Talking Real Money - Investing Talk

Talking Real Money - Investing Talk

byDon McDonald

BusinessInvestingEducationHow-To

Financial talk radio veteran, Don McDonald and former host of Serious Money on PBS, Tom Cock, join forces to talk about real money issues. In each episode, they solve real money problems, dole out real investing (not speculating) advice, and really explain the financial issues that effect all of us. Plus, it's actually fun! Talking Real Money is a podcast designed to provide the real help we all need to enjoy a really great future. Call in with your questions anytime at 855-935-TALK (8255).

Episodes(40 episodes)

Retirement Myths
As Talking Real Money moves into its final week on terrestrial radio, Don and Tom mix transition talk with a practical rundown of common retirement myths. They push back on the idea that expenses automatically fall in retirement, warn that Social Security was never meant to cover everything, and explain why relying on the market alone can be dangerous when withdrawals begin. Callers bring in questions about the sketchy-sounding Quantum X trading platform, required minimum distributions, whether a high-income worker can retire at 62, ETF bid/ask spreads, and where to hold bonds when a 401(k) offers outrageously expensive fund...
Published: Mar 25, 2026Duration: 46m 59s
You Can't Know
With geopolitical tension rattling markets and investors stampeding into cash, gold, and energy, Don and Tom step back to deliver a familiar message: nobody knows what’s next—and anyone claiming otherwise is selling something. They walk through the behavioral traps of market timing, explain why diversification (especially beyond U.S. large caps) is quietly doing its job, and highlight the role of small cap and micro-cap stocks as part of a broader portfolio—not a silver bullet. Along the way, they mix in listener calls, practical tips (including liquidity strategies and avoiding irreversible investments), and a running acknowledgment that w...
Published: Mar 24, 2026Duration: 44m 53s
Icy Market
The housing market is stuck in an unusual freeze, driven by the lingering effects of ultra-low COVID-era mortgage rates, reduced housing inventory, and sharply higher income requirements for buyers. With fewer people moving, less new construction, and more all-cash purchases, affordability has deteriorated and first-time buyers are older than ever. Don and Tom argue that homeownership is often overrated as an investment and suggest renting may be the more rational choice for many. They also tackle listener questions on Robinhood’s 2% transfer bonus (tempting but tied to a five-year lockup), comparisons between today’s market and 1929 (very different structurally), and...
Published: Mar 23, 2026Duration: 29m 50s
Fewer Q Friday
Don fields listener questions on asset allocation, advisor timing, and investing complexity with his usual bias toward simplicity and self-awareness. He emphasizes that the decision to add bonds isn’t about age but about emotional tolerance for loss, shares his own shift to a more conservative 55/45 portfolio, dismisses futures markets as largely speculative noise for most investors, and advises a listener nearing retirement that while there’s no urgency to hire an advisor, the value of planning—especially around taxes and income strategy—becomes increasingly important in the early 60s. 0:04 Thunderstorm intro and Q&A format setup 1...
Published: Mar 20, 2026Duration: 21m 11s
Optimal Income?
Morningstar’s latest research nudges the “safe” withdrawal rate down to 3.9%, but Don and Tom make it clear there’s no magic number—just tradeoffs. They walk through fixed vs. flexible withdrawal strategies, why spending adaptability matters more than rules of thumb, and how your goals (spend vs. leave money behind) shape everything. Listener questions tackle bond fund choices (yield vs. stability), portfolio allocation math, and whether an advisor should pay for a costly tax mistake (short answer: yes). 0:04 The big retirement question: how much can you safely withdraw? 0:32 Morningstar updates the “4% rule” to 3.9% 0:55 Why the...
Published: Mar 19, 2026Duration: 27m 53s
Everything Ends
The show opens with a major announcement: Talking Real Money is leaving terrestrial radio and going fully podcast-only, marking the end of a 16-year Saturday run. A heartfelt surprise call from Don’s wife Debbie reflects on decades of friendship, trust, and listener connection before the tone pivots back to business. The main topic takes aim at perpetual crash predictors like Robert Kiyosaki, dismantling their track records with hard numbers and highlighting the absurdity of market timing. The episode then shifts to a real-world HOA investing debate, using it as a case study to expose the risks and illusions be...
Published: Mar 18, 2026Duration: 45m 40s
Retired Broke
