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JPost.com - Banking & Finance | The Jerusalem Post

Who are big winners from the shortening of the workweek? | The Jerusalem Post Smotrich's unusual attack on the governor | The Jerusalem Post The bartender beat the National Insurance Institute | The Jerusalem Post Like elite teams at the World Cup, profitable portfolios require consistent work | The Jerusalem Post Your Taxes: Is it time to do business with Lebanon? | The Jerusalem Post Europe: Employers will be have to disclose salaries at the start of recruitment | The Jerusalem Post Bank Hapoalim marked Pride Month in an emotional meeting with Tal Ramon | The Jerusalem Post "Taylor Swift tax" takes effect | The Jerusalem Post The Finance Ministry’s new move targets small savings | The Jerusalem Post Wall Street concludes the best quarter in 6 years | The Jerusalem Post Confessed to stealing from the register – and received high compensation | The Jerusalem Post Bitcoin records its worst month in 4 years | The Jerusalem Post Naftali Bennett promises to save NIS 8,000 per family | The Jerusalem Post The wealth report: A record number of millionaires worldwide | The Jerusalem Post Bezalel Smotrich launches NIS 1.6 billion aid plan for high-tech and exporters | The Jerusalem Post "The Treasury took hundreds of billions from National Insurance surpluses" | The Jerusalem Post 10 mistakes that cost you thousands of shekels a year | The Jerusalem Post Discussion on Goldknopf’s proposal to lower VAT postponed by two weeks | The Jerusalem Post Study: "Israel’s Basket" led to a wave of price increases | The Jerusalem Post Goldknopf proposes lowering the VAT to 17% | The Jerusalem Post Insolvency order against Nochi Dankner | The Jerusalem Post Your Taxes: Look before you leap out of Israeli fiscal residency | The Jerusalem Post Your Investments: Getting back to basics for a secure financial future | The Jerusalem Post Another NIS 1,600 a month: How they inflated our mortgages | The Jerusalem Post Drama in Seoul: The trading in South Korea was halted twice | The Jerusalem Post The $820 billion report: Why the S&P 500 is going to break a record? | The Jerusalem Post A tsunami of bankruptcies threatens the global economy | The Jerusalem Post The annoying truth behind the illusion of the low dollar | The Jerusalem Post Bank of Israel reveals new data on Israel’s mortgage market | The Jerusalem Post Inflation and housing prices show continued declines in Israel | The Jerusalem Post Two permanent homes and a double life? Problematic | The Jerusalem Post How to make sure your summer vacation is financially responsible | The Jerusalem Post Bitcoin is recovering, and with it the entire crypto market | The Jerusalem Post Whining about the cost of living, continuing to wear Nike and Adidas | The Jerusalem Post Some conclusions from the Go E-Commerce conference | The Jerusalem Post This is how bank credit fees were reduced | The Jerusalem Post Israelis are returning to shopping malls | The Jerusalem Post BST Group completed IPO at a valuation of NIS 3 billion | The Jerusalem Post Bankers need to start viewing AI as a solution rather than a threat | The Jerusalem Post Elon Musk says SpaceX will have $1 trillion in revenue by 2030 | The Jerusalem Post Your Investments: Tips to prevent ‘lifestyle creep’ Your Taxes: How Trump's anti-slavery tax proposal could impact Israeli exporters Israel against the current 75 Years, $57 billion, one unbreakable bond Israeli startups raise $8.6b. in first half of 2026 despite war, report finds Bank Hapoalim caps dollar rate for Israelis’ summer travel Your Investments: The spies and fear of financial success Your Taxes: New Israeli rules could save US olim money and affect businesses Your Taxes: Trump’s tax amnesty raises questions for Israeli taxpayers Your Investments: Aaron’s menorah teaches us patience is key to long-term wealth Shekel gains sharply despite interest rate cut “Rabitabank” OJSC secures USD 7 Million funding from Enabling Qapital Your Taxes: How California’s new software tax may hit Israeli tech companies Your Investments: Shavuot lessons, from Torah to retirement planning Your Investments: Financial freedom and Jerusalem unification Your Taxes: How Israel’s new war compensation system works Israel’s inflation dynamics remain under control Your Investments: Prosperity in Israel takes time, but aliyah is worth it Your Taxes: An agreement is an agreement How Israel’s new reporting rules change the olim tax holiday - opinion Your Taxes: Israel’s lower mid-market is tempting international M&A buyers Your Investments: Avoid repeating financial blunders Your Taxes: So you want to acquire an Israeli company? 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Your Investments: Second chances, respect, and newlywed finance
AARON KATSMAN · 2026-05-02 · via JPost.com - Banking & Finance | The Jerusalem Post
ByAARON KATSMAN

“I have learned that only two things are necessary to keep one’s wife happy. First, let her think she’s having her own way. And second, let her have it.” – Lyndon B. Johnson

As a public service to all readers, remember to close your windows on Monday night. As I have written before, like it or not, there is nothing quite like Lag Ba'omer in Israel.

