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The story’s always the same: Brokers end up richer and customers end up broker.

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The Home Ownership Gamble

"I won't lie...I sometimes think living in a boring midwestern city sounds positively sublime. I got lucky on the three homes I owned in Portland. But if the timing on any of them had been off by a couple of years, it could have been a different story."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Financial regrets about parenthood?

"Thanks for sharing that Dan. When I placed my daughter for adoption it was 1988 and open adoptions were a relatively new thing. There weren't very many adoptive parents who were comfortable with the idea of a birth parent remaining a part of their child's life. Placing my daughter for adoption was the most difficult thing I have ever done in my life. I can't imagine making a more difficult decision. But she's grown up to be an accomplished woman, a loving wife and a terrific mother to THREE children herself. And, if anyone was wondering, she has ALWAYS loved dogs--even as a very young child. The dog-lover gene is a strong one..."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Simplify Everything

"And if all of this talk of password managers wasn't burdensome enough, here is an article on a recently discovered newly improved session info-stealer, that enables accessing your content without userid/password/2fa credentials by stealing session credentials. https://www.varonis.com/blog/storm-infostealer?hs_preview=kpiLasCz-210280462761 The lesson here, and something I started doing a lot more aggressively and consistently, especially on important websites (e.g. financial, medical) is to log out of the website after ending my session."
- Doug C
Read more »

Tax Efficiency

TAX EFFICIENT FUND placement is an often underrated topic. The goal of the tax efficient fund placement is to minimize taxes within your investments, and select the right account for those investments.

But how much does that actually matter?

Vanguard’s research finds that a thoughtful asset location strategy can add significantly more value than an equal location strategy. The value added typically ranges from 5 to 30 basis points of after-tax return, depending on circumstances (e.g., income, portfolio size).

Investors generally have access to different account types, including:

  • Tax-free accounts (Roth IRA, Roth 401(k))
  • Taxable brokerage accounts
  • Tax-deferred accounts (401(k), 403(b), Traditional IRA)

If you are an employee that may not have access to a retirement plan, you could perhaps consider a Solo 401(k) if you have "side hustle" business income.

Generally, if your investments are all in tax-deferred or tax-free accounts, fund placement will not make a huge difference for you. That is because these accounts already come with tax efficiency.

If that's your case, two things become important though:

1. Consideration between pre-tax, like Traditional 401(k) or after-tax account, like Roth 401(k). Put simply, this decision generally comes down to your marginal tax rate now versus marginal tax rate in the future (which isn't something easy to predict due to the ever-changing tax landscape).

2. Account allocation. It becomes equally important where exactly you are investing. Roth accounts grow tax-free and qualified withdrawals are tax-free. You likely don't want to hinder that growth by choosing conservative assets (like fixed income, Money Market Funds, and so on).

Tax-efficient fund placement becomes extremely important when you also have a taxable brokerage account, along with tax-advantaged accounts. Many funds pay dividends and distribute capital gains if placed in your taxable brokerage account. At the end of the year, you receive a 1099 with that income and must pay taxes on the dividends and certain distributions.

One thing to call out from history is that you generally shouldn't hold Target Date Retirement mutual funds (or any "proprietary" funds) in your brokerage account. This is because unexpected redemptions could cause a huge tax bill.

You may remember a Vanguard 2021 fiasco where Vanguard opened an institutional TDF to more investors (lowered the minimum investment from $100M to $5M), which caused smaller retirement plans to sell out of individual funds and move into the institutional fund. This triggered massive unexpected capital gains for anyone invested in the individual funds if held in a brokerage account.

All of those unnecessary taxes could've been avoided by:

  • Choosing investments that don’t distribute many dividends or capital gains
  • Choosing passively managed investments (low portfolio turnover)
  • Placing them in tax-advantaged accounts

Let me give you a simple example:

Let’s say you are in a 22% federal tax bracket and a 5% state tax bracket, and you have some money invested in a dividend fund like Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD). SCHD dividends are generally qualified, which means that the dividends get preferential treatment at a 15% federal tax rate for this investor.

The dividend yield is 3.43%. Considering the tax rates, the tax drag is (15% + 5%) * 3.43% = 0.686%.

To put this in perspective, a $10,000 investment will yield ~$343 in annual dividends. The tax impact on that investment will be $60.86.

Of course, if that money was in a Roth IRA, you would pay $0 in taxes on dividend distributions. Alternatively, this is something you may need to decide whether a dividend-focused investing strategy is the right one for you. For example, a Total US Stock Market ETF could have almost 3x less tax drag, and potentially more growth.