As Talking Real Money prepares to leave terrestrial radio and become a podcast-only show, Tom and Don pivot from logistics to a deeper issue: the growing financial fragility of retirees. With fewer than 3% of Americans over 65 holding $1M in retirement savings and bankruptcy rates rising among seniors, they explore whether the shift from pensions to 401(k)s helped or hurt. While critics call 401(k)s a failed experiment, the hosts argue the real problem is behavior, education, and lack of early saving. Listener calls reinforce the divide—some are planning wisely in their 30s, while others highlight rising costs, la...
Published: Mar 17, 2026Duration: 44m 58s
Exchange Traded Gambling
Exchange-traded funds began as simple, low-cost index vehicles, but their popularity has sparked a flood of increasingly speculative products. Don and Tom explain how more than 1,000 new ETFs launched in the past year—many involving leverage, crypto exposure, or even single-stock bets—turning what was once a sensible investment wrapper into a playground for risky financial engineering. They discuss why firms are rushing into ETFs to capture investor dollars, how leveraged products can devastate portfolios, and why investors must focus on what’s inside an ETF rather than the label itself. The episode also answers listener questions about the cost s...
Published: Mar 16, 2026Duration: 30m 47s
Questions Four
In this Friday Q&A episode, Don answers four listener questions covering fund recommendations, special-needs financial planning, retirement withdrawal strategy, and tax-efficient health savings. First, he addresses whether Talking Real Money receives commissions for mentioning Avantis and Dimensional funds (they do not) and explains why those firms’ evidence-based strategies stand out. A second caller asks about planning for a child with a lifelong disability, prompting Don to stress the importance of working with a specialist attorney to establish structures such as special-needs trusts and ABLE accounts. Another listener questions whether all-in-one funds complicate retirement withdrawals, but Don argues that si...
Published: Mar 13, 2026Duration: 17m 36s
Don't Invest?
A debate over jelly bean flavors quickly pivots into a takedown of a flashy Inc. Magazine article claiming people shouldn’t save for retirement. Don and Tom dissect the “cash-flow over investing” pitch from entrepreneur Joseph Drups, exposing the realities of running small businesses, the risks behind claims of passive income, and the likelihood that the real money comes from selling the system rather than executing it. The conversation then turns to listener questions, including the differences between Avantis ETFs AVGE and AVTM and a thoughtful inquiry about whether factor investing from firms like Avantis and Dimensional justifies higher fees c...
Published: Mar 12, 2026Duration: 35m 55s
Retiremeet 2026 Part Two
Broadcast from RetireMeet 2026 in Bellevue, Don and Tom reflect on the evolution of retirement planning—from a narrow focus on investments to a broader conversation about purpose, relationships, and life after work. They interview Paul Merriman, who discusses portfolio construction, the role of small-cap value stocks, risk tolerance, and long-term investing discipline. The conversation also explores withdrawal strategies, market history, and how investor behavior during downturns often determines success more than asset allocation itself. The episode closes with a major announcement: the Talking Real Money radio show will end in April and transition fully to a podcast format with fi...
Published: Mar 11, 2026Duration: 38m 18s
Retiremeet 2026 Part One
Broadcast live from RetireMeet in Bellevue, Don announces that after nearly four decades of Saturday radio shows, Talking Real Money will end its live radio run on March 28 and continue exclusively as a podcast. The episode features conversations with Joe Saul-Sehy of Stacking Benjamins and Morningstar’s Christine Benz about how people should approach retirement. The central theme is flipping the traditional process: design the life first and the money second. Guests emphasize “play-testing” retirement activities before leaving work, gradually transitioning into retirement rather than stopping abruptly, maintaining strong social connections, and keeping purposeful work or learning in later life...
Published: Mar 10, 2026Duration: 43m 16s
Future Jobs
This episode begins with a look at the changing career landscape as AI and automation reshape white-collar work. Don and Tom discuss a Wall Street Journal piece suggesting that some workers—and especially young people deciding on careers—may want to reconsider the trades and other blue-collar paths where demand and wages are rising. They explore shortages in skilled labor, the value of transferable business skills, and the importance of knowing yourself when choosing a career. Listener questions then cover whether Robinhood’s transfer bonuses make the platform worth considering, the realities of starting a second career as a financ...
Published: Mar 9, 2026Duration: 31m 59s
More Questions!
