Market efficiency helps protect naïve investors from themselves—but it won’t protect them from brokers hell-bent on collecting a commission.
NO. 17: OUR MOST valuable asset is often our human capital—our income-earning ability. A regular paycheck can be like collecting interest from a bond, which then frees us up to invest in stocks.
NO. 103: YOU CAN estimate stock market returns by adding the starting dividend yield to the expected percentage increase in earnings per share. But such estimates could prove badly wrong—depending on investor sentiment. When investors grow bullish, they put a higher value on corporate earnings, driving up the market’s price-earnings ratio.
HAPPINESS RESEARCH. Using experiments and survey data, academics have brought greater rigor to our understanding of what drives happiness. For instance, researchers have found that commuting and the birth of a child hurt happiness, a robust network of friends is a big plus, and that money buys happiness but the amount wanes as our income rises.
NO. 3: WE LACK self-control. Prudent money management is simple enough: We should save less than we earn, build a globally diversified portfolio, hold down investment costs, minimize taxes, buy the right insurance and take on debt judiciously. Yet folks struggle with such basic steps—because they can’t bring themselves to do what they know is right.
NO. 17: OUR MOST valuable asset is often our human capital—our income-earning ability. A regular paycheck can be like collecting interest from a bond, which then frees us up to invest in stocks.
You faced no financial disasters through life, you were not disabled, you simply went through life with no specific financial plans for the future and now you are old, retired with minimal income or resources.
How would you feel accepting money or substantial gifts (car) from adult children?
Glad, embarrassed, ashamed, entitled, grateful?
Ever have one of those moments? You you’ve been reading HumbleDollar for a couple years and your 26 year old son calls and says “Dad, work is going to start kicking in %5 for a 403(b), what should I do?” “Well, son, let me tell you about low cost index funds…”
Anybody else had softballs teed up like this ? 🙂
“YOU WILL ROTH!”
“But Dad, I’m only 10.”
“Evan, it is never too early to start saving. Besides, this gives you 70-plus years of compounding.”
“Yes, Dad, but didn’t you tell me last week that I need a job and earned income to contribute to a Roth?”
“We can arrange to get you a paycheck. I’ll get a friend or neighbor to hire you. What would you like to do?”
“I like to play soccer.”
“Evan,
ADULT MONEY HABITS are set by age seven, according to a 2013 Cambridge University study. Want to get your kids on the right track? Three things should scare the hell out of you.
First, parents teach kids about money all the time, often without knowing it. “Turn off the lights.” “Let’s go shopping.” “We will save if we have something left over.” It’s unavoidable. The subject of money is as omnipresent as the air we breathe.
As I sit here on what the media is calling “Super Saturday” (?!?), I can’t help but wonder, am I the boring aunt? My husband and I are childfree by choice but we are blessed with five awesome nieces and nephews, consisting of 21 month old twins through 7 years old. I love the Christmas season but as a society, we’ve lost something with all the commercialism and commoditization of this great holiday. Thus, we give the kids money for birthdays and holidays.
MY WIFE IS OUT OF town for a while, so I have a lot of free time on my hands. I asked Carl, an old schoolmate, if he’d like to have lunch. I thought it would be a chance to give Carl a couple of copies of the HumbleDollar book, My Money Journey.
I didn’t think Carl would actually read the essay I wrote, let alone the whole book.
Will Work For Food, Starting My Diet Soon
I’ll take the “best” thing on the menu says Quinn
How’s Your Crystal Ball? By Jonathan Clements
Consumer Advocate by Ken Cutler
Kristine Wonders: Does Not Having Children Change How You Plan For Retirement?
Any Bonds Today? By Marjorie Kondrack
Paying Your Tuition
Adam M. Grossman | Mar 29, 2025
Recommendations for Free Portfolio Analyzer?
Lesson One From Taking Care of a 102 yo in Her Last Year of Life- Be Grateful
Three bucket strategy for financing retirement
I’m concerned about the stock market. How concerned are you? Jonathan, any comforting words?
Going Back to Work (Briefly)
Seeking Certainty
Jonathan Clements | Mar 28, 2025
- Bailing early. Where’s the certainty if life intervenes, as it often does, and we’re compelled to sell our individual bonds before maturity? How easy will it be to sell the bonds in the secondary market, and could we receive far less than the bond’s par value?
- Worrying about pennies. If we’re willing to own stocks and run the risk of steep short-term losses, should we really get hot and bothered because we don’t know precisely what a bond fund will be worth when we’ll need our money back in, say, 10 years?
- No safety in numbers. Are we really reducing our financial peril if we trade the diversification of bond funds for the single-issuer risk of an individual bond? Is the added risk involved worth it, given that the return of an intermediate bond fund will likely be similar to that of an intermediate individual bond of comparable credit quality?
- Losing to inflation. Where’s the certainty in knowing that each of our individual bonds will be worth $1,000 upon maturity, but we have no idea what the purchasing power of that $1,000 will be?
To be sure, the risk of individual securities is reduced if we stick with Treasury bonds, which most experts believe carry scant risk of default. Worried about inflation? That can be addressed with inflation-indexed Treasurys and Series I savings bonds. Still, I’ve never owned an individual bond, except a $75 EE savings bond I won for finishing second in a 5k road race. Why not? I’m not that concerned that my bond funds might be worth a few percent more or less than I’d hoped when it’s time to cash out. Why would I? Heck, I’ve lived through two 50%-plus stock market declines during my investing career, so modest fluctuations in bond prices hardly seem worth the worry. Meanwhile, I simply don’t want the hassle and complexity of dealing with individual bonds, including Treasurys and savings bonds, and I sure don’t want to bequeath that sort of portfolio to my family. Given all the complaints I’ve read about dealing with TreasuryDirect, and especially cashing in Series I and EE savings bonds, I’m glad I made that choice. But many readers, I know, strongly disagree.