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About that inflation in retirement

"Thanks, Dan. I will look into that."
- Dave Melick
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The Making of Jonathan Clements

WHEN READERS THINK of my younger brother Jonathan Clements, they often picture the longtime Wall Street Journal columnist or the founder of HumbleDollar. They remember the clear financial advice, the thoughtful essays and the quiet wisdom that helped millions make better decisions with their money. But every writer has a beginning. As I've been researching Jonathan's life over the past several weeks, I've found myself drawn less to the career everyone knows and more to the people who helped shape it. Before the books, the columns and the countless readers, there was a curious teenager discovering that he loved to write. Jonathan's journey began long before Wall Street, long before Forbes and long before HumbleDollar. It began with a school magazine at Bryanston School in Dorset, England. As a teenager, Jonathan joined the staff of Saga, the school magazine. There he wrote an article criticizing Bryanston's decision to spend money on a new pipe organ while other parts of the school needed attention. Years later, Jonathan looked back on that article with characteristic humor, saying it earned him "the enmity of a host of people." But he also said something far more revealing. That article, he believed, "was my entrée to becoming a journalist." More importantly, Jonathan had discovered not just that he enjoyed writing, but that he enjoyed asking difficult questions. Reading those early Saga articles today, what strikes me isn't simply Jonathan's talent. It's how familiar his voice already sounds. Even as a teenager, he questioned accepted wisdom with humor rather than hostility, weighed competing arguments fairly and cared deeply about priorities. Years later, readers would come to know him for helping them decide what mattered most in their financial lives. Looking back, those instincts were already there. Journalism also ran in the family. Our father began his career as a journalist before becoming an economist, and Jonathan often said his example inspired him to pursue financial journalism. After leaving Bryanston, Jonathan had almost a year before beginning his studies at Cambridge, our father's alma mater. During that time, a family friend, Mrs. Dolezal, helped him secure a reporting job at the Potomac Almanac, a small community newspaper in suburban Washington. For the next eight months, Jonathan did what young reporters often do. One day he covered education. The next, sports. Then police, then business. It wasn't glamorous work, but it taught him the fundamentals of reporting. Years later, Jonathan would describe those eight months as "the most fun and the most educational experience I had in journalism." It wasn't a large newspaper, but it gave a young reporter the opportunity to learn every aspect of the profession. Even more importantly, it introduced him to the paper's editor, Leslie Leven. Decades later, after writing for Forbes, The Wall Street Journal and founding HumbleDollar, Jonathan was asked about the people who had influenced his career. His answer surprised me. Of everyone he had worked with, he singled out Leslie, describing her as "probably the most important mentor I had." Those words say as much about Jonathan as they do about Leslie. No matter how successful he became, Jonathan never forgot the people who had believed in him before anyone else did. Cambridge came next, but by then journalism was no longer simply an interest. Jonathan later admitted that during one term he attended only four lectures because he was so immersed in editing the student newspaper, Varsity. Somewhere along the way, writing had stopped being a hobby and had become the work he wanted to spend his life doing. After Cambridge, Jonathan joined Euromoney in London, his first full-time journalism position. It was another stepping stone that eventually led him to New York and Forbes, where he discovered the world of personal finance writing. The years that followed are well known. After Forbes came nearly two decades at The Wall Street Journal, where Jonathan became one of the country's most respected personal finance columnists. He later spent six years at Citigroup as Director of Financial Education, helping investors better understand their financial lives. But the entrepreneurial spirit never left him. In 2016, he founded HumbleDollar, creating not simply another financial website, but a community built on thoughtful conversation, generosity and the belief that money is ultimately a means to a richer life, not an end in itself. Millions of readers came to trust his judgment and his remarkable ability to explain complicated ideas with clarity, humanity and compassion. Growing up, I don't think any of us could have imagined where Jonathan's curiosity and love of writing would eventually lead. He was simply my younger brother; curious, thoughtful and always eager to learn. Looking back now, the path seems almost inevitable. At the time, it was anything but. But as I've pieced together Jonathan's early years, I've come away with a different appreciation of his career. I always knew where Jonathan finished. Only recently have I begun to appreciate where, and with whom, it all began. Long before Jonathan became a mentor to countless writers and readers, someone had mentored him. A family friend opened a door. An editor patiently taught him his craft. A small community newspaper gave him a chance. We often celebrate the finished product. The successful journalist, the respected author, the trusted voice. Yet behind almost every accomplished life are people whose names are seldom remembered, people who quietly open doors, encourage talent and believe in someone long before the rest of the world notices. Jonathan never forgot them. Perhaps that's why, years later, so many aspiring writers would tell similar stories about him. He answered emails, encouraged new voices, edited with kindness and opened doors for others just as doors had once been opened for him. In the end, Jonathan's story isn't simply about becoming one of the world's most respected financial journalists. It's also about the people who quietly shaped that journey. Mrs. Dolezal opened the first door and Leslie Leven helped Jonathan find his footing as a young reporter. Those early opportunities gave him the confidence to pursue the career that followed. Every accomplished life begins somewhere. Jonathan's began with people who saw potential in a young man long before the rest of the world did.   After spending more than two decades building a successful landscaping business with his twin brother Nicholas, Andrew Clements retired in 2015 with a new appreciation for what matters most. Born in England, his essays draw on a life that has included growing up in England and Bangladesh, entrepreneurship, caregiving, family loss and travel. A regular HumbleDollar contributor, he enjoys tellingstories that remind readers life’s richest lessons often have little to do with money. Andrew is the older brother of HumbleDollar founder Jonathan Clements, whose life and legacy have inspired some of his most personal writing. He lives in Florida with his husband, Joey.
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Reluctantly Saving Money

"Martin, I completely agree with your point about falling. Every time my late mum had a fall and later recovered, her baseline level of robustness ended up noticeably lower than it had been before. As for ladders, I've never been comfortable on them – which is a bizarre state of affairs, considering I spent years rock climbing. In fact, later this month, a few old climbing friends and I are planning to rappel down a section of An Bhinn Mhór, a 650‑foot sea cliff with a massive 200‑foot scree and boulder slope, and then climb back up using our belay points… yet put me on a fifteen‑foot ladder and I get instant wobbly‑leg syndrome. Go figure!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Better Questions

"They call it prompt engineering in ai, but Jerry I like your mention of what the wise person said."
- V Saraf
Read more »

A taxing situation, but is it reality?

