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Financial danger sign: All your stocks are penny stocks, but they weren’t when you bought them.

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Coping with inflation in retirement, what’s the plan?

"Our equity allocation is such that it should keep pace with inflation, and some of our bond allocation is also designed to protect purchasing power through inflation. Social security once we take it should also. The same cannot be said of most US pensions and annuities. Nothing against those, just a distinction worth noting in the context of the question."
- Michael1
Read more »

Is The Australian Superannuation Program the Answer to US Retirement Problem?

"Not sure the benefit of another government run retirement savings program. We already have one in the US called Social Security. Instead of adding a second how about just fixing the first?"
- Michael Flack
Read more »

A Big Little Move (by Dana/DrLefty)

"Maybe the "old" comment is because I live in California. There aren't houses from 1789 here, at least not that I know of!"
- DrLefty
Read more »

Wrapping It Up

"I just followed a link from one of the old posts that took me to a site listing hourly fee advisors. The hourly rates and one-time fees were all over the place, and some alphabet credentials that I’ve never heard of. I sure couldn’t tell which ones were any good by the information provided. Even knowing where and how to check, a bad advisor may not have any complaints or disciplinary action in their history. It’s scary. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Keeping up with the Jonses— at least it looks that way.

"I think my stake in the Empire State Building is worth a brick or two, but it make feel good to say I’m invested in NYC real estate. 😆"
- R Quinn
Read more »

Giving Up on Owning a Home

"Almost everyone, except maybe FIRE adherents and the frugal wealthy, spends more of their earnings than they save."
- Ken Cutler
Read more »

Social Security Spousal Benefits

"Wouldn't say "any reason" but very slim. You earn 32.5% of his FRA for 5 years instead of 50% if waited til age 67. But practically that difference is small and the major benefit is the survivor benefit which is already maximized. Starting at 62 seems right to me too."
- James McGlynn CFA RICP®
Read more »

Treasury Tax Reporting

IF YOU HAVE a Money Market Fund (e.g. VUSXX, VMFXX), Treasury fund (e.g. SGOV), or any other Treasury ETF (e.g. VBIL), you need to know how to report it on your taxes correctly. If you don’t, you are overpaying on your state taxes unknowingly. 

How and why?

These funds hold U.S. Treasury Bills. Treasuries are exempt from state and local taxes. Of course, this only matters if you hold these funds in a taxable brokerage account, which most people do.

The broker sends you a 1099-DIV form, but it’s your responsibility to figure out how to report it on your taxes correctly. By the way, bad tax preparers can miss this sometimes, or if you self-prepare, this may be something you aren't aware of (I hope most of you reading HumbleDollar are familiar with this!)

This is one of those areas where the reporting rules are technically simple, but the execution is where people mess up. The IRS gets their share regardless (since interest is fully taxable at the federal level), but if you don’t adjust properly, your state will too, even when it shouldn’t.

The 1099-DIV doesn’t break out how much of the dividend was allocated to Treasuries. The software also wouldn’t know how much based on the 1099-DIV. This means that you generally have to figure out how to report it (or ensure your CPA does it correctly).

Now, the 1099-DIV will have a breakdown of every single stock/ETF you have, but you have to find out the percentage of a fund that holds Treasuries.

This percentage is not on your brokerage statement. It comes directly from the fund provider (Vanguard, iShares, Schwab, etc), usually buried in their “tax center” or “year-end tax supplement” pages.

Let me give you an actual example.

Say, in 2025, you received $5,000 of dividends from two funds.

Then, if you scroll down, you will see a “Detail Information” of your dividends:

Interest

We can see that $2,456.78 came from Vanguard Federal Money Market fund.

The entire $2,456.78 will be taxed at the federal level, but how do we figure out what’s taxed at the state level?

This is where the extra step comes is.

During the end of the year, the fund manager (e.g Vanguard for VMFXX) will post a “US government source income information” on their Tax page.

This report tells you what portion of the fund’s income is derived from U.S. government obligations (Treasuries), which is the key to the state tax exemption.

VMFXX

We can see that 66.61% of VMFXX holdings for the 2025 tax year were income derived from the U.S. government and, therefore, are not taxable at the state level.

