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Financial progress: When we can afford almost everything we wanted when we were younger—but we no longer want it all that much.

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HumbleDollar’s HumbleDrivers

"I don't know what it's like in a gas-only car, but my Camry hybrid has been doing start-stop for nineteen years now, and I think it's great. Can't say I really even notice these days."
- mytimetotravel
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Retiring before age 65? COBRA vs ACA plan- important decision

"This is some good advice for some of our HD friends who are contemplating early retirement. We were in this situation when Spouse retired 2.5 years ago. I was old enough for Medicare and went on that. I researched what to do for Spouse and decided COBRA. Our old health insurance plan was generous and the cost was about the same as ACA that was less generous. Also, we only had 6 mos until Spouse would go on Medicare. So I am glad my thoughts on what to do incorporated some of the points you mentioned. Chris"
- baldscreen
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Benefits Young Adults Should Look at Before Taking a Job

"My union's leadership always recognized the value of benefits. It was the rank and file whose demands were always money, money, money."
- Dan Smith
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Slow on the Draw

RETIREMENT IS LIFE’S most expensive purchase. During our working years, we deprive our present selves of immediate pleasure by refusing to spend money for nicer cars, a bigger house or a vacation to boast about. Instead, we squirrel away those saved dollars with an eye toward keeping the future us fed, clothed and living indoors.  At age 64, after decades of choosing to save and invest a large chunk of each paycheck, rather than spend it, I’ve bought a choice: Fully retire to fully embrace life after work, or carry on in a career that still adds purpose to my life. I’ve chosen to stay, but I’ve whittled down my work hours too far to handle all of my family’s spending needs. Thus, I’m faced with reaching into savings for the first time. More about that later. But first, where is our money, and why? Taking advantage. The bulk of our retirement savings is invested in tax-advantaged accounts. Until we reached our mid-30s, neither my wife nor I had invested a dime in the stock market. Since that time, however, we’ve stuffed dollars from every paycheck into our workplace savings accounts. Initially, these contributions went into traditional accounts, but we switched to the Roth option when it became available. We also topped-off Roth IRAs every year, and stashed a smaller amount in a taxable brokerage account. A little less than half of our total investments reside in future-tax-free Roth accounts. Most of the balance is tax-deferred, traditional money, which is subject to ordinary income tax rates the year it’s withdrawn. The distinction between how these two types of accounts are taxed influences where we position assets between those accounts. Accordingly, we’ve looked at two scenarios that may raise our future tax rates: One begins in a little more than a decade, when required minimum distributions (RMDs) from my traditional retirement accounts begin at age 75, followed by my wife’s RMDs a few years later, plus my Social Security, begun at age 70. The other is triggered when the first of us dies and the surviving spouse moves into the single filer tax bracket.  Because we still owe ordinary income tax on the savings in our traditional accounts, we’re making Roth conversions and taking the tax hit now, at a known rate. We’re also seeking to curb the growth of our traditional accounts by keeping all our bonds there. By contrast, our Roth accounts, on which we should never owe future tax, are invested 100% in the stocks we expect to grow over time. Picking winners. In the beginning, my wife and I entertained thoughts of alternatives to stocks, such as real estate. Soon, however, we decided that maximizing market participation was our wisest wealth-building tactic. As our knowledge of finance grew, we further refined our focus by choosing broad-based, low-cost index funds over other options, for good reason: They out-perform actively-managed funds. I don’t doubt the intelligence of active fund managers. On the contrary, I suspect they carry bigger brains than me, and know they command more