Do ‘rules’ cover this?

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“Around half of retirees, more likely to be female, are expected to spend some time in a residential care facility. The estimated likelihood that people aged 65 and over will use residential care at any time before they die has been projected to increase to 53% by 2040.“Half of those age 65 and over are likely to die in residential care (or in an acute hospital setting, having been transferred from a residential care facility).”

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Get a reverse mortgage or home reversion – discussed recently in this column. You’ll probably be able to access several hundred thousand dollars. Arrange to get the money gradually, as you need it, rather than in a lump sum.Move to a lower-priced home, which might be smaller or further from a central city. Or you could look into subdividing your land, or see if your council offers rates postponement – again written about in recent columns.

‘Banana oil’

A revised and updated edition of Mary Holm's book Rich Enough? A laid-back guide for every Kiwi.A revised and updated edition of Mary Holm’s book Rich Enough? A laid-back guide for every Kiwi.

The Stock Picking Game

Most students were lousy stock pickers. In 2011, for example, the most popular share was Fletcher Building, probably because students expected it to benefit from the recent Canterbury earthquakes. But in the 14 weeks, its performance ranked 20th out of 25. And the second-most popular, Air New Zealand, came dead last. Meanwhile, the top-performing share, NZX, which was chosen by just three students out of 400, produced an astonishing best return of 55% in just three months.

Information affects share prices more or less immediately, and amateurs can’t benefit from it after that. The popularity of Fletcher Building – because of the earthquakes – illustrates that. By the time the students were picking their stock, in March 2011, the experts had long since calculated how much that company was likely to benefit from the quakes rebuild. That information had already pushed up the share price.Don’t judge a share by its short-term return. Despite the fact that the students “invested” for only three months, we also looked at the longer-term performances of the shares.

A single share can be very volatile. NZX, the top performer in both 2009 and 2011, came 22nd out of 25 in the year in between. Mainfreight, top in 2010, came dead last in 2013. And F&P Appliances, top in 2012, had come 20th out of 25 in 2010.Perhaps most importantly: diversification smooths out the ride. When we looked at the portfolios of five shares, it showed how “owning” more than a single share reduces the highs and lows.

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