Real Personal Finance cover logo
RSS Feed Apple Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts
English
Non-explicit
libsyn.com
4.80 stars
21:53

It looks like this podcast has ended some time ago. This means that no new episodes have been added some time ago. If you're the host of this podcast, you can check whether your RSS file is reachable for podcast clients.

Real Personal Finance

by Scott Frank and James Conole

Your REAL personal finance questions answered by CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professionals, Scott Frank and James Conole. With all of the misinformation and jargon in the financial industry, it's no wonder most people are confused about how to best manage their money. James and Scott are here to give clear answers to the important questions they hear most often. If you're ready to use your finances to create a more secure financial future, this show is for you.

Copyright: © 2023 Real Personal Finance

Episodes

Misleading Financial Rules That You Should Avoid

18m · Published 21 Dec 16:00

Scott and James discuss misleading financial rules to avoid.

Join the Real Personal Finance Community and click on "The Nation"

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

How do you both think about the common wisdom that you should have a certain multiple of your income saved by a specific age (e.g. save at least 1x your salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, and 10x by 67)?

I am in a situation where my income has tripled between ages 30 and 35. As an example, let's say I had 100K saved at age 30 (1x my salary), but I'm 35 and my salary is now 300K. I don't have 900K saved in retirement, in fact, it's about half that. Am I in trouble?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - How Much Do I Need To Save?

8:52 - How Much Money Do I Need?

12:54 - Portfolio Changes

14:45 - Income Diversification

18:21 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

Misleading Financial Rules That You Should Avoid

18m · Published 21 Dec 16:00

Scott and James discuss misleading financial rules to avoid.

Join the Real Personal Finance Community and click on "The Nation"

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

How do you both think about the common wisdom that you should have a certain multiple of your income saved by a specific age (e.g. save at least 1x your salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, and 10x by 67)?

I am in a situation where my income has tripled between ages 30 and 35. As an example, let's say I had 100K saved at age 30 (1x my salary), but I'm 35 and my salary is now 300K. I don't have 900K saved in retirement, in fact, it's about half that. Am I in trouble?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - How Much Do I Need To Save?

8:52 - How Much Money Do I Need?

12:54 - Portfolio Changes

14:45 - Income Diversification

18:21 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

[BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!] How to Find the Right Solution For Your Financial Needs

43m · Published 14 Dec 11:00

Scott and James discuss annuities and announce Real Personal Finance NATION!

Join the Real Personal Finance Community and click on "The Nation"

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I've met with multiple financial advisors and all of them have 2 things in common.
1. They all say they are Fiduciary.
2. They all try and pitch me on various types of annuities to supplement or augment my portfolio.
Can you please address annuities on a show? Everything I have read online says to stay away from annuities (all types), and I am losing trust for the financial advisor industry. Are there cases where an annuity is a good move?
P.S. I asked the last guy your recommended set of questions from a previous show. He was impressed with the question I asked, "How else are you paid?" And did say insurance commissions, but also said nobody asked him that.

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Annuity Overview

14:15 - Exchanging Annuities

23:46 - Financial Advisors

29:15 - Advisor Resources

35:10 - Real Personal Finance NATION!

39:30 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

[BIG ANNOUNCEMENT!] How to Find the Right Solution For Your Financial Needs

43m · Published 14 Dec 11:00

Scott and James discuss annuities and announce Real Personal Finance NATION!

Join the Real Personal Finance Community and click on "The Nation"

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I've met with multiple financial advisors and all of them have 2 things in common.
1. They all say they are Fiduciary.
2. They all try and pitch me on various types of annuities to supplement or augment my portfolio.
Can you please address annuities on a show? Everything I have read online says to stay away from annuities (all types), and I am losing trust for the financial advisor industry. Are there cases where an annuity is a good move?
P.S. I asked the last guy your recommended set of questions from a previous show. He was impressed with the question I asked, "How else are you paid?" And did say insurance commissions, but also said nobody asked him that.

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Annuity Overview

14:15 - Exchanging Annuities

23:46 - Financial Advisors

29:15 - Advisor Resources

35:10 - Real Personal Finance NATION!

39:30 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

What's the Best Way for a Career Changer to Get Into the Financial Planning Industry?

26m · Published 07 Dec 16:00

Scott and James discuss the best way to enter the financial planning industry as a career changer.

Wilson Liu Financial Resources

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I really enjoy your podcast. I've had a 10-year career in nonprofit development, but I've had a passion for investing and personal finance since I was a little kid. I'm trying to pivot into wealth management. I know in a recent episode you addressed the path into the industry for someone coming out of college. I'd love to hear if you have any insight for someone making a pivot mid-career. Maybe the pathway is the same, but it would be great to hear what you think.

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Financial Resources

10:15 - Understanding Your Options

12:46 - Career Change Sample

15:55 - Characteristics Scott/James Look For

23:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

What's the Best Way for a Career Changer to Get Into the Financial Planning Industry?

26m · Published 07 Dec 16:00

Scott and James discuss the best way to enter the financial planning industry as a career changer.