resources to sniff-out future winning stocks. But they swim in a tank with fish just as big, and it's tough to get a fin up on the competition. The result: Each year, index funds finish strokes ahead of their active cousins. For the same reason, we’ve shied away from individual stocks. Have we lost out? I’d argue we profited. Simple diversity. Moving into retirement, my ideal portfolio is heavily influenced by decades of working closely with older patients in my physical therapy practice. I’ve followed a number of folks as they age from their vibrant, active 60s through the years of physical deterioration. Along the way, I’ve observed the cognitive decline that affects most of us as we age. I don’t count on escaping a similar fate.  Hence, rather than covering every corner of the stock market with a complicated collection of index funds, my wife and I have been shifting toward a two- or three-fund portfolio, to achieve the same result. We aim to hold shares in virtually every public company across the globe, housed in two funds, plus one bond fund. Our choice for U.S. stocks is Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (symbol: VTSAX). For foreign stocks, we like Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund (VTIAX).  Tending to just two stock funds cuts complexity, especially decisions like when to rebalance and how to go about it. Aside from the biases that affect most of us, there’s that issue of our aging brains, again. Why fret about realigning our investments when just keeping track of medical appointments has become a challenge? To further simplify our lives, at a bit more expense, we could let Vanguard Group, Inc. do all the work with their Vanguard Total World Stock Index Fund (VTWAX).. Picking our peril. Our nest egg is weighted a little heavily toward stocks, which means its sum will rise and fall with the market. That can be unnerving, but it’s the price we'll pay for the extra risk that gives us a shot at outpacing inflation.  Without the long-term growth provided by stocks, our buying power might not keep pace with our expected long lives. That strategy is fine when the market is riding high, but where do we go for spending money when stocks are in a slump? Selling depressed stocks in a pinch to raise cash is hazardous to our wealth. For that reason, the balance of our savings is in mostly short-term government bonds and cash, enough of a cushion to cover several years of expenses until the market regains its footing. To be sure, that money is mostly idle, but it's ready when needed. When I finally clock my last-day-forever in the clinic, we might buy an income annuity to replace earned income with insured money to add to my wife’s modest Social Security check, which she expects to start collecting in a little over a year.  This combination of regular monthly paychecks would provide a floor of income to keep the household going, and bolster our courage to boot, when the market hits the skids. Drawing it down. Meanwhile, we’ve yet to settle on a plan to siphon off savings to pay the bills not covered by my part-time income. At the moment, there’s little pressure to find the perfect formula. For starters, we’re not calculating the highest withdrawal rate our investments will bear to bankroll a spending spree. Also, part of our retirement preparation included holding steady to a frugal lifestyle and eliminating debt. Our low expenses give us breathing space to decide how to replenish our cash account. Why the dithering? It turns out nailing down a withdrawal plan is my toughest financial decision to date. But it’s not the math that has me stymied. Rather, it’s the emotion. Yes, I believe the research, and I’ve run analyses that assure me our money will probably outlive us.  Still, thinking of pushing start makes me queasy, so we’re sliding into the task. Instead of a rate, we’ve chosen the dollar amount that sustains our current lifestyle over the coming year. It falls short of the figure we expect to reach once we’ve limbered up our spending legs, but one allows us to work up to a rate that doesn’t outpace my level of comfort. Ed is a semi-retired physical therapist who lives and works in a small community near Atlanta. When he's not spending time with his church, family or friends, you may find him tending his garden and wondering if he will ever fully retire. Check out Ed’s earlier articles.  
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The Mirrored Funnel