"There are two sides to the coin - taxes AND spending. We might not be taxed enough OR we might be spending too much!"
- tooqk4u22
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Open Questions

AS WE CELEBRATE 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, I’m reminded of an expression that’s popular in the investment world: “This time is different.” The phrase dates to a 1993 publication titled “16 Rules for Investment Success,” authored by the veteran investment manager Sir John Templeton. Rule number 11 included the following admonition: “The investor who says, ‘This time is different,’ when in fact it’s virtually a repeat of an earlier situation, has uttered among the four most costly words in the annals of investing.” Templeton’s message, in other words: Human nature doesn’t change. Though the facts change with each new market cycle, the outcome will ultimately be driven by the same human tendencies and emotions as we’ve seen many times before. The phrase “this time is different” was further popularized by a book by that name published during the worst of the financial crisis in 2009. Economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff studied dozens of market cycles going back centuries and concluded that Templeton’s somewhat informal hypothesis turned out to be more accurate than even he might have guessed. Things always seem different but rarely are. As a result, “this time is different” is an expression that’s usually invoked with irony, as if to suggest that whatever investors are excited about today is likely—with the benefit of hindsight down the road—to look no different from similar events in the past. What makes this notion tricky, though, is that sometimes things do change in ways that are fundamentally new and discontinuous. In other words, we can’t dismiss every new development we see in investment markets with the glib assertion that the future will be no different from the past. Even if human nature is a constant, in other words, a more critical analysis of current events is always warranted. Here are four such areas where change is underway but the ultimate result is still an open question. Question 1 - The impact of the internet on investing. Years ago, the assumption was that the internet would democratize investing because it would make more information accessible to more people at lower costs. This hypothesis was logical, and to some degree, it was accurate. Information that was previously only available through a pricey Bloomberg terminal is now available through any number of free or low-cost online services.  But there have been unintended consequences. As much as the internet enables the spread of information, it also accelerates the spread of less-than-useful information that can drive events like the meme stock craze in 2021. The internet has also given rise to various forms of gambling. It’s enabled inventions like non-fungible tokens, which seem to be of dubious value. And the internet has enabled cryptocurrencies, of which there are apparently millions. Many have lost all or virtually all of their value. Which way will this go? On the positive side, the internet has lowered costs dramatically. Where brokerage commissions were more than $100 not too long ago, most brokers now charge little or nothing to trade stocks and exchange-traded funds. At the same time, recent trends suggest that the internet has been of mixed value, especially with the recent rise in so-called prediction markets. But reversion to the mean is a powerful force, and ultimately the internet may be a net positive for investors. Question 2 - The impact of artificial intelligence on the workforce. Not long ago, there was the belief that AI would displace large numbers of workers. This view was supported most notably by OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman, who commented more than once that AI was likely to “replace most of the jobs people do today.” But he’s since changed his mind. “I'm delighted to be wrong about this,” Altman said this spring. “I thought there would have been more impact on entry-level white-collar jobs being eliminated by now than ​has actually happened.” What did Altman overlook in his earlier prediction? Investor Bob Haber offers an analog. When railroad networks became widespread in the 1800s, there was the assumption that demand for horses would fall significantly. But the opposite happened.  As Haber explains, “rail displaced horses in one narrow function, long-haul transport, but it increased demand for them almost everywhere else. Rail depots needed drayage. Growing railroad towns needed more cartage. Farms connected to wider markets needed more local hauling. Rail automated one visible task while enlarging the surrounding economic system in ways that created more complementary work for horses and for the humans who depended on them.” We may see something similar with AI. The jury is still out, but it’s clear that the most pessimistic predictions overlooked potential second-order effects. Question 3 - Whether the stock market is overvalued. For a decade, and maybe more, there’s been hand-wringing over stock market valuations. Using the popular cyclically-adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio as a yardstick, the market’s valuation has been rising almost continuously since 2009 and is now just a few percent below the peak reached in 2000. Through that lens, there’s a lot to worry about, and those who argue that this time is different seem like they’re straining to justify numbers that shouldn’t be dismissed. There’s another side to this argument, though, driven by the fact that the composition of the market has changed over time. Today’s largest companies are almost all in technology and are faster growing than the largest firms were in past generations. As a result, the argument goes, today’s technology companies deserve higher valuations. And that, in their view, makes the CAPE ratio an outdated metric. Who’s right? Of course, time will tell. That’s why investors’ best defense, in my view, is a defensive asset allocation. Question 4 - The value of international diversification. Twenty years ago, the accepted wisdom was to diversify a stock portfolio internationally. One reason was because many economies outside the U.S. were growing quickly. Another argument was that exchange rate fluctuations were a potential source of added returns. Those who limited their investments to the U.S. were accused of “home bias.” But this view came under pressure when, for most of the past 20 years, domestic markets outpaced their global peers, and that’s reversed only recently. How should we think about this question? One point of view is that we shouldn’t abandon diversification simply because it delivered a string of losing years, and indeed, the recent resurgence of international stocks might represent the beginning of a new trend.  The opposing view cites the relative anemia of many international markets, especially in Europe. Over the 15-year period between 2008 and 2023, GDP per capita in the European Union fell from 76.5% of the level in the U.S. to just 50%. Which side is correct? It is, of course, anyone’s guess, which is why I continue to believe in international diversification.   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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What Remains: Money and Me

"With all of the anticipation and accolades by early readers Jonathans final book Money and Me received, I thought it deserved another round of comments and reviews by those of us who have now read the book since its release in late May.  I read a lot of books on financial education/planning, retirement (all aspects not just money), investing and personal finance but Money and Me is nothing like any of the other books in this crowded section of the library bookshelves.   Perhaps it’s hearing Jonathan’s familiar voice from the many columns and podcasts and other books he’s written, but reading this book was like Jonathan’s was giving me a personal road map of how to build and live a Happy, productive and successful life without regrets.  I wish I could have read this book when I finished college and was just starting my career and family, but it is still relevant at this point in my life being retired and living my remaining years (as many and as hopefully long those might be) to the fullest extent possible.   Not to diminish Jonathan’s extraordinary explanations of investing and financial planning, which he describes beautifully from the essays from Humble Dollar, but the last 3 chapters of the book starting with “Cancer” should be “must reading” for anyone at an advanced stage of their life.  The way he so calmly explains how he went about his life after receiving the devastating news of his terminal cancer diagnosis is both brave and insightful and advice all of us could learn from.  I was almost in tears reading these last chapters and essays and didn’t want the book to end.  Regular readers of Humble Dollar are familiar with many of these words and advice, including his final Farewell essay, published in Humble Dollar by his loving wife Elaine upon Jonathan’s death.   This is an extraordinary book that I have already recommended to many friends and I hope to be able to get my adult children to read.  If you haven’t already read the book, you must put it on your list to read soon. Jonathan was a unique voice that is already sorely missed."
- Brian Frisch
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Don’t Let a Roth Conversion Trigger a Penalty

