This episode cuts through the marketing fog around “financial advisors,” breaking them into three real categories—brokers, insurance agents, and fiduciary investment advisors—and exposing how incentives, commissions, and murky regulations shape the advice investors receive. Don and Tom highlight the industry’s gradual shift away from commissions while warning that titles like “fiduciary” or “CFP” don’t guarantee behavior. A listener segment dives into retirement portfolio construction, clarifying misconceptions about bond funds like BND, sequence risk strategies, and the role of safe assets. The episode closes by reframing trendy concepts like “liability matching portfolios” as common-sense planning: keep near-term spending safe and let long-term money grow.
0:05 Three types of “financial advisors” and why the title means nothing
0:51 Brokers vs RIAs vs insurance agents—what they actually do
2:10 Fiduciary confusion and “part-time fiduciaries”
3:10 How brokers really operate (transactions, firm-first incentives)
6:00 Insurance agents, annuities, and massive hidden commissions
7:47 Regulation gaps and misleading “no commission” language
8:15 Investment advisors (RIAs) and the fiduciary standard (with caveats)
9:42 CFP designation—rigorous, but not a guarantee of behavior
10:36 Portfolio reality: “a collection of ideas” vs an actual plan
11:50 Industry trend: slow death of commissions and rise of fee-only
15:13 Listener: retirement portfolio, glide path, and bond confusion
18:15 BND vs Treasuries—risk, diversification, and reality
19:59 Sequence risk strategy—lower equities early, increase later
21:31 2022 bond drop explained (rates, not failure)
23:11 Managing volatility fear—cash buffers vs bond funds
24:01 Practical solution: mix of bonds, CDs, and cash
28:07 Liability Matching Portfolio (LMP) vs “bucket strategy”
31:01 Core takeaway: match short-term needs with safe assets, let rest grow
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