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The Scenario When HSA's Are a *BAD* Account (AMA, E124)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Release Date: 12/10/2025

Debate! ...Taking Sides On 10 Retirement Sub-Topics (E139) show art Debate! ...Taking Sides On 10 Retirement Sub-Topics (E139)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Looking for a financial planner?  → PlanWithJesse.com Jesse is joined by Andrew Giancola—host of The Personal Finance Podcast—for a fast-paced, opinionated conversation tackling some of the most debated ideas in investing and retirement planning. Andrew makes a strong case for simplicity, arguing that a portfolio built primarily on stocks and bonds remains one of the most effective and least stressful ways to build wealth, while cautioning against the complexity and hidden costs of alternatives like real estate, crypto, and commodities. The discussion explores why cash is a poor...

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Making Retirement As Simple as Possible, but No Simpler (AMA, E138) show art Making Retirement As Simple as Possible, but No Simpler (AMA, E138)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Looking for a financial planner?  → PlanWithJesse.com In this Ask Me Anything episode, Jesse explores the delicate balance between overcomplicating and oversimplifying financial decisions in retirement, arguing that while many investors get lost in unnecessary complexity, others fall into equally dangerous “too simple” thinking. He tackles four listener questions that highlight this tension across key planning topics. First, he critiques advanced tax-loss harvesting strategies like long-short and direct indexing approaches, explaining that while they can generate short-term “tax...

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Target Date Funds: More Flawed Than Advertised (E137) show art Target Date Funds: More Flawed Than Advertised (E137)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Looking for a financial planner?  → PlanWithJesse.com Jesse delivers a critical re-evaluation of target date funds—one of the most widely used “set-it-and-forget-it” retirement tools—arguing that while their simplicity is appealing, their real-world performance often falls short in meaningful ways. He begins by explaining how target date funds work, focusing on their defining features: the glide path (a gradual shift from stocks to bonds over time) and their structure as “funds of funds.” From there, he highlights their massive dominance in retirement accounts following the...

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He Retired Early - Here’s What No One Warned Him About (E136) show art He Retired Early - Here’s What No One Warned Him About (E136)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

In today’s replay of episode 62, Jesse is joined by Fritz Gilbert—retirement blogger behind The Retirement Manifesto and former corporate executive turned early retiree—for a candid and experience-driven conversation about what retirement actually feels like after the spreadsheets are closed and the plan becomes real life. Fritz shares the story behind his early retirement decision, including the financial discipline, intentional lifestyle design, and tradeoffs that made it possible, but quickly moves beyond the numbers to focus on the psychological transition that catches many retirees...

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Why Trump Accounts Fall Short  (AMA, E135) show art Why Trump Accounts Fall Short (AMA, E135)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

On his 15th Ask Me Anything episode, Jesse tackles a fresh set of listener questions with a throughline that centers on how to evaluate financial decisions in a world full of new ideas, policy noise, and competing priorities—starting with a breakdown of “Trump accounts” and what they actually mean for real planning. Rather than reacting to the headline, he walks through how to analyze any new or proposed account type: understanding its tax treatment, limitations, and—most importantly—where it fits (or doesn’t) within an already well-structured plan built around flexibility and...

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Even Financial Advisors Misunderstand Monte Carlo Retirement Analysis (E134) show art Even Financial Advisors Misunderstand Monte Carlo Retirement Analysis (E134)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

In this technical deep dive, Jesse pulls back the curtain on one of the most commonly cited tools in retirement planning—Monte Carlo analysis—explaining what it actually does, how it works under the hood, and why its outputs are often misunderstood. He begins by contrasting Monte Carlo simulations with simpler “static” retirement calculators and deterministic cash-flow projections, showing why modeling thousands of randomized market paths provides a more realistic stress test of retirement outcomes. From there, Jesse walks through the mechanics of Monte Carlo itself—from the concept...

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Uncomfortable Truth: Great Investing Decisions Can Look Wrong For Years (E133) show art Uncomfortable Truth: Great Investing Decisions Can Look Wrong For Years (E133)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Jesse is joined by Rubin Miller—former Dimensional Fund Advisors insider, founder and CIO of Peltoma Capital Partners, author of the Fortunes and Frictions blog, and national chess master—for a wide-ranging conversation about how investment philosophy, behavioral discipline, and real-world client psychology intersect. Rubin pulls back the curtain on how factor tilts like small-cap, value, and profitability work. The discussion moves beyond theory into practice, tackling commoditization in passive investing, the tradeoffs between index funds and structured tilts, and the uncomfortable truth...

