CAP Northwest

CAP Northwest

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Financial expertise you can trust. Learn where you are, where you want to go, and how to get there.

Investment advice offered through Columbia Advisory Partners, LLC. At CAP Northwest, we believe in insightful growth—a journey that combines purposeful financial progress with the clarity to understand each step. We’re here to help you know where you stand financially and confidently plan for what’s next, offering the guidance to grow and the insights to stay ahead.

04/16/2026

From Jeremy Russell:

Client forwarded me a pitch last week: Private REIT offering 8.2% current yield. "This seems too good to pass up."

We passed.

Not because it's a scam. We passed because of what it would mean for their specific situation.

$200K proposed investment. Client is 68, retired, $2.1M portfolio. Withdrawing $72K/year.

The pitch emphasized 8.2% yield and monthly distributions. What it didn't emphasize: 5-7 year lockup (they might need liquidity for health issues), distributions aren't guaranteed, and they already own an office building—more real estate doesn't diversify anything.

The real question wasn't "is 8.2% good?" It was "what problem are we solving?"

They don't need more income. They DO need liquidity. Dad's health is declining.

So we moved $200K into intermediate-term municipal bonds yielding 3.8% tax-free. Less exciting. Fully liquid. Actually solved the problem they have.

Good financial advice often sounds boring. That's usually the point.

04/06/2026

"When should I start taking Social Security?"

The internet gives you 12 different answers, and they're all technically correct.

The math says: Every year you delay from 62 to 70, your benefit increases by roughly 7-8%. If you live into your mid-80s, delaying usually wins.

But the math doesn't account for your actual life.

One client had a pension that dropped at 65. Delaying Social Security until 70 meant drawing down the portfolio during market volatility.

Another had health concerns and a family history of shorter lifespans. Taking it at 62 meant more total dollars over their actual lifetime.

A third had a spouse 8 years younger with minimal work history. Delaying maximized the survivor benefit, which mattered more than anything else.

The right answer isn't about maximizing a spreadsheet. It's about integrating Social Security into a plan that accounts for pensions, portfolio withdrawals, tax brackets, and real life.

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