

Sound Investing
Paul Merriman
Weekly podcasts with Paul Merriman. Strategic planning for investing at every stage of life.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 22, 2020 • 33min
What returns can we expect in the future?
Why do investors find it difficult to deal with the reality of the random nature of investment returns? Paul gave a lot of thought to this question in preparation for an interview with Jim Dahle of White Coat Investor and Rick Ferri, President of The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy.
On this podcast he shares his conclusions, including the likely possibility that it is the neat and tidy way we teach the history of returns. Paul focuses on the many decades of underperformance of the asset classes that most investors have in their portfolio. He draws on information from the 4 Fund Combo tables as well as the 9 Decades Study. The interview with Jim and Rick will be posted next month.
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Jul 15, 2020 • 55min
Am I saving enough to retire? and 5 more Q&A
Paul tackles six topics from commodities to retirement savings, from first-time investing to current retirement investment strategies. A special thank you to Paul’s podcast listeners who responded to his survey question: "Podcasts or videos: which do you prefer?" Your listenership, and sharing this information — to help educate and empower others — is greatly appreciated!
1: Why don’t your recommendations include commodities? 1:35
Paul’s comments focus on an article written by Dennis Tilley, Director of Alternative Investments for Merriman Wealth Management. http://www.merriman.com/advanced-portfolio-management/why-we-still-dont-favor-commodities/
2: How should a 24-year-old first-time investor best put $5000 to work? 16:15
Paul suggests he read The Ultimate Buy and Hold Strategy article, review the list of recommended Best In Class ETFs and listen to this “Best Investment Advice" podcast Paul recorded for university students.
3: What funds do you recommend for the 4 Fund Combo? 28:40
Paul's recommendations include this article, “Market Got You Down? How to Construct a Comeback Portfolio
4: Am I saving enough to retire with $2.5 to $4 million dollars? 29:40
Paul's answer includes reading this free chapter from Financial Fitness Forever.
5: What do you have to say about the horrendous returns of the Four Fund Combo this year? 37:05
Paul recommends reviewing the normal losses in the Fine Tuning Tables.
6: What are your thoughts about Jeremy Siegel’s recommendation for retired investors increasing their exposure to equities? 46:20
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Jul 8, 2020 • 1h 16min
The Past, Present, and Future of Investing
In this special presentation to the Bainbridge Community Foundation, June 2020, Paul provides insights into the past, present and future of investing. What are the most important lessons learned about investing in the last 50 years? How can we use them to make more money for our retirement? What 3 myths cost investors up to half their retirement savings? What three people changed investing forever? And much more. If you enjoy this podcast, please share.
To see the slide show accompanying the video, click here.
For the slideshow, "10 Simple Investment Decisions Guaranteed to Change Your Financial Future”, click here.
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Keywords: investing for retirement, stock market history, future of investing, bear markets, make more money, famous investors, investor success, financial independence, best investments, paul merriman podcast, sound investing

Jul 1, 2020 • 52min
Help for the do-it-yourself investor
On February 22, before the recent bear market and during the very early days of the Coronavirus, I was scheduled to speak at Vestory’s Annual Retiremeet. I went a day early so I could interview two very good friends I'd worked with for more than 10 years, Tom Cock and Don MacDonald. The three of us used to do a weekly radio show together. It was always fun and we had great guests like John Bogle, Knight Kiplinger, Larry Swedroe, Scott Burns, Robert Kiyosaki and Joe Granville, to name a few. In 2009 Tom and Don left the Merriman firm to found Vestory a registered investment advisory firm.
In this podcast we discuss the challenges of helping the do-it-yourself investor. While Don mentions the importance of staying in front of the investors on a regular basis, they felt one of the most difficult decisions for DIY investors is determining their risk tolerance. They offer an interesting risk tolerance test that I took. It has some very good questions. I suggest you give it a try as it is more specific than most.
Questions I ask:
How can you tell if you are working with a fiduciary?
What do tell investors about expectations for long term returns?
Why are stocks a good investment for the long term?
How much should young people be investing?
How can mutual funds offer funds without any expense?
What do you look for in a good investment advisor?
Don MacDonald is also author of Financial Fysics: How Money and Investing Really Work. For those who know Don’s outspoken mistrust of stock brokers, you will be shocked that I tricked him into saying something nice about stockbrokers.
