Long Story Short

Selling Your Business, Market All-Time Highs, and Rethinking Bonds in Retirement

28 min · 24. apr. 2026
episode Selling Your Business, Market All-Time Highs, and Rethinking Bonds in Retirement cover

Description

Adam recently earned his CEPA designation through the Exit Planning Institute, and this episode starts with what that means in practice. Selling a business is not a single event. It is a planning process that most owners start far too late. Adam covers the three areas that trip people up most often and why getting a financial advisor involved well before the transaction is more important than most people realize. From there, Adam and Andy turn to the market hitting all-time highs again, recovering from a 9% peak-to-trough drop in just 11 trading days. With conflict in the Middle East dominating the headlines, clients have been asking how the market can keep going up. Adam and Andy explain what really drives stock prices over time and why the day-to-day noise, as unsettling as it can feel, tends to be just that. The episode closes with a conversation that comes up regularly with clients who are newly retired or nearing retirement. Should you shift heavily into bonds once you stop working? Andy pushes back on the conventional wisdom, makes the case why stocks still belong in a retirement portfolio over a 20 or 30-year time horizon, and reframes what "income" in retirement means. ⏱️ Timestamps:  * (00:46) Welcome and intro: Adam's CEPA designation * (02:39) Why exit planning matters * (04:27) Three areas where business owners get tripped up before a sale * (09:31) Common pitfalls and why your advisor should be involved early * (12:28) The market hits all-time highs in 11 trading days * (13:29) All-time highs tend to cluster: what the historical data shows * (14:49) What's actually driving the stock market right now * (19:27) Clients retiring into a volatile market: should you dial back risk? * (21:08) The problem with overweighting bonds in retirement * (23:18) Inflation as the real long-term risk for retirees * (25:22) Rethinking "income" in retirement: the total return approach * (27:27) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast [http://www.burneywealth.com/podcast] Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement [http://www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement]  Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/]  Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/]  Exit Planning Institute | exit-planning-institute.org [http://exit-planning-institute.org]  #ExitPlanning #BusinessOwners #RetirementPlanning #Investing #StockMarket #WealthManagement The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

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49 episodes

episode IPO Hype, a Historic Market Run, and What to Look for in a Financial Advisor artwork

IPO Hype, a Historic Market Run, and What to Look for in a Financial Advisor

The headlines around SpaceX's IPO filing are hard to ignore. Andy and Adam open this episode’s discussion with a look at surprisingly consistent data showing that every one of the ten largest IPOs in U.S. history posted a negative return in its first year, with an average decline of around 27%. That track record raises some questions about the timing of buying into that much hype at that valuation. From there, they shift to something that didn't get nearly as much attention as it deserved. April and May 2026 together ranked as the fifth-best two-month stretch for the S&P 500 in 75 years, and unlike most of the moves above it on that list, this one wasn't driven by a snap-back from panic. Earnings growth outpaced price appreciation, meaning the market actually became cheaper on a valuation basis even as prices climbed. The episode closes with a question one client sent in directly: why hire a financial advisor, and how do you find a good one? Adam and Andy walk through the criteria that matter, from fee structure and credentials to how the team around an advisor operates day-to-day. ⏱️ Timestamps:  * (1:23) SpaceX IPO filing and what to expect from the trifecta of big IPOs in 2026 * (3:55) The one-year performance of the ten largest U.S. IPOs since 2000 * (5:15) Why mega-cap IPOs aren't exceptions to the underperformance pattern * (6:46) How hype outpaces reality once public markets get a closer look * (8:00) If you're a long-term believer, why the IPO date probably doesn't matter * (9:29) Morningstar's valuation estimate on SpaceX and the case for waiting * (11:27) April and May 2026: the fifth-best two-month S&P run since 1950 * (12:06) Why this rally is different from the panic-recovery moves above it on the list * (14:36) Earnings are driving the market higher while valuations actually come down * (17:44) Andy pivots to the value of a financial advisor and the Vanguard study * (23:05) The four Cs: competency, coaching, convenience, continuity * (24:16) What 250,000 people calling themselves advisors actually means * (25:11) The three things Adam looks for: fee-only, credentials, team structure * (30:32) Trust as the final filter and what it looks like when an advisor is selling fear * (32:02) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast [http://www.burneywealth.com/podcast] Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement [http://www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement]  Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/]  Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/]  Vanguard Advisor’s Alpha: Clients and their advisors thriving together for 25 years | https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/article/celebrating-25-years-of-working-to-improve-outcomes-for-you-and-your-clients [https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/article/celebrating-25-years-of-working-to-improve-outcomes-for-you-and-your-clients]  #WealthManagement #FinancialPlanning #IPO #StockMarket #FinancialAdvisor The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

