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The Opportunity Cost of Waiting

"I hear you. This reminds me of something that occurred with my in-laws. They were retired and lived on the east coast, near the ocean. G’s father was a birder and enjoyed walks in the woods. Her mother, not so much but she enjoyed the ocean views. Bill spoke periodically of seeing the Columbia River Gorge in Washington state, but it seemed it would never happen. Then G’s mother told us they were going to travel to LA. She had been invited to an event for playwrights. I decided this was an opportunity, discussed it with G and I roughed up a travel itinerary to get them to the Gorge. They would take a train from LA to San Francisco. We would fly in, pick them up in an SUV and travel by vehicle. We discussed as a group and they agreed. I then planned a daily itinerary with daily driving distances, stops along the way, places to stay and so on. We would travel north through California, stopping by the National Parks and Bodie ghost town. Then to the Columbia River and east to The Dalles, OR for a short visit with a relative. We would return via the Oregon coast and the Pacific Coast Highway, stopping at lighthouses because Bill was a fan. I made all of the necessary reservations. As the time approached there were some serious fires in California, and the price of gasoline went above $5 a gallon. It was tempting to cancel the trip, but I approached it as a “once in a lifetime event”, checked the fire situation and decided to persevere. Bills health was becoming tenuous, but we did go. In fact, he amazingly climbed many of the circular stairs in the lighthouses. The trip was more than what was expected and everyone had a wonderful time. I took thousands of photos, sometimes irritating G. From these we created an amazing DVD, set to music. The pertinent thing is this. We didn’t know it, but this was Bill’s one opportunity. Not long after, Bill’s health further declined and he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s, moved into a care facility for the remainder of his life."
- normr60189
Read more »

The Myth of the Default Caregiver

"I completely agree it's far from ideal. I spent four years with my life on hold caring for my mum — and this was alongside a professional care package that included four daily visits from a medical company, plus wonderfully helpful neighbours. Even with all of that in place, I once tried to take a holiday during that period, only to be called back home after a few days due to a care crisis. My point is that alternative arrangements can work up to a point, but on many occasions the situation demands more than they're able to provide. We might not want to admit that reality, but it needs to be highlighted."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Tools/calculators for monthly retirement cash flow and tax estimation

"Got it. I think you've done a great job minimizing your tax exposure."
- DAN SMITH
Read more »