As someone in their 20s (who is subject to the Net Investment Income Tax) my focus is 100% on a growth investment strategy, rather than income generation. For someone in their 60s, that strategy could be different (even though selling shares for capital gains is better from a tax timing point of view).

A few more important points:

REIT stocks/ETFs are the least tax-efficient asset class to hold in a brokerage account because their distributions aren’t qualified, so you pay more tax (even though it may qualify for a 199A deduction).

Stocks that don’t pay dividends are the most tax-efficient to hold within your taxable account (Adobe, Amazon, Netflix, and others). However, holding individual stocks may not be the best strategy from an investment and diversification standpoint.

A big benefit of a taxable account is that the money is always easily accessible (liquidity), and you can control your withdrawal timing. While there are strategies that allow you to withdraw from retirement accounts before age 59 (like Rule of 55, 72(t) SoSEPP, Roth conversions), a brokerage account is more flexible. Therefore, analyzing the contributions and investments that go into this account is crucial.

How do you maximize tax efficiency? Let us know in the comments!   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.  

Read more »

Perfection, enemy of good

"Thanks. Glad I mentioned I wasn't the oracle - you've already spotted a flaw in my plan!"
- greg_j_tomamichel
Read more »

Blood Money

"That is indeed a very salient article. I wonder about a sequel given the stock price is now so much higher than when you considered it before. As you mention preserving the NUA opportunity, I gather you’re not inclined to do it now. "
- Michael1
Read more »

Stock Market Contest

"My guess is individual stocks will win but a broad fund will best most others. At least there may be one lesson there."
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Any concern?

"Complete disregard for all market situations. I sold everything on March 2nd. Almost every year I sell once when risk is too high. Usually I'm out for 1–3 weeks, but in 2022, I was out 10 months. My model is based on timing + slow trading + funds in leading categories that have excellent risk-adjusted performance. Of course, you can stay in indexes and do pretty well, but you also suffer all the market volatility. Your only solution to lower volatility is bonds. Sometimes you will be far behind:
  • The SP500 lags as it lost money from 01/2000 to 01/2010.
  • The US bond index has a terrible peformance for 3-5-10-15 years
Investors with pensions, especially pensions that cover all expenses, are not the norm. Most don't have them. History of my allocation 1995-2000 + 2000 until last year = very high % in the US 2000-2010 = value, small cap, international since 2025 = international"
- Fund Daddy
Read more »

Why I use a Donor-Advised Fund

"Our after tax account is pretty equally divided between a total market index fund and a tax efficient fund. The performance of the two is very similar. But when doing our taxes this year, I noticed the index fund had major taxable gains; the taxable income on the tax efficient fund was zero. I’m also concerned about leaving my kids— who are high earning professionals— taxable IRAs. We do regular major Roth conversions each year."
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

