Learned From Less
Ken Cutler | Dec 4, 2023
HOW MANY OF OUR adult financial habits are shaped by childhood experiences? My parents, who grew up during the Great Depression, weren’t fans of providing allowances for my sisters and me. My oldest sister, Gail, got no pocket money but remembers being offered a quarter to fill a grocery bag with dandelions pulled from the yard. Lynn, 10 years older than me, received a quarter a week for a short period. My first allowance was also a quarter a week, which I started receiving around age 10. That may not sound like much, but I felt fortunate. At the right store—Grants—I could buy three full-size candy bars for that quarter. Baseball cards, my other big extravagance, were a dime a pack. It seemed that all my friends had more money than me. One friend’s dad gave him $5 a month, paid out all at once. I suspect it was doled out that way in an attempt to teach him to budget his allowance for the whole month. The lesson was lost on my friend. Shortly after receiving his monthly $5, he tended to blow the entire wad on candy, soda, baseball cards, comic books and whatever else caught his fancy. It was fun to hang out with him right after he got paid. Some of my friends had newspaper routes. These guys were flush with cash. They could afford many more packs of baseball cards than me. Since I couldn’t buy my way to a superior baseball card collection, I had to learn to be a shrewd trader. If I came into possession of a card coveted by one of my richer friends, I’d negotiate getting a large number of their unwanted duplicate cards in return. Then I’d use one or more of those duplicates to execute a similar trade…
Read more » Requiem for a CEO
Ken Cutler | Aug 23, 2024
A former CEO of my old company passed away this week at age 89. Of the half-dozen or so company CEOs that passed through during my tenure, Joe had made the biggest impression on me. Of course, I was way down the food chain so my interactions with him were limited. My first encounter with him was as a newly hired engineer for the Philadelphia Electric Company. The company had a program in which engineers were exposed to different divisions of the company during their first year. The program involved travel to a different company location each month. We would typically get a tour of a facility and then would be treated to a lavish lunch. One time, they herded us into a bus and we went to Chinatown. At the posh restaurant we ended up at, we were served egg rolls, followed by soup, and then fried rice. Finally (so I thought) the main course was brought out. Everything was delicious and I was filling up. Next thing I knew, another main course was brought out. Eventually, we were served about seven or eight dishes, one after the other. I wished I’d known they were going to do that, because I had no room left to even sample the last few courses. But I digress. Another feature of these gatherings was a keynote speech, usually during or after lunch, by the vice president of the company division we were learning about. To be honest, these speeches were snoozers, given by aged executives who seemed to ramble on. This pattern held until we rotated to the finance division. Joe was the relatively young finance VP, and his speech was unlike all the others. With amazing clarity, he regaled us with stories of clever financial maneuvers and other financial topics that…
Read more » An Ordinary Life
Ken Cutler | Apr 11, 2024
MY GRANDFATHER FALLS into the category of folks who are “not long remembered.” He died more than 75 years ago. None of his children or their spouses is alive. The one grandchild alive at the time of his death was only a few months old. It’s safe to say his memory has been all but erased, and yet his story offers a glimpse into what working life was like in the first half of the 1900s. Emil Cutler was born in 1887, the second son of farmers who lived in rural Maryland. His older brother, Willitts, had been born two years before. A sister, Lorena, was born in 1889, but died from dysentery—attributed to eating a green apple—just before her first birthday. In 1891, another sister, Beatrice, was born to complete the family. In the family letters I have, there isn’t a lot of information about my grandfather’s early years. For high school, he went to the Tome School for Boys, a prestigious boarding school in nearby Port Deposit, Maryland. There, he took the “commercial course,” graduating in 1907. After graduation, he wasn’t sure what career to pursue. He made an inquiry with the U.S. Marines, seeking information about how to join as an officer. Another career he considered was forestry—he looked into enrolling in the Biltmore Forest School. Eventually, he landed a sales job and moved to Philadelphia. From there, he relocated to Camden, New Jersey, and helped his parents start a fruit jelly company, Cutler and Cutler. His parents took care of production at their Maryland farm, while he was instrumental in procuring supplies, such as jars and labels. In 1912 and 1913, while living in Camden, he received a lot of letters and invitations from a mysterious Aunt Lucy, who lived in nearby Philadelphia. Lucy, a young…
Read more » They Made the Lists
Ken Cutler | Dec 12, 2023