Money for Later

IF A SALESPERSON had tried to get me to sink my hard-earned money into an investment that’s illiquid or issued by an insurance company, I would have shut down in a New York minute—until now. My spouse and I recently became owners of a deferred income annuity (DIA), with plans to put perhaps 15% of our savings into these products. Also known as longevity insurance, a DIA involves plunking down money today in return for regular monthly income starting at a future date. What convinced us to buy DIAs?
  • Income hedge. We want income we can’t outlive. The DIAs will provide us with a safety net if the withdrawals from our 401(k), IRA and taxable savings fall short of what we expect or if our Social Security benefits get cut.
  • Shrinking yields. Treasury bonds—both the conventional type and those that are indexed to inflation—are mainstay riskless assets in our portfolio. But today, they yield less than inflation. Yields on municipal and higher-quality corporate bonds are also disappointing, especially when you factor in the added risk involved. By contrast, with a DIA, we can collect handsome income, in part because the insurance company will be effectively returning part of our initial investment to us each month.
  • Longevity risk. Some of us will live much longer than our birth year cohort. It’s impossible to know how life will go, but my spouse and I are keen to stay independent to the end.
  • Simplicity. Our plan is to collect income from annuities and Social Security, while also taking required minimum distributions from our retirement accounts. Put these three together, and we have a simple plan for turning our savings into retirement income. That simplicity will be useful as we age.
My first concern with buying an annuity was the usual—that our chosen insurer could go belly up or fail to generate the income needed to meet its obligation to us. After the 2008 subprime mortgage fiasco, I’m skeptical of ratings agencies. But I used their ratings and my own review of audited financial statements to choose a top-rated insurer for our first purchase. Annuities are not 100% guaranteed by the FDIC or anybody else. But should an insurer fail, our state’s guaranty association provides a mechanism to recover a portion of our premiums. My bigger concern was inflation. We bought a joint annuity with a 3% annual cost-of-living adjustment. The DIA will pay guaranteed income every month starting when I’m age 72 and ending when the second of us leaves this vale of tears. The 3% inflation rider reflects my bet that inflation will be similar to the historical average. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] Yes, I remember the high inflation of the 1970s. But for a broader perspective, I reread Triumph of the Optimists, which shows annual U.S. inflation averaged 3.2% during the last century. Since then, personal consumption expenditure inflation has averaged less than 3%, according to FRED, the data tool maintained by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. What if inflation is much higher in future? With dependable income streams from both Social Security and our DIAs, we can afford to keep a healthy amount of stock market exposure in our investment accounts, which should help if 1940s- or 1970s-style inflation returns. My last question was about the likely benefits, beyond the peace of mind offered by guaranteed lifetime income, and the costs involved. Ideally, we’ll get back our investment plus a modest rate of return. The two big variables are how long we’ll live and the related issue of opportunity cost—how we would have fared if we’d used the money instead to, say, buy bonds. Bottom line: We have decent odds of breaking even on our DIAs while achieving the main point of our investment, which is hedging longevity risk. For our DIA purchase, we turned to the same online sellers who offer immediate fixed annuities. The buying process was straightforward, though much slower and more complex than buying a mutual fund. Our purchase took just under two weeks from quote to policy delivery. It would likely have gone faster if we’d used a local insurance agent, rather than buying online. There’s a healthy stack of paperwork involved—less than closing on a house, but far more than a mutual fund prospectus plus a trade confirmation. If I could change one thing about DIAs, it would be to increase the transparency about the transaction costs involved. We received no cost disclosures similar to those offered by mutual funds. To be sure, all costs are already reflected in the income you’re quoted. Still, I would like to have known more. For selling an immediate or deferred income annuity, it seems a salesperson might collect a commission of between 1% and 5% of the sum invested. That’s certainly high compared to index fund costs. But it’s a lot less than other annuities, notably variable annuities and equity-indexed annuities, which between them have given annuities such a bad reputation. David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 36 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous articles include Beat the Cheats, Get Me a Margarita and Making a Mesh. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Recency Bias (or: You’re Running Buggy Software)

"Unbiased information is, in my experience, becoming increasingly hard to find. I try to sort the wheat from the chaff — though I'm self-aware enough to know I probably introduce my own bias in the process."
- Mark Crothers
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 »

Getting Older

"We were fortunate to be moving from a single level home to another single level home. I'm definitely done moving things up and down stairs!"
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Wisdom, from the wisest women I know

"We were financial late bloomers who both grew up in homes that were on the lowest rung of middle class and money was always tight. When we finally started getting more comfortable, I remember my husband saying “I’d just like to be able to order a pizza on a Friday night without having to balance the checkbook first.” “Breaking the shackles of frugality” is a nice turn of phrase that I resonated with. I wouldn’t say I’ve gone entirely the other direction (=spendthrift), but I definitely understand the sigh of relief when you want or need to buy something at the grocery store or for the house and you don’t have to go through anxiety-laden moments—you just do it."
- DrLefty
Read more »

Carrying Humble Dollar Forward

"Please do! Your writing style (and kind, thoughtful comments) very much remind me of your brother."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Perfection, enemy of good

"Agreed! I put some money in a target date fund many years ago and it has served me well. Its built in shift towards more conservative investments over time appeals to my naturally conservative self."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Blood Money

"Here's a podcast episode on the topic, from Ed Slott & Jeffrey Levine: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0C0CfDdTmFKsR07DBLkuJu?si=2PpP8uw1SJW45ijpYlSJxQ"
- Randy Dobkin
Read more »

Financial regrets about parenthood?

