire index. During the last year, the top ten holdings have accounted for roughly a third of the total weight of all 500 companies. The mechanism behind this is simply how the index works. The S&P 500 is market-cap weighted, meaning the bigger the company, the bigger its slice of the pie. As technology companies scaled their dominance through the 2010s and into the 2020s, their weight within the index ballooned accordingly. The index didn't change its rules; the market just rewarded one particular group of companies so heavily that they came to dominate the scoreboard. This means the investor who bought the S&P 500 believing they were spreading risk broadly across the American economy (energy, healthcare, financials, industrials, consumer staples) owns something that looks quite different to the story they were sold. You buy five hundred companies and a third of your money lands in ten stocks, most of them operating in the same broad technological ecosystem. That is a concentration risk, whether it is labelled as one or not. It's a sector fund “light”, acquired by stealth through the natural mechanics of market-cap weighting. The issue is that millions of everyday investors are carrying a version of that same risk without necessarily knowing it. Although I've used the S&P 500 as an example here, it isn't alone. Most broad-based indexes including developed world trackers will exhibit the same characteristics to varying degrees, because the same companies sit near the top of those indexes too. The MSCI World, often marketed as the global diversifier, allocates somewhere in the region of seventy percent to US equities, and within that, the familiar names reappear. You can cross borders on paper without ever really leaving the room. None of this is an argument against the S&P 500. The concentration reflects real, earned dominance; these companies grew to the top of the index because they genuinely deserved to. And whether my reallocation turns out to be the right call is genuinely unknowable. The concentrated index could continue to outperform for another decade and I'll have left returns on the table, a real possibility I've made my peace with. The point isn't that I've found the correct answer. The point is that I had the information to make a considered choice, weighed it against my own circumstances, and acted accordingly. That's all any investor can do. The uncomfortable truth is that a great many people haven't been given the chance to do the same. They're holding a product that has quietly changed its character, and nobody has thought to mention it. Better information doesn't guarantee better decisions, but it at least puts the decision where it belongs: with the person whose money it is. ___ 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 »

When Your Pastime Takes Ownership

"Clew bay, a wonderful part of the country, there's a great view from Croagh Patrick down onto the islands…I'm jealous, a much better use of a sunny day than trying to wrestle with hawthorn bushes with two inch thorns... I'm cut to pieces!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Actually, Lets NOT Forget the 4% Rule – as Posted Yesterday 3/6/26

"Dan, I only listened to the first one minute of this 50 minute video. He says it perfectly in that one minute ! My impression is that people are WAY WAY over concerned about running out of money. Unless you are foolish, stupid, or have the worst luck imaginable, it seems like it’s a very hard thing to do ! There are no gold medals, not even a participation award (we are in 2026 after all ! ), for being the richest person in the graveyard."
- Mark Bergman
Read more »

Tax Smart Retirement

A POPULAR JOKE about retirement is that it can be hard work. That’s because financial planning is like a jigsaw puzzle, and retirement often means rearranging the pieces. In the past, I’ve discussed two key pieces of that puzzle: how to determine a sustainable portfolio withdrawal rate and how to decide on an effective asset allocation. But there’s one more piece of the puzzle to contend with: taxes. Especially if you’re planning to retire on the earlier side, it’s important to have a tax plan. When it comes to tax planning for retirement, there’s one key principle I see as most important, and that’s the idea that in retirement, the goal is to minimize your total lifetime tax bill. That’s important because a fundamental shift occurs the day that retirement arrives: In contrast to our working years, when taxes are, to a large degree, out of our control, in retirement, taxes are much more within our control. By choosing which investments to sell and which accounts to withdraw from, retirees have the ability to dial their income—and thus their tax rate—up or down in any given year. The challenge, though, is that tax planning can be like the game Whac-A-Mole. Choose a low-tax strategy in one year, and that might cause taxes to run higher in a future year. That’s why—dull as the topic might seem—careful tax planning is important. To get started, I recommend this three-part formula: Step 1 The first step is to arrange your assets for tax-efficiency. This is often referred to as “asset location.” Here’s an example: Suppose you’ve decided on an asset allocation of 60% stocks and 40% bonds. That might be a sensible mix, but that doesn't mean every one of your accounts needs to be invested according to that same 60/40 mix. Instead, to help manage the growth of your pre-tax accounts, and thus the size of future required minimum distributions, pre-tax accounts should be invested as conservatively as possible. On the other hand, if you have Roth assets, you’d want those invested as aggressively as possible. Your taxable assets might carry an allocation that’s somewhere in between. If you can make this change without incurring a tax bill, it’s something I’d do even before you enter retirement. Step 2 How can you avoid the Whac-A-Mole problem referenced above? If you’re approaching retirement, a key goal is to target a specific tax bracket. Then structure things so your taxable income falls into that same bracket more or less every year. By smoothing out your income in this way from year to year, the goal is to avoid ever falling into a very high tax bracket. To determine what tax rate to target, I suggest this process: Look ahead to a year in your late-70s, when your income will include both Social Security and required minimum distributions from your pre-tax retirement accounts. Estimate what your income might be in that future year and see what marginal tax bracket that income would translate to. In doing this exercise, don’t forget other potential income sources. That might include part-time work, a pension, an annuity or a rental property. And if you have significant taxable investment accounts, be sure to include interest from bonds. Then, for simplicity, subtract the standard deduction to estimate your future taxable income. Suppose that totaled up to $175,000. Using this year’s tax brackets, that would put your income in either the 24% marginal bracket (for single taxpayers) or 22% (married filing jointly). You would then use this as your target tax bracket. Step 3 With your target tax bracket in hand, the next step would be to make an income plan for each year. The idea here is to identify which accounts you’ll withdraw from to meet your household spending needs while also adhering to your target tax bracket. This isn’t something you’d map out more than one year in advance. Instead, it’s an exercise you’d repeat at the beginning of each year, using that year’s numbers. What might this look like in practice? Suppose you’re age 65, retired and not yet collecting Social Security. In this case, your income—and thus your tax bracket—might be quite low. To get started, you’d want to withdraw enough from your tax-deferred accounts to meet your spending needs but without exceeding your target tax bracket. This would then bring you to a decision. If you’ve taken enough out of your tax-deferred accounts to meet your spending needs and still haven’t hit your target tax rate, then the next step would be to distribute an additional amount from your pre-tax accounts. But with this additional amount, you’d complete a Roth conversion, moving those dollars into a Roth IRA to grow tax-free from that point forward. How much should you convert? The answer here involves a little bit of judgment but is mostly straightforward: You’d convert just enough to bring your marginal tax bracket up into the target range. Some people prefer to go all the way to the top of their target bracket, while others prefer to back off a bit. The most important thing is just to get into the right neighborhood. What if, on the other hand, you’ve taken enough from your pre-tax accounts to reach your target tax rate, but that still isn’t enough to meet your spending needs? In that case, you wouldn’t take any more from your pre-tax accounts, and you wouldn’t complete any Roth conversions. Instead, you’d turn to your taxable accounts, where the applicable tax brackets will almost certainly be lower. Capital gains brackets currently top out at just 20%. Thus, for the remainder of your spending needs, the most tax-efficient source of funds will be your taxable account. What if you aren’t yet age 59½? Would that upend a plan like this? A common misconception is that withdrawals from pre-tax accounts entail a punitive 10% penalty. While that’s true, it isn’t always true, and there’s more than one way around it. One exception allows withdrawals from a workplace retirement plan like a 401(k) as long as you leave that employer at age 55 or later. In that case, as long as you don’t roll over the account to an IRA, you’d be free to take withdrawals without penalty. If you’re retiring before age 55, you’ll want to learn about Rule 72(t). This allows for withdrawals from pre-tax accounts at any age, as long as you agree to what the IRS refers to as substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) from your pre-tax assets. The SEPP approach definitely carries restrictions, but if you’re pursuing early retirement, and the bulk of your assets are in pre-tax accounts, this might be just the right solution.   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 »

