The Stacking Benjamins Show

What Would You Do With a $500,000 Inheritance -- And What Would You Leave Behind? SB1860

🔥11 h 3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio What Would You Do With a $500,000 Inheritance -- And What Would You Leave Behind? SB1860

Descripción

Americans are in the middle of the largest wealth transfer in history. Trillions of dollars are moving between generations right now. But what do you actually do when half a million dollars lands in your account? And on the other side of that question: when it's your turn to give, do you leave it when you die or give it while you're alive? Do you split it equally or based on need? And what about the inheritance that has nothing to do with money at all? Joe asks Paula Pant, OG, and Doc G to answer all of it honestly. What You'll Walk Away With * What Paula, OG, and Doc G would each do before noon on the day they found out -- and why OG's first move is to make a list of questions while Paula immediately calls her accountant * Why Doc G, currently in the decumulation phase, would give some away and consider lending money to his son for a property before investing a dollar * OG's 40/20/40 framework for any unexpected windfall: 40% to investing, 20% to guilt-free spending, 40% to debt payoff or a medium-term goal -- and why it works for $1,000 checks and $500,000 checks alike * The grief factor: why Paula says the first thing she thinks of when she hears the word inheritance is grief -- and why emotional cloudiness is the most underestimated risk in how people handle inherited money * Would you tell anyone? All three guests have different answers -- and the reasons matter * Give it while you're alive or leave it when you die: what the King Lear scenario has to do with your estate plan, and why Paula's answer depends entirely on her end-of-life care risk * Pay for college or leave an inheritance: Doc G picks college, OG picks experiences, and the reasoning behind each choice reveals two completely different theories of compounding * Equal inheritance versus needs-based inheritance: why Doc G has already had the conversation with his kids and why he's not apologizing for unequal parenting * What people at the end of life actually want to leave behind -- Doc G's hospice experience in one of the most memorable moments of the episode * The non-financial legacy each panelist is trying to leave -- and Doug's surprisingly moving answer about where joy actually comes from Why This Matters Now The wealth transfer is already happening. Whether you're on the giving end or the receiving end, the decisions made in the first days after money changes hands tend to be the ones people regret most. This episode is the conversation to have beforehand. From the Basement Paula Pant, OG, and Doc G work through the full inheritance question -- tactics, emotions, purpose, and legacy -- in one of the more wide-ranging Friday conversations this show has produced. Paula tries to win the trivia competition for the first time in longer than anyone cares to admit, immediately hoping she gets to thank the Academy. Doug closes with something nobody saw coming. Resources Mentioned * Earn and Invest podcast [https://EarnandInvest.com]-- Doc G (Jordan Grumet); upcoming episode with Dr. Jaspal Singh on the case for ambitious careers; wherever you listen to podcasts * Afford Anything podcas [https://AffordAnything.com]t -- Paula Pant; recent episode with Dr. Julia Garcia on five habits of hope; wherever you listen to podcasts * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * OG financial planning calendar -- stackingbenjamins.com/og [https://stackingbenjamins.com/og] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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episode What Would You Do With a $500,000 Inheritance -- And What Would You Leave Behind? SB1860 artwork

What Would You Do With a $500,000 Inheritance -- And What Would You Leave Behind? SB1860

