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Investment advice: the only sure way to wealth is regular savings

A widely held belief is that the ticket to a comfortable retirement and a fat investment portfolio are instructions on how to allocate your assets and what extraordinary individual stocks or mutual funds to buy… The harsh truth is the most important driver in the growth of your assets is how much you save, and saving requires discipline.

Rule 2 – Keep a steady course, the only sure way to wealth is regular savings

This is a meaty chapter. I will only share the parts I think are the most helpful. The heart of this chapter is his practical advice on places to cut (savvy savings tips).

1. Pay yourself FirstThe best way to ensure that you don’t spend every nickel of every paycheck is to set up a plan so that you never get your hands on the money in the first place. You can do this by establishing a payroll deduction plan where you work.

He esp. advocates plans that allow you to save for retirement with tax advantages through your employer (e.g. a 401k).  And if your employer matches all or part of your contribution, do everything you can to get started.

My input: While we all wish would have started earlier, now is the time to get started. Start small if you need to, but get started. However, as important as saving for retirement is, you may have to “pay yourself first” to build your emergency fund, car repair/replacement fund, etc. If you don’t, you might get started on retirement only to get derailed with an unexpected need. We use ING Direct’s Orange savings account. They are on-line accounts you link to your checking account. You can set up regular drafts and then move money back to your checking accounts when needed.

2. Find (or do your own) “Save more tomorrow” plan

Malkiel cites some fascination work by two economics who applied psychology to economics to encourage most consistent retirement savings. It is difficult to get started as most people fully spending their paycheck and they perceived a start in savings as a pay cut. Individuals weigh losses like this more than the gains of the savings. In a “Save More Tomorrow Plan”, instead of making a start today, an employee commits a portion of future pay raises to retirement savings. Where implemented has been popular and has high retention rates.

3. Make Out a Budget / change a spending habit or two

  • Ben Franklin: Beware of small expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship.
  • Even if you don’t want to live on a formal budget, he suggests you track your expenses for 2-3 months. Separate your expenditures into two categories: necessary and things you wanted at the time. Learn and reduce the unnecessary so you can save.

4. Think about opportunity costs ($2 today is really $16 at retirement)

What is the cost of a $2 treat at McDonalds (or fill in the blank)? If you recall that time is money, your realize that $2 today (at 7.2%/year) is $4 in 10 years, $8 in 20 years, $16 in 30 years, $32 in 40 years. So if you are in your 20’s today, multiple your expenditure by 16 times to figure out what it might be costing you at retirement. And if you change a habit, you can multiple the savings time after time. Remember, $300/year at 8 percent over 40 years adds up to $90,000.

5. A dollar saved is NOT a dollar earned (it is more).

Why? a dollar saved is much more than a dollar earned because taxes reduced earnings to far less than a dollar.

Here’s another idea:  When you go out to eat with kids, offer them $1 if they will drink water instead of soft drinks. It keeps the money in the family, teaches the kids to forge present gratification, and the water is healthier for them.

6. Pay Off Your Credit Card Balance.

“Credit cards are the crack cocaine of the financial world.”

“Keeping a balance on your credit cards is about the worst financial move you can make.”

Strategies for Catching Up

1. Downsize Your Life

“There is no other way to make up for lost time than to start a rigorous program of savings now. You have not other choice but to be frugal.  It may mean downsizing.

2. Consider Pushing Retirement Back a Few Years

Here are some sites with help on retirement planning:

  • Fidelity.com
  • Morningstar.com
  • Trowerprice.com
  • Vanguard.com

The Millionaire Next Door

Results of a 20 years study on the wealthy in America:

  • Most people who live in expensive homes and drive luxury cares do not have much wealth.
  • Conversely, many who are wealthy don’t live in fancy neighborhoods. Nor have the earned advanced degree or inherited wealth. They do not appear to be rich.
  • Wealth is most often the result of a lifestyle of hard work and the discipline of regular savings.
  • Getting up in the morning and knowing that there is no mortgage on the house, every bill is paid in full and on time, is the most wonderful feeling in the world. It is a lot better than buying a $5,000 watch that will be used only to impress someone in a $1200 suit. I do take great family vacations, go to dinner a few times a month and move my own lawn. I do not deprive myself of anything I really want. I just don’t want the latest things that are being peddled on TV.”

