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For Richer, For Poorer: 37 Years of Compounding

"The three toasters turned out to be appropriate, considering all the bread you made over the years! Mazel tov on your anniversary."
- Mike Gaynes
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Note to HD Writers and Contributors

"Larry Sayler, I appreciate you reading my post. To do what I can, I just commented on an excellent article of yours "Somebody Has to Win" which has put it back on the home page."
- mflack
Read more »

Somebody Has to Win

HOW DO YOU COMPETE in an investment contest when you’re a firm believer that investors can’t consistently beat the market averages? That was my dilemma several years ago.

A school not far from where I taught was given money by an alumnus to endow the St. Louis Area Collegiate Investment Contest. All colleges and universities in the area are invited to participate in the competition, which is held regularly. Each is given a hypothetical $1 million and asked to select 20 value stocks. An outside investment firm oversees the contest. They “invest” $50,000 in each of the 20 stocks. Whoever’s portfolio is worth the most two years later wins $10,000—real dollars, that is.

How do we select the 20 stocks for our entry? When I explain the contest to students, I also discuss the evidence that most investors don’t outperform the market. I suggest we could tape the stock pages of The Wall Street Journal to the wall and literally throw darts at it. Several students like this option.

But instead, I distribute Value Line’s current list of 100 stocks most likely to outperform the stock market over the next year. To focus on value stocks, I take these 100 stocks deemed most likely to outperform, circle the 40 or so companies with the lowest price-earnings ratios and ask students to select stocks from this list.

Value Line Investment Survey, which is often available at larger libraries, evaluates approximately 1,700 stocks. Value Line gives each stock a timeliness rating from one to five, indicating its belief that the stock will outperform the market over the next year. My initial list for the students draws on those stocks rated one for timeliness.

Rating             Number of Stocks    Meaning

1                      100                             Most likely to outperform

2                      300

3                      900

4                      300

5                      100                             Least likely to outperform

Value Line has a full-page analysis of each of these 1,700 stocks. Each stock gets a full review every 13 weeks, which means each week it updates this detailed analysis for about 130 stocks. But each week, all 1,700 stocks are evaluated for timeliness.

Some 30 or 40 years ago, there were a few academic studies indicating that Value Line could outperform the market averages. I have seen no recent independent studies of Value Line. My guess is that any advantage Value Line might have had decades ago no longer exists.

While I don’t believe Value Line will outperform the market, it’s one way to narrow down the list of potential stocks. It’s definitely safer than letting college students throw darts in a classroom.

Six schools entered the first contest. We won, receiving $10,000 and an oversized check. I took the check to our next faculty meeting and bragged about our business students. Most faculty assumed I had superior stock-picking skills, and I did not disabuse them of that view. But in my heart, I firmly believed it was just luck.

Six years later, we won again. If six schools enter each year, we ought to win about every six years. I didn’t point out that obvious fact when I went to the faculty meeting with that oversized check.

The very next year, we won again. Did that indicate we had a winning method? No. If six schools enter, and if the winner is completely random, the chance of this year’s winner winning again next year is one out of six. While my method of picking stocks might be superior, I believe two wins in a row is simply a random occurrence.

Recently, the contest was modified. Instead of starting just once a year, it now starts every semester. The payoff for winning was reduced from $10,000 once a year to $5,000 each semester. The number of participating schools has dropped to just four or five, increasing our odds of winning each contest.

Although I'm now retired, our school continues to follow the above method. Over the years, we have won $35,000. We call it our slush fund. Our department has used that money for additional faculty enrichment opportunities, student awards, end-of-the-year catered dinners for graduates and their families, and a host of other good causes. Perhaps most important, our finance students have learned some important lessons about how the stock market works.

Larry Sayler is the only person with a Wharton MBA who also graduated from Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey’s Clown College. Earlier in his career, he served as CFO for three manufacturing and service organizations. For 16 years before his retirement, Larry taught accounting at a small Christian college in the Midwest. His brother Kenyon also writes for HumbleDollar. Check out Larry's earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Is saving really that hard? Nope, not for the great majority of Americans. 