How Deals Hurt Returns

THERE'S BEEN DRAMA recently in a normally quiet corner of the market. This story got its start back in 2015, when Warren Buffett helped to merge food makers Kraft and Heinz. At first, it looked like a smart idea. Through cost-cutting, the combined company was expected to save more than $1 billion in annual operating expenses. “This is my kind of transaction,” Buffett said at the time, “uniting two world-class organizations and delivering shareholder value. I’m excited by the opportunities for what this new combined organization will achieve.” The excitement was short-lived, and many observers were skeptical from the start, mainly because Buffett had teamed up with a private equity firm called 3G to make the purchase. 3G had a reputation for being overly zealous when it came to cost-cutting. Initially, Buffett defended 3G. They “could not be better partners,” he wrote in his 2015 annual letter. But within a few years, it became clear that the skeptics had been right. Sales at the combined company began falling, and in 2018, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway recorded a $15 billion write-down on the value of its Kraft Heinz holdings. The following year, Buffett publicly acknowledged that the merger had been a mistake and that Berkshire had overpaid for its stake. “The business does not earn more because you pay more for it,” he said. In the years since, Kraft Heinz has continued to struggle with declining sales. To address the problem, in January of this year, the company brought in a new CEO, Steve Cahillane, and tasked him with splitting the company back up again. By that point, though, Buffett had changed his mind again. His view was that it was now better to leave the combined company intact rather than going through the costly exercise of trying to break it back up. A breakup, he said, wouldn’t create value. “It doesn’t do a thing, you know, for what the ketchup tastes like.” Despite his influence, though, the break-up plan appeared to be moving forward, and Cahillane took the helm on January 1 with that mandate.  Within weeks, Cahillane came around to Buffett’s point of view. The company’s woes were more fundamental, he told the board, and breaking it up wouldn’t address those core issues. Where things go next is an open question.  This story is notable because of Warren Buffett’s involvement, but it turns out not to be so unusual. Studies over the years have found that corporate mergers and acquisitions, on average, do not create value. According to a study by KPMG of more than 3,000 acquisitions, 57% of deals were found to detract from shareholder value rather than increase it. Other research puts the failure rate in the neighborhood of 70%. Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at NYU, sums it up this way: “More value is destroyed by acquisitions than by any other action that companies take.” Why do so many transactions detract from shareholder value? Economist Richard Thaler attributes it to what he calls the “winner’s curse.” This phenomenon was first identified in the petroleum industry, where competitive auctions are held for oil leases. Research found that the winners of these competitive auctions often ended up disappointed—not because they didn’t find any oil, but simply because they had overpaid. Thaler explains that auctions—especially when there are large numbers of bidders—can cause some participants to become emotional, to the point that they become undisciplined and end up bidding too much. The winners in these situations are thus “cursed” because they’re the ones who were willing to overpay the most and thus tend to be most disappointed. Thaler found that the winner’s curse dynamic appears across industries, and that is what explains the poor track record of corporate acquisitions. Competitive situations, whether it was in the Kraft-Heinz case, or in the one that recently played out in the competition for Paramount, can cause prices to go too high. That’s great for sellers but a key reason why acquirers often end up regretting their decisions and why a large number of corporate takeovers end up being reversed. So why, despite all this data, do corporate managers—including even Warren Buffett—pursue these transactions? There are three key reasons.  The first is that they’re an easy way for companies to combat stagnant growth—much easier than the hard work of developing new products. This helps explain the Kraft-Heinz tie-up. According to a write-up in 2015, when the merger was first announced, many of Kraft’s businesses had been stalled out, delivering zero or even negative growth. Another reason mergers and acquisitions are popular despite the odds: Corporate managers tend to overestimate the economic benefits—so-called synergies—that will result from a transaction. Consider companies like Kraft and Heinz. It was easy to make the argument that two companies in the same industry would be able to gain significant efficiencies by combining operations and realizing economies of scale. And since some number of transactions do succeed, even if it’s only a minority, it’s natural for corporate managers to believe that their transaction will be the one to beat the odds. In a 1986 paper, economist Richard Roll identified a related phenomenon, which he dubbed “the hubris hypothesis.” The logic is as follows: Corporate managers who find themselves in a position to be making acquisitions are, by definition, probably doing well. Their stock prices are up, and they likely have cash in the bank. Because their businesses are strong, they’re more likely to feel self-confident in their ability to succeed with a merger or an acquisition even when the data suggests the odds are against them. The lesson for individual investors? Companies will probably always pursue transactions like this that end up subtracting from shareholder value. But since there’s no way to predict when this will happen, I see this as yet another reason to choose broadly-diversified index funds, where any one company’s mistake generally won’t have too much of a negative impact. Also, to the extent that the company being acquired is also in the index, passive fund investors can enjoy the benefits that accrue to that company’s shareholders.   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.
Read more »

Lent, Chocolate, and the Art of Retirement

"What a lovely coincidence — my wife and I have just returned from a walk into the little village of Bushmills, near our vacation home, where we picked up scallions for the colcannon we're making tonight... although we call it champ."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

The Home Ownership Gamble

"I won't lie...I sometimes think living in a boring midwestern city sounds positively sublime. I got lucky on the three homes I owned in Portland. But if the timing on any of them had been off by a couple of years, it could have been a different story."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Financial regrets about parenthood?

"Thanks for sharing that Dan. When I placed my daughter for adoption it was 1988 and open adoptions were a relatively new thing. There weren't very many adoptive parents who were comfortable with the idea of a birth parent remaining a part of their child's life. Placing my daughter for adoption was the most difficult thing I have ever done in my life. I can't imagine making a more difficult decision. But she's grown up to be an accomplished woman, a loving wife and a terrific mother to THREE children herself. And, if anyone was wondering, she has ALWAYS loved dogs--even as a very young child. The dog-lover gene is a strong one..."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Simplify Everything

"And if all of this talk of password managers wasn't burdensome enough, here is an article on a recently discovered newly improved session info-stealer, that enables accessing your content without userid/password/2fa credentials by stealing session credentials. https://www.varonis.com/blog/storm-infostealer?hs_preview=kpiLasCz-210280462761 The lesson here, and something I started doing a lot more aggressively and consistently, especially on important websites (e.g. financial, medical) is to log out of the website after ending my session."
- Doug C
Read more »

Tax Efficiency

TAX EFFICIENT FUND placement is an often underrated topic. The goal of the tax efficient fund placement is to minimize taxes within your investments, and select the right account for those investments.

