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    Money For the Rest of Us

    A personal finance and investing podcast on money, how it works, how to invest it and how to live without worrying about it. J. David Stein is a former Chief Investment Strategist and money manager. For close to two decades, he has been teaching individuals and institutions how to invest and handle their finances in ways that are simple to understand. More info at moneyfortherestofus.com

    enMoney For the Rest of Us483 Episodes

    Episodes (483)

    The Long-term Bullish Case for Gold

    The Long-term Bullish Case for Gold

    Why you should allocate a small percentage of your assets to gold.

    Topics covered include:

    • What is money, and how does gold fit with that definition
    • Why central banks bought more gold last year than at any time since 1967
    • Which central banks own the most gold and which are increasing their gold holdings
    • How fast is the gold supply growing compared to the U.S. dollar money supply
    • How financialization, greater leverage, and contagion risk should motivate us to consider gold


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Central banks load up on gold in response to rising geopolitical tensions by Daria Mosolova—The Financial Times

    Above-ground stocks—Gold Hub

    Central bank holdings—Gold Hub

    Does the Federal Reserve own or hold gold?—The Federal Reserve

    Trey Reik—LinkedIn

    M2 and Components—FRED

    Gold Charts R Us

    Related Episodes

    37: Gold – Without the Hype and Politics

    53: Should You Invest In Bitcoin?

    59: Is Gold Money?

    263: Should You Invest In Gold?

    344: Why Should You Care About Shadow Banking?



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    How Should Personal and National Wealth Be Measured?

    How Should Personal and National Wealth Be Measured?

    How we measure wealth, riches, abundance, and well-being is more important today than ever.

    Topics covered include:

    • How late 18th century philosophers Adam Smith and the Earl of Lauderdale defined wealth and the role of capital. Why they worried about income inequality and excess profits
    • What led to the dramatic increase in life expectancy and wealth in the 20th and 21st centuries
    • How a long life expectancy and well-being can be attained at much lower levels of wealth
    • Why John Maynard Keynes was right about the expansion of the economy but wrong about how many hours we would work
    • How the U.S. expanded its wealth relative to the rest of world, and at what cost
    • Why natural capital should be included in measuring wealth


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith—Early Modern Texts

    About Adam Smith—Adam Smith Institute

    An Inquiry Into the Nature and Origin of Public Wealth and Into the Means and Causes of Its Increase by The Earl of Lauderdale—McMaster University

    Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed and Fail by Ray Dalio—Simon & Schuster

    The Economics of Biodiversity: The Dasgupta Review—GOV.UK

    Less Is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World by Jason Hickel—Penguin Random House

    Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren by John Maynard Keynes—Yale

    America’s economic outperformance is a marvel to behold—The Economist

    How Much is Enough? Money and the Good Life by Robert Skidelsky and Edward Skidelsky—Penguin Random House 


    Related Episodes

    8: What If Everyone Worked Only Four Hours Per Day?

    142: Why Are Some Nations Wealthier Than Others?

    282: Is GDP the Best Measure of Happiness and Well-Being?

    300: Ray Dalio and the Changing World Order

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    Which Inflation Protection Strategies Worked and Which Didn't?

    Which Inflation Protection Strategies Worked and Which Didn't?

    With a total U.S. inflation rate of 14% in the past two years, we review how various inflation hedges performed over the past twenty-four months.

    Topics covered include:

    • What were investors' and the Federal Reserve's inflation expectations two years ago
    • What led to the big inflation increase
    • Why was the Federal Reserve forced to raise its policy rate by almost 5% in a year
    • How successful were inflation-index bonds, stocks, commodities, and real estate in beating inflation over the past two years
    • How did two active ETFs that set out to protect against inflation perform
    • What is the current outlook for inflation, and what should investors do


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    CPI Inflation Calculator—U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

    Inflation Beneficiaries ETF—Horizon Kinetics

    Quadratic Capital Management

    Investments Mentioned

    iShares TIPS Bond ETF (TIP)

    Vanguard Short-term Inflation Protection Securities ETF (VTIP)

    Invesco DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (DBC)

    Vanguard Total World Stock ETF (VT)

    Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI)

    WisdomTree U.S. High Dividend Fund (DHS)

    WisdomTree Global High Dividend Fund (DEW)

    Horizon Kinetics Inflation Beneficiaries ETF (INFL)

    Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (SCHH)

    Quadratic Interest Rate Volatility and Inflation Hedge ETF (IVOL)

    Related Episodes

    336: Own What Is Real

    342: Is Another Great Inflation Coming?