"Agree IRMAA threshold is a careful consideration, as is taking distributions before 59.5 yrs of age which will under most circumstances also incur penalties. The above comment was purely addressing the tax penalty situation associated with a large end of year conversion and treating tax payment on the Roth conversion as a witholding, rather than incurring a penalty for underpayment if estimated taxes were paid instead and not reported correctly to the IRS. The multi step process illustrated pays taxes from a brokerage account which is widely regarded as more tax efficient than paying from an IRA when performing the conversion. When performing Roth conversions the impact on gross income and IRMAA premiums from the age 63 onwards as you mentioned are an important consideration. One dollar too much can move you up a bracket and be quite costly. No matter whether the tax is paid from brokerage or from the IRA the amount of tax paid dollar for dollar is the same. Paying taxes from brokerage allows more to be transferred into the Roth ‘tax free’ envelope."
- Grant Clifford
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Frittering away Frugality 

"Just read an article this morning how valuable free samples are to COSTCO and how they lure people into buying, including at the bakery. So gotta love it. They must have a psychologist on staff 😏"
- R Quinn
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Trump Accounts

INNOVATION IN THE world of retirement plans is decidedly slow moving. But as of July 4th, investors now have a new savings option known as a Trump account. In short, these are retirement accounts designed specifically for children. Trump accounts share some similarities with traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs), but there are also key differences. If you have children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews, this new option may be worth exploring. Who is eligible for a Trump account? An account can be opened for any child who will be under 18 as of December 31 in the year that the account is opened. How are Trump accounts different from traditional IRAs? The primary goal of these accounts is to allow children to begin to accumulate retirement funds much earlier than has been possible in the past. For that reason, and in contrast to traditional IRAs, Trump accounts don’t require a child to have any earned income. Contributions could begin as soon as a baby is born.  What is the process for opening an account? To get started, head to the new government website at trumpaccounts.gov. From there, you can download a mobile app to start the account opening process. I tried it myself, opening an account for one of my sons, and found the process quite easy. One nice feature is that the funds are invested automatically in low-cost index funds. What are the contribution limits? Trump accounts have their own unique contribution caps, which are a little complicated. Individuals and employers can contribute up to a total of $5,000 per child per year, though the employer portion is limited to $2,500 of that $5,000. This limit will grow in future years. In addition, the government and a group of philanthropists have established a pilot program and are making contributions to certain new Trump accounts. Children born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028 are eligible to receive a $1,000 contribution from the government upon opening a new account. In addition to this $1,000 contribution from the government, a group of philanthropists, including Michael Dell, Ray Dalio and others, are contributing $250 to Trump accounts for children up to 10 years old who live in particular Zip codes. These additional contributions don’t count toward the $5,000 annual contribution limit. Do Trump account contributions affect IRA contribution limits? If your child has earned income, he or she can contribute the maximum to a Trump account and still also contribute to a regular IRA or Roth IRA up to the annual IRA contribution limit. There’s no tradeoff. How are withdrawals treated? Withdrawals from Trump accounts aren’t permitted during the initial “growth period,” which begins at birth and ends on December 31 of the year before the child turns 18.  After the growth period, withdrawals from Trump accounts will be treated in much the same way as traditional IRAs. Specifically, withdrawals prior to age 59½ are subject to a 10% tax penalty. Trump accounts do, however, allow for penalty-free withdrawals before 59½ under certain circumstances, including a first-time home purchase, higher education and a few other, less common situations. The tax treatment of withdrawals differs by donor: Contributions by individuals are made on an after-tax basis, so those dollars come out tax-free. Investment gains on those contributions, however, are subject to ordinary income tax. Any dollars received from the government or other donors under the pilot program will also be subject to ordinary income tax. Should you contribute to a Trump account? The answer, as with most financial questions, is that it depends. Here’s a framework you might consider: Step 1: If your child was born between 2025 and 2028 and is thus eligible for the government contribution of $1,000, that is the easiest decision. I would head over to the new website today to get started. Step 2: Should you make contributions beyond the government’s initial $1,000? I would pause at this point to assess where your college savings stand. Since education is such a significant expense and since 529 accounts have the benefit of growing tax-free, I would prioritize college savings over a Trump account contribution. Step 3: The next account to consider is a custodial Roth IRA. If your children have any income, they can contribute to a Roth IRA. And since Roth balances grow tax-free too, I would also prioritize Roth contributions over Trump account contributions, where the growth will be taxable. Step 4: After addressing potential 529 and Roth IRA contributions, ordinarily the next savings option to consider would be a custodial taxable account—often referred to as an UTMA. But it’s at this point that you might consider a Trump account.  How should you think about this decision? While there are tax differences between UTMA accounts and Trump accounts, and there are differences in contribution limits, neither of those, in my view, should be the primary consideration. Instead, the question I’d ask is how you’d like the funds to be used, and on that point, there’s a big difference between an UTMA and a Trump account. Depending on the state, children can generally access funds in an UTMA at either age 18 or 21. If you feel your child would benefit from having some funds to help get established in the early years after college, then an UTMA might be the better choice. In contrast, Trump accounts are really designed to be retirement accounts, with only the handful of early withdrawal provisions referenced earlier. If you’d prefer to see your child’s savings grow for decades, then the Trump account might be the better choice. If you aren’t sure how to decide between a contribution to an UTMA and a Trump account, you could always split the difference. One reason to do that is because Trump accounts present an interesting tax planning opportunity. After the growth period, if a child has a Trump account balance, that balance would be eligible for a Roth conversion, whereby it would transfer over to a Roth IRA to grow tax-free. Of course, Roth conversions are taxable, but if a child is in a low tax bracket in the early years after college, the tax might be modest. I see that as a compelling reason to consider making at least some contributions to a Trump account.   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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Haunted Head

"Martin, that about sums it up for me as well. I do find preparing taxes for AARP to be deserving of my time. Chrissy volunteers at a cat rescue, which helps in getting cats spayed or neutered, and off the streets. I’m sure I could find other worthy assignments, but I’m pretty happy with my level of involvement. "
- Dan Smith
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About that inflation in retirement

