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Hey Dummies: No Lattes Won’t Mean $2 Million Later: Books

Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg
A Starbucks, where many people get their daily lattes. Forgoing them will not make you a millionaire.

Helaine Olen thinks Americans have lost their financial minds.

Name your idiocy and over the last 30 years otherwise sensible people have done it: Gorged on credit cards, jumped into “no-money down” mortgages, frittered away 401(k) plans on day trading.

An entire industry exists to stop this from happening. In 2011, there were 319,456 financial advisers working in the U.S. -- a field forecast to grow by 30 percent over the next decade as baby-boomers enter retirement, worrying whether they have saved enough along the way.

If only this “personal finance industrial complex” was truly on the side of its clients. As Olen makes clear in “Pound Foolish,” that is often not the case.

“So much of the advice we receive is suspect, but in our desperation we take it anyway,” she writes, patiently skewering the industry she has been writing about for almost 20 years in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere.

She describes how the business of selling financial advice has grown with, and fed off, other powerful currents in American life.

The first personal finance gurus, such as the “dark- haired, quick-tempered,” fabulously rich New York Post columnist Sylvia Porter, emerged as part of the self-help movement that arose from the Great Depression.

Consumer Champions

In the 1950s, investing in the New York Stock Exchange became a patriotic duty, while in the decades since, peddlers of financial advice have adroitly refashioned themselves as consumer champions, real-estate maestros, stock-pickers and tough-talking debt advisers, depending on the prevailing social and economic winds.

Olen exposes the fallacies spun by some of America’s current personal-finance celebrities.

Take “The Latte Factor,” the money-spinning idea of David Bach, a former senior vice president at Morgan Stanley. (MS) The theory goes that if we forgo our daily $5 trip to Starbucks and invest the money, we could end up with a stash of $2 million by the time we retire.

Flat wrong, says Olen. A more likely (though still optimistic) outcome is a nest egg of around $170,000. “Not chump change, for sure, but way short of a million dollars,” she says.

Olen takes us into the depressing world of free lunches and dinners offered to panicked, retirement-age Americans to pitch them “investment opportunities.” She finds a plethora of fees, commissions, dizzying annuities and conflicts of interest.

Self Help

The central promise of much personal financial advice is alluring. It taps into the strong American spirit of practical can do-ism. “The backbone of the self-help movement is that you can do it. You. Singular,” she says.

Its real power, however, lies in our absolute need for it. The unstoppable rise of the personal finance industry has coincided with an American era of stagnant salaries, withering pensions and staggering rises in the cost of education and health care.

“We were participants in a vast experiment, a hope that personal finance and investments would do it all for us,” Olen writes. With 43 percent of the population now living paycheck to paycheck, according to Olen, is it any wonder that people have ended up making poor, desperate decisions?

Olen concludes by arguing for a broader kind of financial literacy, a conversation about income inequality and decent pensions.

Until then, however, we are left with characters such as Daryl White, a fifty-something U.S. Postal Service worker who Olen meets at an online trading class in New York.

“I’m learning the rules,” says White, who has spent thousands of dollars on trading advice and won’t tell Olen how much he has lost. “The money will come later.”

“Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry” is published by Portfolio/Penguin (292 pages, $27.95). To buy this book in North America, click here.

(Sam Knight writes for Muse, the arts and leisure section of Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.)

Muse highlights include Patrick Cole on dining.

To contact the writer on the story: Sam Knight in London at .

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Manuela Hoelterhoff in New York at mhoelterhoff@bloomberg.net.

'Pound Foolish'

"Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry," by Helaine Olen. Source: Portfolio/Penguin via Bloomberg

Helaine Olen

Helaine Olen, author of "Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry." Photographer: Andrew Walker/Portfolio/Penguin via Bloomberg

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Personal Finance Best Sellers From Amazon

Key Rates

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Today’s national average mortgage rates. Rates may include points.
Type Today 1 Mo
30 Year Fixed Jumbo 3.99% 3.94%
30 Year Fixed 3.66% 3.52%
15 Year Fixed 2.79% 2.77%
10 Year Fixed 2.89% 2.98%
30 Year Fixed Refi 3.64% 3.51%
15 Year Fixed Refi 2.79% 2.74%
5/1 ARM 2.59% 2.65%
5/1 ARM Refi 2.60% 2.60%
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Source: Bankrate.com

Today’s average home equity rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
$30K HELOC 5.34% 5.24%
$50K HELOC 4.56% 4.60%
$75K HELOC 4.57% 4.53%
$100K HELOC 4.27% 4.26%
$30K Home Equity Loan 5.97% 6.07%
$50K Home Equity Loan 6.01% 6.01%
$75K Home Equity Loan 5.97% 5.97%
$100K Home Equity Loan 5.84% 5.84%
View rates in your area »

Source: Bankrate.com

Today’s average savings rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
5 Year CD 1.23% 1.22%
2 Year CD 0.70% 0.66%
1 Year CD 0.57% 0.52%
MMA $10K+ 0.47% 0.50%
MMA $50K+ 0.69% 0.71%
MMA Savings Jumbo 0.59% 0.60%
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Source: Bankrate.com

Today’s average auto loan rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
60 Months Used Car 2.98% 2.94%
48 Months Used Car 2.93% 3.13%
36 Months Used Car 2.89% 2.96%
72 Months New Car 2.43% 2.98%
60 Months New Car 2.54% 2.68%
48 Months New Car 2.45% 2.59%
60 Months Auto Refi 4.15% 4.37%
36 Months Auto Refi 3.61% 3.77%
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Source: Bankrate.com

Today’s average credit card rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
Standard Variable 14.12% 14.12%
Standard Fixed 13.23% 13.23%
Gold Variable 12.70% 12.70%
Gold Fixed 11.99% 11.99%
Platinum Variable 15.53% 15.46%
Platinum Fixed 12.70% 12.70%
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Source: Bankrate.com