So, we would take $2,456.78 * 0.6661 = $1,636. Of the total, $1,636 is derived from U.S. obligations, and you would only pay state taxes on the remaining ~$819.

That $2,456.78 is still fully taxable federally. This is strictly a state adjustment.

It’s also important to note that some states say "if less than 50% of the fund is from the U.S. government (like Treasury Bills), you can treat it as 0%.”

For example, California, Connecticut, and New York are some of these states. So, if the fund has only 35% coming from the Treasury, you shouldn’t even calculate the exempt amount for these states.

Now, if you buy Treasuries directly from TreasuryDirect, they will send you a 1099-INT, and you can just enter that information directly into the tax software. No extra calculations are needed. That’s because the income is already clearly identified as U.S. government interest, no allocation required.

So, how do you report that dividend interest calculation?

In most tax softwares, after entering the 1099-DIV, it will ask: "Did a portion of dividends came from a U.S. Government interest?'

So, you would just check it off/select and enter the amount from Treasuries ($1,636 in our example).

Behind the scenes, this flows into your state return as a subtraction or adjustment, depending on the state.

Some software might ask for the percentage of dividends that are state tax exempt. However, this is a bit tricky because you might receive other dividends in your brokerage account.

In that case, calculate the amount from the Treasury, say $1,636, and divide it by your total dividend amount (e.g. $5,000)

If you have someone do your taxes and you have some of these Money Market Funds or other Treasury ETFs, double-check your state tax return and see the amounts reported. This will save you some money. It's also not too late to amend your tax return if this was missed.

Specifically, look for a “U.S. government interest subtraction” or similarly labeled line item on your state return. If it’s zero and you held these funds, that’s a red flag.

If you live in a no tax state, this would not apply to you, but still good to know in case you move!

I hope you found this one valuable.

  Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

Something to Think About

"Although none of this impacts me directly, I found the thread intriguing because the number of variables involved is just mind-blowing. I actually ran R. Mancuso’s comment through Claude AI to see what it could do. I asked it to analyze the text and design a spreadsheet for comparison scenarios—and it delivered a comprehensive, downloadable sheet complete with multiple tabs and usage notes. I had a quick play with it in Google Sheets, but I’ll admit the RMD and Roth columns were "Double Dutch" to me. Still, I thought you might find the observation interesting!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Prepping to Pull the Trigger

"You’re doing good work Ed. Hope you stay on the job."
- Michael1
Read more »

Debriefing

"I love Norfolk terriers! They are such characters! Having 'enough' money is a good thing, but it certainly doesn't guarantee happiness."
- kristinehayes2014
Read more »

