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HSA Tips

HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNT (HSA) is the most efficient tax-advantaged investment account because it offers a triple tax advantage:
  1. Contributions are tax-deductible
  2. Earnings grow tax-free
  3. Withdrawals are tax-free if used for medical expenses
One of the best uses of an HSA is to actually invest the balance. For example, I keep $500 (the minimum required balance) in cash. The rest, I invest in low-cost index funds. This allows me to maximize compounding inside the HSA account. I also receive a $1,000 HSA match. Since I’m young and my medical expenses are low, it’s a great way to minimize taxes and grow the balance. I will also not touch my HSA at all, even if I have medical expenses. I will reimburse myself 20-30 years down the road (more on this in a bit). But if you are paying medical expenses with the HSA, you should have at least a portion of the funds in a Treasury fund or money market fund (MMF) for stability. Generally, this amount should be equal to at least one year of deductible costs. Rules To contribute to an HSA, three things must happen:
  1. You need a high deductible health plan (HDHP). You cannot contribute to an HSA without one. A “high deductible health plan” is defined under §223(c)(2)(A) as a health plan with an annual deductible of more than $1,700 for self-only coverage or $3,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket limit is $8,500 or $17,000 (family).
Importantly, before enrolling in a high deductible plan, you need to decide whether it’s worth it in the first place. You will generally receive the biggest benefit from an HDHP if you are in good health (more on this in a bit). 2. You aren’t enrolled in Medicare. 3. You cannot be claimed as a dependent. Importantly, the HSA balance never expires. This account is always yours to keep, even if you leave your employer. Some people confuse an HSA with an FSA (which does expire, aside from a small potential rollover option). The account typically works like a “bank account,” where you make deposits and can withdraw money via online transfers or checks, or invest it like a brokerage account. Contributions The 2026 contribution limit is $4,400 for an individual plan and $8,750 for a family plan, with an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution if you are 55 or older. The contribution limit includes both your contributions and your employer’s contributions. If your employer allows it, contributing to an HSA via payroll deduction is generally better than contributing directly, as it avoids the 7.65% FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes. Direct, after-tax contributions only save on income tax when filing, missing the payroll tax savings. Withdrawals Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. IRS Publication 502 has information about which expenses qualify as medical expenses. In addition, as long as you keep proper records, you can reimburse yourself in a later year. I keep track of all my medical expenses in a spreadsheet (e.g., with columns for EOB documents, receipts, bills, etc). I plan to reimburse myself in the future, assuming the law doesn’t change. In 2025, House Bill 6183 was proposed to change the reimbursement limit to expenses no older than two years, but it didn’t gain any traction. If there is a change in legislation, I plan to reimburse myself for all prior medical expenses before enactment. Once you turn 65, you can withdraw money from your HSA for any reason without penalty. However, you will owe income taxes on any non-medical withdrawals, effectively making this similar to a Traditional 401(k) or IRA. Inheriting an HSA Per Publication 969, if your spouse is the designated beneficiary of your HSA, it will be treated as your spouse’s HSA after your death. If your spouse isn’t the designated beneficiary (e.g. your child is the beneficiary), the account stops being an HSA and the fair market value of the HSA becomes taxable to the beneficiary in the year in which you pass away. This is why tax free HSA dollars should ideally be spent before passing down an inheritance due to tax inefficiency. On the other hand, naming a beneficiary in a low-income tax bracket to receive the deceased person’s HSA can also be beneficial for tax purposes. HSA can be powerful, but make sure the math makes sense. If you spend thousands of dollars on medical bills, having a standard plan could outweigh all the tax savings you can get.   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

Ambulatory Ambivalence

"Jeez. I'm glad that "drove myself to the hospital for my heart attack" worked out for you, Mark, but please don't anyone try this. A very good friend of mine in his 50's and in seemingly great shape was getting ready for bed and didn't feel quite right. Recognized the symptoms as possibly cardiac related. His wife offered to drive him to the hospital and he told her to call 911. Paramedics arrive and they are talking to him while prepping him for transport when he promptly dies. Twice! Goes into full cardiac arrest two times and they zap him back with the AED. He's fine now but doc tells him if he had let his wife drive him to the hospital he would be quite dead and most assuredly permanently. Only thing that saved him was the EMTs standing right there with an AED fired up and ready to go. Always call 911 for anything that remotely hints of heart attack."
- Mark Ukleja
Read more »

Helping Adult Children, pt. 2

"i believe in your initial post, you expressed some disappointment in your son deciding to strike out on his own rather than live in a property you owned. In this post, you and possibly your wife, seem to have moved on from that position. I think that’s truly an important familial benefit — regardless of whether your son and his wife accept the down payment help. Sometimes it’s hard to accept our adult children’s decisions when we think we “know best.”"
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

The $9.95 scam…

"Paper tube? I didn’t even know that was an option! 👏"
- David Lancaster
Read more »

Is AI going to affect our investments

"AI will help us all, but we have to insure it works mostly on what I call the Right things. No one can predict the market, right, so I say no one can predict AI. Sure there will be BIG changes, we all just saw what Dorsey is doing at Block Inc. shrinking the workforce by 1000's. Somehow life will go on and we will absorb AI into the workplace. Remember, people thought email would replace mail, paper copers would not be needed with PDF's etc. I do worry about the National Debt for our Grandchildren. Life keeps going on, but we all have to learn to accept more and more change. The question is will Life be better!"
- William Dorner
Read more »

New to building a CD or Bond Ladder?