Americans are in the middle of the largest wealth transfer in history. Trillions of dollars are moving between generations right now. But what do you actually do when half a million dollars lands in your account? And on the other side of that question: when it's your turn to give, do you leave it when you die or give it while you're alive? Do you split it equally or based on need? And what about the inheritance that has nothing to do with money at all? Joe asks Paula Pant, OG, and Doc G to answer all of it honestly. What You'll Walk Away With * What Paula, OG, and Doc G would each do before noon on the day they found out -- and why OG's first move is to make a list of questions while Paula immediately calls her accountant * Why Doc G, currently in the decumulation phase, would give some away and consider lending money to his son for a property before investing a dollar * OG's 40/20/40 framework for any unexpected windfall: 40% to investing, 20% to guilt-free spending, 40% to debt payoff or a medium-term goal -- and why it works for $1,000 checks and $500,000 checks alike * The grief factor: why Paula says the first thing she thinks of when she hears the word inheritance is grief -- and why emotional cloudiness is the most underestimated risk in how people handle inherited money * Would you tell anyone? All three guests have different answers -- and the reasons matter * Give it while you're alive or leave it when you die: what the King Lear scenario has to do with your estate plan, and why Paula's answer depends entirely on her end-of-life care risk * Pay for college or leave an inheritance: Doc G picks college, OG picks experiences, and the reasoning behind each choice reveals two completely different theories of compounding * Equal inheritance versus needs-based inheritance: why Doc G has already had the conversation with his kids and why he's not apologizing for unequal parenting * What people at the end of life actually want to leave behind -- Doc G's hospice experience in one of the most memorable moments of the episode * The non-financial legacy each panelist is trying to leave -- and Doug's surprisingly moving answer about where joy actually comes from Why This Matters Now The wealth transfer is already happening. Whether you're on the giving end or the receiving end, the decisions made in the first days after money changes hands tend to be the ones people regret most. This episode is the conversation to have beforehand. From the Basement Paula Pant, OG, and Doc G work through the full inheritance question -- tactics, emotions, purpose, and legacy -- in one of the more wide-ranging Friday conversations this show has produced. Paula tries to win the trivia competition for the first time in longer than anyone cares to admit, immediately hoping she gets to thank the Academy. Doug closes with something nobody saw coming. Resources Mentioned * Earn and Invest podcast [https://EarnandInvest.com]-- Doc G (Jordan Grumet); upcoming episode with Dr. Jaspal Singh on the case for ambitious careers; wherever you listen to podcasts * Afford Anything podcas [https://AffordAnything.com]t -- Paula Pant; recent episode with Dr. Julia Garcia on five habits of hope; wherever you listen to podcasts * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * OG financial planning calendar -- stackingbenjamins.com/og [https://stackingbenjamins.com/og] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

🔥1Ayer1 h 3 min
episode Dana Anspach on the Four Phases of Retirement (and why your go-go years are the most important) SB1859 artwork

Dana Anspach on the Four Phases of Retirement (and why your go-go years are the most important) SB1859

Most retirement planning focuses on accumulation -- how to save enough. Dana Anspach of Sensible Money has spent her career on the other side of that equation: what happens when it's time to actually spend the money. In her new book Living Off Your Acorns, she breaks retirement into four distinct phases -- pre-go, go-go, slow-go, and no-go -- and argues that the decade before you retire may be the most important planning window of all. CFP and MarketWatch columnist Beth Pinsker also stops by to flag an HSA inheritance problem that almost nobody sees coming. What You'll Walk Away With * Dana's four-phase retirement framework -- pre-go, go-go, slow-go, and no-go -- and why the pre-go years (the 10 years before you stop working) are where the most valuable planning actually happens * Why most people wait until months before retirement to do serious planning -- and the specific things you can only fix if you start far enough out * The JP Morgan research showing 20% volatility in retirement spending year over year -- and why that makes flexibility a more important goal than optimization * Why Dana recommends recalibrating your retirement plan every year rather than building a 30-year model that's guaranteed to be wrong by year five * The income ladder approach: how having bonds and CDs maturing each year means you never have to sell investments at a loss to cover spending -- and why it also helps behaviorally * The fundedness concept: why the safe withdrawal rate was calculated assuming the Great Depression starts the day you retire, and why dynamic go-go spending gives you more room than the 4% rule suggests * The retirement red zone -- the five years before and the first year after leaving work -- and why Dana starts shifting portfolios toward conservatism 10 years out, not five * The long-term care reality check: why only about 15% of people incur a catastrophic care cost, why home equity is Dana's preferred reserve asset, and what insurance actually covers versus what people hope it covers * The HSA tax problem Beth Pinsker uncovered: why a non-spouse beneficiary who inherits your HSA takes the entire balance as ordinary income in a single year -- and why you should spend it before your Roth, not after * Why power of attorney paperwork at each individual financial institution matters more than most people realize -- and the specific authentication vulnerabilities that put retirees at fraud risk Why This Matters Now The decumulation phase requires a completely different strategy than accumulation -- and most people don't start thinking about it until they're months away from leaving work. Dana's case is simple: the earlier you start building flexibility into every decision, the more options you have when life doesn't go according to plan. And it almost never does. From the Basement Dana Anspach joins Joe and OG for a deep dive into Living Off Your Acorns, covering everything from her grandpa feeding squirrels in retirement to the very specific paperwork every financial institution needs before they'll honor your power of attorney. Beth Pinsker makes a headline segment appearance to explain the HSA inheritance tax problem her MarketWatch piece uncovered. Doug arrives with World Cup trivia. The community shares reactions to the 59% unplanned retirement episode, including Shep's 30-year story of gradually bumping his savings rate and a 37-year-old Stacker leaving the workforce in two weeks for baby number four. Resources Mentioned * Living Off Your Acorns: Your Guide to the Four Phases of Retirement by Dana Anspach -- available on Amazon; search "Living Off Your Acorns" or "Dana Anspach" * Sensible Money -- Dana Anspach's financial planning firm; sensiblemoney.com [https://sensiblemoney.com] * MarketWatch -- "I'm 66 and have $85,000 in my HSA. When should I start spending it?" [https://www.marketwatch.com/story/im-66-and-have-85-000-in-my-hsa-should-i-spend-it-all-by-a-certain-age-66939bd9] by Beth Pinsker * My Mother's Money by Beth Pinsker -- previous Stacking Benjamins appearance linked at stackingbenjamins.com * Stacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide] * Stacking Benjamins YouTube channel -- OG and Anna basics series; youtube.com/stackingbenjamins [https://youtube.com/stackingbenjamins] * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