"My original plan was to sell the business, take 18 months off and maybe pick up some low-key, stress-free work — but that idea didn't last long once I realised how much I loved having complete control of my own time. Enjoy your vacation! I'm on the Orihuela Costa in Spain at the moment… just back from two hours of padel in 90-degree heat!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Direct Indexing Anyone?

"After reading a few of the comments, I would like to clarify that direct indexing, or separately managed accounts do not create any extra paperwork in preparing my annual income tax returns. I receive a 1099 just as I would for any other similar account. As noted, the 1099s are very long but you do not enter every position. The provider totals everything up and you only need to enter the summary data. These investments are not for everyone, but in the right situation can be very beneficial. I have not paid any capital gains tax for 10 years."
- Howard Schwartz
Read more »

Pricing the Impossible

AN UNUSUAL STORY hit the news this week. GameStop, the struggling video game retailer, announced a bid to buy eBay. The offer was unexpected, but what surprised investors more was the economics of the proposed deal. eBay is many times larger than GameStop, making it difficult to understand how GameStop would be able to finance the acquisition. GameStop has offered $56 billion for eBay, comprised of cash and stock. For the cash portion, according to its May 3 press release, GameStop would use the $9 billion it has in the bank and borrow the remainder from TD Bank, which has committed up to $20 billion to the deal. But that, in a sense, is the easy part. The stock portion is what left investors with many more questions. That’s because GameStop’s total market value is in the neighborhood of just $11 billion, so it isn’t clear how it would be able to hand over $28 billion of shares. Its share price would somehow have to multiply for this to work. In an interview Monday on CNBC, GameStop’s chairman, Ryan Cohen, offered little clarity. When the reporter asked Cohen to explain his financing plan, the details were sparse. More than once, Cohen just repeated: “It’s half cash, half stock.” When the reporter challenged him to say more, Cohen stared back stone-faced. “I don’t understand your question…it’s half cash, half stock.” This went on for several minutes without much more clarity. Cohen’s parrying was amusing, and it’s an open question where this all ends up. In the meantime, this story is instructive for investors because it helps illustrate some of the stock market’s inner workings. For starters, it can help us understand the market’s seemingly split personality. At first glance, this story seems to highlight the more casino-like side of the stock market. After all, GameStop was the original “meme” stock, rising 30-fold in January 2021 when a YouTube personality promoted it to his followers. GameStop is now using its cult status as currency to support a deal that, according to conventional analysis, doesn’t add up. That said, it isn’t entirely irrational. Putting aside the financing, there is precedent for an online-only business merging with a traditional retailer. Amazon purchased Whole Foods, a grocer, in order to gain a retail footprint, and GameStop envisions something similar, where eBay customers could drop off goods at a physical location rather than hauling them to the post office. To be sure, eBay isn’t Amazon, and GameStop isn’t Whole Foods, but there is some logic to Cohen’s argument. How can we assess investors’ opinion of this deal? A pillar of Cohen’s pitch to investors is that he can make eBay much more profitable, such that it will essentially pay for itself. In an interview on Wednesday, he argued that under new management, eBay could operate much more efficiently. “There's 11,500 employees,” he said. “It doesn't make sense. I could run that business from my house. It doesn't need 11,500 employees.” The implication: Right now, it might not look like the math works for this deal, but if GameStop proceeds with the acquisition, its shares deserve to rise very considerably. Even if GameStop has to issue many new shares, in other words, each share would become much more valuable because of the addition of a newly more profitable eBay. Those additional profits, in Cohen’s view, would offset the dilution caused by the issuance of new shares. That’s the argument GameStop is making. What does Wall Street think? It turns out this question has a straightforward answer. GameStop has offered $125 per share of eBay. If investors were confident in this deal, then eBay’s shares would now be trading right around $125. That’s according to the principle of arbitrage, which says that there shouldn’t be a way to purchase a dollar for any less than a dollar. In other words, if eBay shareholders really stand to receive $125 a share, then it would be illogical for the shares to trade much below $125. But today, eBay shares are trading far below that, falling to as low as $105 on Wednesday. That tells us that investors have little confidence in the deal, most likely because of the difficult-to-explain financing. As Benjamin Graham famously wrote, in the short run, the stock market is a voting machine—a popularity contest—but in the long run, it’s a weighing machine. It’s rational. And though corners of the market often devolve into irrational and speculative excesses, that’s not always the case. More often than not, in my view, the market is better behaved than it’s commonly perceived to be, and I think that’s what we’re seeing here. eBay’s share price today tells us that investors are keeping their feet on the ground. In 1901, J.P. Morgan coordinated the acquisition of Carnegie Steel in a deal that, in its time, was the most audacious ever undertaken. Through massive leverage, it created the first company in the United States worth more than $1 billion. At the time, it was astounding. This tells us that unusual and unlikely things can happen. On the other hand, in 2001, the highly-leveraged merger of AOL and Time Warner was a disaster almost from the start.  Which way will the GameStop-eBay deal go? Right now, it’s anyone’s guess. And as with most things involving great amounts of financial engineering, my recommendation is to steer clear. But this case is instructive because it illustrates many of the principles that drive the market from day to day.   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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One Stock at a Time

