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Personal Finance for
Every Veteran
…the “GMT” you wish you had in bootcamp
Would you rather….
Have 3.5 million
dollars up front?
or
Start with a penny
and have your
balance double every
day for one month?
The value of the doubling penny after 30 days is: $5,368,709!
Who I am
Where does my approach/advice come from?
Who I’m not (Disclaimer)
Although I have a passion for these topics, the views expressed
are not intended to serve as a forecast, a guarantee of future
results, investment recommendations or an offer to buy or sell
securities. This should not be interpreted as tax advice and
please consult your personal tax advisors if you have any
questions.
Housekeeping
Topics
Behavioral Finance
Understanding your current situation
Credit Scores
Retirement, the time value of money,
& the TSP
Investing 101
Savings accounts & fees
Love & Money
Home ownership, mortgages, & refinancing
Tax strategy
Life insurance (SGLI & USAA) / Health Insurance
Tactical next steps
Why we need an automatic plan…
People are not rational with financial decisions (susceptible
to framing, prospect theory, anchoring, choice architecture, & the default option)
Study: the more often you check your portfolio the worse you do
Google’s anchoring experiment (3% increase)
“Save More Tomorrow” (12% vs 4%)
Allocation decisions & the default option:
Scenario 1:
Scenario 2:
Scenario 3:
Fund A: Stocks
Fund B: Bonds
Fund A: Stocks
Fund B: ½ Bonds ½ Stocks
Fund A: ½ Bonds ½ Stocks
Fund B: Bonds
54% allocation to stocks
73% allocation to stocks
35% allocation to stocks
Prior to the talk
20 mins - capture your “Net Worth” (all assets & debts)
Use Mint.com; connect banking & investment accounts, student/car
loans
Include property (homes & cars)
Homes: zillow.com
Cars: edmunds.com
10 mins - understand your credit score
Signup for CreditKarma
Pull a free credit report from annualcreditreport.com; Experian in
Jan, TransUnion in Apr, Equifax in Aug
15 mins – analyze your current investments and get free
advice:
www.FutureAdvisor.com
(optional) 30 mins - create a spending plan (aka budget)
Can be in Mint or even Excel
Savings must be a part of your plan
Understanding your current
situation
Check Mint often
Spend < make
Save xx% of your income
“Pay yourself first” – schedule savings
Debts
Credit Cards & SSCRA
BT offers
By 22, have a ROTH IRA & contribute annually
Credit Scores
Credit Scores have 5 components:
(300 850 scale, >720 is good)
1. On Time Payments: 35% (Use Auto-Pay)
2. Credit Utilization: 30% (use < 10%)
3. Length of history: 15% (keep old cards!)
4. Types of credit used: 10%
5. Recent inquiries: 10% (hard vs soft pulls)
Credit Scores affect mortgage rates, auto
insurance, credit card rates, student loans,
apartment rentals
“I’ll worry about retirement later…”
Time Value of Money is HUGE!
Frick & Frack brothers
The “Rule of 72”
$$ saved from 25-35 > $$ saved 35
on
Everyone should have a (ROTH) IRA
& TSP!
Are you on-track?
~75% of ending salary per year
See handout
Retirement Accounts
IRA
TSP
• 2014 Limit: $5,500
• 2014 Limit: $17,500
• No matching
• No matching
• Hold at any institution
• Limited choices (5+1 funds)
• Thousands of investment options
• Only contribute from payroll
• Only contribute cash
• No income limits
• Income limits
• Different for Roth vs Trad
• We have a Roth option
• Jan 1 – Dec 31 open period
• Jan 1 – Apr 15 (of following year)
open period
Uncle Sam will always* get paid
Roth
Traditional
• After-tax contributions (pay tax
now)
• Pre-tax contributions (get a tax
break now)
•
• Earnings grow tax-free
•
•
• Roth IRA’s have no RMD’s
$120k salary, contribute max
amount of $17,500
Taxable income now $102,500
28% x $17,500 = $4,900
• Roth IRA income limit: < $114k
• Taxed on the way out
• “Backdoor Roth” option
• Traditional IRA’s have RMD’s
• Really depends on tax bracket now vs. retirement
• Beliefs on long-term tax brackets / code / law
• Solution: have some in each
*combat-zone special circumstances
Investing 101 & active vs. passive
Stocks, Mutual Funds, ETF’s, Bonds
Write down your financial principles / guidelines
20-25% for “fun” if you must
Active vs. Passive Investing:
research shows ~80-90% of
active funds underperform their
benchmark
8,000 2,000 500 125
20% most actively traded
accounts performed much worse
-men worse than women
Past fund performance has very little predictive power to future performance!