Home Tax Tips

IF YOU OWN a home or are planning to buy one, there are a few things you need to know from the tax standpoint that could save you money: 1. Mortgage Interest If you have a mortgage, you can typically deduct the interest you pay on the loan up to $750,000 ($1,000,000 if taken before December 16, 2017) but only if you itemize your deductions (schedule A) You can also deduct points you paid if you itemize. Many people miss deducting points on their tax returns when they purchase a house, but you have to meet some criteria like:
  1. The points relate to a mortgage to buy, build or improve your principal residence
  2. Points were reasonable amount charged in that area
  3. You provide funds (at or before closing) at least equal to the points charged
  4. The points clearly show on the settlement statement
In general, points to get a new mortgage or to refinance an existing mortgage are deducted ratably over the term of the loan.  Note that the deductible points not included on Form 1098 (the mortgage interest form) should be entered on Schedule A (Form 1040), Itemized Deductions, line 8c “Points not reported to you on Form 1098.” 2. Property taxes Property taxes can be deducted on your tax return if you itemize deductions. The total amount of taxes (including state and local income taxes) is capped at $40,400 for 2026. This cap is temporary and will increase by 1% annually through 2029 before reverting to $10,000 in 2030. If you make between $500k to $600k of modified adjusted gross income, the $40.4k deduction is reduced by 30% for each dollar you make. At $600k MAGI, the deduction drops to $10k, potentially raising marginal tax rates to 45.5% (!) for singles due to “SALT torpedo” if you are in the $500-600k range. If you are at that range, it’s recommended to mitigate this by lowering AGI/MAGI by maximizing pre-tax 401(k)/403(b), HSA, FSA contributions, timing RSU sales, tax loss harvesting, or deferring income/accelerating expenses for business owners. 3. Improvements Improvements are significant enhancements made to your home that increase its value. Many people overpay on taxes when they ultimately sell their house because they don’t keep track of these improvements. Here are some examples provided by the IRS: > Putting an addition on your home > Replacing an entire roof > Paving your driveway > Installing central air conditioning > Rewiring your home > Building a new deck > Kitchen upgrades > Lawn sprinkler system > New siding > Built in appliances > Fireplace Now, these costs aren’t deducted, but they are added to your home’s cost basis. This could lead to lower capital gains taxes when you sell your property (more on this later). Repairs, on the other hand, don’t impact your basis and don’t affect your taxes (e.g. repairing a broken fixture, patching cracks, etc) You will need to document every improvement, as this can help you save money on taxes. Keep your receipts and invoices (upload them to Google Drive) and record the dates and descriptions of the work done. Taxes when selling your house When you sell your house, here’s the formula: Selling price  > Selling expenses (like realtor fees) > Adjusted cost basis (how much you purchased it for + all these capital improvements I talked about above + any closing costs you paid when you acquired the home (legal fees, recording, survey, stamp taxed, title insurance) = Gain/Loss You will need to pay capital gains tax if there is a gain, but, luckily there is a gain exclusion (Section 121 exclusion) that can also help you save on taxes: 4. Gain exclusion If you sell your primary residence, you may be able to exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for married) of the gain from taxes if you meet some conditions. > Ownership (must have owned the home for at least 24 months within the 5 years prior to sale. For married couples only one spouse needs to meet this requirement) > Residence (you must have used the home as your main residence for at least 24 non-consecutive months during the 5 years before the sale. For married couples both spouses must meet requirements. > Look-back (you must not have claimed the exclusion on another home within the 2 years before this sale) Now, many people don’t know this but there is actually a partial exemption.  1. Work related move (i.e. you started a new job at least 50 miles farther from home) 2. Health related move (you moved to obtain, provide, or facilitate care for yourself or a family member) 3. Unforeseeable events (casualty, divorce, death, financial difficulty) 4. Special circumstances So, instead of claiming the full exclusion, you can exclude a prorated portion of the $250,000/$500,000 limit based on how long you owned and lived in the home. By the way, you can rent out a home for 2 years and still qualify for the exemption, as long as you lived there for the required period before selling (many people do this). 5. Tax example selling a home You bought a home for $200,000 (including all other costs) in 2018. You built a new deck, new roof and siding totaling $50,000. You now sold your home for $500,000. You are single. Selling costs are $20,000 (agent fees, etc) Sale price: $500,000 -$20,000 of selling costs (200,000 + 50,000) = -$250,000 (adjusted basis) Total Gain = 230,000 Exclusion = $250,000. Total taxes paid = $0. But what if you didn’t keep track of all your renovation costs like new siding or a deck? You would’ve had to pay taxes on $20,000 of capital gains!  Overall, knowing how these things work can literally save you thousands in taxes. Do you have any tips with homeownership? Share some in the comments!   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
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What is the best way to donate to charity in 2026?

"I am a gambler and in 2024 (and 2025) won a couple of jackpots that would have thrown me into a much higher tax bracket. My solution was to create a DAF via Schwab which allowed me to itemize deductions and claim my gambling losses against wins. With one simple move, I saved thousands in taxes and simplified my charitable giving. (Sadly, I do now have to pay IRMAA due to the increase in income). But it was a win/win/win situation. I have always given 10% of my income to charitable causes. That has continued in retirement. It’s my plan to exhaust the DAF over the period of 3 or 4 years and then switch my RMDs (which start this year) to QCDs."
- haliday11
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Smoke, Sparks and Retirement Spending.

"I get it. The past couple of weeks have seen a particular light fixture die and a smoke/carbon monoxide detector fail. Both of these seemingly simple repair items became "projects" in our home due to either wiring or damage issues. In particular, the light fixture needed removal and repair - not just a new bulb, and the smoke/CO detector was wired into house current but obscenely failed by beeping at all hours of the day/night. Luckily, I have both the time and the skills to address these without calling a repairman. As I written in HD before, enjoy the challenge to keep things running, which avoids the need to pay more than just the part replacement cost."
- Jeff Bond
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Volatility is your Best Friend

"I started investing in equity mutual funds about 6 months before the big crash in 1987. Much like you, with little invested at the time, and being in my mid-20s, I was too busy to worry about it. Over the years, I saw volatility as a huge friend and helper to my dollar cost averaging."
- Patrick Brennan
Read more »

Retirement Plan

""Different strokes for different folks.""
- Doug C
Read more »

Vanguard’s Transfer on Death Plan Kit

"I am glad I learned of the change and that sharing the change was helpful. Best, Bill"
- William Perry
Read more »

Forget the 4% rule.

