The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett

Money Expert: Buying A House Is A Mistake! Becoming Rich is Simple But You Won’t Do It!

2d ago2:14:0820,231 words
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Investing has been solved, but your brain is keeping you poor. Money Expert Ben Felix explains why most people make terrible financial decisions! Ben Felix is a Portfolio Manager and Chief Investment...

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There is a reason why GoFantMe is from millions and who are supported and who are supported by exciting samularin. GoFantMe is a very important person. And who are supported by people? And who are supported by people? Ranting versus owning a home is the biggest financial decision most people make in their life.

So we're going to talk about all of the unrecoverable costs of owning a home, including property taxes.

And it's cost. Which is the one that I think people underestimate the most. And then there's also emergency costs. I've got a whole stack of them as well as a 5% rule to figure out. If renting is a better financial decision, we'll go through that.

What else have we got? So this is something that people just don't think enough about.

Which is the top 10 financial mistakes that I think people make.

For example, tax planning opportunities. Like there are simple things that people can do to minimize the amount of tax to paying. And we'll go through those. Ben Felix has found manages the money of more than 3,000 people. Ranging from people with huge amounts of money and not so much money.

His whole thesis is giving people money advice that is based on academic research. Our brains are psychology absolutely gets in the way of making good long-term financial decision. And today we're going to sponsor the big money questions like what should I invest in? A lot of people believe they need to have a lot of background information before they can start investing. But I would argue that people who know just a little bit, they will be better long-term investors.

And there's a ton of evidence supporting that this little outperform most other investment strategies. And also, what is the mentality? The mindset of people that end up making money over the long-term. Psychology is important for determining what your financial goals are. So this is a framework that we developed to elicit higher quality goals.

What do you say to young people better thinking about their financial strategy? A lot of young people feel a lot of pressure to save. But there is research suggesting that it's probably so much more for young people to say, which we'll talk more about later. And then in a world of AI where everything is changing so quickly.

What should I be doing with my money right now? Ben Felix has the answer. Guys, I've got a favor to ask before this episode begins. The algorithm, if you follow a show, deliver you. The best episodes from that show very prominently in your feed.

So when we have our best episodes on this show, the most shared episodes, the most rated episodes, I would love you to know. And the simple way for you to know that is to hit that follow button. But also, it's the simple, easy, free thing that you can do to help us make this show better. And I would be hugely grateful if you could take a minute on the app you're listening to this one right now.

And hit that follow button. Thank you so, so, so, so much. [Music] Ben, there are lots of people out in the world talking about personal finance and investing in all these adjacent subjects. What is the approach you take that you think is different to lots of the other sort of finance experts that are on YouTube that are giving people advice?

What I think in the approach that I've always tried to take is what can we take from academic literature.

Very smart people who spent a lot of time thinking about these things. What can we take from them and apply to making good financial decisions for a typical person? And one of the key questions that you've sought to answer for the audiences that you have is renting versus owning a home. So that's always been big. Ask that allocation is another big one. How much should you invest of your long-term money that you can afford to take some risk with?

Another important question people wonder about is why should I not do this other investment strategy that seems very attractive?

And who will we appealing to with this conversation is it just people that have lots of money? Or is it, no, I think these questions need to be answered. I mean, the renting versus owning a home one is applicable to pretty much everyone because that is the biggest financial decision most households will make in their lives. Regardless of what their network is, but investing or what should you do with your long-term investments? That's applicable to anybody.

Anybody that's going to be saving for their future, whether they have ten thousand dollars or ten million dollars, the same principles apply. And how much of this game of investing making money is comes back to psychology? So I like to say investing is itself. We're going to use index funds. That's it. The hard part is actually doing that because our brains are psychology absolutely gets in the way of making good long-term financial decisions.

Where our brains are designed for survival. They're not designed for thinking about long-term abstract concepts like taking your money today, investing in the stock market, ignoring all the stuff that happens in between and then having money left over later to fund your retirement.

That's so interesting, because a lot of the time people talk about tactics an...

And is that academic research about the best sort of mental approach to take towards money and finance investing?

So one of the best approaches and it's a little bit counterintuitive is to not look at your investments. There is an academic paper showing that the more people look at their investments, the less risk they take and the lower returns they earn. Because when you look at your investments every day, the stock market goes up and down. We know that. If you're looking every day at your portfolio and it's down 5% up, 6% going up and down all the time, that can be very stressful. And it makes it seem like the stock market is very risky.

And so people will invest less in the stock market. In reality, for long-term investors who can invest in stocks, buy and hold for a very long period of time, that they're a lot safer than people think.

So we've got some props here for some demonstrations we're going to do. Could you just give explains me the high level of what these things are on the table and the different frameworks we're going to go through?

Sure. So we have a bunch of things here. This is one of my favorites that I bring up in a lot of my videos. So this is the promo model, which comes from positive psychology. Psychology is important for investing well, but it's also important for figuring out what your long-term investing strategy should be. We'll go through that. What else have we got here?

This is the top 10 financial mistakes that I think people make.

This is the three steps for investing your first $10,000.

Okay. And we've got $10,000 there so you're going to talk me through how we do that as well. We're going to talk about all of the unrecoverable costs. Got a whole stack of them. They would occur when you own a hole.

Okay. And I guess this begs the question, who is Ben Felix? What is your background? What is the education the reference points, the experiences that you're drawing upon to give us this information today?

Probably where it starts for being relevant is I did a degree in mechanical engineering at Northeast University. And I say that's relevant because when I came into finance, I wanted to approach it like an engineer. And a lot of finance, a lot of financial services of investing in wealth management is not approached like an engineer. It's approached like I feel almost bad saying this, but it's approached like a car dealership selling product. So I was disappointed in that and had to find my own way.

They haven't got my best interest at heart. In a lot of cases, I don't think so. I started spending a lot of time reading through academic literature, so that I could be very confident and comfortable at the advice that I was giving to people was good. I call it advice. And where is the best place to start? Is it in the psychology? Is it one of these frameworks? Is it somewhere else? Is there a background understanding of the economy? One needs to get going?

That is a great question. I don't think so. And I think that's where a lot of people get stuck, where they believe they need to have a lot of background information before they can start investing. And they may do research on specific industries. They may look at like the energy sectors that can build out an energy portfolio as one example. But investing the way that I would say is sensible for most people, which is just using low cost index funds, capturing market returns. The market returns have been there and they're going to continue to be there.

They should continue to be there in the long run. Doing that doesn't require a lot of background knowledge. I would argue that people who know just a little bit, just enough. They just know that index funds are sensible, and they have enough conviction they can stick with that. They will be better long-term investors than someone who knows enough to hurt themselves.

What would you say to young people that are thinking about their financial strategy? Would you say that someone in their early 20s, 21 years old, should adopt a completely different approach to money based on what you've just shown me versus someone that's 51 years old? It's going to be different for sure. I think this is a tricky subject, but a lot of young people feel a lot of pressure to save. And that might be saving for their retirement. It might be saving to buy a home. But they feel a lot of pressure from their parents and just from society in general that they need to be saving money.

That if they're not saving money, they're being irresponsible. But again, if we come back to academic research, there is research suggesting that it's probably so optimal for young people to save.

General point is that you should save more when you have a higher income and save less when you have a lower income.

And what that ends up meaning is that young people may not need to save, or may not need to save as much as they feel pressured to save. The reason this topic is tricky is that well what I just said is true, it can cause bad habits. Where if people spend all of their income and then don't have that shift towards saving at some point, then they'll end up in difficult position later on in life. Someone who's 50, it's going to depend on their situation.

If they're the person who I just mentioned who never saved, they're in a tough position and they are going to need to save a lot in order to have some wealth later on in life.

If they've already saved and they have wealth, then they can focus more on so...

And you've got the 10 money mistakes people make here.

Can you run me through those ones and just let me know if any of them is particularly pertinent or interesting that we should dive deeper into.

So this one's controversial. It's not earning enough money. A lot of people feel like they don't have an option. They're not earning enough money because that's just the way things are and there's nothing they can do about it. I don't think that's necessarily true investing in your human capital and that can be formal education, it can be gaining skills, it can be becoming an entrepreneur.

Those are all ways to make your own self a more valuable asset to increase the value of your human capital and allow you to earn more money. So that's a big one.

I think people who get stuck in the in the feeling where the thought that they do not have the ability to increase their income and that this is just the way things are.

I think that can be very problematic. I've always thought of it across these sort of five buckets. The first two buckets that we attempt to fill when we're starting our careers are knowledge and then our skills and kind of like when knowledge is applied it becomes a skill.

And these two first buckets is imperative because they can almost never be unfilled.

Whereas the other three buckets, which is your resources, your network and your reputation, you can have career fluctuations in earthquakes that cause those buckets to unfill. So as like you're saying earlier on about young people, one of the things I've always thought is like when you're young just like optimised for filling your knowledge and skills as much as you possibly can. And actually I guess the level of nuance there is acquiring a rare but complimentary stack of knowledge and skills that the market values.

And I think over the long term, you know, this doesn't apply to everybody because things happen in life and bad things can happen.

But ever the long term, I think life tends to land you pretty much in and around the value of and the rarity and the complementarity of those knowledge and skills as it relates to the markets demands.

That's absolutely true. There's data on this too where we know that there is a mechanical relationship, at least historically. We can talk about the future, but historically there has been a mechanical relationship between formal education or trade education and life tyrannics. And we also know that certain degree types like engineering, finance, business, some of their sciences have higher lifetime earnings than other degrees. So I think you're absolutely right. There are and the part part is we don't know what exactly those degrees and skills that are going to be the highest paying the future are going to be.

10 years ago we might have said software developers today we might not. One year is an example so you did engineering and then you did finance and now you've added this other string to a bow which is you know how to make content on YouTube and that makes you as a finance expert professional in CIO so extremely rare. It almost makes you like one of 100 on planet earth maybe. This is what I mean by rare and complimentary skills. You could have just learnt more finance and I don't think that would have moved you up this sort of earning latter but because you added this really rare skill of being able to make content to the your other skill stack.