But how much does that actually matter?

Vanguard’s research finds that a thoughtful asset location strategy can add significantly more value than an equal location strategy. The value added typically ranges from 5 to 30 basis points of after-tax return, depending on circumstances (e.g., income, portfolio size).

Investors generally have access to different account types, including:

  • Tax-free accounts (Roth IRA, Roth 401(k))
  • Taxable brokerage accounts
  • Tax-deferred accounts (401(k), 403(b), Traditional IRA)

If you are an employee that may not have access to a retirement plan, you could perhaps consider a Solo 401(k) if you have "side hustle" business income.

Generally, if your investments are all in tax-deferred or tax-free accounts, fund placement will not make a huge difference for you. That is because these accounts already come with tax efficiency.

If that's your case, two things become important though:

1. Consideration between pre-tax, like Traditional 401(k) or after-tax account, like Roth 401(k). Put simply, this decision generally comes down to your marginal tax rate now versus marginal tax rate in the future (which isn't something easy to predict due to the ever-changing tax landscape).

2. Account allocation. It becomes equally important where exactly you are investing. Roth accounts grow tax-free and qualified withdrawals are tax-free. You likely don't want to hinder that growth by choosing conservative assets (like fixed income, Money Market Funds, and so on).

Tax-efficient fund placement becomes extremely important when you also have a taxable brokerage account, along with tax-advantaged accounts. Many funds pay dividends and distribute capital gains if placed in your taxable brokerage account. At the end of the year, you receive a 1099 with that income and must pay taxes on the dividends and certain distributions.

One thing to call out from history is that you generally shouldn't hold Target Date Retirement mutual funds (or any "proprietary" funds) in your brokerage account. This is because unexpected redemptions could cause a huge tax bill.

You may remember a Vanguard 2021 fiasco where Vanguard opened an institutional TDF to more investors (lowered the minimum investment from $100M to $5M), which caused smaller retirement plans to sell out of individual funds and move into the institutional fund. This triggered massive unexpected capital gains for anyone invested in the individual funds if held in a brokerage account.

All of those unnecessary taxes could've been avoided by:

  • Choosing investments that don’t distribute many dividends or capital gains
  • Choosing passively managed investments (low portfolio turnover)
  • Placing them in tax-advantaged accounts

Let me give you a simple example:

Let’s say you are in a 22% federal tax bracket and a 5% state tax bracket, and you have some money invested in a dividend fund like Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD). SCHD dividends are generally qualified, which means that the dividends get preferential treatment at a 15% federal tax rate for this investor.

The dividend yield is 3.43%. Considering the tax rates, the tax drag is (15% + 5%) * 3.43% = 0.686%.

To put this in perspective, a $10,000 investment will yield ~$343 in annual dividends. The tax impact on that investment will be $60.86.

Of course, if that money was in a Roth IRA, you would pay $0 in taxes on dividend distributions. Alternatively, this is something you may need to decide whether a dividend-focused investing strategy is the right one for you. For example, a Total US Stock Market ETF could have almost 3x less tax drag, and potentially more growth.

As someone in their 20s (who is subject to the Net Investment Income Tax) my focus is 100% on a growth investment strategy, rather than income generation. For someone in their 60s, that strategy could be different (even though selling shares for capital gains is better from a tax timing point of view).

A few more important points:

REIT stocks/ETFs are the least tax-efficient asset class to hold in a brokerage account because their distributions aren’t qualified, so you pay more tax (even though it may qualify for a 199A deduction).

Stocks that don’t pay dividends are the most tax-efficient to hold within your taxable account (Adobe, Amazon, Netflix, and others). However, holding individual stocks may not be the best strategy from an investment and diversification standpoint.

A big benefit of a taxable account is that the money is always easily accessible (liquidity), and you can control your withdrawal timing. While there are strategies that allow you to withdraw from retirement accounts before age 59 (like Rule of 55, 72(t) SoSEPP, Roth conversions), a brokerage account is more flexible. Therefore, analyzing the contributions and investments that go into this account is crucial.

How do you maximize tax efficiency? Let us know in the comments!   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.  

