The Stacking Benjamins Show
Robinhood just launched agentic trading -- an AI that can execute stock trades and purchases on your behalf using criteria you set in advance. There's also a new agentic credit card that can shop for you automatically. Joe and Anna dig into why handing execution over to a machine is fundamentally different from using AI as a thinking partner -- and why the people most excited about AI agents for their money are often the same people who would never trust a human advisor with it. What You'll Walk Away With * Why the psychology of trusting AI with money while distrusting human advisors doesn't hold up -- and what's actually driving it * The difference between using AI to expand your thinking and using it to execute decisions -- and why only one of those is dangerous * How AI agents eliminate the friction that protects you from your own worst financial impulses -- and why that's exactly how consumer debt gets worse * Joe's four-question framework for knowing when an AI agent is actually helping versus when it's just automating overspending * Why Doug's experience building computer systems made him more skeptical of AI agents, not less -- and what changed * The debt sequencer framework from OG and Anna: how to rank every debt by interest rate, add an honest emotional layer, and decide where the next dollar actually goes * Why the debt snowball versus avalanche debate has a cleaner answer than most people think -- and when the math genuinely doesn't matter * The one thing that happens to almost every client's bonus money if they don't have a pre-decided allocation plan -- and how to fix it before the money arrives * Why paying off a 3% mortgage might be the right call even when the spreadsheet says it isn't -- and the taxes-and-insurance math that makes the house payment conversation more complicated than it looks * Why the Stacking Benjamins guides now have an AI component that only draws from the guide itself -- and why it tells you when it doesn't know something Why This Matters Now Every time a company makes it easier to spend or trade without thinking, it's not because they want you to make better decisions. Understanding where AI genuinely helps -- thinking, organizing, comparing -- versus where it hurts -- executing, spending, trading -- is one of the most important financial literacy questions of the next decade. From the Basement Joe and Anna dig into Robinhood's new agentic trading and credit card features and work out where the line between useful and dangerous actually sits. OG and Anna follow with the debt sequencer -- a framework for ranking every debt you have and deciding where the next dollar goes, with room for both math and emotion. Doug arrives with kite-flying trivia that connects to one of the most famous names in American history. Anna is back without OG, which Doug predicts will produce the highest ratings in show history. Resources Mentioned * CNBC -- "Your AI agent can now trade for you on Robinhood and buy stuff with your credit card, too"; linked at stackingbenjamins.com * The College Investor with Robert Farrington -- referenced for prior deep dive on AI financial advice accuracy * Stacking Benjamins Guides -- college planning, tax planning, and HR benefits guides with new AI component; stackingbenjamins.com/guides * Stacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- season one and season two workbooks free at stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide * Stacking Benjamins Scorecard -- stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 * Field Kit Finance -- fieldkitfinance.com * Stacking Benjamins BAD Groups -- stackingbenjamins.com/bad * Stacking Benjamins Community -- 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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