The Right Design for Your Financial Plans

Cover of "The Spirit Catches You and You ...

Cover via Amazon

One of the real delights of having a kid in college is the terrific books they bring home. Much as I lament the lack of survey courses, and the fact that students can get out of college almost completely ignorant of the Western Canon (don’t stone me), some profs manage to force them to read haunting, thoughtful pieces that will follow them through life.

Recently, dearest daughter brought home The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down. a study of the terrible collision between Western medicine and a Hmong refugee family over the treatment of their severely epileptic child. Anne Fadiman, the author, knows a thing or two about writing—she won a National Book Critics Circle Award  for the book, and she probably imbibed literature with her pablum, her father being Clifton Fadiman, the famous editor and author of the Lifetime Reading Plan. (Footnote: we used his wonderful book as a guide while homeschooling, so DD did get some smidgen of aforesaid Canon).

Spirit is so thought provoking and spellbinding that not only did it keep me up nights but two weeks after finishing it I’m still thinking about it every day. I’m not giving away anything to say that it’s all a horrific train wreck. If you’ve ever had experience with serious illness, you will find yourself identifying mightily with the Hmong family, and if you’ve ever dealt with annoying clients or even a recalcitrant child, you’ll feel for the doctors, too.

One of the most interesting questions the book raises is oh-so-relevant for financial planning—is perfect compliance with a plan necessary? or is there some lesser change that would work nearly as well? Is the correct answer always the one justified by numbers (and science) or are our beliefs and feelings (aka behavioral finance) just as compelling and important? Is there any middle way?

No, yes, no, yes, yes. We financial planners like the certainty and precision of numbers, so much so that we even believe them ourselves. If our projections say your money will last your lifetime, and you can spend exactly $84,237 per year (pick a number), we breathe a sigh of relief, print out the report, have a reassuring client meeting, and off you go. But change the assumptions, the conditions, or the faith of the people involved, and maybe the medicine doesn’t work quite so precisely. It’s critically important to recognize that the best prescription is dependent on certain conditions, but must be tweaked for individual circumstances, personality, and life situation.

Of course, the best plan won’t work if you don’t carry it out. But as Lia’s doctors found out, the plan won’t work if your beliefs, abilities, and commitment disrupt it. I see this so often when people come to me with some robo-advice that proves they can never retire or afford college for their children. Faced with the model that says they must save umpteen thousand dollars, they get terrified and give up (and don’t take the medicine). But even less than perfect action can be life-saving. If you have only managed to save $20,000, or $10,000, or $5,000 (instead of $250,000) for college, more power to you! Believe me, you won’t be sorry to have it.

Other perennial questions—should I pay off the house or invest the money? Should I take the lump sum or the pension?—depend as much on what will bring you peace of mind as on what the numbers might indicate. These are questions that must be sorted through with an advisor who tries to get to know you, not just someone who will crunch numbers.

If you leave an advisor’s office (including mine) with a plan for investments and it turns out to require changes that you put off, and put off, and put off…then maybe the plan, while excellent, is simply not the right design for you. Moving in the right direction is better than doing nothing at all, and revisions should be made until you feel confident that you can proceed.

One of the horrible truths the book demonstrates is that not speaking the language can result in devastating  and costly consequences. In financial planning, too, advisors and the industry can speak a foreign and fatally confusing language. Witness the firestorm over fiduciary, which is a difficult word meaning only that the advisor must act in the client’s best interest. Why on earth would this be controversial, and why would the brokerage industry be conducting a bombing campaign to scare the individual investor into believing that this is somehow an evil requirement cooked up by the Obama administration? Because their bull (er, ox) might be gored and they might not be able to make usurious profits on the backs of people whose lack of industry comprehension they exploit. Or the confusion over fee-based (brokerage jargon that means we’ll collect a commission and charge you) vs. fee-only (which means we’ll charge you by the hour or based on assets managed). Fee-based is a subterfuge to confuse you and make you think you’re getting a better, and honest, deal. The brokerage industry is counting on the fact that most people won’t understand the difference, and that they’ll look like they’re wearing the white hats, too. They’re not.