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    How the Coming Credit Crunch Could Harm the Economy and Real Estate Prices

    How the Coming Credit Crunch Could Harm the Economy and Real Estate Prices

    How accelerating bank deposit withdrawals could harm the economy, including real estate prices. How dollars slosh around the financial system but always seem to end up at the Federal Reserve.

    Topics covered include:

    • How many deposits have left banks since the Silicon Valley Bank collapse
    • How much have banks borrowed from the Federal Reserve to meet deposit withdrawals
    • Why exiting deposits are harming bank profits and causing them to make fewer loans
    • How the credit crunch could hurt commercial real estate values
    • How money market mutual funds differ from banks
    • How today's banking crisis is similar to the 1980s savings and loans crisis
    • What should investors do to protect their wealth


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks—The Federal Reserve

    Assets and Liabilities of Commercial Banks in the United States—The Federal Reserve

    All U.S. Banks Net Interest Margin—BankRegData

    Current Treasuries and Swap Rates—Chatham Financial

    Options trading surges as investors brace themselves for US regional bank volatility by Stephen Gandel and Nicholas Megaw and Colby Smith—The Financial Times

    Bank Turmoil Squeezes Borrowers, Raising Fears of a Slowdown by Jeanna Smialek—The New York Times

    Banks' Demand for Reserves in the Face of Liquidity Regulations by Jane Ihrig—Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

    Money Market Funds: Investment Holdings Detail—The Federal Reserve

    Deposit Outflows Shine Light on Fed Program That Pays Money-Market Funds by Eric Wallerstein and Nick Timiraos—The Wall Street Journal

    ICI Research Perspective: Trends in the Expenses and Fees of Funds, 2022—Investment Company Institute

    FAQs: Reverse Repurchase Agreement Operations—Federal Reserve Bank of New York

    US Resolution Trust Corporation by Aidan Lawson and Lily Engbith—SSRN

    Related Episodes

    270: Repo Rates Soared—Here’s Why It Matters

    333: How The Covid Shock Nearly Destroyed The Financial System


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    Did the Tariffs Work? The Trade War Five Years Later

    Did the Tariffs Work? The Trade War Five Years Later

    What has been the impact on trade and the trade deficit since the U.S. implemented tariffs on steel, aluminum, and goods made in China?

    Topics covered include:

    • Has the shipping backlog been reduced at U.S. ports
    • What are the dangers of running too high of a trade deficit
    • How large is the U.S. trade deficit
    • What has been the impact of U.S. tariffs on trade, domestic production, and prices
    • How Chinese direct-to-consumer retail companies Shein and Temu are driving prices of goods ever lower
    • Why consumers should demand greater visibility on how products they purchase are made


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    The ‘ship backup has ended’ at Los Angeles, Long Beach ports by Alejandra Salgado—Supply Chain Dive

    America’s Trade Deficit Surged in 2022, Nearing $1 Trillion by Ana Swanson—The New York Times

    Industry study tracks China tariffs’ added costs to importers and consumers by Ben Unglesbee—Supply Chain Dive

    Costs of Trade Wars: The Distributional Consequences of US Section 301 Tariffs Against China by Kara M. Reynolds—SSRN

    Certain Effects of Section 232 and 301 Tariffs Reduced Imports and Increased Prices and Production in Many U.S. Industries by USITC—United States International Trade Commission

    Economic Impact of Section 232 and 301 Tariffs on U.S. Industries by USITC—United States International Trade Commission

    The other Chinese apps taking the US and UK by storm by Chelsea Bailey—BBC

    Secretive Shein Founders Build $40 Billion Fortune in Rapid Fashion by Venus Feng and Pei Yi Mak—Bloomberg

    Shein sets ambitious revenue target ahead of IPO by Rachel Douglass—Fashion United

    Shein copycats chase its explosive growth by Eleanor Olcott, Qianer Liu, and Gloria Li—The Financial Times

    Temu’s Big Haul by Ella Apostoaie—The Wire China

    The High Price of Fast Fashion by Dana Thomas—The Wall Street Journal

    Stealing More than Just Designs: Utilizing Environmental Law as a Remedy to Design Piracy by Fast Fashion Brands by Spencer Kluth—SSRN

    Shein’s Cotton Tied to Chinese Region Accused of Forced Labor by Sheridan Prasso—Bloomberg

    Worn: A People's History of Clothing by Sofi Thanhauser—Penguin Random House

    More than ever, our clothes are made of plastic. Just washing them can pollute the oceans. by Brian Resnick—Vox

    Related Episodes

    212: Trade Wars Increase Prices and Poverty

    413: What if the World Stopped Shopping?