"That would indeed be a terrific article idea, Kristine, especially since financial planning for elder care is top of mind for many still-working couples. My own household is a dream situation for an elderly person. Mama (my MIL) is the center of attention for both her daughters and her son-in-law. Even the dog listens to her."
- Mike Gaynes
Read more »

The Opportunity Cost of Waiting

"I hear you. This reminds me of something that occurred with my in-laws. They were retired and lived on the east coast, near the ocean. G’s father was a birder and enjoyed walks in the woods. Her mother, not so much but she enjoyed the ocean views. Bill spoke periodically of seeing the Columbia River Gorge in Washington state, but it seemed it would never happen. Then G’s mother told us they were going to travel to LA. She had been invited to an event for playwrights. I decided this was an opportunity, discussed it with G and I roughed up a travel itinerary to get them to the Gorge. They would take a train from LA to San Francisco. We would fly in, pick them up in an SUV and travel by vehicle. We discussed as a group and they agreed. I then planned a daily itinerary with daily driving distances, stops along the way, places to stay and so on. We would travel north through California, stopping by the National Parks and Bodie ghost town. Then to the Columbia River and east to The Dalles, OR for a short visit with a relative. We would return via the Oregon coast and the Pacific Coast Highway, stopping at lighthouses because Bill was a fan. I made all of the necessary reservations. As the time approached there were some serious fires in California, and the price of gasoline went above $5 a gallon. It was tempting to cancel the trip, but I approached it as a “once in a lifetime event”, checked the fire situation and decided to persevere. Bills health was becoming tenuous, but we did go. In fact, he amazingly climbed many of the circular stairs in the lighthouses. The trip was more than what was expected and everyone had a wonderful time. I took thousands of photos, sometimes irritating G. From these we created an amazing DVD, set to music. The pertinent thing is this. We didn’t know it, but this was Bill’s one opportunity. Not long after, Bill’s health further declined and he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s, moved into a care facility for the remainder of his life."
- normr60189
Read more »

The Myth of the Default Caregiver

"I completely agree it's far from ideal. I spent four years with my life on hold caring for my mum — and this was alongside a professional care package that included four daily visits from a medical company, plus wonderfully helpful neighbours. Even with all of that in place, I once tried to take a holiday during that period, only to be called back home after a few days due to a care crisis. My point is that alternative arrangements can work up to a point, but on many occasions the situation demands more than they're able to provide. We might not want to admit that reality, but it needs to be highlighted."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Tools/calculators for monthly retirement cash flow and tax estimation

"Got it. I think you've done a great job minimizing your tax exposure."
- DAN SMITH
Read more »