I'm guessing it made you money. It did it has and I continue to be paid well and you know it was. Please don't but if you were to go back and watch my old videos which are still up I'm so rigid and nervous and I what I was and it took probably years of recording and we do a podcast too so just being in front of the camera for me to feel pretty good. I mean I probably took me three years to smile on camera really. So yes that was a skill that I acquired through just practice I guess.

So I say this because I really want people to think about how rare their skills stack is it's not something we're taught and then also one of the things I know is to work in a biotech company for a little while while I was in between things and we were looking for a writer a biotech writer. Now the other writers that we hired are other companies might have been paid for 50,000 dollars whatever it is. For a biotech writer we would pay them a quarter of a million and all the only difference is the biotech writer had like some base they didn't have to go to medical school.

They just needed experience in writing about biotech and it five X to their learning so this other point is you might have a skill stack but are you selling them on the right market. And even me first part of my career was marketing. I was helping Uber and Fisi drinks company and dress seller company sell their dresses. As I just said the second little stop I took in my career was helping biotech companies with marketing that are about to IPO.

My first contract reform of those companies was worth eight million six months work and it was a real pivotal moment in my career where I go.

It's not just the skills you have it's like where you the market industry where you sell those skills can wildly change your as you say on that card your earning potential. Yeah and as you say that this is something that you don't have full control over because you could do all of those things and not find work as a biotech writer.

Putting yourself in that position I think does increase the odds.

What's the second one you've got that?

The second one is not saving enough. The traction is a little bit young people maybe don't need to save but at some point you do have to start saving and the tricky thing about saving is that wealth compounds over time. And if you're not saving enough you're missing out on compounding and it gets a lot harder to catch up with the amount of savings you what otherwise had if you started earlier. So that's a big one and some people will wake up when they're 50 55 maybe even 60 and realize they haven't saved enough but by that time.

There's nothing that you can do about it or very little that you can do about it. There's a lot of parallels with health here where if you eat poorly and don't exercise you can wake up when you're 55 and you can have heart disease that is very difficult to reverse and it's the same effect it's compounding over time.

The health and wealth of a lot of parallels anyway. So not saving enough can be very problematic because it is so hard to reverse the effects of it once you've realized it's a problem.

Interesting. I read a book called The Slight Edge by I think it's Jeff Olson when I was 18. She talks exactly about that. I think it uses one of the analogies that uses is like brushing your teeth. Don't brush them today. It's fine. Don't brush them every day this week. You're fine. Don't brush them every day this month. You're fine. But in five years you're fucked. That's right. In five years time you can't like stop brushing them then. You're an identical to having them ripped out. And I guess finance is the same in this regard.

Exactly. Yeah. Number three is not setting financial goals again.

That's what we talked a little bit about this earlier as well.

If people don't set goals, they will do things like think they need to earn more money because because because that's what you do.

Or they'll think they need to buy a house because that's what you're supposed to do. But they won't step back and reflect on what are the components of a good life for them. What do they want their life to look like? And what would they need to do to achieve that? And if you don't go through that exercise, you can end up spending years or dollars achieving things that don't really matter to you. And again, because of compounding by the time you realize those things didn't matter, that's time and money that you can't get back.

So how do I go about setting good financial goals? What is the process that's that? So this is the process that we created is three steps. List your goals. Okay. So what does that look like? So you're going to sit down with a piece of paper or we built an app for this that we use with clients. You just list out your goals. So I could say, I want to be a dad. You know, I want to buy Ferrari. We want to go and holiday to Cancun. Yep. I want to be able to retire at 50. There's kinds of goals. Yep. Now step two. So you've got your list of goals. You're going to double the list.

Double it. Yep. Why? So you came up with, I think four goals is now you're going to write down equals because this forces you to think harder about what other, what other goals might be important to you.

And that research does show that this elicits more goals that people later identify as being at least as meaningful as the initial goals that they listed. And then the last thing, we're going to come back to the Perman model. So the Perman model is a five factor model of human flourishing. If you have these components contributing to your life, there's a very good chance that you'll live a good satisfying life. I think you've lived through this experience where you've seen that wealth does not lead to a good life.

And so what does, well, there's just a whole bunch of really good research on this and it does suggest that positive emotion is one big piece of it. What does that mean? It's literally enjoying what you're doing and feeling good throughout the day engagement. You could probably argue that we're getting some of that right now, or you're doing something that you enjoy doing that's maybe a little bit challenging, but it's at your skill level. It's the idea of getting into flow. I know I get that when I do podcast interviews, when I do research when I'm sitting down and writing a video scripts.

Relationships is having good strong relationships with people who are close to your life and that can be friends. It can be family members. It can be colleagues. Meaning is being part of something that is bigger than yourself. That can be a lot of different things for some people. It's religion for some people. It's community for some people. It's their own business. And accomplishment is achieving hard things, setting goals and achieving them.

You're going to look at the items of the paramodel. You're going to look at those categories and think about what other goals you may have that fit into those categories. That's called a categorical props. And again, there's evidence behind that, helping people elicit more meaningful goals. It's one of the things I say is by a Ferrari. Again, these aren't my goals. I didn't care about Ferrari, but in case they want to sponsor the podcast, then I care about Ferrari. But say the Ferrari thing, do I have to find where it sits with in terms of positive emotion engagement relationships, meaning accomplishment?

It would be wise too. And this is why I think this framework is so important because you might realize that a Ferrari does not contribute to any of these things.

It might go. Maybe you take it to the track and you spend hours racing it and that would be engagement. Maybe you have a bunch of buddies who have Ferrari and you want to be part of that friend group. So that's relationships.

Yeah, okay.

Yeah, well, it's that he don't actually like it. Yeah.

And then accomplishment. I mean, it's not really in a context. If it was a goal that you've had since your five years old, maybe that you could call that accomplishment, maybe. Okay, so I fit my, my financial goals, my life goals into the paramodel as a way to understand what my financial goal should be. Yeah. Okay. How many people in the general public do you think have actually thought about what a good life them looks like? Not it not enough. Not many. I think everyone's people are so busy with her data day to day lives.

And I know this is true for me and my family too. It's really, really hard to step back and have this kind of thoughtful discussion about what you actually want your life to look like. Because I was just thinking about that. I think thinking, I don't even know if I've got really clearly defined life goals for myself. I think most of us just kind of act on how we feel. Yeah. And that can somewhat drift us towards the short term. Like if I just, yeah, what's going to make me feel good today and do that every day.

I don't know. Some might argue that you have to be a bit more long-term thinking.

They can help, right? Because it can help you from making decisions that you might regret in the future.

Yeah. Because when I look at this polymer model, there's some things in here that have optimized for which have sacrificed the other things. That's it. Yeah. Like I might have overindexed on this like achieving things, but I've caused me some relationships. So what's the fourth mistake people make? Yeah. So this has related to what we were just talking about, but it's it's overspending on the wrong things. Okay.

When you think about what is a good life for you and you realize that you're spending on things that are not contributing to that, which is resulting in you not being able to save toward things that would contribute to what you want your life to look like. That's probably not a great position to find yourself in. So I could be spending $12 on a nice coffee every morning and not enjoying it. Because you could get positive emotion out of that.

But you're like rushing to work, checking down the $12 coffee every day. That's probably not contributing to a good life. Number five might be one of the bigger ones, which is not taking investment risks.

And that's really the stock market has delivered these incredible long-term returns.

And on expectation, it should continue delivering strong returns for investors. Not participating that in that is a huge mistake. And it's a mistake that many, many people make. A lot of people don't invest in stocks at all. And a lot of people who do invest in the stock market don't invest enough in stocks. They have very conservative portfolios.

And that has a very large implicit cost by not participating in the stock market when you could be. You're giving up a huge amount of economic gain.

How do you quantify that for the average person in terms of what kind of gain they're giving up?

The size of the gain they're giving up. You can look at the historical returns on stocks, and you can also look at the expected returns on stocks. So let's say it's, let's say it's 7% that we expect stocks to turn in the long run. And if you could get 2% by sitting in cash, that 5% difference is your opportunity cost of not investing in the stock market when you otherwise could be. 5% compounded over the long term is enormous.

So say I have $10,000 and I invested in the stock market and I'm getting what did you say 8%? 7%, say 7%. Much money is that. Some of the look. So I've done $10,000, which is what we have here.

Invest in the stock market at 7% return over 40 years. That would be $150,000.

Do you know what cen, do you know what's quite scary when I think about that?

Is does that kind of means that today if I spend $10,000? I'm actually spending $150,000. Yes. Which makes me not want to spend any money on anything. Yeah.

Because if you buy, I don't know what cost 10,000 dollars, like a customer car. Yeah, maybe. You're actually spending $150,000. When you factor in the fact that if you put that $10,000 into the stock market, you could have made 7% a year and it would have turned into $150,000. Yeah.

That's one side of the coin. You also have to think about any enjoyment or utility that you get out of that car. If that car lets you drive to a job, you couldn't have otherwise done. You may have a significant economic value doing the long run. That's one example.

You know, I've got a coffee here. Some people spend $10 on a cup of coffee with frapper chapper, chap things and all that stuff. Looking at that over the long term in 40 years. If you had not bought that coffee and put it into the stock market and got just 7% return, you would have had $150. So when you buy that $10 coffee, you're actually theoretically spending $150 in 40 years time.

So you better really enjoy the coffee.

Is there a bit of a fear that makes us not want to spend money on anything an...

No, I think that's why this framework, that's why the former framework for thinking about these decisions is so important.

Because you do want to have positive emotion and engagement relationships, meaning an accomplishment.