"Excellent info, if you like ladders for finance. I think it is too much work so I find investing in an internet bank like Ally, Marcus or Synchrony is much simpler and offers similar safeguards. The current rates are as high as 4%. This works for me."
- William Dorner
Read more »

It’s Never Too Late

"It is just never too late to change the course, good info for the many. Keep writing these important articles. Congrats."
- William Dorner
Read more »

Managing Investment Risk

BEFORE ITS FAILURE in 2008, Lehman Brothers had been one of the most prominent investment firms in the United States. After 158 years in business, what caused it to collapse so suddenly? In a word: complexity. Lehman had been involved in the securitization of mortgages, a process that resulted in taking something relatively simple—a home mortgage—and turning it into something much more complicated, thus obscuring its true risk level. That was the proximate cause for the firm’s failure. In addition to mortgage bonds, Lehman specialized in creating other complex instruments. A document titled “The Lehman Brothers Guide to Exotic Credit Derivatives” can still be found on the internet. The strategies it describes are the sorts of things that ultimately brought the firm down. When it comes to making investment choices, risk is unavoidable. No one can know what path the economy, the market or any given investment will follow. But that doesn’t mean investment risk is entirely outside our control. There are, in my view, certain characteristics we can look for in investments that can help tilt the odds in our favor. Here are four to consider. Simplicity. Peter Lynch, former manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund, had this warning for investors: “Never invest in any idea you can’t illustrate with a crayon.” Lynch felt that simplicity was paramount because investing is hard enough. As Kodak, Polaroid and BlackBerry taught us, things can go wrong even for well-run companies. But when an investment is complicated, it’s that much harder to assess how things might go. Consider, for example, an exchange-traded fund called the Box ETF (ticker: BOXX). It’s designed to deliver performance comparable to U.S. Treasury bills but in a more tax-efficient manner. For that reason, it’s quite popular, and I’m asked about it frequently. Despite the clear tax advantage, though, I advise against it. That’s because of its complex structure, which involves a strategy known as a box spread. This is how it’s described on the BOXX website: “A box spread is an options trading strategy that combines a long call and short put at one strike price with a short call and long put at a different strike price.”  Another question about BOXX is whether the IRS might challenge the tax strategies it’s employing. BOXX could work out just fine, but in my view, the complexity and IRS risk just aren’t necessary. And even though it’s worked well so far, the hardest part about complex instruments is that we can’t know in advance how they’ll perform through various market cycles. Times of stress could cause an otherwise successful strategy to fail. That was the lesson of Lehman Brothers. Management style. For decades, there’s been a debate between advocates of active and passive investing. That debate is an important one, but it isn’t the only one. Within the world of actively-managed funds, there are also important distinctions. Funds like the Magellan Fund, for example, are straightforward. The manager’s aim is to choose a group of stocks that he thinks will outperform. That’s one type of actively-managed fund and is the most common one, but there are many others. Some funds take a tactical approach, trading in and out of different asset classes in response to the managers’ sense of where markets are headed. Morningstar analyst Jeffrey Ptak analyzed these funds a few years back and concluded that they “would have earned twice as much if their managers didn’t trade over the past decade.” The funds’ managers, in other words, only subtracted value. The lesson: The investment world is much more nuanced than the simple distinction between active and passive, and the passive realm isn’t immune to potholes either. So be sure to look carefully under the hood of any fund you’re considering. Tax-efficiency. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds offer a number of advantages, but they can also carry risk in the form of higher tax bills because funds are required to distribute the bulk of their gains to shareholders on a pro rata basis. Careful due diligence is required on this point because there’s a misconception that a fund’s turnover ratio—which measures the amount of trading inside a fund—is the best proxy for tax efficiency. Turnover can be an imprecise measure, though. Consider a fund like the PIMCO Total Return Fund (ticker: PTTRX). It has thousands of holdings—everything from bonds to currencies to interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, reverse repurchase agreements, and more. As a result of this diverse mix, it has an extremely high turnover rate, north of 600%. With so much trading, you might expect this fund to be massively tax-inefficient. But surprisingly, it isn’t. It hasn’t generated any capital gains distributions at all in the past four years.  In contrast, a fund like Magellan might appear to be more tax-efficient, with a much lower turnover ratio of 49%. But Magellan has generated significant capital gains for its investors in each of the past several years. The lesson: When assessing a fund’s tax efficiency, be sure to study its distribution history. That’s the metric that’s most meaningful. Concentration. With the rise of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks, there’s been increasing hand-wringing over the concentration level of the S&P 500. The top 10 stocks today account for nearly 40% of the entire index. On the one hand, this is unprecedented and potentially cause for concern. But as The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Zweig pointed out recently, there’s more than one way to look at market concentration. At one point, for example, AT&T accounted for nearly 13% of the entire market. Today, the market’s largest stock, Nvidia, poses a risk but nonetheless has a more modest weighting of less than 7%. The bottom line: Concentration may or may not turn out to be a problem in the coming years. But since we don’t have the benefit of hindsight, this is another area where you could be defensive with your portfolio. If concentration is a potential risk, it’s one that’s easy to avoid. To diversify away from the S&P 500, you could allocate to value stocks, to small- and mid-cap stocks and to international stocks.  Other factors. How else can you play defense with your portfolio? In evaluating prospective funds, I’d also consider the length of its track record, the firm behind it, and, as discussed last week, the fund’s withdrawal policies. Investment risk may be unavoidable. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be managed.   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 »