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    Which is Best - Active or Passive, ETFs or Funds?

    Which is Best - Active or Passive, ETFs or Funds?

    David has a fascinating discussion with Kristof Gleich about active management, indexing, and how ETFs and mutual funds really work.

    Topics covered include:

    • Should individual investors even try to select active mutual funds
    • Is there an indexing bubble
    • Why are there so many new ETFs
    • Should we be worried about an ETF flash crash
    • What do ETF market makers and authorized participants do
    • Do SEC yields for international equity mutual funds and ETFs reflect the impact of dividend withholding taxes


    As the president and CIO of Harbor Capital Advisors, Inc. Kristof Gleich oversees all Investment, Distribution & Marketing and Executive Office functions at Harbor. He provides insight while helping lead Harbor’s strategic growth plan.

    Previously, Kristof was a managing director and global head of manager selection at JP Morgan Chase & Co. He has a degree in Physics from University of Bristol. 

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    Related Episodes

    321: How to Analyze Complex Investments

    311: Did ETFs Pass the 2020 Market Collapse Stress Test?

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    How Profits Motivate Change

    How Profits Motivate Change

    "If something is profitable, it will be done," says Martin Wolf of the Financial Times. We explore how profits will drive the energy transition and how and where water from the Colorado River is used.

    Topics covered include:

    • How profits have led to higher energy market share for natural gas and renewal energy
    • What is hindering a faster transition to renewables
    • What is contributing to a water shortage in the southwestern U.S,. and how will it be resolved
    • Why big infrastructure projects often aren't the best solution to solve a problem
    • Why some regulation is helpful


    For more information on this episode click here.

    Show Notes

    The market can deliver the green transition by Martin Wolf—The Financial Times

    Where the Water Goes: Life and Death Along the Colorado River by David Owen—Penguin Random House

    Economics may take us to net zero all on its own by John Burn-Murdoch—The Financial Times

    The Gregor Letter by Gregor Macdonald—Substack

    The Inflation Reduction Act: Here's what's in it—McKinsey & Company

    Management of the Colorado River: Water Allocations, Drought, and the Federal Role by Charles V. Stern and Pervaze A. Sheikh—Congressional Research Service

    The Supreme Court wrestles with questions over the Navajo Nation's water rights by Becky Sullivan—NPR

    As the Colorado River Shrinks, Washington Prepares to Spread the Pain by Christopher Flavelle—The New York Times

    Can Western States Agree on the Future of the Colorado River? by Matt Vasilogambros—Pew

    A matter of priorities by DeEtte Person—Know Your Water News

    Average monthly water prices in the United States as of July 2022, by selected state—Statista

    Election to Designate AMA for the Douglas Basin—Arizona Department of Water Resources

    Arizona Is in a Race to the Bottom of Its Water Wells, With Saudi Arabia’s Help by Natalie Koch—The New York Times

    Arizona gets serious about piping water from Mexico in nonbinding desalination resolution by Brandon Loomis—AZ Central

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    Related Episodes

    399: Unintended Consequences Impact Everything

    345: Investing in Water

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    Are More Bank Runs Coming? The Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank

    Are More Bank Runs Coming? The Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank

    What caused Silicon Valley Bank to collapse in only 44 hours, and how likely will the contagion spread, leading to other bank failures?

    Topics covered include:

    • How losses on bonds blew up SVB's balance sheet
    • How is Silicon Valley Bank similar and different than other regional banks
    • What the FDIC and Federal Reserve are trying do to restore confidence and stop bank runs
    • How a weakening of the Frank-Dodd bank regulation act set the stage for SVB's failure
    • Why bailing out uninsured depositors is controversial
    • Three scenarios of what might happen next
    • Actions we can take to protect ourselves when private money fails


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Silicon Valley Bank launches $2.25bn share sale to shore up capital base by Joshua Franklin and Antoine Gara—The Financial Times

    US Bank Capital Regulation: History and Changes Since the Financial Crisis by John Walter—Economic Quarterly

