R2| Monday, March 9, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.
Also: answering a reader’s
question on Social Security
benefits, and whether Medicare
pays for eyeglasses
health-care expenses.
(A 65-year-old couple who retired
in 2019, with a life expectancy of
about 21 years for the husband and
about 23 years for the wife, can ex-
pect to spend $285,000 in health
care and medical expenses through-
out retirement— not including the
cost of long-term care, according to
Fidelity Investments.)
If you still expect to have money
left over, you might want to consider
something more meaningful than
simply writing a check: funding fam-
ily vacations, college tuition, medical
bills, house down payments, or
startup capital for a small business—
contributions that could have a major
impact on your children’s or grand-
children’s lives in your lifetime.
We spoke with a couple in Texas
who, after retiring, bought a travel
trailer with part of their savings. They
used their home on wheels to intro-
duce their five grandchildren to
swaths of the country, including New
York, the Grand Canyon and Califor-
nia—on monthlong trips. I can only
imagine the memories that the grand-
parents and the grandchildren all have.
The grandmother put it this way:
“I think you need to share your
money as you go, not just stick it all
in the bank and not ever use it.”
iii
I was interested in your recent column
about Social Security and benefits for
survivors. Please tell your readers that
these benefits also apply to divorced
spouses whose former spouse dies. I had
no idea, but someone’s chance remark
sent me to my Social Security office to
find that I had been eligible for a year
for my ex-spouse’s benefit amount—a
raise of $600 a month for me.
Happy to do so. You are correct: Divorced
spouses—if their former husband or wife
dies—are eligible for the same benefits as
Giving While Living
Asked when they would prefer to distrib-
ute their estate to heirs, the following
percentages of surveyed adults age 55 and
older said:
Source: Merrill Lynch Wealth Management/Age Wave 'Leaving a
Legacy: A Lasting Gift to Loved Ones' 2019
Give some of
it away
while I'm alive
65%
Give it all awaywhile I'm alive
Give it all away
afterIpassaway
27%
8%
a widow or widower, provided the
marriage lasted 10 years or more.
And in case you’re wondering: Bene-
fits paid to you as a surviving di-
vorced spouse won’t affect the bene-
fit amount for other survivors who
are receiving (or who might be eligi-
ble for) benefits based on the de-
ceased person’s earnings history.
Of course, the usual rules involving
survivors and Social Security apply
here. Typically a person will receive
the larger of two benefits: the one
based on her/his own earnings his-
tory, or the benefit due as a survivor.
Our reader, for instance, ended up
with a “raise” of $600; that’s because
her benefit as a survivor, apparently,
was larger than the benefit she was
collecting as a retired worker.
But...let’s change the circumstances.
Let’s say a divorced woman is cur-
rently collecting a retirement benefit,
based on her earnings history, of
$2,200 a month, and let’s say her ex-
husband is collecting (or eligible for)
a benefit of $2,000 a month. If the
ex-husband dies, the former wife
simply would keep her existing bene-
fit, which is larger than the one she
would receive as a survivor.
The point: If there’s a major change
in your life—and the death of a former
spouse certainly qualifies—it’s always
a good idea to tell the Social Security
Administration and ask how the
change could affect your benefits.
iii
My friend tells me that traditional
Medicare will help pay for eye-
glasses or contact lenses. I say he’s
wrong. What’s the correct answer?
In most cases, traditional Medicare
won’t pay for eyeglasses or contact
lenses. But...if you have had cataract
surgery to implant an intraocular
lens (an artificial lens that replaces a
person’s natural lens), Medicare will,
in fact, help pay for corrective lenses.
To be specific, you would be re-
sponsible for 20% of the Medicare-
approved amount for eyeglasses or
contact lenses after cataract surgery.
(This assumes you have already met
your Part B deductible for the year.)
If you wish to upgrade the frames,
the cost is on you. And Medicare will
pay only for corrective lenses from a
supplier enrolled in Medicare.
Traditional Medicare also will help
pay for the cataract surgery itself—
and will help pay for an annual glau-
coma test for people at high risk (for
example, a person with diabetes), as
well as an annual eye exam that
looks for damaged blood vessels,
again, in people with diabetes.
Note: Again, all of the above ap-
plies to traditional Medicare. Some
Medicare Advantage plans offer ben-
efits—including vision care—that tra-
ditional Medicare doesn’t.
Mr. Ruffenach is a former reporter
and editor for The Wall Street
Journal. His column looks at financial
issues for those thinking about,
planning and living their retirement.
Send questions and comments to
[email protected].
trated, making it more difficult to
achieve the level of diversification
that would otherwise ease bear-mar-
ket losses. For example, the five
companies in the S&P 500 with the
largest market cap now make up
more than 18% of the combined mar-
ket cap of all component companies.
That is the most in U.S. history, ac-
cording to Morgan Stanley Re-
search—higher even than at the top
of the internet-stock bubble.
That means the S&P is becoming
more vulnerable to the idiosyncratic
failures of a few large companies.