"That's pretty much the gist of it, and it's something I have personal experience with. Before retiring, I purchased a ten-year term annuity to cover all my essential spending — and I really can't emphasise enough the peace of mind this has given me compared to drawing down from my portfolio for those expenses. It's simply like getting a paycheck every month. No hassle, no worry. I'm now reasonably certain I'll purchase a lifetime annuity when this one matures in ten years, because of the confidence a guaranteed income gives you to actually spend."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Sector Fund by Stealth

I'VE RECENTLY MADE the most significant change to my own portfolio in thirty five years. For the first time I've moved away from pure market-cap investing, tilting meaningfully toward Europe and Southeast Asia and bringing my US technology concentration down to around fifteen percent. I'm retired. I don't need to chase the outperformance that concentration might deliver, and I don't need the potential volatility that comes with it. This is a personal position rather than any kind of recommendation; it's nothing more than a risk management decision made at a point in life where I simply don't need the risk. What prompted it was a growing discomfort with something I suspect many everyday investors haven't fully reckoned with: the S&P 500 is no longer quite the animal it once was. A broad market index fund casts a wide net across the economy, and the S&P 500, which tracks the 500 largest US businesses by market value, has long been held up as the sensible default: low cost, well diversified, a bet on the whole rather than any one part of it. A sector fund works differently; it makes a deliberate, concentrated bet on a specific industry. If you believe technology is going to outperform the market as a whole, it gives you the ability to concentrate your capital into exactly the sector your research or gut instinct suspects is going to be the place to be and let it run. The theory behind each is straightforward enough. A broad market fund captures a larger slice of the investment universe and is generally considered the lower-risk path. A sector fund comes with a well-understood trade-off: higher potential returns in good times, sharper drawdowns when sentiment turns. Investors who consciously choose a technology sector fund know what they're signing up for. The risk profile is understood, accepted, and priced into the decision. The problem is that the line between these two things has become a bit fuzzy, and most everyday investors haven't noticed. A handful of technology and technology-related companies (Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet) have grown so dominant in their market valuations that they now represent a disproportionate share of the entire index. During the last year, the top ten holdings have accounted for roughly a third of the total weight of all 500 companies. The mechanism behind this is simply how the index works. The S&P 500 is market-cap weighted, meaning the bigger the company, the bigger its slice of the pie. As technology companies scaled their dominance through the 2010s and into the 2020s, their weight within the index ballooned accordingly. The index didn't change its rules; the market just rewarded one particular group of companies so heavily that they came to dominate the scoreboard. This means the investor who bought the S&P 500 believing they were spreading risk broadly across the American economy (energy, healthcare, financials, industrials, consumer staples) owns something that looks quite different to the story they were sold. You buy five hundred companies and a third of your money lands in ten stocks, most of them operating in the same broad technological ecosystem. That is a concentration risk, whether it is labelled as one or not. It's a sector fund “light”, acquired by stealth through the natural mechanics of market-cap weighting. The issue is that millions of everyday investors are carrying a version of that same risk without necessarily knowing it. Although I've used the S&P 500 as an example here, it isn't alone. Most broad-based indexes including developed world trackers will exhibit the same characteristics to varying degrees, because the same companies sit near the top of those indexes too. The MSCI World, often marketed as the global diversifier, allocates somewhere in the region of seventy percent to US equities, and within that, the familiar names reappear. You can cross borders on paper without ever really leaving the room. None of this is an argument against the S&P 500. The concentration reflects real, earned dominance; these companies grew to the top of the index because they genuinely deserved to. And whether my reallocation turns out to be the right call is genuinely unknowable. The concentrated index could continue to outperform for another decade and I'll have left returns on the table, a real possibility I've made my peace with. The point isn't that I've found the correct answer. The point is that I had the information to make a considered choice, weighed it against my own circumstances, and acted accordingly. That's all any investor can do. The uncomfortable truth is that a great many people haven't been given the chance to do the same. They're holding a product that has quietly changed its character, and nobody has thought to mention it. Better information doesn't guarantee better decisions, but it at least puts the decision where it belongs: with the person whose money it is. ___ 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 »

When Your Pastime Takes Ownership

"Clew bay, a wonderful part of the country, there's a great view from Croagh Patrick down onto the islands…I'm jealous, a much better use of a sunny day than trying to wrestle with hawthorn bushes with two inch thorns... I'm cut to pieces!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Actually, Lets NOT Forget the 4% Rule – as Posted Yesterday 3/6/26

"Dan, I only listened to the first one minute of this 50 minute video. He says it perfectly in that one minute ! My impression is that people are WAY WAY over concerned about running out of money. Unless you are foolish, stupid, or have the worst luck imaginable, it seems like it’s a very hard thing to do ! There are no gold medals, not even a participation award (we are in 2026 after all ! ), for being the richest person in the graveyard."
- Mark Bergman
Read more »