"Then this country and the future of retirement is in serious trouble. At the same time 76 million Americans attend a Disney resort each year with families spending $5,000 to $9,000 each visit and many visiting multiple times. I’m pretty sure those families are not only the upper 20% There is always money to spend, not so much to save I guess."
- R Quinn
Read more »

The Vision, the Babe , Einstein and the Q

"As always, an enjoyable missive. My wife and I have been to several of these type presentations and our table mates are usually simpatico with our intention of just enjoying the steak and ignoring the pitch."
- John D.
Read more »

The great COLA debate-maybe not the expected solution.

"Richard: I agree with much of that, particularly your last sentence. Seems that should have already be the case. Where I differ is that our pensions are partially funded by our employers, partially by mandatory deductions from our pay, and a very small portion, 1-2%, by the State, thus, from taxes. Most of us considered our mandatory deductions to be very much like taxes, and, of course, the portion our employers (school districts) paid was funded primarily through property taxes."
- Dave Melick
Read more »

Happy 50th!

"thanx to bogle and malkiel for helping millions of retail investors everyone should read their books"
- Kenneth Tobin
Read more »

Around the Obstacles

I WAS 48 years old when the judgement was final and the papers were signed. My former wife and I split our net worth 50/50. There were no arguments over household items like furniture; I didn’t care about that stuff. Pam gladly accepted my proposal that she keep the house, and all its equity, in exchange for me keeping an offsetting amount of the IRAs and my 401(k), a very good move for my future self. By giving up the house, I also escaped the mortgage, which was the only loan obligation I had. Had there been consumer debt (there was none), I would have eliminated that as quickly as possible, beginning with the highest interest loans. I was ordered to pay spousal support to age 65, or my retirement if I worked beyond 65. I would be lying if I told you that I liked paying alimony. Still, it wasn’t unfair considering our age at divorce, Pam’s depression, and the fact that she mostly stayed at home to raise our kids.  Long before the divorce was ever final, I knew I’d have to make up for lost time if I ever wanted to retire in the manner to which I wanted to had become accustomed. The divorce wasn’t going to be the only obstacle I would have to overcome. Thirty years of delivering beverages resulted in osteoarthritis and plantar fasciitis; my days on the beer truck were rapidly coming to an end.  I needed a plan. Where Was I?  I had to understand exactly where I was, and what my options were. 
  1. My continued employment as a delivery driver would likely have left me on Social Security Disability (SSDI) by age 55.
  2. I was very interested in personal finance, and knew many people in that field who would help me get my foot in the door.
  3. I had acquired bookkeeping, payroll, and tax prep skills through my involvement with my local union, though I never pictured myself as the type to sit behind a desk, in a dimly lit office, crunching numbers beneath the glow of one of those green shade banker’s lamps.
  4. As a last resort, I could fall back on my truck driving skills, using my commercial drivers license to get a job hauling ‘no-touch’ freight of some sort.
  5. Last but not least, I needed a place to live. “Hello, mom and dad, I need my room back”. Sleeping on the twin mattress I gave up 25 years earlier, was not part of my plan.
  6. I was determined not to let my occupation as a beer truck driver dictate my future job prospects.
Where did I want to be? 
  1. Where to live? Living with the folks was never meant to be a long term thing. After three months of that, I signed my first ever apartment lease as a lessee, as opposed to a lessor. That lasted two years, until a very large increase in the rent caused me to buy a duplex, and become a lessor again.
  2. Where to work? I continued my work as a delivery driver for three more years. My position as the local union president, and my five paid weeks of vacation actually kept me off of the truck much of the time. That enabled me to tolerate the maladies that would eventually force me out of that job. Having absolutely no desire to spend the balance of my life languishing on SSDI and a minimal IRA balance, I set off on the path to becoming a financial services guy. That did not work out, and if you want more information on that, here’s a link.
  3. To make ends meet, I turned to my last resort; driving a truck. Piloting an 18-wheeler was not how I envisioned my remaining working days. And although the freight was ‘no touch’, driving 600 miles every day in a Kenworth tractor is still pretty hard on your vertebrae. But sometimes you have to do what you have to do to survive and to keep your eye on your finish line. My heart goes out to full time drivers, that job is no walk in the park.
  4. And what about love? My preference was to be in a relationship, but not any relationship. I wanted a good partner, I wanted to be a good partner as well. What qualities would I look for in a new partner? Independent, established, confident, and nice. Was I asking too much?
Making it All Work  Finally, preparation collided with opportunity. In other words, I got lucky. Remember when I told you I didn’t picture myself as ever being a bean-counter? Two established financial services guys set me up with free office space and began funneling tax prep clients to me. What began with me preparing taxes for about three dozen of my union brothers, instantly turned into over 100 clients. There I was, a bean counter of sorts.  I kept that truck driving job for several more years. And remember that duplex I bought after the rent spiked at my apartment? Well, there was this girl living next door. Enter Chrissy. We became best friends. She is no longer my neighbor. She is now my spouse. Of course, at the time we met, aside from being a nice guy, I wasn’t much of a catch. Man, she took a chance on me.  As my client count went up, my days driving the big-rig went down. When the client count got to about 400, I retired forever from driving. No more trips to Chicago, Des Moines, Snow Shoe PA, or Jersey City. Chrissy and I began pounding 40% of our gross pay into savings. It would take until I was 70, but working together, we got to a place each of us only dreamed we would be. By living within our means, and keeping lifestyle creep to a minimum, we surpassed our goals.  Chris retired at 64 and helped me during my final three years as a tax preparer. Lucky for me, Federal Wage and Hour never found out that I violated the minimum wage laws by never paying her in the first place. I sold the practice at age 70. I prepared 650 tax returns in my final year.  It’s important to note that during our journey, we did not starve ourselves of food nor fun. We counted 27 trips during our first ten years together. Chris was great at finding great deals to various destinations in the Caribbean, and we turned several of her business trips into mini vacations as well. It’s important to prepare for the future, but have some fun along the way as well.  I hope this piece inspires someone who is still on the road, dealing with similar obstacles, and wondering if there was a way around them. For 30 years, Dan Smith was a driver-salesman and local union representative, before building a successful income-tax practice in Toledo, Ohio. He retired in 2022. Dan has two beautiful daughters, two loving sons-in-law and seven grandchildren. He and Chris, the love of his life, have been together for two great decades and counting. Check out Dan's earlier articles.
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Investing Fundamentals: A Simple Guide for Beginners

