エピソード

  • If You Could Ask Just One Question
    2026/04/17

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/4mUGiFb

    Trevor Cummings hosts the Thoughts On Money podcast with Brett Bonecutter to discuss a due diligence hypothetical: if you could ask an advisor or investment manager only one question, it should be “How do you invest your money?” Drawing on Nassim Taleb’s “skin in the game” idea, Trevor argues behavior and portfolio holdings reveal true beliefs more than polished pitches. He recounts meeting a Twitter-famous fund manager whose personal investments didn’t match his fund strategy, reinforcing the “eat your own cooking” rule while noting it isn’t a complete substitute for full due diligence or diversification. The conversation explores aligned incentives versus fiduciary labels, Buffett’s Goldman Sachs deal requiring executives to retain shares (“buying the jockey”), 1929-era disclosure rules on insider trading, and Trevor’s real example of a near-retiree concentrated in two stocks despite claiming high confidence.

    00:00 One Question Diligence

    01:40 Skin In The Game

    02:48 Quitting Social Media

    05:31 Fund Manager Test

    09:22 Eat Your Cooking

    14:34 Buffett Deal Lesson

    18:35 Limits Of Skin

    19:56 Peace Child Setup

    20:26 Judas and the Gospel

    21:24 Peace Child Incentives

    22:21 Advisor Skin in Game

    23:42 Fiduciary vs Incentives

    25:09 Taleb Fund Cycle

    28:35 Do You Follow Advice

    31:41 1929 Insider Reporting

    35:06 Eating Own Cooking

    35:39 Diversification Wake Up

    38:04 Due Diligence Wrap

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    41 分
  • Room for Life
    2026/04/10

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/4sIiJ3H

    On the Thoughts On Money Podcast, hosts Blaine Carver and Brett Bone Cutter talk with Director of Financial Planning Matt Gregory about his article “Room for Life,” inspired by running in New York City and Morgan Housel’s The Psychology of Money. Gregory explains the need to balance detailed modeling with the reality of uncertainty, using conservative assumptions (often planning to age 100) to create flexibility so plans can absorb pivots without falling apart. He shares his personal pivots from musical theater at NYU into finance, emphasizing that planning is both technical and relational storytelling. The discussion covers helping both technical and narrative-minded clients, avoiding “Armageddon” planning while building margin, using scenario ranges to provide clarity, and viewing the financial plan as a launchpad for tax, savings, and other decisions. They also stress estate planning as completing the picture—aligning assets with family and charitable goals and updating plans as life changes.

    00:00 Podcast Welcome

    00:37 Room for Life Origins

    03:12 Matt’s Career Pivot

    06:06 Storytelling in Planning

    08:40 Different Client Mindsets

    10:01 Room for Life Reframed

    11:42 Expect the Unexpected

    13:36 Optimism vs Pessimism

    15:36 Three Scenario Planning

    17:14 Clarity and Client Questions

    19:29 Puzzle Framework for Plans

    21:23 When Clients Resist Planning

    22:32 Plans Spark Motivation

    23:01 Planning Launchpad Topics

    24:24 Fixing Fragile Plans

    26:39 Budgeting Styles That Fit

    28:05 False Precision Reality

    30:30 Golf Shot Planning Analogy

    31:47 Estate Planning Completes Plan

    35:34 Evolving Estate Plans

    39:05 Mortgage Planning Perspective

    40:48 Advice Over Transactions

    42:46 Final Takeaways Wrap

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    46 分
  • Was Jesus a Socialist?
    2026/04/03

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/3PHCjiB

    Host Trevor Cummings, with Brett Bonecutter and Blaine Carver, discusses whether Jesus’ teachings support socialism, prompted by Senator Raphael Warnock citing Matthew 25 in policy debates about poverty and healthcare. Brett argues socialism is often invoked as a moral claim and defines it as collective ownership and cooperative regulation to constrain private self-interest, then contends Jesus’ teachings and biblical law assume private and real property rights, voluntary exchange, merit-based reward, banking, and interest. They debate whether Jesus’ statements address individual heart posture versus prescribing systems, with Brett pointing to parables of landowners/tenants and the talents, and Jesus praising the widow’s offering, as incompatible with socialist ethics. The conversation emphasizes a “free and virtuous” society, personal responsibility and generosity as the Bible’s mechanism for caring for the poor, and invites listener feedback.

