If you get that next pay raise, you imagine everything will be better. But that’s also what you thought when you earned half as much.
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.
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. 23: IF WE DON’T have much money, we should compensate with time—by starting to save when we’re young, holding stocks for decades and encouraging our children to do the same.
CHECK YOUR portfolio percentages. Each year often brings sharply different results for stocks and bonds, U.S. and overseas shares, growth and value stocks, and large- and small-company shares. This can push your portfolio away from your target mix—and you may need to rebalance. This is best done within a retirement account to avoid triggering big tax bills.
NO. 10: WALL STREET always strives to look its best. To ensure mutual fund expenses and advisory fees appear small, they’re expressed as a percent of the dollars we invest, not as a percent of our likely gain. To make their results appear more impressive, money managers pick their benchmark indexes carefully and use cumulative return “mountain” charts.
LONGEVITY RISK. Spending down a retirement portfolio is tricky: You don’t know how long you will live—and hence there’s a risk you’ll run out of money before you run out of breath. To fend off that risk, limit annual portfolio withdrawals to 4% or 5%, delay Social Security to get a larger check and consider an immediate annuity that pays lifetime income.
NO. 23: IF WE DON’T have much money, we should compensate with time—by starting to save when we’re young, holding stocks for decades and encouraging our children to do the same.
Let’s play a hypothetical – a married couple 60 and 58, with a net worth of $10M. No debt, no children.
What roles does a financial advisor play, assuming the couple is content on how they invest?
What role might a tax expert play for planning and managing cost avoidance over time?
We often hear about the power of compounding returns—how investments grow exponentially over time. But there’s a lesser-known side to compounding: the cost of ongoing financial advisor fees.
Consider a $1,000,000 portfolio growing at 7% annually. Over 10 years, that could grow to about $1,967,151—if left untouched. But add a seemingly modest 1% annual advisory fee, and your ending value drops to roughly $1,779,056. That’s a $188,000 difference.
Why such a large gap?
Each year, the fee reduces your balance before it compounds.
On my way to better things
(No time left for you) I found myself some wings
(No time left for you) Distant roads are callin’ me
(No time left for you)
– The Guess Who
It had been a while since I had been mailed the opportunity to “get guaranteed income that you can’t outlive,” “preserve your capital,” and most importantly “enjoy a complimentary dinner.” I was concerned that there might have been some sort of cosmic shift away from financial planners who charge 1% of assets or even worse that my name had fallen off the free steak mailing list.
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”
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,
$3 Trillion S&P 500 Gatecrashers
Mark Crothers | Mar 21, 2026
Mark Crothers is a retired small business owner from the UK with a keen interest in personal finance and simple living. Married to his high school sweetheart, with daughters and grandchildren, he knows the importance of building a secure financial future. With an aversion to social media, he prefers to spend his time on his main passions: reading, scratch cooking, racket sports, and hiking.
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