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HSA Tips

HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNT (HSA) is the most efficient tax-advantaged investment account because it offers a triple tax advantage:
  1. Contributions are tax-deductible
  2. Earnings grow tax-free
  3. Withdrawals are tax-free if used for medical expenses
One of the best uses of an HSA is to actually invest the balance. For example, I keep $500 (the minimum required balance) in cash. The rest, I invest in low-cost index funds. This allows me to maximize compounding inside the HSA account. I also receive a $1,000 HSA match. Since I’m young and my medical expenses are low, it’s a great way to minimize taxes and grow the balance. I will also not touch my HSA at all, even if I have medical expenses. I will reimburse myself 20-30 years down the road (more on this in a bit). But if you are paying medical expenses with the HSA, you should have at least a portion of the funds in a Treasury fund or money market fund (MMF) for stability. Generally, this amount should be equal to at least one year of deductible costs. Rules To contribute to an HSA, three things must happen:
  1. You need a high deductible health plan (HDHP). You cannot contribute to an HSA without one. A “high deductible health plan” is defined under §223(c)(2)(A) as a health plan with an annual deductible of more than $1,700 for self-only coverage or $3,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket limit is $8,500 or $17,000 (family).
Importantly, before enrolling in a high deductible plan, you need to decide whether it’s worth it in the first place. You will generally receive the biggest benefit from an HDHP if you are in good health (more on this in a bit). 2. You aren’t enrolled in Medicare. 3. You cannot be claimed as a dependent. Importantly, the HSA balance never expires. This account is always yours to keep, even if you leave your employer. Some people confuse an HSA with an FSA (which does expire, aside from a small potential rollover option). The account typically works like a “bank account,” where you make deposits and can withdraw money via online transfers or checks, or invest it like a brokerage account. Contributions The 2026 contribution limit is $4,400 for an individual plan and $8,750 for a family plan, with an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution if you are 55 or older. The contribution limit includes both your contributions and your employer’s contributions. If your employer allows it, contributing to an HSA via payroll deduction is generally better than contributing directly, as it avoids the 7.65% FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes. Direct, after-tax contributions only save on income tax when filing, missing the payroll tax savings. Withdrawals Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. IRS Publication 502 has information about which expenses qualify as medical expenses. In addition, as long as you keep proper records, you can reimburse yourself in a later year. I keep track of all my medical expenses in a spreadsheet (e.g., with columns for EOB documents, receipts, bills, etc). I plan to reimburse myself in the future, assuming the law doesn’t change. In 2025, House Bill 6183 was proposed to change the reimbursement limit to expenses no older than two years, but it didn’t gain any traction. If there is a change in legislation, I plan to reimburse myself for all prior medical expenses before enactment. Once you turn 65, you can withdraw money from your HSA for any reason without penalty. However, you will owe income taxes on any non-medical withdrawals, effectively making this similar to a Traditional 401(k) or IRA. Inheriting an HSA Per Publication 969, if your spouse is the designated beneficiary of your HSA, it will be treated as your spouse’s HSA after your death. If your spouse isn’t the designated beneficiary (e.g. your child is the beneficiary), the account stops being an HSA and the fair market value of the HSA becomes taxable to the beneficiary in the year in which you pass away. This is why tax free HSA dollars should ideally be spent before passing down an inheritance due to tax inefficiency. On the other hand, naming a beneficiary in a low-income tax bracket to receive the deceased person’s HSA can also be beneficial for tax purposes. HSA can be powerful, but make sure the math makes sense. If you spend thousands of dollars on medical bills, having a standard plan could outweigh all the tax savings you can get.   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

It’s Never Too Late

"I agree. We can’t change the past, but we can influence our future. I suspect there are quite a few people who have triumphed in some fashion over financial difficulties. The author’s point isn’t much different from my own experience.  At the age of 53, my retirement and investment accounts had a combined value of $848. No pension either.   We spoke of setting goals and management by objective. The terms may have changed. Life is a marathon. When we can, we run. When obstacles occur, we may find that we can only walk. That’s okay. For me, it was always to continue and never stop. The real goal is to finish.   We get stopped from time to time by an obstacle. Sometimes it was simply that internal conversation “I can’t”.  When I was in kindergarten, as young children that would occur; I didn’t deal all that well with discomfiture or adversity.  I recall the nun who was my teacher once telling the class “You are Americans and that word ends with four letters ‘I can’. So you can!” That was good advice; it is funny what we remember and even the life’s lessons that can be learned at such an early age. "
- normr60189
Read more »

Is AI going to affect our investments

"AI is disruptive so it will influence companies. We see that today as there is a shift in interest underway from the hardware suppliers to the software companies that are involved in the AI industry.   The market has been overpriced. It doesn't take a genius to say that there will be a correction. In the present circumstances, when a market correction does occur, it can be large. But not always. As for AI, it is likely that certain jobs will be eliminated while others are modified. A few will be transformed. As for "massive" disruptions, who knows? Which jobs, how soon, etc. This cannot be predicted with any real accuracy.  However, if one is inclined to hype the stocks, then by all means, use words such as "massive" when describing the changes. As usual, a well-diversified portfolio is probably the investor’s best defense. Currently, foreign stocks (Ex-U.S.) are once again in vogue as some investors chase better returns. There is also a renewed interest away from large caps. As for AI, some companies will get rich off of this, while others are absorbed or go out of business entirely. Mr. Grossman’s article “Managing Investment Risk” points to the folly of investing in things we don’t understand. I’d add that chasing results isn’t a good strategy, either. I don’t put much stock into the gurus who think they can predict the fallout of this. At one end we have the utopia believers who say we’ll work far fewer hours per week (and perhaps earn far less per year). At the other end of the spectrum are the doom sayers.   I'm reminded of all of the changes anyone born in 1900 experienced before their retirement at age 65 including: WWI, the flu epidemic, the great recession and depression, WWII, the polio epidemic, the recessions after WWII, the Korean war, possible nuclear Armageddon, multiple stock declines and several "lost decades", etc."
- normr60189
Read more »

Loose Change

"I switched to using credit cards a few decades ago. For a time I had one credit card per category of bills. One for utilities, one for groceries, one for gas and auto, etc. Then the cash-back offers began and I did a quarterly roulette to get the best deals. When covid occurred and local vendors eschewed cash, that was pretty much the end of my use of cash. As I had pretty much weaned myself from cash this wasn’t an issue for me and the checking account fell into disuse. However, G had a monthly bill for $100 with a small business. She mailed a check until these began getting lost in the mail. The vendor suspected a problem at his end. His solution was for her to mail it via Fedex, which I frankly saw as a stupid, unnecessary expense and waste of time for her. Keep in mind she had to drive to a Fedex facility to get the special envelopes and drop it off.  I told G to use Zelle or drop the vendor. He resisted but finally relented. Now he gets his payment within 24 hours of rendering the service. Nor only is he convinced, he acts as if he invented this approach! As for cash, we use it when RVing for miscellaneous expenses and for the occasional time when credit cards are a problem, and for emergencies. For example, if a satellite goes down, gas stations, etc. cannot process credit cards. I did experience this a few years ago. Multiple cards are helpful if there is an issue with one card, such as possible fraud. So G and I each have several cards with different banks, etc. Some see using a credit card or cards as an issue, but we pay these off monthly, so we carry no debt. One advantage is there are certain fraud protections. However, I don’t use my debit card as this lacks some of those protections, except at the local bank branch. Today with “cash” advances available at grocers, etc. we’ve found this service to be desireable, but I’ve never used this “benefit”, always declining at the POS entry screen. However, I view this as a form of insurance for access to cash. Getting to a bank or out-of-network ATM while travelling can be a hassle, or it may incur fees. One of my goals is no fees and no interest payments, etc.  Now that we are retired and with pension and/or social security income and no need to save for retirement there really is no need to categorize expenses because we spend significantly less than our annual income. However, I continue to put expenses into my Quicken categories. It is a habit I’m willing to maintain. This has been useful as G is involved in the care of an elderly parent, and this requires cross-country travel four times a year. There are other expenses related to that, too. I view tracking as an aspect of good management; these care expenses can be $40k a year, or more.  It would be a mess if we only used cash and the checking account, and time consuming to track. One of the relatives bragged that she handles the family finances. It turned out that she wrote the checks. It was her husband who balanced the accounts and replenished the checking account. That approach wouldn’t work for me. "
- normr60189
Read more »