    00:00 Welcome and premise

    00:46 Holy Week motivation

    01:32 Socialism in culture

    02:36 Morality and Jesus

    04:16 Why this matters

    06:35 Warnock quote context

    09:07 Defining socialism

    11:00 Polls and capitalism label

    13:19 Heart versus system

    17:14 Parable property rights

    20:04 Rich ruler nuance

    22:29 Systemic assumptions

    23:11 Systemic Lens Debate

    24:16 Familiar Categories Not Endorsement

    25:45 Parable of the Talents

    29:50 Morality Envy and Greed

    32:55 Acts Church and Coercion

    35:54 Widows Mite and Charity

    38:08 Was Jesus a Socialist

    41:02 Too Big to Fail Tensions

    43:41 Final Thoughts and Wrap

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    46 分
  • What Kind of Spending Makes Us Happy?
    2026/03/27

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/40YZ2Jj

    Trevor Cummings hosts the Thoughts and Money Podcast with Brett and Blaine as they discuss Blaine’s article, “What Kind of Spending Makes Us Happy?” using stories about kids choosing purchases, trips to Disneyland and Chuck E. Cheese, and how adult spending often runs on autopilot amid frequent transactions and subscription costs. They contrast “happiness” with more lasting “joy,” describe how budgeting should start with the “why,” and note how recurring payments and social pressure can drive unexamined spending. Drawing on research and client observations, they highlight that giving (often producing a “warm glow”) and spending on experiences and relationships tend to bring more lasting satisfaction than material goods, while buying to impress others (the “man in the car” paradox) can disappoint. The episode ends with a call to reflect on what brings joy and align spending with personal values.

    00:00 Podcast kickoff

    00:28 Kids and money

    01:38 Disney and Chuck E Cheese

    02:51 Autopilot spending

    03:58 Happiness versus joy

    07:41 Budgeting with purpose

    08:56 Subscription trap

    12:21 Privilege and gratitude

    14:16 Spending on experiences

    18:11 What research shows

    20:19 Joy of giving

    22:34 Motives for Giving

    23:02 Anonymous Giving Debate

    24:42 Warm Glow Study

    27:09 Giving as Money Habit

    27:58 Spending on Experiences

    30:33 Memory Dividends Mindset

    32:19 Second Homes and Familiarity

    35:22 Man in the Car Paradox

    41:23 Hedonic Treadmill Trap

    42:28 Align Spending with Values

    44:24 Final Wrap and Call In

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    47 分
  • American Debtmageddon
    2026/03/20

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/3PkPu91

    Trevor Cummings hosts the Thoughts and Money podcast with Brett “Bone Cutter” and Blaine Carver to address recurring client fears about soaring U.S. national debt and whether “Debt-mageddon” is imminent. They clarify deficit vs. debt using a household analogy, explain how Treasury issuance funds deficits, and cite projected 2026 figures: ~$5.6T receipts vs. ~$7.4T spending, ~ $1.9T deficit, and over $1T of interest expense, with ~75% of spending mandatory. They note rates are historically low (mid-3% average vs. ~9.2% in 1986), meaning higher rates could bust the budget. Possible “solutions” (raise taxes, cut spending, grow out of it, lower rates) all have limits, so they expect a slow, Japanification-style grind rather than a sudden collapse. For investors, they caution against complacent indexing, long-duration bonds, crypto, and overreliance on gold, and emphasize durable, cash-flowing dividend-growth businesses and measuring opportunity cost.

    00:00 Podcast Introductions

    00:20 Debtmaggedon Setup

    01:03 Apocalypse Pop Culture

    03:41 Preppers And Planning

    04:25 Five Key Questions

    05:54 Deficit Versus Debt

    07:47 How Government Borrows

    11:42 Budget Math Reality

    12:36 Interest Costs Squeeze

    17:08 Debt Versus GDP Context

    20:42 Is It Solvable

    20:49 Raise Taxes Tradeoffs

    23:18 Cut Spending Politics

    23:51 Can We Grow Out

    24:24 Can Government Cut Rates

    25:51 Why Long Rates Are Market Set

    26:44 No Magic Wand Fixes

    27:34 Bell Curve Future Scenarios

    29:23 Middle Path Japanification

    30:23 Prepper Mindset And Paralysis

    33:39 Markets Signal No Debt Bomb

    34:55 Investor Playbook Starts Here

    35:21 Beware Indexing And Bonds

    39:33 Opportunity Cost Of Cash

    43:05 Crypto And Gold Skepticism

    45:30 Dividend Growth And Real Profits

    47:58 Closing Jokes And Recap

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    52 分
  • Convictions > Confirmity
    2026/03/13

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/4bFGcwT

    Trevor Cummings hosts The Thoughts on Money Podcast with Brett Bonecutter and Blaine Carver to discuss “convictions over conformity,” arguing that shallow convictions lead investors to chase hot trends and abandon strategies when results turn. They contrast conformity/coercion with conviction by comparing Prohibition (a short-lived, legally forced attempt to curb alcoholism) with Alcoholics Anonymous (a long-lasting program rooted in personal responsibility and shared beliefs). The group emphasizes understanding the “why” behind an investment philosophy to avoid short-term decision-making, noting clients who engage intellectually are calmer during market stress. They discuss how strong convictions help filter product pitches and evaluate risk versus tax benefits. Trevor also shares uncertainty around legacy/estate planning, stressing communication, avoiding formulaic planning, and recognizing multi-generational impacts of wealth transfer.