"Thanks, Dan. I will look into that."
- Dave Melick
Read more »

The Making of Jonathan Clements

WHEN READERS THINK of my younger brother Jonathan Clements, they often picture the longtime Wall Street Journal columnist or the founder of HumbleDollar. They remember the clear financial advice, the thoughtful essays and the quiet wisdom that helped millions make better decisions with their money. But every writer has a beginning. As I've been researching Jonathan's life over the past several weeks, I've found myself drawn less to the career everyone knows and more to the people who helped shape it. Before the books, the columns and the countless readers, there was a curious teenager discovering that he loved to write. Jonathan's journey began long before Wall Street, long before Forbes and long before HumbleDollar. It began with a school magazine at Bryanston School in Dorset, England. As a teenager, Jonathan joined the staff of Saga, the school magazine. There he wrote an article criticizing Bryanston's decision to spend money on a new pipe organ while other parts of the school needed attention. Years later, Jonathan looked back on that article with characteristic humor, saying it earned him "the enmity of a host of people." But he also said something far more revealing. That article, he believed, "was my entrée to becoming a journalist." More importantly, Jonathan had discovered not just that he enjoyed writing, but that he enjoyed asking difficult questions. Reading those early Saga articles today, what strikes me isn't simply Jonathan's talent. It's how familiar his voice already sounds. Even as a teenager, he questioned accepted wisdom with humor rather than hostility, weighed competing arguments fairly and cared deeply about priorities. Years later, readers would come to know him for helping them decide what mattered most in their financial lives. Looking back, those instincts were already there. Journalism also ran in the family. Our father began his career as a journalist before becoming an economist, and Jonathan often said his example inspired him to pursue financial journalism. After leaving Bryanston, Jonathan had almost a year before beginning his studies at Cambridge, our father's alma mater. During that time, a family friend, Mrs. Dolezal, helped him secure a reporting job at the Potomac Almanac, a small community newspaper in suburban Washington. For the next eight months, Jonathan did what young reporters often do. One day he covered education. The next, sports. Then police, then business. It wasn't glamorous work, but it taught him the fundamentals of reporting. Years later, Jonathan would describe those eight months as "the most fun and the most educational experience I had in journalism." It wasn't a large newspaper, but it gave a young reporter the opportunity to learn every aspect of the profession. Even more importantly, it introduced him to the paper's editor, Leslie Leven. Decades later, after writing for Forbes, The Wall Street Journal and founding HumbleDollar, Jonathan was asked about the people who had influenced his career. His answer surprised me. Of everyone he had worked with, he singled out Leslie, describing her as "probably the most important mentor I had." Those words say as much about Jonathan as they do about Leslie. No matter how successful he became, Jonathan never forgot the people who had believed in him before anyone else did. Cambridge came next, but by then journalism was no longer simply an interest. Jonathan later admitted that during one term he attended only four lectures because he was so immersed in editing the student newspaper, Varsity. Somewhere along the way, writing had stopped being a hobby and had become the work he wanted to spend his life doing. After Cambridge, Jonathan joined Euromoney in London, his first full-time journalism position. It was another stepping stone that eventually led him to New York and Forbes, where he discovered the world of personal finance writing. The years that followed are well known. After Forbes came nearly two decades at The Wall Street Journal, where Jonathan became one of the country's most respected personal finance columnists. He later spent six years at Citigroup as Director of Financial Education, helping investors better understand their financial lives. But the entrepreneurial spirit never left him. In 2016, he founded HumbleDollar, creating not simply another financial website, but a community built on thoughtful conversation, generosity and the belief that money is ultimately a means to a richer life, not an end in itself. Millions of readers came to trust his judgment and his remarkable ability to explain complicated ideas with clarity, humanity and compassion. Growing up, I don't think any of us could have imagined where Jonathan's curiosity and love of writing would eventually lead. He was simply my younger brother; curious, thoughtful and always eager to learn. Looking back now, the path seems almost inevitable. At the time, it was anything but. But as I've pieced together Jonathan's early years, I've come away with a different appreciation of his career. I always knew where Jonathan finished. Only recently have I begun to appreciate where, and with whom, it all began. Long before Jonathan became a mentor to countless writers and readers, someone had mentored him. A family friend opened a door. An editor patiently taught him his craft. A small community newspaper gave him a chance. We often celebrate the finished product. The successful journalist, the respected author, the trusted voice. Yet behind almost every accomplished life are people whose names are seldom remembered, people who quietly open doors, encourage talent and believe in someone long before the rest of the world notices. Jonathan never forgot them. Perhaps that's why, years later, so many aspiring writers would tell similar stories about him. He answered emails, encouraged new voices, edited with kindness and opened doors for others just as doors had once been opened for him. In the end, Jonathan's story isn't simply about becoming one of the world's most respected financial journalists. It's also about the people who quietly shaped that journey. Mrs. Dolezal opened the first door and Leslie Leven helped Jonathan find his footing as a young reporter. Those early opportunities gave him the confidence to pursue the career that followed. Every accomplished life begins somewhere. Jonathan's began with people who saw potential in a young man long before the rest of the world did.   After spending more than two decades building a successful landscaping business with his twin brother Nicholas, Andrew Clements retired in 2015 with a new appreciation for what matters most. Born in England, his essays draw on a life that has included growing up in England and Bangladesh, entrepreneurship, caregiving, family loss and travel. A regular HumbleDollar contributor, he enjoys tellingstories that remind readers life’s richest lessons often have little to do with money. Andrew is the older brother of HumbleDollar founder Jonathan Clements, whose life and legacy have inspired some of his most personal writing. He lives in Florida with his husband, Joey.
Read more »

Reluctantly Saving Money

"Martin, I completely agree with your point about falling. Every time my late mum had a fall and later recovered, her baseline level of robustness ended up noticeably lower than it had been before. As for ladders, I've never been comfortable on them – which is a bizarre state of affairs, considering I spent years rock climbing. In fact, later this month, a few old climbing friends and I are planning to rappel down a section of An Bhinn Mhór, a 650‑foot sea cliff with a massive 200‑foot scree and boulder slope, and then climb back up using our belay points… yet put me on a fifteen‑foot ladder and I get instant wobbly‑leg syndrome. Go figure!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Better Questions

"They call it prompt engineering in ai, but Jerry I like your mention of what the wise person said."
- V Saraf
Read more »

A taxing situation, but is it reality?

