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The 4% Rule for Retirement

  The 4% rule is a popular retirement guideline that dictates withdrawing 4% of your total retirement savings in your first year, and then adjusting that dollar amount annually for inflation. By following this formula, your portfolio should theoretically sustain you for a 30-year retirement without running out of money. [ 1 , 2 , 3 ] How It Works Calculate Year 1: Add up all your retirement investments (e.g., 401(k), IRA). Multiply that total by 0.04 to find your first year's allowance. [ 1 ] Adjust for Inflation: In every subsequent year, take the previous year's withdrawal amount and increase it by the rate of inflation. [ 1 ] The "Multiply by 25" Shortcut: If you already know how much annual income you need from your savings, you can multiply that number by 25 to find your total retirement savings goal (e.g., $60,000 × 25 = $1.5 million) . [ 1 ] Portfolio Assumptions The rule relies on historical market data and was originally built assuming: [ 1 , 2 ] A por...

The mysteries of Benjamin Graham and Louis Rukeyser

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The Power of a Stock Basket: Lessons from Graham, Templeton, and My Personal Journey The ultimate lesson of portfolio diversification is simple: when you invest in a basket of high-quality stocks, it doesn’t matter if one or two go under. As long as a few of your picks skyrocket—the way NVIDIA did for me—the winners will massively overshadow the losers. This philosophy has guided my investing journey for decades. Looking back at an email I sent in July 2018, I reflected on my typical stock picks and a core document that shaped my career: "The Investment Owner's Contract." Living by the "Investment Owner's Contract" From January 2006 until I retired in June 2012, I dedicated my portfolio to a core group of companies: Google, Amazon, eBay, Adobe, and Apple , later adding Netflix and Tesla . For years, I believed "The Investment Owner's Contract" was tied to Warren Buffett's philosophy. However, while helping a fellow leader in my son's B...

2 pages from Benjamin Graham Intelligent investor (rough draft)

To protect yourself from emotional buying and selling, you need an ironclad Investment Policy Statement (IPS) combined with automated investing . Writing down your rules now—and automating your purchases—will remove the emotional decision-making when the market swings. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] Here are actionable ways to build long-term wealth and shield your portfolio from your emotions: 1. Write an "Investment Owner’s Contract" Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing, famously suggested that investors write an Investment Owner's Contract . Draft a physical or digital document outlining exactly how long you will hold your investments (e.g., 5, 10, or 20 years) and what qualifies as an emergency exit (job loss, major medical expense). When you feel the urge to sell during a market panic or buy when things are soaring, read your contract to reaffirm your long-term intentions. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] 2. Automate Your Purchases (Dollar-Cost Averaging) The most effective w...