It's your life. You get to do what you want with it
Submitted by Mark on 14 April 2008 - 6:52amA buddy of mine this weekend complained to me how his company wasn't letting him work on a couple of projects he thought were critical to the long term success of his company. He's the Senior Vice-President in charge of new product development for a medium sized, yet global business.
The reason they won't let him continue with the projects doesn't have much to do with whether they can afford them. To hear him talk about it, the company has plenty of resources. Business is good. He says the reason he can't get approval to work on the projects he thinks are important has to do with a recent change in the executive suite.
A new CEO recently brought on board caused a shakeup in the political structure at the executive level. Old alliances and allegiances have fallen apart. New alliances are taking their place. My friend feels like he's no longer in the inner circle.
Important 2008 Federal Income Tax Limits
Submitted by Mark on 14 April 2008 - 5:53amI know it's early, but tomorrow being tax day and all it seemed appropriate to present a list of some of the most important Federal Income Tax limits for your tax year 2008. After all, when is a better time to list these than when you're as familiar as you're likely to get with them?
Personal exemption amount $3,500
Income at which personal exemption phases out
Single $159,950
Married filing jointly $239,950
Head of Household $199,950
Married filing separately $119,975
Standard Deduction
Single $5,450
Married filing jointly $10,900
Head of Household $8,000
Married filing separately $5,450
Additional deduction for the elderly and/or blind
Single $1,350
Married $1,050
Income at which itemized deductions phase out
Single $79,975
Married filing jointly $159,950
Kiddie tax standard deduction $900Now, your job this year is to get out there and earn enough to bump into one or more of these limits. I hope you are successful.
Do committees make better portfolio managers?
Submitted by Mark on 8 April 2008 - 11:56amThis morning I received an email informing me of upcoming changes to my 401(k) plan:
This message is intended to inform you of a change being made to [your] 401(k) Plan. ...
The Investment Review Committee recently evaluated the 401(k) Plan’s existing fund offerings and has decided to remove the [unnamed fund]. This fund has been under performing relative to its benchmark and similar funds for quite some time. ...
2008 Financial Planning Limits - Employer Retirement Plans
Submitted by Mark on 2 April 2008 - 6:05amConcerned about making too much money and bumping into the limit on how much you can sock away in an employee retirement plan this year? Looking to max out your SEP IRA contributions? You've come to the right place. Listed below are the the limits to all federally sponsored employer retirement plans.
Contribution Limits Elective deferrals for 401(k), 403(b), 457 and SAR-SEPs $15,500 401(k), 403(b), 457 and SAR-SEP Catch-Up Contribution $5,000 Defined Contribution Plan Limit $46,000 Maximum SEP IRA Contribution $46,000 SIMPLE IRA and SIMPLE 401(k) Contribution $10,500 SIMPLE IRA and SIMPLE 401(k) Catch-Up Contribution $2,500 SEP Minimum Earnings Limit $500 Maximum Annual Defined Benefit Limit $185,000 PBGC Maximum Monthly Benefit $4,312.50 Maximum Includable Compensation $230,000 Highly Compensated Employee $105,000 Key Employee > $150,000
Make Up Day
Submitted by Mark on 12 March 2008 - 6:08amThat was some ride we enjoyed yesterday. It was nice seeing stocks pop like that again - everything from top to bottom was nice and green on my portfolio listing.
Yesterday was the biggest up day in 5 years, so they say. The odd thing for me was that while yesterday was certainly a big day, it didn't feel like I'd had the best day in 5 years. A quick check proved my suspicions. While yesterday had been a good day for me, it wasn't the best. Not in the last 5 years anyway. I had had better days.
Golf anyone?
Submitted by Mark on 21 February 2008 - 7:15amWord this morning in the NYT that the golf world is concerned about an 8 year long decline in the number of golfers in the US.
The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association.
More troubling to golf boosters, the number of people who play 25 times a year or more fell to 4.6 million in 2005 from 6.9 million in 2000, a loss of about a third.
The industry now counts its core players as those who golf eight or more times a year. That number, too, has fallen, but more slowly: to 15 million in 2006 from 17.7 million in 2000, according to the National Golf Foundation.
Reasons cited for the decline include: the economy, changing family dynamics, too many golf courses and, believe it or not etiquette rules.
This one they should open up for comment and let the golfing, or ex-golfing, public educate them to some of the real reasons.
2008 Financial Planning Limits - Federal Income Taxes
Submitted by Mark on 15 February 2008 - 6:48am
Personal exemption $3,500
Phaseout of personal exemption
Single $159,950
Married filing jointly $239,950
Head of Household $199,950
Married filing separately $119,975
Standard Deduction
Single $5,450
Married filing jointly $10,900
Head of Household $8,000
Married filing separately $5,450
Elderly or blind additional deduction
Single $1,350
Married $1,050
Phaseout of itemized deductions
Single $79,975
Married filing jointly $159,950
Kiddie tax standard deduction $900
2008 Financial Planning Limits - IRAs
Submitted by Mark on 12 February 2008 - 7:00am
Traditional IRA Contribution Limit: $5,000
Roth IRA Contribution Limit: $5,000
Traditional IRA Catch-Up Contribution: $1,000
Roth IRA Catch-Up Contribution: $1,000
IRA Deduction Phaseout for Active Participants
Single $53,000 – $63,000
Married filing jointly $85,000 – $105,000
Married filing separately $0 – $10,000
IRA Deduction Phaseouts for Spousal Contributions
Married filing jointly $159,000 – $169,000
Roth IRA Contribution Phaseout
Single $101,000 – $116,000
Married filing jointly $159,000 – $169,000
Married filing separately $0 – $10,000
Roth IRA Conversion Phaseout
Single $100,000
Married filing jointly $100,000
Note: both of these limits will be eliminated in 2010
Married filing separately ineligible
What to invest in now
Submitted by Mark on 31 January 2008 - 7:18amYesterday the Fed lowered the overnight funds rate another ½%, the second bold move in a little over a week. Hopefully that's just the 1-2 punch this economy needs to put us back on the growth track again.
It might even get us back into growth mode before the big stimulus package is passed. Anyone holding your breath on that one? Don't worry. It'll happen. It's an election year.
The Fed Funds Rate now stands at 3%. That's had, and will continue to have a downward effect on interest rates we can earn. Recently, 10-year Treasury note yields have been right near 3.5%. Money Market rates aren't much better, somewhere right around 4%. Take out inflation and taxes and there won't be a lot left over.
Real estate doesn't look good yet. It took years, decades even, to create the mess we're in with real estate. I don't think it'll take years to unwind it, but it won't be done soon. The news in real estate hasn't gotten bad enough yet. It'll get better a few months after it seems like it can't get any worse. That hasn't happened yet.
This Economic Placebo Might Work
Submitted by Mark on 25 January 2008 - 6:53amAccording to Congress' Joint Committee on Taxation:
...it is not practical to contemplate distributing cash rebates until the peak filing season is completed, which in past years has been the very end of May.
And that's if everything goes right. Now add 8-12 weeks' time to process rebate checks and you're looking at July-ish before the big stimulus actually happens.
Think we'll really need it by then?