A PIN to protect your tax return

"There is another set of passwords when you file electronically that can be used every year. The IP PIN is different and can apply to only one taxpayer when filing jointly."
- Nick Politakis
Read more »

Critique my investment strategy or lack thereof

"“If you earmark specific dollars that you intend to leave to future generations, invest those like they should for a longer time line in low cost, well diversified equity funds.” This is not directed towards Richard, but in general. As I have written before for the past several years I have been in the process of converting all of my wife’s traditional IRA (about 1/3 of our retirement assets) to a Roth. This way I will only have to take RMDs from my traditional. As a result my traditional is more conservative in order to meet our overall allocation. My traditional is, and hopefully will be the only fund tapped to supplement our Social Security income, and my small pension. My wife’s Roth is invested 100% in Vanguard Total World ETF (VT) as hopefully this portion of our portfolio will never be touched and thus both grow and be inherited tax free. Under current tax law, always subject to change, our children can also wait to tap these funds for an additional 10 years after we are gone for further tax free growth. If my wife lives to approximately the same age as her mother did (103), and my children wait 10 years after our passing that could result in a total of more than 45 years of tax free growth."
- David Lancaster
Read more »

New to building a CD or Bond Ladder?

"I put money in Marcus a while back, but for the past couple of years Vanguard Federal Money Market fund has paid more. I now have a hundred bucks at Marcus."
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Ambulatory Ambivalence

"Ha. We religiously recycle paper, plastics, and glass. I have a special place for collecting spent spent batteries, fluorescent bulbs, and expired electronics. Did I mention that we compost? :)"
- Jeff Bond
Read more »

A Rule of Thumb Is Not a Plan

"Dan, are you subverting that old communist saying of Lenin's, “A lie told often enough becomes the truth,” and applying it to spelling? Or perhaps you've just lost the plot? 😂"
- Mark Crothers
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Managing Investment Risk

BEFORE ITS FAILURE in 2008, Lehman Brothers had been one of the most prominent investment firms in the United States. After 158 years in business, what caused it to collapse so suddenly? In a word: complexity. Lehman had been involved in the securitization of mortgages, a process that resulted in taking something relatively simple—a home mortgage—and turning it into something much more complicated, thus obscuring its true risk level. That was the proximate cause for the firm’s failure. In addition to mortgage bonds, Lehman specialized in creating other complex instruments. A document titled “The Lehman Brothers Guide to Exotic Credit Derivatives” can still be found on the internet. The strategies it describes are the sorts of things that ultimately brought the firm down. When it comes to making investment choices, risk is unavoidable. No one can know what path the economy, the market or any given investment will follow. But that doesn’t mean investment risk is entirely outside our control. There are, in my view, certain characteristics we can look for in investments that can help tilt the odds in our favor. Here are four to consider. Simplicity. Peter Lynch, former manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund, had this warning for investors: “Never invest in any idea you can’t illustrate with a crayon.” Lynch felt that simplicity was paramount because investing is hard enough. As Kodak, Polaroid and BlackBerry taught us, things can go wrong even for well-run companies. But when an investment is complicated, it’s that much harder to assess how things might go. Consider, for example, an exchange-traded fund called the Box ETF (ticker: BOXX). It’s designed to deliver performance comparable to U.S. Treasury bills but in a more tax-efficient manner. For that reason, it’s quite popular, and I’m asked about it frequently. Despite the clear tax advantage, though, I advise against it. That’s because of its complex structure, which involves a strategy known as a box spread. This is how it’s described on the BOXX website: “A box spread is an options trading strategy that combines a long call and short put at one strike price with a short call and long put at a different strike price.”  Another question about BOXX is whether the IRS might challenge the tax strategies it’s employing. BOXX could work out just fine, but in my view, the complexity and IRS risk just aren’t necessary. And even though it’s worked well so far, the hardest part about complex instruments is that we can’t know in advance how they’ll perform through various market cycles. Times of stress could cause an otherwise successful strategy to fail. That was the lesson of Lehman Brothers. Management style. For decades, there’s been a debate between advocates of active and passive investing. That debate is an important one, but it isn’t the only one. Within the world of actively-managed funds, there are also important distinctions. Funds like the Magellan Fund, for example, are straightforward. The manager’s aim is to choose a group of stocks that he thinks will outperform. That’s one type of actively-managed fund and is the most common one, but there are many others. Some funds take a tactical approach, trading in and out of different asset classes in response to the managers’ sense of where markets are headed. Morningstar analyst Jeffrey Ptak analyzed these funds a few years back and concluded that they “would have earned twice as much if their managers didn’t trade over the past decade.” The funds’ managers, in other words, only subtracted value. The lesson: The investment world is much more nuanced than the simple distinction between active and passive, and the passive realm isn’t immune to potholes either. So be sure to look carefully under the hood of any fund you’re considering. Tax-efficiency. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds offer a number of advantages, but they can also carry risk in the form of higher tax bills because funds are required to distribute the bulk of their gains to shareholders on a pro rata basis. Careful due diligence is required on this point because there’s a misconception that a fund’s turnover ratio—which measures the amount of trading inside a fund—is the best proxy for tax efficiency. Turnover can be an imprecise measure, though. Consider a fund like the PIMCO Total Return Fund (ticker: PTTRX). It has thousands of holdings—everything from bonds to currencies to interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, reverse repurchase agreements, and more. As a result of this diverse mix, it has an extremely high turnover rate, north of 600%. With so much trading, you might expect this fund to be massively tax-inefficient. But surprisingly, it isn’t. It hasn’t generated any capital gains distributions at all in the past four years.  In contrast, a fund like Magellan might appear to be more tax-efficient, with a much lower turnover ratio of 49%. But Magellan has generated significant capital gains for its investors in each of the past several years. The lesson: When assessing a fund’s tax efficiency, be sure to study its distribution history. That’s the metric that’s most meaningful. Concentration. With the rise of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks, there’s been increasing hand-wringing over the concentration level of the S&P 500. The top 10 stocks today account for nearly 40% of the entire index. On the one hand, this is unprecedented and potentially cause for concern. But as The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Zweig pointed out recently, there’s more than one way to look at market concentration. At one point, for example, AT&T accounted for nearly 13% of the entire market. Today, the market’s largest stock, Nvidia, poses a risk but nonetheless has a more modest weighting of less than 7%. The bottom line: Concentration may or may not turn out to be a problem in the coming years. But since we don’t have the benefit of hindsight, this is another area where you could be defensive with your portfolio. If concentration is a potential risk, it’s one that’s easy to avoid. To diversify away from the S&P 500, you could allocate to value stocks, to small- and mid-cap stocks and to international stocks.  Other factors. How else can you play defense with your portfolio? In evaluating prospective funds, I’d also consider the length of its track record, the firm behind it, and, as discussed last week, the fund’s withdrawal policies. Investment risk may be unavoidable. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be managed.   Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.
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Helping Adult Children, pt. 2