A PIN to protect your tax return

"I have to tell you of my experience this year with the IRS IP pin. For quite a few years I have been using TurboTax PC version to do my taxes. This has included using the pin. However, I don’t recall ever doing anything to obtain the pin, nor have I ever received one through the mail. Each year after installing the new version of TT I import my return from the previous year. Then i update all the 1099 data etc, and am ready to file. This year when I attempted to E-file, my return was rejected for having an incorrect pin. I looked at the info I had, and then tried again. Failed again. So, I called TT tech help line. The very knowledgeable person at TT advised me that for a significant number of taxpayers, the IRS had not actually mailed out the new pins for 2025 taxes. It was some kind of glitch. The solution was to login to my account at the IRS to get the pin. Again, this was interesting, as I didn’t have an account at the IRS that I knew of; had never been to their site. Fortunately, I have ID.ME credentials. I used them to login to the IRS, and easily found the pin. I put this new pin into TT and successfully E-filed. What is really fascinating, is that our return was a joint return. My spouse also has a pin, the IRS accepted the return with her pin as imported from our 2024 return. Trying to understand how the IRS works is like gazing at your own navel, a crystal ball, tea leaves, etc."
- stelea99
Read more »

Question for writers

"Bogdan, to let you know, the comment I referred to below in Kristine's piece never got approved but disappeared entirely. Today I find that a comment on another article that I made yesterday and was awaiting approval has today disappeared as well. Just making you aware there’s a problem. And I’m pretty sure it wasn’t with the comments :-)"
- Michael1
Read more »

A Rule of Thumb Is Not a Plan

"Couldn't agree more with the three of you. Those retiring with guaranteed income are likely in the minority going forward since pensions plans are becoming scarce, however it’s a wonderful place to be.  My goal for retirement is to have a guaranteed income to support our lifestyle.  Investment income is for the extras, kids, charity and a legacy.   In good years we will take 4 % or more.  In down years I don’t want to reduce the principle.  My three-legged stool includes a decent pension, social security which will be augmented with the recent SS windfall elimination provision and an annuity which was funded with 50 % of my deferred comp.  At 63, I have a way to go before claiming social security and my annuity will turn on at 65.  In the interim we have enough cash to ride out any market hiccups.  "
- Brian
Read more »

Critique my investment strategy or lack thereof

"I think the reason you see people saying that isn’t because holding individual stocks is different from a capital gains perspective, but because people holding index funds are generally happy to hold them. No one is saying “I wish I owned a bunch of individual stocks instead of an index fund,” so no one is complaining about their fund’s capital gains. "
- Michael1
Read more »

HSA Tips

HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNT (HSA) is the most efficient tax-advantaged investment account because it offers a triple tax advantage:
  1. Contributions are tax-deductible
  2. Earnings grow tax-free
  3. Withdrawals are tax-free if used for medical expenses
One of the best uses of an HSA is to actually invest the balance. For example, I keep $500 (the minimum required balance) in cash. The rest, I invest in low-cost index funds. This allows me to maximize compounding inside the HSA account. I also receive a $1,000 HSA match. Since I’m young and my medical expenses are low, it’s a great way to minimize taxes and grow the balance. I will also not touch my HSA at all, even if I have medical expenses. I will reimburse myself 20-30 years down the road (more on this in a bit). But if you are paying medical expenses with the HSA, you should have at least a portion of the funds in a Treasury fund or money market fund (MMF) for stability. Generally, this amount should be equal to at least one year of deductible costs. Rules To contribute to an HSA, three things must happen:
  1. You need a high deductible health plan (HDHP). You cannot contribute to an HSA without one. A “high deductible health plan” is defined under §223(c)(2)(A) as a health plan with an annual deductible of more than $1,700 for self-only coverage or $3,400 for family coverage. The maximum out-of-pocket limit is $8,500 or $17,000 (family).
Importantly, before enrolling in a high deductible plan, you need to decide whether it’s worth it in the first place. You will generally receive the biggest benefit from an HDHP if you are in good health (more on this in a bit). 2. You aren’t enrolled in Medicare. 3. You cannot be claimed as a dependent. Importantly, the HSA balance never expires. This account is always yours to keep, even if you leave your employer. Some people confuse an HSA with an FSA (which does expire, aside from a small potential rollover option). The account typically works like a “bank account,” where you make deposits and can withdraw money via online transfers or checks, or invest it like a brokerage account. Contributions The 2026 contribution limit is $4,400 for an individual plan and $8,750 for a family plan, with an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution if you are 55 or older. The contribution limit includes both your contributions and your employer’s contributions. If your employer allows it, contributing to an HSA via payroll deduction is generally better than contributing directly, as it avoids the 7.65% FICA (Social Security and Medicare) taxes. Direct, after-tax contributions only save on income tax when filing, missing the payroll tax savings. Withdrawals Withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. IRS Publication 502 has information about which expenses qualify as medical expenses. In addition, as long as you keep proper records, you can reimburse yourself in a later year. I keep track of all my medical expenses in a spreadsheet (e.g., with columns for EOB documents, receipts, bills, etc). I plan to reimburse myself in the future, assuming the law doesn’t change. In 2025, House Bill 6183 was proposed to change the reimbursement limit to expenses no older than two years, but it didn’t gain any traction. If there is a change in legislation, I plan to reimburse myself for all prior medical expenses before enactment. Once you turn 65, you can withdraw money from your HSA for any reason without penalty. However, you will owe income taxes on any non-medical withdrawals, effectively making this similar to a Traditional 401(k) or IRA. Inheriting an HSA Per Publication 969, if your spouse is the designated beneficiary of your HSA, it will be treated as your spouse’s HSA after your death. If your spouse isn’t the designated beneficiary (e.g. your child is the beneficiary), the account stops being an HSA and the fair market value of the HSA becomes taxable to the beneficiary in the year in which you pass away. This is why tax free HSA dollars should ideally be spent before passing down an inheritance due to tax inefficiency. On the other hand, naming a beneficiary in a low-income tax bracket to receive the deceased person’s HSA can also be beneficial for tax purposes. HSA can be powerful, but make sure the math makes sense. If you spend thousands of dollars on medical bills, having a standard plan could outweigh all the tax savings you can get.   Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