24 de jun de 20261 h 8 min
episode The SpaceX IPO Wasn't for You (and that's actually fine) SB1858 artwork

The SpaceX IPO Wasn't for You (and that's actually fine) SB1858

SpaceX raised $75 billion in the largest IPO in history -- more than all 71 other IPOs combined so far this year. Shares jumped nearly 20% on day one. Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire. And if you're a regular investor asking whether you missed out, Joe and OG have a very specific answer: the life-changing money was already gone before the ticker symbol appeared. Here's how IPOs actually work, who really wins, and why your index fund is probably going to own SpaceX anyway. What You'll Walk Away With * Why the 20% first-day pop was largely an illusion for retail investors -- and what actually happened to the price between $135 and the moment you could buy it * The auction mechanics behind IPO pricing: why institutional investors with early access capture most of the return before the stock hits public markets * Why OG argues that even putting a million dollars into SpaceX at the IPO price and making 20% isn't life-changing -- and why that math actually makes the risk harder to justify, not easier * The sobering stat: 71 other IPOs happened this year before SpaceX, raising a combined $36 billion between them * How SpaceX could still end up in your portfolio without you doing anything -- and which indexes will add it faster than others under new fast-entry provisions * Why S&P 500 investors will have to wait: the three criteria any company must meet before joining, and why SpaceX's profitability timeline makes one of them complicated * The six new space-themed ETFs Wall Street created in the past three months -- and what that pattern always signals * OG on why the person who got rich on SpaceX put money in before you knew it existed, and why you wouldn't have done it either * Why being wrong on a small speculative position might be the most valuable financial education available -- and OG's Thanksgiving pan story * OG and Anna on college planning: how to calculate your actual funding gap, why FAFSA still matters even if you won't qualify for need-based aid, and the high school glide path that protects your savings from market timing risk in the final four years Why This Matters Now Every few years a story like SpaceX comes along and makes every investor feel like they missed the trade of a lifetime. The real question isn't whether you missed SpaceX -- it's whether you have a plan that captures the next one automatically, without you having to call your shot. From the Basement Joe and OG dig into the SpaceX IPO mechanics, the FOMO math, and why index fund investors may own it soon anyway without lifting a finger. OG and Anna deliver the penultimate episode of their financial basics series with a full college planning walkthrough including the gap calculator, FAFSA, and the glide path strategy for the four years before tuition is due. Doug arrives with Meryl Streep trivia. The show introduces Scout, a new AI assistant built specifically for the Stacking Benjamins guides that only answers from the guides themselves -- and tells you when it doesn't know. Congratulations go out to Stacker Melissa, who finished her last day of work. Resources Mentioned * Stacking Benjamins Guides -- college planning, tax, and workplace benefits guides with new Scout AI assistant; stackingbenjamins.com/guides [https://stackingbenjamins.com/guides] * Stacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide] * Stacking Benjamins Scorecard -- stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard [https://stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard] * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * The College Investor -- Robert Farrington; collaborator on the college planning guide; thecollegeinvestor.com [https://thecollegeinvestor.com] * Granola AI -- meeting notes tool; granola.ai/sb [https://granola.ai/sb] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

