Earlier this week, I received an anguished call from an investor—let’s call her Emily. Emily’s accountant was finishing up her tax return and was surprised to see a $113,000 capital gain. The explanation turned out to be just as surprising. The issue stemmed from a well-intentioned move by the [...]
How to tame regret
Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote that it is “better to have loved and lost than to have never loved at all.” When it comes to matters of the heart, maybe Tennyson was right. But when it comes to personal finance, I’m not sure that’s the case. If you’ve ever seen a gain slip through your fingers, you know [...]
A buyer’s guide to bonds
At the mutual fund company where I once worked, the stock and bond teams liked to poke fun at one another. Bond managers viewed the stock-pickers as overpaid storytellers. Meanwhile, the stock-pickers saw the world of bonds as stultifying. “Playing for nickels and dimes” is how one of them put [...]
Threading the needle
This week’s Mega Millions jackpot is projected to top $1 billion. Would you be happy if you won? Last week, I talked about the Vanderbilts. Once the wealthiest family in America, they saw their fortune dwindle because of aggressive spending. Back in the 1890s, for example, the family spent $7 [...]
How to manage a windfall
When Cornelius “Commodore” Vanderbilt died in 1877, he was by far the wealthiest American, with a fortune of $100 million. And in the ten years after Vanderbilt’s death, his son William succeeded in further doubling those assets. It was an astonishing level of wealth. But that’s precisely when [...]
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