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Sound Advice: March 12, 2026

Why You Should Watch the Shiller CAPE Index   The Shiller CAPE Index is a long‑term valuation metric for stocks that compares today’s prices to 10 years of inflation‑adjusted earnings, and you should care because extreme readings have historically lined up with meaningfully different long‑run returns. What the Shiller CAPE Index is CAPE stands for  Cyclically Adjusted Price‑to‑Earnings  ratio, also called the Shiller P/E or P/E 10. It is calculated as: current index level divided by the average of the last 10 years of earnings per share, with those earnings adjusted for inflation. Robert Shiller popularized it to smooth out the business cycle noise that distorts the usual one‑year P/E. What it is trying to tell you By averaging a decade of real earnings, CAPE aims to say, “How expensive is this market relative to a normal level of earnings through a full cycle?” Higher‑than‑average CAPE has historically bee...
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Sound Advice: March 11, 2026

How should I react to commercials about real estate investing? Treat real estate investment commercials as sales pitches first and, at best, raw leads for further due‑diligence—not as something to act on directly. Any serious step should only follow independent verification of the people, the deal, and how it fits your overall plan. ​ What these commercials are really doing They are designed to create leads for sponsors, syndicators or timeshare-like products, using TV, online, and seminar advertising specifically because it scales and converts skeptical viewers into warm prospects. ​ The business model of many seminar and ad campaigns is to sell education, memberships or high-fee products, not to help you build wealth efficiently. ​ Red flags to watch for Promises of “guaranteed” or unusually high returns with little or no risk or suggestions you can get rich quickly or passively with minimal effort. ​ Vague descriptions of th...

Sound Advice: March 4, 2026

Why is a total market index fund the best choice for most investors? A total market index fund is often the best default choice because it gives you the entire stock market in one low‑cost, diversified, tax‑efficient package, with a high probability of beating most active alternatives over time. ​ Broad diversification in one fund A total market index fund owns thousands of stocks across sizes and sectors, representing virtually the entire investable market of a country or region. ​ This breadth reduces the impact of any single company or sector blow‑up on your wealth, lowering portfolio‑level risk compared with holding a handful of individual stocks. ​ Extremely low costs Because these funds simply track an index, they are cheap to run and typically have very low expense ratios, often just a few dollars per $10,000 invested per year. ​ Low fees are a major reason index funds, including total market funds, have his...

Sound Advice: February 25, 2026

Why should you buy a variable annuity? A variable annuity is a niche tool, not a default “should buy” product, and it tends to make sense only for specific, narrow situations rather than as a general investment. What a variable annuity is It is an insurance contract where your money is invested in market‑linked subaccounts (similar to mutual funds), and the value fluctuates with market performance. In exchange, you get insurance features such as tax‑deferred growth, optional lifetime income, and often a death benefit for beneficiaries. When it can be reasonable You have maxed out other tax‑advantaged accounts (401(k), IRA, HSA, etc.) and still want additional tax‑deferred growth for long‑term retirement money. You value specific insurance riders (e.g., guaranteed lifetime withdrawal benefit or enhanced death benefit) enough to justify the extra cost and complexity. M ajor drawbacks you must weigh Fees are often high and ...

Sound Advice: February 18, 2026

Why you need to ignore commercials about stock picking Commercials about stock picking are designed to sell, not to build your wealth, and the incentives and evidence behind them are stacked against individual investors. They play on emotion, selective data, and short-term stories rather than a repeatable, long-term process grounded in your goals and risk tolerance. How stock-picking ads actually work They are marketing, not research. The primary goal is to gather assets, sell newsletters, or generate trading commissions, not to improve your risk‑adjusted returns. They highlight winners and ignore losers. Showing a few huge past successes hides the many ideas that went nowhere or blew up, a classic survivorship and cherry‑picking problem. Why the promises are misleading Past performance is not predictive. Even professional active managers who publish full track records struggle to consistently beat broad indexes after fees a...

Sound Advice: February 11, 2026

Are there financial advisors who are really different? There are advisors who operate very differently from the stereotypical product-pusher, but you have to know what to look for and how to verify it. ​ What “different” really means For an advisor who is genuinely different, look for: Acts as a fiduciary all the time, not just “when providing advice”. ​ Is paid only by you (fee-only: flat, hourly, or % of assets) with no commissions or kickbacks from products. ​ Provides comprehensive planning (tax, retirement, estate, risk, cash flow), not just portfolio sales. ​ Key structural signs Fee-only vs. commission/fee-based Fee-only: compensated solely by client fees; no product commissions or revenue sharing. ​ Fee-based/commission: may earn both fees and product commissions, creating conflicts of interest. ​ Fiduciary commitment Registered investment advisors and many CFP prof...

Sound Advice: February 4, 2026

  Most major Wall Street outlooks currently  do  expect a positive, though more modest, gain for US stocks in 2026, not a flat or down year. ​ What Wall Street Is Pricing In Large strategists’ S&P 500 targets cluster in low- to mid‑single‑digit to low‑teens price gains (roughly 3–13% price upside), plus dividends. ​ FactSet’s earnings aggregation points to about 15% S&P 500 EPS growth in 2026, which historically has been consistent with at least some positive equity return, even if multiples compress. ​ Key Bullish Supports Forecasts generally assume: continued (but slower) US growth around a bit above 2%, falling recession odds near 30%, and incremental Fed easing supporting risk assets. ​ Multiple houses (Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Yardeni, etc.) see a fourth straight up year driven primarily by earnings growth rather than further valuation expansion. ​ Why Upside May Be Smaller Consens...