"I have read about this idea in the past and thought what a great. However at 67, being grandchildless, and considering the age both my parents passed, if we were so blessed in the future I will not live to see them as teenagers."
- David Lancaster
Read more »

For Richer, For Poorer: 37 Years of Compounding

"The three toasters turned out to be appropriate, considering all the bread you made over the years! Mazel tov on your anniversary."
- Mike Gaynes
Read more »

Note to HD Writers and Contributors

"Larry Sayler, I appreciate you reading my post. To do what I can, I just commented on an excellent article of yours "Somebody Has to Win" which has put it back on the home page."
- mflack
Read more »

Somebody Has to Win

HOW DO YOU COMPETE in an investment contest when you’re a firm believer that investors can’t consistently beat the market averages? That was my dilemma several years ago.

A school not far from where I taught was given money by an alumnus to endow the St. Louis Area Collegiate Investment Contest. All colleges and universities in the area are invited to participate in the competition, which is held regularly. Each is given a hypothetical $1 million and asked to select 20 value stocks. An outside investment firm oversees the contest. They “invest” $50,000 in each of the 20 stocks. Whoever’s portfolio is worth the most two years later wins $10,000—real dollars, that is.

How do we select the 20 stocks for our entry? When I explain the contest to students, I also discuss the evidence that most investors don’t outperform the market. I suggest we could tape the stock pages of The Wall Street Journal to the wall and literally throw darts at it. Several students like this option.

But instead, I distribute Value Line’s current list of 100 stocks most likely to outperform the stock market over the next year. To focus on value stocks, I take these 100 stocks deemed most likely to outperform, circle the 40 or so companies with the lowest price-earnings ratios and ask students to select stocks from this list.