Next time: On Insurance and Cash Reserves

The above is from my on-going study on investing, from Malkiel’s  The Random Walk Guide on Investing. For more, see the index page to my full summary.

Investment advice: Start Saving Now, Not Later: Time is Money

“The amount of capital you start with is not nearly as important as getting started early.. Every year you put off investing make your ultimate retirement goals more difficult to achieve.”

Having laid out some groundwork in his 3 “basic points”, Malkiel goes on to his 10 “rules” for financial success. Some of them are straightforward. But even here is provides his insight and help on getting it done.

The first rule then: Start Saving Now, Not Later: Time is Money.  The secret of getting rich is the miracle of compound interest, slowly but surely (something we likely don’t want to hear). Albert Einstein once described compound interest as the “greatest mathematical discovery of all time.”

Malkiel illustrate this miracle three ways.

1) “The rule of 72”. Divide the number 72 by the rate of return on an investment you can earn over the long-haul. The result will be the number of years to double your investment. For example, if you can earn an average of 7.2% per year, it will take you 10 years to double your money (72/7.2). So if you start investing at age 25 rather than 55, you will have 8 times as much when you are done (2x2x2).

2)  Malkiel’s book includes a link to a graph by Jeremy Siegel in his book: Investing for the Long Run.  The graphs shows the long-term performance (over 200 years) of a number of investment choices including gold, treasury bills, bonds, and stocks compared with the growth of the consumer price index over the period 1802 to 2002. To see an inflation adjusted version, go to this link to the page of his book on Google Books. It shows compounding pays you when it is on your side.

Long-term growth in investment types
Long-term growth in investment types

3) Finally, there is a case study, “the million dollar difference”.  Pay close attention. Which would you chose:

  • One brother saved $ 2,000/year for 20 years, starting at age 20, and then he saved no more (total saved = $40,000). He earned 10% tax free on what he saved.
  • The second brother did not start saving until he was 40. He saved $ 2,000/ year from age 40 to age 65. He also earned 10% tax free (total saved = $50,000).
  • How much did they end up with?
    • The first brother earned $1.25 million on his $40,000 invested.
    • The second brother earned: $200,000  on his $50,000 invested.
  • The difference: time. The moral: get started early.

The moral is clear, you can accumulate more money just by starting now.

To get rich, you will have to do it slowly, and you have to start now.

Next time: Rule Two: Keep a steady course: the only sure road to wealth is regular savings.

The above is from my on-going study on investing, from Malkiel’s  The Random Walk Guide on Investing. For more, see the index page to my full summary.

Investment advice: Understand the risk/return relationship

In investing, risk and return are related.  Risk is the possibility of suffering harm or loss. Some things have little risk, e.g. Treasury bonds. But their return is relatively limited. To induce investors in riskier investments, higher returns must be offered.

He has a table of investment type, historic average annual returns (for the period 1926-2002) and range of annual returns (volatility).

  • Cash (including Treasury Bonds) returns on average 3-4%/year with a range of +1% to 9% annually.
  • Long-term corporate bonds return on average 6%/year but can range from -5% to +15% annually.
  • Common stocks return on average 10%/year but can range from -27% to +52% annually.

While the stock market tends to rise most of the time, he reviews the history of bear (declining) markets. Such declining periods can go on for several years. But eventually, the market comes back and recovers these losses and begins to gain once again. So the market is a good place for long-term investments but can be a poor choice for short-term investments.

Next time: Rule One: Start Saving now, Not Later: Time is Money.

The above is from my on-going study on investing, from Malkiel’s  The Random Walk Guide on Investing.For more, see the index page to my full summary.

Investment advice: Focus on Four Investment Categories

From my on-going study on investing, from Malkiel’s  The Random Walk Guide on Investing. For more, see the index page to my full summary.

While ignorance may be bliss, as the English poet Thomas Gray once wrote, it is not profitable.

