

Money For the Rest of Us
J. David Stein
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
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 8, 2021 • 25min
How To Invest in Web3, DAOs and the Metaverse
What is Web 3.0 and how will it transform the world? How you can invest your time and money in decentralized autonomous organizations and other Web3 projects.Topics covered include:What are Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and Web 3.0 and how do they differWhat are decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)How DAOs operate and what are some examplesHow to register one's Web 3.0 user nameHow the Ethereum network, a major part of Web3, is changingHow to participate and invest in DAOs and other Web3 projectsThanks to LinkedIn and Commonstock for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesDecentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs)—EthereumState of the DAOs #0 | Oct 6th, 2021 by BanklessDAO Writers Guild—BanklessDAODecentralized Autonomous Organizations;The New Coordination Frontier by Calvinme—MediumOrganization Legos: The State of DAO Tooling by Nichanan Kesonpat—MediumOpenOrgs.infoSnapshotDeepDAOENSUniswap ProtocolGas and Fees—EthereumUltra Sound MoneyProof of Stake (PoS)—EthereumWhat Is the Metaverse, Exactly? by Eric Ravenscraft—WiredChris Dixon and Naval Ravikant — The Wonders of Web3, How to Pick the Right Hill to Climb, Finding the Right Amount of Crypto Regulation, Friends with Benefits, and the Untapped Potential of NFTs (#542)—The Tim Ferris ShowRelated Episodes339: How To Make Money with BlockFi, Dai and the Evolving DeFi EcosystemNFTs—Money For the Rest of Us Topic IndexSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Dec 1, 2021 • 28min
What Investment Strategies Do Best During High Inflation Periods?
How different asset classes and investment strategies have performed during periods of unexpectedly high inflation. While trend and momentum strategies have performed the best, what are some of the challenges with implementing those strategies.Topics covered include:What has led to today's high inflation environment and why it is uniqueHow current demographic and technology trends are disinflationaryHow many inflationary regimes have there been in the pastHow stocks, residential housing, commodities, collectibles performed during high inflation environments.How trend following and momentum have been the best performing strategy during high inflation environments.Which trend following and momentum approaches have worked best for individual investors.How managed futures strategies workThanks to OurCrowd and Egnyte for sponsoring the episode. Here is more information on Money For the Rest of Us Plus.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesUS Budget Deficit Hits $2.77 Trillion in 2021, 2nd Highest by Associated Press—U.S. News & World ReportIndia says nationwide birthrates drop below key ‘replacement rate’ by Gerry Shih—The Washington PostThe Best Strategies for Inflationary Times by Henry Neville Et al. Trend Following: Equity and Bond Crisis Alpha by Carl Hamill, Sandy Rattray, and Otto Van HemertAQR hedge fund suffers $10bn in outflows by Laurence Fletcher—Financial TimesIs There a Replication Crisis in Finance? Theis Ingerslev Jensen, Bryan T. Kelly, and Lasse Heje PedersenRelated Episodes266: Using Momentum Investing and Trend Following342: Is Another Great Inflation Coming?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Nov 17, 2021 • 21min
Is There a Global Energy Crisis?