THERE’S A CHANGE coming in the way many of us invest. But for background, it’s important first to look at a related—though seemingly mundane—investment concept known as tax-loss harvesting. To understand how tax-loss harvesting works, consider a simple example. Suppose you purchased a stock in your taxable account for $10, and it subsequently dropped to $8. That would be unfortunate, but there’d be a silver lining: You could sell the stock to capture the $2 loss for tax purposes and then reinvest the proceeds in another stock. Like most topics in personal finance, tax-loss harvesting is the subject of some debate. Detractors argue that the tax benefit is something of an illusion. Continuing with the above example, critics would point out that a tax-loss harvesting trade would cause the investor’s cost basis to drop, and that, in their view, would negate any benefit. Why? The new stock’s basis would be $8, whereas the original stock’s basis was $10. That’s important because it means that when the new stock is eventually sold, the taxable gain will be $2 greater than the gain would’ve been on the original stock. And that additional $2 of gain would perfectly offset the $2 loss that was captured earlier. It’s for this reason that some compare tax-loss harvesting to a shell game: They argue that it can shift a gain from one year to another, but never truly eliminate it. In a narrow sense, the critics have a point. But there are many cases in which harvesting losses can yield tangible benefits. Suppose you’re in retirement and taking regular withdrawals from your portfolio. In that situation, tax-loss harvesting could help you moderate the capital gains on those withdrawals. Continuing with the example above, if you took a $2 loss on one investment, you could pair that with a $2 gain on another investment. That would allow you to free up cash from your portfolio without any net tax liability. In that way, tax-loss harvesting can help retirees keep a lid on their tax bill when drawing down a taxable account. Even before retirement, tax-loss harvesting can be a benefit. That’s because even the most dedicated buy-and-hold investor will want to make changes to their investments from time to time, if only for rebalancing. And that’s another key benefit of tax-loss harvesting. It can help investors rebalance—and thus manage risk—more tax-efficiently. Those are the benefits of tax-loss harvesting. But you might notice a fly in the ointment. After the strong market we’ve enjoyed over the past decade, it might be hard to find holdings with any losses to harvest. Over the past 10 years, the S&P 500 has risen 250%. Even international stocks, which are seen as laggards, have gained nearly 70% over that period. That would appear to be an obstacle to tax-loss harvesting. In other words, it’s hard to harvest losses if there are no losses to harvest. For index fund investors, this is indeed a challenge. But now imagine that if, instead of owning a broad-market index like the S&P 500, you instead owned each of the 500 stocks individually. Then, as you looked across your portfolio, there would be both winners and losers. While Nvidia has gained 25,000% over the past 10 years, stocks like Walgreens, Warner Brothers and American Airlines have each dropped more than 50%. Forty stocks, in fact, have lost money over that period. Nearly 300 of the 500 stocks in the S&P index have gained less than the index’s overall average. If you owned these stocks individually, they’d offer opportunities to take withdrawals from a portfolio more efficiently than if you owned the index only in the form of a fund. Wouldn’t it be cumbersome, though, to own 500 stocks individually? That brings us to a strategy known as direct indexing. It’s a way to own the individual stocks in an index, and to conduct regular tax-loss harvesting, without needing to manage the portfolio yourself. Direct indexing has existed for decades. But in the past, because of the cost, it only made sense for the wealthiest investors. In recent years, however, brokerage commissions have largely been eliminated, and new competitors—including Vanguard Group—have helped bring down the cost. As a result, these services now cost as little as 0.15% or 0.2% a year. Yes, that’s more than a comparable index fund. But according to at least one study, the tax benefits can easily offset that cost. In addition to the tax benefit, direct indexing offers two other advantages. First, it offers the ability to customize a portfolio. Suppose there’s an industry that runs counter to your values—tobacco, for example. With a direct indexed portfolio, you could own all of the stocks in the S&P 500, with the exception of Altria and Philip Morris, leaving you with your own custom S&P 498. With direct indexing, you could also overweight selected industries. Another benefit of direct indexing: Suppose you have a large holding in a single stock—Apple, for example. Because of the risk, you might want to diversify. But if you bought an S&P 500 index fund—ordinarily a good way to diversify—that would pose a problem, because 7% of any dollars invested in the S&P 500 would be allocated to Apple, further increasing your exposure. But with direct indexing, you could construct a portfolio that included all of the stocks in the index except Apple. A further benefit: Over time, losses produced by the direct indexing strategy could be used to offset gains as you whittled back your Apple shares. Are there downsides to direct indexing? As noted earlier, there’s the cost. In addition, some people dislike the idea of holding hundreds of individual stocks; it seems messy. Another downside of direct indexing is that the tax benefits are front-loaded. Over time, as the market rises, there will be fewer losses available to harvest. Still, I believe direct indexing can continue to provide tax benefits far into the future. Even if, after a decade or two, most stocks in a portfolio have gains, there’ll always be some stocks that have gained more than others. Result: At any given time, if you were looking to take a withdrawal, there’d still be a tax benefit even if none of your holdings had losses. You could cherry pick from among your holdings to limit the gains on each sale. Moreover, to meet charitable goals, you could donate the most appreciated shares, such as Apple or Nvidia, thus sidestepping the gains. Another potential risk with direct indexing is that a portfolio can ossify over time. Without the benefit of new cash, the ability to make changes can become constrained by unrealized gains. And this can cause a direct indexed portfolio to slowly drift away from its benchmark. This is where mutual funds have an advantage. Because there are always investors coming and going, mutual funds have the benefit of being able to deploy new cash on a daily basis, and that gives them the ability to stay right in line with an index. For these reasons, I don’t recommend direct indexing as a substitute for index funds. But I do see it as a good complement. It is, I think, a strategy well worth considering. 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. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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HumbleDollar’s HumbleDrivers

"I don't know what it's like in a gas-only car, but my Camry hybrid has been doing start-stop for nineteen years now, and I think it's great. Can't say I really even notice these days."
- mytimetotravel
Read more »

Retiring before age 65? COBRA vs ACA plan- important decision

"This is some good advice for some of our HD friends who are contemplating early retirement. We were in this situation when Spouse retired 2.5 years ago. I was old enough for Medicare and went on that. I researched what to do for Spouse and decided COBRA. Our old health insurance plan was generous and the cost was about the same as ACA that was less generous. Also, we only had 6 mos until Spouse would go on Medicare. So I am glad my thoughts on what to do incorporated some of the points you mentioned. Chris"
- baldscreen
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Benefits Young Adults Should Look at Before Taking a Job