Value Line Investment Survey, which is often available at larger libraries, evaluates approximately 1,700 stocks. Value Line gives each stock a timeliness rating from one to five, indicating its belief that the stock will outperform the market over the next year. My initial list for the students draws on those stocks rated one for timeliness.

Rating             Number of Stocks    Meaning

1                      100                             Most likely to outperform

2                      300

3                      900

4                      300

5                      100                             Least likely to outperform

Value Line has a full-page analysis of each of these 1,700 stocks. Each stock gets a full review every 13 weeks, which means each week it updates this detailed analysis for about 130 stocks. But each week, all 1,700 stocks are evaluated for timeliness.

Some 30 or 40 years ago, there were a few academic studies indicating that Value Line could outperform the market averages. I have seen no recent independent studies of Value Line. My guess is that any advantage Value Line might have had decades ago no longer exists.

While I don’t believe Value Line will outperform the market, it’s one way to narrow down the list of potential stocks. It’s definitely safer than letting college students throw darts in a classroom.

Six schools entered the first contest. We won, receiving $10,000 and an oversized check. I took the check to our next faculty meeting and bragged about our business students. Most faculty assumed I had superior stock-picking skills, and I did not disabuse them of that view. But in my heart, I firmly believed it was just luck.

Six years later, we won again. If six schools enter each year, we ought to win about every six years. I didn’t point out that obvious fact when I went to the faculty meeting with that oversized check.

The very next year, we won again. Did that indicate we had a winning method? No. If six schools enter, and if the winner is completely random, the chance of this year’s winner winning again next year is one out of six. While my method of picking stocks might be superior, I believe two wins in a row is simply a random occurrence.

Recently, the contest was modified. Instead of starting just once a year, it now starts every semester. The payoff for winning was reduced from $10,000 once a year to $5,000 each semester. The number of participating schools has dropped to just four or five, increasing our odds of winning each contest.

Although I'm now retired, our school continues to follow the above method. Over the years, we have won $35,000. We call it our slush fund. Our department has used that money for additional faculty enrichment opportunities, student awards, end-of-the-year catered dinners for graduates and their families, and a host of other good causes. Perhaps most important, our finance students have learned some important lessons about how the stock market works.

Larry Sayler is the only person with a Wharton MBA who also graduated from Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey’s Clown College. Earlier in his career, he served as CFO for three manufacturing and service organizations. For 16 years before his retirement, Larry taught accounting at a small Christian college in the Midwest. His brother Kenyon also writes for HumbleDollar. Check out Larry's earlier articles. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Is saving really that hard? Nope, not for the great majority of Americans. 

"Then this country and the future of retirement is in serious trouble. At the same time 76 million Americans attend a Disney resort each year with families spending $5,000 to $9,000 each visit and many visiting multiple times. I’m pretty sure those families are not only the upper 20% There is always money to spend, not so much to save I guess."
- R Quinn
Read more »

The Vision, the Babe , Einstein and the Q

"As always, an enjoyable missive. My wife and I have been to several of these type presentations and our table mates are usually simpatico with our intention of just enjoying the steak and ignoring the pitch."
- John D.
Read more »

The great COLA debate-maybe not the expected solution.

"Richard: I agree with much of that, particularly your last sentence. Seems that should have already be the case. Where I differ is that our pensions are partially funded by our employers, partially by mandatory deductions from our pay, and a very small portion, 1-2%, by the State, thus, from taxes. Most of us considered our mandatory deductions to be very much like taxes, and, of course, the portion our employers (school districts) paid was funded primarily through property taxes."
- Dave Melick
Read more »

Happy 50th!

