The Universal Calculation Engine
Insights
The Universal Calculation Engine

Treating a glossy past return chart as next years guarantee

Part of: What Is Investing?

Two investing tips can both sound right if they assume different years, fees, or tax rules—check those first.

Wrong vs right

Two portfolios can show the same label (“balanced”) with different stock weights—match allocation before you argue “safer.”

For investing, the expensive mistakes are silent omissions: vacancy, taxes, fees, or timeline.

Why fights persist

Rechecking math on the wrong table feels productive; rebuilding the table from documents is what fixes decisions.

Related lesson and Another angle are two sanity passes—use both when money is large.

Check your numbers now

Classic slip

Mistake: comparing taxable brokerage to Roth outcomes without tax-adjusting. Fix: model after-tax spendable dollars.

Fix

Wrong comfortWhat fixes it
“Numbers match”Definitions match
“I’m careful”Line-by-line audit
“Close enough”Not for six-figure choices
Same words, different spreadsheets
Align lines, then compare

Bracket test

Core lesson

Go deeper: What Is Investing? — if one number still does not feel right, enter it in the calculators above and change one input at a time to see what drives the result.

Use the calculator

FAQ

Where is the main lesson?

What Is Investing? is the hub with related lessons linked from it.

Which calculator should I open first?

Use Investment growth or Lump sum growth for long horizons; Savings goal for targets; Debt payoff when comparing to loans.