Tax Smart Retirement

A POPULAR JOKE about retirement is that it can be hard work. That’s because financial planning is like a jigsaw puzzle, and retirement often means rearranging the pieces. In the past, I’ve discussed two key pieces of that puzzle: how to determine a sustainable portfolio withdrawal rate and how to decide on an effective asset allocation. But there’s one more piece of the puzzle to contend with: taxes. Especially if you’re planning to retire on the earlier side, it’s important to have a tax plan. When it comes to tax planning for retirement, there’s one key principle I see as most important, and that’s the idea that in retirement, the goal is to minimize your total lifetime tax bill. That’s important because a fundamental shift occurs the day that retirement arrives: In contrast to our working years, when taxes are, to a large degree, out of our control, in retirement, taxes are much more within our control. By choosing which investments to sell and which accounts to withdraw from, retirees have the ability to dial their income—and thus their tax rate—up or down in any given year. The challenge, though, is that tax planning can be like the game Whac-A-Mole. Choose a low-tax strategy in one year, and that might cause taxes to run higher in a future year. That’s why—dull as the topic might seem—careful tax planning is important. To get started, I recommend this three-part formula: Step 1 The first step is to arrange your assets for tax-efficiency. This is often referred to as “asset location.” Here’s an example: Suppose you’ve decided on an asset allocation of 60% stocks and 40% bonds. That might be a sensible mix, but that doesn't mean every one of your accounts needs to be invested according to that same 60/40 mix. Instead, to help manage the growth of your pre-tax accounts, and thus the size of future required minimum distributions, pre-tax accounts should be invested as conservatively as possible. On the other hand, if you have Roth assets, you’d want those invested as aggressively as possible. Your taxable assets might carry an allocation that’s somewhere in between. If you can make this change without incurring a tax bill, it’s something I’d do even before you enter retirement. Step 2 How can you avoid the Whac-A-Mole problem referenced above? If you’re approaching retirement, a key goal is to target a specific tax bracket. Then structure things so your taxable income falls into that same bracket more or less every year. By smoothing out your income in this way from year to year, the goal is to avoid ever falling into a very high tax bracket. To determine what tax rate to target, I suggest this process: Look ahead to a year in your late-70s, when your income will include both Social Security and required minimum distributions from your pre-tax retirement accounts. Estimate what your income might be in that future year and see what marginal tax bracket that income would translate to. In doing this exercise, don’t forget other potential income sources. That might include part-time work, a pension, an annuity or a rental property. And if you have significant taxable investment accounts, be sure to include interest from bonds. Then, for simplicity, subtract the standard deduction to estimate your future taxable income. Suppose that totaled up to $175,000. Using this year’s tax brackets, that would put your income in either the 24% marginal bracket (for single taxpayers) or 22% (married filing jointly). You would then use this as your target tax bracket. Step 3 With your target tax bracket in hand, the next step would be to make an income plan for each year. The idea here is to identify which accounts you’ll withdraw from to meet your household spending needs while also adhering to your target tax bracket. This isn’t something you’d map out more than one year in advance. Instead, it’s an exercise you’d repeat at the beginning of each year, using that year’s numbers. What might this look like in practice? Suppose you’re age 65, retired and not yet collecting Social Security. In this case, your income—and thus your tax bracket—might be quite low. To get started, you’d want to withdraw enough from your tax-deferred accounts to meet your spending needs but without exceeding your target tax bracket. This would then bring you to a decision. If you’ve taken enough out of your tax-deferred accounts to meet your spending needs and still haven’t hit your target tax rate, then the next step would be to distribute an additional amount from your pre-tax accounts. But with this additional amount, you’d complete a Roth conversion, moving those dollars into a Roth IRA to grow tax-free from that point forward. How much should you convert? The answer here involves a little bit of judgment but is mostly straightforward: You’d convert just enough to bring your marginal tax bracket up into the target range. Some people prefer to go all the way to the top of their target bracket, while others prefer to back off a bit. The most important thing is just to get into the right neighborhood. What if, on the other hand, you’ve taken enough from your pre-tax accounts to reach your target tax rate, but that still isn’t enough to meet your spending needs? In that case, you wouldn’t take any more from your pre-tax accounts, and you wouldn’t complete any Roth conversions. Instead, you’d turn to your taxable accounts, where the applicable tax brackets will almost certainly be lower. Capital gains brackets currently top out at just 20%. Thus, for the remainder of your spending needs, the most tax-efficient source of funds will be your taxable account. What if you aren’t yet age 59½? Would that upend a plan like this? A common misconception is that withdrawals from pre-tax accounts entail a punitive 10% penalty. While that’s true, it isn’t always true, and there’s more than one way around it. One exception allows withdrawals from a workplace retirement plan like a 401(k) as long as you leave that employer at age 55 or later. In that case, as long as you don’t roll over the account to an IRA, you’d be free to take withdrawals without penalty. If you’re retiring before age 55, you’ll want to learn about Rule 72(t). This allows for withdrawals from pre-tax accounts at any age, as long as you agree to what the IRS refers to as substantially equal periodic payments (SEPP) from your pre-tax assets. The SEPP approach definitely carries restrictions, but if you’re pursuing early retirement, and the bulk of your assets are in pre-tax accounts, this might be just the right solution.   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 »

Home Tax Tips

IF YOU OWN a home or are planning to buy one, there are a few things you need to know from the tax standpoint that could save you money: 1. Mortgage Interest If you have a mortgage, you can typically deduct the interest you pay on the loan up to $750,000 ($1,000,000 if taken before December 16, 2017) but only if you itemize your deductions (schedule A) You can also deduct points you paid if you itemize. Many people miss deducting points on their tax returns when they purchase a house, but you have to meet some criteria like:
  1. The points relate to a mortgage to buy, build or improve your principal residence
  2. Points were reasonable amount charged in that area
  3. You provide funds (at or before closing) at least equal to the points charged
  4. The points clearly show on the settlement statement
In general, points to get a new mortgage or to refinance an existing mortgage are deducted ratably over the term of the loan.  Note that the deductible points not included on Form 1098 (the mortgage interest form) should be entered on Schedule A (Form 1040), Itemized Deductions, line 8c “Points not reported to you on Form 1098.” 2. Property taxes Property taxes can be deducted on your tax return if you itemize deductions. The total amount of taxes (including state and local income taxes) is capped at $40,400 for 2026. This cap is temporary and will increase by 1% annually through 2029 before reverting to $10,000 in 2030. If you make between $500k to $600k of modified adjusted gross income, the $40.4k deduction is reduced by 30% for each dollar you make. At $600k MAGI, the deduction drops to $10k, potentially raising marginal tax rates to 45.5% (!) for singles due to “SALT torpedo” if you are in the $500-600k range. If you are at that range, it’s recommended to mitigate this by lowering AGI/MAGI by maximizing pre-tax 401(k)/403(b), HSA, FSA contributions, timing RSU sales, tax loss harvesting, or deferring income/accelerating expenses for business owners. 3. Improvements Improvements are significant enhancements made to your home that increase its value. Many people overpay on taxes when they ultimately sell their house because they don’t keep track of these improvements. Here are some examples provided by the IRS: > Putting an addition on your home > Replacing an entire roof > Paving your driveway > Installing central air conditioning > Rewiring your home > Building a new deck > Kitchen upgrades > Lawn sprinkler system > New siding > Built in appliances > Fireplace Now, these costs aren’t deducted, but they are added to your home’s cost basis. This could lead to lower capital gains taxes when you sell your property (more on this later). Repairs, on the other hand, don’t impact your basis and don’t affect your taxes (e.g. repairing a broken fixture, patching cracks, etc) You will need to document every improvement, as this can help you save money on taxes. Keep your receipts and invoices (upload them to Google Drive) and record the dates and descriptions of the work done. Taxes when selling your house When you sell your house, here’s the formula: Selling price  > Selling expenses (like realtor fees) > Adjusted cost basis (how much you purchased it for + all these capital improvements I talked about above + any closing costs you paid when you acquired the home (legal fees, recording, survey, stamp taxed, title insurance) = Gain/Loss You will need to pay capital gains tax if there is a gain, but, luckily there is a gain exclusion (Section 121 exclusion) that can also help you save on taxes: 4. Gain exclusion If you sell your primary residence, you may be able to exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for married) of the gain from taxes if you meet some conditions. > Ownership (must have owned the home for at least 24 months within the 5 years prior to sale. For married couples only one spouse needs to meet this requirement) > Residence (you must have used the home as your main residence for at least 24 non-consecutive months during the 5 years before the sale. For married couples both spouses must meet requirements. > Look-back (you must not have claimed the exclusion on another home within the 2 years before this sale) Now, many people don’t know this but there is actually a partial exemption.  1. Work related move (i.e. you started a new job at least 50 miles farther from home) 2. Health related move (you moved to obtain, provide, or facilitate care for yourself or a family member) 3. Unforeseeable events (casualty, divorce, death, financial difficulty) 4. Special circumstances So, instead of claiming the full exclusion, you can exclude a prorated portion of the $250,000/$500,000 limit based on how long you owned and lived in the home. By the way, you can rent out a home for 2 years and still qualify for the exemption, as long as you lived there for the required period before selling (many people do this). 5. Tax example selling a home You bought a home for $200,000 (including all other costs) in 2018. You built a new deck, new roof and siding totaling $50,000. You now sold your home for $500,000. You are single. Selling costs are $20,000 (agent fees, etc) Sale price: $500,000 -$20,000 of selling costs (200,000 + 50,000) = -$250,000 (adjusted basis) Total Gain = 230,000 Exclusion = $250,000. Total taxes paid = $0. But what if you didn’t keep track of all your renovation costs like new siding or a deck? You would’ve had to pay taxes on $20,000 of capital gains!  Overall, knowing how these things work can literally save you thousands in taxes. Do you have any tips with homeownership? Share some in the comments!   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
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Manifesto