Read more »

Perfection, enemy of good

"Thanks. Glad I mentioned I wasn't the oracle - you've already spotted a flaw in my plan!"
- greg_j_tomamichel
Read more »

Blood Money

"That is indeed a very salient article. I wonder about a sequel given the stock price is now so much higher than when you considered it before. As you mention preserving the NUA opportunity, I gather you’re not inclined to do it now. "
- Michael1
Read more »

Stock Market Contest

"My guess is individual stocks will win but a broad fund will best most others. At least there may be one lesson there."
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Any concern?

"Complete disregard for all market situations. I sold everything on March 2nd. Almost every year I sell once when risk is too high. Usually I'm out for 1–3 weeks, but in 2022, I was out 10 months. My model is based on timing + slow trading + funds in leading categories that have excellent risk-adjusted performance. Of course, you can stay in indexes and do pretty well, but you also suffer all the market volatility. Your only solution to lower volatility is bonds. Sometimes you will be far behind:
  • The SP500 lags as it lost money from 01/2000 to 01/2010.
  • The US bond index has a terrible peformance for 3-5-10-15 years
Investors with pensions, especially pensions that cover all expenses, are not the norm. Most don't have them. History of my allocation 1995-2000 + 2000 until last year = very high % in the US 2000-2010 = value, small cap, international since 2025 = international"
- Fund Daddy
Read more »

How Deals Hurt Returns

THERE'S BEEN DRAMA recently in a normally quiet corner of the market. This story got its start back in 2015, when Warren Buffett helped to merge food makers Kraft and Heinz. At first, it looked like a smart idea. Through cost-cutting, the combined company was expected to save more than $1 billion in annual operating expenses. “This is my kind of transaction,” Buffett said at the time, “uniting two world-class organizations and delivering shareholder value. I’m excited by the opportunities for what this new combined organization will achieve.” The excitement was short-lived, and many observers were skeptical from the start, mainly because Buffett had teamed up with a private equity firm called 3G to make the purchase. 3G had a reputation for being overly zealous when it came to cost-cutting. Initially, Buffett defended 3G. They “could not be better partners,” he wrote in his 2015 annual letter. But within a few years, it became clear that the skeptics had been right. Sales at the combined company began falling, and in 2018, Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway recorded a $15 billion write-down on the value of its Kraft Heinz holdings. The following year, Buffett publicly acknowledged that the merger had been a mistake and that Berkshire had overpaid for its stake. “The business does not earn more because you pay more for it,” he said. In the years since, Kraft Heinz has continued to struggle with declining sales. To address the problem, in January of this year, the company brought in a new CEO, Steve Cahillane, and tasked him with splitting the company back up again. By that point, though, Buffett had changed his mind again. His view was that it was now better to leave the combined company intact rather than going through the costly exercise of trying to break it back up. A breakup, he said, wouldn’t create value. “It doesn’t do a thing, you know, for what the ketchup tastes like.” Despite his influence, though, the break-up plan appeared to be moving forward, and Cahillane took the helm on January 1 with that mandate.  Within weeks, Cahillane came around to Buffett’s point of view. The company’s woes were more fundamental, he told the board, and breaking it up wouldn’t address those core issues. Where things go next is an open question.  This story is notable because of Warren Buffett’s involvement, but it turns out not to be so unusual. Studies over the years have found that corporate mergers and acquisitions, on average, do not create value. According to a study by KPMG of more than 3,000 acquisitions, 57% of deals were found to detract from shareholder value rather than increase it. Other research puts the failure rate in the neighborhood of 70%. Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at NYU, sums it up this way: “More value is destroyed by acquisitions than by any other action that companies take.” Why do so many transactions detract from shareholder value? Economist Richard Thaler attributes it to what he calls the “winner’s curse.” This phenomenon was first identified in the petroleum industry, where competitive auctions are held for oil leases. Research found that the winners of these competitive auctions often ended up disappointed—not because they didn’t find any oil, but simply because they had overpaid. Thaler explains that auctions—especially when there are large numbers of bidders—can cause some participants to become emotional, to the point that they become undisciplined and end up bidding too much. The winners in these situations are thus “cursed” because they’re the ones who were willing to overpay the most and thus tend to be most disappointed. Thaler found that the winner’s curse dynamic appears across industries, and that is what explains the poor track record of corporate acquisitions. Competitive situations, whether it was in the Kraft-Heinz case, or in the one that recently played out in the competition for Paramount, can cause prices to go too high. That’s great for sellers but a key reason why acquirers often end up regretting their decisions and why a large number of corporate takeovers end up being reversed. So why, despite all this data, do corporate managers—including even Warren Buffett—pursue these transactions? There are three key reasons.  The first is that they’re an easy way for companies to combat stagnant growth—much easier than the hard work of developing new products. This helps explain the Kraft-Heinz tie-up. According to a write-up in 2015, when the merger was first announced, many of Kraft’s businesses had been stalled out, delivering zero or even negative growth. Another reason mergers and acquisitions are popular despite the odds: Corporate managers tend to overestimate the economic benefits—so-called synergies—that will result from a transaction. Consider companies like Kraft and Heinz. It was easy to make the argument that two companies in the same industry would be able to gain significant efficiencies by combining operations and realizing economies of scale. And since some number of transactions do succeed, even if it’s only a minority, it’s natural for corporate managers to believe that their transaction will be the one to beat the odds. In a 1986 paper, economist Richard Roll identified a related phenomenon, which he dubbed “the hubris hypothesis.” The logic is as follows: Corporate managers who find themselves in a position to be making acquisitions are, by definition, probably doing well. Their stock prices are up, and they likely have cash in the bank. Because their businesses are strong, they’re more likely to feel self-confident in their ability to succeed with a merger or an acquisition even when the data suggests the odds are against them. The lesson for individual investors? Companies will probably always pursue transactions like this that end up subtracting from shareholder value. But since there’s no way to predict when this will happen, I see this as yet another reason to choose broadly-diversified index funds, where any one company’s mistake generally won’t have too much of a negative impact. Also, to the extent that the company being acquired is also in the index, passive fund investors can enjoy the benefits that accrue to that company’s shareholders.   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.
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 6: OUR FINANCIAL life involves endless tradeoffs. We usually have a good idea of what our dollars are buying us. But to be good stewards of our wealth, we should also ponder what we’re giving up.

