
FINANCIaL
FIELd NOTES
Potential Pitfalls In Bond Investing
Last year around this time I published an article, Potential Pitfalls In Bond Investing. What followed was the worst year for bonds in decades. I’d like to think I timed the article perfectly, but it was more a coincidence than anything. I watched over the years as the bond market composition changed dramatically, particularly the average maturity of bonds increasing by over 50% from 4 years to 6+ years in the past decade.
This resulted in a painful year for passive bond owners this year as long-term bonds got hammered. I wanted to reshare the post because the principles still apply as you consider how to invest in bonds going forward…
End-of-Year Tax Prep Checklist
With the year coming to a close, below are 23 year-end planning tax items that I review for my clients.
Reviewed maxing out 401(k) or employer-sponsored plan.
Reviewed next year's 401(k) contribution limits and adjust withholdings in January.
Contributed to IRA or…
Who Is Buying In This Market?
A client recently asked, “Who is buying in this market?” It’s a great, simple question. If you turn on the news, it sure sounds like everyone is selling. But that is not the case. SPY, one of the most widely held ETFs has an average trading daily volume of 86 million shares - which equates to approximately $32 Billion trading hands every day.
For each seller represented here, there is a buyer. Even on a really bad day in the stock market, the fact alone that the market doesn’t fall to $0 means that there has to be buyers. So, who are the buyers?
A Unique Widow Social Security Claiming Strategy
Are you a widow or do you know someone who is a recent widow? If so, this strategy may be worth considering between the ages of 60 and 70.
Under Social Security, widows are entitled to a widow benefit as early as age 60, two years earlier than the earliest filing option of 62 for most retirees. The unique strategy that can be used here is filing for only widow benefits while allowing your own Social Security benefit to continue growing until the maximum age of 70…
Some Good News - Corporate Earnings
What drives stock market returns? Economic activity, politics, wars, viruses, inflation, interest rates...the list could go on. Over the long run, the answer is simply two things - (1) company earnings and (2) how much investors are willing to pay for those earnings.
With everything that has gone on this year, some bright news is that corporate earnings have remained fairly stable, with 5.1% growth through the end of September. What’s changed is how much investors are willing to pay for those earnings…
What Is in Your Control?
There has been nowhere to hide this year. Year-to-date (9/30/2022), the S&P 500 is down 25% and the bond aggregate is down a whopping 15%. It’s the worst-performing period for a balanced portfolio since 1931!