With oil, natural gas, coal, and gasoline at the highest prices in eight years, we consider if there is an energy crisis due to an over-reliance on renewable energy sources.Topics covered include:How high have prices risen for oil, gasoline, natural gas, and coalWhy rising energy prices is a multifaceted problem as illustrated by coalHow the global energy mix has changed for power productionWhy investment capital is flowing to renewable energy projects rather than fossil fuel projectsWhy a clean energy transition leads to more volatile fossil fuel pricesHow higher oil prices lead to greater adoption of electric vehiclesHow renewable energy combined with battery technology will create lead to energy on-demand solutionsThanks to Egnyte and Policygenius for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesUS coal prices jump to highest level since 2009 by Myles McCormick—Financial TimesChina’s Energy Crisis Complicates Its Plans for Climate Announcements Ahead of COP26 by Sha Hua and Keith Zhai—The Wall Street JournalChina’s Coal War With Australia Fuels Shortage at Home by Chuin-Wei Yap—The Wall Street JournalChina’s Coal Shortage Threatens Farmers in India and Truckers in South Korea by Jiyoung Sohn in Seoul and Vibhuti Agarwal—The Wall Street JournalThe Gregor LetterPresident Jimmy Carter - Report to the Nation on Energy (Video)Share of renewables, low-carbon sources and fossil fuels in power generation, World 1990-2019—IEAOil 2021: Analysis and forecast to 2026—IEACoal—IEAStatement on recent developments in natural gas and electricity markets—IEARenewable energy firms warn of difficult conditions amid slow winds by Jasper Jolly—The GuardianGlobal EV sales rise 80% in 2021, as automakers including Ford, GM commit to zero emissions: BNEF by Robert Walton—Utility DiveEveryday DriverIn 1900, Ladies’ Home Journal Publishes 28 Predictions for the Year 2000 by Josh Jones—Open CultureHere’s what’s in the infrastructure bill that Biden signed today By Emily Cochrane, Christopher Flavelle, and Alan Rappeport—The New York TimesBattery Storage in the United States: An Update on Market Trends—U.S. Energy Information AdministrationMetals may become the new oil in net-zero emissions scenario by Lukas Boer, Andrea Pescatori, Martin Stuermer, Nico Valckx—Vox EU, CERPRelated Episodes346: Should You Buy an Electric Car or Truck?What You Need to Know About Carbon Investing and its Effect on Climate ChangeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Nov 10, 2021 • 22min
Why Some Asset Bubbles Don't Burst
What conditions need to be in place for an asset bubble to continue and how that applies to stocks, cryptocurrency, and houses.Topics covered include:How to determine if there is an asset bubbleWhat are microbubbles and anti-bubblesHow the cannabis stock bubble burstWhat is required to sustain an asset bubbleHow the current runup in home prices differs from the housing bubble in the mid-2000sWhat structural changes have led to the high valuations for U.S. stocksWhat is the Great Wealth Transfer and will it impact stock pricesThanks to Commonstock and LinkedIn for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesAll-Transactions House Price Index for Oakland-Berkeley-Livermore, CA (MSAD)—Federal Reserve Bank of St. LouisS&P/Case-Shiller CA-San Francisco Home Price Index—Federal Reserve Bank of St. LouisWhat Pops Stock Market Bubbles? Only Surprises, Rob Arnott Says by Vildana Hajric and Michael P. Regan—BloombergYes. It's a Bubble. So What? by Rob Arnott, Bradford Cornell, and Shane Shepherd—Research AffiliatesBubble, Bubble, Toil and Trouble by Rob Arnott, Bradford Cornell, and Shane Shepherd—Research AffiliatesWhat's really going on with San Francisco Walgreens closures? by Eric Ting—SFGATESF ranks high in property crime while it ranks low in arrests by Phil Matier—San Fransisco ChronicleZillow’s Algorithm-Fueled Buying Spree Doomed Its Home-Flipping Experiment by Patrick Clark—BloombergIn Search of the Origins of Financial Fluctuations: The Inelastic Markets Hypothesis – Xavier Gabaix and Ralph S.J. KoijenThe Great Wealth Transfer—Cerulli AssociatesHow Does Intergenerational Wealth Transmission Affect Wealth Concentration? by Laura Feiveson and John Sabelhaus—Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve SystemRelated Episodes226: How To Spot Asset Bubbles and What To Do About Them234: Index But Don’t Herd329: Meme Stocks, GameStop, Short Squeezes, and BubblesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Nov 3, 2021 • 23min
Should You Hedge Your International Stock Exposure From Currency Fluctuations?
