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Purpose Driven Finances

Podcast door Purpose Driven Finances

Engels

Business

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Over Purpose Driven Finances

Welcome to Purpose Driven Finances — the podcast that helps you use your money as a tool to fulfill the plan and purpose for your life. Hosted by Allan Malina, founder of Servus Capital Management, each episode brings you practical strategies, insightful conversations, and timely commentary on personal finance and investing. We guide you toward clarity and confidence, whether you’re planning for retirement, navigating life transitions, or simply looking to make wiser financial decisions. We cover a wide range of topics—from budgeting, debt management, and investment strategies to retirement planning and legacy planning—plus commentary on current economic trends to keep you informed. Because money isn’t the goal—living with purpose is. Learn more at www.servuscm.com Thanks for listening, and welcome to Purpose Driven Finances.

Alle afleveringen

57 afleveringen

aflevering The Estate Planning Standoff: Why She Worries and Why He Waits artwork

The Estate Planning Standoff: Why She Worries and Why He Waits

Aired May 9th, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS • Estate planning is ultimately about stewardship, clarity, and reducing chaos for the people you love. • Men and women often approach estate planning differently, but both are usually asking the same question: “Will my family be okay?” • One of the biggest hidden risks is the household “knowledge gap,” where only one spouse knows the accounts, passwords, advisors, or financial structure. • Delaying estate planning does not eliminate the problem — it simply transfers the burden to grieving family members later. • A coordinated estate plan helps protect spouses, children, assets, and decision-making during difficult moments. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina discusses why so many families avoid estate planning conversations until a crisis forces action. The show begins with several common portfolio questions, including diversification, structure, and long-term positioning. Allan explains that many portfolio conversations eventually become estate planning conversations because eventually, stewardship transitions to someone else. The episode then explores the emotional differences in how men and women often view estate planning. Women frequently focus on continuity, reducing confusion, and making sure the family will be okay. Men often focus on protection, providing, preserving what they built, and making sure they fulfilled their responsibilities. Allan reframes estate planning away from fear and toward stewardship. Estate planning is not really about preparing to die — it is about making life easier for the people you love. The discussion also addresses why families procrastinate. Some avoid uncomfortable conversations. Others assume there is more time. Many households unintentionally create a dangerous “knowledge gap” where one spouse controls the passwords, accounts, advisors, and financial relationships while the other spouse is left in the dark during a future emergency. The episode closes with a practical challenge for couples: “If I wasn’t here tomorrow… would you know where the red folder is?” FAQS Why do couples often delay estate planning? Many families delay estate planning because the conversation feels uncomfortable or emotionally heavy. Others assume there is more time. Unfortunately, delay often creates confusion, conflict, and unnecessary stress later for surviving family members. What is the “knowledge gap” in estate planning? The knowledge gap occurs when one spouse manages the financial accounts, passwords, advisors, and estate documents while the other spouse has little visibility. If something happens unexpectedly, the surviving spouse may struggle to access important information during an already difficult time. Why is estate planning more than just legal documents? Estate planning is not simply about wills or trusts. It is about creating structure, clarity, communication, and coordination so your family can navigate difficult moments with less chaos and uncertainty. How does estate planning connect to investment management? Your investment portfolio may eventually become part of your family’s transition process. Without proper beneficiary coordination, titling, and estate structure, even well-managed assets can create unnecessary complications for heirs. What is the first estate planning step families should take? Start the conversation. Many families avoid discussing important financial and estate matters entirely. A simple conversation about accounts, documents, and responsibilities can significantly reduce future stress. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in retirement planning, investment management, and purpose-driven financial guidance for families, retirees, and business owners throughout Central Virginia. Allan is also the host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 FM.

20 mei 2026 - 29 min
aflevering Your Retirement Plan: How to maximize your HSA! artwork

Your Retirement Plan: How to maximize your HSA!