Doubt the Forecast

WHEN PAUL EHRLICH'S obituary appeared a few weeks ago, it came and went without much notice. But during his lifetime, he was enormously influential. By training, Ehrlich was a biologist, but he was most well known for his 1968 book, The Population Bomb. It opened with this dire prediction: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.” In his writings and speeches over the years, he reiterated this point in terms that became even more extreme. In 1970, he argued that famine would kill 65 million Americans during the 1980s. And in 1971, he offered this prediction about the U.K.: “If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” It was destined to become “a small group of impoverished islands, inhabited by some 70 million hungry people.” Why did Ehrlich hold these views? Earlier in his career, he had traveled to developing countries and concluded that their population growth was unsustainable. He argued that the world’s population needed to be cut in half and proposed a number of ideas to accomplish that. “The operation will demand many apparently brutal and heartless decisions,” he acknowledged. Of course, none of Ehrlich’s predictions came close to being true, but that didn’t impact his popularity. He made more than 20 appearances on The Tonight Show—so many, in fact, that he was required to join the Screen Actors Guild. And despite Ehrlich’s impressively poor track record over nearly 60 years, The New York Times, in its obituary, still couldn’t criticize. Instead, the paper referred to his apocalyptic predictions as simply being “premature.” What can we learn from this? I see five key lessons for individual investors.
  1. No one can see around corners, and we shouldn’t believe anyone who can claim to be able to. Presumably, there was some scientific basis for Ehrlich’s predictions. The problem, though, was that all of his predictions were based on extrapolation, and he could only extrapolate from the facts available at the time. For example, he had no idea how advances in agriculture would outpace population growth, made possible by technologies like LED bulbs for indoor farming, something that hadn’t yet been invented at the time.
  2. We should be inherently skeptical of extreme predictions. Extreme views aren’t necessarily wrong. After all, extreme things can and have happened. The reason we should be skeptical is because the world is complex. As I noted a few weeks back, it’s possible for an observation to be correct but incomplete. And that was a key flaw in Ehrlich’s thinking.
The formula at the center of his research considered just three variables (population, affluence and technology). But when it comes to most things in the world, the ultimate outcome is dependent on many more variables than that. So someone like Ehrlich might have been accurate with one, or even more than one, of his observations. But at the same time, he was ignoring innumerable other factors, such as public policy decisions.
  1. In a similar vein, we should be wary of stories that sound convincing only because of the way they’re presented. I’ve discussed before the phenomenon of the “single story”—when an overly simplified, one-dimensional version of the facts takes on a life of its own. Later in life, Ehrlich acknowledged that he had benefited from this sort of thing: “The publisher’s choice of The Population Bomb was perfect from a marketing perspective…,” he wrote.
  2. We shouldn’t be too easily impressed by credentials. Despite being almost entirely wrong with his “population bomb” arguments, Ehrlich was a tenured professor at Stanford and received numerous awards. This carries an important lesson: Smart people can veer off course just as much as anyone else. As I’ve noted before, the scientist who invented the lobotomy received the Nobel Prize for his work. We should never blindly accept an argument based solely on its source.
  3. We should be careful of confirmation bias. That’s the emotional tendency to look for evidence that confirms pre-existing beliefs. In Ehrlich’s case, despite all the disconfirming evidence, he never backed down from his views. 
In 1980, economist Julian Simon challenged Ehrlich to a bet. Simon let Ehrlich pick a basket of commodities and wagered that each of them would be less expensive by 1990. For his part, Ehrlich was sure they’d all increase in price due to population pressure. Ten years later, every one of the commodities in the basket turned out to be cheaper, despite the population having grown by 800 million people over the course of the bet. Ehrlich held up his end of the bet, sending Simon a check for $567 in 1990, but he had his wife sign it, and he never acknowledged that he might have been wrong. Indeed, he doubled down. In 2009, Ehrlich commented that, “perhaps the most serious flaw in The Bomb was that it was much too optimistic about the future.” The bottom line: Prognosticators can be convincing and are often entertaining. As investors, our job is to listen with a critical ear.   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 »

Coping with inflation in retirement, what’s the plan?

"Our equity allocation is such that it should keep pace with inflation, and some of our bond allocation is also designed to protect purchasing power through inflation. Social security once we take it should also. The same cannot be said of most US pensions and annuities. Nothing against those, just a distinction worth noting in the context of the question."
- Michael1
Read more »

Is The Australian Superannuation Program the Answer to US Retirement Problem?

"Not sure the benefit of another government run retirement savings program. We already have one in the US called Social Security. Instead of adding a second how about just fixing the first?"
- Michael Flack
Read more »

A Big Little Move (by Dana/DrLefty)

"Maybe the "old" comment is because I live in California. There aren't houses from 1789 here, at least not that I know of!"
- DrLefty
Read more »

Wrapping It Up

"I just followed a link from one of the old posts that took me to a site listing hourly fee advisors. The hourly rates and one-time fees were all over the place, and some alphabet credentials that I’ve never heard of. I sure couldn’t tell which ones were any good by the information provided. Even knowing where and how to check, a bad advisor may not have any complaints or disciplinary action in their history. It’s scary. "
- Dan Smith
Read more »

Keeping up with the Jonses— at least it looks that way.