In fact, expense ratios are the best predictor
Expense Ratios (the enemy)
Industry average (0.80% 2.50%)
Low cost options (0.06% 0.50%)
Get angry…it’s your money!
Use the calculator
TSP – 0.027%!
“It is difficult to get a man to
understand something, when
his salary depends on his not
understanding it.” – Upton Sinclair
Asset allocation & rebalancing
With proper allocation, you should reduce risk (volatility)
and outperform the S&P 500
Rebalancing: meeting long-term policy
target weights
Use it as a disciplined way of buying low
and selling high
“..shunning the loved & embracing the
unloved. Most people do the opposite.”
(Swensen)
Example: 1990-2012 portfolio: +0.5%
difference in return, -2% difference in
volatility
My target allocation:
Precedence of Saving
1. Matching 401(k) or TSP – Max it!
2. Emergency fund (~6-9 months)
3. Pay down debt(s)
4. Roth IRA / Roth 401(k) or TSP
5. Taxable account
Savings accounts & fees
USAA: reimbursement of ATM fees
Never pay monthly service
fees for savings/checking
CapitalOne 360:
doubled-ended bonus
emergency fund
“Direct deposit” & USAA ACH push
Wells Fargo, Chase, & BofA offer military accounts
Home ownership & mortgages
Up to a $300/month because of credit score
Real estate is a key component
Consider NOT holding your mortgage with the same
bank as your investments
Typically 20% down, qualify for a home 3x your annual
gross income
Closing costs, points
Refinancing
Being a landlord can be tough!
Rent
Rent : Income < 30% (rule of 36)
Impact in high-rent markets (SF / NYC)
Have rental package ready
Credit pull
Ask for a copy of credit report
Security deposit & interest
Zillow’s “zestimate”
Remember SSCRA for
breaking a lease
Tax strategy
Look for ways to reduce your taxes
Traditional TSP/ 401k / IRA
Mortgage interest (& property management fees)
Education expenses
Consider capital gains (realize gains if you ever find yourself in the 10
or 15% tax bracket. 0% long term gains)
Donate to charity with
appreciated stock
Hire a professional – taxes
are “grey” (VITA tax help)
Active Duty are tax-lucky!
Life insurance
Active Duty get SGLI by default ($400k for $27/month. Includes 4
months insurance after separation.)
Typically don’t need it until you have a family, but some
people “lock” it in while they are healthy
Term vs. Whole
Nice way to leave a gift
$500k for $42/month
Other random advice…
Never go without health insurance!
Careful with your contracts
Always look for military discounts
Cell phone bills (15%-20%)
Movies, restaurants, museums, parks
Natl Parks Pass
Clubs
Space A travel
Remember: smart investing
is not very exciting, but it is
very rewarding!
Tactical next steps
Automate your savings (pay yourself first)
Enroll in the TSP via HR / YN
Open a ROTH IRA
Stick to low-cost index funds
My favorite personal
finance resources
Fatwallet Finance Forums
Bogleheads
Blogs: Mr. Money Mustache, Oblivious Investor
Networth IQ
| Investopedia
The Military Wallet
*Bonus Material*
Tax Loss Harvesting
the Credit Card game
Combat zone perks
Questions?