Money for Later

IF A SALESPERSON had tried to get me to sink my hard-earned money into an investment that’s illiquid or issued by an insurance company, I would have shut down in a New York minute—until now. My spouse and I recently became owners of a deferred income annuity (DIA), with plans to put perhaps 15% of our savings into these products. Also known as longevity insurance, a DIA involves plunking down money today in return for regular monthly income starting at a future date. What convinced us to buy DIAs?
  • Income hedge. We want income we can’t outlive. The DIAs will provide us with a safety net if the withdrawals from our 401(k), IRA and taxable savings fall short of what we expect or if our Social Security benefits get cut.
  • Shrinking yields. Treasury bonds—both the conventional type and those that are indexed to inflation—are mainstay riskless assets in our portfolio. But today, they yield less than inflation. Yields on municipal and higher-quality corporate bonds are also disappointing, especially when you factor in the added risk involved. By contrast, with a DIA, we can collect handsome income, in part because the insurance company will be effectively returning part of our initial investment to us each month.
  • Longevity risk. Some of us will live much longer than our birth year cohort. It’s impossible to know how life will go, but my spouse and I are keen to stay independent to the end.
  • Simplicity. Our plan is to collect income from annuities and Social Security, while also taking required minimum distributions from our retirement accounts. Put these three together, and we have a simple plan for turning our savings into retirement income. That simplicity will be useful as we age.
My first concern with buying an annuity was the usual—that our chosen insurer could go belly up or fail to generate the income needed to meet its obligation to us. After the 2008 subprime mortgage fiasco, I’m skeptical of ratings agencies. But I used their ratings and my own review of audited financial statements to choose a top-rated insurer for our first purchase. Annuities are not 100% guaranteed by the FDIC or anybody else. But should an insurer fail, our state’s guaranty association provides a mechanism to recover a portion of our premiums. My bigger concern was inflation. We bought a joint annuity with a 3% annual cost-of-living adjustment. The DIA will pay guaranteed income every month starting when I’m age 72 and ending when the second of us leaves this vale of tears. The 3% inflation rider reflects my bet that inflation will be similar to the historical average. [xyz-ihs snippet="Mobile-Subscribe"] Yes, I remember the high inflation of the 1970s. But for a broader perspective, I reread Triumph of the Optimists, which shows annual U.S. inflation averaged 3.2% during the last century. Since then, personal consumption expenditure inflation has averaged less than 3%, according to FRED, the data tool maintained by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. What if inflation is much higher in future? With dependable income streams from both Social Security and our DIAs, we can afford to keep a healthy amount of stock market exposure in our investment accounts, which should help if 1940s- or 1970s-style inflation returns. My last question was about the likely benefits, beyond the peace of mind offered by guaranteed lifetime income, and the costs involved. Ideally, we’ll get back our investment plus a modest rate of return. The two big variables are how long we’ll live and the related issue of opportunity cost—how we would have fared if we’d used the money instead to, say, buy bonds. Bottom line: We have decent odds of breaking even on our DIAs while achieving the main point of our investment, which is hedging longevity risk. For our DIA purchase, we turned to the same online sellers who offer immediate fixed annuities. The buying process was straightforward, though much slower and more complex than buying a mutual fund. Our purchase took just under two weeks from quote to policy delivery. It would likely have gone faster if we’d used a local insurance agent, rather than buying online. There’s a healthy stack of paperwork involved—less than closing on a house, but far more than a mutual fund prospectus plus a trade confirmation. If I could change one thing about DIAs, it would be to increase the transparency about the transaction costs involved. We received no cost disclosures similar to those offered by mutual funds. To be sure, all costs are already reflected in the income you’re quoted. Still, I would like to have known more. For selling an immediate or deferred income annuity, it seems a salesperson might collect a commission of between 1% and 5% of the sum invested. That’s certainly high compared to index fund costs. But it’s a lot less than other annuities, notably variable annuities and equity-indexed annuities, which between them have given annuities such a bad reputation. David Powell has written software or led engineering teams for 36 years. He enjoys work, vegan fine dining, cycling and travel with his spouse. His previous articles include Beat the Cheats, Get Me a Margarita and Making a Mesh. [xyz-ihs snippet="Donate"]
Read more »

Recency Bias (or: You’re Running Buggy Software)

"Unbiased information is, in my experience, becoming increasingly hard to find. I try to sort the wheat from the chaff — though I'm self-aware enough to know I probably introduce my own bias in the process."
- Mark Crothers
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 »

Getting Older

"We were fortunate to be moving from a single level home to another single level home. I'm definitely done moving things up and down stairs!"
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Wisdom, from the wisest women I know

"We were financial late bloomers who both grew up in homes that were on the lowest rung of middle class and money was always tight. When we finally started getting more comfortable, I remember my husband saying “I’d just like to be able to order a pizza on a Friday night without having to balance the checkbook first.” “Breaking the shackles of frugality” is a nice turn of phrase that I resonated with. I wouldn’t say I’ve gone entirely the other direction (=spendthrift), but I definitely understand the sigh of relief when you want or need to buy something at the grocery store or for the house and you don’t have to go through anxiety-laden moments—you just do it."
- DrLefty
Read more »

Carrying Humble Dollar Forward

"Please do! Your writing style (and kind, thoughtful comments) very much remind me of your brother."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 75: WANT TO give to charity or family? We’ll boost happiness and possibly save on taxes by giving now. But if we’re struggling to fund retirement, we should bequeath the money instead.

