Financial Planning

Recently I had to make some decisions about what to do with a significant amount of cash from an inheritance. I ended up putting it into an annuity. Generally, annuities are a bad idea. (“Bad” because the fees and fund expenses can eat up any tax advantages. Not true in my case, but I digress.)

Anyway, in talking with some folks about where to put this money, I was amazed at the number of otherwise very smart people who don’t have a clue about financial planning.

Once upon a time, I was like them. I didn’t have a clue either, and my financial strategy was “ignore it.” I was enlightened by none other than Scott Adams, in his book Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel. There’s a simple nine point plan, and like much of Adams’ work, amusingly simple. The points are:

1. Make a will
2. Pay off your credit cards
3. Get term life insurance if you have a family to support
4. Fund your 401k to the maximum
5. Fund your IRA to the maximum
6. Buy a house if you want to live in a house and can afford it
7. Put six months worth of expenses in a money-market account
8. Take whatever money is left over and invest 70% in a stock index fund and 30% in a bond fund through any discount broker and never touch it until retirement
9. If any of this confuses you, or you have something special going on (retirement, college planning, tax issues), hire a fee-based financial planner, not one who charges a percentage of your portfolio.

Floyd Fights Back

Professional bicycle racing is one of the very few sports I follow religiously. All my spare time in July is spent following the Tour de France. It’s only in the last few years that coverage has even been available on American television. But there’s much more to pro cycling than the Tour.

Cycling as a sport is suffering from a serious image problem because of all the doping. But they’re suffering even worse because of their response to the problem. They way they handles the various issues this year sure didn’t help.

Floyd Landis, the winner of the Tour de France this year, was accused of doping by the race authorities. He’s alleged to have far more testosterone in him than he’s allowed to. He claims he’s innocent and is mounting a defense.

Frankly, the offense he’s accused of doesn’t make much sense. The substance the lab detected isn’t a performance enhancer under those conditions. His samples before and after the problem sample were clean.

As part of his defense, he and his team [*] have created a Powerpoint presentation describing the problems with the testing procedures. All I can say is “wow.” I work in the medical lab business, and if one of our labs made even half this many mistakes and tried to pass it off as good work, they’d get their license pulled and we’d probably see someone doing a perp walk.

If he’s guilty, okay. Fine him, take back his title, disgrace him, kick him out of cycling. But it’s looking more and more like his only offense is being American, and a winner.

[*] By his team, I mean “his doctors and lawyers.” His racing team, Phonak, dumped him like a hot potato as soon as he was charged. They ought to be ashamed of themselves, and I’ll never buy a Phonak hearing aid until they apologize publicly to him and his fans. And yes, I’m a hearing aid user and I buy a new one every five years or so.

Autism, Asperger’s, and Breeding Behavior

There’s an article in this month’s Wired that discusses some genetic aspects of autism and autism-related syndromes. There’s been a fairly significant increase in the number of diagnosed cases of autism in the past ten years or so. It’s only been recently that we’ve begun to realize that there may be a whole spectrum of autism disorders. Some researchers and lay experts feel that some kind of environmental factor is causing the increase in autism-related diagnoses. Some feel that there’s a genetic basis.

Wired makes the point that social changes may be a factor. While that may seem obvious to the uninitiated, it’s heresy in the world of autism research.

(My thanks to Dori Smith at Backup Brain for the last couple of links.)