Yesterday33 min
episode Tax-Smart Investing, Why Bonds Are Back, and the Sentiment Paradox artwork

Tax-Smart Investing, Why Bonds Are Back, and the Sentiment Paradox

Andy is recording from a hotel room in Seattle, attending the Basis Northwest Conference, a two-day deep dive into esoteric tax strategies run by Brent Sullivan of Tax Alpha Insider. The episode opens with a walkthrough of what tax-centric wealth management looks like in practice, including asset location, direct indexing, tax-loss harvesting, and the 351 ETF conversion on the investment side, and Roth conversions, charitable giving strategy, and lifetime tax efficiency on the planning side. The second topic is bonds. Interest rates spiked last week, and Adam walks through a chart plotting ten-year Treasury starting yields against forward returns since the early nineties. With last year's starting yield at 4.6%, forward-looking bond returns are projecting just under 6% annualized. Andy's read is that 4.6% sits right in the middle of the historical range. This is a normalization, not a warning sign. Consumer sentiment is near its lowest level on record, driven in part by the U.S.-Iran war and fuel price concerns, while the stock market sits near all-time highs and earnings keep growing. Adam and Andy discuss the K-shaped economy, the politics angle, and why sentiment this low has historically preceded strong forward returns. Andy closes with Ben Carlson's thought experiment - even an investor who bought only at all-time highs throughout history still averaged around 8% annually over the long run. ⏱️ Timestamps:  * (00:49) Intro: Andy live from Seattle at the Basis Northwest Conference * (01:35) Asset location and matching investments to account types * (04:57) Direct indexing and tax-loss harvesting at scale * (06:44) Adam on the planning side: lifetime tax efficiency vs. the single-year bill * (10:36) Why CPAs push back on Roth conversions and why that's shortsighted * (11:10) The ten-year distribution rule and multi-generational tax planning * (13:05) Bond market update and why rates spiked last week * (14:02) The ten-year yield chart: starting yield vs. forward return * (17:42) Stocks vs. bonds: why equities still win over the long run * (19:20) University of Michigan sentiment survey: 44.8, an all-time low * (22:06) The K-shaped economy and whether politics explains the gap * (26:28) Ben Carlson's all-time highs thought experiment * (27:46) Wrap and listener questions * (27:28) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast [http://www.burneywealth.com/podcast] Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement [http://www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement]  Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/]  Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/]  Tax Alpha Insider Substack by Brent Sullivan | https://www.taxalphainsider.com/ [https://www.taxalphainsider.com/]  Ben Carlson / A Wealth of Common Sense | https://awealthofcommonsense.com/ [https://awealthofcommonsense.com/] CNBC “Consumer sentiment hits fresh record low in May as Iran war fuels inflation worries” | https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/22/consumer-sentiment-hits-fresh-record-low-in-may-as-iran-war-fuels-inflation-worries.html [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/22/consumer-sentiment-hits-fresh-record-low-in-may-as-iran-war-fuels-inflation-worries.html]   University of Michigan Survey of Consumers | https://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/ [https://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/] #TaxPlanning #WealthManagement #RothConversion #BondMarket #ConsumerSentiment #Investing #PersonalFinance #LongTermInvesting The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

29. maj 202628 min
episode The State of the American Consumer, Long-Term Care Costs & the Value Factor artwork