THERE’S AN OLD SAYING: Good things come in threes. That’s certainly been true for one aspect of my life. I’ve lived in just three locations—and all of them have been featured in national “best places” lists. My early years were in Moorestown, New Jersey, a quiet town with a population of some 20,000. It’s an affluent suburb of Philadelphia that defies stereotypes about New Jersey. In 2005, Money magazine identified Moorestown as the best place to live in the country. This was well after I’d moved away. Still, the town was certainly a pleasant place to grow up during the 1960s and '70s. Moorestown has a strong school system, which I experienced first-hand. It also has a relatively low crime rate, a charming downtown and beautiful public spaces. It’s a little over an hour’s drive from the Jersey Shore. One downside: The town is so popular that homes have been richly priced for decades. After I graduated from Moorestown High School, I made my way to Blacksburg, Virginia, to attend Virginia Tech. Blacksburg regularly makes lists of desirable places to live. For instance, Forbes included the town in its 2016 list of the top 25 places to retire. In 2018, Blacksburg was named the 63rd best place to live in the country, according to Livability.com. I was only in Blacksburg for four years, back in the 1980s. It was an idyllic place to attend college. With the town located in the Blue Ridge Mountain range, it was easy to get away, even without a car. Within 10 minutes of leaving campus on a bicycle, you could feel like you were completely away from civilization. The college itself has a mix of academic sophistication and friendly country charm. In a survey a few years back, Virginia Tech’s student quality of life…
Read more » That Dumb Stock Market
Ken Cutler | Oct 11, 2025
The proposition of an article I recently read was “this is the dumbest stock market in history.” Why is it dumb? In part because of an increasingly popular approach to investing—one that most in the HumbleDollar community, including myself, subscribe to. According to the article, passive index investing is “the very definition of dumb money, because indexers buy stocks without any regard to valuation.” Here are some other points that caught my attention in the article, which I will link to in the comments: -Fewer and fewer people are actually making a market in stocks using their brains. Most index fund investors are just blindly buying, assuming that someone else is minding the store. -The dumb stock market, built entirely on blind faith, wouldn’t matter so much if the numbers passed a sanity test. The problem is, they don’t. -Due to bets on AI, a single company, Nvidia, is worth substantially more than all of the 2000 companies in the Russell 2000 index combined. -Metrics such as price per earnings and the ratio of total stock market to GDP indicate that stocks are priced at historically high levels, close to valuations during the 1999/2000 bubble. The conclusion of the article is that investors need to stress test our so-called risk-tolerance sooner rather than later. We may be taking on far more risk than we realize. After a conversation with my son in which he pointed out I am quite conservatively invested if my pension is included as part of my retirement portfolio, I wondered if he had a point and if I should increase my stock allocation (currently around 63% for my retirement funds). I decided to stick to my “kiss rebalancing goodbye” approach. Still, I have moved a good bit of money from U.S. to international stocks as valuations…
Read more » Taste Those Savings
Ken Cutler | Dec 18, 2023
I GET A THRILL FROM saving money on groceries. We have customer loyalty cards for the two local grocery stores where we do most of our shopping. The sales receipts list total savings for that shopping trip. I love to see big numbers on that line. I’m a prodigious cereal eater, and my favorite is Cheerios. The regular price for the smallest box is $4.99. Of course, I never pay that. Fairly frequently, one of the local stores runs specials on General Mills brands, and the price for small boxes of Cheerios is often two for $6. Occasionally, they’re two for $5 or even two for $4. I have on rare occasions even purchased two for $3. At $1.50 a box, that’s a savings of 70% over the regular price. If a cereal I eat regularly is discounted significantly, I’m likely to buy it even if we have some in stock already. I’ve also sampled the various store brands of cereal, which are priced much more favorably. I’ve found that I like some as much as the name brands, while others I’d never buy again. None of the generic substitutes for Cheerios tastes good to me. On the other hand, I can’t tell the difference between generic and name-brand frosted mini-wheats. What about other grocery store items? I generally don’t buy things like pouches of tuna, pasta sauce, certain frozen dinners and name-brand orange juice unless they’re discounted. Similarly, I usually won’t try out a new product unless it’s offered on sale. I have an online account for one of our local stores where I can redeem points accrued on past purchases to get a discount on a future bill. Each month, I typically get a $3 or $4 reward for my efforts. Hey, every little bit helps. I’m not…
Read more »
Carrying Humble Dollar Forward
Andrew Clements | Apr 7, 2026
Financial Tension
William Housley | Apr 17, 2026
The condo, HOA, senior citizen conundrum
R Quinn | Apr 19, 2026
Staying Rational
ArticleAdam M. Grossman | Apr 18, 2026
Penny Wise, Pound Foolish
DAN SMITH | Apr 12, 2026
A Life You Build
Jeff Peck | Apr 19, 2026
Navigating a Turbulent Career
ArticleRichard Connor | Apr 18, 2026
Something to Think About
David Lancaster | Mar 24, 2026
Fixing Social Security once and for all
R Quinn | Apr 15, 2026
The IRA Decision That Affects Your Kids
David Lancaster | Apr 17, 2026
One Good Call?
Mark Crothers | Apr 14, 2026
What happens to Medicare Supplement coverage when moving to a different state?
Carl C Trovall | Mar 15, 2026