    SVB's 44-Hour Collapse Was Rooted in Treasury Bets During the Pandemic by Brian Chappatta—Bloomberg

    Remarks by FDIC Chairman Martin Gruenberg at the Institute of International Bankers—FDIC

    How Silicon Valley Turned on Silicon Valley Bank by Ben Foldy, Rachel Louise Ensign, and Justin Baer—The Wall Street Journal

    SEC Filings Details—Silicon Valley Bank

    FDIC Creates a Deposit Insurance National Bank of Santa Clara to Protect Insured Depositors of Silicon Valley Bank, Santa Clara, California—FDIC

    Uninsured Silicon Valley Bank depositors seek fire sale of assets by Joshua Franklin, Sujeet Indap, Colby Smith, and George Hammond—The Financial Times

    Join Statement by Treasury, Federal Reserve, and FDIC—Federal Reserve

    FDIC Acts to Protect All Depositors of the former Silicon Bank, Santa Clara, California—FDIC

    US regulators are setting a dangerous precedent on SVB by Sheila Bair—The Financial Times

    Back-to-Back Bank Collapses Came After Deregulatory Push by David Enrich—The New York Times

    Will another bank fall? by Robert Armstrong—The Financial Times

    Shares in US regional banks close sharply lower over fears of deposit flight by Jennifer Hughes, James Fontanella-Khan, Ortenca Aliaj, and Brooke Masters—The Financial Times

    Charles Schwab shares drop 12% even as the firm defends financial position by Yun Li—CNBC

    Related Episodes

    405: When Volatility Spikes, Financial Things Break

    392: What Is Money and How to Use It

    305: Are Banks Safe?

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    A "Safe" 6% Yield: The Case for Investment Grade CLOs

    A "Safe" 6% Yield: The Case for Investment Grade CLOs

    How leveraged loans and CLOs work and how to invest in them. What are the risks and opportunities with the new CLO ETFs.

    Topics covered include:

    • What are the characteristics of leveraged loans and how David has invested in them in the past, both professionally and personally.
    • Why LIBOR reference rate for leveraged loans is being phased out
    • What is the current investing climate for leveraged loans
    • How collateralized loan obligation work
    • Why insurance companies are fighting over CLOs
    • What are the different ways to invest in CLOs


    For more information on this episode click here.

    Show Notes

    Companies, Lenders Clash Over Loan Spreads in Switch from Libor by Mark Maurer—The Wall Street Journal

    Libor: The Spider Network—The Wall Street Journal

    Collateralized Loan Obligations (CLOs) Primer by Jennifer Johnson—NAIC and The Center for Insurance Policy Research

    Investing In The Middle: Tapping Into Opportunities in Middle Market Lending—AllianceBernstein

    Top 10 US CLO Managers: CLO AUM (30 Nov 2022)—CLO Research

    Default, Transition, and Recovery: 2021 Annual Global Leveraged Loan CLO Default And Rating Transition Study—S&P Global Ratings

    U.S. BSL CLO And Leveraged Finance Quarterly: Is Winter Coming? by Stephen Anderberg, Daniel Hu, Et al.—S&P Global Ratings

    Risk Assessment of Structured Securities - CLOs by Eric Kolchinsky, Charles A. Therriault, Marc Perlman—National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC)

    Monthly US CLO Index - December 2022—Fitch Ratings

    Private equity-backed insurers under US scrutiny over risky loans by Antoine Gara and Sujeet Indap—The Financial Times

    Private Equity Taps Insurers' Cash to Speed Up Growth by Matt Wirz and Leslie Scism—The Wall Street Journal

    Investments Mentioned​

    Virtus Seix Floating Rate Income Fund (SAMBX)

    Virtus Seix Senior Loan ETF (SEIX)​

    Invesco Senior Loan ETF (BKLN)​

    DoubleLine Flexible Income Fund (DFLEX)​

    BlackRock Debt Strategies Fund (DSU)

    BlackRock AAA CLO ETF (CLOA)

    iShares Treasury Floating Rate Bond ETF (TFLO)​​

    Janus AAA CLO ETF (JAAA)

    Janus B-BBB CLO ETF (JBB)​

    VanEck CLO ETF (CLOI)

    Eaglepoint Credit Company (ECC)

    Oxford Lane Capital Corp (OXLC)

    Related Episodes

    305: Are Banks Safe?