"We started giving unsolicited money gifts to our two children 2 years ago. We had good years investing and decided to share that with them. We gave each of them $15k each year. They will have good inheritances but these funds will help now when they can use it. It will not jeopardize my retirement and I plan to make this an annual event."
- Jerry Pinkard
Read more »

HSA Tips

HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNT (HSA) is the most efficient tax-advantaged investment account because it offers a triple tax advantage:
  1. Contributions are tax-deductible
  2. Earnings grow tax-free
  3. Withdrawals are tax-free if used for medical expenses
One of the best uses of an HSA is to actually invest the balance. For example, I keep $500 (the minimum required balance) in cash. The rest, I invest in low-cost index funds. This allows me to maximize compounding inside the HSA account. I also receive a $1,000 HSA match. Since I’m young and my medical expenses are low, it’s a great way to minimize taxes and grow the balance. I will also not touch my HSA at all, even if I have medical expenses. I will reimburse myself 20-30 years down the road (more on this in a bit). But if you are paying medical expenses with the HSA, you should have at least a portion of the funds in a Treasury fund or money market fund (MMF) for stability. Generally, this amount should be equal to at least one year of deductible costs. Rules To contribute to an HSA, three things must happen:
  1. You need a high deductible health plan (HDHP). You cannot contribute to an HSA without one. A “high deductible health plan” is defined under §223(c)(2)(A) as a health plan with an annual deductible of more than $1,700 for self-only coverage or $3,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket limit is $8,500 or $17,000 (family).
Importantly, before enrolling in a high deductible plan, you need to decide whether it’s worth it in the first place. You will generally receive the biggest benefit from an HDHP if you are in good health (more on this in a bit). 2. You aren’t enrolled in Medicare. 3. You cannot be claimed as a dependent. Importantly, the HSA balance never expires. This account is always yours to keep, even if you leave your employer. Some people confuse an HSA with an FSA (which does expire, aside from a small potential rollover option). The account typically works like a “bank account,” where you make deposits and can withdraw money via online transfers or checks, or invest it like a brokerage account. Contributions The 2026 contribution limit is $4,400 for an individual plan and $8,750 for a family plan, with an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution if you are 55 or older. The contribution limit includes both your contributions and your employer’s contributions. If your employer allows it, contributing to an HSA via payroll deduction is generally better than contributing directly, as it avoids the 7.65% FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes. Direct, after-tax contributions only save on income tax when filing, missing the payroll tax savings. Withdrawals Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. IRS Publication 502 has information about which expenses qualify as medical expenses. In addition, as long as you keep proper records, you can reimburse yourself in a later year. I keep track of all my medical expenses in a spreadsheet (e.g., with columns for EOB documents, receipts, bills, etc). I plan to reimburse myself in the future, assuming the law doesn’t change. In 2025, House Bill 6183 was proposed to change the reimbursement limit to expenses no older than two years, but it didn’t gain any traction. If there is a change in legislation, I plan to reimburse myself for all prior medical expenses before enactment. Once you turn 65, you can withdraw money from your HSA for any reason without penalty. However, you will owe income taxes on any non-medical withdrawals, effectively making this similar to a Traditional 401(k) or IRA. Inheriting an HSA Per Publication 969, if your spouse is the designated beneficiary of your HSA, it will be treated as your spouse’s HSA after your death. If your spouse isn’t the designated beneficiary (e.g. your child is the beneficiary), the account stops being an HSA and the fair market value of the HSA becomes taxable to the beneficiary in the year in which you pass away. This is why tax free HSA dollars should ideally be spent before passing down an inheritance due to tax inefficiency. On the other hand, naming a beneficiary in a low-income tax bracket to receive the deceased person’s HSA can also be beneficial for tax purposes. HSA can be powerful, but make sure the math makes sense. If you spend thousands of dollars on medical bills, having a standard plan could outweigh all the tax savings you can get.   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

It’s Never Too Late

"I agree. We can’t change the past, but we can influence our future. I suspect there are quite a few people who have triumphed in some fashion over financial difficulties. The author’s point isn’t much different from my own experience.  At the age of 53, my retirement and investment accounts had a combined value of $848. No pension either.   We spoke of setting goals and management by objective. The terms may have changed. Life is a marathon. When we can, we run. When obstacles occur, we may find that we can only walk. That’s okay. For me, it was always to continue and never stop. The real goal is to finish.   We get stopped from time to time by an obstacle. Sometimes it was simply that internal conversation “I can’t”.  When I was in kindergarten, as young children that would occur; I didn’t deal all that well with discomfiture or adversity.  I recall the nun who was my teacher once telling the class “You are Americans and that word ends with four letters ‘I can’. So you can!” That was good advice; it is funny what we remember and even the life’s lessons that can be learned at such an early age. "
- normr60189
Read more »

Is AI going to affect our investments

"AI is disruptive so it will influence companies. We see that today as there is a shift in interest underway from the hardware suppliers to the software companies that are involved in the AI industry.   The market has been overpriced. It doesn't take a genius to say that there will be a correction. In the present circumstances, when a market correction does occur, it can be large. But not always. As for AI, it is likely that certain jobs will be eliminated while others are modified. A few will be transformed. As for "massive" disruptions, who knows? Which jobs, how soon, etc. This cannot be predicted with any real accuracy.  However, if one is inclined to hype the stocks, then by all means, use words such as "massive" when describing the changes. As usual, a well-diversified portfolio is probably the investor’s best defense. Currently, foreign stocks (Ex-U.S.) are once again in vogue as some investors chase better returns. There is also a renewed interest away from large caps. As for AI, some companies will get rich off of this, while others are absorbed or go out of business entirely. Mr. Grossman’s article “Managing Investment Risk” points to the folly of investing in things we don’t understand. I’d add that chasing results isn’t a good strategy, either. I don’t put much stock into the gurus who think they can predict the fallout of this. At one end we have the utopia believers who say we’ll work far fewer hours per week (and perhaps earn far less per year). At the other end of the spectrum are the doom sayers.   I'm reminded of all of the changes anyone born in 1900 experienced before their retirement at age 65 including: WWI, the flu epidemic, the great recession and depression, WWII, the polio epidemic, the recessions after WWII, the Korean war, possible nuclear Armageddon, multiple stock declines and several "lost decades", etc."
- normr60189
Read more »