NO. 21: A HIGH income makes it easier to grow wealthy. But no matter how much we earn, we’ll struggle to amass a healthy nest egg—unless we learn to spend less than we earn.

humans

NO. 70: FOCUS on the negative and we’ll feel miserable, while focusing on the positive can boost our mood. Suffering through a long workout? Imagine how good breakfast will taste afterwards. Upset because stocks are struggling? Focus on how well the rest of your portfolio is holding up, or on how your nest egg is worth so much more than it was five years ago.

act

REVISIT YOUR DEBTS. Think of borrowed money as a negative investment: Instead of making you money, it’s costing you. If you have high-cost debt, paying it off—or replacing it with lower-cost debt—should be a top priority. What about lower-cost debt? That might also be worth paying off, especially if the alternative is to hold bonds or cash.

Truths

NO. 12: WE STRUGGLE with self-control and rely on tricks to compensate. To limit spending, we shift money from our checking account to accounts we deem untouchable. To force ourselves to save, we sign up for payroll contributions to our 401(k). We adopt rules such as “save all income from the second job” and “never dip into capital.”

What we don’t do

Manifesto

NO. 21: A HIGH income makes it easier to grow wealthy. But no matter how much we earn, we’ll struggle to amass a healthy nest egg—unless we learn to spend less than we earn.

Spotlight: Retirement

An Insignificant Sum?

I spent 30 years working for a US megacorp: however, I joined the company in the UK. I was on the UK payroll for about six years, and therefore a very small part of my pension is paid by the UK company (with COLA). I was astounded, when I applied for Social Security, to find that the US government was going to reduce my benefit by the amount of my UK pension.
How did that make sense?

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Retirement at Risk

I HAVE TROUBLE accepting things at face value. I like to validate information, checking it against several sources. This is especially true when it comes to all things money- and retirement-related. But it’s not always easy to do.

Do Americans tell the truth about how they spend their money? Do they actually know? Does it really take extreme frugality to save for the future, a talent many folks lack or refuse to embrace?

I look around and,

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How Did You Announce Your Retirement?

Ken Cutler’s question about his retirement status made me think about how my retirement started. I’m curious about what path you all followed. As I approached retirement in 2020, I considered how much notice to give my employer. I had worked for the company for 20 years. I was not a manager, but I was an expert technical professional and had carved out a very specialized niche within the organization. Substantial organizational changes were implemented during the first three months of the calendar year and as a result I had three different managers over a very short span of time.

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Benefits Lost

WHO’S YOUR WORST financial enemy? Got a mirror? For millions of American workers, their employee benefits play a significant role in their financial life—and yet this noncash portion of their compensation is often undervalued, overlooked and misused.
I designed and managed employee benefits for nearly 50 years. During those years, I tried every form of communication I could think of to get employees to pay attention to their benefits. I retired with a sense of failure.

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Financial Happiness

ACCORDING TO THE World Happiness Report, Finland ranks as the happiest nation in the world, a title it’s held for eight years in a row.
Each time this report is updated, it makes the news for a day or two but then fades. That’s for good reason, I think. As much as Finland might be a nice place, it isn’t necessarily practical to suggest that anyone pick up and move.
The good news, though,

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A Firm Foundation

I WAS 24 YEARS OLD when I started working fulltime. My salary at that first job wasn’t great—I was making about $16,000 a year—but the retirement benefits were stellar. As a government employee, I was entitled to enroll in the state’s pension plan. Every month, the government contributed an amount equal to some 17% of my salary. The money was guaranteed to never earn less than 8% interest a year. Most years, the rate of return was much higher.

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Spotlight: Powell

Beefing Up Security

MANY OF US HAVE little more than a weak, reused password standing between our financial assets and a remote attacker—one armed with powerful tools and a database of passwords from security breaches. This is a losing battle. It’s the most likely way for weak computer security to put our finances at risk. Think this can’t happen to you? I’ll bet you have at least one password taken in a big security breach. A quick way to find out is entering your email address at Troy Hunt’s HaveIBeenPwned site. My address turns up in almost a dozen big cyberattacks. We are notoriously bad at creating strong passwords and remembering them. When you decide to create stronger, unique passwords for each site, you quickly discover that managing dozens of randomly generated, site-specific passwords by hand is a headache. Don’t fret. Password managers like LastPass, Dashlane and 1Password make short work of it. A password manager puts all your passwords in an encrypted vault, leaving you with just one password to remember. You want to make this password really strong and unforgettable. The password manager then fills in the right password for mobile apps and websites whenever you use them. What can you expect from a good manager? Up-to-date access to your password vault on all devices, regardless of the device’s operating system. Updates to your vault as you create new accounts or update existing passwords. A random password generator that creates really strong, unique passwords. Those passwords will meet each site’s requirements for length and allowed characters. A security challenge which guides you through the work of replacing existing poor passwords—those which are known to be compromised, weak or easily guessed, or which you’ve used more than once. Emergency access to your vault by someone you choose, as well as password sharing with, say, family members for your Amazon Prime or Netflix account. Two-factor authentication for extra vault security. Some of these are only available in paid versions of the service. Despite knowing better, I procrastinated in evaluating password managers. That changed the day I tried to picture life for my spouse after I leave this vale of tears. I visualized the chores I handle: Banking, bill paying and investment management all involve online accounts. That brought my password problem into focus. A list of passwords in a binder, next to our wills, isn’t secure and it’s a pain to keep up. After experimenting with a free trial, I bought a family subscription. Moving my password vault from low-ranked to the top 1% took a couple of weekends. Each weekend, I’d spend an hour or two changing passwords, guided by the security challenge and with help from the password generator. Do this on your home PC or Mac, not an office computer. I started with high-value accounts: email, cellular carrier, and then banks and brokerages. Why email? Most web sites let you reset a password by emailing a link to the address on file. If hackers have access to your inbox, they’ll use it to access every online account. The cellular account is also important if you’ve enabled two-factor authentication that triggers text messages with secure codes. What if someone hacks into your password manager’s vault? If you pick a great vault password, the odds of this are low. But when you have all your eggs in one basket, you want to ensure that basket stays safe. That’s what led me to the YubiKey 5 series hardware keys. When you use a YubiKey with a password manager, the manager encrypts your vault twice, once with your vault password and again with a secret it gets from the YubiKey. For convenience, I’m using two models of YubiKey. I use YubiKey 5 Nano with my PC and Mac. Meanwhile, YubiKey 5 NFC stays on my keyring for use with my phone. The latter should work with an iPhone 7 or newer, as well as an Android phone with NFC (near field communication). David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 35 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous article was Playing Defense. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Get Me a Margarita