    206: Be Bear Aware of Bank Loans

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    This Stock Has a 15% Dividend Yield and Has Outperformed Warren Buffett. Should You Invest?

    This Stock Has a 15% Dividend Yield and Has Outperformed Warren Buffett. Should You Invest?

    Do activist hedge funds including Carl Icahn's add value? Should you invest in Icahn Enterprises L.P., a conglomerate with a 15% dividend yield and a stake in Carl Icahn's hedge fund?

    Topics covered include:

    • How Icahn Enterprises' (IEP) investment performance compares to Berkshire Hathaway
    • How to analyze individual stocks and why it is challenging
    • What are activist hedge funds and do they make a positive performance difference
    • What are the risks and opportunities of investing in IEP


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Icahn Enterprises L.P.

    The Activism of Carl Icahn and Bill Ackman by Jason D. Schloetzer and Richard Lee—SSRN

    The Long-Term Effects of Hedge Fund Activism by Lucian A. Bebchuk, Alon Brav, Wei Jiang—SSRN

    Did They Live Happily Ever After? The Fate of Restructured Firms After Hedge Fund Activism by Jongha Lim and Wonik Choi—SSRN

    Related Episodes

    242: Should You Let Warren Buffett Manage Your Money?


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    Beware of Survivorship Bias When Investing

    Beware of Survivorship Bias When Investing

    Why long-term U.S. stock market outperformance could be because it has avoided major catastrophes. Does an over-reliance on historical U.S. stock returns when modeling retirement outcomes lead to spending rates that are too high?

    Topics covered include:

    • Why you might consider earthquake insurance
    • What is survivorship bias and what are some examples
    • Why the U.S. is an outlier when it comes to stock market performance
    • Why the 4% retirement spending rule might be too high
    • If the 4% spending rule is too high, what can retirees do instead to have enough for retirement
    • Why the size and scale of the U.S. economy provide some resistance to catastrophes


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Homefacts

    Survivorship Bias—Matt Rickard

    Is The United States A Lucky Survivor: A Hierarchical Bayesian Approach by Jules H. van Binsbergen, Et al.—SSRN

    The Financial History of Emerging Markets: New Indices by Bryan Taylor—SSRN

    The (Time-Varying) Importance of Disaster Risk by Ivo Welch—Financial Analyst Journal

    The Safe Withdrawal Rate: Evidence from a Broad Sample of Developed Markets by Aizhan Anarkulova, Et al.—SSRN

    The 2.7% Rule for Retirement Spending by Ben Felix—YouTube

    Trends in Retirement and Retirement Income Choices by Tiaa Participants: 2000–2018 by Jeffrey R. Brown, Et al.—SSRN

    Related Episodes

    250: Investing Rule One: Avoid Ruin

    326: The New Math of Retirement Spending and Investing


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    Does a 60/40 Balanced Portfolio Still Work? Time to Jettison Non-U.S. Stocks?

    Does a 60/40 Balanced Portfolio Still Work? Time to Jettison Non-U.S. Stocks?

    What are the pros and cons of a simple stock and bond portfolio consisting of two funds or ETFs? Given U.S. stocks have significantly outperformed the rest of the world over the past decade, is there even a role for non-U.S. stocks in your investment portfolio?

    Topics covered include:

    • How have 60/40 and similar portfolios performed over the long-term
    • What are the advantages and disadvantages of a 60/40 portfolio
    • What is the expected return of a 60/40 portfolio and what should be included?
    • What has contributed to U.S. stocks outperforming non-U.S. stocks over the past decade
    • Why have emerging markets stocks done so poorly
    • What has to happen for U.S. stocks to continue to outperform non-U.S. stocks


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    Show Notes

    BlackRock vs. Goldman in the Fight Over 60/40 by James Mackintosh—The Wall Street Journal

    Battered 60-40 portfolios face another challenging year by Adrienne Klasa—Financial Times

    The case for the 60/40 portfolio in equities and bonds by Erin Browne—Financial Times

    Investors wonder if the 60/40 portfolio has a future by Michael Mackenzie—Financial Times

    Has the tried and tested 60/40 strategy soured? by Maya Bhandari—Financial Times


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    How to Make Portfolio and Asset Allocation Changes

    How to Make Portfolio and Asset Allocation Changes

    We consider four case studies in which individuals struggle to decide what to do with their investment portfolios.