"My union's leadership always recognized the value of benefits. It was the rank and file whose demands were always money, money, money."
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Slow on the Draw

RETIREMENT IS LIFE’S most expensive purchase. During our working years, we deprive our present selves of immediate pleasure by refusing to spend money for nicer cars, a bigger house or a vacation to boast about. Instead, we squirrel away those saved dollars with an eye toward keeping the future us fed, clothed and living indoors.  At age 64, after decades of choosing to save and invest a large chunk of each paycheck, rather than spend it, I’ve bought a choice: Fully retire to fully embrace life after work, or carry on in a career that still adds purpose to my life. I’ve chosen to stay, but I’ve whittled down my work hours too far to handle all of my family’s spending needs. Thus, I’m faced with reaching into savings for the first time. More about that later. But first, where is our money, and why? Taking advantage. The bulk of our retirement savings is invested in tax-advantaged accounts. Until we reached our mid-30s, neither my wife nor I had invested a dime in the stock market. Since that time, however, we’ve stuffed dollars from every paycheck into our workplace savings accounts. Initially, these contributions went into traditional accounts, but we switched to the Roth option when it became available. We also topped-off Roth IRAs every year, and stashed a smaller amount in a taxable brokerage account. A little less than half of our total investments reside in future-tax-free Roth accounts. Most of the balance is tax-deferred, traditional money, which is subject to ordinary income tax rates the year it’s withdrawn. The distinction between how these two types of accounts are taxed influences where we position assets between those accounts. Accordingly, we’ve looked at two scenarios that may raise our future tax rates: One begins in a little more than a decade, when required minimum distributions (RMDs) from my traditional retirement accounts begin at age 75, followed by my wife’s RMDs a few years later, plus my Social Security, begun at age 70. The other is triggered when the first of us dies and the surviving spouse moves into the single filer tax bracket.  Because we still owe ordinary income tax on the savings in our traditional accounts, we’re making Roth conversions and taking the tax hit now, at a known rate. We’re also seeking to curb the growth of our traditional accounts by keeping all our bonds there. By contrast, our Roth accounts, on which we should never owe future tax, are invested 100% in the stocks we expect to grow over time. Picking winners. In the beginning, my wife and I entertained thoughts of alternatives to stocks, such as real estate. Soon, however, we decided that maximizing market participation was our wisest wealth-building tactic. As our knowledge of finance grew, we further refined our focus by choosing broad-based, low-cost index funds over other options, for good reason: They out-perform actively-managed funds. I don’t doubt the intelligence of active fund managers. On the contrary, I suspect they carry bigger brains than me, and know they command more resources to sniff-out future winning stocks. But they swim in a tank with fish just as big, and it's tough to get a fin up on the competition. The result: Each year, index funds finish strokes ahead of their active cousins. For the same reason, we’ve shied away from individual stocks. Have we lost out? I’d argue we profited. Simple diversity. Moving into retirement, my ideal portfolio is heavily influenced by decades of working closely with older patients in my physical therapy practice. I’ve followed a number of folks as they age from their vibrant, active 60s through the years of physical deterioration. Along the way, I’ve observed the cognitive decline that affects most of us as we age. I don’t count on escaping a similar fate.  Hence, rather than covering every corner of the stock market with a complicated collection of index funds, my wife and I have been shifting toward a two- or three-fund portfolio, to achieve the same result. We aim to hold shares in virtually every public company across the globe, housed in two funds, plus one bond fund. Our choice for U.S. stocks is Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (symbol: VTSAX). For foreign stocks, we like Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund (VTIAX).  Tending to just two stock funds cuts complexity, especially decisions like when to rebalance and how to go about it. Aside from the biases that affect most of us, there’s that issue of our aging brains, again. Why fret about realigning our investments when just keeping track of medical appointments has become a challenge? To further simplify our lives, at a bit more expense, we could let Vanguard Group, Inc. do all the work with their Vanguard Total World Stock Index Fund (VTWAX).. Picking our peril. Our nest egg is weighted a little heavily toward stocks, which means its sum will rise and fall with the market. That can be unnerving, but it’s the price we'll pay for the extra risk that gives us a shot at outpacing inflation.  Without the long-term growth provided by stocks, our buying power might not keep pace with our expected long lives. That strategy is fine when the market is riding high, but where do we go for spending money when stocks are in a slump? Selling depressed stocks in a pinch to raise cash is hazardous to our wealth. For that reason, the balance of our savings is in mostly short-term government bonds and cash, enough of a cushion to cover several years of expenses until the market regains its footing. To be sure, that money is mostly idle, but it's ready when needed. When I finally clock my last-day-forever in the clinic, we might buy an income annuity to replace earned income with insured money to add to my wife’s modest Social Security check, which she expects to start collecting in a little over a year.  This combination of regular monthly paychecks would provide a floor of income to keep the household going, and bolster our courage to boot, when the market hits the skids. Drawing it down. Meanwhile, we’ve yet to settle on a plan to siphon off savings to pay the bills not covered by my part-time income. At the moment, there’s little pressure to find the perfect formula. For starters, we’re not calculating the highest withdrawal rate our investments will bear to bankroll a spending spree. Also, part of our retirement preparation included holding steady to a frugal lifestyle and eliminating debt. Our low expenses give us breathing space to decide how to replenish our cash account. Why the dithering? It turns out nailing down a withdrawal plan is my toughest financial decision to date. But it’s not the math that has me stymied. Rather, it’s the emotion. Yes, I believe the research, and I’ve run analyses that assure me our money will probably outlive us.  Still, thinking of pushing start makes me queasy, so we’re sliding into the task. Instead of a rate, we’ve chosen the dollar amount that sustains our current lifestyle over the coming year. It falls short of the figure we expect to reach once we’ve limbered up our spending legs, but one allows us to work up to a rate that doesn’t outpace my level of comfort. Ed is a semi-retired physical therapist who lives and works in a small community near Atlanta. When he's not spending time with his church, family or friends, you may find him tending his garden and wondering if he will ever fully retire. Check out Ed’s earlier articles.  
Read more »

