On the House
Howard Rohleder | Aug 31, 2021
WANT A CONSERVATIVE strategy that can help you prepare for college costs? Consider prepaying your mortgage. In 1992, when my oldest was 10 years old, we moved to a new home. We opted for a 15-year mortgage at 7.625% with 33% down. With our son’s graduation set for 2000, we began to prepay the mortgage so the last payment would coincide with the month before he began his freshman year. Thereafter, the payments previously sent to the mortgage company were instead directed to the college. Our aggressive repayment plan was made possible by buying enough house for our needs but less than we could afford. On top of that, the large down payment ensured that the required monthly payments were relatively low. Financial planners might say a better strategy would be to take out a 30-year mortgage with, say, a 10% down payment and then pay only the minimum required. The notion: You could take the money that isn’t going to the mortgage company—the difference between the 30-year loan’s smaller down payment plus lower monthly payments and the 15-year mortgage’s larger down payment and higher monthly payments—and instead invest in the stock market. As it turns out, I was able to make a direct comparison of the two approaches. We had money provided by a grandparent for our son’s college, which was invested in a stock mutual fund. For most of the 1990s, it looked like a great strategy. Then the dot-com bubble burst and a big chunk of the fund gains were erased just as college was starting. Meanwhile, the money prepaid on the mortgage effectively earned 7.625% a year. What are the lessons here? With a long time horizon, mortgage prepayments aren’t that burdensome. Imagine a family buying a home with a 30-year mortgage when their first child…
Read more » Helping Mom and Dad
Howard Rohleder | Jun 14, 2021
LIKE MANY BABY boomers, my wife and I have watched our parents go from total independence to assisted living to death. We’ve been thankful that, at key moments, they made the difficult decisions themselves, without our prompting. These decisions included when to give up the family home in favor of moving to a continuing care retirement community, when to give up their car and driver’s license, and when to move to assisted living. Our parents were organized and realistic people who trusted us to act for them in increasingly significant ways as they moved from one stage to the next. Because of their recognition of what they could and couldn’t do, they were able to ease these transitions. Below are five categories of steps they took, sometimes with our help. These steps protected their assets while they were alive and ensured that their assets were all accounted for after they died. Also, their actions ensured that, after their death, complications and potential family squabbles were minimized. They each put in place key estate planning documents: a will, a revocable living trust with one of us as trustee, a financial durable power of attorney designating one of us to act on their behalf in business matters, and a living will and durable power of attorney for health care. With these as a foundation, they made sure that their accounts were titled properly, so they were held within the trust. A word about revocable trusts: For most people, the main purpose of these trusts is to avoid the need for assets to go through probate. I haven’t been through the probate process, but attorneys say to avoid it as much as possible. I’ve been through the process of closing three parents’ estates with a trust in place and it went very smoothly.…
Read more » Once Burned, Twice Shy
Howard Rohleder | Mar 6, 2026
Return with me now to the year 1990. George H. W. Bush was President. The Buffalo Bills had a heartbreaking loss to the NY Giants in the Super Bowl. The Cold War ended with the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The Gulf War started when Iraq invaded Kuwait. In the investment world, Peter Lynch, the long-time mutual fund manager of Fidelity’s Magellan Fund, retired to be replaced by Morris Smith. In my chapter of Jonanthan Clement’s book My Money Journey, I tell how my mother and I made a leap of faith in 1981 to make our first foray into stock investing by purchasing the Magellan Fund. By 1990, my mother’s retirement plans were much more secure, Peter Lynch was my hero and the Magellan Fund was Fidelity’s flagship. My logic in 1990 was “Surely Fidelity will not let its flagship fund founder… they will place it carefully in the hands of the next Peter Lynch.” So, we continued to hold Magellan for what would become a disappointing decade. To refresh my memory, I asked CoPilot to summarize Magellan’s performance for ten years after Lynch’s retirement. Morris Smith had a two-year tenure with similarly strong results. According to AI, from 1992 to 1996 “Jeff Vinik produced strong absolute performance but made a famous defensive shift into bonds and cash in 1995, causing the fund to lag the S&P 500 during a major rally.” Then came Robert Stansky in 1996. Magellan had over $100 million in assets by then. “The fund is specifically remembered for underperformance in his tenure.” Further, “With that size, Magellan became more index‑like and diversified, making it very hard to keep up with a narrow, momentum‑driven tech rally. The S&P 500 concentrated gains in a few mega‑cap growth names; Magellan, by design and scale, couldn’t mirror that…
Read more » Free Lunch?