"There are two sides to the coin - taxes AND spending. We might not be taxed enough OR we might be spending too much!"
- tooqk4u22
Read more »

Open Questions

AS WE CELEBRATE 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, I’m reminded of an expression that’s popular in the investment world: “This time is different.” The phrase dates to a 1993 publication titled “16 Rules for Investment Success,” authored by the veteran investment manager Sir John Templeton. Rule number 11 included the following admonition: “The investor who says, ‘This time is different,’ when in fact it’s virtually a repeat of an earlier situation, has uttered among the four most costly words in the annals of investing.” Templeton’s message, in other words: Human nature doesn’t change. Though the facts change with each new market cycle, the outcome will ultimately be driven by the same human tendencies and emotions as we’ve seen many times before. The phrase “this time is different” was further popularized by a book by that name published during the worst of the financial crisis in 2009. Economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff studied dozens of market cycles going back centuries and concluded that Templeton’s somewhat informal hypothesis turned out to be more accurate than even he might have guessed. Things always seem different but rarely are. As a result, “this time is different” is an expression that’s usually invoked with irony, as if to suggest that whatever investors are excited about today is likely—with the benefit of hindsight down the road—to look no different from similar events in the past. What makes this notion tricky, though, is that sometimes things do change in ways that are fundamentally new and discontinuous. In other words, we can’t dismiss every new development we see in investment markets with the glib assertion that the future will be no different from the past. Even if human nature is a constant, in other words, a more critical analysis of current events is always warranted. Here are four such areas where change is underway but the ultimate result is still an open question. Question 1 - The impact of the internet on investing. Years ago, the assumption was that the internet would democratize investing because it would make more information accessible to more people at lower costs. This hypothesis was logical, and to some degree, it was accurate. Information that was previously only available through a pricey Bloomberg terminal is now available through any number of free or low-cost online services.  But there have been unintended consequences. As much as the internet enables the spread of information, it also accelerates the spread of less-than-useful information that can drive events like the meme stock craze in 2021. The internet has also given rise to various forms of gambling. It’s enabled inventions like non-fungible tokens, which seem to be of dubious value. And the internet has enabled cryptocurrencies, of which there are apparently millions. Many have lost all or virtually all of their value. Which way will this go? On the positive side, the internet has lowered costs dramatically. Where brokerage commissions were more than $100 not too long ago, most brokers now charge little or nothing to trade stocks and exchange-traded funds. At the same time, recent trends suggest that the internet has been of mixed value, especially with the recent rise in so-called prediction markets. But reversion to the mean is a powerful force, and ultimately the internet may be a net positive for investors. Question 2 - The impact of artificial intelligence on the workforce. Not long ago, there was the belief that AI would displace large numbers of workers. This view was supported most notably by OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman, who commented more than once that AI was likely to “replace most of the jobs people do today.” But he’s since changed his mind. “I'm delighted to be wrong about this,” Altman said this spring. “I thought there would have been more impact on entry-level white-collar jobs being eliminated by now than ​has actually happened.” What did Altman overlook in his earlier prediction? Investor Bob Haber offers an analog. When railroad networks became widespread in the 1800s, there was the assumption that demand for horses would fall significantly. But the opposite happened.  As Haber explains, “rail displaced horses in one narrow function, long-haul transport, but it increased demand for them almost everywhere else. Rail depots needed drayage. Growing railroad towns needed more cartage. Farms connected to wider markets needed more local hauling. Rail automated one visible task while enlarging the surrounding economic system in ways that created more complementary work for horses and for the humans who depended on them.” We may see something similar with AI. The jury is still out, but it’s clear that the most pessimistic predictions overlooked potential second-order effects. Question 3 - Whether the stock market is overvalued. For a decade, and maybe more, there’s been hand-wringing over stock market valuations. Using the popular cyclically-adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio as a yardstick, the market’s valuation has been rising almost continuously since 2009 and is now just a few percent below the peak reached in 2000. Through that lens, there’s a lot to worry about, and those who argue that this time is different seem like they’re straining to justify numbers that shouldn’t be dismissed. There’s another side to this argument, though, driven by the fact that the composition of the market has changed over time. Today’s largest companies are almost all in technology and are faster growing than the largest firms were in past generations. As a result, the argument goes, today’s technology companies deserve higher valuations. And that, in their view, makes the CAPE ratio an outdated metric. Who’s right? Of course, time will tell. That’s why investors’ best defense, in my view, is a defensive asset allocation. Question 4 - The value of international diversification. Twenty years ago, the accepted wisdom was to diversify a stock portfolio internationally. One reason was because many economies outside the U.S. were growing quickly. Another argument was that exchange rate fluctuations were a potential source of added returns. Those who limited their investments to the U.S. were accused of “home bias.” But this view came under pressure when, for most of the past 20 years, domestic markets outpaced their global peers, and that’s reversed only recently. How should we think about this question? One point of view is that we shouldn’t abandon diversification simply because it delivered a string of losing years, and indeed, the recent resurgence of international stocks might represent the beginning of a new trend.  The opposing view cites the relative anemia of many international markets, especially in Europe. Over the 15-year period between 2008 and 2023, GDP per capita in the European Union fell from 76.5% of the level in the U.S. to just 50%. Which side is correct? It is, of course, anyone’s guess, which is why I continue to believe in international diversification.   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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What Remains: Money and Me

"With all of the anticipation and accolades by early readers Jonathans final book Money and Me received, I thought it deserved another round of comments and reviews by those of us who have now read the book since its release in late May.  I read a lot of books on financial education/planning, retirement (all aspects not just money), investing and personal finance but Money and Me is nothing like any of the other books in this crowded section of the library bookshelves.   Perhaps it’s hearing Jonathan’s familiar voice from the many columns and podcasts and other books he’s written, but reading this book was like Jonathan’s was giving me a personal road map of how to build and live a Happy, productive and successful life without regrets.  I wish I could have read this book when I finished college and was just starting my career and family, but it is still relevant at this point in my life being retired and living my remaining years (as many and as hopefully long those might be) to the fullest extent possible.   Not to diminish Jonathan’s extraordinary explanations of investing and financial planning, which he describes beautifully from the essays from Humble Dollar, but the last 3 chapters of the book starting with “Cancer” should be “must reading” for anyone at an advanced stage of their life.  The way he so calmly explains how he went about his life after receiving the devastating news of his terminal cancer diagnosis is both brave and insightful and advice all of us could learn from.  I was almost in tears reading these last chapters and essays and didn’t want the book to end.  Regular readers of Humble Dollar are familiar with many of these words and advice, including his final Farewell essay, published in Humble Dollar by his loving wife Elaine upon Jonathan’s death.   This is an extraordinary book that I have already recommended to many friends and I hope to be able to get my adult children to read.  If you haven’t already read the book, you must put it on your list to read soon. Jonathan was a unique voice that is already sorely missed."
- Brian Frisch
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Don’t Let a Roth Conversion Trigger a Penalty