Tom and Don do a weekly radio/internet show, "Talking Real Money", as well as a daily podcast of the same name. I hope you enjoy this podcast and check out their daily podcast. In fact, they have a call-in phone line where you can leave a question anytime. Give it a try: Call 855-935-TALK.
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Jun 24, 2020 • 1h 8min
Great news for target date fund Investors PLUS 7 more Q&A's
In this podcast, Paul answers recent questions from his readers, video viewers and podcast listeners including how best to enter the market in these uncertain times, which equity asset classes to hold. small-cap value strategies and more.
1. In your book, “First Time Investor: Grow and Protect Your Money,” you write (page 49), “Don’t bother with target-date funds.” In your video titled, “2 Funds for Life: A Simple Strategy to Maximize Your Retirement Investments,” you included target-date funds on your list of “The Three Greatest Investment Products.” Why have you changed your views on target-date funds? :30
In this answer Paul references an important new study from the Wharton Pension Research Council, “Target Date Funds and Portfolio Choice in 401(k) Plans.” (For more on target date funds see Paul’s website, Best Advice, Target Date Funds)
2. What are you opinions of lower cost target date funds at Fidelity and Schwab? 20:15
3. I am 43 years old and have about $90K in a CD that matures at the end of the month and want to know: how would best get it into the market with so much uncertainty with the economy/covid/social unrest? I know it’s bad to time the market but… 2:10
4. I am 35 and have several hundred-thousand in retirement accounts and a few hundred-thousand in a taxable account. Which equity asset classes should I have in each portfolio? 35:54
5. In you Best-in-Class ETF recommendations, you have DLS for international small-cap value. I notice 31% of the fund is invested in Japanese companies. That seems very risky. Please explain, why did you chose this fund? 40:46
6. Do you still recommend small-cap value for your strategy that turns $3000 into $50 million? 43:30
7. For someone in a high tax bracket do you recommend a short-term tax-exempt or corporate bond fund? 52:30
8. You mentioned you and your wife hold a portfolio of both U.S. and international stock funds in the equity part of your portfolio. I would like to stick with a U.S.-only portfolio. How much difference should there be in the portfolio returns of the 4-fund combo and the 10-fund Ultimate Buy and Hold Portfolio? 56:35
Note: This article includes the ETFs and mutual funds we recommend for the 4-fund combo.
Whether an #investor starting out or in #retirement, you’ll finds hundreds of articles, podcasts, Q&A’s, videos, #portfoliorecommendations, #freeebooks and much more at paulmerriman.com. Join more than 25,000 savvy investors by subscribing to Paul's free twice-a-month newsletter.

Jun 17, 2020 • 59min
12 Q&A from San Diego AAII
On May 9, 2020 Chris Pedersen and Paul Merriman addressed the San Diego American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) via Zoom. Chris, director of research, presented “2 Funds for Life” and Paul, founder and president of The Merriman Financial Education Foundation, presented “The Ultimate Buy and Hold Strategy.” After the presentations Daryl Bahls, director of analytics, joined Chris and Paul to respond to questions. Daryl also prepared Tables for the Q&A. When the meeting concluded there were a number of unanswered questions submitted by the attendees. The following are 12 of the 24 questions. The remaining 12 will be answered in a future podcast. Watch the video here- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rk3uMwD1Okc
How do long term returns for small and large cap growth indexes compare to long term returns for small and large cap value indexes? 1:10
How do required minimum distributions fit into your distribution tables? 6:15
Am I right in assuming the 4 Fund Comboand Ultimate Buy and Hold strategies can be used at any age? 7:46
How does an investor put together a portfolio when their 401k does not have all of your recommended asset classes in either the 4 Fund Comboor the Ultimate Buy and Hold strategies? 15:12
I would like to move to the Ultimate Buy and Hold strategy. Should I sell everything and just start over or dollar cost average over time? 20:40
I want to use the 2 Funds for Lifestrategy but I’m 62 and not sure it will have much impact. What do you suggest? See the article, “Making The Most of Your Target Date Funds Before and During in Retirement”. 24:00
Instead of a Vanguard target date fund, what about building a portfolio of individual ETFs representing the Total U.S. Stock Index, international stock index, international and U.S. bond indexes? See a new study from Wharton,Target Date Funds and Portfolio Choice in 401(k) Plans 29:50
What are your thoughts on an all-value portfolio that is 1/3 each large-cap value, small-cap value and international value asset classes? 38:00
Is there any magic in the way you have built up the 10 and 4 fund strategies? 40:25
Do you have any studies that assume taking a higher rate than the safe 4% distribution to allow me to delay drawing Social Security so I can maximize my Social Security payments? See Table. 44:05
What asset classes do you recommend for the bond portion of your portfolio? The Vanguard Portfolios show the bond funds we recommended. See: Vanguard mutual fundsand Vanguard ETF portfolios. 51:02
With bond returns so low, has that altered your thinking on the percentage of the portfolio devoted to bonds? 54:49

Jun 10, 2020 • 40min
How confident can we be in past performance?