Truths

NO. 47: STRIVING to preserve principal often destroys it. As you aim to maintain your portfolio’s nominal value, you’ll likely buy bonds and cash investments—and could find yourself losing ground to inflation. Worse still, you may chase yield, buying supposedly safe investments that promise big payouts, but which may instead suffer sharp price drops.

think

MONEY ILLUSION. We have the illusion we’re doing better if we earn 5% on our savings rather than 1%, even if these yields simply match the inflation rate—and hence in both cases we aren’t making any financial progress. In fact, earning 5% when inflation is 5% leaves us worse off, because we’ll lose more to taxes than in the lower-yielding scenario.

act

PREPARE FOR a long life. For a quick gauge of your life expectancy, try the Social Security and Society of Actuaries' Longevity Illustrator calculators. What will you learn? First, the longer you live, the longer you can expect to live. Second, lifespans vary widely. Educated, health-conscious Americans might live three or four years longer than average.

Two-minute checkup

Manifesto

NO. 75: WANT TO give to charity or family? We’ll boost happiness and possibly save on taxes by giving now. But if we’re struggling to fund retirement, we should bequeath the money instead.

Spotlight: Charity

Jonathan Is Everywhere on the Internet

Another great link from Mike Piper’s Oblivious Investor newsletter is this interview on the Bogleheads Podcast:
https://bogleheads.podbean.com/e/episode-82-jonathan-clements-jason-zweig-and-christine-benz-are-special-guests-on-this-podcast-host-rick-ferri/

Read more »

Donating Time

AS ALWAYS, DR. SEUSS said it best: “Oh, the places you’ll go and the people you’ll meet.”
In making this statement, the good doctor could have been talking about the benefits of volunteering. Since inheriting some money in 2011, I haven’t had to work multiple jobs, as I did in graduate school and during the three years that followed. From 2012 on, I’ve had mostly full-time work, leaving me with time to volunteer for causes I care about.

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Our annual give it away meeting

Connie and I just had our annual financial meeting- how best to give money away. 
Every since I discovered QCDs – you know what that is, right, I enjoy avoiding taxes on a RMD. 
As long as I have to take the money out of my IRA, I like putting it to good use – tax-free if possible.
Where does it go? A chunk goes to church and several religious organizations- Connie’s call. 
We give to a food pantry on Cape Cod and one local.

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Random Acts

BUDGETS CAN BE a contentious topic. Some people swear by them. Others argue they’re unnecessary if you easily spend less than you make. No matter which side you take in this debate, I’d advocate budgeting for one item: kindness.
I’ve always enjoyed reading news stories about strangers who left unusually large tips for their waiter. After reading such stories, I’d daydream about where I’d leave large tips if I was that rich. One day,

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Does Charitable Giving Make Things Better?

I was just reading through the responses to a Forum post on charitable giving. And, as often happens to me, my brain has these thoughts that seek to escape. This morning, they are all about the futility of using/expecting our giving to charity to make things fundamentally better. I usually make our annual gifts to food banks, figuring that this is a safer way to avoid charity frauds and expense issues. But, I know, that even if we gave all of our funds to the food banks,

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Share What You Know

MOST EVERYONE AGREES financial literacy should be taught to some degree in schools. Even the basics, like how to set up a bank or credit card account, or how to make a budget and avoid debt, should be explained to those soon to enter the workforce.
Another group of newcomers to the U.S. financial system who could use guidance are immigrants, particularly refugees. Jiab and I have been volunteering for a number of years to help refugees get acclimated to American life.