"I think my stake in the Empire State Building is worth a brick or two, but it make feel good to say I’m invested in NYC real estate. 😆"
- R Quinn
Read more »

Giving Up on Owning a Home

"Almost everyone, except maybe FIRE adherents and the frugal wealthy, spends more of their earnings than they save."
- Ken Cutler
Read more »

Social Security Spousal Benefits

"Wouldn't say "any reason" but very slim. You earn 32.5% of his FRA for 5 years instead of 50% if waited til age 67. But practically that difference is small and the major benefit is the survivor benefit which is already maximized. Starting at 62 seems right to me too."
- James McGlynn CFA RICP®
Read more »

Treasury Tax Reporting

IF YOU HAVE a Money Market Fund (e.g. VUSXX, VMFXX), Treasury fund (e.g. SGOV), or any other Treasury ETF (e.g. VBIL), you need to know how to report it on your taxes correctly. If you don’t, you are overpaying on your state taxes unknowingly. 

How and why?

These funds hold U.S. Treasury Bills. Treasuries are exempt from state and local taxes. Of course, this only matters if you hold these funds in a taxable brokerage account, which most people do.

The broker sends you a 1099-DIV form, but it’s your responsibility to figure out how to report it on your taxes correctly. By the way, bad tax preparers can miss this sometimes, or if you self-prepare, this may be something you aren't aware of (I hope most of you reading HumbleDollar are familiar with this!)

This is one of those areas where the reporting rules are technically simple, but the execution is where people mess up. The IRS gets their share regardless (since interest is fully taxable at the federal level), but if you don’t adjust properly, your state will too, even when it shouldn’t.

The 1099-DIV doesn’t break out how much of the dividend was allocated to Treasuries. The software also wouldn’t know how much based on the 1099-DIV. This means that you generally have to figure out how to report it (or ensure your CPA does it correctly).

Now, the 1099-DIV will have a breakdown of every single stock/ETF you have, but you have to find out the percentage of a fund that holds Treasuries.

This percentage is not on your brokerage statement. It comes directly from the fund provider (Vanguard, iShares, Schwab, etc), usually buried in their “tax center” or “year-end tax supplement” pages.

Let me give you an actual example.

Say, in 2025, you received $5,000 of dividends from two funds.

Then, if you scroll down, you will see a “Detail Information” of your dividends:

Interest

We can see that $2,456.78 came from Vanguard Federal Money Market fund.

The entire $2,456.78 will be taxed at the federal level, but how do we figure out what’s taxed at the state level?

This is where the extra step comes is.

During the end of the year, the fund manager (e.g Vanguard for VMFXX) will post a “US government source income information” on their Tax page.

This report tells you what portion of the fund’s income is derived from U.S. government obligations (Treasuries), which is the key to the state tax exemption.

VMFXX

We can see that 66.61% of VMFXX holdings for the 2025 tax year were income derived from the U.S. government and, therefore, are not taxable at the state level.

So, we would take $2,456.78 * 0.6661 = $1,636. Of the total, $1,636 is derived from U.S. obligations, and you would only pay state taxes on the remaining ~$819.

That $2,456.78 is still fully taxable federally. This is strictly a state adjustment.

It’s also important to note that some states say "if less than 50% of the fund is from the U.S. government (like Treasury Bills), you can treat it as 0%.”

For example, California, Connecticut, and New York are some of these states. So, if the fund has only 35% coming from the Treasury, you shouldn’t even calculate the exempt amount for these states.

Now, if you buy Treasuries directly from TreasuryDirect, they will send you a 1099-INT, and you can just enter that information directly into the tax software. No extra calculations are needed. That’s because the income is already clearly identified as U.S. government interest, no allocation required.

So, how do you report that dividend interest calculation?

In most tax softwares, after entering the 1099-DIV, it will ask: "Did a portion of dividends came from a U.S. Government interest?'

So, you would just check it off/select and enter the amount from Treasuries ($1,636 in our example).

Behind the scenes, this flows into your state return as a subtraction or adjustment, depending on the state.

Some software might ask for the percentage of dividends that are state tax exempt. However, this is a bit tricky because you might receive other dividends in your brokerage account.

In that case, calculate the amount from the Treasury, say $1,636, and divide it by your total dividend amount (e.g. $5,000)

If you have someone do your taxes and you have some of these Money Market Funds or other Treasury ETFs, double-check your state tax return and see the amounts reported. This will save you some money. It's also not too late to amend your tax return if this was missed.

Specifically, look for a “U.S. government interest subtraction” or similarly labeled line item on your state return. If it’s zero and you held these funds, that’s a red flag.

