Late Bloomer Wealth

Annuities

Financial Shark Attack and Repellent #6 in this Series

Number 6 in this long series of 67 shark attacks and repellant posts on how to protect yourself with a little financial know-how.
In this series, you will discover shark repellent by finding a genuine fiduciary financial adviser. A fiduciary is a financial professional who looks out after your best interests over theirs. Now that’s REPELLENT against the predatory attacks by unethical and self-conflict professionals who only look at getting commissions and high fees FROM YOU. Make no mistake, in the public K12 world the 403(b) greedy sharks are EVERYWHERE!
A fiduciary financial adviser should construct a well-diversified low-cost Vanguard portfolio like the one I constructed for myself and have used now for 15 years with good success. Fiduciaries are not sharks.

Book Review: “TEACH and Retire RICH”

Teachers. Are you wary of the bureaucratic and top-down interference with no end in sight? If you are like me, I did a good job for my students for 24 years, but I was FINISHED at 61 years old. I wanted to get out of Los Angeles, live in a retirement community and do the usual and unusual activities that most retirees do: travel, volunteer, donate to worthy causes and write financial books and this review. It’s not that I retired from life and work, it’s that at 61 I was financially independent with only 49% of my salary covered by my teachers’ pension. I opted to do something else. That’s what Daniel Otter’s wonderful book is all about with his title TEACH and Retire RICH.
The word RETIREMENT is beginning to get phased out of the English language. I have not taught for ten years but I am super busy doing what I want to do right here with my blog, writing informational posts on three investment forums, my two books, all to help you become financially independent too. That’s the new buzzword, FI means financial independence.
Daniel Otter is a good friend and my review of his book is bias, but the financial information he provides in his book TEACH and Retire RICH is not. The objective information he provides rarely makes it to our colleagues, the hard-working teachers in the classrooms across America. Why? The volunteer retirement world (403(b) and 457(b)) with public K-12 school districts is mysteriously secretive and very strange world. It is a long and sometimes sad story of why the potentially powerful benefit plan is hardly ever discussed publicly within the education profession. Dan’s book is full of objective information that begins to make this secretive world transparent and will work for you as it worked for me.

Can a Financial Adviser also be your friend?

NO! This is no surprise–Jordan’s story shows just how complicated and disastrous to your retirement nest egg having your financial adviser as a friend.
When he learned I write this blog, Jordon was eager to tell his incredible and lengthy financial story so that other teachers (and all investors) will learn how to protect their money. As a retired Los Angeles Unified School District English and theater arts teacher, he knows how difficult our colleagues experience with people we trust to provide objective financial information.
He goes into excoriating detail. At times it seems complex and uninteresting. But it reflects our retirement planning system—the 403(b) is a mess by itself but having a financial adviser as a friend makes the deplorable situation worse. In addition to Jordan being sold horrible 403(b) annuities, he and his friend/financial adviser got caught up in the real estate mania just before 2008. It is possible for an ordinary investor to get caught up in investment manias, but the crucial lessons are that Jordan’s financial adviser got caught up in the mania too. YES! Professional financial advisers make huge mistakes too! When people trust a financial adviser, people are blinded to the risks as Jordon’s story will show.
Jordan’s story covers two crises, one is the 2008 stock market crash and Jordon’s serious heart attack. Jordon made a lot of serious mistakes, buying too much real estate with borrowed money (because his financial adviser friend invested in the same real estate complex in Florida!) just before one of the most serious real estate and stock market collapses in history, 2008. But read this story about Jordon’s adviser’s additional recommendations! Learned how Jordan finally said NO.
I am adding on a third tale and the purpose of this blog post: Financial advisers are astute, interesting and social, but never, NEVER, have as a friend. Like other professionals you hire, keep the relationship professional. Better yet, learn to manage your money without an adviser. Jordan manages his money without an adviser.

How Does Irony Explain the 403(b)/TSA “Safe” Money “Guarantees”?

Tax-sheltered Annuity’s (TSA) Long, Sordid, and Lucrative Sales History with the Public PreK-12 Educational Culture Since 1961 in California, the Tax-sheltered Annuity (TSA) retirement plan has had runaway sales in the billions of dollars to a very specific clientele: public school PreKindergarten-12th grade educators. Public school employees are familiar with the “TSA” label, which has been …

How Does Irony Explain the 403(b)/TSA “Safe” Money “Guarantees”? Read More »

Is an Insurance Product an Investment?

Hell no! Here’s why I have lots of insurance. I thank the companies for protecting my home, autos, providing long-term care, earthquake and umbrella protection, and have no problem paying the premiums and the commissions to get great service from my agents. But my retirement nest egg is kept 100% separate from insurance policies and their …

Is an Insurance Product an Investment? Read More »

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