“Doing” beats “being,” which is why the world’s gardens are full of benches nobody ever sits on.
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. 30: INVESTING is best when it is simplest. If we own costly, complicated products, we’re filling Wall Street’s coffers—at our own expense. Don’t understand an investment? Don’t buy it.
NO. 1: WE'RE SURE money can buy happiness—and, if we’re wise, it can. Use money to create special times with friends and family. Favor experiences over possessions. Build up savings to get the happiness that comes with financial security and so one day you can have the freedom to devote your days to activities you’re most passionate about.
NO. 127: WHEN WE borrow, we borrow not from the bank or some other lender, but from our future self, who will have to repay the money. We’re betting that the benefit we get from the money today will outweigh the loss of that money, plus interest, in the future. Thinking of borrowing? Spend a few days mulling the cost and what your future self will think.
FIGURE OUT YOUR savings or spending rate. If you’re working, aim to save 15% of your pretax income each year toward retirement. Got other goals? That’ll require an even higher savings rate. Meanwhile, each year, retirees should look to withdraw no more than 4% or 5% of their portfolio’s beginning-of-year value, including any dividends and interest they spend.
NO. 30: INVESTING is best when it is simplest. If we own costly, complicated products, we’re filling Wall Street’s coffers—at our own expense. Don’t understand an investment? Don’t buy it.
I’VE ALWAYS BEEN a saver, and perhaps even pathologically frugal. Growing up, it pained me to spend money, even on food when I was hungry. Today, I have more than enough money, but I still resist paying full price for food.
Perhaps I’m just genetically frugal, or perhaps my feelings about money reflect my parents and my upbringing. My mom once shared that her aunt predicted that she’d make lots of money, but it would be like grains of rice and slip through her fingers. Meanwhile,
THRIFTY. FRUGAL. CHEAP. Pick the adjective you favor, and you could apply it to me.
I’ve spent almost my entire adult life being financially careful. I haven’t carried a credit card balance or overdrawn my checking account since my early 20s. I was an early convert to low-cost index funds. When I worked at The Wall Street Journal and at Citigroup, I brought my breakfast and a thermos of coffee to the office every day,
JUST A HANDFUL of weeks ago, I posted about achieving a $1 million net worth. Now my status as a millionaire is already in jeopardy. While the value of some of my financial assets have held steady—and some have seen gains—the portion of my retirement account invested in the stock market has suffered significant losses.
My retirement account balance peaked on Jan. 4 at $478,000. Today, it hovers around $430,000. Since I retired in late May,
MANY EMPLOYEES deliberately have too much income tax withheld from their paycheck, so they receive a fat refund each spring. Federal refunds averaged $2,850 per income-tax return in 2014, the latest year for which data is available.
This is completely irrational and entirely sensible.
It’s irrational, because we’re making an interest-free loan to Uncle Sam. Why not have the correct amount of tax withheld, and then take a sliver of each paycheck and pop it in a high-yield savings account,
You do not need $1,000,000 to retire or $1.5 million or any number some expert throws out on YouTube or social media. Those numbers are generated by people selling advice, investments or videos.
Having a simple dollar target makes planning appear easy, but IMO more likely to scare people into inaction because they see an impossible quest. Besides, we know very few people come near that amount and given they still retire, demonstrates the value of such assumptions.
Here is an interesting article I just read on my weekly Boldin (previously New Retirement) newsletter.
International allocation
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- We are blessed to have income that covers all of our expenses and more so I don't think to often about withdrawal rates. But, I am way to simple and use a way to simple math to completely understand the idea. I would think that if I withdraw 5% and inflation was 3% and the indexes I have our investments in return 8% , it would stay the same. Why is that not correct?
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