If you live in a no tax state, this would not apply to you, but still good to know in case you move!

I hope you found this one valuable.

  Bogdan Sheremeta is a licensed CPA based in Illinois with experience at Deloitte and a Fortune 200 multinational.
Read more »

Something to Think About

"Although none of this impacts me directly, I found the thread intriguing because the number of variables involved is just mind-blowing. I actually ran R. Mancuso’s comment through Claude AI to see what it could do. I asked it to analyze the text and design a spreadsheet for comparison scenarios—and it delivered a comprehensive, downloadable sheet complete with multiple tabs and usage notes. I had a quick play with it in Google Sheets, but I’ll admit the RMD and Roth columns were "Double Dutch" to me. Still, I thought you might find the observation interesting!"
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Doubt the Forecast

WHEN PAUL EHRLICH'S obituary appeared a few weeks ago, it came and went without much notice. But during his lifetime, he was enormously influential. By training, Ehrlich was a biologist, but he was most well known for his 1968 book, The Population Bomb. It opened with this dire prediction: “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.” In his writings and speeches over the years, he reiterated this point in terms that became even more extreme. In 1970, he argued that famine would kill 65 million Americans during the 1980s. And in 1971, he offered this prediction about the U.K.: “If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” It was destined to become “a small group of impoverished islands, inhabited by some 70 million hungry people.” Why did Ehrlich hold these views? Earlier in his career, he had traveled to developing countries and concluded that their population growth was unsustainable. He argued that the world’s population needed to be cut in half and proposed a number of ideas to accomplish that. “The operation will demand many apparently brutal and heartless decisions,” he acknowledged. Of course, none of Ehrlich’s predictions came close to being true, but that didn’t impact his popularity. He made more than 20 appearances on The Tonight Show—so many, in fact, that he was required to join the Screen Actors Guild. And despite Ehrlich’s impressively poor track record over nearly 60 years, The New York Times, in its obituary, still couldn’t criticize. Instead, the paper referred to his apocalyptic predictions as simply being “premature.” What can we learn from this? I see five key lessons for individual investors.
  1. No one can see around corners, and we shouldn’t believe anyone who can claim to be able to. Presumably, there was some scientific basis for Ehrlich’s predictions. The problem, though, was that all of his predictions were based on extrapolation, and he could only extrapolate from the facts available at the time. For example, he had no idea how advances in agriculture would outpace population growth, made possible by technologies like LED bulbs for indoor farming, something that hadn’t yet been invented at the time.
  2. We should be inherently skeptical of extreme predictions. Extreme views aren’t necessarily wrong. After all, extreme things can and have happened. The reason we should be skeptical is because the world is complex. As I noted a few weeks back, it’s possible for an observation to be correct but incomplete. And that was a key flaw in Ehrlich’s thinking.
The formula at the center of his research considered just three variables (population, affluence and technology). But when it comes to most things in the world, the ultimate outcome is dependent on many more variables than that. So someone like Ehrlich might have been accurate with one, or even more than one, of his observations. But at the same time, he was ignoring innumerable other factors, such as public policy decisions.
  1. In a similar vein, we should be wary of stories that sound convincing only because of the way they’re presented. I’ve discussed before the phenomenon of the “single story”—when an overly simplified, one-dimensional version of the facts takes on a life of its own. Later in life, Ehrlich acknowledged that he had benefited from this sort of thing: “The publisher’s choice of The Population Bomb was perfect from a marketing perspective…,” he wrote.
  2. We shouldn’t be too easily impressed by credentials. Despite being almost entirely wrong with his “population bomb” arguments, Ehrlich was a tenured professor at Stanford and received numerous awards. This carries an important lesson: Smart people can veer off course just as much as anyone else. As I’ve noted before, the scientist who invented the lobotomy received the Nobel Prize for his work. We should never blindly accept an argument based solely on its source.
  3. We should be careful of confirmation bias. That’s the emotional tendency to look for evidence that confirms pre-existing beliefs. In Ehrlich’s case, despite all the disconfirming evidence, he never backed down from his views. 
In 1980, economist Julian Simon challenged Ehrlich to a bet. Simon let Ehrlich pick a basket of commodities and wagered that each of them would be less expensive by 1990. For his part, Ehrlich was sure they’d all increase in price due to population pressure. Ten years later, every one of the commodities in the basket turned out to be cheaper, despite the population having grown by 800 million people over the course of the bet. Ehrlich held up his end of the bet, sending Simon a check for $567 in 1990, but he had his wife sign it, and he never acknowledged that he might have been wrong. Indeed, he doubled down. In 2009, Ehrlich commented that, “perhaps the most serious flaw in The Bomb was that it was much too optimistic about the future.” The bottom line: Prognosticators can be convincing and are often entertaining. As investors, our job is to listen with a critical ear.   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 »