Loose Change

"I switched to using credit cards a few decades ago. For a time I had one credit card per category of bills. One for utilities, one for groceries, one for gas and auto, etc. Then the cash-back offers began and I did a quarterly roulette to get the best deals. When covid occurred and local vendors eschewed cash, that was pretty much the end of my use of cash. As I had pretty much weaned myself from cash this wasn’t an issue for me and the checking account fell into disuse. However, G had a monthly bill for $100 with a small business. She mailed a check until these began getting lost in the mail. The vendor suspected a problem at his end. His solution was for her to mail it via Fedex, which I frankly saw as a stupid, unnecessary expense and waste of time for her. Keep in mind she had to drive to a Fedex facility to get the special envelopes and drop it off.  I told G to use Zelle or drop the vendor. He resisted but finally relented. Now he gets his payment within 24 hours of rendering the service. Nor only is he convinced, he acts as if he invented this approach! As for cash, we use it when RVing for miscellaneous expenses and for the occasional time when credit cards are a problem, and for emergencies. For example, if a satellite goes down, gas stations, etc. cannot process credit cards. I did experience this a few years ago. Multiple cards are helpful if there is an issue with one card, such as possible fraud. So G and I each have several cards with different banks, etc. Some see using a credit card or cards as an issue, but we pay these off monthly, so we carry no debt. One advantage is there are certain fraud protections. However, I don’t use my debit card as this lacks some of those protections, except at the local bank branch. Today with “cash” advances available at grocers, etc. we’ve found this service to be desireable, but I’ve never used this “benefit”, always declining at the POS entry screen. However, I view this as a form of insurance for access to cash. Getting to a bank or out-of-network ATM while travelling can be a hassle, or it may incur fees. One of my goals is no fees and no interest payments, etc.  Now that we are retired and with pension and/or social security income and no need to save for retirement there really is no need to categorize expenses because we spend significantly less than our annual income. However, I continue to put expenses into my Quicken categories. It is a habit I’m willing to maintain. This has been useful as G is involved in the care of an elderly parent, and this requires cross-country travel four times a year. There are other expenses related to that, too. I view tracking as an aspect of good management; these care expenses can be $40k a year, or more.  It would be a mess if we only used cash and the checking account, and time consuming to track. One of the relatives bragged that she handles the family finances. It turned out that she wrote the checks. It was her husband who balanced the accounts and replenished the checking account. That approach wouldn’t work for me. "
- normr60189
Read more »

A PIN to protect your tax return

"There is another set of passwords when you file electronically that can be used every year. The IP PIN is different and can apply to only one taxpayer when filing jointly."
- Nick Politakis
Read more »

Critique my investment strategy or lack thereof

"“If you earmark specific dollars that you intend to leave to future generations, invest those like they should for a longer time line in low cost, well diversified equity funds.” This is not directed towards Richard, but in general. As I have written before for the past several years I have been in the process of converting all of my wife’s traditional IRA (about 1/3 of our retirement assets) to a Roth. This way I will only have to take RMDs from my traditional. As a result my traditional is more conservative in order to meet our overall allocation. My traditional is, and hopefully will be the only fund tapped to supplement our Social Security income, and my small pension. My wife’s Roth is invested 100% in Vanguard Total World ETF (VT) as hopefully this portion of our portfolio will never be touched and thus both grow and be inherited tax free. Under current tax law, always subject to change, our children can also wait to tap these funds for an additional 10 years after we are gone for further tax free growth. If my wife lives to approximately the same age as her mother did (103), and my children wait 10 years after our passing that could result in a total of more than 45 years of tax free growth."
- David Lancaster
Read more »

New to building a CD or Bond Ladder?

"I put money in Marcus a while back, but for the past couple of years Vanguard Federal Money Market fund has paid more. I now have a hundred bucks at Marcus."
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Ambulatory Ambivalence

"Ha. We religiously recycle paper, plastics, and glass. I have a special place for collecting spent spent batteries, fluorescent bulbs, and expired electronics. Did I mention that we compost? :)"
- Jeff Bond
Read more »

Managing Investment Risk

BEFORE ITS FAILURE in 2008, Lehman Brothers had been one of the most prominent investment firms in the United States. After 158 years in business, what caused it to collapse so suddenly? In a word: complexity. Lehman had been involved in the securitization of mortgages, a process that resulted in taking something relatively simple—a home mortgage—and turning it into something much more complicated, thus obscuring its true risk level. That was the proximate cause for the firm’s failure. In addition to mortgage bonds, Lehman specialized in creating other complex instruments. A document titled “The Lehman Brothers Guide to Exotic Credit Derivatives” can still be found on the internet. The strategies it describes are the sorts of things that ultimately brought the firm down. When it comes to making investment choices, risk is unavoidable. No one can know what path the economy, the market or any given investment will follow. But that doesn’t mean investment risk is entirely outside our control. There are, in my view, certain characteristics we can look for in investments that can help tilt the odds in our favor. Here are four to consider. Simplicity. Peter Lynch, former manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund, had this warning for investors: “Never invest in any idea you can’t illustrate with a crayon.” Lynch felt that simplicity was paramount because investing is hard enough. As Kodak, Polaroid and BlackBerry taught us, things can go wrong even for well-run companies. But when an investment is complicated, it’s that much harder to assess how things might go. Consider, for example, an exchange-traded fund called the Box ETF (ticker: BOXX). It’s designed to deliver performance comparable to U.S. Treasury bills but in a more tax-efficient manner. For that reason, it’s quite popular, and I’m asked about it frequently. Despite the clear tax advantage, though, I advise against it. That’s because of its complex structure, which involves a strategy known as a box spread. This is how it’s described on the BOXX website: “A box spread is an options trading strategy that combines a long call and short put at one strike price with a short call and long put at a different strike price.”  Another question about BOXX is whether the IRS might challenge the tax strategies it’s employing. BOXX could work out just fine, but in my view, the complexity and IRS risk just aren’t necessary. And even though it’s worked well so far, the hardest part about complex instruments is that we can’t know in advance how they’ll perform through various market cycles. Times of stress could cause an otherwise successful strategy to fail. That was the lesson of Lehman Brothers. Management style. For decades, there’s been a debate between advocates of active and passive investing. That debate is an important one, but it isn’t the only one. Within the world of actively-managed funds, there are also important distinctions. Funds like the Magellan Fund, for example, are straightforward. The manager’s aim is to choose a group of stocks that he thinks will outperform. That’s one type of actively-managed fund and is the most common one, but there are many others. Some funds take a tactical approach, trading in and out of different asset classes in response to the managers’ sense of where markets are headed. Morningstar analyst Jeffrey Ptak analyzed these funds a few years back and concluded that they “would have earned twice as much if their managers didn’t trade over the past decade.” The funds’ managers, in other words, only subtracted value. The lesson: The investment world is much more nuanced than the simple distinction between active and passive, and the passive realm isn’t immune to potholes either. So be sure to look carefully under the hood of any fund you’re considering. Tax-efficiency. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds offer a number of advantages, but they can also carry risk in the form of higher tax bills because funds are required to distribute the bulk of their gains to shareholders on a pro rata basis. Careful due diligence is required on this point because there’s a misconception that a fund’s turnover ratio—which measures the amount of trading inside a fund—is the best proxy for tax efficiency. Turnover can be an imprecise measure, though. Consider a fund like the PIMCO Total Return Fund (ticker: PTTRX). It has thousands of holdings—everything from bonds to currencies to interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, reverse repurchase agreements, and more. As a result of this diverse mix, it has an extremely high turnover rate, north of 600%. With so much trading, you might expect this fund to be massively tax-inefficient. But surprisingly, it isn’t. It hasn’t generated any capital gains distributions at all in the past four years.  In contrast, a fund like Magellan might appear to be more tax-efficient, with a much lower turnover ratio of 49%. But Magellan has generated significant capital gains for its investors in each of the past several years. The lesson: When assessing a fund’s tax efficiency, be sure to study its distribution history. That’s the metric that’s most meaningful. Concentration. With the rise of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks, there’s been increasing hand-wringing over the concentration level of the S&P 500. The top 10 stocks today account for nearly 40% of the entire index. On the one hand, this is unprecedented and potentially cause for concern. But as The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Zweig pointed out recently, there’s more than one way to look at market concentration. At one point, for example, AT&T accounted for nearly 13% of the entire market. Today, the market’s largest stock, Nvidia, poses a risk but nonetheless has a more modest weighting of less than 7%. The bottom line: Concentration may or may not turn out to be a problem in the coming years. But since we don’t have the benefit of hindsight, this is another area where you could be defensive with your portfolio. If concentration is a potential risk, it’s one that’s easy to avoid. To diversify away from the S&P 500, you could allocate to value stocks, to small- and mid-cap stocks and to international stocks.  Other factors. How else can you play defense with your portfolio? In evaluating prospective funds, I’d also consider the length of its track record, the firm behind it, and, as discussed last week, the fund’s withdrawal policies. Investment risk may be unavoidable. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be managed.   Adam M. Grossman is the founder of Mayport, a fixed-fee wealth management firm. Sign up for Adam's Daily Ideas email, follow him on X @AdamMGrossman and check out his earlier articles.
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Manifesto

NO. 32: WE SHOULD start with the global market portfolio—the investments we collectively own—and decide what we don’t want in our portfolio. Often, foreign bonds are the biggest subtraction.