Ambulatory Ambivalence

"Jeez. I'm glad that "drove myself to the hospital for my heart attack" worked out for you, Mark, but please don't anyone try this. A very good friend of mine in his 50's and in seemingly great shape was getting ready for bed and didn't feel quite right. Recognized the symptoms as possibly cardiac related. His wife offered to drive him to the hospital and he told her to call 911. Paramedics arrive and they are talking to him while prepping him for transport when he promptly dies. Twice! Goes into full cardiac arrest two times and they zap him back with the AED. He's fine now but doc tells him if he had let his wife drive him to the hospital he would be quite dead and most assuredly permanently. Only thing that saved him was the EMTs standing right there with an AED fired up and ready to go. Always call 911 for anything that remotely hints of heart attack."
- Mark Ukleja
Read more »

Helping Adult Children, pt. 2

"i believe in your initial post, you expressed some disappointment in your son deciding to strike out on his own rather than live in a property you owned. In this post, you and possibly your wife, seem to have moved on from that position. I think that’s truly an important familial benefit — regardless of whether your son and his wife accept the down payment help. Sometimes it’s hard to accept our adult children’s decisions when we think we “know best.”"
- Marilyn Lavin
Read more »

The $9.95 scam…

"Paper tube? I didn’t even know that was an option! 👏"
- David Lancaster
Read more »

Is AI going to affect our investments

"AI will help us all, but we have to insure it works mostly on what I call the Right things. No one can predict the market, right, so I say no one can predict AI. Sure there will be BIG changes, we all just saw what Dorsey is doing at Block Inc. shrinking the workforce by 1000's. Somehow life will go on and we will absorb AI into the workplace. Remember, people thought email would replace mail, paper copers would not be needed with PDF's etc. I do worry about the National Debt for our Grandchildren. Life keeps going on, but we all have to learn to accept more and more change. The question is will Life be better!"
- William Dorner
Read more »

New to building a CD or Bond Ladder?

"Excellent info, if you like ladders for finance. I think it is too much work so I find investing in an internet bank like Ally, Marcus or Synchrony is much simpler and offers similar safeguards. The current rates are as high as 4%. This works for me."
- William Dorner
Read more »

It’s Never Too Late

"It is just never too late to change the course, good info for the many. Keep writing these important articles. Congrats."
- William Dorner
Read more »