Basic Point Two – Focus on Four Investment Categories

In this section of his book, Malkiel overview the four types of investments to consider (he does not include insurance, which he says should only be used for protection, or collectables included gold):

  • Cash – this includes checking accounts and other short term securities that can be turned into cash on short notice and with no risk of loss on principle. This includes short term Treasury bills, short term CDs that can be made to cash without penalty, money market mutual funds. “Every investor needs a cash reserve to meet the various emergencies of life…” More in Rule 3 on how to build this cash reserve.
  • Bonds – A long-term IOU from government, industry. Owning bonds make you a creditor of the company. They yield a specific rate of interest. If interest rates rise, bond prices fall. Some bonds are sold at discount and yield their face value at maturity (called zero coupon bonds). Bonds are fixed income investments. High quality bonds are good for retirees. Types of bonds:
    • U.S. Treasury
    • Ginny Mae (Gov’t National Mortgage Association)
    • Sally Mae (Student Loan Marking Association)
    • Municipal (including state and local gov’t)
    • Corporate. Varying quality. Riskier than other bonds so they offer a greater return to attract buyers. Junk bonds are high yielding but the riskiest.
  • Common stocks – Owning stock makes you part owner of a company.
    • You can make greater yields if the company does well; but greater risk if not. There is no specific promise of return as in bonds.
    • However, over the long haul, stocks have done well. (average yield is 8-9%/year vs 5-6%/year for high quality bonds).
    • “Bull” (gaining) markets dominate the long history of the stock market. But “bear (loosing) markets can go on for years. So your money in stocks needs to be for long-term objectives (e.g. retirement).
    • He says the stock market is pretty efficient about pricing stocks over the long term.  But once in a while the stock market goes “loony”.  There can be a “herd mentality” where something starts doing well and then everyone wants a piece of the gain so that a particular stock or segment gets overvalued. Eventually, it will come back to reasonable values and those who bought at the end will lose much (e.g. internet, “dot.com” craze).
    • He recommends a simple, low-risk, diversified strategy that will make money and keep us from making mistakes of following the herd. But it will take discipline when others boast of their short-term gains.
  • Real estate – besides owning your own home, it can be profitable to invest in commercial real estate.
    • Values of real estate typically rise (and thus the value of this investment) and you also get share in the income of the property.
    • Like stock mutual funds, real estate investment trusts (REITs) allow you to share ownership in real estate with many others. There are differing REITs depending on the segment of property you are interested in.  While they have only been around for 20 years, they look like a place to have some of your investment portfolio.

Next time: Understanding the Risk/Return Relationship

For more, see the index page to my full summary.

Investing advice: Fire Your Investment Adviser

From my on-going study on investing, from Malkiel’s  The Random Walk Guide on Investing. For more, see the index page to my full summary.

Basic Point One – Fire Your Investment Adviser

In this chapter he argues that we can do better without investment advisers. These advisers are making money at our expense. They are generally compensated by earning commissions on products they sell us. They make investing seem very complicated so we have to turn to them for advice.  But their products do not return the promised results of beating the market. [As he shows later, 85% of the money managers are beat by the market].

We will see later that the correct investment strategy is actually to throw a tower over the stock page and buy a lost-cost mutual fund that includes all the stocks and does not trade.

Following the advice of these financial “experts” can be hazardous to our wealth.

2000 Forbes article, “…your average pro on Wall Street has failed to beat the indexes.

”The way to get rich from investment advice is to sell it.”

“By keeping your savings and investment strategy as simple as possible, you will free up time to do the really important things you want to do with your life such as spending more time with friends and family.”

Book review: Escape From the Deep

The story of a legendary submarine and her courageous crew

“Today we have devalued terms like ‘hero’ and ‘courage,’ applying them loosely to athletes with multi-million dollar contracts and movie stars whose feats are no more than celluloid fantastic. The destroyer we launch today [celebrates] a genuine hero from an age when heroism truly meant something.” Congressmen Tom Allen honoring Captain O’Kane at the dedication of a ship in his honor.

I just complete listening/reading to this book that chronicles the extraordinary WWII heroism of the crew of the USS Tang, the deadliest submarine operating in the Pacific. It is the story of their accomplishments, of the sinking of their sub, of the escape of some them from 180 feet below the surface, and their survival of torture in a Japanese concentration camp (I confess I skipped the section covering their time in the concentration camp).

The book left me with a greater understanding of the price paid by many for the freedom we have and therefore a greater appreciation of it. The book challenges me to live a life that honors their sacrifice, using the freedom they paid for to live well. I hope I will complain less as well, as my trials here are small compared to what they enduring with honor.