Truths

NO. 40: NOTHING generates spectacular returns forever. Investment trends can last far longer than expected and, after a few years, further gains can seem inevitable. But that sense of inevitability encourages investors to pay prices far above what the fundamentals justify—and those fundamentals eventually drag the highfliers back to earth.

act

IMAGINE YOU WERE the executor for your own estate. What would make your job easier? You might consolidate financial accounts, shed illiquid assets like collectibles and investments in private businesses, draw up a letter of last instruction that details all assets and debts, organize key documents, and compile a list of usernames and passwords.

think

CURRENT VS. FUTURE self. Our daily lives are a constant battle between the whiny demands of our current self and the needs of our future self. We know it would be better for our future self if we exercised, ate healthily and saved diligently—and yet, all too often, we give in to our current self, who wants to sit on the couch, eat junk food and shop online.

Saving diligently

Manifesto

NO. 32: WE SHOULD start with the global market portfolio—the investments we collectively own—and decide what we don’t want in our portfolio. Often, foreign bonds are the biggest subtraction.

Spotlight: Saving

Saving Your Life

I GREW UP IN a lower-middle-class family. We lived in a small apartment where I slept on the living room couch. My father sold cars for a living.

Today, my living standard is quite different. On average, 97% of retirees my age have less income and assets than my wife and me. Our friends are in similar economic circumstances. If they weren’t, they couldn’t live where we do.

The minimum needed to live in our condo community is $24,000 a year.

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Change is good – and profitable

For more years than I remember I have saved my pocket change. Every day I put it in a tray on my dresser. When it overflows, Connie bags it and eventually rolls it for deposit. That happens at around $80.00.
I never pass a penny on the ground. In fact, on occasion I dig one out of the soft tar. Some coins are so mangled it’s hard to tell what they are at first. Sometimes people stare at me,

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Cheap and Proud

ONCE UPON A TIME, I thought it was a little unseemly to pay a lot of attention to costs. My father grew up in a farm family with little money. He was the first to attend college and, indeed, went on to law school from there. He did well in his profession and, when I was growing up, we lived a comfortable—though far from luxurious—life.
Maybe because he’d spent his youth worried about money,

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Divvying Up Dollars

IF YOU HAVE A SURPLUS in your household budget, what’s the best use for it? Does it make more sense to pay down debt or to invest those extra funds? With interest rates at such low levels, this is a question I’ve been hearing with increasing frequency.
Suppose your mortgage rate is 3.5%. If you pay down that debt, it’s like earning 3.5%. By contrast, if you invested in the stock market, your annual return would be uncertain.

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Show Me the Money

HERE’S A SOBERING thought: Much—and perhaps most—of the money you’ll accumulate for retirement will reflect the raw dollars you sock away and not the investment returns you earn.
Consider a simple example. Let’s say retirement is 40 years away and your goal is to quit with $1 million. Let’s also assume you can earn an after-inflation “real” annual return of 4%, which is my best guess for the long-run return on a globally diversified,

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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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Spotlight: Lim

Price Protection

HOW WOULD YOU LIKE to earn a guaranteed 6.7% or more on your money without taking any risk? Although it sounds too good to be true, that’s exactly the opportunity that will be offered on Nov. 1. The investment? Series I savings bonds. I bonds are 30-year bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury, which are available to anyone who opens a free TreasuryDirect account. These bonds are the quintessential risk-free asset. Backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, they have minimal credit risk. They also offer inflation protection, as their yields are indexed to inflation. The yield on I bonds is the sum of two components: a fixed rate and an inflation rate. The fixed rate is set at the time of purchase, and remains fixed for the life of the bond. It’s currently 0%, so you can effectively ignore it. The inflation rate component of the yield adjusts twice a year—the first business days of May and November. The semi-annual inflation rate for I bonds being currently sold is 1.77%. This determines the interest earned over the next six months. Double it and you get the bond’s annual percentage rate (APR), which would be 3.54%. While 3.54% isn’t bad, the new rate in November is all but guaranteed to be much higher. My guess is that I bonds issued then will carry yields of at least 6.7% and possibly as high as 7.8%. Let me explain. The inflation rate is based on the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, which I’ll simply call CPI. The November rate will be based upon the percentage change of CPI from March to September of this year. We already know March’s CPI number, which was 264.877. September’s CPI won’t be released until Oct. 13, but the August number was 273.567. Assuming there’s no change in CPI in September—not very likely given recent trends—the six-month percentage change would be 3.28%. That corresponds to an APR of 6.56%. The effective annual rate you would earn is 6.67%, since I bonds compound semiannually. More than likely, September’s CPI level will be higher than August’s. How much? The average monthly increase in CPI has been 0.55% year-to-date. Extrapolating that rate of increase, September’s CPI would be 275.072, corresponding to a semiannual inflation rate of 3.85%. The corresponding effective annual rate for I bonds would be 7.85%. That’s not too shabby, particularly considering this return is risk-free. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] Of course, the rate would only apply for six months. In May 2022, the rate would be adjusted once again. If the Fed’s transitory thesis is correct, and inflation slows next year, the interest rate on I bonds would fall. On the other hand, if inflation persists or accelerates, I bond yields would remain high and vastly outperform money market funds and savings accounts. Another bonus: Unlike TIPS, or Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, I bonds are protected against capital losses. Akin to a savings account, the principal value of an I bond can only increase. In the unlikely scenario that inflation is negative, the inflation rate on I bonds can never go below zero. I bonds must be held for a minimum of one year after purchase. If you redeem an I bond before it’s five years old, you’ll lose the last three months of interest. Assuming a 6.67% interest rate, selling early would reduce your return for the final 12 months to 5%. How many I bonds can you purchase? There's an annual limit of $10,000 per individual. That means a married couple with two children could buy up to $40,000 in total. If that family had a trust, another $10,000 could be purchased in the name of the trust, for a cumulative $50,000 in I bonds per year. Keep in mind, if you buy an I bond for a child through a custodial account, that constitutes an irrevocable gift. I bonds also enjoy favorable tax treatment. Interest is subject to federal income taxes, but is free from state and local taxes. You can also defer reporting the interest on your federal tax return until you cash in your bonds or the bonds mature. If you hold an I bond to maturity, that’s 30 years of tax-deferred growth. Speaking of taxes, you can purchase up to an additional $5,000 in paper I bonds per year using your federal tax refund. If you’re considering I bonds, I would suggest waiting until Nov. 1, when the interest rate will reset to a much higher level. Just don’t expect most advisors to recommend them. I bonds are only available—commission-free—through TreasuryDirect.gov or when you file your tax return. As such, your advisor stands to gain little by having you invest in these wonderful bonds. John Lim is a physician and author of "How to Raise Your Child's Financial IQ," which is available as both a free PDF and a Kindle edition. Follow John on Twitter @JohnTLim and check out his earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Lords of Easy Money