I remember growing up in Seattle when Lag Ba’omer fell on a school day, and we would play sports while the school provided hot dogs and cans of pop. That was it.

In Israel, it means that you’d better close your windows because of the bonfires. Then there is the insanity of 13- and 14-year-olds being in charge of 10- and 12-year-olds, all surrounded by raging bonfires. We should all hope and pray that the Lag Ba’omer celebrations are safe and pass without incident.

As we move through the meaningful stretch of the Jewish calendar that includes Second Passover (Pesach Sheni), Lag Ba’omer, and the start of the wedding season, there is a powerful framework for newly married couples as they begin their shared financial life.

The French Hill – a project by Terra Real Estate and Rotshtein.
The French Hill – a project by Terra Real Estate and Rotshtein. (credit: The French Hill – Terra and Rotshtein)

Marriage is not just the merging of two individuals; it is the merging of two financial identities. Two different upbringings, attitudes toward money, and a general money culture now need to coexist. Whether that becomes a source of tension or strength depends largely on how intentionally couples approach it.

Build a shared plan.

Pesach Sheni provides the first lesson: It’s never too late to get it right. The Torah (Bamidbar 9:6-11) describes individuals who were unable to bring the Pesach sacrifice at its proper time and approached Moshe asking, “Why should we be left out?” In response, they were given a second opportunity one month later. The Talmud codifies this concept (Pesachim 93a), and the broader message is clear: Missed opportunities are not permanent failures. Sometimes we get a second chance.

For newlyweds, this is enormously relevant. Rarely do two people enter a marriage with perfectly aligned financial histories. One may bring debt, the other savings. One may have been disciplined, the other less so. The mistake many couples make is allowing past financial decisions to define future dynamics.

Pesach Sheni argues the opposite. Your financial past is not your financial destiny. The key is not where you start, but whether you are willing to reset together. Early in marriage, couples should take inventory – not just of assets and liabilities, but also habits. What are your spending triggers? How do you view risk? What does financial security mean to each of you? This process is not about judgment; it’s about clarity. And clarity creates the possibility of change.

From there, the lesson becomes practical: Build a shared plan. That means creating a realistic budget, setting priorities, and agreeing on a strategy for saving and investing. But just as important, it means accepting that mistakes will happen – and committing to fixing them together rather than assigning blame.

Then comes Lag Ba’omer, which introduces a second critical dimension: unity.

Lag Ba’omer marks a break in the mourning period connected to the students of Rabbi Akiva, who failed to treat one another with proper respect, according to the Talmud. A lack of respect destroys even the most promising foundations. After all, it was Rabbi Akiva who said: “This is a great principle of the Torah: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself [Vayikra 19:18].’”

Financially, this is where many couples struggle. Money disagreements are rarely about numbers. They are about values, control, fear, and communication. One spouse may prioritize saving, while the other experiences money as a tool for enjoying life. One may be comfortable with investment risk; the other may equate risk with instability.

Lag Ba’omer teaches that success comes from respect and alignment, not uniformity. Couples do not need identical financial personalities; they need shared goals. Define what you are working toward: buying a home, building long-term wealth, achieving financial independence, or supporting the family. Once those goals are clear, decisions become less personal and more purposeful.

Respect also means listening. If one spouse is anxious about investing, dismissing that fear will only deepen the divide. Instead, address it. Educate, compromise, and create a plan that both partners can live with.

Finally, the wedding season itself delivers the third lesson. A wedding is a moment of inspiration, but it is also the starting point of a system. The habits formed in the first year of marriage often persist for decades.

Decide how finances will be managed. Will accounts be fully merged or partially separate? Who tracks expenses? How are major decisions made? Transparency is equally critical. Hidden debts, undisclosed spending, or financial secrecy undermine the very partnership that marriage is meant to create.

There is also a broader lesson that connects all three elements of this season: patience. Just as we are counting the Omer day by day, financial growth is incremental. There are no shortcuts. Wealth is built through consistency, saving regularly, investing wisely, and allowing time to do its work.

Newlyweds often feel pressure to accelerate, to buy, upgrade, and match perceived lifestyles. But the most successful couples are those who balance present enjoyment with future stability. They spend intentionally, not impulsively.

Pesach Sheni teaches resilience, the ability to recover and move forward. Lag Ba’omer teaches unity, the necessity of respect, and shared purpose. These lessons are the cornerstone of a successful marriage.

The information contained in this article reflects the opinion of the author and not necessarily the opinion of Portfolio Resources Group, Inc. or its affiliates.

aaron@lighthousecapital.co.il

Aaron Katsman is the author of Retirement GPS: How to Navigate Your Way to A Secure Financial Future with Global Investing.

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