Chuck Jaffee, a forty-year veteran financial journalist who regularly writes for the Wall Street Journal and is also a nationally syndicated financial columnist, discusses how money and investors’ attitude towards investing has changed over the last few decades.
Category: Episodes
#392: Ask Paula: Did the Great Recession Lead to the FIRE Movement?
Colleen and her husband own SEVEN paid off rental homes. Now they’re heading into retirement and disagree on what to do with some of that equity.
Kevin wants to hit FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) and believes his motivation comes from witnessing the financial trauma of the Great Recession. He’s wondering if others are motivated to reach FIRE for similar reasons.
Anonymous wants to learn more about utilizing HSA accounts and Susan wants to learn more about investing in tax liens.
My friend and former financial planner Joe Saul-Sehy joins me to answer these questions on today’s episode. Enjoy!
Do you have a question on business, money, trade-offs, financial independence strategies, travel, or investing? Leave it here and we’ll answer them in a future episode.
#391: Powerful Tactics to Take Control of Your Life and Career, with Dr. Reza Abraham
Dr. Reza Abraham, an international leadership consultant, walks us through a framework of staying in control of your career and your life. This framework utilizes a singular core, three cornerstones and twelve principles. He explains how to apply and execute these principles to reinforce personal fulfillment, growth and progression.
0:00:47: Introducing Dr. Reza Abraham
0:02:48: […]
#390: Ask Paula: Help! My Bills Are Too High
We start this episode with two anonymous callers who have opposite problems: one says her bills are too high, while the other is worried that she’s saving too much.
Anonymous (“Izzy”) saves A LOT. She wants to relax about her spending more, and start including more joy into her life. How should she approach the next 10 or 20 years, so that she can enjoy her financial security?
A different anonymous caller (“Starlight”) has the opposite problem: her expenses are mounting. Her bills make her uncomfortable. She wants to shake up her investments so that she can tap her assets in order to make her payments. Ideally, she’d also like to buy a house in Europe within the next 10 years. How should she do this?
John liked the episode with Bill Bengen, where we discussed the 4% rule. However, he questions whether that rule should really be applied to the FIRE community.
Steve is a landlord who needs his property to cash flow, but doesn’t like to raise rents. What should he do?
Do you have a question on business, money, trade-offs, financial independence strategies, travel, or investing? Leave it here and we’ll answer them in a future episode.
Enjoy!
#389: Invest Anywhere: Should I Bother Investing in Long-Distance Real Estate?
Welcome to Invest Anywhere, our monthly series on long-distance real estate investing.
Invest Anywhere airs on the First Friday of each month and is co-hosted by Paula Pant and Suni Rao.
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Today we tackle one of the most common questions we hear:
“Should I bother investing in real estate?”
“Is the hassle worth it?”
“What’s the upside? Is this worth my time and effort?”
“Do I really want to do this?”
“Maybe I should just stick to index funds …”
How can you methodically, systematically dig into answering this question?
In this episode, we’ll help you take a personal inventory of four factors: your time, capital, relationships, and mindset.
Time, capital and relationships are the resources at your disposal, and your mindset governs how well you’ll use those resources.
These four factors will have a major influence on your experience as a long-distance investor.
And there’s good news:
Plenty of successful investors start out with empty coffers in one or more of these arenas.
They’re strapped for cash. They’re pressed for time. They lack connections.
In this episode, we discuss how to inventory your time, cash and connections (you might have more than you think!), as well as what to do if you’re lagging in one or more of these arenas.
Enjoy!
#388: “Feeling Anxious About Your Investments?”, with Scott Nations
Recessions are terrifying.
Market crashes often bring out the worst in people’s anxieties and fears.
This fear triggers us to act even more irrationally than usual – which can lead to making expensive mistakes in our investment portfolios.
In today’s episode, Scott Nations, who spent his career studying market volatility, describes some of the most common cognitive biases and irrational behaviors that investors make. He shares tips on how to master the mental game of investing, especially in turbulent times.
Here are a few irrational biases that destroy wealth:
#1: The disposition effect – Humans have a tendency to sell their winners and hold their losers.
Why? We get a dopamine hit when we sell a winning asset and lock in our gains. Meanwhile, sunk cost fallacy makes us want to hang onto the loser ‘until it comes back.’
How can we avoid falling prey to this?
First, if you’re thinking about selling off an asset that’s performing well, ask yourself: What’s the real motivation? Do you want to book a profit for the sake of booking a profit? Or do you believe that some underlying fundamental has changed?