Still, even though the trend is worri-
some, today’s S&P is more diversi-
fied than Nasdaq was: In contrast to
the 18% of combined market cap
that the five largest companies in
the S&P represent, the comparable
proportion for Nasdaq was more
than 40%.
Valuations matter
The other investment lesson is that
valuations matter, even though they
don’t seem to when things are hum-
ming and some investors are con-
vinced that the rules have changed.
At the top of the internet bubble, for
example, Nasdaq had a price/earn-
ings ratio of more than 100 when
calculated on trailing 12 months’
earnings—and still 75 when based
on estimates of subsequent 12-
month earnings. Both were many or-
ders of magnitude higher than the
broad market’s long-term P/E aver-
age of below 20.
To be sure, no valuation metric is
perfect. But in hindsight, the P/E ra-
Note carefully, furthermore, that
these recovery times were from the
worst bear markets of the past cen-
tury. Taking into account all U.S.
bear markets since the mid-1920s,
I calculate it took an average of
just 3.1 years for the broad market
on a dividend- and inflation-ad-
justed basis to make its way back
to where it stood before the bear
market began.
So, the Nasdaq’s plunge in 2000,
and subsequent slow recovery, is an
outlier. No other bear-market recov-
ery in U.S. history took as long.
Diversification is still the key
To make a portfolio less vulnerable
to the same kind of long, drawn-out
recovery as the Nasdaq market suf-
fered, diversification will be as im-
portant as it has always been.
Being narrowly concentrated in
a relatively small number of mostly
younger companies, the Nasdaq
market required more than twice as
long as the broader market to re-
cover from the dot-com crash.
And let there be no doubt that
the Nasdaq market was poorly di-
versified 20 years ago. Cisco Sys-
tems , the internet hardware and
software company, had the largest
market cap of any stock in March
2000, and represented the largest
share of any in the Nasdaq Com-
Continued from page R1 posite, which is a cap-weighted in-
dex. Over the two years subsequent
to the bursting of the internet bub-
ble, the stock dropped more than
90%.
This investment lesson unfortu-
nately comes with a disturbing foot-
note: The overall stock market today
has become increasingly concen-
20 Years After the Dot-Com Bust:
Are Investors Any Smarter?
I’m considering giving my heirs part of
their inheritance before I die. Any
thoughts? Have you spoken with retirees
about this?
An interesting question. Of course, recent
changes in the tax code make it easier to
gift money to heirs before you pass on. In
2020, the “annual exclusion” is $15,000; in
other words, you can give as much as
$15,000 to as many individuals as you wish
(and your spouse can, too)
without triggering any gift
taxes. What’s more, the lifetime
exemption from gift and estate
taxes increases to $11.58 million
in 2020 from $11.4 million in
2019.
Still, it is worth pausing be-
fore you begin parceling out
your estate.
First, you need to make sure
youwon’tneedanyofthat
money to take care of yourself,
keeping in mind the six-figure
amounts that some retirees wind up spend-
ing on long-term care or simply on basic
One retired
couple tapped
their savings
to take
grandchildren
across the
country on
monthlong
trips.
JOURNAL REPORT |INVESTING IN FUNDS & ETFS
tio was a good indicator of the mar-
ket’s overvaluation, and of weaker
returns ahead: Since its March 2000
high, the Nasdaq Composite, on an
inflation- and dividend-adjusted ba-
sis, has produced a return of just
1.3% annualized. The comparable re-
turn for the S&P is 4.1% annualized,
which is itself lower than the 6.8%
average annualized return for the
past two centuries.
Fortunately, the Nasdaq market’s
P/E ratio is a lot lower today than 20
years ago: It stands at 26.4, when
calculated based on trailing 12-
month earnings, and 22.2 when
based on forward estimates, accord-
ing to Birinyi Associates. While
these ratios are significantly above
average, they aren’t nearly as in-
flated as they were in March 2000.
Bottom line
The stock market is not as over-
valued as it was 20 years ago, and
so long as you invest in a widely
diversified index fund, your recov-
ery from the next bear market
should be a lot faster than the Nas-
daq market’s was from the bursting
of the internet bubble. More
broadly, the past 20 years have
taught us the importance of diver-
sification and paying attention to
valuations. We should resolve never
to forget.
Mr. Hulbertis a columnist whose
Hulbert Ratings tracks investment
newsletters that pay a flat fee to
be audited. He can be reached at
[email protected]. MARTIN TOGNOLA
ASK ENCORE|GLENN RUFFENACH
How to Give Heirs
An Early Payout
Nasdaq’s Long Recovery
Performance since March 2000 of Nasdaq Composite Index, after adjusting for
inflation and dividends
Total return
Sources: FactSet; Bureau of Labor Statistics; HulbertRatings.com
Note: 100 = Nasdaq Composite Index's high on March 10, 2000
140
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
%
2000 ’01 ’02 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19 ’20
Recovery takes17 years and five months
RECESSION
The Wall Street Journal’s annual review
after 1999, when Nasdaq soared 85.6%.