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dsmWealth August 5, 2021
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AUGUST 5, 2021   |   VIEW AS WEBPAGE
 
 
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From left: Chris Cook, Brandon Grimm and Megan Rosenstiel with Gilbert & Cook.
Gilbert & Cook: Opportunity Awaits Investors

BY STEVE DINNEN

Money in the market from mid-2020 to now has bounced back sharply from what Chris Cook called the “COVID crater,” the first-quarter 2020 financial meltdown that accompanied the shock of the pandemic shutdown.

Now comes the harder part: finding winners in a field of investments where everybody already got a blue ribbon. The folks at Gilbert & Cook, wealth managers in West Des Moines, didn’t have any specific stocks to pick but did note in their midyear review of economic conditions that opportunity awaits investors.

“The S&P 490 is just starting to wake up, and we actually see good value beyond that,” said Chris Cook, chief investment strategist. But is this new, something beyond the S&P 500 index of companies?

Actually, it’s something Cook crafted, a subset of the S&P 500. There are the top 10 members of the S&P 500 – such as Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook – which account for 30% of its valuation. And then there are the other 490 stocks left for the remainder of the index. They have not rebounded from the pandemic as quickly as have the top 10. Case in point: The S&P 10 sport a price-to-earnings ratio of 30, while the S&P 490 carry a PE of 18.9. Clearly, there’s catching to do.

Of course, there are no sure bets. But there is a very good chance of volatility and a pullback that could trim some enthusiasm. Since 1980, the market has had pullbacks of an average of 14% every year. So far this year its heaviest retraction has been 4%.

Brandon Grimm, Gilbert & Cook portfolio manager, said fundamentals of the market appear to be strong enough to keep investors out of trouble. But now that the market rise has eased up, he said investors should use this time to review their portfolio and de-leverage perceived risk.

Also at play midyear are President Joe Biden’s tax tweaks that are part of his recently unveiled American Families Plan. These are mere proposals at this moment, but Megan Rosenstiel, adviser at Gilbert & Cook, said that if they come to pass they would drop capital gain tax rates in favor of a higher ordinary income rate of as much as 39.6% for high-income individuals. And of course, investors are still working through the impact of late 2019 legislation upon inherited IRAs (called stretch IRAs when they are continued upon the death of the original account holder).

As ever, then, there is much to think about money-wise as we move to the second half of the year. But do enjoy the summer. Find a good beach book.

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Travel Insurance Becoming Increasingly Useful

BY STEVE DINNEN

We're all getting out more now that the pandemic is loosening its grip. But still, lockdowns, mandates and travel restrictions have a way of changing and gumming up the best-laid plans. Travel insurance that once may have seemed a pointless add-on to your journey has suddenly become a useful tool.

The best bet in this arena is coverage for CFAR cancel for any reason. It will reimburse you for covered expenses not only if you contract COVID and can't travel, but also if your destination becomes unavailable due to a spike in COVID. Or even if you just have a feeling it's not the right time to travel.

There are, naturally, rules to follow. You have to purchase such a policy within 14 days (some companies allow 21 days) of making your first payment for an airplane ticket or cruise. And you won't get back all of the money you've spent probably 75% of what you can document, up to a limit.

Online shopping will turn up a host of insurers. At aardy.com (they work with AARP), I plugged in a December visit to Hungary and got a CFAR coverage quote of $622 for 50% reimbursement on a $6,000 total travel cost, or $656 for 75% payback.


To find out where we can travel, consult travel.state.gov to see how countries are categorized. Level 3 countries carry an advisory against travel, while level 4 generally don't allow foreigners to entry, in which case CFAR is an excluded category.

Gen Z is Rewriting the Rules for Personal Finance

BY MALLIKA MITRA FOR MONEY MAGAZINE

In the summer of 2020, Matt Choon sat in his Brooklyn apartment surrounded by piles of boxes of CBD gummies and bags of designer clothing. He spent years trying to turn his e-commerce business Potion from a passion project into a sustainable revenue source, trekking through snow to beg bodegas to sell his products and throwing house parties just to get photos of guests with his brand’s logo. But collaborators had come and gone, and now it was just 24-year-old Choon, his roommate and a recently laid-off neighbor he hired to help with shipping Potion orders.

In an effort to really ramp up the business, Choon turned to TikTok.

Suddenly, a few videos of the gummies and clothing at pop-up shops and street fairs with captions like “secret vintage designer pop up in NYC” changed everything. He watched as videos racked up thousands of views and lines formed down the streets. READ MORE
Nonprofits Getting Donations in Cryptocurrency

BY PAUL SULLIVAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

The University of Pennsylvania recently announced a $5 million gift to Wharton, its business school. The donation was not one of its largest, but the university announced the gift with the type of fanfare it usually lavishes on gifts many times its size.

What gives?

The gift, from an anonymous donor, was in Bitcoin. The announcement, therefore, was a trial balloon — a signal that cryptocurrencies are now as acceptable for donations as stocks, bonds, real estate and other investments. READ MORE.
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dsmWealth is published on the first and third Thursday of each month and updated on dsmMagazine.com.

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