The Mirrored Funnel

"My original plan was to sell the business, take 18 months off and maybe pick up some low-key, stress-free work — but that idea didn't last long once I realised how much I loved having complete control of my own time. Enjoy your vacation! I'm on the Orihuela Costa in Spain at the moment… just back from two hours of padel in 90-degree heat!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Direct Indexing Anyone?

"After reading a few of the comments, I would like to clarify that direct indexing, or separately managed accounts do not create any extra paperwork in preparing my annual income tax returns. I receive a 1099 just as I would for any other similar account. As noted, the 1099s are very long but you do not enter every position. The provider totals everything up and you only need to enter the summary data. These investments are not for everyone, but in the right situation can be very beneficial. I have not paid any capital gains tax for 10 years."
- Howard Schwartz
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 42: WE SHOULD never take investment advice from brokers and insurance agents—because they have an incentive to sell high-commission products and get us to trade excessively.

humans

NO. 13: WE'RE GIVEN to inertia. Even if our financial situation is bad, we fear any change will make it even worse—and we’ll end up racked with regret. Such fear can leave us holding bum investments we should have ditched years ago. Still, inertia isn’t all bad. It takes effort to sign up for the 401(k). But once we have, we tend to stick with it, thanks to inertia.

act

USE TWO-FACTOR authentication. If a thief gets online access to your financial accounts, your life’s savings could be at risk. What to do? If your bank, brokerage firm or fund company offers it, set up two-factor authentication. Your financial firm will text you a special access code every time you log on or when you log on from an unrecognized computer.

Truths

NO. 32: LONG-RUN U.S. stock market returns will most likely trail their 10%-a-year historical average, for two reasons. First, today’s dividend yields are far lower than a century ago, trimming a key contributor to stock performance. Second, price-earnings ratios are higher, so today’s buyers likely won’t get much benefit from rising market valuations.

Savings Initiative

Manifesto

NO. 42: WE SHOULD never take investment advice from brokers and insurance agents—because they have an incentive to sell high-commission products and get us to trade excessively.

Spotlight: College

A Real Education

WE’RE A SINGLE-INCOME family with five children, so the prospect of paying for college for all our kids is daunting, to say the least. Yes, our oldest is now in her second year of college. But we still have a long way to go before they’ve all crossed the finish line.
Our kids are ages 19, 17, 12, nine and six. We’ve been homeschooling them since the beginning, with a few brief exceptions, including one daughter in a Department of Defense high school in Korea for a year and another daughter in a private high school for two years.

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Getting a later start: college vs. retirement, a growing conundrum

Our oldest child is age 55, – three children ages 14 and 12 (twins),
our second is age 54 – three children ages 14, 13 and 10,
our third age 51 – three children 18,17 and 13,
and our fourth age 50 – two children ages 20 and 17
All ages are rounded.
Look at these ages and what comes to mind, college, retirement? Pretty sure not retirement any time soon. This is what I ponder when I read about FIRE or even early retirement before age 60.