Next, compare this decision to your investor policy statement, which is your written statement about your goals, timeline, risk tolerance, risk capacity, strategy and style as an investor. Is this decision aligned with your written personal policies?
#2: Status quo bias – Our tendency to overvalue our current situation, such as the mix of assets that happens to already be inside our portfolio. We demand a higher burden of proof to justify any change than we do to justify holding the status quo.
This is often triggered by information overload – when we feel overwhelmed by excess information and too many options, we react by doing nothing.
Psychologist Barry Schwartz calls this the “paradox of choice” – the more choices we’re offered, the more likely we are to not make any decision.
How can we protect ourselves from this? One tactic is to adopt a low-information diet, in which we carefully curate the amount of news and information that we receive.
Another tactic is to look at our resources and imagine that we’re starting from a blank slate. If we didn’t have our current mix of stocks, bonds, real estate, crypto, etc. – if we imagine that we’re starting with our entire net worth in cash – how would we allocate our capital if we were starting from scratch?
#3: Overconfidence – Research shows that people consistently overestimate both their abilities and their predictions of positive future outcomes.
The majority of people think they’re an above-average driver, which is mathematically impossible.
Most people overestimate their probability of getting and staying married forever, of not grappling with fertility issues, choosing a winning investment, or becoming a millionaire.
Today’s interview guest says that he’s aware that, among all the cognitive biases he describes, he’s personally the most susceptible to overconfidence bias. Staying aware of his personal susceptibility helps him keep it in check.
#4: Loss aversion – The sting of a loss is more emotionally profound than the joy of a gain. As a result, our brains are hardwired to avoid losses, rather than pursue gains.
This closely relates to the sunk cost fallacy that fuels the disposition effect, which we described above.
We describe many more cognitive biases in today’s episode. Enjoy!
#387: Ask Paula: Is A Crash Coming??
Lila is concerned about inflation and the risk of a recession. Should she invest in the stock market, despite the scary headlines? Or should she pay off her primary residence or her investment properties?
Linda invested in a 529 for her son’s college, and he’ll be starting in the fall. But, the value of the plan dropped right before she was planning on using it and she is wondering how to keep from losing more money.
Jen and her husband want to retire in 8 years. They’re hoping to have paid off their mortgage AND hit their net worth goals when they stop working. How should they prioritize between these two goals?
Do you have a question on business, money, trade-offs, financial independence strategies, travel, or investing? Leave it here and we’ll answer them in a future episode.
Enjoy!
#386: The Psychology of Secrets, with Dr. Michael Slepian
We all have our secrets.
We keep some secrets from bosses, colleagues and clients, like the fact that we hope to retire early, change careers, or start a business.
We keep other secrets from friends and family, like our income, net worth, spending habits and investing mistakes.
Research from around the world shows that we […]
#385: Ask Paula: How to Invest When You’re Unsure of the Goal
Anonymous (“Jennifer”) keeps hearing us say that you should “start with the end in mind” – that your investments should match your goals and timeline. But what if you don’t have any specific financial goal? What if your risk tolerance is different than you once thought?
Rachel’s new employer won’t let her contribute to retirement for more than a year – what should she do??
Carri’s parents are in poor health and can’t work much – what should they do about their life insurance policy and their health insurance?
Do you have a question on business, money, trade-offs, financial independence strategies, travel, or investing? Leave it here and we’ll answer them in a future episode.
Enjoy!
#384: Invest Anywhere: Six Strategies to Make Money in Real Estate
Welcome back to the third episode in our special series, Afford Anything Presents: Invest Anywhere.
Invest Anywhere is a new monthly series that runs on the First Friday of each month. It lays out the information you need to invest in real estate at a distance.
Many of you want to invest in real estate, but you live in a high-cost-of-living area. (Ahem, California and New York). The homes in your city are prohibitively expensive, and they offer lackluster returns.
You could invest in a lower-cost area like Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Omaha or Wichita … but HOW? That sounds terrifying.
We’re here to dismantle that fear, piece by piece, by sharing our knowledge and experience.
The Invest Anywhere series is dedicated to giving you the guidance you need to make smart, confident choices about investing out-of-state.
It’s co-hosted between myself (Paula) and esteemed real estate investor Suni Rao, who’s experienced everything ranging from buy-and-hold rental investing to (accidentally) wholesaling. She’s managed short-term and long-term rentals. She’s owned houses, multi-units, and even a mobile home park.
She joins me in this episode to talk about a variety of strategies that will help you make money in real estate.