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Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 17: OUR MOST valuable asset is often our human capital—our income-earning ability. A regular paycheck can be like collecting interest from a bond, which then frees us up to invest in stocks.

think

HAPPINESS RESEARCH. Using experiments and survey data, academics have brought greater rigor to our understanding of what drives happiness. For instance, researchers have found that commuting and the birth of a child hurt happiness, a robust network of friends is a big plus, and that money buys happiness but the amount wanes as our income rises.

humans

NO. 3: WE LACK self-control. Prudent money management is simple enough: We should spend less than we earn, build a globally diversified portfolio, hold down investment costs, minimize taxes, buy the right insurance and take on debt judiciously. Yet folks struggle with such basic steps—because they can’t bring themselves to do what they know is right.

act

SET UP A HOME equity line of credit. These have lost some of their allure under 2017's tax law, because you can only deduct the interest if it's used to buy, build or substantially improve your home. Still, a HELOC is one of the cheaper ways to borrow, and it could come in handy if you have a financial emergency or as an alternative to education and car loans.

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Manifesto

NO. 17: OUR MOST valuable asset is often our human capital—our income-earning ability. A regular paycheck can be like collecting interest from a bond, which then frees us up to invest in stocks.

Spotlight: Behavior

Taking It Personally

WHICH FINANCIAL dangers should we focus on? The possibilities seem pretty much endless. In fact, five years ago, I decided to make a list—and ended up offering readers 50 shades of risk.
Yet our notion of risk used to be far more circumscribed.
In the late 1980s, when I started writing about personal finance, insurance was considered important, but it wasn’t much discussed. Instead, the only risk that seemed to merit serious analysis was investment risk,

Read more »

Taking Center Stage

IT’S THE ONE ASSET we’re all born with, and it pretty much defines our financial life. I’m talking here about our human capital, our ability to pull in a paycheck.
That paycheck—or the lack thereof—drives our ability to save, service debt and take investment risk. It also dictates our insurance needs and how much emergency money we should hold. Put it all together, and our human capital should arguably determine how we manage our money over our lifetime.

Read more »

Kicking Myself

THERE ARE TWO TYPES of mistake I make: those that are unintentional and those where I should have known what would happen.
After an unintentional mistake, I’m perplexed by what went wrong. I might say to myself “I’ll never do that again” or perhaps “what the heck just happened?” These are genuine mistakes, and I try to learn from them.
By contrast, stupid mistakes are those that I should have known would occur. No matter how many college degrees we have or how many years on the job,

Read more »

Care to join me on my yacht cruising the Mediterranean? Do you envy the super wealthy? RDQ

There was a time when I probably did- that was many years ago when sailing around the Mediterranean in my luxury yacht was a fantasy. Once, decades ago, I actually explored the cost of renting such a yacht. Back then it was $200,000 a week, plus tips for the crew and the cost of the food you selected. I was afraid I couldn’t afford the tips- but I could bring eight friends to impress.
These days I don’t envy of the billionaires,

Read more »

A “B” for effort won’t get you far. Results are what matter.

I read an article recently and was shocked to learn that a small percentage of college students feel they deserve a B just for showing up for class. A survey seems to support this. In addition, many feel that effort, even without results, should be rewarded with good grades.
I once had an employee who had grand ideas about her own ability and ideas. One of her ideas involved controlling health care costs with wellness programs.