Truths

NO. 27: COST-CONSCIOUS investors can save thousands over their lifetime. Take two investors who salt away $5,000 a year for 40 years. One pays 1% of assets in annual investment costs, while the other incurs 0.1%. If both earn 5% a year before expenses, the cost-conscious investor will amass $618,000, while the high-cost investor garners $494,000.

think

MARKET PORTFOLIO. This is the investable universe—all securities available for purchase. It consists of four sectors of roughly similar size: U.S. stocks, U.S. bonds, foreign stocks and foreign bonds. This is what all investors own and reflects our collective judgment of what securities are worth. Arguably, if you own a different mix, you’re making a market bet.

Truths

NO. 112: ALL-TIME highs in the stock market shouldn’t cause alarm. Investors often get unnerved when they see the Dow Jones Industrial Average or the S&P 500-stock index hit one new high after another. But because share prices trend upward over the long haul, all-time highs happen often—and don’t necessarily signal an imminent market downturn.

Saving diligently

Manifesto

NO. 6: OUR FINANCIAL life involves endless tradeoffs. We usually have a good idea of what our dollars are buying us. But to be good stewards of our wealth, we should also ponder what we’re giving up.

Spotlight: Advisors

Finding Flat-Fee Financial Advisors

I noticed that in the post by Dick Quinn – beyond-fees-is-using-a-financial-advisor-advisable , couple of folks had mentioned having flat-fee advisors. I see that it is lot easier to find advisors that charge a % of the assets under management but one that I am not fond of.
Have read mixed reviews about FACET, have found two sites that have flat-fee FAs

https://www.flatfeeadvisors.org/
https://saragrillo.com/2022/03/14/flat-fee-financial-advisors/

Are there other resources that one can look up?
Part of the “holistic”

Read more »

My Mistakes

Thank you Jonathan for as always, for your willingness to tell your story, the good and the bad.
I have one big mistake to get out there.
About 10 years before my wife and I retired, I started getting interested in money. I educated myself about index versus managed funds, fees, etc. While both of us had sizable 403b accounts that were tied up at work, I put all our after tax money in Vanguard. When we retired,

Read more »

Sunny Prospects

“NICE OFFICES,” OFFERED the 30-something investor, as he cast a wary eye across the corporate art, barren desks and empty bookshelves.
“Yeah, we asked management if they could put us on the 12th floor, so our suite number could be 12b-1. Funny, right?” The financial salesman winked.
“Not sure I get it.”
“It’s a joke, but clients never get it, they pay it.”
“What qualifications do you have?”
“See those initials after my name?

Read more »

Fishing for Feedback

I met with a Vice President of Fisher Investments, a very large and very well-advertised fee-only investment advisory firm, to see if they would be a good fit to manage my portfolio. It turns out they weren’t, and after they asked why, this was my reply:
Frank,
Thanks for taking the time to meet with me to explain how Fisher Investments works.
I respect you for asking for feedback. And since you asked:
1. I’m not a fan of the fee structure:
-Its size: Paying you $70,000 a year to manage my portfolio seems like an awful lot of money.