    00:00 Welcome and Setup

    00:50 Why Conviction Matters

    01:40 Conviction vs Conformity

    03:54 Clients and Market Volatility

    07:55 Prohibition as a Case Study

    13:00 AA and Personal Responsibility

    16:36 Start With Why

    17:35 Staying True to Philosophy

    20:24 Convictions Rooted in Truth

    20:57 Grandma's Ham Parable

    21:16 Ham Ends Parable

    22:18 Why Beats What

    23:34 AI Advice Pitfalls

    24:28 Legacy Planning Uncertainty

    27:05 Communication And Expectations

    31:37 Advisor Role Boundaries

    37:12 Gifting While Alive

    38:44 Generational Ripple Effects

    42:08 Fully Convinced Wrap Up

    43:07 Ratings And Next Steps

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    46 分
  • Shortcuts, Head Starts, and Changing Lanes
    2026/03/06

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/47grFFj

    Trevor Cummings hosts the Thoughts and Money Podcast with Brett Bonecutter and Blaine Carver, discussing his blog topic “Shortcuts, Head Starts and Changing Lanes.” After attending a conference job fair for aspiring financial advisors, they critique “fast track” career programs and argue against career and investing shortcuts, emphasizing foundation-building, patience, and willingness to do early “dirty work.” They compare shortcuts to chasing penny stocks, leverage, and persuasive pitches, noting investors’ susceptibility to FOMO, media narratives, and relative performance envy. They advocate “head starts” through early saving and compounding, citing a chart showing higher ending wealth from starting at 25 versus 35 despite lower total contributions. They warn against “changing lanes” in strategies, promote seeking “good returns, not best returns,” and stress having a durable investment philosophy, accountability, and discipline to avoid ruining long-built progress quickly.

    00:00 Welcome and Banter

    00:54 Conference Shortcut Pitch

    02:24 Why the Long Cut Wins

    05:44 Dirty Work and Foundations

    08:08 Shortcuts in Life and Money

    10:05 Smooth Is Fast Principle

    12:01 Penny Stocks and Red Flags

    13:56 Why We Chase Shortcuts

    18:08 Head Starts Beat Catching Up

    20:05 Compounding Chart Explained

    21:26 Discipline and Real Life Costs

    24:08 Don’t Disrupt Compounding

    24:40 Can You Afford It

    26:18 Credit Changes Everything

    27:42 Changing Lanes Trap

    29:36 Good Returns Mindset

    31:30 Relative Returns FOMO

    33:21 Shallow Convictions

    34:31 Philosophy vs Institutions

    39:49 Time Horizon Edge

    42:34 Reputation and Shortcuts

    43:54 Advisor as Accountability

    45:13 Same as Ever Lessons

    46:06 Overconfidence and Wrap Up

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    50 分
  • Opting For Wisdom: Options Trading Basics
    2026/02/27

    This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/4rAtQvD

    Trevor Cummings, hosting with a lost voice, interviews blog author Brett Bonecutter about his COVID-era entry into the options-trading subculture after being taught by a former bond trader. Brett describes early euphoric gains from a single strategy in a favorable market that led to confirmation bias, followed by significant losses when conditions changed and he wasn’t nimble enough to adapt, noting how traders often highlight winning trades while ignoring the full sample. They explain options as time-bound contracts to buy or sell an underlying asset (calls and puts), including how contracts themselves can be traded, and warn that complex combinations can create severe or even unlimited losses, citing a widely reported case of a confused young options trader who took his life and examples like meme-stock squeezes. They contrast investing vs speculating, critique overreliance on technical analysis, and conclude options are best for professional hedging, not retail “tinkering,” despite get-rich-quick allure.

    00:00 Welcome and Setup

    01:07 Subcultures and Finance

    02:32 COVID Options Rabbit Hole

    05:32 Highlight Reels and Bias

    08:34 Big Wins Then Losses

    10:25 Options Explained Simply

    15:07 Derivatives and Real Danger

    19:28 Casino vs Investing

    21:42 Technical Analysis Debate

    29:30 Selling Puts Insurance Analogy

    35:56 Get Rich Quick Temptation

    37:19 Final Warnings and Wrap

    Links mentioned in this episode:

    • http://thoughtsonmoney.com
    • http://thebahnsengroup.com
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    40 分