I HAVE LONG ADMIRED my good friend Nick for his generosity with friends—but also for his inspiring ability to pinch a penny. The man can pinch so hard he makes Lincoln cry, so I knew the world was changing fast when he installed a Ring video doorbell. Really? Pinch me. A decade ago, new technologies inspired fantasies of living in a Jetsons-style “smart home.” There was a nascent market for internet-connected products, such as the original Nest Learning Thermostat. Since then, the number of players and products has exploded. Smart assistants like Siri and Alexa also came along, further stoking growth, and sending companies scrambling to connect smart home products with assistants, so customers can control things with their voice. “Hey Rosie, get me a margarita on the rocks, no salt.” Okay, we’re not there yet. What is the state of smart home products? Some promise to save you time or money. Others offer improved home security, comfort or peace of mind when you’re out of the house. How much of it is currently worth sinking money into? In my own home, I’ve deployed a handful of the new technologies, some with good results and some mixed. Before you even consider any of this, be sure your family has a wi-fi network which reliably covers your whole home. My first project was “smart-for-dumb” device replacement. I swapped three of our seven old smoke-and-carbon-monoxide detectors for Nest Protect devices. Why not all seven at once? Smart devices are often two-to-four times the cost of “dumb” ones: $120 for Nest Protect vs. around $40 for a basic detector. I started with units in our foyer and hallways, leaving the bedrooms for later years. Installation was easy enough. I simply added the Nest units to our wi-fi network and they’ve been working reliably ever since. I love the convenience and peace of mind. My phone gets an alert if there’s an emergency. The alarms are more easily muted if cooking in the kitchen triggers the alarm. Nest also warns in a clear way when batteries get low—no more annoying, mysterious chirps. Detectors in high places can be tested easily without a ladder. Another worthwhile project: swapping out our standard landscape irrigation controller for one from Rachio. It’s compatible with the typical control wiring used with most old school irrigation controllers. Installation and setup took me less than 30 minutes. The Rachio 3 unit is way easier for creating and changing irrigation schedules, which you do with its mobile app. What’s more, it can automatically skip a day when it rains—a handy feature here in Seattle—and, like most smart home solutions, it enables control from anywhere. My first mixed experience involved lighting control, where things get more expensive and complicated fast. Most solutions for this, like those from Insteon or Lutron, involve a hub device that’s linked to your home wi-fi network. The hub controls power to devices through smart switches you buy, usually from the same manufacturer. These are either plug-in switches, for things like lamps or coffee makers, or hardwired ones for electrical circuits in your house. My goal was to control exterior house lighting, holiday lighting, and our landscape and patio lighting, with an eye to putting all of it on an automatic sunset-to-sunrise schedule. Unfortunately, these switches typically talk to the hub without using a home’s wi-fi network. This can lead to connection problems, though range extenders are available. Most solutions can also leverage your electrical wiring to send signals, with some gotchas. Home security video cameras are another area with potential for happiness and headaches. Video doorbell solutions like Ring and Nest Hello are a popular way to get started with home security cameras. For new house installations, I would pick models which use a single ethernet cable for both power and connectivity, such as Ring’s Video Doorbell Elite. The upfront cost is much higher, but it will be far more reliable, secure and convenient. For existing homes, you’ll need to choose between the hassle of regularly replacing video doorbell batteries, or the installation grief of finding—and likely replacing—your doorbell power transformer, so it meets the new doorbell’s needs. Either way, you’re looking at wi-fi for connectivity. If your wi-fi network isn’t really solid, you’re in for a one-star review experience. And if you’re the anxious type, inclined towards imagining nightmare-worthy life scenarios, I’m sorry to report that cellular and wi-fi communications can be easily jammed with a $600 gadget, rendering your video camera useless. But if you simply want to see who’s at your door, whether you’re at home or away, and like the idea of helping to cut down on garden-variety vandalism or porch package theft, this approach should work just fine. Many of these video doorbell solutions are most useful when paired with optional services, like Nest Aware or Ring Protect, which cost $3 to $10 a month. One more caveat: These products raise real privacy issues. Before you get an always-listening smart assistant device or an indoor video camera, check the company’s privacy policies. David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 35 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous articles include Making a Mesh, Elon and Me and Beefing Up Security. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Rookie Year

FANS OF PROFESSIONAL sports know the excitement and agony of watching each year’s fresh crop of rookies. These young players have to relearn a game they thought they knew. The fact is, the strategies, tactics, intensity and winning habits of big league sports teams are tougher than those of college and minor league teams. That can leave rookies wondering what hit them when they move up to the big leagues. That’s how I felt in December 2022, when I retired after decades of working and saving. Season's start. For me, full-time work ended abruptly. Deciding not to seek another position came later, the result of a months-long wallow. I realized one day that I didn’t know what I was waiting for and I “don’t wanna be a richer man,” to quote David Bowie. Time with family and friends had become precious. What’s more, I’d fallen in love with choosing how to spend my time. I couldn’t appreciate the joy and lightness this freedom brings until many months away from full-time work. Lower blood pressure has been a bonus. Better defense. As a first step in our rookie retirement year, my wife and I reviewed expenses and cut some low-hanging fruit. Streaming services we modestly used? Gone. A remote storage unit for our seasonal things? Replaced with storage racks over our garage doors and a paring down of seasonal holiday treasures. These cuts and more felt so good that it’s now a January tradition. Housing can be a big expense, but we finished off our mortgage years ago. When work ended, we had already decided to retire in place, staying in our home of 20-plus years in the Pacific Northwest. This area isn’t cheap, but it could be much worse. We’re still healthy, our kids aren’t far away, and we saw no reason to spend money on a move until later in life. By the spring, we’d finished a major year-long home renovation that was underway when my job was cut. From here, housing costs should offer few surprises. New game. When I had a steady paycheck and was working long hours, I never took the time to create a detailed retirement-income plan. When my job went away, I felt we had likely saved enough to meet our goal for retirement income: 100% of my final net salary and bonus. That 100% excludes the retirement savings we used to sock away, but adds in higher health care costs. Still, I hadn’t figured out how to turn those savings into steady early retirement income, while we waited to start Social Security. I felt stupid for skipping this step until retirement was suddenly upon us. Rookie mistake. Over the next eight years, I have a chunky mix of investments outside our main portfolio that mature at different times: retirement stock grants vest quarterly until late 2026; annual deferred compensation investments pay out from 2026 through 2030; and an eight-year bond ladder covers 2024 to 2031. Series I savings bonds can be tapped for gaps, if needed. Eventually, we’ll use some dividends and interest from our retirement portfolio, while it hopefully keeps growing. To cover the rough spots, and sleep well through tough times, I’m increasing our cash holdings from 18 to 30 months of expenses. Like many HumbleDollar readers, I shifted our cash savings from our bank to a federal money market fund, so our cash would work harder while short-term rates are high. To simplify our cash flow, I finally set up a monthly automated transfer from our money market fund, so our checking account always holds two to three months of living expenses. It took this rookie six months before he felt comfortable enough with every aspect of our plan to automate that monthly transfer. Don’t beat yourself. Without a steady paycheck coming in, our time horizon had changed overnight. I now wanted a bit more certainty, plus bigger financial margins to cover surprises, until we claim Social Security. That drove two more changes. First, when yields on nominal and inflation-indexed five-to-10-year Treasury notes approached their recent highs in October, and with inflation heading down, I decided to shift part of our retirement bond portfolio from Treasury index funds to direct Treasury bond holdings. I also stretched our average bond duration, which had been short heading into 2022. Holding these new Treasurys to maturity gives us what Bill Bernstein calls “investing equanimity,” and does so with satisfying yields and low expenses. Our portfolio’s short-term Treasury holdings are still held in a Vanguard Group index fund. Second, when my ex-employer’s stock price rose to new highs, I limited potential “losses” in future stock grant vests by buying put options for 2023 and 2024. Put options rise in value when a stock’s price drops below the contract’s strike price. Playing the long game. Our final tactics were around longevity. In this first year of our retirement, I reviewed my assumptions for our portfolio’s expected return and dividend yield, as well as our planned withdrawal rates, which are set at 3% or less. I want a plan that’s conservative enough to carry us through the next 40 years, while still leaving some money for the kids. To lower our early retirement risk, I trimmed our portfolio’s stock target to 67% and boosted Treasurys to 33%. With that allocation, and plenty of cash savings, I should be able to view market downturns as a buying opportunity. After we start Social Security benefits, I’ll let our stock allocation grow. Once I hit age 75, we’ll use a simple retirement-income system: We’ll supplement a modest income annuity and Social Security with required minimum distributions from my rollover IRA, plus dividends and interest from our taxable-account savings. As I wrap up my rookie year, I can see why so many retirement veterans say “the first year is the hardest.” I’d love to hear how other readers are playing their retirement-income game. David Powell spent nearly four decades as a software engineer and engineering general manager at Apple, Microsoft, NIH and Silicon Graphics until he retired in 2023. He can be reached on Threads at @AmpedToGo. Check out David’s earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Money for Later