The State of the American Consumer, Long-Term Care Costs & the Value Factor

Despite months of pessimistic headlines, a thread from Ryan Detrick at the Carson Group shows American consumers in solid shape. Credit card delinquencies are back to pre-COVID levels, foreclosures and bankruptcies are flat, and home equity has climbed alongside equity markets. Andy adds the Costco recession indicator to the mix, which flags a shift from steaks to canned tuna as a warning sign. Adam's take is that maybe people just want tuna salad in the summer. From there, the episode turns to long-term care costs, one of the most underplanned-for expenses in retirement. A Business Insider article about a family navigating memory care for an aging parent put a number to it - $17,000 a month, with over $200,000 spent in 18 months. Adam walks through state-by-state cost ranges using the Genworth cost of care calculator, the case for and against long-term care insurance, and why starting the conversation early is the most important move regardless of what you decide. The episode closes with the second installment of Burney's factor deep dive series. Andy covers the value factor, tracing the Fama-French research showing cheaply priced stocks have historically outperformed expensive ones by 3 to 5% annually, why price-to-book value has lost its usefulness, and why value investors have to be prepared to sit through extended stretches where growth dominates. ⏱️ Timestamps: (00:45) Intro from Hilton Head and Memorial Day weekend (02:06) Ryan Detrick's consumer data: credit cards, delinquencies, and household balance sheets (04:46) The Costco recession indicator (06:32) Cost of long-term care: a Business Insider story about memory care at $17K a month (08:10) What Burney walks clients through when planning for care costs (09:25) The Genworth cost of care calculator and state-by-state ranges (12:48) Long-term care insurance: the decision window, the history, and who actually needs it (19:13) Why most clients end up choosing to self-insure (20:00) Factor deep dive: the value factor and the Fama-French research (21:47) Why price-to-book no longer works and what's replaced it (23:04) Price-to-earnings as the most practical value measure (24:26) Why value has underperformed growth for a decade, and why that doesn't kill the thesis (26:48) How Burney's models track which value metrics are working now (27:41) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ Business Insider Article, “My dad's dementia care cost $17,000 a month. It wiped out his life savings in 16 months” | https://www.businessinsider.com/dads-dementia-care-cost-life-savings-2026-5 Genworth Cost of Care Calculator | https://www.carescout.com/cost-of-care Costco Recession Indicator | https://finance.yahoo.com/economy/articles/costco-recession-signal-goes-viral-114424970.html #LongTermCare #RetirementPlanning #PersonalFinance #ValueInvesting #StockMarket #WealthManagement #FactorInvesting #ConsumerHealth The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

22. maj 202628 min
episode Ten Trillion-Dollar Companies, Social Security COLAs, and the Great Wealth Transfer artwork

Ten Trillion-Dollar Companies, Social Security COLAs, and the Great Wealth Transfer

Adam opens with a pop quiz on how many trillion-dollar market cap companies exist in the US right now. The answer is ten, led by NVIDIA at $4.8 trillion.  He traces prior melt-up periods from the Roaring Twenties through the Nifty Fifty, the Japanese market in the '80s, and the Nasdaq bubble of the '90s to put the Nasdaq 100's 643% climb over the past decade in context. Andy adds the labor market data. Payrolls grew above expectations in the most recent report, and despite fears that AI-driven tech layoffs would hollow out white-collar employment, companies are still hiring. Adam then turns to Social Security, where stickier inflation has a silver lining. With CPI at 3.8% and running sticky, early projections put the 2027 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) at 4-5%. He walks through the COLA history and explains why delaying your claim matters so much when those adjustments stack on top of 8% annual delay credits. The episode closes on the great wealth transfer, a topic Adam says he's been hearing about for twenty years. Baby boomers hold $90 trillion in wealth, but Andy and Adam both question whether the anticipated handoff to millennials and Gen Z will play out as expected. Boomers are spending more aggressively than prior generations, living longer into their go-go years, and, in many cases, intentionally holding off on passing down wealth. ⏱️ Timestamps * (00:44) Pop quiz: how many trillion-dollar companies are there? * (01:15) NVIDIA at $4.8 trillion and the full list * (02:19) Melt-ups throughout history: the '20s, Nifty Fifty, Japan, the Nasdaq * (05:11) What's supporting the run: the latest jobs report * (06:27) AI layoff fears and why the data tells a different story * (07:52) Social Security COLAs and what stickier inflation means for 2027 * (08:17) COLA history: near-zero for a decade, then 6%, then almost 9% * (09:40) Why delaying your Social Security claim compounds the benefit * (12:12) The great wealth transfer: $90 trillion in boomer wealth * (13:59) Why boomers are spending it rather than passing it on * (14:23) Longevity, health span, and the go-go years stretching longer * (18:18) Planning for a life that might run to 100 or beyond * (20:07) Upcoming guests: estate planning, P&C insurance, trust administration * (21:14) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast [http://www.burneywealth.com/podcast] Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement [http://www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement]  Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/]  Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/]  Wall Street Journal: The Great $110 Trillion Wealth Transfer Won’t Happen Any Time Soon | https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-great-110-trillion-wealth-transfer-wont-happen-any-time-soon-e8b2ef31 [https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-great-110-trillion-wealth-transfer-wont-happen-any-time-soon-e8b2ef31]] #SocialSecurity #WealthTransfer #StockMarket #RetirementPlanning #PersonalFinance #WealthManagement #LongTermInvesting #Longevity The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

