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Category: savings

How much Social Security is worth to you, and why you need to know now

August 12, 2020 by admin

Jack Bogle, the founder of the Vanguard Group, used to suggest that investors think of Social Security as if it was a bond they had bought and paid for. The idea, he said, was to act as if that money was in your bond portfolio, generating income in the future, and to base your planning …

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Put your portfolio to this 5-question test

August 13, 2020 by admin

(This column was released to newspapers on July 7, 2020.)   Rick in Maumee, Ohio, has used stay-at-home time during the coronavirus pandemic to “clean up my life.” There was a de-cluttering of the house, followed by a purging of his financial files (in accordance with guidelines I laid out in a recent column). He …

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5 things to make part of your ‘new financial normal’

September 9, 2020 by admin

Everyone is anxious for life to get back to “normal” right now. Normal, however, has changed. You may miss the gang from the office, the night out at the bar or the chance to go to the movies, but you may be making the most of the relationships with your kitchen, garden, yard or with …

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Time to look at your accounts and decide ‘What’s next?’

September 9, 2020 by admin

These days, “Don’t look” is an actual investment strategy. It’s not just espoused by plenty of experts, but it is being followed by millions of investors whose portfolios were swamped under the effects of the coronavirus pandemic and the accompanying economic shutdown. It’s not a terrible strategy either, at least for investors who had a …

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Do you have $2,467 saved for emergencies? You should

October 30, 2019 by admin

For years, consumers and financial advisers have wrestled with the “right” amount to set aside for emergencies. The long-lived rule of thumb on the subject is that three to six months of salary is necessary to have an adequate emergency fund, but few people actually live by that guideline. Not only is that a lot …

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No sale: Don’t buy the end of 60/40 investing

October 22, 2019 by admin

In 35 years covering investments, I have seen “the end” countless times. Dividend investing purportedly was dying while the Internet bubble was inflating in the 1990s, buy-and-hold investing has been on the way out countless times in the last quarter century, asset allocation hasn’t worked as expected throughout the current bull market, international diversification is …

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Fake ‘expert’ diminishes the value of genuine financial help

August 21, 2019 by admin

Patricia Russell wanted to help. That’s what she wrote me in an e-mail offering to be a trusted, helpful resource for my work.  She was a certified financial planner, and the founder of FinanceMarvel.com, a web site about getting out of debt, repairing and improving credit scores and more. I get a lot of offers …

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How could $1,000 a month change your life?

August 6, 2019 by admin

Americans are no more likely to collect the “Freedom Dividend” than they are to win the next Mega-Millions lottery jackpot, but just as playing the lottery can fuel dreams and shape financial priorities, so can the unusual political promise of free money help consumers and savers re-evaluate their finances. The Freedom Dividend is the unconventional …

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Are you a death-wish investor? These strategies can kill fund returns

July 15, 2019 by admin

   I attended an investment sales seminar this week where the speaker tried to persuade the audience to take his approach to retirement investing.    It involved something most of the audience had never heard of. Pitched as a “7702 Plan,” it was actually a life-insurance policy, a twist on the more standard annuity-sales pitch …

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5 financial terms that consumers should redefine now

June 28, 2019 by admin

   The recent furor between personal finance icon Suze Orman and members of the FI/RE movement shows a significant gap in the language all savers, investors and retirees are using.    Fixing the problem means coming up with new definitions for common terms.    FI/RE stands for “financial independence/retire early” and its proponents tend to …

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