IF A SALESPERSON had tried to get me to sink my hard-earned money into an investment that’s illiquid or issued by an insurance company, I would have shut down in a New York minute—until now. My spouse and I recently became owners of a deferred income annuity (DIA), with plans to put perhaps 15% of our savings into these products. Also known as longevity insurance, a DIA involves plunking down money today in return for regular monthly income starting at a future date. What convinced us to buy DIAs? Income hedge. We want income we can’t outlive. The DIAs will provide us with a safety net if the withdrawals from our 401(k), IRA and taxable savings fall short of what we expect or if our Social Security benefits get cut. Shrinking yields. Treasury bonds—both the conventional type and those that are indexed to inflation—are mainstay riskless assets in our portfolio. But today, they yield less than inflation. Yields on municipal and higher-quality corporate bonds are also disappointing, especially when you factor in the added risk involved. By contrast, with a DIA, we can collect handsome income, in part because the insurance company will be effectively returning part of our initial investment to us each month. Longevity risk. Some of us will live much longer than our birth year cohort. It’s impossible to know how life will go, but my spouse and I are keen to stay independent to the end. Simplicity. Our plan is to collect income from annuities and Social Security, while also taking required minimum distributions from our retirement accounts. Put these three together, and we have a simple plan for turning our savings into retirement income. That simplicity will be useful as we age. My first concern with buying an annuity was the usual—that our chosen insurer could go belly up or fail to generate the income needed to meet its obligation to us. After the 2008 subprime mortgage fiasco, I’m skeptical of ratings agencies. But I used their ratings and my own review of audited financial statements to choose a top-rated insurer for our first purchase. Annuities are not 100% guaranteed by the FDIC or anybody else. But should an insurer fail, our state’s guaranty association provides a mechanism to recover a portion of our premiums. My bigger concern was inflation. We bought a joint annuity with a 3% annual cost-of-living adjustment. The DIA will pay guaranteed income every month starting when I’m age 72 and ending when the second of us leaves this vale of tears. The 3% inflation rider reflects my bet that inflation will be similar to the historical average. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] Yes, I remember the high inflation of the 1970s. But for a broader perspective, I reread Triumph of the Optimists, which shows annual U.S. inflation averaged 3.2% during the last century. Since then, personal consumption expenditure inflation has averaged less than 3%, according to FRED, the data tool maintained by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. What if inflation is much higher in future? With dependable income streams from both Social Security and our DIAs, we can afford to keep a healthy amount of stock market exposure in our investment accounts, which should help if 1940s- or 1970s-style inflation returns. My last question was about the likely benefits, beyond the peace of mind offered by guaranteed lifetime income, and the costs involved. Ideally, we’ll get back our investment plus a modest rate of return. The two big variables are how long we’ll live and the related issue of opportunity cost—how we would have fared if we’d used the money instead to, say, buy bonds. Bottom line: We have decent odds of breaking even on our DIAs while achieving the main point of our investment, which is hedging longevity risk. For our DIA purchase, we turned to the same online sellers who offer immediate fixed annuities. The buying process was straightforward, though much slower and more complex than buying a mutual fund. Our purchase took just under two weeks from quote to policy delivery. It would likely have gone faster if we’d used a local insurance agent, rather than buying online. There’s a healthy stack of paperwork involved—less than closing on a house, but far more than a mutual fund prospectus plus a trade confirmation. If I could change one thing about DIAs, it would be to increase the transparency about the transaction costs involved. We received no cost disclosures similar to those offered by mutual funds. To be sure, all costs are already reflected in the income you’re quoted. Still, I would like to have known more. For selling an immediate or deferred income annuity, it seems a salesperson might collect a commission of between 1% and 5% of the sum invested. That’s certainly high compared to index fund costs. But it’s a lot less than other annuities, notably variable annuities and equity-indexed annuities, which between them have given annuities such a bad reputation. David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 36 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous articles include Beat the Cheats, Get Me a Margarita and Making a Mesh. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Losing It All