Those are all really, really important. And yes, that money could be worth more in the future. But it can also be a worth a lot today if you're optimizing on the right things. What else? Number six.

It's another big one. So not taking enough risk is important, taking the wrong risks with your investments. So we just rent some numbers about a 7% stock market return. You can basically get that using an index fund.

The problem is a lot of people don't invest in index funds.

They pick individual stocks, hoping to earn really high returns. They trade individual stock options. They trade crypto tokens and all that kind of stuff. And a lot of those types of risks have negative expectations of returns or they have high costs if you're doing a lot of trading. And that can really erode long-term investment growth.

What about buying a house? Is that a good investment? I wouldn't consider buying a house to live in an investment. It sort of is, you get an asset. But you're really buying an asset that funds your housing consumption.

It kind of pays you a dividend that's sort of like getting rent from the house that you're on.

When you do the side by side comparison, which I think is the only way to think about this.

If you compare buying a house. So that means in Canada, you usually save up for a 20% down payment. You put 20% down in your house.

You take out a mortgage to finance the rest.

You're now living in the house, you're paying your mortgage payment, you're paying for some maintenance costs, you're paying for property taxes. Alternatively, you could have rented the house. That 20% that went into buying a home could have been invested in the stock market. So again, we're back to the idea of opportunity costs.

The other important thing here is that renting typically has lower cash flow costs than only. So these are the unrecoverable costs of owning a home. Mortgage interest. So that's when you buy a house and you borrow to fund the purchase. You're paying interest to the bank.

That's like I call these unrecoverable costs. That's money that you're paying for the use of money in this case. And you're not going to get those dollars back. It's gone. Opportunity costs.

So that's what I just mentioned. Whatever equity you have in a home is equity that you could have otherwise invested in the stock market. The capital portion of the principle that the price of homes has increased around inflation at the rate of inflation maybe a little bit higher historically.

Stocks have far outpaste inflation. So by having money sitting in a house as opposed to invested in the stock market, you have what is called an opportunity cost. You're not earning returns. You could have otherwise been earning.

So that opportunity cost is one of the largest costs of owning a home. So I've got mortgage interest. The opportunity cost of equity. Property taxes are another big unrecoverable cost. The property taxes vary depending on where you are.

But it's saved between 0.5% and 1%. Maybe sometimes a little bit higher. You get utilities and some services in exchange for it. But it's again, it's an unrecoverable cost. You pay that.

You've got nothing left afterwards. They've got maintenance costs. Oh, this is the annoying one.

And it's the one that I think people underestimate the most.

I started making content about renting versus owning a home years ago. I used to say 1% was a reasonable estimate of maintenance costs. And people would push back and say that's way too high. There's a bunch of academic literature on this too that says it could well be over 2%. And that's probably a more reasonable estimate.

Having been a homeowner now for six years after renting prior to that. I'm fairly confident at least in my case, that maintenance costs are far higher than one or 2% of the property value per year. Yeah, I mean, I bought my first home a while ago. And I didn't think about the gardening and the pool pump gets broken.

And then there's a crack in the patio outside. And then the heating system breaks. And then everything just seems to break.

And it's always breaking.

It's always breaking. Every time I go back there, which is it's in a different country, I'm the first week. I'm just spent looking at the things that have broken since last year. I'm like making a list of the new expenses.

And it's never cheap. No. And if I was renting that wouldn't be my problem. No. It doesn't look like another cost here,

which we don't talk about, which is like the time you waste on the maintenance. Like what we think of maintenance costs. I imagine people are thinking about the fees to fix things. But actually the time I spend having phone calls and speaking to people. For me is worth a lot more than just the costs.

But anyway, yeah, maintenance costs. Yeah, the coordination is huge. And you could outsource that. But that would be expensive.

Depending on how valuable your time is,

it could make sense to outsource it. But I agree with you. I do the same thing. I spend time on the phone finding which contractors are going to come in and fix this thing.

And then you have to wait for them. And then maybe they're late. Yeah. So that's maintenance costs. We have emergency cost here, which is really a subset of maintenance costs.

So you can have big things. Like the roof needs to be redone. And the foundation cracks, whatever, those can be very significant. And one of the challenges with those types of big costs is that you kind of have to have liquidity available to fund them.

And that means that you have to have cash sitting somewhere,

or at least some liquid assets sitting somewhere. So probably not invested in the stock market, which also has an implied cost to it, which is more opportunity cost. More opportunity cost, exactly.

And then this one's interesting. And this is one that I don't think I appreciated until I own my own home, which is renovation spending. We talk about maintenance when you fix something in your house. You don't just fix it to get it back to the baseline level that was before.

Yeah. You make it a little bit nicer. You're right.

I never did that when I was renting.

So this is the site by side. So you run this side by side comparison. You can't for all of those unrecoverable costs the owner has. You can't for the renter investing the stock market and investing the cost difference. The cash flow cost difference between renting and owning each month or whatever frequency.

And what you'll find, and I've done this with projections. So looking at expected stock returns and expected real estate appreciation, you can very easily show that there is unequivalent. There is a level of rent where you are indifferent between renting and owning. I did a video years ago that has millions of views now,

where I came over this idea called the 5% rule. So I took some of those costs. I took property taxes, maintenance costs, and the cost of capital, which is the opportunity cost and the cost of borrowing. I wrapped all that up and said we've got roughly 1% for property taxes.

Roughly 1% for maintenance costs, which is probably way too low as we just talked about.

And I said 3% for opportunity cost, which I think is also on the on the low end.

And you put all that together and you get 5%. So I said, okay, if you divide the price of a home by 5%. And then divide that number by 12. You will get the monthly rent that has a equivalent that is equivalent to the unrecoverable cost of owning that home. Okay, so let's do that.

So I'm thinking of buying a $300,000 house. What's the math that I need to do to figure out if it's better to rent? Multiply by 5%. And then divide by 12. You're brave.

I usually have a rule to never do math live on a podcast.

I can edit. Okay, the result is 1,250. There you go. 1,250 is the equivalent rent where you're roughly break even between renting and owning. So if I could rent for 1,250 instead or less or less, I should rent.

Renting is a better financial decision. So this is an important part of this topic. We can show financial equivalence. And then just that is important. Like we can show that there is financial equivalence between renting and owning.

I've done more robust versions of this analysis. Since then, we have PWL has a calculator on our website where you can see the break even by putting specific numbers in instead of just doing the rule of thumb. Because things will change it. For example, if your asset allocation is more conservative or more aggressive, that opportunity cost number can be different. If you're a taxable investor, meaning your taxed on your investment gains by investing in the stock market or the bond market,

your opportunity cost decreases because the after tax expected return on stocks and bonds decreases relative to home ownership. 5% is a very rough rule of thumb. Do you think for the average young person, let's say someone's under 25 years old, they should admit thinking about building their wealth over the long term, do you think they should buy it by buying a house as an investment or should they be doing something else? I think for young people, it's really tough. And it's tough for a couple of reasons. One is because home prices are high.

You have to save up a lot of money to buy a house. Another one is that it can limit your mobility.

We've seen in Toronto in Canada, where I'm from, prices, condo prices in particular have plummeted. They fall off a cliff. If you bought a condo in Toronto and you get a job offer, somewhere outside of Canada, what are you going to do with that condo that's at a big loss? You kind of stock or you're trying to rent it out and now you've got this just difficult situation to deal with. Plus, there are big transaction costs if you're selling a place. So for young people, I do think that home ownership can be tricky because it can limit your mobility.

Your ability to go and find maybe higher paying work. It introduces a risk that you probably don't need in your life because you may end up moving somewhere else. And then people often move up where they want a condo today, but they're going to want a house later. For my family, I met my wife, I was renting a place.

The first place we met in a second place, a third place, and a fourth place.

We rented four different places as we were having our family.

And so our needs were changing over time. We needed a bigger condo, and then we had a town house, and we had a house.

But we just, the lease ended and we gave notice and we left. We found the better rental that was more suitable for our needs. If we had been homeowners, the amount we would have paid in transaction costs to do that would have been insane. Or we would have had to buy the house that we were going to have forever much earlier, which would have introduced significant opportunity costs. That's one of those things that's just impossible to measure, and because it's so intangible, but like the psychology of feeling like you can't easily move.

And I see this a lot actually with people that apply for jobs in our company is in the interview process. I'll say, "I've just bought house in Insert City." And you can see this sort of psychology is holding them back from taking an opportunity because they've made an investment in a particular city. And so they might lose, as you say, like an opportunity in New York or LA or London, because mentally they feel committed to a place. Yeah, now the flip side of that is that if you're really sure that you wanted to stay in one place,

one of the best ways to accomplish that is by who can be sure. Yeah, you can't, but if someone was really sure, maybe someone has maybe like me. I have four kids, they're all in the same school. It's very unlikely that we would move.

The other big mistake I think I made is I bought holiday home.

That was a tap. Well, I shouldn't say tap, I did, but kind of a tap idea. And part because of the same reason, and part because it means you only go on holiday to one place, which is like defeats the point of holiday. Yeah, and it's, I have not done that, and the main reason is the mental overhead. I don't like having to think about one property.

I can't imagine having to think about a second one, but I'm not that.

Especially don't idea. I don't like that. I don't like that, especially when you're like young, it's like the whole point is you can still walk up mountains and do things. Yeah, you're going to be sitting in the same house. Yeah, oh, how mine is happier than rent is. Depends how you slice the data. If you control for property types and neighborhoods and all that kind of stuff, no, they're not.

If you don't control for those things, I think owned homes do tend to be a little bit nicer and better maintained. They do tend to be in better neighborhoods. So uncontrolled renters are a little bit less happy. There's multiple studies on this statistics. Canada has a really good one that does exactly that. They have controlled an uncontrolled life satisfaction differences for renters and owners. If you're a professional who is thinking about buying a house in a nice neighborhood or renting a nice house in a nice neighborhood, it's unlikely that you'll be happier in either case.

