REALLY: TAKE THE PLEDGE
|
SHREDS OF
CONSISTENCY Steve Sutton: “A paradox is brought to mind reading about
‘Mr. Dan You-sure-have-a-lot-to-say...’ Namely: Anyone who
takes your advice on individual stocks would seem to be ignoring advice in your
books!” ☞ The only shred of consistency here is that
I have for quite some time suggested a strategy (for those with enough assets
for it to make sense) to do MOST of your stock-market stuff via index funds,
but to do enough in specific stocks to control the tax consequences –
using the losses to knock $3,000 off your taxable income each year, and using
the long-term gains to fund your charitable giving through (say) the Fidelity
Charitable Gift Fund. That way, even if you just break even, you can come out
nicely ahead after taxes. (The glaring flaw
in 2008-2009: few stock market investors achieved a 0% break even return. The
only GAIN I was able to suggest in recent
memory was the “safe-ish way to short the market”; other than that,
I’ve only provided wonderful losses to knock $3,000 off your taxable
income.) The other
possible shred of consistency: We’re human. A lot of us want to feel
we have a shot at outsize results. We want a little excitement. Why else
accept the odds on a lottery ticket? So to the extent people are going to do
this anyway, my hope has been to provide some suggestions, with lots of
caveats, that might improve the odds. Some have worked out very well; on some
the jury is out (to the best of my knowledge, the plane really did move; silt
really does continue to accumulate in our waterways); and all too many, as our
friend Dan wisely notes, have been awful. REALLY: TAKE
THE PLEDGE As I suggested
yesterday, “here’s
a way to help in 30 seconds.” But if you count the time it takes to
watch the video, call it three minutes. REDEFINING
MARRIAGE From
merriam-webster.com/dictionary
(thanks, Rex): Main
Entry: mar·riage Pronunciation:
\'mer-ij, 'ma-rij\ Function:
noun Etymology:
Middle English mariage, from Anglo-French, from marier to marry Date:
14th century 1 a
(1): the state of being united to a person of the opposite sex as husband or
wife in a consensual and contractual relationship recognized by law (2): the
state of being united to a person of the same sex in a relationship like that
of a traditional marriage <same-sex marriage> b: the mutual relation of
married persons : wedlock c: the institution whereby individuals are joined in
a marriage
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Andrew Tobias