Howard Rohleder | Aug 11, 2025
On the Fidelity account page that displays my holdings online, I noticed banners saying I could make extra money by lending my securities. I ignored this on the premise of “too good to be true.” Then I got an email from Fidelity advertising their Fully Paid Lending Program and read what they had to say. By following a link, I was able to get an assessment of each of my accounts telling me which holdings might be eligible and how much they might yield. The account assessments said I did have eligible securities, all of which were ETFs, and that I could earn interest by loaning them to others, apparently short sellers. The interest estimates ranged from 1% to 10% based on the loan market for each security. This interest rate is security specific and varies from time to time based on the market for each security. Interest accumulates during the month and is paid out after month end. Still skeptical, I did an online search independent of Fidelity and found that other brokerages have substantially identical programs, including Vanguard, Schwab and Interactive Brokers. The primary caution I picked up from my online search was that tax favored qualified dividends paid on a security while it is on loan will be passed on to you, but it will be in the form of ordinary income not as a qualified dividend. Of course, this only matters in taxable accounts. The security does not have SIPC insurance coverage while it is on loan. The program description explains that when a security is loaned out, Fidelity deposits an equivalent dollar amount into a bank account as collateral in the event the borrower fails to return the security. The collateral is adjusted periodically to account for changes in the market value of the loaned…
Read more » Independent Investor
Howard Rohleder | Feb 11, 2023
FRANK CAPPIELLO and Carter Randall were longtime panelists on the television show Wall Street Week with Louis Rukeyser. Panelists typically worked at investment firms, with their affiliations displayed on the screen. At some point, Cappiello and Randall retired. On the screen, each was simply identified as an “independent investor.” At least one regular guest, John Templeton, also achieved this listing after retiring from running the Templeton Funds. That “independent investor” label intrigued me then and does to this day. Do you need a career on Wall Street or in the financial services industry to achieve this designation? Does society benefit from having independent investors? Can you be an independent investor with $100,000 or do you need a million? I’m retired and primarily living off my investments. Does that make me an independent investor? Popular portrayals of wealthy individuals who make money from money are often negative. Think of Charles Dickens’s Ebenezer Scrooge or Mr. Potter from It’s a Wonderful Life. William Shakespeare coined a term with his infamous moneylender Shylock, who seeks a “pound of flesh” from a defaulted borrower. Marxists would say that in the eternal tension between capital and labor, investors are extracting their wealth from the sweat of workers. The old saw says that money does not grow on trees—it has to be earned here on earth. Savers who put their money into bank accounts and investors who buy stocks are funding the future. Even in Bedford Falls, Jimmy Stewart, playing George Bailey, explains that money deposited in a bank account is invested in a neighbor’s house. The mortgage pays the interest earned by the depositor. Without saving and investing, there would be no capital to expand the economy. Wall Street Week producers used the moniker “independent investor” to make clear the panelist had no employment affiliation.…
Read more » Rebuilding My Ladder
Howard Rohleder | Nov 13, 2022
I DID IT AGAIN. I correctly identified a trend but jumped too soon. When interest rates plummeted as the Federal Reserve reacted to COVID-19, I had a ladder of certificates of deposit. Some of these CDs are only now reaching maturity. Each step of the ladder yielded 2% to 3%. This looked good in comparison to the low rates available through most of the COVID period. As the short-term CDs in the ladder matured, I deposited most of the proceeds in a high-yield savings account. Its interest rate had dropped as low as 0.5%, but I accepted that low return because I didn’t want to lock in low CD rates for the long run. Not long ago, I wrote about using this money to partially rebuild my CD ladder. Rates were inching up and I thought a yield of just over 1% was worth locking in with a 13-month CD. After all, this was a better rate than what had been available during the past few years. My first indication that I could do better came in a comment from a HumbleDollar reader, who asked why I would buy a CD when I could build a ladder of one- to three-year Treasurys yielding far more. An added bonus: Interest on Treasurys isn’t subject to state or local income taxes, raising their effective return. The short answer is, I’d never before considered Treasurys as an investment option. I’d only just opened my first TreasuryDirect account a few months earlier to take advantage of Series I savings bonds, then paying an initial annualized rate of 9.62%. The other factor: I didn’t appreciate just how fast interest rates would rise this year—or that the rates paid on Treasurys would rise considerably faster than bank CD rates. Banks are still not hungry for CD…
Read more »
Lent, Chocolate, and the Art of Retirement
Mark Crothers | Apr 2, 2026
Investment Versus Speculation
Philip Stein | Apr 1, 2026
Giving Up on Owning a Home
normr60189 | Mar 30, 2026
It’s all so relative, where you live and what $$$ you may
R Quinn | Apr 1, 2026
Social Security Spousal Benefits
James McGlynn CFA RICP® | Mar 26, 2026
Quinn’s super frugal experiment. Are you up for a challenge?
