Thanks, Younger Self
Catherine Horiuchi | Apr 15, 2020
SAVING FOR THE FUTURE entails a pinch in the present. Every so often, it makes sense to reconsider how much we save—and whether it’s time to take a break from saving. As a recent early retiree, I was pondering this, even before the latest stock market disruption. Unfortunately, none of us has a reliable crystal ball that tells us when to buy low or sell high. We also don’t have complete knowledge of our future self. Maybe future me will receive a windfall or die young, so I can get by with saving less. Or maybe I’ll develop a chronic condition and need more savings. We don’t know how lucky we will be on the way from youth to retirement—those years when we have the greatest opportunity to save. Savings aren’t “safe.” Risk is inevitable. Cash in an FDIC-protected bank account is guaranteed to keep its face value, but it’s also pretty much guaranteed to decline in real value each year due to inflation. Meanwhile, buying bad stock or bond market investments does little more than transfer your wealth to someone else. Recessions, market corrections and normal fluctuations can be difficult to stomach. And then we have occasional extraordinary events, like the economic and political disruptions caused by the coronavirus. Faced with all this uncertainty, I don’t try to divine the future. Instead, in setting aside a portion of my money for future me, I’m simply seeking to maintain purchasing power for a comfortable old age. With moderate luck and ongoing financial education, I might be able to eke out a percentage point or three above inflation, opening the road to a more prosperous retirement. I recently reviewed the Series EE and I savings bonds that I’ve purchased over the years. These ultra-conservative investments are rarely recommended. They’ve never been more…
Read more » 4% every year? even this one?
Catherine | Apr 9, 2025
I'm withdrawing a bit from IRAs, ahead of RMDs in a few years, which will decide for me how much I'll be taking out each year. For those of you who make voluntary withdrawals, do you go with a fixed percentage, like 4% every year, plus an inflation boost, calculated on Jan. 1 and taken at the beginning of the year? Or do you recalculate to reflect market change, and withdraw gradually throughout the year? Or wait till Dec. 31 when you know how the year went, and then take it? I'm thinking this is sort of related to "decummulation", which for me includes both retirement money and other savings socked away. 4% a year max spent out of all your assets? Or more variable?
Read more » At the End
Catherine Horiuchi | Nov 21, 2019
IT STARTED INNOCENTLY. A doctor’s visit. A blood test. Results. Admit to hospital for “a couple days of observation” that instead cascaded, over six days, into my husband’s death at age 71. His death certificate states “etiology unknown.” While doctors suspected prescribed medication, we will never know just what caused his liver to fail. Throughout, the situation had been confusing. Clarity regarding treatment options—and the likely outcome from procedures—was in short supply. He and I and doctors made medical decisions in the face of this uncertainty and without regard to costs. Crucially useful was my husband’s advance medical directive, completed a decade earlier when we updated our wills. I kept this at hand to reference as we made decisions. Language in directives is ambiguous and can be a poor fit to clinical decisions. Yet the directive was essential to working through differences of opinion among family members and to obtaining, in the final hours, a frank assessment from attending doctors and clinicians. Amid many roundtrips at all hours between home, hospital, airport and hotels, I lost my identification twice. Once, I was paying for parking at the hospital lot kiosk. I cancelled my credit and debit cards before getting my wallet back two days later, less the cash. “Nobody turns wallets in, ever,” said the hospital security guard as he handed it back. After that, I only carried keys, phone, my driver’s license and my backup credit card, and lost the license and credit card a couple of days later. It would be two months before I could replace my driver’s license with a new picture ID. In the interim, I carried my passport card and a printout listing my appointment with the DMV to replace my driver’s license. At the end, I was bedside with our three teenagers. Afterward, before…
Read more » Twin Peeks
Catherine Horiuchi | Jan 12, 2024
CAN IT REALLY BE TWO years since I wrote about sending my twins off to college? One is a chemistry major, midway through her junior year. Meanwhile, for her twin sister, the artist, there have been big changes in her college trajectory. My initial criteria for college selections included published statistics on cost, likelihood of admission, timely graduation and low rates of loan default. I took this last stat as a reasonable proxy for post-college success. My daughter the chemistry major is on track to graduate after four years. This past semester was her first as an organic chemistry lab assistant. She’s applying for internships in her field. If that doesn’t work out, she’ll take any other job. Her sister, after three semesters in art school, came home without a degree. She’d become uncomfortable with the expense, not to mention the raw talent, Herculean effort and plain old good luck that would be essential to earning a living in the arts. She loved the big city and befriended amazing people. I’d paid tuition in full each semester, so she walked away debt-free. I’ve told her from the first to avoid the sunk cost fallacy—seeing something to completion only because she’d already invested considerable effort. Rather, I encouraged her to treat each semester as a new decision. She could continue at art school, look for work, switch to community college, become a volunteer or try something else. She returned home with “some college,” a category frequently found in job descriptions. A family friend suggested she volunteer at a school library. In our city, many elementary school libraries are open part of the day and staffed by volunteers. To take on this role at a public school required fingerprinting for a criminal background check and screening for tuberculosis. The principal explained the…