Air Date: May 2, 2026 | WLNI 105.9 FM KEY TAKEAWAYS The Triple Tax Advantage The Health Savings Account remains one of the most unique financial tools available: contributions may be tax-deductible, growth compounds tax-free, and qualified medical withdrawals remain tax-free. The “Stealth IRA” Strategy Most people use an HSA like a medical checking account. Disciplined investors often evaluate it differently — as a long-term retirement asset designed to help bridge future healthcare costs, Medicare premiums, and retirement income gaps. The Shoebox Strategy Current regulations allow qualified medical expenses to be reimbursed years later if proper records are maintained. This creates the potential for decades of tax-free compounding before future reimbursement. Most people treat their Health Savings Account like a medical debit card. That decision may be costing them one of the most powerful long-term planning tools available in the tax code. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina explains why disciplined retirement planning requires looking past the “market fog” and focusing instead on the tools we can control. The program begins with listener questions surrounding recession concerns, interest rates, geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, Roth IRA conversions, portfolio positioning, and whether investors should move retirement accounts to cash during periods of uncertainty. Rather than reacting emotionally to headlines, Allan discusses why understanding your “Gap Ratio” — the distance between your Social Security income and the income your portfolio must generate to sustain your lifestyle — often provides a more reliable compass than short-term market predictions. The featured discussion centers on Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and why they may be one of the most underutilized retirement planning tools available today. Allan reviews the 2026 HSA contribution limits, catch-up provisions, and the unique “triple tax advantage” structure that separates HSAs from virtually every other financial account. The episode also covers recent legislative changes that expanded HSA eligibility for Bronze and Catastrophic healthcare plans while adding Direct Primary Care (DPC) memberships as qualified medical expenses — increasing access for many cost-conscious families throughout Lynchburg, Forest, and Central Virginia. Rather than viewing the HSA as a short-term reimbursement account, Allan explains the “Stealth IRA” strategy: once a reasonable deductible reserve is established, excess balances may be intentionally invested rather than left idle in low-yield cash accounts. For many disciplined savers, the goal shifts from spending to stewarding. The episode also introduces the “Shoebox Strategy,” where medical expenses are paid out-of-pocket while receipts are digitally preserved for future reimbursement years — or even decades — later. Because there is currently no expiration date on qualified reimbursements, HSA assets may continue compounding tax-free while creating future retirement flexibility. Additional discussion includes: ·        Using HSAs as a “Medicare Premium Bridge” after age 65 ·        The Medicare enrollment timing conflict ·        The differences between HSAs and FSAs ·        Common mistakes that quietly reduce long-term flexibility ·        Why healthcare planning should be integrated into a broader retirement income strategy Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management, a fee-only Registered Investment Advisor serving Lynchburg, Forest, and Central Virginia. As host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 FM.

14 mei 2026 - 29 min
aflevering Your Retirement Plan: Traditional & Roth IRA Coordination artwork