"thanx to bogle and malkiel for helping millions of retail investors everyone should read their books"
- Kenneth Tobin
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 2: WE GET one shot at making the financial journey from here to retirement—and failure is not an option, so we should save like crazy, avoid big investment bets and insure against major risks.

humans

NO. 2: WE FOCUS on today—and shortchange tomorrow. Our nomadic ancestors didn’t worry about the long term. Instead, they focused on surviving today, which meant consuming as much as they could whenever they could. Those instincts live on within us, driving our spending, saving and investing behavior—and causing long-term financial damage.

act

CHECK YOUR retirement readiness. Try the simple calculators from AARP and Vanguard Group. Neither requires you to create an account. Each will give you a somewhat different assessment—a reminder that such projections are a rough-and-ready business. Still, you should get a sense for whether you're on track for a comfortable retirement or off the rails.

Truths

NO. 104: SHIFTS IN investor sentiment—as reflected in the stock market’s rising and falling price-earnings ratio—become less important as our time horizon lengthens. Instead, for investors who hold diversified stock portfolios for decades, what matters is the stock market's starting dividend yield and subsequent growth in earnings per share.

Investing

Manifesto

NO. 2: WE GET one shot at making the financial journey from here to retirement—and failure is not an option, so we should save like crazy, avoid big investment bets and insure against major risks.

Spotlight: Cars

Closing the Deal

I HATE BUYING CARS. I can’t think of too many sales transactions that are more loathsome. When I look back at all the times I purchased a car, the one with my father in 1976 was the most memorable.
I needed a new car. I was living in San Diego and often driving to Los Angeles to visit family and friends. My 1966 Volkswagen Beetle couldn’t take too many more trips.
I asked my father if he wanted to come with me to look at new cars.

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Getting Used

OKINAWA IS A JAPANESE island that is southeast of mainland Japan and about two hours and 40 minutes from Tokyo by plane. It is famous for fierce Second World War battles and currently houses about 26,000 U.S. military personnel. From 2006 to 2008, I was one of these military personnel, working as an emergency physician in the naval hospital.
Okinawa, my new dream come true. Going to Okinawa was not my first choice.

Read more »

Diminished Value

A CRUCIAL STEP WHEN buying a preowned car is to scrutinize its Carfax report. A single-owner car with a regular maintenance history and which was driven solely for personal use should be a safe bet, while an accident record gives most people pause. All things being equal, a car that was in an accident, however minor, ought to cost less than a similar one with a clean history.
Some bargain hunters don’t mind taking a chance on a car with an accident history as long as it drives well.

Read more »

Driving Lessons

THIS PAST YEAR marked my 50th anniversary of driving. Over that time, our family has owned 19 cars and driven them roughly 1.9 million miles. While latte purchases frequently evoke financial debate, cars seem less discussed, despite being Americans’ second-largest expenditure after housing. The purchase, ownership, maintenance and sale of cars can all get pretty complicated.
Cars are considered a depreciating asset, but not always. My first car was a 1967 Mercury Comet, which I bought for $400 in 1973.

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Fork in the Road

IT HAS BEEN THREE months since we closed on the sale of our home and drove away from the storage unit that contains everything we couldn’t donate, sell, give away or take with us. It was a big decision to have no fixed abode, and we feel great about it.
We’re about to move our rambling lifestyle across the pond to spend some time in the U.K. and continental Europe, and we have no return date in mind.

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Spotlight: Zaccardi

All Fall Down

THE S&P 500 JUST HAD its worst week since March 2020's COVID-19 crash. Ironically, the decline happened as coronavirus cases were finally dropping after the December surge. Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (symbol: VOO) fell 5.7%, while Vanguard Small-Cap ETF (VB) lost 7.3%. Returns were not as bad overseas. Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-U.S. ETF (VEU) dropped 3.1%. Coming as a surprise to some index fund investors, Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (VWO) is actually positive so far in 2022. Investors who hold a globally diversified portfolio have benefited this month as international stocks have missed the brunt of the selling pressure. The bond market was down slightly last week after a surge in interest rates to kick off the year. The 10-year Treasury note neared 1.9% on Tuesday before settling just shy of 1.75% on Friday. Traders flocked to the safety of Treasurys as the stock selloff worsened over the second half of the week. I noticed that the yield to maturity—a measure of a bond’s current interest rate—jumped to 2.1% on iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF (AGG). Suddenly, bonds don’t seem like such a raw deal. In mid-2020, when the 10-year Treasury rate was just 0.6%, the yield to maturity on the U.S. aggregate bond index was less than 1%. Still, inflation expectations over the next decade are near 2.3%, while the market sees consumer prices climbing 2.7% a year over the next five years. You can grab Series I savings bonds at 7.12% through April, but that rate will retreat later this year and beyond, assuming inflation eases. Buckle up for continued wild market moves. The Volatility Index (VIX) rose to nearly 30 last Friday, the highest since early December. There’s a Federal Reserve rate decision on Wednesday. The market currently expects five quarter-point interest rate hikes by year-end.…
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A Stronger Bond