Paul Merriman responds to a podcast listener who wrote: “I am convinced your 4-Fund Combo is a portfolio I want to add to my portfolio. My question is, how confident are you in the past performance of these four asset classes from 1970-2019 AND how confident can we be about any performance?"
Before digging into the specifics of the 4-Fund Portfolio, I re-read a 2015 MarketWatch article (written with Rich Buck) entitled, 10 things you should know about portfolio performance.
To help investors get a sense of how difficult it is to pin down future returns, I looked back at the period from 1928-1969 to see what an investor might learn about risk and return from these 4 asset classes. Questions to which I sought answers were:
What were the nominal returns of the S&P 500 and 4-Fund Combo?
What were inflation adjusted (real) returns?
What were tax rates in 1969 compared to 2019?
What were the 1929-1932 losses of the S&P 500 compared to the 4-Fund Combo?
Is the commitment to build the portfolio for future income, build the portfolio for present income, or build the portfolio for family and charities after your death?
I hope you will forward this link to friends and family, leave a comment or like at whatever site you are accessing this podcast, and support The Foundation in continuing our commitment to helping investors.
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Jun 2, 2020 • 1h 6min
Q&A Part 2 from ChooseFI Events May 2020
In May, Paul Merriman, founder of The Merriman Financial Education Foundation, and Chris Pedersen, director of research, were guest presenters at two ChooseFI online events, via Facebook Live on May 9 and Zoom on May 16. On May 9 Chris and Paul made separate presentations: Paul on “12 Investment Decisions Guaranteed to Change Your Financial Future" and Chris on “2 Funds for Life.” They were joined by Chief Analyst Daryl Bahls to answer questions. In a recent video/podcast Paul, Chris and Daryl addressed 15 questions that had not been answered during the presentation. In this video/podcast the trio address 17 more questions from the two presentations.
1. During retirement should you take money from the target date fund or the more risky small cap value fund? 2:34
2. My wife wants to know, why don’t you recommend mid-cap funds? 5:08
3. How should I invest RMDs if I don’t need the money to live on? 9:04
4. What is the best strategy for investing for my 4 children, ages 17, 5, 5 and 3? 11:47
5. Is the Vanguard High Yield (VWEAX) fund still a good retirement fund choice? 13:55
6. The media reports the stock market remains overvalued in spite of the recent crash. Why should I want to buy now if the the market is expected to drop even more? 16:36
7. Is there a reason REITS would not be part of the 4 Funds Strategy? 21:26
8. When do you think you will be updating the Best in Class ETFs for the Ultimate Buy and Hold? 23:57
9. Is the 4-Fund Strategy appropriate for a 60 year old investor? 27:00
10. If target date funds are funds of funds, does that mean they have two sets of fees? 32:38
11. When you say Vanguard is investor owned, what does that mean? 36:38
12. Is the comeback portfolio the same as the 4 fund combo? 40:00
13. Could you use a TDF plus the 4 Fund Combo instead of small cap value? How would that strategy likely perform? 41:16
14. Is the TDF based on retirement age or your life expectancy? 44:55
15. Given that small caps may struggle for the foreseeable future (due to the recent pandemic) should one focus more on large caps or is this the time to rebalance more heavily towards small caps as they are selling at a larger discount. 47:57
16. In any of your distribution scenarios in retirement, are you withdrawing cash to cover 2-3 years of expenses or simply withdrawing cash for current year living expenses? 53:54
17. I am intrigued by your 4-fund portfolio However, my respectful criticism of that portfolio is that it does not have any international exposure. There is a contributor on the Boglehead's forum who has supposedly done a series of backtesting and shown that the following combo has an identical long term returns as the UBH portfolio. The holdings: US LGB + US SCV + Intl LGV + Intl SCB. What are your thoughts on this portfolio? 59:26

May 27, 2020 • 1h 10min
10 ways retirees can make an extra $1 million dollars on their portfolio
While it is easy to show young investors how to make an extra million dollars over the course of 50 years or more, it’s not so easy to do for retired investors looking at 10 to 30 more years. But there are ways! Here Paul suggests 10 different ways to add a million dollars or more to the portfolio of an investor near or in retirement.