Read more »

Four Thoughts

WHEN I STARTED writing about personal finance in the late 1980s, my focus was on giving “actionable” money advice. Here, at the end of my career, I’m more interested in offering thoughts that’ll help folks with all areas of their life, financial and otherwise.
I’m not sure how many articles I have left in me. Fingers crossed, it’ll be many more than my current diagnosis suggests. But whatever the case, here are four thoughts that I’d like readers to remember:
1.

Read more »

Spotlight: Tomamichel

Australian superannuation – a local perspective

Around the world there are a vast number of ways that countries seek to provide financial support to its retirees. I certainly won’t profess to being an expert in any, including my home of Australia, but I thought it might be interesting to give some insight into how our superannuation scheme works, along with some of my thoughts. Back in 1974, around 32% of Australians had access to retirement funds via a range of pension schemes. This obviously left a lot of Australians without any formal structure to save and invest for their retirement. This meant they had to rely on a mix of their own savings and the government aged pension. In 1983, the first steps towards our current superannuation scheme began. In an era when trade unions were a much more powerful influence on government policy than today, the unions agreed to forego a 3% wage increase, which would instead be made as a contribution to a new superannuation system that would apply to all Australian workers. In 1992, the employee contributions were matched with 3% paid by the employer. This signaled the start of the superannuation scheme as we know it today. Over time, with some hiccups along the way, there has been bipartisan support to steadily raise the level of contributions being paid. This currently stands at 11.5% of normal time wages (excluding overtime, bonuses etc.) but will increase shortly to 12%. Like most large, government regulated schemes, there is lots of complexity in our superannuation system. But I like to keep things simple, so here are the bare bones:   The employer pays 12% of the employee’s ordinary time earnings (excluding overtime, bonuses etc.) into an approved fund. This applies to all employees regardless of how much they are earning or their age. For people…
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The rules we didn’t follow

Firstly, full credit to Kristine Hayes for this idea. I wish I could say that I thought of it on my own. Kristine wrote about her buying and selling of houses that didn't fit the accepted "rules of thumb" for personal finance. I was reflecting on my own financial path thus far, and ways in which we have strayed from the recommended path. Two in particular stick out. All in equities My wife and I were lucky to have good jobs straight out of university. With the compulsory superannuation system in Australia, our retirement savings started from our very first pay. Because we working for healthy wages in the mining industry and had very low living expenses, we both contributed more to our "super" than the required minimum. Without knowing it at the time, we both had a wonderful financial head-start. We also recognized that we had a very long investing timeline, so could be aggressive -  100% in equities. Now both in our fifties, we are still basically 100% global equities. As we near retirement we may pull some of that money into fixed interest to cover a few years of living expenses. But other than that we will likely remain all-in on global equities. Lots of financial discussion seems to assume 60% equities / 40% bonds, or some similar variation, as a somewhat default position. I can understand that people would seek this particular allocation for several reasons. In particular, either aversion to volatility or nearing retirement and seeking to ensure that they are not selling equities during a down market. But for many people in their 20's, 30's and 40's (and maybe older) it would seem to me that 100% equities is well worth considering. Part of the issue seems to be conflating volatility with risk. Volatility…
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Close but not quite

Nothing like Christmas and the rolling of one year into the next for a little reflection. A chance to think a little more broadly than the daily minutia. And to catch up with friends and family that we haven't seen for a while. For me, this included a lot of us in our early fifties. I sensed a common theme in the discussions - everyone seems pretty sick of striving for a promotion or more money. We didn't talk specifically about retirement savings, but I got the impression that everyone had a pretty good level of comfort about being "on track". Our retirement saving scheme in Australia only allows withdrawals from age 60, and the aged pension kicks in at 67. So unless you're a very rare individual with significant savings outside of our retirement scheme, work will continue until to at least 60, maybe longer. So here we sit, roughly a decade from hanging up our boots. The drive to earn more and save more has faded somewhat - why bust ourselves when it will likely have little impact on the timing or quality of our retirement? I got a real sense from others of something that I've been feeling lately - shifting from a mindset of going above and beyond, striving for greater and greater things, to an approach of really looking to enjoy life more and be less focused on what happens from "9 to 5". This shift should be easy - but decades of dedication becomes a hard habit to break. Bringing this back to the HD realm, I feel like the next ten years will see many of my contemporaries embracing a shift towards retirement. Using all our annual leave, taking more holidays, less overtime, more time spent on things that enhance our lives. And…
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I’d like to take all the credit, but ……

