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Ignore That Gut

Article by James Kerr  |  Apr 28, 2022

WITH THE MARKETS in a tizzy this year due to roaring inflation and the war in Ukraine, I’ve been kicking myself for not listening to my gut. At issue: an investment decision I made last fall.
When I left the corporate world in September, I took with me the 401(k) balance I’d built up over my five years with my former employer. I’d been aggressive with my investment choices in that 401(k), stashing half the account in Vanguard Small-Cap Growth Index Fund (symbol: VSGAX) and half in Vanguard Mid-Cap Index Fund (VIMAX).

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Look Before Leaping

Article by James Kerr  |  Apr 27, 2022

WELL, I’M SIX MONTHS into my retirement from the corporate world. How are things going? Any regrets? Any big surprises?
No regrets, for sure. I knew that leaving the workplace at age 61 would be a tradeoff of freedom gained versus money forgone. But I had a second-act dream to pursue—becoming an author—and, for me, that tradeoff was worth going for. So far, it has been. I have my first book out and another in the works.

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Only an Eight

Article by James Kerr  |  Mar 11, 2022

WHEN I STOPPED AT CVS the other day to pick up a new charging cable for my iPhone, I was reminded just how woefully out of fashion I am.
The young lady behind the counter handed me a box from the rack and watched as I took the cable out to make sure it was the right one. I guessed her to be in her early 20s. She was wearing a pair of those huge loopy earrings that you could jump hoops through out in the parking lot.

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Listen to the Kids

Article by James Kerr  |  Jan 7, 2022

ONE OF THE GREAT pleasures of having grown children is seeing them do things better than you ever did.
My son, who’s in his mid-20s, is already well beyond me in terms of investments. When I was his age, I was still bouncing around in grad school, living off teaching stipends and dreaming of one day being a novelist. I had no concept of what a mutual fund was, how to trade stocks and bonds,

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Fit to Retire

Article by James Kerr  |  Dec 2, 2021

I WAS RECENTLY talking with a younger acquaintance about my decision to leave the workforce early. I’d left a demanding career to pursue my personal passions, while I was still young and healthy enough to do so.
My acquaintance is in his early 30s. He’s single and makes a boatload of money working in IT for a pharma company. He’s also a big proponent of the FIRE (financial independence-retire early) movement. He takes part in Reddit boards and reads every investment article he can get his hands on.

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Fees Are Your Foe

Article by Charles D. Ellis  |  Nov 20, 2021

THE COSTS WE PAY for active investment management are important—far more important than most investors seem to realize, particularly when the stock market is going up and up.
Start with an interesting reality: Nobody ever actually pays such fees by writing a check. Graciously, money managers take care of that, deducting their fees from the assets they manage for us. Out of sight, out of mind. But wait: Perhaps, instead of being grateful, we should be careful to understand what’s going on.

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Challenging Myself

Article by James Kerr  |  Nov 17, 2021

I JUST TURNED 62. That’s the milestone age when so much of the magic—and the decision-making—of retirement begins to happen.
For the record, although I recently left the workforce early to pursue a long-simmering passion for writing, I won’t be starting Social Security payments early. Nor—unless something changes health-wise—do I intend to begin distributions from my IRAs any time soon. Before I go down those two routes, I plan to live off my taxable-account savings and minimal dividend income for as long as I can.

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Reclaiming My Life

Article by James Kerr  |  Sep 7, 2021

A STRANGE THING is happening in corporate America right now.
The job market is booming, and companies are offering bonuses and salary increases to find and keep good people. Yet experienced workers are leaving their jobs in droves. The Labor Department reported that a record number of Americans have recently quit their jobs, part of what pundits are calling “the Great Resignation.”
I’m one of them. After 30 years leading global communications and public relations programs for multi-billion-dollar technology companies,

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Money Guide

The Jonathan Clements Money Guide 2016, updated through Dec. 31, 2015, is now available. The paperback is listed at $17.99 (though Amazon often sells it at a discount) and the Kindle and Nook editions cost $9.99. If you enjoy the book, please post a review to Amazon.

Here’s what you’ll find in 2016’s Money Guide:

How to build your own financial plan in 18 easy steps
My story: How I tackled crucial money issues
What the 2015 Budget Act means for claiming Social Security
Dos and don’ts for 2016
Great debates: A look at seven of the fiercest financial arguments
Fascinating statistics on how Americans are faring financially
Tax information for 2015 and 2016
Up-to-date facts and figures on the economy and markets

The Money Guide was named the Institute for Financial Literacy’s money-management book of the year and won a silver medal in the Axiom Business Book Awards.

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