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CONSIDER EVERYTHING

ICW Journal

Perspectives help cultivate ways of thinking about and understanding things and sightlines help develop clarity about what lies ahead.

These helpful primers, books and blogs can help you think about situations and problems in more wise and reasonable ways. They can help you develop longer-term perspectives and sightlines to withstand the shifting winds of short-term thinking. They can help you bypass  camouflaging distractions and help you stay focused on the key issues that matter most to the long-term success of your plan.

IT’S JUST PART OF WHAT WE DO.

Fiduciary Wealth Management
Scottsdale | Phoenix

Wealth management
designed to maximize your life.

Focus on what’s important.

We help you develop and maintain perspectives and sightlines to your plan.

CONSIDER EVERYTHING

ICW Journal | Perspective and Sightlines

Perspectives help cultivate ways of thinking about and understanding things and sightlines help develop clarity about what lies ahead.

These helpful primers, books and blogs can help you think about situations and problems in more wise and reasonable ways. They can help you develop longer-term perspectives and sightlines to withstand the shifting winds of short-term thinking. They can help you bypass  camouflaging distractions and help you stay focused on the key issues that matter most to the long-term success of your plan.

It's just part of what we do.

We help you develop and maintain perspectives and sightlines to your plan.

ICW Papers | Perspective and Sightlines

We believe dividend reinvestment is a compounding accelerator and that dividend growth stocks should play a key part in a retirement income …

At Intelligent Capitalworks, we believe that the key to long-term investment success is being a discriminating buyer and a patient owner of …

The SECURE Act, passed at the end of 2019, changed a number of rules regarding inherited IRAs, making it more difficult for …

Before we head into the holiday season, be sure to look ahead at your 2022 year end tax planning checklist and take …

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Dividend Reinvestment is a Compounding Accelerator

We believe dividend reinvestment is a compounding accelerator and that dividend growth stocks should play a key part in a retirement income strategy. Why is dividend reinvestment a compounding accelerator? By reinvesting your dividends, you can accelerate the power of long-term compounding in your investment and retirement accounts. By methodically plowing dividend income back into high-quality stocks, investors may meaningfully increase their annual returns and total assets. A hypothetical illustration reveals the powerfully positive impact that reinvesting your dividends can make. Let’s go back in time to May 31, 1995 and open two investment accounts ‒ Account A and Account B. In each account, we will deposit $7,700 and purchase 800 shares of Colgate Palmolive at $9.63 per share (on a split-adjusted basis), which offered a 2.13% dividend yield at the time. In Account A, we’ll take the dividends we earn and put them in our pocket to spend. In Account B, we’ll systematically reinvest our dividend income to buy more shares ‒ using a commission-free dividend reinvestment plan. Let’s fast-forward to December 31, 2021. What we’ll find is that Account B’s balance dwarfs that of Account A. Account A, in which we pocketed our dividend earnings, grew by an

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Investing in High-Quality Companies

At Intelligent Capitalworks, we believe that the key to long-term investment success is being a discriminating buyer and a patient owner of great businesses ‒ in other words, investing in high-quality companies at a fair price and owning them a long time. We didn’t invent this bit of wisdom ‒ it’s been applied by many successful investors, including Warren Buffet. The good news is, the approach that works for Warren (and countless non-famous investors) can be put to use by any serious investor. What Does Investing in High-Quality Companies Mean? So let’s first look at what investing in high-quality companies means. A great investment is a business that has demonstrated revenue growth over long periods of time (more than one business cycle) and that competes on a value proposition other than price. Why screen out businesses that can only sustain long-term revenue growth by competing on price? Because cutting prices eats into profit margins, and ultimately makes such businesses more cyclical and less attractive. The key to uncovering businesses with real long-term growth is to look for cash flow growth generated from continuing operations over multiple business cycles. Businesses that are able to grow throughout the business cycle and maintain

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The SECURE Act Retains Opportunity for Stretch-Out IRA with a Special Needs Trust Beneficiary

The SECURE Act, passed at the end of 2019, changed a number of rules regarding inherited IRAs, making it more difficult for most beneficiaries to save on taxes by “stretching” distributions over many years. However, an exception to the new rules potentially changes advice that special needs planners often give clients. For many reasons, it’s usually not advisable to make an individual with special needs the beneficiary of an IRA or 401(k) plan. The individual may not be able to manage the funds, and owning the account may render the person ineligible for vital public benefits. This is why planners always recommend that parents with children with special needs leave their share of their estates in a special needs trust for the child’s benefit. But parents are often encouraged to leave their retirement plans to other children, if any, because holding a retirement plan in a special needs trust gets complicated. Why a SECURE Special Needs Trust (SNT) Can Save in Taxes But in light of the SECURE Act’s new rules, this advice may no longer apply, especially in the case of people with larger retirement plan accounts. Under the terms of the SECURE Act, most people who inherit retirement

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