Long Story Short
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.
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