Wilson Liu Financial Resources

We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I really enjoy your podcast. I've had a 10-year career in nonprofit development, but I've had a passion for investing and personal finance since I was a little kid. I'm trying to pivot into wealth management. I know in a recent episode you addressed the path into the industry for someone coming out of college. I'd love to hear if you have any insight for someone making a pivot mid-career. Maybe the pathway is the same, but it would be great to hear what you think.

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Financial Resources

10:15 - Understanding Your Options

12:46 - Career Change Sample

15:55 - Characteristics Scott/James Look For

23:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

How Do You Know When You're on Track to be Financially Free?

23m · Published 30 Nov 11:00

Scott and James discuss how you can know when you're financially free.

NEW: We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

If you think we can step away from work when I hit "my number" whether it be at age 49 or 54 - knowing that I would only pull approx 3% from my brokerage until I reach 59.5. My goal would be to leave FT work at age 50, and have my wife and I only work PT or consulting to cover expenses and carry healthcare - w/o withdrawing from the portfolio until we hit our number (BTW we think total number is about 3.5M). 

We're both 40
We have about 900,000 in liquid assets (not including our home equity). Of that total amount, about 500k in roth, 250k in traditional ira, 130k brokerage and 20k hsa. 90/10 portfolio of just a few diversified vanguard ETFs
combined income of 300k
spend about 85k today
after tax, we save/invest about 60% and if you add employer match in total it's about 115k a year towards investments
mortgage will be paid off by 50 and kids will be in college
we'd like to forecast spending about 90-95k in todays dollars in retirement

So, in about 10 years, will we reach enough to execute our plan of having options? And how large should our brokerage account be to cover our plan of spending our 50s doing some PT work to cover expenses and then withdrawing in our mid-50s?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Listener Question

10:30 - Truth of Investing

13:16 - Financial Freedom

18:20 - Tax Planning

20:53 - Risk Management

23:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

Submit Your Question For The Show Here!

How Do You Know When You're on Track to be Financially Free?

23m · Published 30 Nov 11:00

Scott and James discuss how you can know when you're financially free.

NEW: We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

If you think we can step away from work when I hit "my number" whether it be at age 49 or 54 - knowing that I would only pull approx 3% from my brokerage until I reach 59.5. My goal would be to leave FT work at age 50, and have my wife and I only work PT or consulting to cover expenses and carry healthcare - w/o withdrawing from the portfolio until we hit our number (BTW we think total number is about 3.5M). 

We're both 40
We have about 900,000 in liquid assets (not including our home equity). Of that total amount, about 500k in roth, 250k in traditional ira, 130k brokerage and 20k hsa. 90/10 portfolio of just a few diversified vanguard ETFs
combined income of 300k
spend about 85k today
after tax, we save/invest about 60% and if you add employer match in total it's about 115k a year towards investments
mortgage will be paid off by 50 and kids will be in college
we'd like to forecast spending about 90-95k in todays dollars in retirement

So, in about 10 years, will we reach enough to execute our plan of having options? And how large should our brokerage account be to cover our plan of spending our 50s doing some PT work to cover expenses and then withdrawing in our mid-50s?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Listener Question

10:30 - Truth of Investing

13:16 - Financial Freedom

18:20 - Tax Planning

20:53 - Risk Management

23:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

Submit Your Question For The Show Here!

How do Individual Stocks Compare to Investing in Funds?

34m · Published 23 Nov 11:00

Scott and James discuss the most how individual stocks compare to investing in funds.

NEW: We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I listen to your podcast and it has inspired me to invest however, I have invested into individual stocks and it has lost around 50% of its value so I invested money into VOO because I thought it was safer and I continue to invest $55 every two weeks im 18 and this is what I can comfortably afford how do I build my wealth for the long term should I continue to invest in the S and P or is there another thing you recommend?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Individual Stocks

10:30 - Truth of Money

13:16 - Funds Overview

18:20 - Financial Planning

20:53 - Stock Investing

26:49 - Growth Mindset

33:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

Submit Your Question For The Show Here!

How do Individual Stocks Compare to Investing in Funds?

34m · Published 23 Nov 11:00

Scott and James discuss the most how individual stocks compare to investing in funds.

NEW: We're on YouTube here!

Listener Question:

I listen to your podcast and it has inspired me to invest however, I have invested into individual stocks and it has lost around 50% of its value so I invested money into VOO because I thought it was safer and I continue to invest $55 every two weeks im 18 and this is what I can comfortably afford how do I build my wealth for the long term should I continue to invest in the S and P or is there another thing you recommend?

Planning Points Discussed

  • Utilizing Time Efficiently
  • Capital Appreciation
  • Purchasing Power
  • Other issues (IRAs, Inflation, Financial Goals, etc.)

Timestamps:

2:30 - We're on YouTube HERE!

6:17 - Individual Stocks

10:30 - Truth of Money

13:16 - Funds Overview

18:20 - Financial Planning

20:53 - Stock Investing

26:49 - Growth Mindset

33:00 - Aligning Your Financial Goals

LET'S CONNECT!

James

YouTube LinkedIn Website

Scott

Facebook Twitter Website

ENJOY THE SHOW?

Don’t miss an episode, subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Google Play.

Submit Your Question For The Show Here!

Real Personal Finance has 216 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 78:49:48. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on October 26th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on March 2nd, 2024 19:10.

Similar Podcasts

Every Podcast » Podcasts » Real Personal Finance