SERIES I SAVINGS bonds might be the best-performing investment in folks’ portfolios this year. With steep losses in both the stock and bond markets, I bond’s 9.62% current yield looks like a home run. But the playing field could be shifting. How so? Yields on the federal government’s other inflation-linked bond—Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS)—are up sharply in 2022. Result: TIPS aren’t such a bad buy today and perhaps better than Series I savings bonds. According to Bloomberg, as of last Friday, TIPS yields across the maturity spectrum, from five to 30 years, were solidly in the black, generally in the 1.3% to 1.6% range. These are so-called real yields, meaning they’re yields over and above inflation. Simply put: We can now earn a positive inflation-adjusted rate of return on TIPS. Meanwhile, today’s buyers of Series I savings bonds will earn a yield that merely equals the inflation rate. Remember, that 9.62% yield is only good for the first six months. Thereafter, the annualized yield for each six-month stretch will bounce up and down with the inflation rate. Series I savings bonds may start looking much less attractive as early as May of next year, when rates on I bonds are reset. In fact, if you have a short time horizon and want safety, you might want to check out very short-term TIPS. The Wall Street Journal reports that real yields are above 2% on TIPS maturing within 18 months. Gone are the days of your cash losing out big time to inflation. Based on the difference in yield between TIPS and conventional Treasurys, investors expect inflation over the next year will be muted at a little more than 2%, while the expected 10-year average inflation rate is just 2.37%. Investors’ conviction that the economy will slow and inflation will cool…
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If Only

I TURNED 32 LAST month. My mother, clearing through clutter as she and my father look to downsize ahead of retirement, found an old savings bond of mine issued shortly after I was born. It’s a series EE bond that cost a modest $25 in December 1987. The finance professor in me reacted with “imagine if that were invested in the S&P 500.” The $25 savings bond had grown to $104, a 4.1% nominal annual return and 1.9% after figuring in inflation. Not bad, I guess. It being a 30-year savings bond means the window during which interest is earned has ended, so it’s in my best interest to cash in the bond. I teach portfolio management at the University of North Florida and I shared this story with my students. I also shared with them what the investment could have been worth. I bet you’re guessing it would be a tidy sum if it had been invested in an S&P 500 index fund, and you’d be right—$686 to be precise, according to PortfolioVisualizer.com. Why wasn’t I consulted? Well, I was just five days old. Had it been put to work in a more aggressive manner, such as a U.S. small-cap fund, the ending value would be a whopping $763. There is a dark side, though. My lifetime has seen a stellar run for U.S. stocks versus other areas of the world, as I’m sure nearly all readers are aware. The Japanese stock market accounted for nearly half of the global market at its peak in 1989. Surely an investor would have been tempted to play that market given its hot streak, especially as we’re all subject to recency bias. What if my parents had rolled the dice with Pacific Rim stocks? The not-so-tidy sum would have grown to just $61…
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No Stagflation