OVER A PRODUCTIVE 30-year career that ended in 1950, Willie Sutton robbed as many as 100 banks for gains worth $40 million today—without ever firing a shot. That sort of bank robbery is rare now and, when it happens, customers don’t lose a dime, thanks to FDIC insurance. Today, Sutton—the Babe Ruth of robbers—wouldn’t waste time knocking over banks. Trillions of dollars held in millions of internet-accessible retirement and brokerage accounts are much softer and more lucrative targets. He’d use a cyber-heist known as an account takeover. For that, our modern Willie Sutton would access your account with your weak and often reused password (the one in that massive leak) or by stealing your password when you click on links in his spear phishing outreach. In a typical takeover, Sutton would log into your account, link a bank account he controls to yours and then start transferring cash out. All while sipping espresso. But that won’t happen to your online retirement accounts, right? In a recent incident, elderly grandparents in Illinois had $40,000 wired out of their hijacked Fidelity Investments account. They discovered the theft long after the money had vanished by wire transfer into a bank account that the attacker had linked to theirs. The money was then transferred again and lost forever. It seems investors don’t need to dump their retirement savings into cryptocurrency or lottery tickets to lose it all. Instead, just sign up for online access to your investment accounts. Was the couple reimbursed? At first, the answer was “no” because they reported the incident long after the deadline in their account agreement. On top of that, they hadn’t enabled certain security features that would have made it harder to change account contact information or to add additional linked bank accounts to their investment account. Who bears the cost of these sorts of incidents is highly dependent on circumstances. There’s little consistency in cybercrime fraud policies across mutual fund and brokerage firms, and no industry-wide insurance system that pools risk and reimburses losses. Investment firms aren’t keen to bear the full burden of liability unless you’ve used certain security features on their site—many of which are off by default. This feels a bit like an automaker that sells cars with seat belts and airbags that are optional, and then accuses customers injured in car crashes of negligence. Want to reduce the risk of loss? Here are five habits that’ll help protect you and your investment company: 1. You keep your devices and network secure. Strong security must start here. On each device used for account access, you have an operating system that's current with the latest security fixes. Ditto for your web browser. You’re using anti-malware software on each device. Your home network is protected with a firewall. Its wireless network is not open and uses the latest wi-fi security (WPA2 or WPA3, never WEP). 2. Your account passwords are strong, site-specific and never shared with anyone. In a strong security world, you’re using a good quality password manager to generate the longest random password that each account’s website or app will support. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] 3. You protect sensitive accounts with multifactor authentication (MFA). Your investment and bank accounts are ideal places for MFA, but so too is your email account, cell phone service account and password manager. On mobile devices, facial or fingerprint recognition can be used for MFA. For MFA, you can also use hardware security keys like YubiKey, which are highly secure, pretty cheap, durable, easy to use, and work with virtually all devices and browsers. Get at least two to avoid locking yourself out when you lose one. Companies like Vanguard Group and Bank of America support security keys that meet industry standards, and more are expected. Until then, you can still get short security codes from your financial firm via text message or an authenticator mobile app, which is less secure but better than no MFA at all. 4. You reduce your risk exposure. You never use public computers or public wi-fi networks to access financial accounts. When someone calls claiming to represent your bank or investment company, you hang up and call back the firm at the phone number on your recent statement or send a secure message within the firm's mobile app or web site. You’re vigilant for oddities in emails or text messages which tip off a phishing attack. 5. You closely monitor your account balances. Ideally, you’ve configured each account to notify you of all transactions, as well as security sensitive operations like adding a new bank account, changing the address or phone numbers on record, or cash transfers out. Even with that, it’s wise to check balances at least monthly to avoid reporting an incident past any required notification period. Nothing in this world is perfectly secure, but habits like these put you at less risk of falling victim to this century’s Willie Sutton. Showing you’ve taken care with security will also help you avoid accusations of gross negligence, which may lead to a more favorable outcome if a bad incident happens. This critical thinking goes both ways. Choose to keep investments with companies that are secure themselves—tricky, as there are no industry scorecards. Also favor firms that have clear and reasonable fraud protection policies, and that are helping their customers get and stay more secure with convenient, state-of-the-art technology. David Powell has spent his career writing software and leading engineering teams. During his 40 years working in tech, he has come to respect the limits of human imagination in any planning. Check out David's earlier articles. 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Beat the Cheats

U.S. CREDIT CARD fraud topped $8 billion in 2015 and should surpass $12 billion next year. You can reduce your exposure to such incidents with a few simple steps. Why bother? Won’t the bank pick up the tab when unauthorized purchases show up on your account? Generally, yes, thanks to the Fair Credit Billing Act and the Electronic Fund Transfer Act. But there may be limitations on that protection, based on how quickly you notify your bank when you discover unauthorized charges. There are two well-established ways your credit card information can be stolen and used. The most likely scenario is when a hacker exploits weak security measures at a merchant or payment processing company to download big lists of detailed credit card and billing contact info. These tend to be big, disruptive incidents which cost the responsible party millions of dollars and create a lot of hassle for you and others affected. The Heartland Payment Systems hack in 2009 exposed 160 million cards, according to the indictment of those charged. More such incidents have been reported, including at TJX Cos. (in 2006, 94 million cards), Home Depot (in 2014, 56 million cards) and Target (in 2013, 40 million cards). The next most common scenario is when an attacker gains access to a merchant’s payment terminal or point-of-sale system at a gas station, restaurant or store, and installs malware or modifies it with a skimmer or shimmer device, to steal information from every card used there. Skimmers exploit the oldest tech on your credit card: the old-school magnetic stripe that holds all of your card data in an open, unencrypted form. Michaels crafts stores in 20 states reportedly experienced such a crime in 2011. Skimmer use on ATMs has risen, too. When these incidents are discovered, banks proactively issue new cards to all affected customers. It’s the right thing to do to reduce everyone’s financial exposure, but it’s a hassle. Here are five ways to limit your exposure to such fraud: Set up your credit and debit cards in the electronic wallet on your iPhone or Android. When making purchases in person, use near-field communication (NFC) mobile tap-to-pay technology, like Apple Pay or Google Pay, whenever it’s available. This is your most secure option, usually using a biometric security device on your phone to authenticate before the purchase is enabled. Wireless, secure NFC also avoids the risks from skimmer or shimmer devices. If you select your debit card—rather than your credit card—from your phone’s wallet app, the same method can be used to log securely into a bank ATM with your phone plus your ATM PIN. Use your credit or debit card’s chip technology whenever NFC mobile isn’t an option. This requires you to insert your card rather than swipe. This approach is far more secure than swiping, but still potentially exposes you to shimmers. In Canada and Europe, you may need to use a PIN with your credit card when paying this way. Limit the number of websites where you check the box to store your credit card data when checking out. Yes, it means purchases take a moment longer and require a bit more typing, but it cuts off grief from big hacks right at the source. Use features, like Bank of America’s ShopSafe  and Citibank’s Virtual Account Numbers, to generate a virtual card number (VCN) for one-off web purchases on risky sites or recurring purchases lasting up to 12 months. If your VCN for a merchant is caught up in an incident, just that one VCN will need to be replaced, not the underlying credit card. If a merchant only supports swiping a credit card, pay with cash or take your business elsewhere. Merchants have had years to upgrade their payment terminals. For more secure online payments, there are a few other options popular in the U.S., including services like PayPal. Apple Pay and Google Pay are also expanding to web and mobile app payments. Mastercard and Visa just released specs for new technology that should enable them to compete with Apple, Google and PayPal using Masterpass by Mastercard or Visa Checkout. All of these solve the problems associated with saving underlying credit card information at each merchant. Indeed, we should soon have lots of choices for more secure and convenient online shopping. David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 35 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous articles include Get Me a Margarita, Making a Mesh and Elon and Me. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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