Showing posts with label Consumer Finan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consumer Finan. Show all posts

3/07/2010

Review of Wealth Management in Any Market: Timeless Strategies for Building Financial Security (Hardcover)

This is one of the best resources you are ever going to find to help you navigate through the complexities of personal wealth management. The author, Dr. Bahbah, starts at a commonsense level explaining the components of a wealth management plan, how wealth management is different from financial management, and how to assemble your personal wealth management team. He defines the various kinds of investments and discusses fundamentals of investing, like the time value of money, asset allocation, diversification and rebalancing, and he has a chapter devoted to learning to save and managing debt.

There are chapters on estate planning, insurance, and charitable giving. Even a sophisticated investor will find useful information about protecting assets, using qualified plans, and figuring out what kind of insurance to buy. This book has a great deal more in-depth information than you can get from some of the better-known sources. It's all here, presented clearly, and you will easily be able to find the section you need when you're looking for information on a topic.

Dr. Bahbah has amazing credentials, starting with that PhD and going through a long list of experience and certifications. He is clearly well-qualified to be writing a book like this, which will serve you well as resource for your own wealth management plan.

--Sarah Sleight, co-author of "Wealth Management in the New Economy"




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2/15/2010

Review of Double Your Retirement Income: Three Strategies for a Successful Retirment (Hardcover)

A must read for all of us underfunded baby boomers. There is something new for everyone. Mazonas lays bare an understanding of why we never got ahead investing I stocks and mutual funds. His reasoning and the math of why index tracking products are our salvation is to good to pass up.

What a chump I have been!I payed for my kids education out of pocket each year because I could.Mazonas' explanation of how much better off I would be now if I had used student loans and while funding my pension plan is astounding.



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2/12/2010

Review of Recalibrating Retirement Spending and Saving (Hardcover)

Recalibrating Retirement Spending and Saving. John Ameriks and Olivia S. Mitchell, eds. Oxford University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-199-54910-8, 320 pages. doi:10.1017/S1474747209004077
Two leading researchers, John Ameriks and Olivia S. Mitchell, have organized and contributed to a highly informative and thought provoking book aimed at enhancing retiree financial decision making and security. It provides new analyses that helps us better understand the behavior of the retired population and a number of practical ideas. All the articles are uniformly good, and I comment only on a selected few.
2 Book reviews
The first section of the book covers key issues affecting retirement security. Sewin Chan and Ann Huff Stevens analyze the HRS to measure the extent of ``retirement reversal, '' and they find that about one in three older people move from a more retired to less retired state at some point. Combine that with the tendency to a variegated path to retirement, rather than retirement at once, highlights the need to re-conceptualize what retirement means. Erik Hurst conducts a careful analysis of several datasets to evaluate declines in consumption after retirement. He demonstrates that most types of spending stay the same or increase, but work-related consumption, such as for clothing, transportation, and expenditures for food, do decline. Less spending for clothing and transportation are easy to understand, food expenditures are more complex. But Hurst shows that, in most cases, retirees do not suffer a decline in the quality of food; rather better shopping habits and increased home production are mainly responsible. About one-fifth of the retired population does suffer a decline in food expenditures caused by economic want, and many of those experienced a health shock and retired involuntarily. This leads Hurst to the interesting suggestion that insurance products be developed to protect people's consumption when they suffer a health shock.
The second section addresses the impact of tax policy on Individual Retirement Account (IRA) withdrawals, bequests, and the ideal timing of Social Security claiming. Sarah Holden and Brian Reid offer an excellent analysis of withdrawals from IRAs. They show that individuals tend to hold onto IRAs as long as possible, and Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) are the main reason for withdrawals. To some extent, this indicates that tax policy has worked to keep these accumulations for retirement and old age, and to some extent it indicates a desire to maintain principal. James Mahaney and Peter Carlson contributed an excellent article on the ideal time to claim Social Security. They show that, for most primary earners, claiming benefits as late as possible is beneficial. Today, most workers do not do that so more effective claiming strategies can importantly strengthen financial security.
The third section brings forward a number of new ideas for financial strategies and products that promise to help retirees manage their assets more efficiently. William Sharpe, Jason Scott, and John Watson demonstrate convincingly that two financial strategies frequently recommended by financial advisors are sub-optimal. Specifically, it is inefficient to move assets from equities to fixed investments, when not accompanied by advice on how to adjust spending to market conditions. For example, it can be dangerous to propose the typical ``4% rule, '' which advises that a retiree should start withdrawing this fraction of assets and then adjust upward by inflation, particularly when accompanied with advice to keep a substantial asset allocation in equities. The authors propose a better rule than one tied to investments.
Several articles deal with annuitization and health. Cassio Turra and Olivia Mitchell use modeling, supplemented by an analysis of HRS data to indicate that health conditions and anticipated out-of-pocket health care expenses often make life annuities sub-optimal with current life annuity pricing, which assumes anti-selection. The authors conclude that life annuities that provide higher payouts when there is a medical shock would make the product more attractive to many. John Ameriks, Andrew Caplan, Steven Laufer and Stijn Van Nieuweburgh examine the impact of Medicaid aversion and the bequest motive on receptivity to annuitize. Medicaid aversion is the level of undesirability of depending upon Medicaid to pay for long term care costs. They find that people who desire to leave an estate and the Medicaid-averse desire to have cash, making life annuities less attractive due to their lesser liquidity. This leads the authors to suggest annuity structures that provide additional funds if the need arises for long term care. They model the higher level of interest for these products among the segment who have no bequest motive and are Medicaid-averse (the best target market for this product). Finally, David Brazell, Jason Brown and Mark Warshwsky discuss a combination life annuity and long term care insurance approach, one granted tax benefits under the 2009 Pension Protection Act. Combining insurance protection against long term care costs with a life annuity is believed to reduce anti-selection, reduce the cost of long term care insurance, and help extend protection against covered risks.
Book reviews 3
One of the book's important contributions is its deeper understanding of the retired population's heterogeneity and the need for specific solutions for key segments, particularly since many retirees are not in excellent health. Overall, the articles cover important topics and are well researched, and it offers a welcome mix of authors, both academics and practitioners. The volume will be of interest to a broad range of people, providing academics with new insights and suggestions for research questions, policymakers with suggestions for enhancing retirement security, private market product designers with new ideas for insurance products and insights on target markets, and financial advisors who will find a critique of some commonly used financial strategies.
MATHEW GREENWALD
Mathew Greenwald & Associates, Inc.