22 de jun de 20261 h 7 min
episode Financial Rules That Sound Smart Until You Actually Test Them (Money "Rules" We Had to Unlearn) SB1857 artwork

Financial Rules That Sound Smart Until You Actually Test Them (Money "Rules" We Had to Unlearn) SB1857

Everyone inherited financial wisdom from somewhere -- a parent who clipped coupons at three different grocery stores, a first job, a financial guru, or just the culture you grew up in. Some of those beliefs serve you. Some of them quietly hold you back. Chris Hill of Money Unplugged joins Joe, Paula Pant, and OG to share the money habits they've had to unlearn -- and then the whole group plays a round of In or Out on some of personal finance's most popular rules. What You'll Walk Away With * Why Paula's childhood coupon-clipping ritual wasn't really about frugality -- it was about an unstated belief that your time is worth nothing, and how that belief shapes everything * Chris Hill's 20-year belief that dividend-paying stocks are for old people -- and the specific Apple moment in 2012 that finally broke it * OG's admission that despite the math argument, he's never once seen someone actually execute the "invest the difference" 30-year vs. 15-year mortgage strategy in real life * Why "more money will fix this" is the belief most people never fully unlearn -- and OG's honest accounting of what he thought at $17,000, $170,000, and beyond * The In or Out verdict on five popular financial rules: everyone should own a home, pay off debt before investing, never carry a mortgage into retirement, you need a budget to build wealth, and whether financial independence is mostly behavior or math * Paula's anti-budget framework -- why it works when there's a wide enough gap between income and spending, and the one scenario where a real budget actually becomes necessary * Chris Hill on why surrounding yourself with people who aren't impressed by your success might be the most underrated risk management tool in your financial life * The Isaac Newton problem applied to successful people: why brilliance in one area creates a false confidence in all areas -- and why guardrails matter more the more successful you get * Why OG argues that if the leverage-your-mortgage math truly worked reliably, you'd be using the same logic in your Schwab account -- and why almost nobody does * What Melissa from Detroit did this week that every Stacker listening should know about Why This Matters Now The most expensive financial decisions are often the ones you've never questioned because someone you trusted taught them to you early. This episode is the permission slip to stress-test those beliefs. From the Basement Chris Hill joins Joe, Paula Pant, and OG to dig into the money habits and inherited beliefs they've each had to unlearn -- before the whole group debates whether five of personal finance's most popular rules actually survive contact with real life. Doug arrives with Lou Gehrig trivia and makes everyone do inflation math from 1939. Chris plays for Team Jesse Cramer. The gap between first and second place closes considerably. Resources Mentioned * Money Unplugged podcast [https://MoneyUnpluggedpodcast.com] -- Chris Hill; recent episodes featuring Joe Saul-Sehy and Paula Pant; available wherever you listen to podcasts * Afford Anything podcast [https://AffordAnything.com] -- Paula Pant; upcoming episode on how to think through business decisions with a Harvard professor and longtime practitioner * Surfshark VPN -- surfshark.com/stackingb [https://surfshark.com/stackingb]; code stackingbee for four extra months * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * OG financial planning calendar -- stackingbenjamins.com/og [https://stackingbenjamins.com/og] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

19 de jun de 202657 min
episode Isaac Newton Lost 80% of His Fortune in a Bubble -- What That Teaches Every Investor (SB1856) artwork

Isaac Newton Lost 80% of His Fortune in a Bubble -- What That Teaches Every Investor (SB1856)