    Topics include:

    • Why it's so difficult to reenter the stock market after sitting on the sidelines and what to do instead
    • What are the risks of having a too aggressive portfolio allocation in retirement and what to do instead
    • What to do when an investment strategy has worked really well but you feel it is time to make a change
    • How to decide on an appropriate portfolio mix after a significant financial change


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    For more information on this episode click here.


    Related Episodes

    306: Three Approaches to Asset Allocation

    401: Why Diversifying Your Portfolio Feels Awful


    Show Notes

    Case studies were pulled from the following Plus episodes:

    287 Plus: Coronavirus Update, Mid Month Investment Conditions and Overcoming the Fear of Investing

    306 Plus: Member Profile, Bond Investing, and Emerging Technology

    310 Plus: Mid Month Update and a Member Wants to Reallocate from Growth Stocks

    331 Plus: Member Profile, Tail Risk Protection, Rental Real Estate as Bond Substitute, and YYY ETF

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    Bond Investing Master Class - How to Invest in Fixed Income

    Bond Investing Master Class - How to Invest in Fixed Income

    What you need to know to confidently invest in bonds.

    Topics covered include:

    • Key components of bond investing include face value, coupon rates, yield-to-maturity, duration, and convexity
    • How to decide between owning longer-term or short-term bonds
    • How to decide whether to own individual bonds or bond funds and ETFs
    • When to use active bond management versus bond indexing
    • How bullet bond ETFs work and when to use them
    • How to know when to invest in municipal bonds and corporate bonds
    • When should you own foreign bonds
    • Should you own bonds in taxable or tax-deferred accounts
    • A bond case study based on current interest rates


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    A Complete Guide to Investing in I Bonds and TIPS—Money for the Rest of Us

    Investments Mentioned

    iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT)

    Vanguard Short-Term Treasury ETF (VGSH)

    iShares® iBonds® Dec 2025 Term Treasury ETF (IBTF)

    iShares® iBonds® Dec 2025 Term Corporate ETF (IBDQ)

    Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund ETF (BND)

    Doubleline Total Return Bond Fund (DBLTX)

    Related Episodes

    337: Why in the World Would You Own Bonds?

    378 Plus: A Frustrating Time To Invest and Did Bulletshares Underperform?


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    Will Generative AI Like ChatGPT Replace Your Job?

    Will Generative AI Like ChatGPT Replace Your Job?

    How sophisticated AI apps from OpenAI and other companies create articles, art, and other works that have never existed. How generative AI will impact business owners, employees, students, and financial markets.

    Topics include:

    • How AI is creating personal finance articles and other creative works
    • ChatGPT's attempt at writing a script for the Money For the Rest of Us podcast
    • How ChatGPT and other large language models work
    • What are the risks and flaws of generative AI
    • How can we adapt and take advantage of generative AI


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    We Are Here To Create: A Conversation with Kai-Fu Lee—Edge

    CNET Is Quietly Publishing Entire Articles Generated by AI by Frank Landymore—Futurism

    CNET Money—CNET

    Should You Break a CD Early for a Better Rate by AI engine and edited by Jaclyn DeJohn—CNET

    NerdWallet, Inc. Q3 2022 Earnings Call—NerdWallet

    OpenAI

    The Backstory of ChatGPT Creator OpenAI by Berber Jin and Miles Kruppa—The Wall Street Journal

    GPT-3.5 + ChatGPT: An illustrated overview by Alan D. Thompson—Life Architect

    AI-generate answers temporarily banned on coding Q&A site Stack Overflow by James Vincent—The Verge

    Alarmed by A.I. Chatbots, Universities Start Revamping How They Teach by Kalley Huang—The New York Times

    A Coming-Out Part for Generative A.I., Silicon Valley's New Craze by Kevin Roose—The New York Times


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    Your Nation's National Debt: 5 Things You Need to Know

    Your Nation's National Debt: 5 Things You Need to Know

    We analyze the worrisome national debt situation in the U.S., UK, and Japan and consider what will determine the likelihood of default

    Topics covered include:

    • How big is the national debt in the U.S., UK, and Japan
    • Why Japan and UK interest rates have increased
    • When do federal government debts jump the most
    • What two numbers are key to whether a level of national debt is sustainable
    • What are five ways indebted countries have reduced the relative size of their debt
    • Why quantitative easing is not a solution to a national debt crisis


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    Debt to the Penny—U.S. Treasury Fiscal Data