THE FEDERAL RESERVE has a daunting responsibility. Among its jobs is “to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.” This is commonly referred to as its dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability. Yet those two aims are often at odds. That’s because of the inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation, embodied by the Phillips Curve. Attempts to maximize employment—or minimize unemployment—often stoke the flames of inflation. The primary tool the Fed has to achieve its aims is the ability to set interest rates, specifically short-term rates. It’s a powerful tool because interest rates determine the cost of money. When interest rates are low, people and companies borrow more, leading to credit creation—and credit is the lifeblood of the economy. In recent years, the Fed has expanded its monetary toolkit. Since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, it has directly intervened in the bond market by buying longer-maturity Treasurys and mortgage-backed bonds. These interventions, known as quantitative easing or QE, drive the yields of longer-maturity bonds lower. In addition to controlling a broad swath of interest rates, the Federal Reserve has greatly expanded the money supply through these bond purchases. Since 2007, real gross domestic product has increased by 27%, while the aggregate money supply—as measured by M2, which includes cash, checking accounts and other highly liquid assets—has jumped 300%. The monetary might wielded by today’s Federal Reserve is truly unprecedented. Astonishingly, this power rests in the hands of just 12 individuals—the seven members of the Fed’s board of governors plus five Federal Reserve Bank presidents—who comprise the voting membership of Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). Despite its devilishly difficult task, FOMC members have a striking tendency to vote as a bloc. Dissension among committee members is usually rare. Indeed, since 1996, only two dissenting votes have been cast by Fed governors—the last one in 2005. Federal Reserve Bank presidents are a more rambunctious lot, having cast dissenting votes in a little over a third of FOMC meetings since 1996. Still, 63% of FOMC decisions have been unanimous since 1996. Are the weighty matters before the Fed and its staff of 400 PhD economists just open-and-shut cases to these intellectual giants? Or is there more to the story? Christopher Leonard’s new book, The Lords of Easy Money: How the Federal Reserve Broke the American Economy, sheds some light on this question. One of the central characters of the book, Thomas Hoenig, was the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City from 1991 to 2011. While serving on the FOMC, he cast dissenting votes at all eight meetings in 2010, the only committee member to dissent that year. Hoenig was under tremendous pressure to conform with the rest of the FOMC, then headed by Fed Chair Ben Bernanke. In 2010, quantitative easing had only recently been unleashed. The great worry was that any dissenting vote would weaken the case for QE by undermining the Fed’s authority. Bernanke and others felt it was imperative to present a united front. What was on Hoenig’s mind when he cast the lone dissenting vote against a second round of QE in late 2010? Hoenig worried that the Fed was embarking down a road from which there was no turning back. QE, he believed, was a Pandora’s box that would be impossible to close. Furthermore, he feared that the easy money unleashed by QE would lead to risky lending and asset bubbles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] Hoenig wasn’t alone in his concerns. Regional Fed Bank presidents Jeffrey Lacker, Charles Plosser and Richard Fisher had doubts, too. As Lacker put it, “Please count me in the nervous camp.” Plosser’s assessment was more blunt: “I do not support another round of asset purchases [QE] at this time…. Again, given these very small anticipated benefits, we should be even more focused on the downside risks of this program.” Unfortunately, Lacker, Plosser and Fisher were nonvoting members of the FOMC in 2010. I’m not arguing that the Fed was right or wrong to pursue quantitative easing. Rather, the apparent lack of psychological safety at the world’s most important financial institution is my concern. What exactly is psychological safety? Amy Edmondson, a professor at Harvard Business School and an expert on psychological safety, defines it as a climate where people are comfortable expressing themselves without fear of reprisal or humiliation. In short, people feel safe speaking their mind. In her wonderful book, The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation, and Growth, Edmondson draws on decades of research to show that psychological safety is imperative for learning and managing risk. She points to the Wells Fargo account fraud scandal and Volkswagen’s “dieselgate” as prime examples. In both cases, an absence of psychological safety had disastrous consequences. These two corporate crises were enabled by an environment of fear—fear of not meeting impossible targets and fear of speaking the truth to leadership. Hubris is antithetical to psychological safety, and it seemed the Fed suffered from a major case of hubris. An exchange between Fisher and Bernanke in 2012 is telling. Fisher described how Texas Instruments was taking advantage of easy money by reconfiguring its balance sheet, issuing more debt instead of investing or hiring—one of the many unintended consequences of QE. Bernanke replied, “President Fisher… I do want to urge you not to overweight the macroeconomic opinions of private-sector people who are not trained in economics.” I don’t know the state of psychological safety inside today’s Fed. But I do know that the Fed faces an economy that is as complex and uncertain as ever. Every voice inside the marble-white Eccles Building deserves to be heard and considered. Debate should not be stymied but rather encouraged. This includes garnering the views of “private-sector people who are not trained in economics.” John Lim is a physician and author of "How to Raise Your Child's Financial IQ," which is available as both a free PDF and a Kindle edition. Follow John on Twitter @JohnTLim and check out his earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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12 Investment Sins