How to decide whether it is worth it to hedge currency exposure when investing outside of your home country.Topics covered include:How currency exchange rates impact investment returnsWhat factors impact currency exchange ratesWhat are carry trades and how do they influence exchange ratesHow currency forward contracts workHow ETFs and funds hedge currency exposureWhat to consider when deciding whether to hedge foreign currency exposureThanks to Egnyte and Quartr for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesRising U.S. yields push yen to lowest in nearly 3 years by Saikat Chatterjee—ReutersCutting Volatility in Foreign Stocks While Remaining 100% Invested: Hedge the Currency? by Jeff Weniger and Jeremy Schwartz—WisdomTreeCarry Trade Comes Surging Back With Biggest Gains Since 2016 by Robert Fullem and Brody Ford—BloombergRelated Episodes209: Why Bother Investing Internationally?283: Why You Should Care About Carry TradesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Oct 27, 2021 • 21min
Why Most Cities Thrive and What We Can Learn From Them
How New York City and other metropolises will overcome the pandemic economic shock. Why do some cities thrive while others devolve into chaos? How we can develop the resiliency of thriving cities.Topics covered include:How New York and other cities have dealt with the pandemic economic shockWhy the city of Port au Prince in Haiti is strugglingWhy do cities fail less frequently than companiesHow we can replicate the rhythms and cycles of citiesHow most cities can evolve in response to the pandemic and we can tooThanks to Felix Gray and Alto CryptoIRA for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesLocal Area Unemployment Statistics - New York City— U.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsScale: The Universal Laws of Growth, Innovation, Sustainability, and the Pace of Life in Organisms, Cities, Economies, and Companies by Geoffrey B. WestThe Office Sector in New York City by Brian McElwain, Anita Yadavalli, and Amar Mehta—Office of the New York ComptrollerDesperate Haitians suffocate under growing power of gangs by Dánica Coto and Alberto Arce—The Associated PressCalifornia’s approach to gendered toys says a lot about the state’s political direction—The EconomistHB 389: Poor policy, poorly written, bad for rural Idaho by Geoffrey Wardle—Idaho Business ReviewHuman History Gets a Rewriteby By William Deresiewicz—The AtlanticThe Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity by David Graeber and David WengrowFour Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals by Oliver BurkemanRelated Episodes171: The Extraordinary Impact of CitiesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Oct 20, 2021 • 28min
Should You Invest in a Bitcoin ETF?
Why the new U.S.-based Bitcoin ETFs are a bad idea and will underperform Bitcoin.Topics covered include:What fund and ETF options are available for investing in BitcoinWhy the U.S. has only authorized Bitcoin ETFs that invest in Bitcoin futures even though there are closed-end funds that hold Bitcoin directlyWhat is there a regulatory battle surrounding cryptocurrencies?How closed-end funds differ from ETFsHow Bitcoin futures workWhy Bitcoin ETFs that invest in Bitcoin futures will lag the performance of owning Bitcoin directlyWhy investors should avoid the new U.S. Bitcoin ETFsThanks to Policygenius and Justworks for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesSEC Set to Allow Bitcoin Futures ETFs as Deadline Looms by Katherine Greifeld, Vildana Hajric, and Benjamin Bain—BloombergU.S. SEC Chair Gensler calls on Congress to help rein in crypto 'Wild West' Katanga Johnson—ReutersBitcoin Strategy ETF—ProSharesPurpose Bitcoin ETF—Purpose InvestmentsGrayscale® Bitcoin TrustOsprey Bitcoin TrustJacobi receives approval for "world’s first tier one" bitcoin ETF—Funds EuropeRemarks Before the Aspen Security Forum by Chair Gary Gensler—U.S. Securities and Exchange CommissionCoinbase abandons lending product after SEC pushback by Hannah Murphy and Stefania Palma—Financial TimesCoinbase calls for creation of dedicated crypto regulator by Hannah Murphy and Stefania Palma—Financial TimesFirst bitcoin futures ETF to make its debut Tuesday on the NYSE, ProShares says by Tanaya Macheel—CNBCRustication by Dennis J. Pogue—Mount Vernon Ladies' AssociationIs Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello Constructed of Rammed Earth?—Earth ArchitectureWhat is Roll Yield and How It Impacts Bitcoin, Commodity, and VIX ETF Returns—Money For the Rest of UsRelated Episodes355: Which Money Is Crazier: The U.S. Dollar or Bitcoin?319: Here Come Central Bank Digital CurrenciesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Oct 13, 2021 • 28min
Are Timeshares a Scam? How to Buy and Sell a Timeshare Vacation Rental