    Federal Debt and the Debt Limit in 2022—Congressional Research Service

    Can the Central Bank Alleviate Fiscal Burdens? by Ricardo Reis—London School of Economics and Political Science

    UK government debt and deficit: June 2022—Office for National Statistics

    Japan's Experience with Yield Curve Control by Matthew Higgins and Thomas Klitgaard—Liberty Street Economics

    What is the national debt?—U.S. Treasury Fiscal Data

    Major Foreign Holder of Treasury Securities—Treasury International Capital System, U.S. Treasury

    The Liquidation of Government Debt by Carmen M. Reinhart and M. Belen Sbrancia—International Monetary Fund


    Related Episodes

    295: Federal Reserve Insolvency and Monetizing the National Debt

    338: The National Debt, Inflation, and the U.S. Dollar—What Could Go Wrong?

    360: Will the U.S. Default? Debt Ceilings, Government Shutdowns, and the National Debt

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    Listener Q&A

    Listener Q&A

    We kick off 2023 by answering your questions on making portfolio changes, risk tolerance, the strong dollar, inflation and retirement, influential books, and other topics.

    For more information on this episode click here.

    Episode Sponsors

    Thanks to LinkedIn for sponsoring the episode. Use this link to post your job for free on LinkedIn Jobs.

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    Use Caution With Private REITs Like Blackstone’s BREIT - Is Now a Good Time to Invest in REITs?

    Use Caution With Private REITs Like Blackstone’s BREIT - Is Now a Good Time to Invest in REITs?

    How public equity REITs differ from private REITs. Why investors are selling out of private REITs and why private REIT sponsors like Blackstone and Starwood are limiting investors' ability to do so.

    Topics covered include:

    • What are public and private real estate investment trusts
    • Why has Blackstone's BREIT been such a success
    • Why investors are trying to exit private REITs
    • Why commercial property values are falling
    • Is now a good time to invest in public and private REITs?


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    How the gates closed on Blackstone’s runaway real estate vehicle by Antoine Gara, Sujeet Indap, and Kaye Wiggins—Financial Times

    Investors Yank Money From Commercial-Property Funds, Pressuring Real-Estate Values by Konrad Putzier and Peter Grant—The Wall Street Journal

    How the gates closed on Blackstone’s runaway real estate vehicle by Antoine Gara, Sujeet Indap, and Kaye Wiggins—Financial Times

    Investors Yank Money From Commercial-Property Funds, Pressuring Real-Estate Values by Konrad Putzier and Peter Grant—The Wall Street Journal

    Property Insights: Roller Coaster by Michael Knott—Green Street

    Rising Interest Rates Threaten to Expose Office Buildings’ Inflated Values by Konrad Putzier—The Wall Street Journal

    Why Blackstone’s $69 Billion Property Fund Is Signaling Pain Ahead for Real Estate Industry by John Gittelsohn and Patrick Clark—Bloomberg

    Blackstone’s $70 Billion Real Estate Fund for Retail Investors Is Losing Steam by Dawn Lim and John Gittelsohn—Bloomberg

    Related Episodes

    183: How To Invest In Commercial Real Estate

    230: Use Caution With Real Estate Crowdfunding

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    What if the World Stopped Shopping?

    What if the World Stopped Shopping?

    How to solve the conundrum that consumption reductions lead to economic disasters while benefiting the environment.

    Topics covered include:

    • Why consumption, fossil fuel usage, and carbon emissions keep growing
    • How fossil fuel consumption goes well beyond heating and transportation uses but is tied to agriculture, steel, and cement production
    • The four times global consumption fell and the dire economic consequences that resulted
    • How the world is consuming twice as many resources as the planet can sustain
    • How the economy could still grow while reducing the environmental impact


    For more information on this episode click here.

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    Show Notes

    How the World Really Works: The Science Behind How We Got Here and Where We’re Going by Vaclav Smil

    The Day the World Stops Shopping: How Ending Consumerism Saves the Environment and Ourselves by J.B. Mackinnon

    Global Footprint Network

    Related Episodes

    262: Better Not Bigger, Circular Not Linear – How the Global Economy Is Changing

    282: Is GDP the Best Measure of Happiness and Well-Being?

    340: Climate Change, ESG, and What Should Investors Do?

    395: How Population Trends Will Impact Growth, Inflation, Investing, and Well Being

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    Where to Invest Your Cash Savings for Higher Yields