If you buy something just because it’s on sale, you’ll likely wish you never bought it.
NO. 48: A HOME is a lousy source of capital gains and a great source of imputed rent. The upshot: We should buy a house we can comfortably afford and that’s big enough for our family—but no bigger.
NO. 25: WE HAVE NO control over the direction of financial markets, a fair amount of control over our portfolio’s risk level and annual tax bill, and almost total control over investments costs. The implication: We should stop trying to forecast what's next for the markets, and instead focus our energies on cutting costs, holding down taxes and managing risk.
REGAIN YOUR BALANCE. Calculate your portfolio’s split between U.S. stocks, developed foreign markets, emerging markets, bonds and so on. Compare your current allocation to your target portfolio percentages. Buy and sell to bring your portfolio back into line with your target weights—but try to trade in a retirement account, so you avoid triggering taxes.
NO. 44: SINS of omission pain us less than sins of commission. When there’s no obvious choice and we feel no urgency to act, we’ll often procrastinate and end up doing nothing. Why? There’s less mental anguish involved. If we fail to act and that proves to be a mistake, we won’t feel as badly as if we make a choice which then doesn’t pan out.
NO. 48: A HOME is a lousy source of capital gains and a great source of imputed rent. The upshot: We should buy a house we can comfortably afford and that’s big enough for our family—but no bigger.
WHENEVER FOLKS declare that their goal is to one day write a novel, or get in great physical shape, or learn to speak Italian, my immediate reaction is always the same: If these were things they really had a burning desire to do, they’d have done them already.
Which is why you should be skeptical of the article that follows.
Now that I’ve turned 60, I’m thinking about how I’ll divvy up my time in the years ahead.
I READ A LOT—AND every now and then I come across an “aha” book that ends up changing the course of my life. Here are two of the most important:
How to Retire Happy, Wild, and Free by Ernie Zelinski
In my mid-50s, I wasn’t happy in my banking job. The stress was starting to get to me. Don’t get me wrong: I was good at my job and it paid well.
IN A RECENT TWITTER post, a man claimed that if all the Social Security taxes he and his employers pay were invested instead, he’d accumulate $1.9 million by age 67. That sum could then generate $95,000 in annual income, he added, which is more than his anticipated Social Security benefit. He concluded that Social Security was “theft.”
Claims like these bother me greatly because they’re often widely read and believed—and they’re nonsense.
Social Security is an insurance program,
I always thought the glowing stories of FIRE folks were a bit dodgy. Much of the time they aren’t even retired in the traditional sense. Sometimes they go too far sharing their acquired wisdom for cash.
I followed one blogger for several years. She shared her frugal ways, extreme in my view like buying her two-year olds shoes in a second hand thrift shop. She wrote a book, gained a lot of publicity, was featured in news articles and gave advice.
IMAGINE YOU ARE already doing all things possible to minimize your taxes:
You are maxing out your pre-tax 401k
You do tax loss harvesting
You did tax efficient placement
You are maximizing Roth IRA through Backdoor Roth
But what other strategies can you use to minimize taxes? You also might not want to start a business or buy real estate.
Another option that many people aren’t aware of is the cash balance plan (CBP).
WELL, I’M SIX MONTHS into my retirement from the corporate world. How are things going? Any regrets? Any big surprises?
No regrets, for sure. I knew that leaving the workplace at age 61 would be a tradeoff of freedom gained versus money forgone. But I had a second-act dream to pursue—becoming an author—and, for me, that tradeoff was worth going for. So far, it has been. I have my first book out and another in the works.
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