This Friday Q&A episode tackles several thoughtful listener questions covering 401(k) investment choices, Roth conversion strategies, bond market fears, inherited IRA planning, and investment club mechanics. Don explains why opaque collective investment trusts and “cycle” funds often hide market-timing strategies, cautions against making large Roth conversions based on predictions about future tax rates, and reassures investors worried about inflation and national debt that markets already incorporate widely known risks. The episode closes with a practical endorsement of a listener’s strategy to gradually withdraw from an inherited IRA to fund Roth contributions, emphasizing simplicity, discipline, and avoiding emotionally driven...
Published: Mar 6, 2026Duration: 27m 54s
Free Money?
AI hype is colliding with financial reality. Don and Tom examine Elon Musk’s suggestion that artificial intelligence could create such abundance that retirement savings might become unnecessary. They unpack the economics behind universal basic income, including the staggering cost—even a modest payment would require trillions in new revenue—and explain why most Americans aren’t betting their futures on Silicon Valley promises. The episode also answers listener questions about confusing target-date fund holdings, what to do with an overfunded 529 plan, and how to reduce taxable investment distributions by placing assets in the right accounts. Along the way they rev...
Published: Mar 5, 2026Duration: 28m 39s
Teach Real Investing
Financial education is expanding nationwide—but much of it is still teaching speculation instead of investing. Don and Tom critique stock-picking contests, flawed risk frameworks, and misleading “active vs. passive” framing, while arguing for evidence-based investing and early Roth contributions as the true foundations of financial literacy. They break down the compounding power of a 529-to-Roth strategy, address custodial transaction fees when selling mutual funds, caution against performance chasing in emerging markets after a major rally, and help a caller navigate moving an elderly parent’s CD out of a low-yield bank account. The through-line: education is powerful—but only if it...
Published: Mar 4, 2026Duration: 44m 55s
With the Cost?
Don and Tom revisit the eternal temptation to beat the market, dismantling the appeal of equal-weight indexes and active management claims by highlighting implementation costs, tax drag, and decades of underperformance data. They explain why diversification isn’t about bragging rights but smoother returns and disciplined risk management. Callers tackle portfolio rebalancing for a multimillion-dollar account (with a strong case made for elegant simplicity), sibling stock-picking rivalries, and small-business 401(k) options 0:04 Beating the market. Four decades of “sure things” that weren’t. 2:44 Equal-weight vs. cap-weight. Smart idea… until costs show up. 4:58 Why diversify beyond the...
Published: Mar 3, 2026Duration: 44m 52s
Funds or Ladders?
This episode dives into the surprisingly emotional world of fixed income investing, exploring whether traditional bond funds like BND still make sense or if newer laddered bond ETFs offer a psychological edge by returning principal at a set maturity date. Don and Tom unpack how these ETFs compare to CD ladders, why capital gains should never be expected from bonds, and how investor psychology often drives the preference for “certainty.” They also congratulate Dimensional Fund Advisors on reaching $1 trillion in assets, discuss whether laddering target-date funds makes planning easier or just more complicated, and answer listener questions about transferring acco...
Published: Mar 2, 2026Duration: 32m 34s
More Qs reQuired
On this Friday Q&A episode, Don answers listener questions on international stock overweighting inside a Seattle city retirement plan, whether a Vanguard target-date fund might be a smarter emotional guardrail than self-managing allocations, how much term life insurance a family really needs (hint: it’s about replacing income, not funding Ivy League dreams), whether an aggressively small-value–tilted Avantis portfolio is too risky for a disabled early retiree, and how to evaluate a $36,000 pension annuity versus a $500,000 lump sum using withdrawal math instead of Monte Carlo optimism. The recurring theme: feelings aren’t an edge, discipline beats prediction, and st...
Published: Feb 28, 2026Duration: 25m 56s
Slicing Fees
Vanguard slashes fees again, pushing its average expense ratio down to six basis points. Don and Tom contrast that with outrageously expensive ETFs charging 2% to 14% annually, walk through why evidence-based factor funds cost a bit more than pure index funds, answer listener questions about international tilts and fund-of-funds rebalancing, and clarify why diversification across assets still matters more than fee-chasing alone. 0:04 Vanguard cuts fees again — average expense ratio now 0.06% 3:43 What expense ratios really are (and how many investors unknowingly overpay) 5:00 The shockers: ETFs charging 2% to 14% annually 11:13 Comparing Vanguard index costs vs. Av...
Published: Feb 26, 2026Duration: 31m 36s