If you don’t understand what an advisor is saying, how that advisor is being paid, why they are recommending what they are, and how they arrived at those conclusions, don’t stop until you do. Even the best doctors make mistakes, and learn from them, but patient, and client, input can have better outcomes if the plan fits well. And sometimes the questioning can produce a thoughtful change in tactics, one which might save the future.

Is “good enough” the secret to wealth?

Cover of "Joy of Cooking"

Normally the Wall Street Journal starts touting tech innovations three months before they’re on the market, and then spends the next three months reviewing how they don’t work quite right. Got to keep that market churning, no? But two recent articles about trends have me amused and bemused, and I think they relate to how much dough you hold onto.

 

The first one was on how people are not replacing their electronic devices as fast as they used to. Basically, after the initial kinks are worked out (and that time span is getting shorter), electronic devices pretty much work. As long as there’s not a major change in the operating system, many people can put up with occasional crashes and slow response, especially since there’s no guarantee they won’t experience those same issues with the brand new device. I can see this with my own experience with e-readers. I stood in line one Black Friday to purchase an early Nook for $100 back in, I think, 2010. It was good for about a year before I got tired of the torturous internet connection, as soon as I discovered that links and the ability to research something online that I’d just read about was one of the chief benefits of e-books. In December of 2011, I purchased an iPad 2 and I haven’t replaced it yet. I did bash the screen in, but when I thought about replacing the whole thing, I decided I could live with it by spending the $100 or so to replace the screen. It was just good enough—even though its crash rate has gone up since various iOS updates.

 

My cell phone contract is up next month, and I’m thinking over whether I’ll replace my iPhone 5. It works just fine, but if I don’t, I read that I’ll still be paying for the same phone over the next contract, and I hate to pay twice for the same thing. My desktop dates from who knows? 2010? 2011? I used to assume computers were good for 3 years, mostly because of operating systems and updated software not working on old ones, but right now I’m not seeing any problems. Still, at some point I’ll probably switch to an all Apple system.

 

What’s the financial planning point? Well, things have changed. I used to fantasize about being an early-adopter—one who was always the latest with the greatest. In fact, I lusted to be able to afford the $2,500 Macintosh back in the 80s. But I’ve seen enough computer history to have learned that 1)the price comes down in 2.0 and 2) 1.0 usually doesn’t work very well. So being an early adopter is a little bit like lighting a cigar with a $100 bill—fun and flashy but a waste.

 

Lately I’ve seen the same thing with cars. When I was a kid, many people replaced their cars every two years, the more frugal waited five, and you were driving a rust bucket heap with fenders flapping by ten years. Then cars just got better. My clients routinely drive cars that are ten years old, with the oldest one so far a 1989. Virtually every one of these people could have bought any car they wanted.

 

Besides the fact that at least some devices seem to be better made and last longer (hear that, clothing industry?), I think a lot of people (my hand is up) simply hate the research required to buy a complex device, and in the case of cars, the overwhelming feeling that you will be taken every time. .That especially, and the fact that I have a kid in college, keeps me driving my 2002 Subaru.  It’s very easy to just keep putting it off until you have a complete breakdown. Consumer Reports has an interesting scale on fix vs. replace—if the fix costs more than 50% of the value of the car, replace. When I think about the cost of a couple of months of car payments (or the sticker on a new car), fixing has won so far. For other things, check the warranty! My daughter recently picked up a $300 set of Bose headphones from the free box at her college—they were still under warranty and she had them fixed for $100 (apple didn’t fall far from the tree).