Managing Investment Risk

BEFORE ITS FAILURE in 2008, Lehman Brothers had been one of the most prominent investment firms in the United States. After 158 years in business, what caused it to collapse so suddenly? In a word: complexity. Lehman had been involved in the securitization of mortgages, a process that resulted in taking something relatively simple—a home mortgage—and turning it into something much more complicated, thus obscuring its true risk level. That was the proximate cause for the firm’s failure. In addition to mortgage bonds, Lehman specialized in creating other complex instruments. A document titled “The Lehman Brothers Guide to Exotic Credit Derivatives” can still be found on the internet. The strategies it describes are the sorts of things that ultimately brought the firm down. When it comes to making investment choices, risk is unavoidable. No one can know what path the economy, the market or any given investment will follow. But that doesn’t mean investment risk is entirely outside our control. There are, in my view, certain characteristics we can look for in investments that can help tilt the odds in our favor. Here are four to consider. Simplicity. Peter Lynch, former manager of the Fidelity Magellan Fund, had this warning for investors: “Never invest in any idea you can’t illustrate with a crayon.” Lynch felt that simplicity was paramount because investing is hard enough. As Kodak, Polaroid and BlackBerry taught us, things can go wrong even for well-run companies. But when an investment is complicated, it’s that much harder to assess how things might go. Consider, for example, an exchange-traded fund called the Box ETF (ticker: BOXX). It’s designed to deliver performance comparable to U.S. Treasury bills but in a more tax-efficient manner. For that reason, it’s quite popular, and I’m asked about it frequently. Despite the clear tax advantage, though, I advise against it. That’s because of its complex structure, which involves a strategy known as a box spread. This is how it’s described on the BOXX website: “A box spread is an options trading strategy that combines a long call and short put at one strike price with a short call and long put at a different strike price.”  Another question about BOXX is whether the IRS might challenge the tax strategies it’s employing. BOXX could work out just fine, but in my view, the complexity and IRS risk just aren’t necessary. And even though it’s worked well so far, the hardest part about complex instruments is that we can’t know in advance how they’ll perform through various market cycles. Times of stress could cause an otherwise successful strategy to fail. That was the lesson of Lehman Brothers. Management style. For decades, there’s been a debate between advocates of active and passive investing. That debate is an important one, but it isn’t the only one. Within the world of actively-managed funds, there are also important distinctions. Funds like the Magellan Fund, for example, are straightforward. The manager’s aim is to choose a group of stocks that he thinks will outperform. That’s one type of actively-managed fund and is the most common one, but there are many others. Some funds take a tactical approach, trading in and out of different asset classes in response to the managers’ sense of where markets are headed. Morningstar analyst Jeffrey Ptak analyzed these funds a few years back and concluded that they “would have earned twice as much if their managers didn’t trade over the past decade.” The funds’ managers, in other words, only subtracted value. The lesson: The investment world is much more nuanced than the simple distinction between active and passive, and the passive realm isn’t immune to potholes either. So be sure to look carefully under the hood of any fund you’re considering. Tax-efficiency. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds offer a number of advantages, but they can also carry risk in the form of higher tax bills because funds are required to distribute the bulk of their gains to shareholders on a pro rata basis. Careful due diligence is required on this point because there’s a misconception that a fund’s turnover ratio—which measures the amount of trading inside a fund—is the best proxy for tax efficiency. Turnover can be an imprecise measure, though. Consider a fund like the PIMCO Total Return Fund (ticker: PTTRX). It has thousands of holdings—everything from bonds to currencies to interest rate swaps, credit default swaps, reverse repurchase agreements, and more. As a result of this diverse mix, it has an extremely high turnover rate, north of 600%. With so much trading, you might expect this fund to be massively tax-inefficient. But surprisingly, it isn’t. It hasn’t generated any capital gains distributions at all in the past four years.  In contrast, a fund like Magellan might appear to be more tax-efficient, with a much lower turnover ratio of 49%. But Magellan has generated significant capital gains for its investors in each of the past several years. The lesson: When assessing a fund’s tax efficiency, be sure to study its distribution history. That’s the metric that’s most meaningful. Concentration. With the rise of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks, there’s been increasing hand-wringing over the concentration level of the S&P 500. The top 10 stocks today account for nearly 40% of the entire index. On the one hand, this is unprecedented and potentially cause for concern. But as The Wall Street Journal’s Jason Zweig pointed out recently, there’s more than one way to look at market concentration. At one point, for example, AT&T accounted for nearly 13% of the entire market. Today, the market’s largest stock, Nvidia, poses a risk but nonetheless has a more modest weighting of less than 7%. The bottom line: Concentration may or may not turn out to be a problem in the coming years. But since we don’t have the benefit of hindsight, this is another area where you could be defensive with your portfolio. If concentration is a potential risk, it’s one that’s easy to avoid. To diversify away from the S&P 500, you could allocate to value stocks, to small- and mid-cap stocks and to international stocks.  Other factors. How else can you play defense with your portfolio? In evaluating prospective funds, I’d also consider the length of its track record, the firm behind it, and, as discussed last week, the fund’s withdrawal policies. Investment risk may be unavoidable. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be managed.   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 »

A PIN to protect your tax return

"I have to tell you of my experience this year with the IRS IP pin. For quite a few years I have been using TurboTax PC version to do my taxes. This has included using the pin. However, I don’t recall ever doing anything to obtain the pin, nor have I ever received one through the mail. Each year after installing the new version of TT I import my return from the previous year. Then i update all the 1099 data etc, and am ready to file. This year when I attempted to E-file, my return was rejected for having an incorrect pin. I looked at the info I had, and then tried again. Failed again. So, I called TT tech help line. The very knowledgeable person at TT advised me that for a significant number of taxpayers, the IRS had not actually mailed out the new pins for 2025 taxes. It was some kind of glitch. The solution was to login to my account at the IRS to get the pin. Again, this was interesting, as I didn’t have an account at the IRS that I knew of; had never been to their site. Fortunately, I have ID.ME credentials. I used them to login to the IRS, and easily found the pin. I put this new pin into TT and successfully E-filed. What is really fascinating, is that our return was a joint return. My spouse also has a pin, the IRS accepted the return with her pin as imported from our 2024 return. Trying to understand how the IRS works is like gazing at your own navel, a crystal ball, tea leaves, etc."
- stelea99
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 32: WE SHOULD start with the global market portfolio—the investments we collectively own—and decide what we don’t want in our portfolio. Often, foreign bonds are the biggest subtraction.

humans

NO. 59: WE'RE anxious to minimize risk, but at what price? We might hold an overly conservative portfolio, thereby avoiding short-run losses but sacrificing handsome long-run returns. Our loss aversion might also infect our insurance choices, such as opting for very low deductibles or buying extended warranties on products we could easily afford to replace.

Truths

NO. 134: BAD RESULTS happen to good investors. Just because our portfolio struggles in the short run doesn’t mean we made bad investment choices—and just because we score spectacular gains doesn’t mean our portfolio decisions have been wise. Indeed, great short-run results are almost always a sign of a badly diversified portfolio.