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11/11/2009

Review of The Cure for Money Madness: Break Your Bad Money Habits, Live Without Financial Stress--and Make More Money! (Hardcover)

What gratification to see someone you taught years ago grow into a wise and helpful human being.This book is the product of that growth.Spencer offers a font of advice on how to look into the money madness which grips so many people in this prosperous, yet often self-defeating society in which we live.Through insightful analysis of hidden childhood money patterns and useful exercises Spencer guides the reader into his or her individual "money madness" and suggests how to remedy it.He further teaches how people can invest, free of the pushes and pulls of the get rich quick schemes in books, on radio and TV.I always wondered why people, who want to sell me ideas about how to make a million, bothered.Why waste their time when they could be out making that million rather than trying to get my money?I guess much financial advice is like this.It is too good to be true.

Spencer puts this into perspective by showing how the money madness of both seller and buyer keep them from addressing what is really important in life: living with a sense of ease, living connected to your loved ones, and living so as to contribute to the world. Spencer's goal is to address the ways in which our hidden attitudes toward money keeps us from this deeper satisfaction.

Beginning with an exploration of your destructive patterns, Spencer presents ways they can be healed, particularly in our relationships to others.He suggests how one can save and invest without being driven by emotion (and he does this in very useful detail---something one can act upon at once). He touches on how money madness affects people at work, and how to address it to make one's self more effective. He takes on the myths about house buying (which given the housing bubble burst, makes his advice all the more relevant).He talks about philanthropy, offering ways to do it more awarely.

At a time of money fear, Spencer offers a way for people to see where they truly stand in it all, and how to take action based on a clearer understanding.The subject matter of this book is greatly needed and Spencer has done an excellent job of helping people find their way through a turmoil which may, in fact, be the result of our collective money madness.This is an important book to read.

Charlie Fisher,Associate Professor Emeritus, Brandeis University




Click Here to see more reviews about: The Cure for Money Madness: Break Your Bad Money Habits, Live Without Financial Stress--and Make More Money! (Hardcover)