WANT TO IMPROVE your investment results? The deadly sins below are not only among the most serious financial transgressions, but also they’re among the most common. I firmly believe that, if you eradicate these 12 sins from your financial life, you’ll have a better-performing portfolio. 1. Pride: Thinking you can beat the market by picking individual stocks, selecting actively managed funds or timing the market. Antidote: Humility. By humbly accepting “average” returns through low-cost index funds, you will—paradoxically—outperform the majority of investors. 2. Greed: Having an overly aggressive asset allocation. Antidote: Moderation. Follow the great Benjamin Graham’s advice and keep no more than 75% of your portfolio in stocks. Once you determine your asset allocation, doggedly maintain it through thick and thin by rebalancing periodically. 3. Lust: Being addicted to financial pornography. Financial pornography—think CNBC and Fox Business—may be entertaining, but it has no lasting value and is actually harmful to your financial health by promoting short-termism. Antidote: Turn off financial media and delete financial apps from your smartphone. 4. Envy: Chasing performance. This sin trips up more investors than any other. It ultimately leads to the cardinal sin of “buying high and selling low.” Antidote: Stop comparing your investment performance to that of others. Success is not measured by relative performance, but by whether you meet your own financial goals. 5. Gluttony: Failing to save. You may be a financial saint in every other respect, but—if you fail to save—it’s game over. You can’t invest what you haven’t saved. Antidote: Start saving something today. Slowly raise your savings rate over time. 6. Impatience: Lacking investing stamina has dire consequences. Patience in financial markets is measured in years, sometimes decades. The first decade of the 21st century was not kind to U.S. stock investors, who lost a cumulative 9%. If you had bailed on U.S. stocks in 2009, you would have missed out on the following decade’s glorious rebound, with annualized returns of over 16%. Antidote: Patience and a knowledge of financial history. While history doesn’t necessarily repeat, it does rhyme. What history has shown time and again is that markets mean revert—that is, sharp declines are typically followed by rebounds. 7. Sloth: Not contributing enough to get your employer’s full 401(k) match. This is like walking past $100 bills on the sidewalk and being too lazy to pick them up. Similarly, make the effort to rebalance. While doing less is generally beneficial when investing, failing to rebalance is the exception to the rule. Antidote: If you’re too lazy to rebalance, sign up for a low-cost target-date fund, which will rebalance for you. The antidote for not getting your 401(k) match? Just do it. 8. Fear: Having an overly cautious asset allocation. This investing sin is easy to overlook, because inflation is so insidious. Inflation reduces our money’s purchasing power by some 2% to 3% a year. Hiding out in cash investments guarantees you an inflation-adjusted loss of 1% to 2% annually. Antidote: Overcome your fear of stocks by understanding their historical returns. History suggests that, while there’s a 46% chance that the S&P 500 will be down on any given day and a 27% chance you’ll lose money in any given year, the odds of losing fall to 5% over 10-year stretches and 0% over 20-year holding periods. 9. Imprudence: Failing to diversify. This is a surefire road to the poorhouse. Consider the lesson of the Japanese stock market. The Nikkei 225—analogous to our S&P 500—reached an all-time high of 38,915 in December 1989, before ultimately declining 82% to close at 7,055 on March 10, 2009. Even today, the Nikkei 225 remains about 40% below the peak reached 30 years ago. This should give serious pause to those who advocate investing in a single national market. Antidote: Diversify, diversify, diversify—by owning both stocks and bonds, by owning thousands of securities through index funds, and by funding traditional retirement accounts, Roth accounts and regular taxable accounts. 10. Negligence: Mixing investing and insurance through variable annuities, equity-indexed annuities and cash-value life insurance. Ever read the entire prospectus for an annuity? I didn’t think so. Antidote: Keep your investments and insurance separate, with one notable exception: immediate fixed annuities. 11. Hyperactivity: Being an overly active investor. It may seem counterintuitive. But when it comes to investing, it pays to just sit on your hands most of the time. Aside from choosing an asset allocation and rebalancing periodically, further efforts are generally counterproductive. Antidote: Learn to do nothing, aside from rebalancing once a year or so. 12. Aimlessness: Failing to plan for retirement, including drawing up an investment policy statement. An investment policy statement—a set of ground rules for your portfolio—provides the guardrails against the numerous behavioral pitfalls that investors face. This is probably one of the most overlooked facets of investment planning. Antidote: Don’t delay another day. Have a retirement plan in place, including a written investment policy statement. Review these documents every year. John Lim is a physician and author of How to Raise Your Child's Financial IQ, which is available as both a free PDF and a Kindle edition. His previous articles include How Low? Too Low, Solomon on Money and Out on a Lim. Follow John on Twitter @JohnTLim. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Running the Numbers

I RECENTLY LISTENED to a podcast featuring Richard Thaler, the Nobel prize-winning economist. To say I’m a huge fan of his work is an understatement. Thaler has that rare ability to communicate a complex topic—behavioral economics—to a lay audience in a way that’s both accessible and enjoyable. His book Misbehaving offers a fascinating historical account of behavioral economics, a field he played a major role in developing. But it was a casual comment that Thaler made toward the end of the interview that really caught my attention. Podcast host Meb Faber asked him for some best practices for teaching personal finance to high school students. Thaler suggested replacing subjects like trigonometry—with near zero practical value—with more useful ones, such as teaching students how to use a spreadsheet. Use a spreadsheet. It suddenly dawned on me just how heavily I’ve relied on spreadsheets throughout my life, particularly when it comes to personal finance. So many financial questions are ripe for analysis through the use of spreadsheets. The following is a list of nine problems for which I’ve depended on them. Some of the resulting spreadsheets were relatively simple, while others devilishly complex. Creating a budget. Seeing how different savings rates would lead to differing levels of wealth accumulation. Estimating my cumulative savings by refinancing or prepaying a mortgage. (This was before online mortgage calculators became ubiquitous.) Determining whether and how much to contribute to my employer’s cash balance plan—a type of defined benefit pension plan. This was a truly complex problem given the myriad factors involved. Helping to choose between health insurance plans, including some that were compatible with health savings accounts and others that weren’t. Setting buying thresholds in 2020’s bear market based on a “worst-case scenario” analysis, as detailed in an article early last year. Analyzing and rebalancing my investment portfolio. Creating a savings rate calculator for a talk I gave on financial independence. The primary input was “years to financial independence”—there were, of course, other inputs as well—and the output was the “required savings rate.” Calculating the yield to maturity on bonds. Looking for help creating a spreadsheet? Microsoft offers a slew of Excel templates that are available for download. Many of my HumbleDollar articles—and the financial analyses that underlay them—would never have seen the light of day if it weren’t for spreadsheets. Of the 24 articles and blog posts that I’ve written so far, a full quarter of them relied on spreadsheets in some manner. In particular, this article, this one and this one were essentially spreadsheets disguised as prose. These articles also happen to be among my favorites. How often have I used trigonometry in my finances? Meet the null set.
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Save for Tomorrow