Your Retirement Plan: Traditional & Roth IRA Coordination

Air Date: April 25, 2026 Most people choose a Traditional IRA or Roth IRA based on a tax deduction, a headline, or a quick internet search. But retirement planning is not about collecting accounts. It is about coordination. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina explains how Traditional and Roth IRAs should function together inside a disciplined retirement system focused on tax efficiency, retirement flexibility, and long-term income coordination. The episode explores: * Roth contribution vs. Roth conversion — and why they are completely different decisions * Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) concentration risk * Survivor tax bracket compression for spouses * Social Security and Medicare coordination * Retirement income sequencing * Investment positioning across taxable, tax-deferred, and tax-free accounts * Why static retirement planning often creates expensive future limitations The decision you made at 35 may not serve you at 65. Many investors spend decades accumulating retirement accounts without coordinating how taxes, withdrawals, Medicare premiums, Social Security, and future Required Minimum Distributions interact later in life. This episode introduces three levels of retirement planning: Accumulation Building retirement savings with limited tax coordination. Coordination Using Traditional and Roth structures together to improve tax flexibility and retirement income options. Discipline Creating a fully integrated retirement income architecture where Roth conversions, tax planning, investment positioning, and withdrawal sequencing work together as a system. The episode also discusses: * Why large pre-tax balances can quietly create future tax concentration risk * Why Roth conversions require strategic analysis rather than emotional reactions to markets * Why many retirees lose flexibility after Required Minimum Distributions begin * How inherited Roth IRAs differ from inherited pre-tax retirement accounts * Why retirement positioning should adapt as markets and economic conditions change FAQs Is a Roth IRA always better than a Traditional IRA? No. A Roth IRA is a tool, not a universal answer. The right structure depends on your tax bracket, retirement timeline, future income expectations, and Required Minimum Distribution exposure. What is the difference between a Roth contribution and a Roth conversion? A Roth contribution is an annual funding decision. A Roth conversion moves pre-tax retirement assets into a Roth structure, typically creating taxes today in exchange for future tax-free growth and withdrawals. Why do Required Minimum Distributions matter? Required Minimum Distributions can create taxable income later in retirement whether you need the income or not. Large pre-tax balances may eventually increase Medicare premiums, Social Security taxation, and overall retirement tax exposure. Should retirement investment positioning change over time? Yes. Markets, economic conditions, volatility, and retirement needs change over time. Static retirement positioning often creates limitations when conditions shift. Retirement planning should function as architecture — not a random collection of accounts opened over decades. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management. He specializes in helping small business owners, retirees, and professionals across Central Virginia move from financial uncertainty to disciplined, purpose-driven financial systems. As the host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 (lynchburg, VA), Allan translates complex economic conditions into clear, actionable strategies for long-term stewardship.

13 mei 2026 - 29 min
aflevering Your Retirement Plan: Small Business Structures—SEP, SIMPLE, and the Solo 401(k) artwork

Your Retirement Plan: Small Business Structures—SEP, SIMPLE, and the Solo 401(k)

Air Date: April 18, 2026 🔑 KEY TAKEAWAYS Participation Is Not Protection With markets near all-time highs and inflation pressure persisting, simply being invested is not a strategy—positioning is. Structure Locks In Flexibility The retirement plan you choose determines your contribution limits, tax options, and adaptability for years to come. Convenience Creates Long-Term Cost Most business owners choose what’s easiest. That decision often limits growth, tax efficiency, and flexibility later. Solo 401(k) = Control For high-income solo earners, the Solo 401(k) offers the highest contribution potential and the most flexibility across tax strategy and long-term planning. SEP and SIMPLE = Simplicity, Not Optimization These structures can work—but they often introduce constraints that become costly as income or team size grows. 🧭 EPISODE OVERVIEW Small business owners don’t just earn income—they design their financial system. And most get one critical decision wrong: They choose a retirement plan based on convenience. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, we reframe that decision for what it actually is: A structural choice that determines what’s possible in your financial future. We begin with the current environment. Markets are pushing all-time highs, but underlying signals—rising oil, persistent inflation, and slowing growth—tell a different story. This is not a “set-it-and-forget-it” environment. It’s one that requires discipline, structure, and positioning aligned with changing conditions. From there, we break down the three primary retirement plan structures for small business owners: * SEP IRA — simple to set up, but limited in flexibility and tax coordination * SIMPLE IRA — structured for small teams, but constrained by lower limits and mandatory contributions * Solo 401(k) — the most flexible and powerful option for high-income solo earners But the real focus isn’t the plans themselves. It’s how each one impacts: • Contribution capacity • Tax strategy • Long-term adaptability Because your business is a tool. And your retirement plan should be designed with the same level of precision. ❓ FAQ SECTION What is the best retirement plan for a one-person business? For most high-income solo earners, the Solo 401(k) offers the highest level of control. It allows both employee and employer contributions, provides a Roth option, and enables more advanced tax coordination. When does a SEP IRA become a problem? A SEP works well early, but becomes restrictive as income rises or employees are added. Required equal contributions can significantly increase business overhead. Who should use a SIMPLE IRA? SIMPLE IRAs are best for small teams that need structure without the complexity of a 401(k). The trade-off is lower contribution limits and less flexibility. When is a Solo 401(k) NOT appropriate? If you have full-time employees (outside of a spouse) or inconsistent income, a Solo 401(k) may not be the right structure. The added complexity must be justified by the benefit. Why does plan structure matter so much? Because structure determines what decisions are available later. Contribution limits, tax treatment, and flexibility are all dictated by the plan—not your intentions. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management. He specializes in helping small business owners, retirees, and professionals across Central Virginia move from financial uncertainty to disciplined, purpose-driven financial systems. As the host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 (Lynchburg, VA) and the Purpose Driven Podcast, Allan translates complex economic conditions into clear, actionable strategies for long-term stewardship.

