Bobby Bonilla Day, Anna Scheiber and the Miracle of Compound Interest

Every July 1, the New York Mets mail out a check for $1.2 million to former outfielder Bobby Bonilla This will continue until 2035 even though he last played baseball in 2001.

Anna Scheiber died in 1995 at age 101 and left a fortune in excess of $22 million even though she never earned a salary of more than $4,000 and had a pension of $3,100 a year.

Both stories dramatize the miracle of compound interest.With both we are talking about piles of money beyond the reckoning or aspirations of most people. But they do provide lessons that are applicable to all of us. Spend wisely, save for the future, invest globally and be patient.

One example I’ve often given is that for the price of a car, a parent can provide for a child’s retirement.

Here’s how that works. For the last 95 years, for as far back as we have good statistics, the broad U.S. stock market has returned about 10 percent a year. There’s no guarantee with stocks. No guarantee whatsoever that that will continue. But for almost the last century, that is what has happened to a broad investment in U.S. stocks.

At that level — 10 percent a year — stocks double every seven years and quadruple every 14 years. Play that out for fifty years. If you fund a child’s Roth IRA account at age 20 with $5,000, assuming they have that much earned income, and they don’t touch the money till retirement, the money won’t be taxed again under current tax law. If you invest that money in stocks for fifty years and you achieve those same returns — admittedly a big if — you will have accumulated $587,000.

If you do that four times, the total would be in excess of $2.3 million. There would be inflation to reduce the value of that sum and the child would have to sit by and do nothing — not touch this massive nest egg and not panic at all during the intervening market crashes. Patience is key because most of the accumulation is in the final years. But if they can surmount all these challenges and past is prologue, that child would be a happy person in retirement.

None of this is easy but some semblance of it is attainable. Whether you accumulate vast riches or merely add a bit to a more modest bundle, let compound interest work for you.

Bobby Bonilla was a great baseball player. Early in his career, for three years in the early 1990s, he was the highest paid player in the league. He was a star on one World Series championship, for the Florida Marlins.

But other, higher paid players, didn’t manage to postpone the payoff and guarantee their financial security for most of their adult life.It’s hard to be patient but a great slugger has to wait for the right pitch and that’s what Bobby Bonilla did.

The annual checks to Bonilla were not a massive stroke of idiocy by the Mets. Instead, it was a careful calculation by both sides of the value of compound interest and the benefits to each.

Financial writers have calculated that the string of payments assumed an eight percent return on the money that the Mets owed Bonilla. They were supposed to pay him $5.9 million in 2001. If that sum were invested at 8 percent interest and the string of payments were deferred for ten years, this series of checks is what you’d get.

A return of eight percent was good for both sides. Bonilla didn’t have to worry about bad investments or being tempted to spend his money too soon. The Mets didn’t have to pay out the money right away and had the potential to get higher returns on the money or use it in the meantime for other purposes.

Anna Scheiber is a different story entirely. She never made much money but she never spent foolishly either. She lived simply, saved her money and invested it. The heroic part was how much of her income she saved and invested and resisted temptation for so long. The investments were good but not out of the normal. Financial writers have calculated that she earned a rate of return a little better that the broad U.S. stock market but not much better. If she earned exactly the same as the market, the story would be basically the same.

We don’t know most of Anna’s story directly and we can’t calculate the returns exactly. We don’t know when she began saving and investing and she may have had some minor sources of income such as gifts or inheritance that we aren’t aware of. But contemporaneous interviews with her longtime lawyer and stock broker give the broad outlines of her story.

Anna worked as an IRS auditor and never got promoted to a high level despite good reviews of her work. She began saving and investing before she retired and a tax return while she was working showed enough dividends to suggest that her savings in 1936 could have been $21,000.

She retired in 1944, apparently never working again and lived till 1995. Her investment strategy was to buy Blue Chip stocks and hold for the long term. She studied the stock market and was patient and apparently avoided the key mistakes that most investors make, letting their fears psyche them out of large returns.

Both stories converged in 2008. Anna donated her large legacy to Yeshiva University for scholarships for women.Yeshiva University and the New York Mets both turned for investment expertise to Bernie Madoff, the convicted swindler. Eventually both recovered much but not all of the money.

Today is Bobby Bonilla Day. It is a great time to remember not only his baseball talent but his patience and financial acumen and to celebrate the discipline and sagacity that secured the fortunes of both Bobby Bonilla and Anna Scheiber and apply those lessons to our every day lives — spend wisely, invest globally and be patient.

 

 

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