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Are You in a Are You in a "Goldilocks" Retirement Range? (E132, AMA)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

On his 14th Ask Me Anything episode, Jesse tackles a set of listener questions that expose the messy, real-world edges of financial planning—where tax rules, behavioral tendencies, and long-term strategy collide. He begins by unpacking a nuanced withdrawal-order debate, explaining why the “optimal” sequence between taxable, tax-deferred, and Roth accounts depends less on rigid rules and more on tax brackets, future income expectations, and optionality over time. From there, he walks through a detailed case involving concentrated stock risk and diversification timing, illustrating how...

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Less Wealth, More Certainty: Why Annuities Are Rarely Worth It (E131) show art Less Wealth, More Certainty: Why Annuities Are Rarely Worth It (E131)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

In this expansive and deliberately contrarian episode, Jesse takes on annuities—not with a sales pitch or a blanket dismissal, but by putting them under a rigorous planning lens rooted in risk, probability, and real retirement outcomes. He begins by laying out what annuities actually are, clearly separating fixed annuities from their variable cousins, and explaining why high fees, capped upside, illiquidity, and poor expected returns make most annuity products deeply unattractive. From there, Jesse zeroes in on the one annuity type he considers intellectually defensible in narrow...

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Don't Let a Scary Economy Cause Bad Retirement Decisions (E130) show art Don't Let a Scary Economy Cause Bad Retirement Decisions (E130)

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors

Jesse is joined by Cullen Roche—financial writer, macro thinker, and founder of Discipline Funds—for a clear-eyed conversation about how money actually works, why so much financial commentary gets it wrong, and how investors can make better decisions by understanding the plumbing beneath markets. Together, they unpack the core mechanics of the modern monetary system, including how government spending, deficits, and interest rates function in practice rather than theory, and why fears around debt and inflation are often oversimplified or misapplied. Cullen explains the crucial distinction...

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More Episodes

On Jesse’s 11th “Ask Me Anything” episode, he unpacks four questions that sit at the center of real-life financial decision-making. He starts with a grounded look at the 15-year vs. 30-year mortgage debate, cutting through rules of thumb to show how interest rates, liquidity, cash-flow, and even your personal comfort with debt shape the right choice far more than blanket advice ever could. From there, he turns to the under-discussed strategy behind Health Savings Accounts—why the “invest and reimburse later” approach works, when it stops working, and how the tax bomb of leaving HSA dollars to non-spouse heirs should change how listeners think about funding and spending those accounts in their 50s and beyond. In a detailed case study, Jesse walks through a listener’s complex 2026 tax year involving rental-property capital gains, ACA cliffs, Social Security timing, and potential Roth conversions, revealing how layered tax rules—income brackets, capital gains stacking, depreciation recapture, and NIIT—interact in ways that can either save or silently cost retirees thousands. And finally, he tackles whether a diehard DIY investor or Boglehead should ever hire a financial planner, drawing a sharp distinction between the “Uncle Franks” who truly live and breathe this stuff and the “Nicks” who love markets but miss the deeper planning work. With clarity, nuance, and practical wisdom, Jesse shows listeners not just what to do, but how to think through the tradeoffs that define good long-term planning.

Key Takeaways:
• A 15-year mortgage saves significant interest, but the higher monthly payments reduce cash-flow flexibility and increase default risk.
• A 30-year mortgage often wins mathematically when investors “invest the difference,” thanks to potentially higher long-term market returns versus fixed loan rates.
• Choosing a mortgage term is partly a psychological decision, not just a financial optimization.
• HSA dollars become a tax trap if left to non-spouse heirs, who must treat the entire balance as taxable income in the year of inheritance.
• Selling a rental property triggers both capital gains and depreciation recapture, which can dramatically increase taxable income in that year.
• DIY investors vary widely—some are true experts, while others know just enough to make avoidable mistakes.

Key Timestamps:
(02:04) – 15-Year vs. 30-Year Mortgage Debate
(11:03) – Liquidity and Mortgage Payments
(13:48) – HSA Accounts: When to Fund and When to Use
(25:37) – Spending Down HSA Balances
(26:39) – Allison's Financial Planning Dilemma
(29:05) – Analyzing Capital Gains and Tax Implications
(35:49) – Considering Social Security Timing
(38:54) – The Role of Financial Planners for DIY Investors

Key Topics Discussed:
The Best Interest, Jesse Cramer, Wealth Management Rochester NY, Financial Planning for Families, Fiduciary Financial Advisor, Comprehensive Financial Planning, Retirement Planning Advice, Tax-Efficient Investing, Risk Management for Investors, Generational Wealth Transfer Planning, Financial Strategies for High Earners, Personal Finance for Entrepreneurs, Behavioral Finance Insights, Asset Allocation Strategies, Advanced Estate Planning Techniques

More of The Best Interest:
Check out the Best Interest Blog at https://bestinterest.blog/
Contact me at jesse@bestinterest.blog
Consider working with me at https://bestinterest.blog/work/

Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors is a personal podcast meant for education and entertainment. It should not be taken as financial advice, and is not prescriptive of your financial situation.