I wonder why this tale has this never been made into a movie?

In contrast, last night Cathy and I watched the movie “The A-Team”, a fictional story of a group of four Special Forces type-men who do special assignments to protect U.S. interests. While amusing, it is also predictable. The men come out of impossible situation after situation without significant injury and succeed in their impossible mission. There is little suspense as you know the end, except for some of the particulars, in this case, who is the bag guy(s). While amused, that was the extent of the gain for the watching.

Real life is another thing. Not a fun read but there is gain as mentioned above. The book did not win a Pulitzer Prize but it is written well enough and a compelling story.

Recommended to check out the library for a real or listen.

Reviews From Amazon

From Publishers Weekly – Popular historian Kershaw (The Bedford Boys) chronicles the extraordinary WWII heroism of the crew of the USS Tang, the deadliest submarine operating in the Pacific, in this spellbinding saga. The Tang’s captain, Cmdr. Richard O’Kane, was a celebrated maverick whose contempt for the enemy was absolute. He was Continue reading Book review: Escape From the Deep

Investing reading group

Over the coming few months, I plan to read three specific books on investing. Below is why, what I hope to accomplish, and an invitation to join me.

Over the last 3-4 years I have been tracking the performance of two retirement accounts Cathy and I inherited as part of her father’s estate. These investments are professionally “managed”. However, as I have tracked them, I have noted that the investments regularly under-perform vs. the DOW (and SP500), which are “unmanaged.” This has always puzzled me as it seems managed investments should do better than unmanaged ones.

Recently, I have started reading on investing and read that the DOW/SP500 beats over 85% of professionally managed funds over the long term.  While it may be normal, it does not seem to be in line with good stewardship.  So, I would like to do something different.

I am starting to read from a variety of authors to determine my strategy moving forward.  I would like to invite others interested to read and discuss these books. I do not see the book “club” as a detailed study but more of an overview. I will assign a book to read, give people a month to read it, and then meet a time or two to discuss each book. We would then go on to the next book the same way.  I would like to get through a few of the books before summer.

Here is my list of books I plan to read:

Investing in One Lesson
Random Walk

I have also been looking at recommendations of David Ramsey in The Total Money Makeover. I do not plan to read it together but may relate his conclusions at the end of our study.

While the focus will be on stocks, we will also look some at bonds and other investment options.

Continue reading Investing reading group

Movie Recommendation: Temple Grandin

Last night, Cathy and I watched a movie called Temple Grandin. A delightful and very well done movie about an autistic girl and her mom and their work to help her find a meaningful place in society, which she does.  It is a story of a gifted mind that is over stimulated by her sense of the world and that does not know how to act in society resulting in ridicule and struggle. In a day when autism was little understood, they overcome with help of others along the way. It brings encouragement and challenge into our “normal” worlds as well. There is also insight into the animal world as well.

A movie I recommend and I will buy so I can watch it again from time to time.

From Amazon:

Editorial Reviews – Amazon.com – It doesn’t take long to see that Temple Grandin, the main character in this eponymous HBO movie, is, well, different–she (in the person of Claire Danes, who plays her) tells us before the credits start that she’s “not like other people.” But “different” is not “less.” Indeed, Grandin, who is now in her 60s, has accomplished a good deal more than a great many “normal” folks, let alone others afflicted with the autism that Grandin overcame on her way to earning a doctorate and becoming a bestselling author and a pioneer in the humane treatment of livestock. It wasn’t easy. The doctor who diagnosed her at age 4 said she’d never talk and would have to be institutionalized. Only through the dogged efforts of her mother (Julia Ormond), who was told that “lack of bonding” Continue reading Movie Recommendation: Temple Grandin

Learn, grow, and save via a weekly trip to the library

For twenty-six years, I worked a few minutes from the Topeka public library but I never got a library card there until March (2010). Once there however, I discovered a great number of resources that go beyond books: a wealth of books-on-tape, magazines, movies, and more. I am now visiting the library on a regular (approx. weekly) basis and recommend this to all who want to learn and grow and save money.