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Spotlight: Hedstrom

Betting on Me

I BLEW OUT MY KNEE when I was 14. Doctors told me to concentrate on academics, as my days playing sports were over. I had no control over my injury, but I could control my response. I decided to focus on academics—and also return to the sport I loved. My new goal: Play soccer the following fall and make varsity as a sophomore. With my parent’s guidance and support, we found a world-renowned orthopedic surgeon close to my hometown. This shift in attitude heralded a newfound drive and desire to bet on myself—an attitude that carried over into my adult years. I knew other situations would arise over which I had no control. It made sense to arm myself with an advanced education, so I had the best chance of success. My father’s rise from extreme poverty to a PhD provided a front row seat to observe the power that education has to transform lives. Pursuing an MBA didn’t come without risks. There was the related education debt, two years of lost income and no retirement contributions, and a substantial investment of time and energy. There was also no guarantee that a cushy, high-paying job waited on the other side. I hedged these risks by attending a business school with a positive overall return on investment. This calculation weighs the projected compensation five years after graduation against the cost of attending the program and the wages that are foregone. With only about 70 schools offering a positive ROI, it was a key consideration. Other factors included small class sizes, location, international exposure and related experiential learning. Also don’t underestimate the lifelong relationships and camaraderie. I learned more from my MBA cohort and favorite professor than any financial calculation could ever account for. The quality of people added to my life, thanks…
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Getting Schooled

SETTING OUT INTO the business world, I was age 27 with a negative net worth. Among life lessons, there are many strong contenders, but nothing introduced me to “adulting” like debt. For that, I had undergraduate and graduate school expenses to thank. Having secured a good job out of business school, I started to rebuild my finances. My grad loans had a relatively high principal amount and an interest rate of 6.8%, so I prioritized that debt over my undergrad loans, which were much lower in principal and charged just 3%. I was acutely aware of the dangers of increasing my living standards overnight. Going from ramen to sushi wasn’t in my best interest. I continued to live like a grad student. These choices gave me more cash to deploy toward three goals—debt reduction, retirement and building a cash reserve. Not wanting my debts to derail my other goals, I decided on a hybrid approach. I contributed the amount needed to get my full employer 401(k) match, and also set up a monthly automatic contribution to a Roth IRA. After I paid myself via my 401(k) and Roth investments, I focused on developing an emergency fund. My goal was to build this up aggressively until I hit $10,000. With this bit of liquidity to fall back on, I felt better about directing more toward my graduate loans. I set my retirement contributions to increase annually in conjunction with my annual raises. My bonuses went toward grad debt, retirement and everyday savings. My life wasn’t exactly sexy in materialism, but it was rich in discipline. My strategy of not letting the perfect get in the way of good worked for me. I managed to pay off more than $65,000 of graduate student loans in two years, while slowly inching toward my other…
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Trek to Retirement

IN LATE MARCH, I SET out into the backcountry of central Oregon with eight other women, all on snowshoes or cross-country skis. We traversed more than 22 miles in the heart of the Oregon Cascades, breaking trail and staying in huts. The terrain was steep, the visibility was poor, the snow was deep and there was a stiff wind. What does this have to do with investing? The trek was reminiscent in three ways: Feeling inferior. I was among incredibly fit and experienced outdoors women. This was my first trip of this kind. The others were triathletes, competitive cyclists and expert mountaineers. If we were a sports team, I’d have been keeping the bench warm. I suspect I saw myself as more amateur than my companions did. I can’t tell you how many competent, educated and bright women I meet who are reluctant to acknowledge all that they’ve done for their financial future or voice the insightful questions they have. They downplay their knowledge because they aren’t “experts.” One of the best things about investing is that it doesn’t require expertise to begin. In fact, the quote of “80% of success is showing up” couldn’t be truer. Just getting started, by putting your money to work in the market, can be one of the best decisions you make. From there, you can always improve and adjust your portfolio, as you learn and grow along the way. Constraints work. Our Oregon Cascades adventure was a last-minute trip, so I didn’t have time to do a ton of research or prep beforehand. This worked in my favor. I could only concentrate on what gear to pack, food to bring and the correct mapping software to download. I couldn’t overthink it. The same approach can be helpful with investing. You can easily get sucked…
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Time to Explore