Paul references Fine Tuning Your Asset Allocations and Fixed and Flexible Distributions in Retirement.
The following tables are part of the presentation:
Table 1: Fine Tuning Your Asset Allocation: S&P 500
4-Fund Combo Equity Portfolio Table
Fine Tuning Table: 4-Fund Combo Equity Portfolio
Table 7: Fixed Distribution Schedule S&P 500 ($30,000/yr + inflation)
Table 8: Fixed Distribution Schedule S&P 500 ($40,000/yr + inflation)
Table 9: Fixed Distribution Schedule S&P 500 ($50,000/yr + inflation)
Table 8a: End of Year Fixed Distribution Schedule S&P ($40,000/yr + inflation)
Table 27: Flexible Distribution Schedule S&P 500 (3%/yr + inflation)
Table 28: Flexible Distributions Schedule S&P 500 (4%/yr + inflation)
Table 29: Flexible Distributions Schedule S&P 500 (5%/yr + inflation))
Table 54: Fixed Distributions Schedule 4-Fund Combo ($30,000/yr + inflation)
Table 55: Fixed Distributions Schedule 4-Fund Combo ($40,000/yr + inflation)
Table 55a: End of Year Fixed Distribution Schedule ($40,000/yr + inflation)
Table 58: Flexible Distribution Schedule 4-Fund Combo (3%/yr)
Table 59: Flexible Distribution Schedule 4-Fund Combo (4%/yr)
Table 60 Flexible Distribution Schedule 4-Fund Combo (5%/yr)
Check out new videos at paulmerriman.com including Paul’s “12 Million-Dollar Decisions Guaranteed to Change Your Financial Future” and Chris Pedersen's “Two Funds for Life in Pre and Post-Retirement”. AND subscribe to Paul’s free newsletter!

May 20, 2020 • 1h 24min
Q&A from the ChooseFI Facebook live event May 9, 2020
In this podcast (also watchable as a YouTube video), Paul Merriman, along with Director of Research Chris Pedersen and Chief Analyst Daryl Bahls get together on a Zoom call to answer additional questions submitted during the ChooseFI Facebook Live event, for which time did not permit on the original recording. The event was hosted by Jen Mah on May 9, 2020. Below are the list of questions. For an archive of hundreds of other investment-related questions and answers, see Ask Paul.
What are the 2 funds you use in the 2 Funds for Life portfolio? 3:56
How do you think Vanguard Total Stock Market and Total Global Market will perform in the future? 7:10
For people taking early retirement, how does the possibility of a serious decline affect the sequence of risk returns? (See Distributions). 9:34
You have many allocations of stocks and bonds setup as pies at M1 Finance. What’s an easy way for people to get started? (See M1 Finance and Our About M1 Finance). 21:00
What information on your website should help me determine what should be my distribution between equities and bonds? Is there a rule of thumb for specific ages? (See Fine-Tuning Your Asset Allocation). 25:14
What has been the long-term difference in returns for the 2 fund vs the 10 fund portfolios? 31:27
How much of your recommended portfolio is in international stocks? (See the Ultimate Buy and Hold strategy). 38:43
What are your thoughts on future returns for Small Cap Value? (For more on SCV, click here). 43:43
You mentioned the impact of setting aside $1/day for a child early on. Where is the best place to be doing this? 529s? UTMAs? Bank of Mom? (See “Turn $3,000 in $50 million”). 48:52
Is value's fall from grace related to the increase in the influence of mutual funds and ETF's? 55:27
If already retired, what target date fund do you choose? Do you choose the target date fund of the year you retired? (See Target Date Funds). 01:01
Your portfolios are used by many people to create their path to retirement. Do you suggest adjusting stock/bond allocations as you near retirement age, much like you would with a target date fund, or select one portfolio based on your risk tolerance and ride it out the entire way?” 01:04
Where to add a SCV fund for taxes? Taxable, tax deferred or tax free? 01:08:20
Momentum and Quality are additional factors that historically produced outsized returns. Did you consider adding to the Ultimate Buy and Hold portfolio index funds that track these factors? (See Best In Class article). 01:10:13
I would like to also do market timing with half of my investments. How do I find someone to do that for me? (See Merriman Wealth Management and Camria Funds). 01:15:16