If you're forced to be a renter in a not very nice neighborhood, because all you can afford, you may be less happy, but it's not necessarily the renting that's making you less happy. Is there any particular group of people that you think should be buying a house? Yeah, so people who are very risk-averse, people who want to stay in one place for a very long time, because they have a family or something. Yeah, and you don't want to be priced out of the market that you live in. This did happen in some cities in Canada in recent history.

It's now reversed, but there were people who were getting priced out of their market. They've been renters for a long time and rents went up so quickly that they just couldn't keep pace. It depends on your rental market, some rental markets are controlled where that's less of an issue. So you do have to think about things like that.

But if you want to stay in one place, owning your home is full of a way to do that, but it's a double-edged sword.

Because if you realize you want to leave, you might be stuck. And then the other big one for who should own a home is taxable investors with high tax rates. And again, that comes back to the opportunity cost, where if you're paying a lot of tax on your investments, where as real estate tends to be tax preferred, and Canada gains on your primary residence or tax free, US has a belief unamount.

And so that's another thing to think about. Where the opportunity cost changes depending on your specific tax situation. When we have these conversations about buying a house or not buying a house, one of the things I see a lot in the comments section is people, and sharing their case studies of them buying a house 30 years ago,

and now it went from being worth $100,000 to $600,000. And they're starting that that's evident that it's a good idea. You can probably see this. Well, this is the thing, this is the example. And everyone has the family member that bought a house for $70,000 and sold it for a million.

I'm just going to read you the top full comments, and I'd like to get your response on them. Now, the first one is the not buying a house does not work in the UK, as 90% of rents are higher than a mortgage cost.

Also, if you want to start a family, you need a stable place to raise your children.

And with renting, you can be kicked out within a few months' notice, and your whole life could be turned upside down. I personally think there are ways around that, and as I mentioned earlier, I did rent for six years of my life with a wife and an increasing number of kids.

The two things that I always made sure to do were to rent from professional landlords.

We did have one experience renting from a sort of mom and pop person who had bought a condo and rented it out.

That wasn't great, but after that, we were very careful about the vetting our...

and only renting from professionals.

And then the other thing that we did, which addresses, at least in Canada, addresses one of the other points there, is we would sign long leases. If we want to stay in a house for a few years, we would sign a multi-year lease. And landlords do tend to like that. The other point that was in there that I think is really important is that rents are higher than mortgage payments.

I think this is one of the biggest mistakes that people make when they're making their rent versus own comparison is they'll say, this is my mortgage payment, this is my rent. If the mortgage payment is lower, owning must be better. But that's not the case. As we talked about a minute ago, you have property taxes, maintenance costs,

potential renovations spending that you wouldn't do otherwise,

and the opportunity cost of capital.

When you add all that up, the cost of owning a home is far more than the mortgage payment. This guy here said, "I bought a house, it's the best thing I ever did. It's launched my mindset and new directions.

Remember that having your own space has profound psychological impact,

and can be life-changing for some of us that want to live in a healthy environment." What you make at that point is that have profound psychological impact. If someone believes that it does, and they've really taken the time to reflect on their life and has decided that yes, it is in fact true that it has a how-to-per-found psychological impact. Of course, that person should not.

Of course, they should. Is it true for everybody? I'm a think so. Dawn said, "My experience, I purchased a house in 2013 with 20% down payment deposit. My total payment, including taxes insurance, H-O-A, two metres and two metres."

And is $100 a month. As of today, the exact same house is renting for $4,000. The property value has also gone up 3x. I'm glad I bought my house. Yes, so there are cases where real estate allows you to use leverage very easily as Dawn mentioned. And if you end up buying in a market that goes up a lot in a short period of time, it can be really, really good. However, and this is what we've seen in Canada more recently, it hasn't touched other markets yet.

Although, of course, the U.S. has had their own declines and so with their countries. But Canada is right now in one of the biggest real estate price drawdowns when you're just for inflation, going back to 1975. And so if you had bought, yes, seven years ago, and then, well, and then looked at the price in 2022, you'd think, "Wow, I'm a genius." Of course, everybody should buy.

But if you had bought in, I think it's 2021, was the kind of peak.

And you look at it today, you're thinking, "Wow, I've ruined my life." So, yes, there are examples like that for sure, but that is not what people should expect every time they purchase a home. So, are you saying that the future is not going to be as the past? For this, I know the Canadian market best, but I think these generalizes outside of Canada. We've seen record decreasing interest rates, so that's changed a little bit now.

But for a period of time, we had interest rates going down and down and Canada, we had a ton of immigration. I have no problem with immigrants, but we had levels of immigration that were just not compatible with the amount of housing that we had in Canada, which was contributing to prices going up. We have housing supply, just not growing, quickly enough, which are all things the Canada is addressing now. But all that causes prices to go crazy, which is, I think, why they'd come down in such an extreme way.

So, I'm not saying necessarily that we're never going to see high house prices again,

or house prices going up at an extreme rate again, but in Canada at least, that has now normalized, or at least started to normalize. I don't think it's reasonable to expect stock-like returns from real estate forever, even though we did see that for some years. So, for most people, then you think, if their goal is to make money and their care about mobility being able to get up and go,

if opportunity arises, a better investment decision would probably be just investing in an index fund, which gives you exposed stock market.

Yeah, I think the mobility piece is key there, because remember, just from a wealth perspective,

we can show that, hey, these are pretty close to equivalent. But if mobility matters to you, yeah, I think that matters a lot. If you have unique investment opportunities, that can be another reason where your opportunity cost is really high. Like, I had an opportunity to buy equity in my company years ago, and if I had been a homeowner, I think I actually had just bought a house,

and I think I even had to reduce the amount of equity I bought, because I think I'll well pump broke, like around the same anyway. It was a whole thing, but that's like, there's opportunity cost in the stock market, which is, you know, call it 7% or whatever. But then there's other opportunity costs that can be a lot higher, like in that specific situation.

And the next one that is number seven? Yeah, missing tax planning opportunities. This is something I think people just don't think enough about, but it's not terribly complex. But there are simple things that people can do to minimize the amount of tax they're playing,

Paying for most people.

It's just optimally using things like in Canada, we have the RSP and the TFSA and the US.

It's the Roth and Traditional IRA and 401Ks. I using those things optimally make a lot of sense. So then the rest, either types of tax planning tend to get more country specific. They tend to be lots of things particularly for hiring and people that you can do to pay a little bit less tax. And I think, what about for low rank and people?

For low rank and people, the government accounts that are provided are the ice in the UK. Yeah, exactly.

Those are probably the best thing for people to be focusing on.

But even then, people are often not using them optimally. One of the things people don't talk about enough is all the ways that rich people do things to avoid paying tax. They have like, they hire people so that they don't have to pay tax. I hear about all these crazy stories of like, I've started this business on the side here, so I can get real estate license.

And if I get real estate license, I don't have to pay the same tax on this thing here. And I move the money around here and I flip it around there and then I don't have to pay any tax. Most people that the average people don't have any loopholes that they can they jump through. Yeah. That's true.

And even one of the crazy ones I like about when I got some money was that you can take a loan against your stocks. And there's no tax on the loan.

So if I have a million dollars of Facebook stock, I can go to a bank and get 500k in cash.

Loaned against that stock without having to sell it. And then on that 500k, I have no tax to pay. And I can just hold that Facebook stock. And when it goes up to 2 million, I can go back to the bank and say, give me another 500k. You could.

But if it goes down, you get margin-cold and they have to co-op the cash to... Don't they just sell, don't they just sell the stock? They might within your sell and afterwards come down. So it's not risk-free. Yeah, that is a thing that people do.

I guess everybody could do that, right? Most people could if they invested in the S&P 500, they could go and get a loan against that investment. And that loan would be tax-free. Yep, same rules for everybody. But I would still say that you're taking a lot of risk by borrowing money against risky assets like that.

Okay, so tax planning doesn't nothing else to cover that in terms of the average person? Yeah, I don't think so. But it is an important thing for you to think about it. Thinking about what mistakes might have been making in my financial plan, they should definitely be thinking about other tax planning opportunities that I'm going to say.

How would they find out? It's a tough one. A good CPA. What's a CPA? An accountant?

A good tax professional. Should be able to identify tax planning opportunities for you. Good financial planners, similarly, should be able to identify good tax planning opportunities for your situation.

But as you said earlier, the reality is there aren't that many things that people can be doing.

And it's really things that you could figure out how to optimize once. And then you're kind of a step. Much of the reason most people haven't posted content or built their personal brand is because it's hard. And it's time consuming and we're all very, very busy. And if you've never posted something before, there's so many factors in your psychology that stop you wanting to post.

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Head to pipedrive.com/ceo to get started. That's pipedrive.com/ceo. I'll see you over there. Who does need a financial advisor? Probably a lot of people but the financial advice profession has a lot of challenges.

We're chatting about the sales nature of the financial services industry and I do think that's a big problem.

Because if someone has, here's Ben said, okay, Ben said I should have a finan...

There's a good chance that they're going to be sold products that they don't need.

And I don't have a solution for that. It's a difficult situation when that is the state of the financial advice industry. I guess to get around that one might ask their friends and family who does their financial planning and then go with a trusted referral. Yeah, but people often trust people that aren't given them great advice. It's really problematic.

I think a lot of people can benefit from financial advice.

It's just finding the right person. And a lot of people don't need financial advice because you do pay fees for it. What's the next one about? It is kind of a similar discussion or we just talked about, but it's missing out on a state planning. What does that mean?

Figuring out how your assets are going to be distributed to the people that you want them to or the entities that you want them to when you die.

This is an interesting one because nobody's most people aren't expecting to die anytime soon.

