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Weekend reading: A little book on retiring, and a short video on a lot of money

Weekend reading

My weekly ramble, followed by some great links.

First up, the peerless Mike Piper of Oblivious Investor has a new book out! In Can I Retire?, Mike attempts to answer one of the big questions in one of the smallest books you can buy.

Actually, he breaks it down into two smaller questions:

  1. How much money will you need to retire?
  2. How should you manage your retirement portfolio to minimize the risk of outliving your money?

And in his usual inimitable style, Mike candidly pitches:

How does this book hope to be better than, for example, The Bogleheads’ Guide to Retirement Planning or Jim Otar’s Unveiling the Retirement Myth?

It doesn’t. It’s not better. It’s shorter.

Can I Retire? is written for the person who might not be able to find the time to read Otar’s entire 525-page book or the 370-page Bogleheads’ Guide.

If you’re one of my U.S. readers, you’ll be thrilled to hear that buying the book will cost you a mere $5!

Actually, it’ll only cost you $5 if you’re a UK reader, too, but the sections on Roth accounts and minimizing taxes won’t be much use when it comes to planning geriatric bliss on the Costa Blanca.

Not for the first time I’m wondering whether I should work with Mike to adapt the US-centric sections of his book for the UK, which is starved of easy-to-read money guides.

Now for something completely different

I suspect you’re one of the two million who’ve already seen this (and I don’t at all agree with our furry friend’s assessment) but this QE2 video is funny:

Quantitative easing has seldom been such a hoot (unless perhaps you’re the chap getting to spend the printed money…)

Try this interactive explanation of QE from the FT, if you want to know more.

The pick of the week’s blogs

Special on ‘Lord Young Gaffe-gate’:

Other money posts from the big sites

  • Royal wedding souvenirs are a mug’s game – The Guardian
  • Market timing errors cost you money – FT
  • A VCT state-of-the-market review – FT
  • Bolton commits to third-year with China fund – FT
  • Dylan Grice sees a China credit bubble – FT Alphaville
  • Saving in a low rate environment – Telegraph
  • Taxman targets buy-to-let – Telegraph
  • Firms paid to shut down wind farms when windy – Telegraph
  • Fisher bullish on global gridlock – Motley Fool
  • Economic indicators from the Web – The Economist
  • What Mervyn didn’t write [on inflation]Investors Chronicle

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Comments on this entry are closed.

  • 1 Neil Wilson November 20, 2010, 10:45 am

    Everybody gets to spend printed money. Sterling doesn’t appear magically out of the hands of foreigners. The government had to spend Sterling first before the bond market can get its hands on it. It is the monopoly supplier.
    .-= Neil Wilson on: How to do Ethernet Bonding on Ubuntu Properly hotplug edition =-.

  • 2 Mike Piper November 20, 2010, 2:26 pm

    Thank you for mentioning the new book!

    And, as I’ve said before, I’d love to work with you on UK-versions of any of the books should you decide to go that route. 🙂
    .-= Mike Piper on: Can I Retire Or- “The Book is Here and Temporarily Discounted” =-.

  • 3 Lemondy November 20, 2010, 4:57 pm

    MMTers annoy me by trying to deny reality. The state is not a “monopoly supplier of currency”, it delegates this ability to commercial banks.

  • 4 The Investor November 21, 2010, 10:42 pm

    @Mike – You’re welcome, and I’ll ponder anon.

    @Lemondy – Agreed!