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Quinn relents. Apparently you can live on 66% of pre-retirement income.

R Quinn  |  Jul 13, 2024

Yesterday I read a recent blog post on a retirement planning site. The headline read “ Can You Live Happily in Retirement With Just 66% of Your Work Income? (Yes! Most Do)“
As you can image, that caught my eye. I went to the source of the survey at T Rowe Price. Here is what the survey said in part. 
“Living on less: Nearly three years into retirement, retirees report living on 66% of their pre-retirement income on average.

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Hurricane Beryl aftermath

Michael1  |  Jul 13, 2024

Last week as Hurricane Beryl approached our Texas storage unit, the company notified us that the office would be closed until further notice, a sensible precaution to let staff stay home to ride out the storm.
Beryl came through on July 8. The office is still closed, with apparently no one working from home. The area has also been without power since the storm, which means that our climate controlled unit is, well – not. 
So,

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The Risks We Miss

Jonathan Clements  |  Jul 13, 2024

TODAY’S FINANCIAL lesson: We can manage risk—but terrible stuff can still happen. This thought, of course, was prompted by my recent cancer diagnosis. But the notion is also all too relevant to money management.
But let’s start with health matters. In 1995, I began training for my first marathon, which I ran in May 1996 in Pittsburgh and finished in just under three hours. Ever since, I’ve been a bit of an exercise nut.

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Vanguard Small-Cap: What’s in a Name?

steve abramowitz  |  Jul 12, 2024

In two previous posts (“The Morningstar Experience” and “Your Morningstar Freebee”), we looked at how readers considering investment in a Vanguard fund can consult the helpful information in Morningstar’s esteemed advisory service. We demonstrated how they might consult this resource to monitor their investments and evaluate their performance. Today, we’ll illustrate how to decide whether the holdings of the fund meet the reader’s objective. Once again, the fund examined is Vanguard’s Small-Cap ETF (symbol VB, or VSMAX for the mutual fund alternative).

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Were we better off?

R Quinn  |  Jul 12, 2024

In 1975 the Social Security COLA was 8%, in 1979 9.9%, 1980 14.3% and 1981 11.2% reflecting soaring inflation. I project 2025 will be 2.3% or less if inflation keeps falling. 
During the oil embargo in 1974 gasoline jumped 35% a gallon in one year to $0.53 a gallon equivalent $3.36 in 2024 – if you could get gas then. As of July 8 the average US price a gallon was $3.608 with significant variations by state and individual station –

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Social Security Alert?

Edmund Marsh  |  Jul 12, 2024

My mother received an email today from “Social Security Administration”  warning of “Important Changes to Access Your Social Security Account!”
It states that “soon you will no longer be able to sign into your online Social Security account using your username and password.” It goes on to say in the future, only a Login.gov or ID.me.account, and ends with a big button that says “Sign In to Your Account.”
I suspect this is bogus. Has anyone else received a similar email?

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Scroll Down

Jonathan Clements  |  Jul 12, 2024

What happened to HumbleDollar’s articles? They’re still here, just farther down the homepage. As I prep the site for a future without me, I’m shifting the focus away from new articles and to the Forum, where writers and readers can post their thoughts directly to the site without my involvement. That said, I monitor all Forum posts—as well as other comments on the site—to make sure nothing untoward ends up on HumbleDollar.

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Artificially Intelligent

Ken Cutler  |  Jul 12, 2024

Jonathan’s series of AI generated financial articles was not the most popular with many HD readers. Others of us found the experiment quite interesting. Although there were a few major duds in the series, there also were computer generated articles that could have easily passed undetected on Yahoo Finance. This year, I’ve started using AI to assist me in my encore career as an engineer in the nuclear power industry. I’ve been pleasantly surprised at how helpful my AI assistant can be at times.

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Humble Bragging

Jonathan Clements  |  Jul 12, 2024

On other financial sites, you’ll find folks bragging about the hot stocks they own and the prescient market calls they made. But here at HumbleDollar, we favor a different sort of boasting.
Instead of trumpeting their market savvy, HumbleDollar writers and commenters are often looking to signal their financial prudence. How do they do that? Here are eight of my favorite HumbleDollar boasts:

How quickly folks paid off their mortgage.

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Retirement Rehearsal

Edmund Marsh  |  Jul 11, 2024

As I finish this article, I’m sitting in an Airbnb in an older community undergoing a renaissance, nestled between a small mountain and my family’s favorite little city. Atop the mountain, my daughter is attending a three-day “get acquainted” gathering at the college perched there, while my wife and I hang out and practice being a couple again.
Across the room, my wife is catching up on her reading. Freedom from home or family duties feels like a vacation to her,

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A challenge from RDQ. How do you define living comfortably in retirement, and is it enough?

R Quinn  |  Jul 11, 2024

Time and again I hear that a retired couple lives “comfortably.” I often wonder what that means. Of course it is quite relative not unlike defining living paycheck to paycheck. 
My AI companion came up with this simple definition. 
“Living comfortably means financial security to cover essentials without stress, and a lifestyle you enjoy. It’s not about excess, but having what you need and freedom to do what matters to you.”
That leaves the relative definition of “need.” 

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Clumsy With People

Edmund Marsh  |  Jul 11, 2024

SOME PEOPLE ARE BORN clumsy. Tools never seem to fit their hands. Their hammer finds a thumb more often than a nail. For them, running looks and feels like an ungainly, uphill battle—even on level ground.
I don’t claim to be physically gifted. But my clumsiness shows up in a different way. I have a notable social deficiency: I’m naturally clumsy with people. Why is this important? It defined the first quarter-century of my life,

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Your Morningstar Freebee: Looking Beyond the Stars

steve abramowitz  |  Jul 10, 2024

Morningstar, that indispensable fund advisory service, has a freebee, but it’s missed by many folks who could benefit mightily from its wisdom and data. True, to monitor your holdings via the invaluable Portfolio Manager, you’ll have to pony up the $249 admission price. But many investors are unaware they can pull up comprehensive analyses—both quantitative and qualitative—of their individual mutual funds and ETFs without a subscription.
Why would Morningstar allow you to squeeze in without paying for its coveted fund reviews?

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Checking the Score

Steve Abramowitz  |  Jul 10, 2024

I’M DUMB MONEY, as are all so-called recreational gamblers. That’s why, during the recent basketball playoffs, we sports spectators were bombarded with wildly seductive commercials glamorizing sports betting.
Fortunately, I learned my limits early on. My last notable gamble ended badly more than four decades ago, when some IBM options I bought expired worthless.
But I’ve also come to appreciate that not all individual gamblers are dumb money. I’ve lately been serving as the sounding board for my 36-year-old son Ryan,

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The Morningstar Experience Part II: Does Your Portfolio Need an X-Ray?

steve abramowitz  |  Jul 9, 2024

In yesterday’s post, “Navigate Your Portfolio in Morningstar in 20 Minutes,” we introduced the highly respected advisory service and walked through how to enter your funds into its Portfolio Manager platform.  We put special emphasis on Morningstar’s hallmark 5-Star Ratings, enumerating some of the system’s strengths and weaknesses. You have access to the Stars without a subscription by simply searching for your fund, but other information on Portfolio Manager and the invaluable X-Ray tool we will navigate today does require one ($249 annually).

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