How the economics of timeshare vacation rentals work, and why they can be a great fit for some individuals.Topics covered include:When were the first timeshares introducedWhat are the different timeshare ownership modelsWhy timeshares don't appreciate but fall in price after purchaseWhat are maintenance fees and why do they keep increasingWho is the target market for timeshares and how do timeshare companies market to themHow timeshare companies make moneyHow to sell your existing timeshareHow to buy a new timeshareThanks to Quartr and LinkedIn for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesThe ABC’s of PUD’s (Part II): The Basics of Timesharing—American Bar AssociationSecond Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call July 29, 2021—Marriott Vacations WorldwideInvestor Presentation July 2021—Marriott Vacations WorldwideSellMyTimeshareNow, LLCFirm to Pay $2.6M, Stop Making False Timeshare Claims—Claims JournalRelated Episodes24: Timeshares, Preppers and Permanent Portfolios57: Live Like A Local When TravelingSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Sep 29, 2021 • 26min
Will the U.S. Default? Debt Ceilings, Government Shutdowns, and the National Debt
Why the U.S. is closing in on both a debt default and a government shutdown. Topics covered include:How a government shutdown differs from a debt ceiling crisisWhy hasn't Congress passed legislation to fund the government and raise the debt limitHow refusing to increase the debt ceiling could impact Social SecurityHow big is the national debt and who owns itWhy we never know how much federal debt is too much: Japan vs the U.S.How federal debt is used and how it has led to financial innovationWhy countries default on their debtWhat are some of the challenges with central banks pegging interest rates and monetizing the debtWhat could cause the U.S. dollar to crash and inflation to soarThanks to Alto CryptoIRA and LinkedIn for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesAmerica’s debt ceiling is a disaster, though fiscal rules can help—The EconomistTreasury Bulletin, September 2021—Bureau of the Fiscal ServiceMajor Foreign Holding of Treasury Securities—Department of the Treasury/Federal Reserve BoardFed official warns of ‘extreme’ market reaction unless debt ceiling raised by Lauren Fedor, Colby Smith and James Politi - The Financial TimesRepublicans Are Playing a Dangerous Game With Debt by Michael R. Strain—The New York TimesExplainer: What happens when the U.S. federal government shuts down? by Jason Lange—ReutersJanet Yellen Says Treasury Could Exhaust Cash Reserves by Oct. 18 if Debt Limit Isn’t Raised by Nick Timiraos and Kate Davidson—The Wall Street JournalJanet Yellen: Congress, Raise the Debt Limit by Janet Yellen—The Wall Street JournalDevin Carroll on YouTubeIn Defense of Public Debt by Barry Eichengreen, Asmaa El-Ganainy, Rui Esteves, and Kris James MitchenerDifferent Types of Central Bank Insolvency and the Central Role of Seignorage by R. ReisHow do central banks control inflation? A guide for the perplexed by Laura Castillo-Martinez and Ricardo Reis—London School of Economics and Political ScienceCan the Central Bank Alleviate Fiscal Burdens? by Ricardo Reis—London School of Economics and Political ScienceRelated Episodes295: Federal Reserve Insolvency and Monetizing the National Debt338: The National Debt, Inflation, and the U.S. Dollar—What Could Go Wrong?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Sep 22, 2021 • 22min
Why Are There So Many Shortages?
What is causing the shortage of goods and workers? What should we do about it?Topics covered include:How a tree pandemic killed billions of American Chestnut treesHow a massive increase in demand has crippled the global supply, leading to an eight-fold increase in shipping costsWhy there are so many job openings and people quitting their jobsWhy the free market doesn't work as well for child daycareHow stimulus payments during the pandemic reduced poverty ratesWhat is the lying flat movementHow everything is in place for an extended period of high inflation even though the bond market still anticipates inflation will be transitoryWhy we should own real things and plan more downtimeThanks to Policygenius and Masterworks for sponsoring the episode.For more information on this episode click here.Show NotesThe Demise and Potential Revival of the American Chestnut by Kate Morgan—Sierra ClubU.S. Imports to Increase by 20% by End of 2021—Material Handling & LogisticsThe largest port in the US hit a new ship-backlog record every day last week, as 65 massive container boats float off the California coast by Grace Kay—Business InsiderThe World Is Still Short of Everything. Get Used to It. by Peter S. Goodman and Keith Bradsher—The New York Times‘Just Get Me a Box’: Inside the Brutal Realities of Supply Chain Hell by Brendan Murray—Bloomberg BusinessweekRising Shipping Costs Are Companies’ Latest Inflation Riddle by Thomas Gryta—The Wall Street JournalIncome, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2020—United States Census BureauEmployers Are Baffled as U.S. Benefits End and Jobs Go Begging by Katia Dmitrieva and Olivia Rockeman—BloombergJob Openings and Labor Turnover - July 2021—U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics‘Lie Flat’ If You Want, But Be Ready to Pay the Price by Allison Schrager—Bloomberg‘Can’t Compete’: Why Hiring for Child Care Is a Huge Struggle by Claire Cain Miller—The New York TimesTreasury Releases Report Showing U.S. Childcare System Overburdens Families and Causes Shortages Due to Inadequate Supply—U.S. Department of the TreasuryRelated Episodes323: The Economy Is Not A Machine331: Why Do We Work So Much?See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.