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The New Gender Gap

IF I WERE STARTING my career all over again, I don’t know how well I’d fare in today’s economy. By contrast, if my dad were alive, he wouldn’t have any trouble finding work. He was good with his hands and could fix anything. He was a machinist by trade, but he could’ve easily been an electrician, plumber or carpenter.
All the disasters we’ve endured during the past few years have created an explosion in skilled,

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Making Their Own Way

OUR FIVE KIDS SPENT a collective 24 years in college. All five have bachelor’s degrees, and three also have master’s degrees. The youngest graduated May 2023. Only one child qualified for non-merit aid—a $300 Pell grant.
My wife and I didn’t give them money for college. We don’t live near a major public university, so four of the five had to live on campus. Here’s what prepared them for college and how to pay for it.

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The Places You’ll Go

MY TWIN DAUGHTERS just finished sorting through college offers and making their decision ahead of the May 1 acceptance deadline. With nearly 3,000 four-year colleges to choose from, how did they decide?
It wasn’t easy. The pandemic didn’t just close our local public schools. It also ended visits from universities and limited school-based college counseling. Counselors compensated with lunchtime workshops, links to webinars, and lots of robocalls and emails urging students to fill out and submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

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College in 72 Hours

OUR NEPHEW JESSE, age 19, took a gap year after high school to explore meditation and work for UPS. He’s a great kid. But he had worn out his welcome with family friends in Florida, so he decided to sleep in his car.
That was in May—and that’s when we invited him to live with us in Pennsylvania.
Jesse hasn’t had an easy life. His mother died of cancer when he was four years old.

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Spotlight: Gartland

Make That Choice

I'M NOT THE SMARTEST guy. That used to bother me when I was in school. The smart guys were making their teachers happy. They were named to the National Honor Society. They went to the best colleges. They seemed to have it all. As I got older, and began to make more and more decisions on my own, I had to come up with a method that would allow me to make good decisions, given the limited gray matter I was working with. My strategy: I like to narrow down my choices, identify the key variables, avoid decisions with really bad potential outcomes—and then get on with my life. Remember, every decision comes with risk—the risk of being wrong—and every decision will lead to an outcome, good or bad. The first thing I do is settle on my priorities. What am I trying to achieve? I then think about the options available to me, and try to narrow that list. I believe limiting choice reduces anxiety. If there are fewer choices to consider, it’s also easier to study each choice and make a good decision. Among the choices I’m considering, I think about what’s the worst that could happen if I chose one option over another—and I then avoid the one with the worst possible outcome. What if the choices seem pretty much equal? I don’t worry too much about which one I choose. I once spoke with a guy who was affiliated with my employer. He was trying to decide how to spend his money. He said his options were to buy a new truck or remodel his home. I asked him which would be best for his relationship with his wife. He chose the remodeling project. Identifying the most important variable is the key to making good decisions.…
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Kicking Myself

THERE ARE TWO TYPES of mistake I make: those that are unintentional and those where I should have known what would happen. After an unintentional mistake, I’m perplexed by what went wrong. I might say to myself “I’ll never do that again” or perhaps “what the heck just happened?” These are genuine mistakes, and I try to learn from them. By contrast, stupid mistakes are those that I should have known would occur. No matter how many college degrees we have or how many years on the job, we all make stupid mistakes. What counts as a stupid mistake? We know we’re doing something wrong, and yet we still go ahead. A stupid mistake happens when we don’t pay enough attention to what we’re doing. When I take a cookie sheet out of a hot oven without bothering to put on oven mitts, that’s a stupid mistake. I might grab the tray one-handed using a dish towel. Too often the result is singed fingers on my ungloved hand. Another example of a stupid mistake—which fortunately hasn’t happened to me—is glancing down at a text on your cellphone while driving. The scenery changes pretty fast at 60 mph. In an instant, you can be in trouble. An error that I make regularly is forgetting to save all documents before shutting down my computer. I should know better by now. Forgetting my wedding anniversary is another stupid mistake. After all, it falls on the same date every year. To be sure, intentionally doing something that results in a less-than-satisfactory outcome isn’t always a stupid mistake. For instance, making an investment decision that doesn’t work out can be classified as risk-taking, not stupidity. We knew it might not work in our favor, but we decided to “take a chance” in the hope of…
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Easy Does It

ONE OF MY FIRST employers allowed me to buy savings bonds through withholding from my weekly salary. It seemed like magic. Ever since, automatic payroll deductions have been an important part of my financial life. My payroll deductions expanded to include my health insurance and my 401(k) contributions. It just felt good to me, kind of like the practice of regularly giving 10% of your income to the church. On the other hand, payroll deductions are also how we pay taxes, which doesn’t seem like such a blessing. This culminates with the annual ritual of filing my income tax return. That’s when I learn whether I’ve withheld enough. I’ve never used a preparer or accountant to calculate how much tax I owe. I prefer to avoid paying someone else to do something I can do myself. That’s my fallback position for many such chores. If I can do it myself, I will. I’ll pay someone for the harder things, like fixing my teeth or repairing my car. Besides, when I do my own taxes, the government checks my work. If I make an arithmetic error, I get a letter from the IRS or my state’s tax department. It points out my mistake and informs me how much more I owe or—on a good day—how much more the government owes me. To be honest, I’m not sure whether my do-it-yourself method has saved me money. If I miss a deduction to which I’m entitled, I’m paying an extra tax for my stubborn independence. I started feeling more confident that I was getting my fair share of all the tax breaks when I began using TurboTax. The software asks a lot of questions that I’d never thought about to help me explore possible ways to save on taxes. Yet there’s still a…
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Killing Time