So they haven't really thought much about this. Yeah, and you know, some might also say, listen, I'm not going to be here. So why should I care? Especially people that I guess that's a mindset of someone that doesn't have kids, but yeah. It can cause a lot of problems. If you don't think through and plan for the way you want your estate to be distributed, you can pay a lot more tax.

Then you otherwise would have, and your estate can go to people that you may not have wanted to go to. You can pay more tax. If you don't have things set up properly, again, this is going to be country specific. But yeah, there's cases where you would pay more tax. If things were not set up properly, then if they were. Do you think everybody should write a will?

Everybody that has any dependence should write a will. I've heard an estate plan lawyer joke that everybody has a will.

But it's the government's default will, which you may not actually agree with.

It's like pre-nups. Yeah, kind of like that. Yeah, it's exactly like that. You could say everybody should have a will because it can help from having a big mess for other people to clean up.

But for sure, if you have kids, if you have dependence, I think having a will is really important.

And on that point of pre-nups, number nine is about who you marry. Yeah, this is a tough one. It's a tough one because, I mean, this is friend of mine for me because as you can see from these photos, I just, I just, I just proposed to my fiance. Yeah.

And I mean, this is not the ring, but because this is a bit extra, but that's awesome. Oh my god, they put my face and their team put my face in the box. Yeah, but yeah, so why is this so important who you decide to marry as it relates to how rich you'll be or won't be? Well, it's not just how rich you'll be. It's how satisfied you'll be with your life and with your marriage.

Academic research is identified to spending profiles that you can categorize people into. One is tight wards. It's people who don't like to spend money. And one is spend thrifts. That's people who do like to spend money.

The names are kind of funny, but that's just what the research calls them. And the crazy thing about this is that tight wards and spend thrifts are more likely to end up marrying each other than to marrying someone who has the same profile as them. So, I, I, I, I, I, I, I type what and a spend thrift or more likely to get married than a tight watt and a tight watt or a spend thrift and a spend thrift. What do you think that is? The, the research on this talks just about kind of opposites attracting and there may be some sort of thrill to the, to the differences.

Um, initially, but tight wards and spend thrifts as they go through their marriages do tend to be less satisfied. In their marriages and have more merit of conflict around money. And again, that's based on an academic paper. Now, that's in the reasons why the marriage might not last. But in terms of how it might impact your financial success.

If you really want to save, if you have, if you go through your goal setting exercise and your promo model. And you've had a vision for the life that you want to live that requires saving. And you have a spouse that wants to spend a lot of money today. That can be very, very difficult. It can make it a lot harder for you to achieve your goals.

I don't think it's insurmountable. I think a tight watt and a spend thrift can work. I mean, it's not like all of them end up getting divorced. But it does require a different level of coordination and communication and being on the same page.

Do you have to speak to clients about this often?

It, it comes up a lot. We have lots of clients who were single and end up getting relationships and then getting married. We have to all have all kinds of conversations about marriage contracts or prenobs, a state planning. Do you think anybody should get prenob? Go back to what you said earlier where you said, if you don't write your own, the government will give you theirs.

Yeah. Which just to simplify that. If you don't write your own prenob, then you are the default position is the government will decide through the law. Now your assets are divided at a time when you break up. Problem is people find prenobs to be really unremantic.

That's right. And they also think there's an implication that we're assuming we're going to break up, which is also not so sexy.

Right.

Do you think people should get them?

If both partners are on the same page and comfortable with it, it's not going to cause a major rift.

And if it does, maybe that's a red flag. Do you know what it calls a rift? I mean, and it's not to say that I'm just keeping all my stuff in your keeping yours. It's just to say, let's agree now what would happen. You know, like 50% probability that this doesn't work out. Yep.

We've seen both. We've seen clients come up with very creative and interesting marriage contracts that have, you know, specific formulas for how things are going to work and depending on how many kids they have is, you know, it's kind of an interesting exercise. And in that case, it was kind of fun. They were engaged in the process and didn't cause an issue. And we've also seen people who did not have anything in place and have had very bad divorce outcomes from a financial perspective.

I had a friend go through a divorce recently and he's a very successful person. His wife was there from the beginning. She took looked after the family while he was off-calfanting around the world building. His businesses will live the place. So obviously, she, you know, they, she's contributed hugely to his success.

What I noticed though is, it's destroyed what could have otherwise been a good relationship as they separated. They now really, really hate each other because lawyers have stood in between both sides. Yeah.

And basically caused tension because that's their job.

They're going to get paid more. And their her lawyers are incentivized to squeeze every single penny they can out of this separation.

And so I think he said it had been like six or seven years since they decided to divorce.

He's still in court arguing with lawyers about how they separate. And it's just a relationship. They've got two kids. You just think gosh, like, if you had a prenapped, this would have been quick and it could have saved the relationship. Okay.

Anything else to say on this point of marriage and compatibility? The academic research on this does have a short quiz. I don't know if we have it getting around anywhere here. I think this is it. It's called the type word and spend thrift quiz developed by research as a Carnegie Mellon and the University of Michigan.

Yep. This scale measures the pain of paying the emotional distress some people feel when spending money. And here's a quick DIY version of that quiz. Question number one is you see a high quality coat on sale for $100, which is usually $300. You need a coat.

And you have the money. Do you buy it? Answer A, no.

$100 is still a lot of money.

I'll wait for a better deal. B, yes. It's a great value. I need something. Yes. And I might buy a scarf to match since I saved so much.

Which one of you? I mean, if I need the coat, I'd be. I think I'm so. [laughs] But I actually need to be fair.

I just don't buy stuff, so I don't even know if I'd buy it anyway. Question two. You are at a restaurant with friends. The bill is being split evenly, but you ordered the cheapest item. How do you feel?

A, physically pained. I'll likely mention that I should pay last. B, a bit annoyed, but I'll pay it to keep the piece. Or C, fine. It all will even out in the end. I'm between B and C.

Really? I might feel a little bit annoyed. Really? But I wouldn't know when it comes to fuss about it. I'm seeing it again.

Find it all even out in the end. Number three. Which statement describes you best? A, I have trouble spending money. Even on things I actually need.

B, I balance my spending and saving pretty well. Or C, I often spend more than I intended and regret it later. Like I'd be. You said B, which is my balance my spending and saving is pretty well. I would say I'm seeing it again.

But again, the caveat here is actually don't. I don't spend money on stuff anymore. I don't buy stuff anymore. But I can spend it on travel and experiences and stuff. Last question, when you buy something expensive, your primary motion is A,

anxiety or regret, B, satisfaction in the utility of the item, or C, excitement and a rush. I think I'll be again. I reckon I'm B as well there. So scoring your results.

If you're mostly A's, then you're a tight word. If you're mostly B's, you are the uncomflicted. And if you're mostly C's, you are the spend thrift. So I guess with that, you are a uncomflicted. You're in the middle.

You have a healthy relationship with money where you can save one necessary, but enjoy the fruits of your labor without guilt. And I, I'm a C, which is you feel very little payment spending. You enjoy the moment. But you might struggle with long-term saving goals or buyers remorse.

That's so fucking true. Everyone should do that at home. Okay, that makes sense. So we know that the pay ones spend thrift during compatible. I do think it's an interesting concept.

Like, how do you have that discussion with a potential partner? Or do you just observe it and kind of infer? On a date, you can say, say to a partner, say, say to a partner, say, say, "Oh, this is great.

Poor constant, you should call the dial to see it."

We should listen to it. Then listen to this episode. Then listening with, you know, right now, if this, you've done this. And then just play a lot.

I play along with your partner, am I?

Are you looking for your partner to be the opposite then? Because you said opposite to attract. No, you don't have to. No, opposite to end up together. But then have conflict because of that.

Oh, okay. Yeah. Interesting. Yeah.

I think if you're, if you're a tight one, being with the same is probably good.

If you're a spend thrift and you end up with another spend thrift. Leave you really careful about your, like, house refinances. Yeah. I don't think my partner's a spend thrift. I think she's in the middle with, like, you.

Yeah. Doesn't really care. Yeah. Which is useful. We do have one more card in the mistakes, which is under ensuring catastrophic risks.

And I think that's one, particularly for people who are not currently financial independent. That's really, really important. If your household income, it relies on your income to maintain the lifestyle of the household. It's really important to have sufficient life insurance. Where if you die your human capital, your ability to earn income in the future is replaced by the insurance.

And also disability insurance. Where if you lose your ability to work, you have insurance to replace that income. Did many people think about this? Probably not enough. And it's cheap.

Well, disability insurance is not always cheap.

Life insurance is generally pretty cheap. If you're buying low cost term life insurance, which is what most people need. You made a video called the most controversial paper in finance. Yeah. What paper was that?

That was a paper. We didn't have it out here, but that was a paper on life cycle asset allocation. What does that mean? So it's answering the question of how should your mix of stocks and bonds change throughout your lifestyle?

Conventional wisdom says that you should start at risk here in stocks and then move towards safer bonds as you get older.

This paper took a huge amount of data. They had data from 39 countries going back as far as 1890, I believe.

They sampled from that large set of data to simulate a million potential sort of hypothetical life times you could live through.

And then they asked the question of in this simulated data, which asset allocation gives the best outcomes. And they tested target date funds, which increase the weight and bonds over time. And those are a lot of people have those through their retirement accounts. So it's just one fund and it starts out when you're younger with more equities and then transitions to bonds over time. That's a target date fund.

They tested, I believe, a 60, 40, 60 percent stock, 40 percent bond asset allocation. They might have had some other stuff in there too. They might have tested only domestic stocks. And what they find in this paper is that the optimal portfolio from the perspective of retirement consumption utility and and and request utility. What does that mean?

It's like the satisfaction you get from retirement spending measured in a with a formula. So that it can be studied and then likewise for the amount of money that you have left over at death. They have they measure the probability of running out of money as well as a whole bunch of different metrics they look at.

And they find that a 100 percent equity portfolio with a big chunk of international stocks is optimal.

