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Periodicals
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What’s Your Retirement Number?
The Saturday Evening Post, October 4, 2011
How to calculate what you'll need so you can keep living the way you want. Read
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Is Inflation Around the Corner?
The Saturday Evening Post, July/August, 2011
How to tweak your portfolio so you can't get hurt. Read
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Why Index Investing?
The Saturday Evening Post, April/March, 2011
Building a broad portfolio delivers solid returns. Read
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Back From the Abyss
The Saturday Evening Post, July/August 2009
Lessons in investing and a few other things learned from the financial crisis. Read
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The Perils of Leverage
Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, August 2009
You’re almost sure to lose with funds that let you magnify your bets. Read
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Building
a Portfolio for All Seasons
Fidelity magazine, May 2007
The right investment mix may help
your portfolio in any environmentwhether its a
sunny day or a stormy one on Wall Street. Read
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Your Take-Charge Guide to Affordable
Health Care
AARP The Magazine, July/August 2006
How scared are you of big medical bills? If you're like most
people, very. Americans fret more about their health care
costs than they do about losing a job, paying the mortgage,
or becoming a victim of terrorism, according to a recent survey
by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Read
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Le Bond du Jour
Wealth Manager, May 2006
Pop quiz: Foreign bonds make up what percent of fixed-income
investment opportunities worldwide?
A. 23 percent
B. 52 percent
C. More than 75 percent
D. Who cares?
The answer, per the number crunchers at T. Rowe Price, is
C. But many American investorsamateur and professional
alikewould likely answer D. Read
article
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REITS GO Global
Financial Planning, April 2005
Welcome to the brave new world of international real estate
securities
"Why, land is the only thing in the world worth workin'
for, worth fightin' for, worth dyin' for, because it's the
only thing that lasts."
Gone with the Wind
Whether you agree with Scarlett O'Hara's dad or not, there's
no denying that landif not Southern plantations,
then certainly modern malls, condos, and hotelshas
been an awfully good investment of late. For 2004, the nearly
200 U.S.-based real estate investment trusts (REITs) that
collectively make up the NAREIT Composite Index returned 31.6
percent. Over the past five years, the NAREIT's compound annual
return has been 22 percent, and over the past 10 years, 14.8
percent. Not even vintage Pez dispensers have done that well,
never mind plain vanilla stocks and bonds. Read
article
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Invest Like
the Big Boys
AARP Bulletin, March 2005
Exchange-traded funds are moving from Wall Street to
Main Street
Every month, it seems, Wall Street comes
up with some newfangled investment idea. The array of financial
products is now so dizzying that the old lumpy mattress is
starting to look like a more comfortable place to stash the
cash. But there is one new product out there definitely worth
looking at. Something of a cross between an index mutual fund
and a stock, it's called an exchange-traded fund, or ETF.
Read article |
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50-Plus and
Going Broke
AARP Bulletin, January 2005
Divorce, layoffs, medical costsand seductive credit cardsadd
up to a bankruptcy boom
Sandra Thompson, 64, of Eugene, Oregon, is not a shopaholic
with closets full of fancy clothes. To the contrary, she describes
herself as a frugal woman with an aversion to debt. But after
the death of her first husband, a failed business and a divorce,
with no career training to speak of, she found herself going
deeply in the hole. Read article
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Lighten Up
AARP Modern Maturity, May/June 2003
Moving to a smaller place isn't a step backwardit's
a chance to do more with less
With home prices at record highs in most parts of the country,
have you asked yourself lately if it makes sense to be clinging
to the big old place you've lived in for years? Ever since
the kids moved out it has seemed awfully empty. And the upkeep-the
dusting, the lawn cutting, the sidewalk shovelingisn't
getting easier. Then there are the expensesnot the mortgage
(chances are, that's paid off by now), but taxes and insurance
and utilities. That stuff's not getting any cheaper, either.
Read article
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Someone to Watch
Over Me
AARP Modern Maturity, January/February 2003
What you need to know before you sign on the dotted line
for long-term care insurance
An Oregon widow's long-term care (LTC) insurance refused
to pay for her nursing homebecause the facility didn't
precisely meet the definition of "skilled" care.
An Illinois man's $1,000-a-year LTC policy quickly skyrocketed,
and when it hit $8,000 he let it lapse. When the day came
that he needed long-term care, he was on his own. Read
article
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The ABCs of
Money
AARP Modern Maturity, July/August 2002
The time-pressed consumer's guide to skillful investing,
saving, and spending. Let the nation's top financial gurus
show you the ropes
"I've got all the money I'll ever needif I die by four
o'clock this afternoon," said comedian Henny Youngman. Presumably
you're in the game of life for longer than that. Which is
why you need a money plan. A good one needs to cover all the
bases-savings, investments, pension (if any), Social Security,
taxes, debts, household budgeting, and more. Unfortunately,
if you're like most people you may not have such a strategy
in place yet. A recent study co-sponsored by AARP found that
only 32 percent of American workers had even figured out how
much they'll need for retirement, much less felt confident
about their overall financial picture. But have no fear. The
solid planning starts now! Because time is money (see Franklin,
Ben), all this good advice has been tightly compressed
and neatly alphabetized. Read article |
Other
Articles on the Web
Reprints are available through Featurewell.com,
or email Russell.
“The Demise of Investigative Journalism,” The Huffington Post, March 2009
The 20,000 journalism jobs lost in the past 18 months are flushing knowledge and experience out of American newsrooms, diminishing our lives and our democracy.
"What's
in a Name?" Financial Advisor magazine, February,
2004
Financial planning with the In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida Group.
"The
Grand Canyon," Financial Advisor magazine, June,
2003
Will the two camps of financial advisors ever get along?
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