Truths

NO. 26: WALL STREET’S advice is often self-serving. Mutual fund companies want us to purchase actively managed funds, rather than index funds. Brokers want us to trade. Investment advisors want bigger portfolios to manage, and thus they may dissuade us from paying down debt or encourage us to take a lump sum in lieu of pension payments.

Retirement

Manifesto

NO. 32: WE SHOULD start with the global market portfolio—the investments we collectively own—and decide what we don’t want in our portfolio. Often, foreign bonds are the biggest subtraction.

Spotlight: Cars

Diminished Value

A CRUCIAL STEP WHEN buying a preowned car is to scrutinize its Carfax report. A single-owner car with a regular maintenance history and which was driven solely for personal use should be a safe bet, while an accident record gives most people pause. All things being equal, a car that was in an accident, however minor, ought to cost less than a similar one with a clean history.
Some bargain hunters don’t mind taking a chance on a car with an accident history as long as it drives well.

Read more »

Stop and Go

LIKE SO MANY OTHERS, I’ll be working from home for the foreseeable future. But I know in my soul that we’re all going back—and I’m mostly okay with that. There are things I miss about the office: colleagues who have become friends, the collaboration, the access to ideas and creativity.
The biggest thing I don’t miss? Traffic. Nothing even comes close.
I live in Austin, Texas, which ranks tenth in America in terms of worst commute.

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Driving Down Costs

LIKE MOST PEOPLE, owning a car is my second largest monthly expense, right after housing. But unlike a lot of people, I also strive to be a super-saver, loosely defined as folks who max out their retirement accounts each year. That means I’m constantly looking for ways to cut my transportation costs.
Four years ago, when I found myself needing to buy a car, I settled on a gently used Honda CRV. Even though it was nearly six years old when I purchased it,

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About That Fine Print

CAR LEASING WILL likely make a comeback in 2023. But is leasing a good idea?
Before the pandemic, leases represented about 30% of new car sales and as much as 70% or 80% for some luxury vehicles. But during the pandemic, with new vehicles in short supply, manufacturers reduced their generous lease subsidies. This, combined with low interest rates, reduced payment differences between financing and leasing, making leasing less attractive.
But that may be about to change.

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It Also Has Wheels

WE’VE OWNED OUR NEW 2023 Toyota Highlander Hybrid for six weeks. The technology and features are breath-taking. Until now, both of our vehicles were 18 years old. I feel like Rip Van Winkle, waking up in a time I do not recognize.
Here are some of the bells and whistles on our new SUV, and my evaluation of their usefulness. Please forgive me if some of this information isn’t accurate; I’m still learning about these features.

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Taking Back the Wheel

WE FLEW BACK TO the U.S. last week from Madrid, and were reunited with our car of 12 years. After selling our house in late 2022 and going nomadic, we had headed to Europe six months ago, opting to have our 2008 Lexus SUV professionally stored.
In an earlier article, I recounted the thought process behind this decision. Suffice it to say, we chose this option largely because we had no firm plans for when we’d need our car again,

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Spotlight: Quinn

Throw, hit or kick … it all add$ up

If you have young children or grandchildren, you may know the answer to this question. How much do families spend on their children’s sports activities? 🏈🏒🥍⚾️⚽️ The answer is a lot, often thousands of dollars a year. I know that from experience in our family. My children each spend four thousand more or less for their children’s equipment, team fees, travel costs and in some cases lessons.   And then there are the fund raisers each team conducts. Ma and Pa are a go to source which is fine with us, but maybe not for those retired on a tight budget.  There is social pressure to participate in a different sport each season of the year. Baseball used to be spring and summer. No more, now there is “Fall ball” too. A good little league bat costs $200 or more. When I was a kid the equipment was a broom stick and a pink rubber ball. We never heard of soccer (or proper football). Never mind soccer, what about lacrosse? A mid-range lacrosse kit of equipment runs around $300. And then there is field hockey. A mid-range stick can be $250.  The only travel we did was climb the fence in our apartment’s back yard to get to the local park or walk a half mile with a wood bat, ball and glove to a (dirt, not artificial turf) ball field. Where we live now I can easily walk to four artificial turf football, baseball, soccer/ lacrosse fields all equipped with night lighting, electronic scoreboards and grandstands. One has a snack bar. And you wonder where your property taxes go.  Today travel teams actually travel. Two of our grandchildren have traveled from NJ to Florida, Georgia, Virginia, and Maryland with their teams.  According to New York Life’s Wealth Watch Survey, on average, parents report spending about $3,000 per year on children’s sports. The Aspen Institute says the average is $1,500 per child - that’s for average income households. The number climbs with family income.  In addition to the cost, there is a tremendous time commitment for the child and the family, not to mention the pressure - sometimes extreme - to win. I’m not opposed to sports, but I think it has gotten a bit too high on the priority list for children.   The ever pragmatic me secretly wonders, does this spending on sports mean less saving for retirement-or more credit card debt for many families trying not to disappoint their children? 🤑
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At Sea