[note: article updated December 2014; for more on what I have learned on the topic of health, see our web site: healthsimply.org]

What got me there was my search for a few good books to buy and read on diet/nutrition. I wanted to spend my limited time and budget for books on the best I could find. So I first assembled a list of potential books by spending some time at Amazon’s web site. While Amazon has helpful information and recommendation of others, there are so many recommended books on this topic, I decided I needed to see them myself before buying.

So over that first lunch hour, I took my list of titles to the library. They had most of the titles on my list and many others besides. I looked them over, eliminated some from my list, added others, and checked out about half a doze books that first I wanted to look at in more detail.

In addition to books on diet and nutrition, I have been exploring other topics: finances and investing (The Random Walk Guider To Investing), leadership (Integrity: The Courage to Meet the Demands of Reality; Today Matters; Good to Great), exercise, time management, and more.

But once there, I found more than just books at the library:

  • Books-on-tape , mostly CD’s.
  • Magazines, some of which you can check out (helping me to decide which ones to subscribe to myself and which ones to look at there)
  • Videos (DVD’s) of all kinds.

As my initial lunch hour at the library went quickly, I decided to go back the following week. I dropped off some of the books I was done with and found a couple more to check out to look and explored more of the resources above.

Books-on-tape – As a commuter (30 minutes a day each way), I was drawn to explore the library’s extensive set of books-on-tape. Actually, I may be benefiting more from this than the books themselves. At any one time, I will get 2-3 books-on-tape checked out. Some times, it only takes a short time to determine I am not interested. Frequently, I listen to a book-on-tape as a way to preview whether I want to read/purchase the book (I have seen moved on to listening to books via Audible, see my article on this).

I have listened to a variety of selections so far:

  • 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,
  • an excellent, short summary of the life of Isaac Newton
  • Good to Great, an engaging management book analyzing factors that separate good companies from great ones
  • Highest Duty, an autobiography of the pilot who successfully landed his plane that lost book engines in the Hudson River
  • Make Today Count: the secret of your success is determined by your daily agenda by John Maxwell.
  • And more

The library’s magazine selection, some of which you can check out, has also been very helpful. I have decided to subscribe to three magazines (two on cooking; one on investing) as a result and decided to pass on a number of others, instead just looking at them at the library on a regular basis.

The Topeka Library is a very good. On-line you can reserve books and they will email you a note when it is ready to pick up.

Initial goals accomplished, heading to second base

On February 17, 2010, I started this second section of my blog, announcing my health goals for the period between then and my June 28th birthday, when I turn 55 (and just before my daughters July 2nd wedding):

  • Get to a good weight for me in a enduring, healthful way
  • Improve my all-around physical condition (including endurance/cardio-vascular health, strength, flexibility, and balance)
  • More specifically, to drop from a body mass index of 25 to a more healthy 22
  • While I did not announce it at the time (as I wanted to see how I would progress first), I also was hoping I could run a 5k (5 kilometer or 3 miles) run as well

I am pleased to say that this past week I both ran 5 kilometers (on my own, not in an organized race) and got to this weight goal of a BMI of 22. I have done it the old fashion way: persistence in regular exercise, eating better, and eating less. I highly recommend this approach. It takes time, patience and perseverance, but I hope and pray that it will be lead to lasting results, not temporary ones.

I encourage you as well to find a way/time to exercise regularly and learn to eat more slowly and less (and better). For me, it has meant an early morning routine; it was the only time I could be consistent. I am thankful to Cathy for her planning and preparing healthy meals.

I had hoped to write more here on what I have been reading, which has helped me to learn and persevere. But since spring break, this has not happened. While my/our lives our always full, this period has been more challenging than normal: work as been very full, three daughters engaged, seeking to fulfill long overdue commitments to get some things done around at house, etc, etc, etc.  So this blog has had to take a back seat to these other higher priorities. But I am hopeful, in the coming weeks, life will move from chaos back to busy.

My journey to improved health is not over. To use a baseball analogy, I feel like I am rounding first base, on my way to second base. Here are my second base goals:

  • Keep the weight off for 6 months (my third base goals will extend this further).
  • Drop 5-7 more pounds (while I feel much better, I am not quite satisfied)
  • Continue to build strength, adding a bit more variety in my workouts
  • Continue work on cardio-vascular endurance (and actually run in a 5k race)
  • Put more of what I have read/am reading and learned/am learning on this blog.

Thanks for sharing in my journey.

David