15. maj 202622 min
episode Health Insurance Costs & Momentum in Stock Selection artwork

Health Insurance Costs & Momentum in Stock Selection

Health insurance has long been treated as non-negotiable, but Adam and Andy are getting more questions than ever from clients wondering whether it's worth the cost. A Bloomberg article on healthy workers dropping employer coverage to save over $1,000 a month captured something they've both been noticing in client conversations for years, and the two walk through why opting out, whether through self-pay, religious health pools, or exchange plans, tends to look better on paper than it plays out in practice. Their advice stays consistent regardless of income level. You're in a "don't screw it up" phase, and a catastrophic health event paid fully out of pocket can undo years of careful planning. That framing carries into the economic conversation. Andy has been getting questions about Iran, oil prices, and whether the stock market can really be at all-time highs while all of this is happening. The hard data keeps coming back strong. The US economy grew 2% in early 2026, the Atlanta Fed has since updated its Q2 real growth forecast to 3.5%, and jobless claims are declining while retail spending is climbing. Consumer sentiment has been negative for months, but Andy makes the point that it tends to be a contrarian indicator. When sentiment is low and the hard numbers are healthy, that tends to be when staying invested pays off. The episode closes with the first installment of a recurring segment on Burney's active management process. Andy introduces momentum, explaining how the same instincts behind "let your winners run" and "never catch a falling knife" show up in the academic data, and why the momentum factor has provided very strong returns on a market-neutral basis over the past year. ⏱️ Timestamps:  * (00:00) The Bloomberg health insurance article and why people are questioning employer coverage * (01:15) Alternatives people are considering and why they tend to fall short * (03:57) The "don't screw it up" phase applied to insurance decisions * (07:21) Is the economy in its own "don't screw it up" moment? * (08:18) US GDP, the Atlanta Fed's Q2 forecast, and the labor market * (10:39) Consumer sentiment as a contrarian indicator * (13:24) Burney's stock selection process and the factor deep dive series * (15:09) Momentum explained: bull signals, bear signals, and why it works * (21:15) 5,000 factors, 25 to 50 per model, and why momentum is leading right now * (23:36) Behavioral investing and knowing when to cut your losses * (25:44) Wrap and listener questions * (26:36) Podcast disclosures Resources: Long Story Short website | burneywealth.com/podcast [http://www.burneywealth.com/podcast] Follow Burney Wealth Management on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement [http://www.linkedin.com/company/burneywealthmanagement]  Follow Adam Newman on Linkedin | www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/adam-newman-cfa-cfp%C2%AE-mst-ricp%C2%AE-cepa-48853916/]  Follow Andy Pratt on LinkedIn | www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyjpratt/]  Bloomberg Article: Healthy Workers Ditching Company Insurance to Save $1,000 a Month | https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-04-29/as-health-insurance-costs-rise-workers-leave-employer-plans [https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-04-29/as-health-insurance-costs-rise-workers-leave-employer-plans]  Atlanta Fed GDPNow Q2 2026 forecast | https://www.atlantafed.org/-/media/Project/Atlanta/FRBA/Documents/cqer/researchcq/gdpnow/RealGDPTrackingSlides.pdf [https://www.atlantafed.org/-/media/Project/Atlanta/FRBA/Documents/cqer/researchcq/gdpnow/RealGDPTrackingSlides.pdf]  #HealthInsurance #PersonalFinance #StockMarket #ActiveManagement #InvestingStrategy #WealthManagement #LongTermInvesting #FactorInvesting The Burney Company is an SEC-registered investment adviser. Burney Wealth Management is a division of the Burney Company. Registration with the SEC or any state securities authority does not imply that Burney Company or any of its principals or employees possesses a particular level of skill or training in the investment advisory business or any other business. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as personalized investment advice or a recommendation.

8. maj 202627 min