R Quinn | Apr 4, 2025
A Big Little Move (by Dana/DrLefty)
DrLefty | Mar 28, 2026
The Cardinal Sin
ArticleJohn Lim | Sep 25, 2021
Very Fast, Not Very Smart
Mark Crothers | Apr 1, 2026
Blood Money
Michael Flack | Mar 28, 2026
Treasury Tax Reporting
ArticleBogdan Sheremeta | Mar 28, 2026
IF YOU HAVE a Money Market Fund (e.g. VUSXX, VMFXX), Treasury fund (e.g. SGOV), or any other Treasury ETF (e.g. VBIL), you need to know how to report it on your taxes correctly. If you don’t, you are overpaying on your state taxes unknowingly.
How and why?
These funds hold U.S. Treasury Bills. Treasuries are exempt from state and local taxes. Of course, this only matters if you hold these funds in a taxable brokerage account, which most people do.
The broker sends you a 1099-DIV form, but it’s your responsibility to figure out how to report it on your taxes correctly. By the way, bad tax preparers can miss this sometimes, or if you self-prepare, this may be something you aren't aware of (I hope most of you reading HumbleDollar are familiar with this!)
This is one of those areas where the reporting rules are technically simple, but the execution is where people mess up. The IRS gets their share regardless (since interest is fully taxable at the federal level), but if you don’t adjust properly, your state will too, even when it shouldn’t.
The 1099-DIV doesn’t break out how much of the dividend was allocated to Treasuries. The software also wouldn’t know how much based on the 1099-DIV. This means that you generally have to figure out how to report it (or ensure your CPA does it correctly).
Now, the 1099-DIV will have a breakdown of every single stock/ETF you have, but you have to find out the percentage of a fund that holds Treasuries.
This percentage is not on your brokerage statement. It comes directly from the fund provider (Vanguard, iShares, Schwab, etc), usually buried in their “tax center” or “year-end tax supplement” pages.
Let me give you an actual example.
Say, in 2025, you received $5,000 of dividends from two funds.
Then, if you scroll down, you will see a “Detail Information” of your dividends:
We can see that $2,456.78 came from Vanguard Federal Money Market fund.
The entire $2,456.78 will be taxed at the federal level, but how do we figure out what’s taxed at the state level?
This is where the extra step comes is.
During the end of the year, the fund manager (e.g Vanguard for VMFXX) will post a “US government source income information” on their Tax page.
This report tells you what portion of the fund’s income is derived from U.S. government obligations (Treasuries), which is the key to the state tax exemption.
We can see that 66.61% of VMFXX holdings for the 2025 tax year were income derived from the U.S. government and, therefore, are not taxable at the state level.
So, we would take $2,456.78 * 0.6661 = $1,636. Of the total, $1,636 is derived from U.S. obligations, and you would only pay state taxes on the remaining ~$819.
That $2,456.78 is still fully taxable federally. This is strictly a state adjustment.
It’s also important to note that some states say "if less than 50% of the fund is from the U.S. government (like Treasury Bills), you can treat it as 0%.”
For example, California, Connecticut, and New York are some of these states. So, if the fund has only 35% coming from the Treasury, you shouldn’t even calculate the exempt amount for these states.
Now, if you buy Treasuries directly from TreasuryDirect, they will send you a 1099-INT, and you can just enter that information directly into the tax software. No extra calculations are needed. That’s because the income is already clearly identified as U.S. government interest, no allocation required.
So, how do you report that dividend interest calculation?
In most tax softwares, after entering the 1099-DIV, it will ask: "Did a portion of dividends came from a U.S. Government interest?'
So, you would just check it off/select and enter the amount from Treasuries ($1,636 in our example).
Behind the scenes, this flows into your state return as a subtraction or adjustment, depending on the state.
Some software might ask for the percentage of dividends that are state tax exempt. However, this is a bit tricky because you might receive other dividends in your brokerage account.
In that case, calculate the amount from the Treasury, say $1,636, and divide it by your total dividend amount (e.g. $5,000)
If you have someone do your taxes and you have some of these Money Market Funds or other Treasury ETFs, double-check your state tax return and see the amounts reported. This will save you some money. It's also not too late to amend your tax return if this was missed.
Specifically, look for a “U.S. government interest subtraction” or similarly labeled line item on your state return. If it’s zero and you held these funds, that’s a red flag.
If you live in a no tax state, this would not apply to you, but still good to know in case you move!
I hope you found this one valuable.
Simplify Everything
Doug C | Mar 30, 2026