But it is a one third domestic two thirds international stocks when you say domestic, which does that mean that's a great question. So the way they set up domestic in the paper is that it can be any country. So the way they do the simulations is that for each draw, so they're drawing, it's on average 10 years of returns. We're say we're in the US. They'll draw the US returns measured in US dollars for a 10 year block.

That's the domestic return. And then the international block is going to be the 10 years on average of all the other countries samples returns measured in US dollar. So I've got the domestic return, the international return. The next block might be 10 years from Italy measured in whatever the Italian currency was at the time. And then the international portion is going to be all the other countries excluding Italy measured in Italian currency.

And so they're weaving together all these blocks that's called bootstraps simulation. So domestic to answer your question is whatever country you live in.

So the outcome or the conclusion from this should be that you should invest.

I mean, if we're following this and if it was 100% accurate, what 60% in whatever country you live in, in the stocks of whatever country you live 30%. 30% domestic, so you're one third domestic, two thirds international. Okay, so if I'm in the United States, one, so I get 30% of my capital and invest it in the American companies. Yeah, and then 60% in international stocks. Yeah, well, say 67%. Yeah. Yeah. So that one important finding in the paper, and I talk with you in the video is that the curve for how optimal the domestic amount is is pretty flat.

If I remember correctly between sort of 10% and 50%. So they do say in the paper that for a US investor, you don't necessarily have to be a third domestic.

Even if you're 50 or even if you're just market cap weighted, which is curren...

That's probably fine, but for a Canadian investor, or someone who's in a country other than the US, one third in your domestic country ends up being a pretty big home country bias.

In these simulations, are they saying that you need to invest in international stocks because sometimes in the simulations, your domestic country, your home country has problems.

Yeah, high inflation tends to be bad for retirement, consumptionally you're spending a lot more and for domestic stock returns and international stocks protected against that. So it devised to spice you a little bit. Yeah, once exactly what it's a diversification. And that paper was controversial. I mean, we had the co-author on our podcast twice to talk about it, but it was met with a lot of controversy from everybody, from a lot of professionals, from other academics. Why? It's an extreme finding.

The conventional wisdom that you should be allocating more toward bonds throughout the life cycle is so ingrained in everyone's thinking that a finding like this that shows that that's basically wrong. Of course, it's going to be met with controversy. But at the very least, I think it's an interesting paper. It's telling us that stocks are a little bit safer for long-term investors than we probably thought. And bonds, which are typically considered safe are actually a little bit riskier than we may have thought for a long-term investors. The reason being that during periods of high inflation bonds get absolutely decimated.

What's a bond? A bond is a debt instrument, so you're effectively lending money to a government and you're receiving interest payments over time and then you're principal back at the end.

What is the most important thing we haven't talked about that your audience come to you to understand?

Well, a lot of the things that I talk about are financial products that you should not invest in.

Okay, 10-something of those, which I always think is fun. A big one that I spent quite a bit of time on the last year.

It's free videos on it, was on covered calls. What's that? So that's where you own a stock and then you sell a call option, which is the option to buy the stock, you're selling that option to somebody else, which gives you an option premium. And so you get some income from having sold the call option. But it also means that if a stock that you own appreciates sufficiently, you are required to sell it to the person who bought the call option from you at a at a preset price. So the stocks, whatever, $40, and you sold a call at $50, and the stock goes to $60, you have to sell it at $50.

So you're giving out a big chunk of your upside. And this plays on one of the big biases that investors have, which is a preference for income. It's the mental accounting bias where investors separate capital and income. And so there's a huge proliferation now of covered call products, where they do that strategy that I just described inside of an ETF. And they charge usually a higher fee, and these are being marketed really heavily to investors.

On the premise that you're going to get appreciation, capital appreciation, and you're also going to get income.

But I think my view on this, and what I tried to explain in those videos, is that you're giving up so much upside that I don't think most investors realize that they're giving up,

that the implied cost of these products is enormous. On that point of fees, I've got this graph here, which I think is pretty pertinent to what you're saying. Because when we start investing in ETFs and various index funds, we often don't think about fees. It'll say 0.5%, you think I can, whatever, 0.5%, it's fine, 1% fine, small numbers. But when you look at that graph, you see how that can impact throughout come over time.

Yeah, fees compounded. Any rate of return to compounds over long periods of time can be very impactful in dollar terms.

And some people choose to keep them money in cash, because most of us are never educated on this subjective inflation.

And what inflation means, so some of us, you know, we might keep $10,000 under the bat. What do you say to those people? Yeah, so inflation is everywhere. It's been around for throughout history and it's probably not going to go away. We have central bank policies in most of our countries that actually target a low-bit stable rate of inflation.

And there are reasons for that, but what it means is that if you have money sitting under your mattress, it's purchasing power will decrease over time. And that can be very damaging to your wealth. You can maybe keep pace of inflation using short-term government debt instruments, which are going to pay you a little bit of an interest rate.

But again, periods of high inflation can cause even that to deep decline in real value. So one of the best ways to fight inflation for a long-term investors, something we've been talking about is just investing in low-cost index funds to avoid the fee issue. And participate in the stock market, which wrote history as far-up pace inflation. One of the smartest things a business can do is build like a bigger company,

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This is something that I've made for you. I realized that the diversity of audience are strivers, whether it's in business or health. We all have big goals that we want to accomplish. And one of the things I've learned is that when you aim the big big goal, it can feel incredibly psychologically uncomfortable. Because it's kind of like being stood at the foot of Mount Everest and looking upwards.

The way to accomplish your goals is by breaking them down into tiny small steps.

And we call this an our team the 1% and actually this philosophy is highly responsible for much of our success here. So what we've done so that you at home can accomplish any big goal that you have is we've made these 1% diaries. And we've released these last year and they all sold out so I asked my team over and over again to bring the diaries back. But also to introduce some new colors and to make some minor tweaks to the diaries. So now we have a better range for you.

So if you have a big goal in mind and you need a framework and a process and some motivation that I highly recommend you get one of these diaries before they all sell out once again. And you can get yours at the diary dot com. And if you want the link, the link is in the description below. Is this broadly accurate? This graph here shows the impact of inflation on cash kept under the mattress over 30 over 20 years.

And you start with $10,000 in terms of purchasing power. And 20 years later, if that cash is under the mattress, you have $5,336. It doesn't show me the inflation rate. Oh, and that's that 3% inflation. You leave it losing half of your money effectively.

And the source here is St. James place. So a lot of people who are just holding on to cash don't really realise that over 20 year period assuming a 3% inflation rate. Yeah.

Honey, it ties back to I don't remember which number was it ties back to one of those biggest mistakes in personal finance we talked about, which is.

Yeah, not investing not taking the right kinds of risk with your investments and just holding cash. Horting cash is it's in its own way taking a type of risk. You don't have an expected return when you hold cash. You in real terms have a negative expected return. Do you think we should be thinking about retirement kind of?

I think it ties into the permna thinking and designing the life that you want to live. But at some point, I mean, at some point we can't work anymore. It's rare for somebody to be able to work into their, you know, I don't know, 80s. I think that it's sensible to plan for for that. But beyond that, a lot of people don't want it to have to work forever.

Maybe might choose to work forever, but they might choose to do lower paying work. But the idea that you will be forced to work forever, I don't think it's very attractive to anyone.

So from that perspective, building financial independence by saving and planning for retirement, yeah, I think it's important for everyone to think about.

Is the sort of social contract of retirement changing based on how the economy is changing? Because a lot of people saying, you're not going to be able to retire and get a pension because there's not enough money or you're going to have to work later than ever before. I think the artist has been put back on individuals. Pensions used to be much more common from companies and governments. So retirement's changed from that perspective for sure.

But I don't know if we can say we're going to crisis, I think people have more personal responsibility now than they've had in the past. But they also have better tools than historically been available. 30 years ago, we were just starting to get low cost index funds proliferating and being readily available to everybody. Prior to that, you were paying 2% or more to invest in a mutual fund. So the tools people have available are better today than they've been in the past, but it's also, there's also a lot more responsibility people have to take for their own personal finances.

Even naming the things that people shouldn't invest in.

The first is that cool thing.

Yeah, covered calls, covered calls, what else?

Another one that I think is really problematic is thematic ETFs.

And so that's like an AI ETF, or I don't know, a space or energy, like any any specific ETF that's targeting a specific theme. Why? What tends to happen with thematic ETFs is that something becomes really hot. So maybe it's AI, maybe it's cannabis, electric vehicles was another one, sustainable energy. Yeah, that's another good one clean energy.

And so what happens is asset prices in that theme go up. Because there's a lot of interest in it, everybody wants to invest in that space.

Asset prices go up.

An index provider creates an index for that hot theme.

And then an ETF gets launched, but it gets launched when the asset prices are up here. And what tends to happen is the asset prices come down. Then the returns on thematic funds tend to be very poor. Ah, okay. Yeah, I think I was guilty of that.

My idea was like, oh my god, a sustainable energy ETF. I believe in sustainable energy. I should invest in that. But you're right, they created that when it was hot.

So you should have invested, I guess you're saying, just invest in the FTSE 100, the S&P 500 instead.

All technology, which is a broader basket. Technology's tough. Technology has performed so incredibly well. But it is still one sector. Okay.

I have trouble saying you shouldn't invest in tech.

If you had invested in tech for the last 20 years, well done.

Should you choose to invest only in tech or have a big concentration in tech today? I think that's a lot less obvious. Well, I would say, well, the cool thing is I owe my stuff. How do I invest in all the AI stuff? A lot of it's private right now.

Although a lot of the public companies do own chunks of some of these private companies. I will see how that plays out. But that's another one that's been tough recently, where a lot of investors are interested in investing in investing in some of these private companies. A lot of them AI related, but space access is another one.