Read more » Goodbye Assets
Catherine Horiuchi | Jan 12, 2021
MY TWINS ARE SENIORS in high school. That means, pandemic or no pandemic, we spent the fall applying to colleges. Here in California, the pandemic closed public schools in March and most did not reopen for in-person teaching with the start of the current academic year. That forced parents to stand in for college counselors. The preparations high school juniors usually engage in, such as visiting colleges and taking standardized tests, didn’t occur this past spring or summer. Student athletes spent the summer practicing in parks and driveways. Grades suffered under remote learning. For all these reasons, applying to college has been more difficult. And then there’s the price tag. Post-secondary education can be relatively inexpensive—or it can break the Bank of Mom and Dad. The federal government supplies some grants and many loans to limit the immediate financial damage, and colleges also dole out money from their own funds. Still, the student loan crisis is front page news. That’s one reason so many parents try to ensure their young adults don’t leave college with crushing debt. The federal government’s role begins with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, with “free” meaning it doesn’t cost you to ask. FAFSA calculates a family’s expected family contribution (EFC) based on the parents’ and student’s income and assets. On top of that, colleges use their own guidelines to distribute the grant money they control. For families earning below about $50,000, the EFC will likely be $0. After that, the amount rises sharply—and sometimes unfairly. For instance, middle-class single parents, along with older parents with a healthy amount of savings, may be shocked by how much they’re expected to pay toward college costs. There’s no way to sugarcoat it: Parents with decent incomes, or who’ve successfully set aside a chunk of…
Read more » Missing a Step
Catherine Horiuchi | Apr 23, 2020
I LIKE TO THINK my husband and I were savvy and careful when planning our estate. Yet anybody can make an occasional dumb mistake. That brings me to my next surprise in settling my husband’s affairs—and it came with an unfortunate legal bill. As a couple, we’d established a revocable living trust at a young age, when death was a strictly theoretical idea. The trust eliminated the need for our estate to go through probate, not that I knew what that was at the time. Ten years later, as it dawned on us that we had edged closer to the end of life, we reviewed our trust for changes in the law and in our finances. This process included updating financial accounts, so they’d roll into the trust, either immediately or on our deaths. We’d decided on a trust based on our personal situation. Not everyone needs one. Shady characters try to sell them to people who don’t. Still, even if you don’t need a revocable living trust, you do need to ensure your house, retirement accounts and other assets are inherited according to your wishes. The process of establishing the beneficiaries for a financial account is typically simple. After reviewing our trust, we dutifully mailed request letters to retitle accounts, so they’d be included in the trust. Some institutions immediately updated our accounts, while others responded with their own forms that needed to be signed and notarized, and then returned. Well, we were busy. With kids and work and life, those forms sat unattended, along with other important but not urgent paperwork. After my husband died, I found these forms. Luckily, most accounts had been retitled and had named beneficiaries. But one personal account had no beneficiary named. Our legal work to ease the management of our estate was…
Read more »
Ageing and the Open Road
ArticleMark Crothers | May 2, 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.
Saving for Grandchildren
ArticleJohn Yeigh | May 2, 2026
- Tax-free growth when used for qualified education expenses
- High gift-tax contribution limits: $19K per contributor per year (indexed)
- New ability to convert up to $35K into a Roth IRA for the beneficiary
Cons- Relatively complex with penalties and taxes on non-qualified withdrawals
- Limited, state-approved investment options
- Risk of underutilization if the child does not pursue qualifying education
Caveats- Technology and AI could significantly reduce education’s cost structure in the future
- Roth conversions are capped at $35K lifetime
- The 529 must be open 15 years, and contributions must age 5 years before conversion
- Conversions require the beneficiary to have earned income (i.e. they could Roth anyway)
- Annual Roth contribution limits still apply (e.g., $7.5K in 2026), so completing the full $35K conversion would take five years
UGM Custodial Accounts Pros- Brokerage account where up to $2.7K of unearned income can be tax-free each year
- High gift-tax contribution limits: $19K per contributor per year (indexed)
- Broad investment flexibility — stocks, bonds, funds, etc.
