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What’s your biggest financial regret?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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What’s the wisest financial advice you’ve ever been given?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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How much allowance should children receive?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Should affluent parents insist their children pay a portion of college costs?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Are top private colleges worth the cost?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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What do you do that’s financially foolish—but you do it anyway?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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What are your favorite charities?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Is it okay to retire with debt?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Are annuities ever worth buying—and, if so, which type?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Can the market be beaten?

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 12, 2021

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Go Figure

John Goodell  |  Apr 12, 2021

A LOT OF INVESTMENT math focuses on how money grows over time. But as an attorney who’s worked with many clients hoping to retire in comfort, I find myself thinking more about risk—and how the math can work against us. Consider five sets of numbers:
Inflation’s toll: 0.98
Got cash? If you multiply that sum by 0.98, you’ll see your money’s purchasing power a year from now. This assumes 2% inflation, which is the Federal Reserve’s stated target.

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It’s All in the Mix

Adam M. Grossman  |  Apr 11, 2021

IS THE STOCK MARKET too high? It’s a question I’ve heard a lot recently. Each time, I’ve offered this recommendation: It’s impossible to predict where the market will go next, so your best defense is to have an appropriate asset allocation. But how exactly can you determine an ideal allocation?
The textbook method originated in the 1950s, with the work of a PhD student named Harry Markowitz. Up until that point, investors had mostly picked stocks and bonds in a vacuum,

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Feel Better

Jonathan Clements  |  Apr 10, 2021

WARREN BUFFETT doesn’t have the best investment record over the past three decades. That accolade apparently belongs to Jim Simons. Buffett also isn’t the world’s richest person. In fact, he hasn’t held that title for the past dozen years and currently ranks No. 6, with barely half the wealth of today’s richest person, Jeff Bezos.
I doubt Buffett feels bad about this. Is your surname neither Simons nor Bezos? I don’t think you should feel bad,

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A Firm Foundation

Kristine Hayes  |  Apr 9, 2021

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

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Who Are You?

Mike Drak  |  Apr 8, 2021

THE PRODUCERS of retirement commercials would like us to believe that all retirees are the same. They aren’t. To be happy in retirement, we need a good handle on what our needs are—financially and otherwise—and then find ways to satisfy them each and every day.
That might sound difficult, but it isn’t. To help get you started, here are the three general types of retiree I discovered during my research on retirement:
1.

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