Forget this year’s stock market angst—and ponder the riches that will accrue to those who can ignore it.
Ed Marsh is a physical therapist who lives and works in a small community near Atlanta. He likes to spend time with his church, with his family and in his garden thinking about retirement. His favorite question to ask a young person is, “Are you saving for retirement?” Check out Ed’s earlier articles.
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.NO. 3: WE SHOULD focus relentlessly on what we want from our financial life. That’ll motivate us to save, drive our investment strategy—and help ensure we pursue the goals we care about most.
AIM TO OWE TAXES. Manage your tax withholding and estimated payments so you owe a modest sum each year, rather than receiving a refund. Why? First, you avoid making an interest-free loan to the government and instead can invest the money to earn gains for yourself. Second, if you’re a victim of tax identity theft, there’s no risk you’ll lose money.
HEDONIC TREADMILL. We get excited by the prospect of a pay raise, a promotion, a bigger house or a shiny new car. But once we achieve these goals, our excitement quickly fades and soon we’re hankering after something else. This is the hedonic treadmill: We're constantly striving for greater happiness, only to find that we're running in place.
NO. 135: MORE THINGS can happen than will happen. We have just one past, but we face all kinds of possible futures—and we don’t know which one we’ll get. If we bet big on one stock market segment or one company's shares, we’re ignoring a host of other possible scenarios and our overconfidence could be our undoing. Our best defense: diversification.
NO. 3: WE SHOULD focus relentlessly on what we want from our financial life. That’ll motivate us to save, drive our investment strategy—and help ensure we pursue the goals we care about most.
I have been following the passage of the new bill signed today. I thought the deduction was 6K for couples, but it is per person. Here is information on the specifics from an AI source:
The (bill) includes a significant tax break for older Americans, specifically a new $6,000 “bonus” deduction for those 65 and older. This deduction is targeted at those with modified adjusted gross incomes up to $75,000 for individual filers and $150,000 for joint filers.
I recently read that something in the secure 2.0 act allows taxes paid on annuity
income from a qualified, annuitized annuity will count toward a rmd from
a separate ira account. Is this accurate?
THE IRS RECENTLY announced inflation adjustments for the tax year 2026.
2 quick changes:
Standard deduction
For single taxpayers, the standard deduction rises to $16,100 for 2026, an increase of $350 from 2025.
For married couples filing jointly, the standard deduction rises to $32,200, an increase of $700 from tax year 2025.
Capital Gains Rates
For single taxpayers, long-term capital gains are taxed at 0% if the taxable income is up to $49,450 ($98,900 for married couples filing jointly).
On July 4th, the president signed a significant new tax and spending bill into law. The text of the bill runs to almost 900 pages and affects nearly every corner of the tax code, including personal, business and estate tax rules.
Below I summarize the provisions I see as most relevant to financial planning. It’s important to note that many of the provisions are retroactive to the beginning of 2025.
The formal name of the law is the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” and it is,
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-dft/i1099r–dft.pdf
Thanks to HD for fixing the problem in the link.
On April 15, 2025 the IRS issued draft instructions for the 2025 version of form 1099-R with a new box 7 code of “Y” to indicate the distribution is a qualified charitable distribution (QCD).
A good addition in my opinion.
I observe the national state of taxes, deficit spending, debt and related interest payments and wonder, is the American view of this fiscal management a reflection of the personal finance habits of too many of us?
As a nation we don’t live within our means for sure, largely ignore interest payments, and apparently don’t think about our financial future or who will pay the bills some day.
As individuals, that scenario seems to reflect the lifestyle of too many Americans.
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