- Few restrictions on how funds may be used for the child’s benefit
- Potential for low taxes on capital gains, but subject to marginal “kiddie tax” at parent’s rates until tax-independency or age 24
Cons- Higher income or capital gains could trigger the kiddie tax at the parents’ marginal rate
- Assets count as the child’s for financial-aid purposes
Caveats- Custodians have some ability to spend down the account for legitimate child expenses if the child is a wild-child in the later teen years
Coverdell Accounts Pros- Tax-free growth for qualified education expenses
- More flexible investment choices than most 529 plans
Cons- Low contribution limit: $2K per year plus income limits restrict who can contribute
- Essentially irrelevant today given the expanded options within 529 plans
Trump Accounts Pros- $1K government seed deposit for children born 2025–2028
- Contribution limit of $5K per year in 2026, indexed to inflation
- Parent employers may contribute up to $2.5K per year (also indexed)
- Tax-deferred growth with Roth-conversion opportunities beginning at age 18
- No earned-income requirement for Roth conversions
- Roth conversions are ideal in low-income years starting after age 18 once the child has transitioned to tax-independency of parents or at age 24 when “kiddie taxation” ends. Early tax independence could even be a combined Roth plus student financial-aid strategy
- Potential to convert large account values over several years at relatively low tax rates (potentially marginal 10-12% tax-rates, but averaging less due to the standard deduction).
Cons- Investment options limited to low-cost indexed stock funds (not necessarily a drawback)
- Penalty-free withdrawals must wait until age 59½, but the accounts could be advantageous even including penalties
- Limited custodian control and intervention possibilities if the teen is a wild-child
Caveats- If Roth conversions are not undertaken during the child’s low-income years, a UGMA invested to capture long-term capital gains tax-rates may outperform a Trump Account taxed at ordinary income tax-rates
- Watch this space as future adjustments or eligibility changes are possible
In effect, the 529 is a two-decade college savings program having some complexity and withdrawal limitations; the UGM is a reasonably flexible, 18-30-year college or house downpayment savings program; and the Trump account is a somewhat inflexible, sixty-year retirement accelerator. Resulting Playbook Here is our family’s intended playbook for tax-advantaged accounts in the grandchild's name:- Parents’ retirement account fundings remain their top priority - 401K’s at a minimum up to the match, HSAs with their triple tax advantages, and Roths as long as eligible within income limits.
- A Trump account has already been initiated to secure the free $1K government seed contribution – grows to potentially $2.6K at age 18 after penalties and taxes.
- Limited 529 funding has also been initiated to start the 15-year clock for potential later Roth conversions.
- The family’s next priority is to fund the Trump account which starts at $5K later this year. Maximizing the Roth conversion opportunity will require ~$116K of contributions (at 3% inflation) over 18 years which we grandparents intend to help fund. I estimate the Roth converted Trump account could grow to ~$2 million of tax-free money at age 60 (6% growth) assuming early-age Roth conversions, and the Wall Street Journal projects as much as $3 million (link likely paywalled).
- The subsequent priorities are to start UGM taxable account and 529 account contributions in parallel to perhaps initial levels of about $35K each. This may take our family some years depending upon available resources for contributions.
For the UGM account, a balance of $35K should capture a sizeable chunk of the annual $2.7K tax-free income limit by investing in high-yield income alternatives. For the 529 account, $35K aligns with the Roth conversion limit. On a personal note, we had extremely positive UGM outcomes with our children. We saved taxes for two decades, and each child used the ~$60K balance as down payments on their first house shortly after college. Due to the 529’s withdrawal rigidities and potential technology impacts, we are unlikely to fund the 529 to the max.- We will skip Coverdells as the alternatives offer ample savings opportunity in the child’s name ($200K+).
- Depending upon spare resources available for gifting, we can always reassess future contributions.