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You Aren’t Listening

WHEN IT COMES to communication, I’m kind of a fanatic. (My wife would say I should drop the “kind of.”) More specifically, I’m a fan of responsive communication.
Back in my working days, when I practiced criminal law, I made it a point to return phone calls and emails from clients promptly. It was rare that I didn’t do it the same day. If that meant staying late at the office until I caught up,

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Thanks for Nothing

AFTER TAKING THE Series 65 exam in February, I set a goal for 2019: Help 10 friends and family members with their finances. Instead of giving specific investment advice, I wanted to educate them on money matters. I knew that they would benefit from one-on-one discussions, well-regarded books, educational videos and credible websites. But I also suspected that some might hesitate to talk to me about their finances. Nonetheless, I gave it a try.

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Spotlight: Sayler

Things to Experience

BEHAVIORAL ECONOMISTS tell us that we’ll get more satisfaction if we spend our dollars on experiences rather than on purchasing possessions. But what if the purchase allows us to have an experience? Buying a bike, for instance, allows me to take a ride with my sons. That raises the question: How much do we need to spend on equipment to get the maximum benefit from an experience? I got a glimpse of the answer to that question several years ago as I was walking out of the office on a Friday. The company’s lab director was leaving a little early, as was I. We talked a bit about our weekend plans. He and his wife were heading to Minnesota’s Boundary Waters for a weekend of canoeing. I was taking my sons and a group of Boy Scouts canoeing in a similar area. It struck me that the lab director was transporting his Kevlar canoe using his new Lexus, while I was taking a factory seconds rotomolded canoe on top of my 10-year-old Chevy. But we would both be sleeping under the exact same summer sky. We would each hear the laugh of loons on the lake in the morning. We would each enjoy the company of our companions. To have an experience, there’s some sum of money that needs to be spent on things. But once the basics are covered, there’s sharply diminishing returns on the additional dollars spent.
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Path to Retirement

SOME FRIENDS WERE recently discussing their investment performance. I couldn’t contribute to the conversation—because I have no idea what our investment returns have been. The fact is, I don’t find performance information all that valuable, plus it’s relatively hard to calculate since you have to account for both price changes and dividend or interest payments. To be sure, investment returns are useful if you’re looking to determine whether a mutual fund manager is adding returns in excess of a benchmark index, also known as generating alpha. But since I invest mainly in index mutual funds and exchange-traded index funds, I’m not expecting to achieve any alpha. Moreover, folks don’t spend investment returns. Instead, what they spend are dollars. I can have terrific returns, but if I don’t have much invested, it won’t amount to much. So how do I track our financial progress? Every year, I calculate the net worth—all financial accounts minus all debt—for my wife and me. I then take that figure, and look at measures that assess net worth or total savings as a multiple of your salary. Different financial firms have slightly different guidelines. For instance, as you can see from the accompanying chart, T. Rowe Price says that 45-year-olds should have financial assets that are two to four times their annual salary. Savings benchmarks are also available from Fidelity Investments and in Charles Farrell's book Your Money Ratios. The idea behind these measures: Your net worth or total savings should hit the various age milestones—and, if it does, you’re on track to retire in comfort in your 60s. HumbleDollar’s Two-Minute Checkup uses a similar methodology to assess a user’s “financial fitness.” Even though I have no idea what our investment returns have been, I can track our net worth as a multiple of our salaries, and…
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Predictably Wrong

I DON’T USUALLY FOLLOW the NFL. But this year, I’ve made an exception—because the current season offers a valuable lesson not just for football fans, but also for investors. Teams devote huge amounts of time, energy and money to determining who’s the best quarterback for their team. Yet, this year, three quarterbacks are leading their teams when most experts, who get paid to evaluate talent, didn’t give them much of a chance. Brock Purdy leads the San Francisco 49ers. He was the 2022 NFL draft’s 262nd and final pick, and became a third-string quarterback. As a rookie last year, due to injuries to the team’s two other quarterbacks, he was elevated to starter and took the 49ers to the NFC Championship game. Joshua Dobbs was the 2017 draft’s 135th pick, as well as the seventh quarterback to be selected. In seven years in the NFL, he’s bounced among seven teams, meaning the first six teams looked at him and decided they had better options. He started a total of 11 games for three teams. This season, only four days after being traded to Minnesota, he led the Vikings to victory over the Atlanta Falcons. It's not clear whether he'll remain the starting quarterback. Finally, Aidan O’Connell was the 2023 draft’s 135th pick. He was the third-string quarterback for the Las Vegas Raiders this season until injuries to the two other quarterbacks meant he got the starting position, and he won his first two games. To be sure, folks evaluating quarterbacks selected each of these players in the NFL draft. There are more than 250 Division I football teams and only 32 NFL teams, so just being selected says that the teams thought these quarterbacks were better than many of their college peers. What does any of this have to do…
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New Kid on the Job