 

Finally, this morning WSJ had an article on trendy food. There’s not much I won’t eat (lima beans and jello mold), although my daughter reserves a special circle of hell for kale. But I’m always stunned by food trends. Local and organic make sense to me based on quality and taste. But pot roast out and pan-sauced chicken breasts in? No one eats turkey tetrazzini anymore? People aren’t ready for Moroccan sauces?  Jeez, if it tastes good, it tastes good, and I don’t care if my mom used to cook it in 1957. It always stuns me that when I make a moron-level cake from the Joy of Cooking, people rave about the taste. In fact, lately if I simply make a cake from a box, people rave about the taste because all we are ever served nowadays is ersatz cake product from Sam’s, Jewel, or Costco. Years ago I was stunned to learn that éclairs never have actual custard filling anymore, because they’d have to be kept chilled. I never look at Facebook that some friend hasn’t linked to the latest hype on what we should eat, what precise method of exercising is best, and please god save me from all the vegan mumbo jumbo.

 

What I chiefly object to is that once it’s trendy, it becomes way more expensive. Ask my dog—she USED to enjoy chicken wings. We have no idea what’s seasonal anymore (hint, it’s usually what’s cheapest) and cooking shows are entertainment not instruction (except for my beloved Jacques Pepin).

 

Okay, before I rant on for several more pages, let me summarize the financial points I’m making:

 

  1. Save yourself time, money, and aggravation by being slow to adopt the new
  2. Fix it when it’s broke, as long as it makes financial sense
  3. Try to resist hyped trends. They’re making a fool of you.
  4. Don’t keep up with the Joneses. They don’t have any money saved for retirement.

Grumpy cat will now return to her regularly scheduled programming.

 

 

 

Money and happiness

We all know money doesn’t buy happiness. We also know that having no money can really affect happiness. But can you handle money in specific ways to increase everyday happiness? I’ve been reading The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin, and one idea really caught my attention.

Rubin talks about two different orientations: in simplest terms, the underbuyers, who put off buying things until they run out, wait out pains or illnesses to see if they’ll go away, and never pop for the expensive haircut or premium manicure. Then, there are the overbuyers, who have far more sheer stuff stashed and spend on things that make them feel good. Enough stuff, and they may even be thought to be wealthy (read, the oversized house and pretentious car).  In fact, whether things make you feel good may be one way you can tell which you are. Another way—check how much toilet paper is currently in your house.

Of course, few of us are purely one or the other. I tend to fall on the underbuyer’s side, but I have plenty of toilet paper (that problem will get me out to Sam’s Club in a flash), and book buying, er, we won’t go there. Nevertheless, people I see with a lot of money stashed in investments tend to pursue an underbuying strategy, in the main.

While we might think underbuyers hold onto their dough better, it can produce a lot of stress to be out of essentials or unwilling to spend on care or services you really need. Safety, serenity, health, security, and pleasure have real monetary and non-monetary value, and time is the most expensive commodity of all. On the other hand, so many things we purchase are the whim of a moment, and delaying that purchase may eventually mean no purchase at all, and money saved. I think just-in-time inventory and thoughtful spending are a reasonable mean, and I think Rubin would agree. Frugal, not cheap—cheapskates who try to shift expenses to other people (e.g. the guy who never picks up his full share of the check) are reserved for one of my personal rings of hell.

Overbuying tends to diminish wealth for two reasons: waste and cost of inventory.  It’s not wealth if it’s rotting in your refrigerator or still has the tags on it in your closet. Storing our overbuying has made Container Store a fortune. And, that money spent on too much could have stayed invested and growing. But pleasure is worth something, too. As long as it really does give you pleasure. My mother used to keep a fully stocked freezer in the kitchen. And another one in the basement. And another one in the garage. When she died there was so much meat it took us nearly two years to eat through what we didn’t have to throw out based on label dates. But she had known real hunger as a child, and if that made her feel secure, well, they could afford it.

Mom and Ms. Rubin are both on to something. Small splurges can make for happiness. Buying things you truly want, and paying for services you really need, make for happiness. And ultimately, in many more excellent chapters, Rubin sees happiness in balance. Michael Pollan has a now-famous dictum on everything you really need to know about eating: Eat food. Mostly plants. Not too much. From this book, I think I could derive a few simple money rules. Spend thoughtfully. Mostly on experiences. Just enough. Not as pithy as Pollan, but if most of us did it, we’d be both happier and wealthier.