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When relocation in retirement is not an option, not what you really want. By Dick Quinn

R Quinn  |  Jun 8, 2025

We live in a small town in NJ, population 6,600. The median household income is $203,000, the median home value is $1,358,400 and the median property tax is $29,600. I feel like we live in a bubble and given these numbers are much higher than our state averages, which are third highest in the Country, I guess we do.
Between property taxes and HOA fees the minimum annual cost to live in our condo is $24,900.

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Talking Trillions

Jonathan Clements  |  Jun 8, 2025

Focus on the causes, not the symptoms.
There’s been a heap of handwringing this year over both federal government borrowing and possible cuts in Social Security benefits, and the current budget bill before Congress is only exacerbating those fears. But I worry folks are focusing on the wrong things.
As Adam Grossman noted recently, the federal government collects $5 trillion in revenue each year and spends $7 trillion. Why? You might point the finger at Medicare,

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You Never Know

Adam M. Grossman  |  Jun 7, 2025

LAST WEEK, I MENTIONED the 17th century Dutch tulip bubble. There’s a lot we can learn from history. Current events, however, can teach us just as much. Below are three valuable lessons I see in today’s market.
Myopia. Open any finance textbook, and you’ll find that most of its ideas are built on the notion of “present value.” This simply means an investment should be worth the sum of its future cash flows.

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No TIME Left For You

Michael Flack  |  Jun 6, 2025

On my way to better things
(No time left for you) I found myself some wings
(No time left for you) Distant roads are callin’ me
(No time left for you)
– The Guess Who
It had been a while since I had been mailed the opportunity to “get guaranteed income that you can’t outlive,” “preserve your capital,” and most importantly “enjoy a complimentary dinner.” I was concerned that there might have been some sort of cosmic shift away from financial planners who charge 1% of assets or even worse that my name had fallen off the free steak mailing list.

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Do You Worry About Money Every Day?

R Quinn  |  Jun 6, 2025

An article in Employee Benefits News paints a dim picture of retirement. One that may reflect the real world beyond the HumbleDollar community.
Here again we are relying on a survey so who knows how accurate, but I bet worrying and anxiety over money in retirement is not uncommon. Can you imagine retiring with no clue about the viability of your finances?
It says retirees are struggling to make their savings stretch.
According to Schroder’s 2025 U.S.

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Quinn Explores the Question: Are Doctors Overpaid?

R Quinn  |  Jun 5, 2025

Are doctors overpaid?
That’s a tricky question for several reasons. Getting good data is hard and mostly based on surveys, there are variations across the country and among specialists plus few doctors work a 40 hour week. 
If you are a patient and your doctor provides life saving care, I suspect what they earn doesn’t matter, it wouldn’t to me. In any case, chances are you aren’t paying the bill yourself. 
After looking at the data from several sources,

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Gimme a Reason

Jonathan Clements  |  Jun 5, 2025

When we deploy our hard-earned dollars, we all have our financial reasons. But are we focusing on the right thing? Consider four examples:
Homes. When folks buy a home, they’ll often dwell on the potential price appreciation, the tax benefits and the advantages over renting. But I’d contend there are two reasons that are even more compelling: Buying a home locks in our housing costs and, with every monthly mortgage payment, forces us to save.

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When the Spreadsheet Gets Real

Mark Gardner  |  Jun 4, 2025

I’m 58 and my wife is 56. We’ve been planning our retirement with care and intention for years—no debt, solid retirement savings, a well-diversified portfolio, and a liability-matching plan (LMP) that covers us until Medicare kicks in. We’ve talked through our priorities, run the numbers, and built our plan together. The core approach to our plan was heavily influenced by Bill Bernstein and Wade Pfau’s writing and we are content with a good funded ratio.
One thing we agreed on early: when one of us loses or leaves work,

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Jonathan Is Everywhere on the Internet

David Lancaster  |  Jun 4, 2025

Another great link from Mike Piper’s Oblivious Investor newsletter is this interview on the Bogleheads Podcast:
https://bogleheads.podbean.com/e/episode-82-jonathan-clements-jason-zweig-and-christine-benz-are-special-guests-on-this-podcast-host-rick-ferri/

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“Most Revealing Question in Personal Finance”

David Lancaster  |  Jun 4, 2025

I receive Mike Piper’s Oblivious Investor newsletter. Today I saw the above interesting title of an article he linked to
https://www.advisorperspectives.com/articles/2025/05/19/revealing-question-personal-investing-how-warren-buffett-helps-answer
The question was: What is the lowest risk-free, after-tax, after-inflation rate of return you would accept in order to forgo all other investment opportunities for the rest of your life?1
Although the article itself was waaaay too technical for my pion mind, my knee jerk answer was 2%. I’m not greedy.

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Who Will Care for Us?

Dennis Friedman  |  Jun 4, 2025

At age 74, I like to think our retirement is pretty much set in stone. Most of the big health and financial decisions—Medicare, Social Security, Roth conversions—have already been made. But there’s one concern I’ve been thinking about a lot lately: how will Rachel and I get the help we need if we can no longer take care of ourselves?
Our family is spread out across the country, and we have no plans to move closer to them.

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What About Gold?

R Quinn  |  Jun 3, 2025

I know nothing about buying gold or in any way holding it in a portfolio. TV is full of ads to buy gold coins. If you buy them, how do you sell them and to who?
Anyone have any words of wisdom about buying gold in any form?
Is gold a viable investment for most people?

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What’s the Best Way to Measure Investment Performance?

Fred Miller  |  Jun 3, 2025

In tracking how your investments are doing, there are several ways to measure performance, but they don’t all tell the same story:

Simple Average Return
CAGR (Compound Annual Growth Rate)
TWR (Time-Weighted Return)
IRR (Internal Rate of Return / Dollar-Weighted Return)

Each method offers something different depending on the context, lump sum vs. ongoing contributions, investor vs. fund manager perspective, etc.
1. Which return metric do you personally rely on most and why (IRR, CAGR, etc.)?

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May 2025 Moving Averages

Norman Retzke  |  Jun 3, 2025

As a calming influence, here’s the latest about moving averages. The S&P 500 closed May with a monthly gain of 6.2%, the largest since November 2023.   However, Morningstar published an article today “Has the Stock Market Reached Peak Optimism on Tariffs? – Strategists say equities have already priced in the good news on tariffs as the trade war grinds on.” I’ll periodically post if I become aware of changes of merit. [Currently posting an update via comments at the end of the month].

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Full Circle

Ken Cutler  |  Jun 2, 2025

My first encounter with Jonathan was at an annual client appreciation event in Hershey, PA hosted by my in-laws’ financial advisor, Tim Decker. My wife Lisa and I attended as guests of her parents. The snacks served were nothing special, but the evening was still very worthwhile. Tim gave an “state of the union” update for his many clients in attendance and then turned the microphone over to Jonathan for the keynote presentation.
I can’t recall any details from Jonathan’s talk that night a decade ago but I remember finding it quite interesting.

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