I'M RETIRED, BUT I KEEP fairly busy. From January through April, I volunteer at AARP, helping folks file their income taxes. From May through October, our vegetable garden keeps me occupied. That leaves November and December as a slow period. There’s some volunteering that I do, but nothing that fills up large amounts of time. This year, I thought I might try some seasonal part-time work to keep myself occupied. Retailers usually need help during the holiday season. I’m sure that I could have gotten a higher wage if I’d applied to work for one of the big discount retail chains. But I really didn’t want to be too stressed by large volumes of customers, so I limited my job search to a few stores that I thought would need extra staff but wouldn’t be swamped by huge crowds on Black Friday. The experience reminded me of three things. Although I knew each of them, it was good to get a refresher. First, resumes still matter. At first, I slightly modified my current curriculum vitae (CV), stating that I wanted a seasonal, part-time retail position, but I left my work experience unchanged. I got soundly rejected by potential employers. Maybe it was discrimination because of my extensive work history. Maybe they thought I was overqualified. It really doesn’t matter—it wasn’t working. I changed my CV. I showed only five years of experience and, instead of saying that I was a manufacturing director, I said I’d been responsible for customer satisfaction. Customer satisfaction was certainly part of my previous job description, just not my only duty. Suddenly, I got more calls from employers, including an employer that had previously rejected me based on my old CV. Second, culture matters. I took a job at a national bookseller. Everybody was very nice…
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Wrong Number

WE BOUGHT A SAILBOAT and trailer in 2008 for our son for his 15th birthday. At the time, he was too young to own a boat, so I registered it in my name. Fast forward 15 years, and we finally got around to transferring the title to our son. Transferring the boat was quick and easy. Transferring the trailer was not. Cars, trucks, boats and trailers all have unique vehicle identification numbers, or VINs. In this case, it’s a 17-digit number. The first number of the VIN engraved on the trailer is a five. The seller sent in the title transfer paperwork, which included the VIN number and which I signed. Two weeks later, I got the title from the state. Everything was correct, except the VIN started with a four—something I didn’t notice at the time. When we tried to transfer the title to our son 15 years later, we discovered the state had ownership records for the various VINs—but I wasn’t listed as the owner of any of them. Compounding the confusion, the state upgraded its computer system in 2008, and it’s now difficult to get information from that time. Fortunately, I still had the original bill of sale, the original title transfer, and the title that I'd received from the state. The state asked me to produce: A photo of the trailer’s VIN A photo of the license plate Photos of each side of the trailer, both a hard copy and a digital file A statement of how I came to own a trailer with no previous transfer of title on record, with the statement also signed by the original seller Fortunately, I'd purchased the boat on consignment from a well-known boat dealer that’s still in business. When I showed the boat dealership all of the photos and original…
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Any Seat Will Do

WHEN OUR CHILDREN were little, we had season tickets to the Children’s Theatre in Minneapolis. We started taking our older child, and then brought his brother along when he was old enough to enjoy the show. We had tickets in the front row of the balcony. Before my youngest son’s first show, he looked over the balcony railing at all of the people below. He asked why we were clear up here, when there were all of those people below us. My oldest son told him in a conspiratorial whisper that it was “because Mom and Dad are cheap.” I reminded them that, while we may be cheap, they were here at the show. In my defense, I believe that, in many venues, the first row of the balcony is one of the better seats in the house. For several years, we held season tickets to the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. Our seats were in the second balcony. But as I’ve gotten older and our finances have become more secure, I find that my ticket purchasing has become a bit less thrifty. For instance, a friend is coming to town and we’re going to a Twins game. We’re sitting in the seventh row behind home plate. Similarly, when Manhattan Transfer was doing one of its last concerts, the venue was the Dakota, an intimate jazz club. My wife and I secured a booth right in front of the stage. Meanwhile, we took my mother to the touring production of Hello Dolly. We were in the first row of the main floor. My mother’s smile while watching the show made the price of the tickets immaterial. I still can’t bring myself to pay for tickets on the 50-yard line when Purdue, my alma mater, comes to town. But I’m closer to…
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