Thanks to Surfshark for sponsoring the show. Go to https://surfshark.com/stackingb [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa0J5Rnl4S3plTmRjTjVaU3JYaF9YWGs2MlhCd3xBQ3Jtc0tsWG10TndBMDZCcnc5SWs5dldLNjNrRkh0U0NVWnRTMzZQZHNZR2VOZUUzcVBQblBmUHF0N2NYVUNnUHZ3NUI5OXRWSGF2ZkpCWHIwdE9kaG5welZfMkRmVEZ0NmNtc25qN0cxMWxCVXU0S0s1SlNMZw&q=https%3A%2F%2Fsurfshark.com%2Fstackingb&v=6JcSVhLgogI] or use code STACKINGB at checkout to get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN! Isaac Newton was one of the smartest humans who ever lived. He also bought into the South Sea Bubble, sold for a profit, watched it keep climbing, bought back in out of pure FOMO, and rode it all the way down to an 80% loss that haunted him until he died. Ben Carlson, co-host of the Animal Spirits podcast and one of the sharpest minds at Ritholtz Wealth Management, joins Joe and Anna to walk through centuries of market history -- bubbles, crashes, and the psychology that makes smart people do dumb things with money. Anna also helps a Stacker named Louie untangle his 401(k) sources and figure out whether it's finally time to bring in a professional. What You'll Walk Away With * Why Isaac Newton's South Sea Bubble loss still ranks among history's most instructive investing failures -- and why it had nothing to do with intelligence * Ben's framework for why risk means something completely different depending on where you are in your life cycle -- and why a market crash genuinely doesn't matter the same way to a 25-year-old and a 55-year-old * The wrong lesson an entire generation learned from 2008 -- and why everyone preparing for the last crisis missed the next seventeen years of bull market * Why Japan's three-decade stock market bubble is the best real-world case for diversification -- and why it doesn't translate as cleanly to the US as people assume * The behavioral reason complex investment strategies are easy to sell and nearly impossible to hold through a downturn -- while simple strategies survive the pain * Why Ben's firm discovered that the hardest financial transition isn't saving for retirement -- it's actually learning to spend the money once you get there * The Beanie Babies divorce court story that perfectly captures what every bubble looks like from the outside * Anna and OG's take on Louie's four-source 401(k): why it's simpler to manage than it looks, and why "move everything to Roth" is the wrong instinct for most DIY investors * The Roth conversion icing-on-the-cake strategy: how to use pre-tax and Roth buckets together to manage your tax bracket year by year in retirement * Why one financial pro has a surprisingly negative take on HSAs at death -- and the timing problem that makes spending one down in retirement genuinely tricky Why This Matters Now Every market cycle feels unprecedented while you're living through it. Understanding the actual constant -- human psychology, not headlines -- is the difference between riding out volatility and becoming a cautionary tale, smart as you might be. From the Basement Ben Carlson joins Joe and Anna to walk through centuries of bubbles, crashes, and the psychological wiring that makes both geniuses and ordinary investors do the same dumb things. Doug arrives with Statue of Liberty trivia tied to America's upcoming 250th anniversary. A Stacker calling himself Louie -- and getting Anna instead of OG, much to his surprise -- asks for help simplifying his 401(k) and figuring out his Roth conversion strategy, and gets a reminder that he's already doing better than he thinks. Resources Mentioned * Risk and Reward: How to Handle Market Volatility and Build Long-Term Wealth by Ben Carlson -- available wherever books are sold * Animal Spirits podcast -- Ben Carlson and Michael Batnick; available wherever you listen to podcasts * Ritholtz Wealth Management -- referenced for prior guests Barry Ritholtz, Josh Brown, and Nick Maggiulli * Where Are the Customers' Yachts? by Fred Schwed -- referenced for the famous quote on the emotional experience of losing money * Paul Merriman's research on asset allocation -- paulmerriman.com [http://paulmerriman.com] * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault [https://stackingbenjamins.com/vault] * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * Stacking Benjamins voicemail line -- stackingbenjamins.com/yelldownstairs [https://stackingbenjamins.com/yelldownstairs] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

17 de jun de 20261 h 0 min