It's really hard for retail investors to get access to those types of things. But there are companies who are creating products that say that they can give you access to these things. They're charging high fees. It's not obvious that they've been able to buy the underlying securities that they're saying they have access to at good prices. But it's just another example of financial companies praying on the desires and biases of investors.

Financial firms are very good at seeing what investors want. Even if that thing is not good for them, then creating a product to fulfill that desire. So if someone listening now is, let's say they're 50 years old, and they've got $20,000 in savings, in cash.

And you have to be decisive. You don't know the new ones and the detail of their life. You don't know their palm of framework necessarily. But your job was just to make the money in the next 10 years. How do you think you'd allocate that? Let's say $10,000 is easier.

$10,000 in cash. How would you allocate it? That's a tough question in time. I don't know if it's answerable, especially over 10 years is tough. But about 20 years. If they have a long time horizon,

so I can tell you personally, I like to invest in stocks. I have a globally diversified stock portfolio with a Canadian home country bias, kind of like what that paper, the controversial paper found. We were doing that prior to that paper coming out.

But I think that general concept of a globally diversified portfolio,

maybe with some home country bias, makes a lot of sense for most people, including for retirees. But there are so many like what's this risk tolerance. If he's going to panic when the market goes down and sell everything, then it wasn't a very good idea.

And he's not going to get the outcome. But the good long-term outcome, they may otherwise gotten. And would you go all in on stocks? All the ones? Yeah, like dollar cost averaging versus love sum.

Yeah, like how would you invest? Would you go 100% in stocks? Or would you even diversify that? Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I think a hundred percent stocks is personally.

I can't afford that. I'm very comfortable with. And I'm not, I'm not old enough to be thinking about retirement, but it's a portfolio that I don't expect to change throughout my personal life cycle.

Is that how you allocate your personal finances now?

Yeah, you have a home, but otherwise the money you do invest is in the stock market. Yeah, so I've got my home. I have my stock market investments. And I do have a pretty significant chunk of equity in the company

that I work for. Yeah. No crypto. No crypto. No crypto.

Never touched it. That's not true. I was researching a theorem in Bitcoin. Remember when that was, it was a few years ago. I bought a thousand dollars of each.

Just so I could feel like I was participating while I was learning about it. What do you think of Bitcoin and Ethereum and other crypto currencies? I think that they solved a really interesting problem. The premise of digital cash is something that the Cypher Punk community, the kind of libertarian community of privacy focused computer nerds,

where they were trying to solve a problem for many, many years of digital cash.

How do you create digital cash that doesn't require a trusted third party

to media transactions? And they solved that. Satoshi Nakamoto solved that in, and that was cool. And I used a bunch of different pieces. I can kind of see in the paper how he used albums,

bottombacks ideas that he had created to stop e-mail spam, and it's just how it all came together. Unbelievable. Fascinating story of the technology is really interesting. I think it has become an ideological vehicle,

Where people who believe that the world should be a certain way,

or believe that governments roll in money should be a certain way.

They can invest in Bitcoin and feel really good about it. I think it's got that component to it, and then the other component that it has to it is a speculative asset.

We will buy Bitcoin because I think it's going to go up.

So it's not a good investment, is that what you're saying? I personally wouldn't, we don't allocate it to it for our clients at PWL. We managed quite a bit of money for quite a lot of people. And we've decided not to touch it. And I personally don't touch it, so.

I had a phone call actually from a friend of mine. She's very well known in the UK. And she was, 'cause there's lots of wars going on everywhere. And there's the straight of home news as close. And there's Russia Ukraine.

There's all of this stuff going on. She was asking me for financial advice on what she should do in such a moment. I don't know why she was calling me. I just thought I'll ask you when you come here. But it's interesting because my team found this article from 1847.

Which was in a magazine. And it almost sounds like today. The article says this. Things are bad all over. It is a gloomy moment in history.

Not in the lifetime of any man who reads this paper has there ever been so much grave

and deep apprehension.

Never has the future seem so dark and incalculable.

In France, the political coldrum sees and bubbles within certainty. England and the English Empire is being sorely tried and exhausted in a social and economic struggle. The United States is behest. With racial, industrial and commercial chaos drifting we know not to wear.

Russia hangs like a storm cloud on the horizon of Europe, dark and silent. It is a solemn moment and no man can feel in difference. Of our own troubles, no man can see the end. An apt description of things, very apt. And that was on October 10, 1847.

It sounds like today. It could be today. So as we zoom out on the cycles, the big sort of economic cycles, the geopolitical cycles. My friend that called me and said, "Listen, there's lots of stuff going on in the world." Should I be thinking about my money differently?

My investing strategy, what the hell is going on? What would you say to those people? Yeah. Well, as the clip that you read suggests, or tells us, the world has been through a lot of crazy stuff.

A lot of crazy times, a lot of wars, a lot of turmoil, a lot of political upheavals. And we've come out okay, in general. There's been pain and suffering and not everybody had good outcomes. But generally speaking, here we are. And we think about that from the perspective of financial markets.

Stock returns have been positive, despite all the craziness going on in the world. There's lots of interesting charts that overlay news headlines. They're all the madness going on in the world on top of the stock chart. It's just going up.

Doesn't mean the stocks are always going to be up.

They will go down when things get crazy, like when this war started. Stock returns get a little bit negative for a while. They've since come back. But there will be volatility in financial markets. Volatility up and down day to day.

But in the long run, stock returns, they should continue to be expected to be positive. So for your friend, I don't know how the assets are set up. But someone who's globally diversified, exposed to the stock market, they don't have to make changes to their portfolios when the world's getting crazy. I meant what she said to me.

She said that she was going to re-mogage her house, because I think she'd paid it down. And she was wondering what to do with that money. She was saying, "Do I just get by another house or do I invest it in the stock market?" Now, my bias is the stock market.

But I didn't know what would you say to someone else. I don't know why she's just mortgaging her house. But given those a good reason for that, I would probably go in the stock market not into real estate.

Do you think people shouldn't re-mogage the houses?

This is a tough question. Leverage kind of like how exposure to stock market is good. Borrowing money to invest in positive expect to return assets like the stock market is actually kind of a good thing on paper. Borrowing money generally improves long-term expected outcomes. But it's stressful.

You can't have bad outcomes where you lose all of your money. So, should people borrow money to invest? Should people mortgage their house to invest? That's a very personal question. It's kind of like the stock bond question.

Should you invest in stocks or bonds? Should you invest in stocks with leverage or not? It really depends on your goals and your situation. But generally speaking, if we just look at what are the data say about borrowing money to invest? It's not a terrible idea.

One of the things we haven't talked about is AI. And does AI change any of this equation? A lot of people are worried at the moment about losing their jobs and Throckwick released a report who wanted to be gallery companies saying they're entry-level people in particular. I'm going to have a hard time.

I think they said they're already seeing 13% of entry-level jobs being disrup...

And so I'm to be clear, not a labor economist.

It's not my area of expertise. I do think though that we look back through history. I like looking at history. There have been lots of technological revolutions that have been major, major upheavals to the entire economy. Yes, so ATMs.

ATMs are one of those fascinating examples. Feelful of that ATMs were going to wipe out bank tellers because ATMs could do everything the bank tellers do, but it was automated and you didn't have to pay a person to do it. So there was a lot of concern. And what ended up happening was very counterintuitive.

It's that the cost of operating a bank branch decreased because you needed fewer people to do all the bank tellers stuff because you had the ATMs. And they opened more branches because it cost less and their customers liked that. And the end result was that there were actually more bank tellers jobs at the end of the day. The cost of providing the service decreased, which caused it to proliferate more, provide that service to more people.

And it expanded the market instead of shrinking it. Similar story with the Jevon's paradox, and it's the same concept. What's that story? Where coal became cheaper at a time when they used coal to ship freight on trains. And the coal engine got more efficient with coal, coal industry panics, whisk rude. But then what it meant is people use trains, not just for shipping freight, but also for other things like travel. And people started traveling on trains because it got cheaper, so the coal industry actually burned in the end.

I have thought a lot about this Jevon's paradox idea. And I think it's going to be true for artificial intelligence, for sure.

There will be lots of other jobs created, and actually companies like mine, if we save money, we invest it in something else. Which then would probably create jobs, whatever that is. The part that I sometimes struggle with is the speed of adoption in AI, and then also when you factor in robotics. But my current in LA drives itself, and I think one of the biggest employers on earth is driving in all its forms. But then if you look at warehousing and supply chains, a lot of those are ran by people all over the world.

And there's a video that I played the other day we can throw up on the screen, which shows that in factories in some parts of the world now. They're having their labor force, where cameras on their head, showing what they're doing with their hands.

Because they're robots ultimately going to replace that labor force. And I just, I haven't, I guess this is maybe something that happens in history.

I haven't been able to think about where those people go, and what they then can go on to do, especially if it happens in short order. Yeah, so I've heard you, I've heard you ponder this in your other episodes, and I agree that the speed of this is likely to be different. As you've said, it's, we're talking about the internet, so you can deploy these things at the snap of the finger, and that is different. But where do those people go? This is one of the interesting things. I don't know. We don't know.

On to history, we didn't. Exactly. Through history, it's been the same sentiment, where people worry about where are these people going to go? And they might be unemployed for a while, and they might be hard times, but things have worked out.

And so, two ways to think about it. One way is as an individual, what should you be doing? We talked about it earlier, having complimentary skills and make you very unique. I think it's important.

Personally, content, as you mentioned, has been a big part of that for me, not everybody can necessarily do that, but finding those things that you can do when combined better than anybody else in the world, I think is very valuable. And then the other perspective is as an investor, how should we think about this? And they're going to come back to again, we have seen many technological revolutions that have changed the world. They've changed financial markets, they've changed our culture, they've changed the way we interact with each other.