I WRITE THIS FROM somewhere in the Atlantic. We're headed toward the Falkland Islands, where we’ll apparently see penguins. My wife and I booked this cruise months ago. Since then, of course, we’ve been told repeatedly that being on a ship for 30 days with mostly 60- to 80-somethings is not the best idea. Who knew? There was a time when getting away meant little connection to the outside world. No more. My iPad and iPhone keep me connected, although it’s my fault that I insist on looking. I’m addicted to information. This week has been especially trying, as I watch the stock market do its yo-yo act, while coronavirus hysteria runs amok, along with rumors that all cruise ships will be quarantined. Let’s see: Which is riskier, owning stocks or taking a cruise? Oh wait, I’m in both those boats. One day, I “lose” $100,000. The next day, it’s another $50,000. “Stop looking,” my wife says, after I recount our losses. She’s right, of course, but I can’t help myself.  “How come you never tell me on the days when we make money?” she adds. My logical mind says, “stay the course,” sometimes even “buy now.” That, by the way, is what my wife also says. Then I remind her that we need a new car now that hers is kaput. I’m well diversified and, even though I’m age 76, I don’t live off my investments. Roughly 60% of my assets are in bonds, including municipal bond funds. But even my diversification hasn’t stopped the onslaught. My most volatile investment, it turns out, is a single utility stock. It’s the same company that once employed me and now provides me with a pension. Logical or not, I have a measure of loyalty. I make no claim to be an expert. But I feel I’m fairly knowledgeable. I spent decades overseeing employee benefits, including pension and 401(k) plans. Those of us with experience in employee benefits—as well as folks in the investment business—can share our sage advice all we want. But for the average investor, this is scary stuff. We’re being constantly pummeled with information, including headlines designed to grab our attention. People sometimes think at an emotional level and sometimes they think logically. Right now, it’s all emotion, all the time. We’re worrying about the coronavirus, the stock market and the economy. That’s a lot for people to take in, both everyday investors and professionals. This is likely shaping up to be a great stock market buying opportunity. But simply pointing that out isn’t enough. Instead, to get people to stand their ground and maybe even buy more, we need to help them with their emotional state—and we clearly haven’t figured that one out. After all, if we had, would we be having days when the S&P 500 plunges 8%? There's panic in the air, when what's really needed is courage. I can't tell you where to find it. But if you're to survive this bear market, you better start looking. Richard Quinn blogs at QuinnsCommentary.com. Before retiring in 2010, Dick was a compensation and benefits executive. His previous articles include Know Your Demons, Brain Meets Money and Count the Noncash. Follow Dick on Twitter @QuinnsComments. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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Save ’Til It Hurts

I FREQUENTLY FIND myself criticized when I state my fiscally conservative views on saving and spending in retirement. One fellow recently said I had no compassion and I was scaring people. If folks are frightened by my urging them to retire with the ability to replace most of their preretirement income, then perhaps they should be scared. I’m also criticized because I have a pension, and so don’t rely on investments for my income. As a result, I’m told, I don’t understand most people’s situation today. I do know what it means to make ends meet, however. My monthly pension in 2021 is the same as it was in 2010 when I retired, and that’ll never change. Today, most workers are on their own, with no pension plan to count on. They need to accumulate a large pile of savings to generate their desired retirement income. To me, that’s even more reason to aim high, and preferably for 100% income replacement. When I bring up the topic of income replacement, an underlying issue frequently pops up. Individuals want to retire in their 50s or early 60s. They conclude that, if my ideas are followed, they’ll have to work longer. Maybe that’s what’s scary to them. I retired at 67. By working longer, I knew my pension would replace 100% of my base salary. If you retire at 55, the numbers are much harder. If you start with 70% income replacement and think it’ll get you through 30-plus years of retirement, you're dreaming—unless, that is, your idea of a retirement lifestyle means significant changes, and not for the better. There’s another area of confusion: expenses versus spending. They aren’t the same. People who create detailed retirement budgets based on their expenses are shortsighted. Expenses are what you need to live. Spending is how you want to live, and can include any number of extras—from travel to home remodeling to helping children and grandchildren. Should the goal of retirement be just to cover the bare essentials? I understand the challenge of creating 100% income replacement. But remember, Social Security alone may get you 35% to 40% of the way there. Besides, what’s wrong with having some money left at the end of the month? That extra cash could help you cope with an emergency, deal with high inflation or wait out a lengthy market downturn. And what about having extra money just for fun?
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Why do so many retirees struggle with inflation? Why is it unanticipated? Do you have a plan to deal with inflation in retirement?

Not a day goes by that I don’t hear or read how inflation impacts seniors - not that it doesn’t impact everyone. Many seniors have a unique perspective on what they are entitled to as evidenced by these - not unusual - Facebook comments. “2.3% for next year Social Security is a joke. They should take into consideration, food prices, and medication. We should be getting more like 8% or maybe 9% each year.” “Food and medicine went way up for older people and increasing Social Security is not sufficient. They need to raise the percentage to the cost of food and medicine.” “They should be using the CPI-E.” I happen to know the people who made these comments, they have a pension and had a good 401k as well.  It’s not like inflation should be a surprise, even that there will be periods of high inflation. Nevertheless, it seems to be a shock to many retirees and to create financial problems for them. So, my question is, what strategy do you or will you employ to deal with inflation in retirement? 
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Barely Afloat