We would all like to be happy, right? And there is no shortage of advice on the internet about how to get there, often by buying someone's book or online course. The trouble is, does any of that advice actually work? Is there anything behind the claims? After selling our business last year, I had a "void" that I imagine many experience in their early phase of retirement. I was keen to work again, and sent out lots of applications. None of them were succeeding. I worked in a role for about a month ....... and despised it! Whilst I had more time on my hands and was feeling a little lost, I thought it would be a good time look for evidence-based ways to feel better. Long story short, I completed a really interesting and completely free course by Dr. Laurie Santos. Dr. Santos is a Professor of Psychology at Yale University, which is a pretty good start for my "evidence based" criteria. She created a course called “Psychology and the Good Life" which became Yale's most popular course and had nearly 1 in 4 Yale students enrolled. I completed the on-line version of that course, and found it really interesting. It leads you through all the things that we think we will make us happy but don't - better grades, more money, a better job. Then, more importantly, it provides a long list of techniques that are shown empirically to work. It guides you through these techniques, and at the conclusion steers you towards making your favoured practice a daily habit. My choice was simple - writing a daily entry in a gratitude journal. Each day I take time to right a paragraph or so about three things that I am grateful for. These can be large, globally…
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Selling our business – the journey so far

I’m sure that there are several on Humble Dollar who have navigated this path – selling a family business and moving on to whatever is next. We are part way along that journey, and it feels like a good time begin sharing our story. For some background, we own and operate an automotive workshop in a small country town called Heyfield in Victoria, Australia. My Dad is now a 60 year veteran of the automotive industry, having commenced his apprenticeship at 16, and looking to finally exit at the age of 76. Dad tried to exit working life at 68 but found out he was not very good at retirement. He still really needed to be in business, so decided it would be a great idea to buy a workshop in Heyfield that had been on the market for some time. I was 20 years in engineering and project management. I was reasonably successful, so each project got larger than the last. Once the budget got over a certain mark, everything went from interesting and satisfying to very stressful. So owning and operating an automotive workshop sounded pretty good. Over the last 9 years we have exceeded our expectations. We started with no operating software, no customer list, no staff. Just a workshop and a steady trickle of local customers. We have been able to increase to 8 staff, build a really strong customer base and create a steady, profitable business. But with my Dad now well into his seventies, and starting to see 80 on the horizon, we decided that it would be a good time to sell the business. This would give my Dad a chance to try out retirement again – I hope this attempt is better than his last! And at 51 it gives me the…
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Choices, choices everywhere

Having a choice is a wonderful thing. Something that I suspect many of us take for granted. Which vocation to pursue. Which meal to order at a restaurant. Which car to buy. To even have the luxury of a choice means we are in a very fortunate position, relative to so many in the world. And with every choice, we actually make two decisions - what we accept, and what we reject. I was pondering this whilst reading an old article by Mr. Quinn as he wrestled with the logic of purchasing a Bentley SUV. Some luxury car owners will have such abundant wealth that the purchase will just mean a slightly lower inheritance to their heirs. So the choice is relatively easy and with little impact. But I suspect for many of those driving their dream luxury vehicle, they have made the choice of a car, and rejected some financial benefits that they might otherwise enjoyed. Where I live, I would be happy to bet you $1,000 that we won't see a Bentley SUV this year. But motor vehicles still seem to be imbued with status. A fully optioned Ford Ranger or Toyota Hilux, or maybe a 300 Series Toyota Landcruiser, will certainly generate lots of comments around town. And everyone that purchases a 300 Series Landcruiser for about A$110,000 has spent about 1.5 times the median annual Australian income. The 300 Series is an amazing vehicle. Powerful, comfortable, high towing capacity. But you have spent 1.5 times the Australian median income! That is a lot of money that you have chosen to use for owning a motor car, and you have therefore rejected lots of other things. That money could have been invested for retirement, funding education, family holidays, charitable donations or myriad other things. Personally, family holidays,…
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