7 mei 2026 - 29 min
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Your Retirement Plan: Rollover and Roth Conversion Guidance

Air Date: April 11, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS A Rollover Is a Structural Decision—Not a Form. Where your money sits determines how it can be positioned, managed, and protected. This is architecture, not administration. The Cost vs. Capability Wedge Matters More Than Fees Alone. Costs may rise after a rollover—but the real question is whether you gain better positioning, better decisions, and better long-term outcomes. Roth Conversions Require Coordination—Not Guesswork. Done correctly, they reshape your tax future. Done in isolation, they create permanent tax drag. Static Plans Fail in Dynamic Markets. Markets change. Signals shift. Your retirement plan should respond—not remain frozen in a prior environment. Most people approach a rollover with one narrow question: “Where should I move this money?” That question misses the point. At Servus Capital Management, a rollover is not a transaction—it’s a structural decision inside a larger system connecting investment positioning, tax strategy, and long-term income. We begin with a simple analogy: golf. No experienced golfer plays the same shot in every condition. Wind, terrain, and pressure all dictate the decision. Investing is no different. Markets send signals—and ignoring them leads to poor outcomes. Recent signals from our disciplined process, including the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM), pointed clearly: * Favor energy exposure * Reduce bond exposure * Exit gold as interest rates shifted These are not opinions. They are responses to changing conditions. And that creates the real problem for most retirement plans: They can’t respond. Old employer plans are often static by design—limited menus, limited flexibility, no positioning framework. So the rollover decision becomes a question of capability: * Will you gain better guidance—or just a different account? * Will your investments improve—or just change? * Will your structure evolve—or stay static in a new wrapper? Because here’s the truth most people miss: A rollover often increases cost. That’s not the risk. The risk is paying more—and staying the same. We also walk through what can be lost if the move is rushed: * Access to loans * Institutional share classes * Certain legal protections under ERISA And then we connect the most misunderstood piece: Roth conversions. A Roth conversion is not a tactic. It’s a multi-year tax strategy. When coordinated properly, it can reshape your retirement income and reduce long-term tax exposure. When done without a system, it creates unnecessary liability. This episode is not about convincing you to roll over your plan. It’s about helping you answer one question: Is your current structure actually built for what comes next? FAQ Should I roll over my 401(k) or leave it where it is? It depends on structural improvement. If a rollover enhances positioning, tax coordination, and disciplined guidance, it may make sense. If it simply changes account location without improving decisions, it likely does not. Will my fees increase after a rollover? In many cases, yes. Employer plans often benefit from institutional pricing. The real decision is whether increased cost leads to better outcomes. What are the tax implications of a rollover? A direct rollover is typically not taxable. However, Roth conversions—often paired with rollovers—create taxable income and must be coordinated. When does a Roth conversion make sense? Typically during lower-income years or before Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), but only within a broader strategy. Can I access my money after a rollover? Yes—but rules change depending on account type, age, and structure. Access should be part of the decision. Allan Malina is the founder and president of Servus Capital Management, a fee-only fiduciary firm serving Lynchburg, Forest, and Central Virginia. Through disciplined frameworks like Dynamic Asset Allocation (DAA) and QPM, he helps individuals move from static portfolios to purposeful financial systems.

6 mei 2026 - 29 min
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