That’s our plan, and we’re sticking to it…. until something changes.California, Here They Came
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Everything She Needed
ArticleKen Cutler | Nov 14, 2023
THE MOST FRUGAL person I’ve ever known was my Great Aunt Beatrice. To all the family, she was just Aunt Bea. Never married, she was the sister of my paternal grandfather, a man who passed away 14 years before I was born. She was a dignified lady, proper and pleasant, and not given to bursts of laughter. Still, I felt closer to her than to any of my living grandparents or other relatives from that generation.
When I was growing up, Aunt Bea lived in the same town as us. She would usually be present for our family’s Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations, and would occasionally be present for other gatherings. Every Christmas, she’d give each of my three sisters and me money envelopes that contained exactly two crisp $1 bills. Although I liked getting the money, back then I couldn’t appreciate what a sacrifice those gifts must have been.
Aunt Bea was born in 1891. I remember that because I inherited the silver dollar bearing her birth year that she kept throughout her life. Although it’s not an especially valuable coin or in particularly good condition, it was probably her most valuable possession at the time she passed away.
[caption id="attachment_1540969" align="alignright" width="300"]While I have some old family photographs from when Aunt Bea was young, I don’t know much about her early life. I do know she lost her brother Willits in the great influenza pandemic of 1918. I wish now I’d paid more attention as a youngster when we all got together and she held forth about family history. Being a typical kid, I was bored by stories about people I’d never met.
Aunt Bea’s last job was as a milliner. She sold ladies’ hats during a time when women increasingly went hatless. Her income steadily dropped, while the rent on her shop increased. She stuck at it too long, my mother once told me, and the landlord wanted her out of the space she rented.
Aunt Bea was always hoping fancy hats would come back in style. They never did. Eventually, she was forced to close her little business.
While I was never privy to the details of Aunt Bea’s finances, by the time I knew her, I’m pretty certain she didn’t live on much more than whatever she got from Social Security. I also don’t know whether my father discreetly helped her out financially from time to time. I wouldn’t be surprised if he did.
Aunt Bea rented what would charitably be called a studio apartment, in an older house on the outskirts of town. It was a single large room with the tiniest kitchen area I’ve ever seen.
Aunt Bea didn’t have a car. Her apartment was within walking distance of the local ACME grocery store. Did she have a television? I don’t remember one. I’m guessing she might have had a radio, but I can’t be certain. I really don’t know how she passed her days.
The reason I remember Aunt Bea’s apartment is that one time my parents dropped me off there when they needed an emergency babysitter. With three older sisters, the need for outside babysitting rarely presented itself.
I remember being bored at Aunt Bea’s place. No TV, no games, not much to do. Aunt Bea was a kindly lady, though, and wanted to take good care of me. She boiled some water, and we sat down for a proper tea.
Now, I wasn’t much of a tea drinker, but I had indulged in it before. I saw that for the two cups of tea that she made, she only used one tea bag. When I complained that I should have my own bag, she exclaimed, “Why, I can get four cups of tea out of one bag.”
When asked about my visit with Aunt Bea, I told my parents the tea bag story. My mother burst out laughing—probably mostly due to my imitation of Aunt Bea’s voice. She also explained that Aunt Bea didn’t have much money and had learned to be frugal.
As Aunt Bea aged, her financial situation worsened. Even the rent on her small apartment was a strain. Then, one day, I heard that Aunt Bea—now well into her 80s—was accepted into a church-related retirement home a few towns over. She would assign her small Social Security check to the home, and they would take care of her.
For Aunt Bea, this was like winning the lottery. She had her own room in the large, ancient facility. Her meals were taken care of, and she no longer had to worry about finances. In addition, after living alone for so many years, she was now part of a community. For her, these truly were the golden years. She was so happy to be there.
Aunt Bea continued to appreciate the small things in life. During my high school years, at Christmastime, I would make her a batch of chocolate chip cookies and send it to her at the home, usually with a handwritten letter. Whenever I visited her with my parents, she would rave about the cookies. She would allow herself only one a day to make them last as long as possible.
My letters were a source of amusement for her. The envelopes addressed to “Aunt Bea Cutler” were particularly popular. She loved talking about the letters, even to staff and other residents. I don’t think she received a lot of mail at the retirement home.
Aunt Bea passed away in 1986 at age 95. She had no funeral, and my parents were the only ones present for her burial. She had little to pass on except a box of family pictures and her silver dollar, both of which are now in my possession. Aunt Bea never had much in the way of wealth or possessions. But in the end, she had everything she needed.
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