The world has changed so many times due to technology, and the same cycle has repeated itself. There has been unemployment, there has been social unrest, there has been wealth inequality, but this happens every time. Are you expecting the stock market to collapse, because there's been a huge over-investment in artificial intelligence? And at some point, the investors that put their money into these sort of speculative AI startups that raised tremendous amounts of capital at crazy valuations.

At some point, through history, it doesn't the market always contract at some point.

There's a great book by an economist named Carlotta Perez, the book is technological revolutions and financial capital. And she documents this exact cycle throughout history, and yes, that's part of it. Part of it is asset prices getting really high, and then coming back down.

No, I'm worried about a catastrophic market collapse. I think it's always a concern. I think that's part of the risk of investing in stocks. We never know when it's going to happen or what the trigger is going to be.

So it's not something that you can do anything about. You need to have an asset allocation that you can stick with, even if that outcome is going to materialize.

In that book, does it suggest that the writing is on the wall for the current...

And you know, a couple of years ago, everyone was investing in crypto and web three and NFTs and all this stuff and all of the money seems to have been sucked out of that industry. Really, honestly, sucked out of almost every industry and into AI. And I remember when Defile was going to kill baking and fire to you. And I was only a couple of years ago. In fact, a lot of the developers have moved from my industry to the AI industry, but I think I do think about this a lot. I've got a few start-up friends who are getting a little bit nervous and are raising a lot of money now because they think that in the next couple of years, maybe in the next 24 months, there's going to be a big market contraction.

When investors who invested in some startup idea that had a hundred million dollar valuation, realize that they're losing their money.

And some denominator usually falls in the market. Some catalyst moment means that there's a contraction. Stop markets go down. It gets really hard to raise money clients who you might be relying on now to pay advertising budget start to lower their budgets. And in such a scenario, you're going to want to wish you'd prepared a little bit. Some people are. This is part of the cycle. The cost of capital for bubble companies will call them. I don't love the term bubble, but for companies who are in the industry that becomes the focus of a technological revolution.

So now we're talking about AI. The cost of capital gets really low, which means that as a price to get really high. A lot of people want to invest in that space, but those as a prices are not typically sustainable and they do tend to come down. Because I mean, a total market collapse or catastrophe or panic for diversified investors. No, it's the right to go in the wool. I don't think we can say that. If the writing were on the wall, the way that I view financial markets, is that if the writing were on the wall, prices would reflect that today.

Okay. If we thought market prices were going to drop in the future, they would drop today. So it happens at a time when no one is expecting it. That's exactly right.

You mentioned the writing is never on the wall. That's right. Some new piece of information, something changes and that's what causes prices to come down.

My brother said something to me. He's a very smart person. He's worked in sort of investing for the last 15 years. He said something to me earlier in my career. He said Steven, when you go to invest in something, assume that the price you're paying for that investment. So Sam investing in Facebook stock at $10 is the total accumulation of everything everybody on the planet knows about that company. And they've priced in everything the world knows about that company today. And he was like, so even if you think it's going to go up, that's also by the way, priced into today's price.

So you better know something that no one else knows when you're thinking about buying an investment. I'll tell you a bunch of what he said. But yes, he didn't. He is describing the concept of an efficient market.

An efficient market is a market where prices always, and this is a sort of a theoretical concept.

It's not actually true, but in theory, an efficient market, a perfectly efficient market is a market where prices always fully reflect all available information, something you're thought about what the price, yeah, might do really if you trade on those thoughts. So what are you investing in then if it's if the future's already priced in and all the information about the companies are already priced in? What are you investing in? You're investing in discounted future cash flows.

Companies produce cash flows. They are in profits. When you invest in a company, you're buying those expected future profits at a discount. And that's called the discount rate.

This is getting pretty nerdy again, but that's how it works and finance. What is the value of a stock?

It's the discounted future cash flows.

Riskier stocks will tend to have higher discount rates.

But you buy this asset. And now you've got this discounted bundle of cash flows, which you then hold. And you've received the discount rate as a rate of return as you continue to hold the asset. So a lot of people will invest in Tesla. I've got a Tesla.

It's amazing. I'm going to buy some stock. What is the fault in my thinking there? In buying Tesla stock? Because I've got a Tesla. I think it's a great car.

And I think they'll do well in the future. So I buy the stock. But we just talked about that. Information has already included in the price. Everybody knows that it's a pretty good company.

Making pretty good cars that are selling really well.

And that's why it costs 10 dollars today.

Whatever it costs today. Whatever the price is, yeah. If you look at the data on professional money managers who are trying to beat the market. Most of them don't. And the ones that do, this is a crazy part. The managers who do beat the market over a period of time.

Don't tend to go on to beat the market in the future. And these are professional investors who are, you know. And then you can look at this before or after fees. The data are actually pretty similar. It's worse after fees.

But the distribution is pretty similar. So what's the point in a minute, man? Yeah. Well, ones that are trying to beat the market by picking stocks and timing the market. I don't think that there is one.

That's why I talk about just just buy index funds by the market. Let give, take the markets return.

Except the markets return, which has been very good.

And then don't do anything. Don't check the fact thing. Don't check it. Don't open the app. Lease the password.

I said this about my fiance.

She's really going to invest in because she always forgets the password.

And then we split.

Well, the four years later, we'll be like, "Well, babe, you should check your investment."

And she goes, "I don't know the password. I got fucking." And then we have to do the whole password reset for every. And then we open it. I'm a competitive rich. It's probably good. And she goes, "Oh, amazing."

And then she forgets the password again. And then four years later, we take a look again at her investments. I like to say you want to focus on the things that you can control. You can't control markets. You can't control your performance relative to the market.

And trying to outperform tends to make you worse off rather than better. But the things that you can control are a lot of the things that we've talked about. Having an appropriate financial plan, having the right goal set, having an asset allocation that makes sense for you. Even if markets do decline, having emergency savings, tax planning.

Those are things that you can control. That's what people should focus on. Do you think women at that are investors than men? I'm not super good on these data, but I believe what they're going to say are that women tend to be a little bit more risk-averse.

But they tend to be a little bit less overconfident. Which I assume gets better results, isn't it?

Yeah. I think women are probably better investors.

I'm just going to give the simple answer right there.

I've just got some numbers here, fidelity, said that across 5.2 million accounts.

Women beat men with their investments. Work, business, or women are performed men by 1.8%. Per year, over a three-year period, you see Berkeley. Men traded 45% more often than women leading to annual returns. That were 1.4% lower than women's.

And rather, which is a big bank found that out in the UK, is says that women's investments in the UK outs performed men by 4% over. I believe it. Give your money to your wife.

One of those data points specified, but I assume that a lot of data is related to over trading. Men tend to be overconfident. They tend to trade more. They try to pick stocks. They think Tesla stocks are going to go out because they like the car.

We also, the biggest gambling addicts in the world are men as well. So it's kind of correlates. For sure, it is.

Then we have a closing tradition on this podcast,

where the last guest leaves a question for you next. They're knowing who they're leaving it for. In the diary of the CEO. And the question that has been left for you is, "What experiment can you propose

whose outcome could completely contradict your current beliefs?" Oh, man. I experimented that I could run. If I take my current beliefs as one of the big things that we talked about as markets being efficient, and it being quite hard to outperform the market,

the best experiment that we can run is just trying to beat it. But it's being run all the time.

Isn't there a story in this psychology of money by Morgan Housel?

Well, like, was it Warren Buffett bat someone? Yeah, Warren Buffett bat Ted Sidys, who we've actually had on our podcast. He bet him that his index fund portfolio, which I believe was just the S&P 500,

could outperform any hedge fund portfolio that Ted picked. And they had a specific timeline. I was 10 years was an excellent. Yeah, and then they were going to donate the, an amount of money at the end of the period.

And Ted lost the bat. Warren Warren won. But that was one of those instances where the world kind of got to see, this index fund thing, Buffett has been a big advocate for index funds. But that was a big example where I think a lot of people were exposed to that idea.

Where do people find you? You know, I've got your YouTube channel here, Ben Felix, which I'll link below for anyone that wants to continue to follow you on YouTube. Is there anywhere, and any of the resources that we should direct people to? Yeah, another place where I post actually a little bit more frequently,

with longer form stuff as the rational reminder podcast. People can check me out there. And then I do have some interesting tools for the rent versus buy calculation. We have a goal setting app. I don't think it's up yet though.

And we've got some other really interesting tools on the PWL capital website. PWL capital.com. I'll link all of that below for anyone that's interested. And the rational reminder podcast, rational reminder.ca/podcast. And YouTube channel will be linked below as well.

Awesome. Thank you so much, Ben. Thank you for doing what you do because the finance is such an important part of our life. And I think a huge percentage of the population for whatever reason choose to avoid the subject altogether because it causes a little bit of anxiety.

But also we just don't get taught about finance in school, which I think is a great shame. And in my case, you know, it wasn't until I destroyed my credit rating, my credit score, that I started to figure out what finance was. And by then, kind of like brushing your teeth, I had done a lot of damage. And so since then, from doing this podcast and speaking,

people like you that are good at demystifying complex things, and but also in your case, that use academic research as the basis for the claims they're making.

It has helped to turn the lights on for me.

And in this domain, I think control or like understanding and information is power.

Really like knowledge is power.

And a lot of people are disempowered because they don't have the knowledge.

And they kind of, they're on that sort of roller coaster of their life circumstance.

And they don't feel like they have control, especially considering that the world feels so uncertain right now.

Thank you for doing what you do, Ben. Really, really appreciate it.

I hope to be truly in some time soon. Thanks so much. It's been Theresa and my experience in all entrepreneurs, started with Shopify recently.

I wonder if Shopify has already been the first day.

And the platform makes me no problem. I have a lot of problems, but the platform is not one step away. I have the feeling that Shopify can continue to optimize your platform. Everything is super, simple, integrated and balanced.

And the time and the money that I can never invest in there.

For all of you in Waxtum. Now, the cost list is on shopify.de.

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