JOHN GOODENOUGH was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2019. At 97 years old, he was the oldest Nobel laureate in history. This didn’t happen by accident. At age 57, when most folks are looking to scale back their careers, Goodenough pressed ahead, co-inventing the lithium-ion rechargeable battery, which today powers pacemakers, digital cameras, smartphones, electric wheelchairs and more. Americans are healthier and living longer than at any time in history. If Goodenough had taken “retirement” to heart and scaled back or completely stopped pursuing his life’s passion, we’d all be worse off. Folks like him are helping to redefine retirement not as a time to withdraw or, as some might say, head out to pasture, but as a chance to make the most of a new, less structured chapter in our life. The challenge we each face: To discard passive notions of retirement and instead view this as a time of opportunity. Here are four steps that’ll help you discover what you’re passionate about, so you get the most out of your retirement. 1. Start now. Ideally, this period of exploration should begin long before retirement. Try to think about a life that’s less driven by financial constraints and, instead, more focused on your unique abilities and your personal satisfaction. In the years running up to retirement, assess and reassess those interests and capabilities. Feeling stuck? Try Yale University’s most popular class ever, The Science of Wellbeing. Available through Coursera, it focuses on increasing personal happiness and building better habits to live a more fulfilled life. 2. Embrace boredom. Schedule time to do nothing. To consume nothing. To pause and just be. If this concept seems foreign to you, start with a “Shultz hour.” George Shultz, former U.S. secretary of state, often carved out an hour each week…
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How About a Tutu?

AS ANYONE WHO HAS spent time around kids can attest, emotions often run high when things don't go according to plan. Recently, my three-year-old daughter, Carter Rose, refused to brush her teeth, wear clothes or go to school. Rather than going head-to-head with an emotional toddler, I took the approach of listening, compassion and empathy to get things back on track. What was wrong—and what could make things better? We could all use a little more empathy these days. With continued worries about the direction of the economy, house-buying dreams on pause indefinitely because of higher mortgage rates, and investment portfolios continuing to reflect red numbers, it's understandable if folks feel frustrated and uncertain. It's times like these when my financial-planning clients turn to me to feel heard. They want me to provide reassurances that, despite life not always going as expected, we can still work together to make sure everything turns out okay. For instance, I recently met with a client who’s a few years from retirement. He was curious how the current market may influence his planned retirement date and the timing of other spending, including a home remodeling. He wanted to know if he’d still be okay. I first acknowledged his feelings and let him know he isn’t alone. I then punted on other items I’d planned to discuss, instead spending the majority of our meeting talking through his concerns and questions. Knowing he appreciates a visual approach, I shared my computer screen so we could revisit his plan. This allowed him to see how I was adjusting inputs and assumptions to make the plan more conservative and to play with some “what ifs.” This provided him with a dose of needed confidence. Ditto for Carter Rose. Once I crouched down to her three-foot level, looked her…
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Growing Up (IV)

THE SOUND AND SMELL of the Pickle will be forever burned into my memory. As a wannabe cool teenager, getting rides to school and soccer practice from my parents in their inherited 1976 green Dodge Aspen coupe with whitewall tires—a.k.a. the Pickle—was beyond embarrassing. Sometimes, my parents would honk pulling away, just to add insult to injury. Needless to say, it took a bit of humble pie to finally understand the lessons my parents were teaching me, and my sisters, daily. I didn’t quite grasp what joy my father got from driving old, out-of-style automobiles until one day after soccer practice. On the way home, we took a detour to an affluent part of the small college town I grew up in. He asked me what I thought of these fancy, large houses with beautiful, new cars outside. Like a naive teenager, I remarked that these people must have it all—ultimate happiness and wealth. That ride home, and several embarrassing Pickle pickups later, I began to understand that perception isn’t always reality. My father pointed out that not every large, beautiful house and expensive car on the block was purchased by someone with sufficient means to pay those bills. My parents didn’t value keeping up with the Joneses. Rather, they had chosen to be conscious spenders. Large expenses were aligned with the values they prioritized for our family—values like adventure, education and a hard work ethic. On top of Pickle rides, there was Sunday breakfast, which consisted of burned buckwheat pancakes, soccer strategy and a financial lesson. After eating our well-done complex carbohydrates and visualizing our soccer prowess, Dad turned to a financial article or book to explain a new concept. It began with charts of the Nasdaq to explain what the stock market was and what a stock is, followed…
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