"Agree IRMAA threshold is a careful consideration, as is taking distributions before 59.5 yrs of age which will under most circumstances also incur penalties. The above comment was purely addressing the tax penalty situation associated with a large end of year conversion and treating tax payment on the Roth conversion as a witholding, rather than incurring a penalty for underpayment if estimated taxes were paid instead and not reported correctly to the IRS. The multi step process illustrated pays taxes from a brokerage account which is widely regarded as more tax efficient than paying from an IRA when performing the conversion. When performing Roth conversions the impact on gross income and IRMAA premiums from the age 63 onwards as you mentioned are an important consideration. One dollar too much can move you up a bracket and be quite costly. No matter whether the tax is paid from brokerage or from the IRA the amount of tax paid dollar for dollar is the same. Paying taxes from brokerage allows more to be transferred into the Roth ‘tax free’ envelope."
- Grant Clifford
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Frittering away Frugality 

"Just read an article this morning how valuable free samples are to COSTCO and how they lure people into buying, including at the bakery. So gotta love it. They must have a psychologist on staff 😏"
- R Quinn
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Trump Accounts

INNOVATION IN THE world of retirement plans is decidedly slow moving. But as of July 4th, investors now have a new savings option known as a Trump account. In short, these are retirement accounts designed specifically for children. Trump accounts share some similarities with traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs), but there are also key differences. If you have children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews, this new option may be worth exploring. Who is eligible for a Trump account? An account can be opened for any child who will be under 18 as of December 31 in the year that the account is opened. How are Trump accounts different from traditional IRAs? The primary goal of these accounts is to allow children to begin to accumulate retirement funds much earlier than has been possible in the past. For that reason, and in contrast to traditional IRAs, Trump accounts don’t require a child to have any earned income. Contributions could begin as soon as a baby is born.  What is the process for opening an account? To get started, head to the new government website at trumpaccounts.gov. From there, you can download a mobile app to start the account opening process. I tried it myself, opening an account for one of my sons, and found the process quite easy. One nice feature is that the funds are invested automatically in low-cost index funds. What are the contribution limits? Trump accounts have their own unique contribution caps, which are a little complicated. Individuals and employers can contribute up to a total of $5,000 per child per year, though the employer portion is limited to $2,500 of that $5,000. This limit will grow in future years. In addition, the government and a group of philanthropists have established a pilot program and are making contributions to certain new Trump accounts. Children born between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2028 are eligible to receive a $1,000 contribution from the government upon opening a new account. In addition to this $1,000 contribution from the government, a group of philanthropists, including Michael Dell, Ray Dalio and others, are contributing $250 to Trump accounts for children up to 10 years old who live in particular Zip codes. These additional contributions don’t count toward the $5,000 annual contribution limit. Do Trump account contributions affect IRA contribution limits? If your child has earned income, he or she can contribute the maximum to a Trump account and still also contribute to a regular IRA or Roth IRA up to the annual IRA contribution limit. There’s no tradeoff. How are withdrawals treated? Withdrawals from Trump accounts aren’t permitted during the initial “growth period,” which begins at birth and ends on December 31 of the year before the child turns 18.  After the growth period, withdrawals from Trump accounts will be treated in much the same way as traditional IRAs. Specifically, withdrawals prior to age 59½ are subject to a 10% tax penalty. Trump accounts do, however, allow for penalty-free withdrawals before 59½ under certain circumstances, including a first-time home purchase, higher education and a few other, less common situations. The tax treatment of withdrawals differs by donor: Contributions by individuals are made on an after-tax basis, so those dollars come out tax-free. Investment gains on those contributions, however, are subject to ordinary income tax. Any dollars received from the government or other donors under the pilot program will also be subject to ordinary income tax. Should you contribute to a Trump account? The answer, as with most financial questions, is that it depends. Here’s a framework you might consider: Step 1: If your child was born between 2025 and 2028 and is thus eligible for the government contribution of $1,000, that is the easiest decision. I would head over to the new website today to get started. Step 2: Should you make contributions beyond the government’s initial $1,000? I would pause at this point to assess where your college savings stand. Since education is such a significant expense and since 529 accounts have the benefit of growing tax-free, I would prioritize college savings over a Trump account contribution. Step 3: The next account to consider is a custodial Roth IRA. If your children have any income, they can contribute to a Roth IRA. And since Roth balances grow tax-free too, I would also prioritize Roth contributions over Trump account contributions, where the growth will be taxable. Step 4: After addressing potential 529 and Roth IRA contributions, ordinarily the next savings option to consider would be a custodial taxable account—often referred to as an UTMA. But it’s at this point that you might consider a Trump account.  How should you think about this decision? While there are tax differences between UTMA accounts and Trump accounts, and there are differences in contribution limits, neither of those, in my view, should be the primary consideration. Instead, the question I’d ask is how you’d like the funds to be used, and on that point, there’s a big difference between an UTMA and a Trump account. Depending on the state, children can generally access funds in an UTMA at either age 18 or 21. If you feel your child would benefit from having some funds to help get established in the early years after college, then an UTMA might be the better choice. In contrast, Trump accounts are really designed to be retirement accounts, with only the handful of early withdrawal provisions referenced earlier. If you’d prefer to see your child’s savings grow for decades, then the Trump account might be the better choice. If you aren’t sure how to decide between a contribution to an UTMA and a Trump account, you could always split the difference. One reason to do that is because Trump accounts present an interesting tax planning opportunity. After the growth period, if a child has a Trump account balance, that balance would be eligible for a Roth conversion, whereby it would transfer over to a Roth IRA to grow tax-free. Of course, Roth conversions are taxable, but if a child is in a low tax bracket in the early years after college, the tax might be modest. I see that as a compelling reason to consider making at least some contributions to a Trump account.   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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Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 5: WE CAN’T stop misfortune from befalling us—but we can limit the fallout by keeping emergency money, living below our means, taking on debt cautiously and buying the right insurance.

think

DUNNING-KRUGER. Why do so many amateur investors persist in trying to beat the market, despite results that are mediocre or worse? It could be that, because they’re incompetent, they don’t have the skill needed to recognize their own incompetence and, as a result, have the illusion of superiority—a cognitive bias known as the Dunning-Kruger effect.