WHEN I WAS A TEENAGER, my father and I went to the local mall. I don’t recall why we went shopping together, but I do remember going into a Tandy craft store and buying a customizing kit for leather belts. Tandy Corp. would later become well known as the owner of RadioShack. On the way home, my father and I were talking about the kit, and I made the comment, “It’ll be a good way to kill time.” My father shot back, “Never kill time.” Later that year, he died of a massive heart attack. While I never forgot what my father said, I wish I could tell you I took it as inspiration and went on to accomplish great things, but I never did. I did use time well, but I also wasted time, killed time and have blanks in my memory where I’m not sure how I used my time. But that’s changed. Today, I pay more attention to the ages at which people die. Suddenly, people my age and younger are dying of natural causes. Just yesterday, I went to the dentist for a checkup. As soon as I sat in the examination chair, he told me that his wife recently died, and yet previously she’d almost never been sick. Such stories have changed my perspective on life and money. We can always make more money. But we can’t make more time, and we never know how much more we have. This makes time the more precious commodity. Still, we should carefully consider how we use both money and time. Money can be saved, invested and spent. My wife and I aren’t great investors. But we’ve been good savers and thoughtful spenders. My wife’s family were blue collar. When she was growing up, her family’s budgeting process…
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The Other Side Sucks

THERE ARE CERTAIN expressions I’ve heard during my lifetime which, for one reason or another, have stayed with me. In a previous article, I related how a coworker encouraged me to “keep on keeping on” when confronted with a challenge, and how Napoleon Hill’s expression “burning desire” struck me as a great way to describe a goal worth seeking. Here’s another expression I’ve never forgotten: “The other side sucks.” I’ve been a race car fan ever since my older brother introduced me to automobile racing in my youth. I especially enjoy Formula One racing. These international racing events gather the best of the best—mechanics, engineers, drivers and the sponsors who pay for it all. One of the Formula One race tracks I’ve visited is in Watkins Glen, New York. In the 1960s, Watkins Glen was the only race track that hosted a Formula One race in America. There were others in the years that followed but, at the time, Watkins Glen was the only one. The racing community that sponsored the event, along with the owners of the racing teams, were sophisticated. The same couldn’t be said of the fans at Watkins Glen, who weren’t necessarily from society’s upper crust. One area of the Watkins Glen track was known as “the bog.” It was a valley within the racing grounds that would become muddy following rain storms. This area became a gathering place for fans, who took great joy in directing late arrivals to this muddy area, especially after it was dark. Upon entering the bog, many cars would get stuck. Amid the resulting melee, cars would often be damaged. This led to Formula One’s sanctioning body to stop holding races at “the Glen.” On one particular night at the bog, two separate and distinct groups formed on each side…
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Ask the Question

I WAS A PART-TIME instructor in public speaking for Dale Carnegie & Associates during the 1980s and early 1990s. I taught a course at the Downtown Athletic Club in lower Manhattan. At the time, my wife and I were living in northwestern New Jersey, and we each took the bus into Manhattan to our respective jobs. The course was given after work, so I had to take a late bus home. This meant my wife needed to drive to the bus depot to pick me up. One night, I arrived at the bus stop, but my wife wasn’t there. I called our condo, thinking she’d fallen asleep, but she never picked up the phone. This was prior to cell phones. I called repeatedly, thinking that, if she had fallen asleep, the ringing phone would wake her up. But she never picked up. Just after I made yet another call, a police car pulled up and my wife got out of the back seat. She greeted me with, “Hello, honey.” The cop greeted me by asking, “Sir, do you have a license and registration for your car?” I said “yes,” and presented both. He then informed me that my wife didn’t have a valid driver’s license. Like me, my wife grew up on Long Island, New York. She’d tell me about the cars she owned and the adventures she had driving around Long Island. When we got married, the only question I asked her was, “Do you know how to drive a stick shift?” She said “yes.” This was important since I owned one car and she didn’t own any. I assumed she had a license. How else could she have driven a car on Long Island? It turns out she did have a license when she was living on Long Island.…
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