YES, I’M STILL AT SEA. Confinement in our cabin is wearing thin. But unfortunately, with ports closed and politicians opposed to us docking in Florida, the end isn’t in sight. Have you ever wondered what it would be like to be totally dependent on someone who you can’t see and have no contact with? Me neither. But now, I know. Bottles of water show up at our door, the last one a full gallon. Bags of clean towels also appear. Every other day, the bag includes tissues and toilet paper: There’s no shortage at sea. I even received a little card asking me to check the drinks I’d like. For the heck of it, I checked brandy. The next day, there it was. But we still can’t leave the cabin. Yesterday, I attempted humor. I asked my wife what she would like to do today. She suggested I take a walk. I had heard of Pavlovian conditioning during my mediocre education, but never imagined being an active participant. Now, three times a day, when I hear the clang of trays in the hall, I salivate. Then the big moment arrives. Three knocks on the door. It’s feeding time. A tray of food lays at my feet, put there by invisible hands. I have newfound empathy for zoo inhabitants. My walking is limited to a 24- by eight-foot space—assuming I want to stay dry. My access to the world is limited by the very slow satellite internet. What should take milliseconds actually takes seconds. Sometimes, I feel like I’m accessing an eight-inch floppy disk. I tried buying an iBook. I may finish the book in less time than it took to download. All this wouldn’t be so bad—after all, it’s not like I’m going anywhere—except such delays can play cruel jokes. I open my Bloomberg app and the home screen shows good news: Markets are up. But by the time I click on “indices” and they finish loading, everything has changed. Funny how the down-to-up scenario seems less frequent. But there is good news: My investments have been showing up in green for a change. And it seems the bond funds are doing their job and offsetting some stock market losses. I torment my son-in-law, the Wall Street wealth manager, by telling him how much I have lost. He used to reply, “You haven’t lost anything.” Now, he just chuckles. Or so I assume. Our captain has started a limited release program aimed first at those poor folks with an inside cabin. Three knocks on your door and you can proceed to deck three for a 30-minute stroll. My advice: If you can’t afford a balcony or at least a window, you can’t afford to cruise. I remember friends telling me, “What’s the difference? How much time will you spend in your cabin?” Ha! Any humor that may have accompanied this adventure is gone. We learned this morning that four passengers died in the last 24 hours. That news really put everything else in perspective. There's more to worry about than investments. We are, as they say, abandoning ship. Healthy passengers are being transferred to another ship, as we lie at anchor in Panama still seeking permission to reach Florida, with no doubt more quarantine once we get there. I just want to be home, even if I’m locked in my condo. At least I can watch my recorded episodes of Burns and Allen. Richard Quinn blogs at QuinnsCommentary.com. Before retiring in 2010, Dick was a compensation and benefits executive. His previous articles include Seasick, At Sea, Know Your Demons and Brain Meets Money. Follow Dick on Twitter @QuinnsComments. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
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A theoretical, simplified road to retirement income without a pension. I’ve learned it doesn’t exist. 

Many discussions on HD make it clear my retirement is unique, mainly because our income consisting of a pension and SS is more than adequate to live in the way we did when I was working. Other than monitor my pension as it grew, there was no financial plan except to ensure receiving the employer match on the 401k so that meant saving at least 8% for a total of 12%. I also invested the compensation I received above base salary, both cash and equity. But HD posts often get me thinking, what if there wasn’t a pension, what if it was all on me, what would I have done? Of course I don’t know, but knowing how I think about money and security, I can speculate.  Let’s see, no pension. First, I would keep track of what Social Security would provide to us. Second I would use two separate ways two save and invest. First in the 401k but also outside a retirement plan.  Those brokerage savings would be thought of as two pools of money.  One part of the account to keep investing and growing in retirement and the other for the sole purpose of buying an annuity at retirement to cover basic living expenses.   I would periodically check to see the amount of annuity income those investments could buy so between that and SS I would know our retirement income stream. Back in July 2007 Jonathan wrote in the Wall Street Journal “If you try to pay for retirement by slowly drawing down your nest egg, there’s a risk you will outlive your savings or your finances will get derailed by rotten markets. To protect yourself, you’ll want insurance-in the form guaranteed of lifetime income. Your Social Security benefit will provide some of this insurance, and you may have a pension as well. If you want further protection, consider buying immediate annuities that pay lifetime income.” That is exactly what I am saying.  I would also have saved all forms of compensation above base salary as I actually did. Today the dividends on the company stock I saved and accumulated for the last twenty years generate $25,000 in annual income. Bond interest is about $1,600 a month tax free.  Fidelity says my brokerage account asset allocation “resembles a Growth with Income strategy and my retirement account investment “resembles a Growth strategy. The growth and income strategy in the brokerage account is where bond funds reside, including muni funds.  Is that good? Is it the way it should be? I don’t know. With all this speculation I am still faced with determining the best investment strategy and also the dreaded withdrawal strategy. I like to think I have minimized the withdrawal issue by using an annuity with my withdrawals limited to the income generated by interest and dividends - at least that’s what I imagine, but then there are RMDs to deal with.  Has this theoretical retirement allowed for survivor benefits? Hopefully, but not with the certainty of a pension survivor annuity.  This world without a pension is scary and complicated. There are many decisions to be made, many unknowns to deal with.  My hat is off to the great majority of Americans who live in my theoretical world. It’s not an easy road to a secure retirement. And for sure an early start to saving and investing is very important. 
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