Truths

NO. 113: ACADEMICS talk about the risk-free rate—the investment return you can earn without taking any risk—and they usually point to Treasury bonds. But for you, the risk-free rate may be the sum charged by the highest-cost debt you have. Got credit card debt that's costing you 20%? That’s the risk-free rate you can earn by paying down that debt.

act

VISUALIZE YOUR goals. Daydream about the vacation cottage, new car, remodeled kitchen and what you’ll do in retirement. Why? It will make you more motivated to save and you’ll enjoy the pleasure of anticipation. It’ll also give you a chance to ponder your goals in greater detail—and you might discover, on second thought, that some aren’t so enticing.

Pay down debt

Manifesto

NO. 5: WE CAN’T stop misfortune from befalling us—but we can limit the fallout by keeping emergency money, living below our means, taking on debt cautiously and buying the right insurance.

Spotlight: Borrowing

Double Trouble

PEOPLE OFTEN ACT foolishly and then desperately try to justify their financial sins. A case in point: Those who take on too much debt, can’t get it paid off by retirement—and end up servicing huge mortgages and other loans long after their paychecks have come to an end.
Cue the tap dancing. The indebted start waxing eloquent about the virtues of the mortgage-interest tax deduction and how it’s smart to pay the bank 4% while they invest the borrowed money at 10%.

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Losing at Cards

QUITTING CREDIT CARDS might be more difficult than quitting cigarettes. I’ve done both. I’ve not smoked in 36 years. But it wasn’t until 11 months ago that I stopped charging on my credit cards.
I got my first card at age 15 from the biggest department store in my hometown. It was 1971, and my card’s limit was $50. The store was locally owned, so perhaps it was easier to obtain credit as a minor without steady income.

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Keeping It Private

FAMILY CAN BE A wonderful asset. Your parents, siblings and adult children might help with home repairs, offer free advice based on their professional expertise and take care of the dog while you’re on vacation.
When the circumstances are right, I think there’s an opportunity to take this even further. For instance, earlier this year, I provided my daughter with a private mortgage, which allowed her to purchase her first home. There aren’t many people I’d strike that deal with,

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Pay It Down

DECIDING WHETHER to buy bonds or pay down the mortgage used to be a tricky decision. Not anymore: Paying extra on your home loan will almost always be the right choice.
This takes some explaining—because it involves wrapping your head around the standard vs. itemized deduction, investment taxes, and a mortgage’s shifting mix of principal and interest.
First, let’s dispense with the obvious objection: Yes, if you’re inclined to buy stocks rather than pay down the mortgage,

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Credit Card Debt.

American credit card debt just broke the trillion dollar level.  Taking on  debt, “ bad” debt, credit cards , auto loans and similar, is a like attending a raucous party ,  taking in too much alcohol , etc.
The aftermath , paying off high interest loans, is like the worst hangover, ever. It can take decades to recover from it.
Often,  too much alcohol can kill you, quickly or long term, * alas , debt can kill you,

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Quinn had his credit score lowered. I view credit cards as a necessary evil

Credit cards certainly help drive our economy and drive some people into financial ruin. 
As I stated more than once, my philosophy of personal finance is simply save first, spend the rest but never carry a credit card balance. 
My American Express card was recently cancelled by Amx. It was a business card and they said since I no longer ran a business I couldn’t keep it. Even though I had the card since 1986, I had to apply for a new one which I did and was approved virtually instantly.

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Spotlight: Ehart

Rising Risk

IT’S BUYER BEWARE for bond fund investors. Three big risks have snuck up on today’s fund shareholders, which—taken together—mean higher volatility and lower returns. I discussed these pitfalls with Ben Johnson, director of global exchange-traded fund research at Morningstar, the Chicago investment research firm. “In recent years, the market’s standards have loosened significantly and durations have lengthened,” Johnson told me. “People are generally willing to lend money to less creditworthy borrowers for longer terms…. That likely spells more risk and less return for the foreseeable future.”  Let’s count the ways that today’s market is less favorable for bond fund investors: Higher interest rate risk. Total bond market index funds—the bread-and-butter investment grade option for many investors, as well as a key building block for some balanced, asset allocation and target-date funds—are a lot more vulnerable to rising rates than they used to be. Johnson noted that the duration of Vanguard Total Bond Market Index ETF has jumped to 6.6 years from almost 4.8 years in 2007. Duration is a measure of interest rate risk. That means investors stand to lose nearly 7% for every one percentage point increase in interest rates, versus less than 5% just 14 years ago. That’s 40% greater risk. That said, if interest rates fell, the rewards today would also be greater. More credit risk. Total bond market funds—which typically track the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index—carry more credit risk in their corporate bond holdings than they used to. In other words, there’s a greater chance that some of the bonds within the index will default. Slimmer rewards. The extra yield that these riskier-than-usual investment grade corporate bonds are paying over Treasury bonds is near record lows. “You’re getting paid incrementally less to take on incrementally more risk, which isn’t all that enticing a proposition,”…
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How It Happens

THERE’S A SCENE in Three Days of the Condor, that very ’70s, America-in-decline movie, where the CIA is the bad guy and Robert Redford’s character is in danger of imminent extinction. Max von Sydow’s character Joubert—the Alsatian assassin—warns him that he has “not much future.” Then he calmly describes how the CIA will come for him. “It will happen this way,” Joubert says. “You may be walking. Maybe the first sunny day of the spring. And a car will slow beside you, and a door will open, and someone you know, maybe even trust, will get out of the car. And he will smile, a becoming smile. But he will leave open the door of the car and offer to give you a lift.” Let me paraphrase Joubert and tell you from experience how Mr. Market will occasionally come for you and try to kill your financial future. First, the market will fall far enough that investors start to be concerned. Not you necessarily, but some chatter begins. Worries are expressed. Theories are floated explaining why the market is down, and going to fall further.   Today, that might be the inflation narrative. Both stocks and bonds are down in 2022. At one point in January, the S&P 500 was off 10% from its high. But you know that happens to stocks every other year, on average. You buy the dip. Less frequently, the market will fall 15%. Now those predictions of big trouble get louder and more convincing. Still, you’ve seen this before. You buy more. Like Redford’s character—codenamed Condor—you’re still one step ahead. But once in a while, the market will drop 20%, then 30%. And at least once in your investment career, the bottom will seem to fall out. In mine, I’ve lived through: 2000-02, when the…
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Shooting Stars