WE SPEND TOO MUCH time worrying about stagflation. The term describes a period of high inflation with stagnant growth—a disastrous economic condition. It was seen at times during the worst of the mid-1970s recession, and again when inflation spiked in the early 1980s. Do we see it today? No way. Everyone over 60 surely recalls how difficult it was decades ago. Consumer prices were out of control. The unemployment rate jumped. Real wages were on the decline, while stock and bond prices were also dropping. Blogger and investment expert Michael Batnick notes that the S&P 500 fell 51.8%—including dividends, but after inflation—from January 1973 to September 1974. At the same time, long-term Treasurys experienced a real bear market of their own, losing 21.1%. Real gross domestic product (GDP) contracted 2% in 1974. The Misery Index, which adds together the unemployment and inflation rates, soared to 20 that year. It was the worst of times, part I. The early 1980s brought part II. The Misery Index again spiked above 20. The inflation rate peaked just shy of 15%, while the jobless rate climbed to 7% in 1982. Real GDP growth was barely above zero from 1979 through 1982. That was stagflation. Today’s economic landscape doesn’t compare. Sure, a lot can change, as fellow HumbleDollar writer John Lim recently noted. But core inflation looks to top out early next year at around 5%, according to Bank of America analysts. Meanwhile the Federal Reserve’s GDP growth estimate eases from 5.9% in 2021 to a still-robust 3.8% in 2022. Next year, the unemployment rate might even dip under 4%, or so says the Federal Reserve. As we head into the holiday season, let’s put away this nonsense that stagflation is gripping the U.S. economy. We could conceivably get there. But we aren’t anywhere close right…
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Egg on Their Faces

WHAT A DIFFERENCE a rally makes. So far this year, the S&P 500 is up more than 6%. Not bad considering the doom and gloom from Wall Street forecasters at the end of 2022. Recall how strategists in early December were projecting large-cap U.S. stocks to finish 2023 in the red. Naturally, the market did the opposite of what most experts were thinking. Stocks soared to jumpstart the new year. Many regions notched their best January in decades. What’s more, even the left-for-dead 60% stock-40% bond portfolio is off to its hottest beginning to a year since 1991. Put simply: The pundits have been totally wrong—at least based on the first six weeks of 2023. Does flipping the page from December to January really make a difference? Common sense says no. Still, it’s hard to ignore one fascinating trend: The lousiest assets last year are 2023’s treasures. Goldman Sachs put out a jaw-dropping visual on this quirky relationship. Perhaps the downward pressure on share prices caused by December’s tax-loss selling, coupled with January’s drop in interest rates, set us up for this year’s gains. The consensus among strategists also called for a first-half recession before a late-year economic recovery. Even that outlook has flipped in just a few weeks. There’s emerging chatter that the U.S. will skirt a recession. January’s jobs report was stellar, while inflation readings since the start of the year have been quite sanguine. We’ll get another read on inflation in Tuesday’s Consumer Price Index report for January. Animal spirits are slowly re-emerging. Investors are more upbeat about where things stand, while economists and strategists are walking back their bearish calls made just a handful of weeks ago. It’s yet another instance that underscores the value of ignoring the experts—and sticking with your long-term investment plan.
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Dinner Is Served

HOW LUCKY I WAS to be the recipient of a dinner invitation to Ruth’s Chris. I love a sizzling ribeye, so I booked my seat at the event. Those nearing and in retirement have a good idea of what I’m referring to—the good old annuity sales presentation. These dinners are put on by financial advisors looking to expand their business. The routine goes like this: Invite prospects, present for an hour on the benefits of owning insurance or an annuity, and then let the guests enjoy their meal while attempting to book appointments. It must work because these invitations are distributed all the time, though usually not to millennials like me. More often, it’s affluent couples in their 60s who get the flyers in the mail. What I find interesting at these gatherings—I’ve been to a few—is the advisor’s sales tactics. I’m reminded of the strategies detailed in Influence, Robert Cialdini’s bestselling book: Reciprocity. “The advisor is kind enough to buy me a $100 meal? The least I can do is hear him out and perhaps buy his product if it sounds helpful.” Social proof. “I see couples making appointments. Oh, and table No. 1 has a few existing clients of his. They look like happy people. Maybe I should give him a chance.” Commitment. “Well, I RSVP’d to this dinner and now I’ve hesitantly booked an appointment. I might as well follow through and trust this guy.” Authority. “He has the credentials and his points make a lot of sense. And those were some scary stock market predictions. I sure don’t want to lose my retirement assets in the next crash.” I never booked an appointment. I always leave these events worried for that innocent older couple who clearly don’t have a plan. Such dinners underscore the value of true fiduciary financial…
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