SOCIAL SECURITY benefits are fairly modest—the average retiree receives $1,555 per month or $18,660 a year—but they’re a vital source of retirement income for countless retirees. Today’s burning question: How can we shore up the program’s finances? It’s estimated that Social Security provides some 30% of the income for the elderly and that nearly nine out of 10 people age 65 and older receive benefits. Social Security is even more important for women, 42% of whom rely on it for half or more of their income. Unfortunately, the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund, from which Social Security benefits are paid, faces imminent shortfalls. The fund’s reserves are projected to be depleted by 2033, at which time continuing tax revenue will be sufficient to pay just 76% of promised benefits. There are no easy solutions. Both higher payroll taxes and lower benefits may be necessary. But how about some out-of-the-box thinking? Meet my suggested solution: the Save for Tomorrow program. The program would cost the federal government very little in the short run but save it vast sums in the long run. It involves the creation of a novel, completely optional retirement account. Here’s the basic framework: Parents, grandparents or legal guardians could opt to open and fund a Save for Tomorrow account for their children or grandchildren. The account would be triple tax-advantaged—contributions would be tax-deductible, funds in the account would grow tax-deferred and future withdrawals would be tax-free. Contributions would be subject to a lifetime limit for each child—say, five times the annual IRA contribution limit. For a child born today, that would mean contributions would be limited to $30,000, equal to five times today’s regular $6,000 IRA limit. Contributions could begin at birth. The contribution window would close once the child reaches age 10. Between ages 65 and 70—and no sooner—the beneficiary could claim her benefits. At that point, the funds in the account would be annuitized, with inflation adjustments, just as Social Security payments are. The beneficiary would then receive the higher of the annuitized income stream from her Save for Tomorrow account or the standard Social Security benefit. If the Social Security benefit is higher, the funds in the Save for Tomorrow account would be turned over to the OASI Trust Fund. Save for Tomorrow accounts would be overseen by salaried professionals and would reside inside the highly regarded federal Thrift Savings Plan. Given the super long time horizon—anywhere from 55 to 70 years—the funds would be aggressively invested, with nearly 100% in stocks. Upon a beneficiary’s death, any unused funds in the Save for Tomorrow account would be turned over to the OASI Trust Fund. Let’s run some numbers to see how this new program might work. I’ll assume the Save for Tomorrow account earns a 7% real return over its lifetime. For simplicity’s sake, I’ll also assume the account is funded by a lump sum contribution at birth. Finally, I’ll use the 4% rule to annuitize the account balance at ages 65 and 70. You can see the results in the accompanying table. Some observations: Contributing $6,000 at birth (scenario No. 1) generates an annual payout of $19,505 at age 65. This is higher than the average Social Security benefit of $18,660 that I referenced earlier. By waiting until age 70, the payout increases to $27,357 a year. For comparison purposes, the maximum Social Security benefits are listed in the table. Obviously, many retirees will receive far less than these numbers. Contributing $12,000 at birth leads to annual payouts of $39,011 and $54,715 at ages 65 and 70, respectively. Both of these top the current maximum Social Security benefits. The annual payouts are in real, inflation-adjusted dollars since I’m using a 7% real return for the calculations. Remember that the Save for Tomorrow payouts are tax-free, meaning they’re significantly more generous than those from Social Security, which are potentially taxed. The upshot: Even if the two benefits were equal in dollar terms, the Save for Tomorrow benefit would win out once taxes are factored in. The contributions are entirely funded by the private sector and are completely voluntary. While the new accounts would cost taxpayers very little—there would be a small loss in tax revenue due to the tax-advantaged nature of the accounts—the Save for Tomorrow program would save the Social Security program a bundle over the long run. How so? If someone died at age 64 with $1 million in his Save for Tomorrow account, that money would go to the OASI Trust Fund. In addition, anyone receiving the higher Save for Tomorrow payout isn’t drawing a cent from Social Security. If the Social Security benefit is higher than the Save for Tomorrow benefit, the latter dollars are returned to the OASI Trust Fund. Finally, any money left over upon the death of a beneficiary goes into the OASI Trust Fund. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] The biggest criticism of the Save for Tomorrow program would be that it primarily benefits the rich and their progeny. While this may be true, I could envision significant numbers of middle-class grandparents funding these accounts for their grandchildren. More important, the Save for Tomorrow program is a win-win for everyone. While beneficiaries would certainly benefit from the generosity and foresight of their parents and grandparents, so would everyone else. Every dollar contributed to the program would mean more money for the OASI Trust Fund, which would shore up the Social Security program. As I see it, the Save for Tomorrow program draws on many strengths, both financial and behavioral: The program maximizes compounding’s enormous power. Allowing money to compound uninterrupted for up to seven decades can achieve wonderful things. At a 7% real growth rate, $1 turns into $114 in 70 years. In the extreme case, $30,000 contributed at birth could swell to $3.4 million by age 70, providing $137,000 of annual income for life—or millions of dollars for the OASI Trust Fund should the beneficiary not receive the benefits for whatever reason. While it may seem unfair that a parent or grandparent could ease their progeny’s retirement in such a manner, consider that much of that money might eventually benefit society, should sizable funds remain when the beneficiary dies. The long time horizon enables taking much greater risk and achieving commensurately greater returns. A 100% stock portfolio is exceedingly risky over short and even intermediate time frames, but over six to seven decades, not so much. A globally diversified 100% stock portfolio may actually be less risky than cash or bonds over such time horizons, once inflation is taken into account. The program would reduce behavioral risk. The tectonic shift from company-sponsored pensions to individual 401(k) accounts failed to factor in the human element. We are humans, not “econs,” as Nobel Prize winner Richard Thaler says. Many of us simply don’t possess the knowledge, self-control or temperament to successfully save and invest for retirement—not to mention the even thornier task of drawing down assets in retirement. One of the great benefits of the Save for Tomorrow program would be that both tasks would be professionally managed, removing this burden from individuals ill-equipped to perform them. Will members of Congress read HumbleDollar and act on my suggestions? Probably not. I’m a realist. But perhaps farsighted families could find a way to build the notion of extreme compounding into their generational planning. John Lim is a physician and author of "How to Raise Your Child's Financial IQ," which is available as both a free PDF and a Kindle edition. Follow John on Twitter @JohnTLim and check out his earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Tale of the Tape

MY PORTFOLIO GAINED some 4% in 2021. While I certainly didn’t expect to match the S&P 500’s impressive 28.6% performance, I was surprised at how low my return actually was. This surprise is a lesson unto itself: We often overestimate our own performance. There’s a number of reasons for my portfolio’s middling returns. First, I began 2021 with my stock allocation at around 40%. Bonds, cash, and gold and gold mining companies rounded out the rest of my portfolio. These other asset classes had poor returns last year, including -1.9% for bonds to -4.2% for gold. On top of that, I have an unusually low allocation to U.S. stocks, which had a banner year in 2021. My stock allocation tilts strongly international, with an outsized allocation to emerging markets stocks. Emerging markets woefully underperformed last year, as this chart illustrates. In fact, had it not been for the two individual stocks I own, my portfolio’s performance would have been even worse. Wells Fargo (symbol: WFC) and TotalEnergies (TTE) had a great 2021. Still, there are five reasons I don’t fret about underperforming the S&P 500 in 2021 and why you shouldn’t, either: 1. The S&P 500 is not my benchmark (not even close). Unless you’re 100% invested in U.S. large-cap stocks, the S&P 500 is, at best, an arbitrary benchmark and, at worst, irrelevant. If you feel compelled to measure your relative performance—certainly not an imperative, as I discuss below—what's a more relevant benchmark? I used my end-of-year asset allocation to create a blended benchmark, using exchange-traded funds to measure asset class performance for 2021. The results are summarized below: The 2021 return of this portfolio was 6.1%, two percentage points higher than my 4% gain. As my asset allocation varied over the course of 2021—with progressively more in stocks—the benchmark I created is imperfect. Nonetheless, it’s a reasonable starting point. The verdict: My portfolio clearly underperformed its benchmark in 2021. 2. Last year enabled me to invest more at lower prices. I added significantly to my stock allocation in 2021, particularly emerging markets. As those stocks fell in price, I happily bought more. This is the one corner of the global stock market that’s truly cheap, with a cyclically adjusted price-earnings (CAPE) ratio that’s less than half that of the U.S. But as 2021 clearly demonstrates, a low CAPE ratio shouldn’t be the basis for a market-timing strategy, at least in the short term. Which brings me to my next point…. 3. The short run makes headlines, but it's the long run that matters. In this frenetic age of instantaneous market quotes, it’s easy to forget that one-year performance still constitutes the short run. If you’re a decade or more from retirement, as I am, annual returns are largely meaningless. What really matters is your compounded returns over multiple decades. While I have no idea what’s in store for markets in 2022 or 2023, I’m confident that my portfolio will perform well over the long run, by which I mean a decade or longer. Paradoxically, investment returns over the long run are far easier to predict, yet nearly everyone is obsessed with the short run. A decade from now, you’ll more than likely be reading articles like this one. 4. Investing is neither a competition nor a beauty contest. We live in a hypercompetitive, comparison-obsessed age. This mentality is further inflamed by social media. But personal finance and investing are not competitive sports. My financial goals are different from yours, and yours are different from your neighbor's. A friend of mine has just 10% of his portfolio in stocks. In financial parlance, he has a very high degree of loss aversion—he really dislikes losing money. But that’s the right asset allocation for him. As I’ve aged, my risk tolerance has also fallen. The idea of holding a 100% stock portfolio—which I did for many years—would today make my stomach churn. Having about two-thirds of my money in stocks feels about right. As a result, when it comes to investment returns, I’ll never “knock it out of the park.” On the other hand, I’m confident that my portfolio will enable me to reach my financial goals without losing sleep. 5. The calendar year is an arbitrary point of reference. Market returns are lumpy. Case in point: If you measure my portfolio’s return from Jan. 14, 2021 to Jan. 14, 2022, it comes in around 8.5%. Yes, the first 10 trading days of 2022 have been very good for my portfolio. I don’t give much credence to short-term performance, let alone to two weeks of outsized gains. My point is that markets are unpredictable in the short run—and that investors pay far too much attention to annual returns.
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