THEY WERE GURUS and gunslingers. Market mavens. Stock pickers and sector bettors. Over in the bond market, there was even a king. They were star fund managers—but most were shooting stars, destined to crash. Yes, we’ve had managers like Peter Lynch, Will Danoff and Bill Gross, whose long-term returns did indeed beat the indexes. But for every winner like them, there have been—statistically speaking—seven who failed. Between 74% and 93% of funds in a variety of broad categories—small-cap, large-cap, growth, value and so on—lagged behind their relevant benchmark over the past 15 years, according to the latest research by S&P Dow Jones Indices. On top of that, there’s no way to predict whether a manager’s run of outperformance will continue. Just because a manager shines in any given period doesn’t mean he or she will remain top quintile. Lynch, former manager of Fidelity Magellan Fund, and Gross, former manager of PIMCO Total Return bond fund, ended their careers with great 10-year-plus records. Danoff, who has been at the helm of Fidelity Contrafund for 30 years, still outperforms the S&P 500 index—though he trails the Russell 1000 growth index, which is arguably more relevant. How much is skill and how much is luck? Index fund progenitor Jack Bogle, founder of Vanguard Group, praised Lynch—along with former Vanguard Windsor manager John Neff—as among the few consistent market-beaters who have demonstrated skill. I’m not discounting their achievements, but the fact that a few investors—maybe including your annoying neighbor—beat the averages over the long term is just a statistical necessity. Someone or something has to be top decile in any data set. Flip a group of quarters repeatedly: One or two of them are going to come up heads a whole lot more than the others. Almost as inevitably, above-average readings are likely to…
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Get Shorty

SOMEBODY OUT THERE is buying and holding longer-term bonds—but you probably shouldn’t. Yes, they’ll notch big gains if interest rates fall, but perhaps suffer even bigger losses if the upward trend in rates continues. To be sure, investors in almost all bonds have been hit this year, with the iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF (symbol: AGG) down 9.6% in 2022 through May 13. Shorter-term funds have fared better but are also in the red, with Vanguard Short-Term Bond ETF (BSV) off 4.1%. Still, I’d argue that the bond market’s best combination of risk and return can be found among such shorter-term bond funds. To understand why, look at the two yield curves in the accompanying chart, which I created using Treasury Department data. The two curves show the yields available on Treasury bonds of various maturities. The lower, orange line is the yield curve as of a year ago. Back then, with the Federal Reserve suppressing short-term rates in an effort to stimulate the economy, the yield curve was “steep” in Wall Street parlance, meaning you could get a whole lot more yield by venturing into longer-term Treasurys. Next, check out today’s yield curve, which is the blue line. Across the board, interest rates have climbed, pushing down the price of existing bonds. But here’s the deal: Beyond about three years, the yield available on Treasury bonds flattens out. Yields in the three-year vicinity are 2.79%, while at 10 years they’re just 2.93%. There is a 3.32% yield at the 20-year mark. But to earn that yield, one that's just 0.53 percentage point higher than three-year Treasurys, you have to take an awful lot of interest-rate risk. After all, the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) is down 21.3% in 2022. Looking at today’s yield curve, I contend…
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Padding the Mattress

CAN YOU EVER HAVE enough? Yes, I’m talking about money. But I’m not some gazillionaire burning up billions on a rocket to space. I’m talking about emergency savings for ordinary people. A cash stash. Rainy-day funds. Mattress money. I thought I had enough a few months ago, but then life happened. Dental work. A blown clutch. More support for my son, who has a great job offer but won’t start work until later this year. Boom, a big chunk of my savings was gone and, for now, it’s not growing back. Experts say you should keep between three and six months of living expenses in a safe place, free from the vagaries of the stock and bond markets. You can stash the cash in a savings account at a local bank (yielding little more than your mattress), certificates of deposit, saving bonds from the U.S. Treasury or in an online savings account that won’t yield much (but still many times more than your brick-and-mortar bank will pay you). I can’t bring myself to tie up money in CDs and savings bonds, partly because I may need the money suddenly. Instead, I’m partial to the liquidity of my FDIC-insured online savings account. It’s with Ally Bank, yielding about 0.50%, but there are other providers. You can compare their rates here. One thing I like about online savings accounts is that I can put my money in buckets—segregated pools that I can designate for certain purposes. I have one for my daughter’s wedding. It isn’t enough to cover a decent reception—yet. But that’s okay, because she’s not engaged and might not be for years. I don’t count that money as part of my emergency fund because I’m determined never to tap it except for her big occasion. But I haven’t been able…
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Not My Guru

A LOT OF INVESTORS have spent a lot of time, hope and energy trying to emulate guru portfolios. I’m no different. When I read Unconventional Success by Yale University's chief investment officer, David Swensen, I felt like The Truth was being revealed. Here was the wisdom of the country's top endowment manager with, at the time of publication, a benchmark-crushing 20-year record of 16.1% a year. This wasn’t an attention-seeking fund manager or TV host, but a man who didn’t need or even want my investment dollars. He presented his book as a public service. Swensen was not offering beat-the-market schemes. He advised that ordinary investors use low-cost index funds, such as those run by Vanguard Group, to capture the returns of what he called the six core asset classes. Note that Swensen’s endowment portfolio doesn’t resemble the model he put forth for ordinary investors in Unconventional Success. Swensen argues that, with greater resources and market clout, institutional investors such as himself can beat the indexes with active management and heavy use of alternative investments. Recently, alas, that hasn’t been the case: According to the latest data available, the Yale University endowment trailed the S&P 500 by a large margin from mid-2008 to mid-2018, reports Morningstar. But what about the portfolio that Swensen suggested for everyday investors in Unconventional Success? Since the book’s publication nearly 15 years ago, variations of the Swensen model have been tracked on various websites. Today, it can be found on Portfolio Visualizer (two variations are preset as “Lazy Portfolios” in the "backtest portfolio" function), MarketWatch, Portfolio Charts and Bogleheads. Swensen’s portfolio relies on three key rules: Shun corporate and asset-backed bonds in favor of a fixed-income allocation that is half U.S. Treasurys (15% of the overall portfolio) and half Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, often called TIPS (another 15%).…
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