#649: Many first-time buyers feel like they’re watching the train pull out of the station. If you’ve saved for years but can’t afford a home nearby, should you stretch to buy further (maybe hours) away or invest that cash instead?
In this episode, we dig into the psychology, math, and lifestyle tradeoffs behind the “buy now or wait” dilemma. Plus, we unpack total return, explain when umbrella insurance is worth it, and share what every teen should learn about money.
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Listener Questions in This Episode
Anonymous (aka “Lydia”) (3:26): ”I saved six figures for a down payment, but houses are still out of reach. Do I buy far away, rent forever, or invest the cash instead?”
Lydia, an Australian listener, spent eight years saving for a home, only to find that every option feels like a compromise. Sky-high prices close to work, or long commutes for affordability. It’s a dilemma many face: does owning mean freedom, or does it just tie you down?
We explore how to separate fear from opportunity, why “starter-home-turned-rental” plans often backfire, and how to measure the real cost of lost time when you move hours from work. Ultimately, it’s about aligning your money with your life, not the headlines.
Anonymous (aka “Aristotle”) (29:38): “My ETF is up 10% and yields 3%. Is my net return 13%?”
It’s a common question for anyone tracking their investments. We unpack the difference between total return and your personal rate of return, and why those two numbers rarely match. You’ll learn what actually drives performance, and how to read your brokerage dashboard like a pro.
Joel (39:44): “Umbrella insurance; do we need it and how much?”
If you own a home, drive a car, or rent out a property, you’re exposed to more liability than you might realize. We break down how umbrella insurance works, when it’s essential, and how much coverage makes sense. It’s one of the cheapest ways to protect your wealth.
Julia (56:13): “I’m building a high-school personal finance course. Should I cover insurance or credit?”
When teaching teenagers about money, where do you start? We explore why understanding decision-making (opportunity cost, compounding, and spotting bad financial advice) matters more than memorizing credit scores or insurance terms.
Key Takeaways
Don’t buy from FOMO; let lifestyle goals—not market panic—drive your choices.
Total return includes price changes and income, but your broker’s “personal rate of return” shows the truest number.
Umbrella insurance offers millions in protection for relatively little cost; bundle it with home and auto.
Teach teens the “why” behind money choices before the “what.” Understanding tradeoffs beats memorizing rules.
Chapters
Note: Timestamps will vary on individual listening devices based on dynamic advertising segments. The provided timestamps are approximate and may be several minutes off due to changing ad lengths.
(4:14) Anonymous Lydia’s question: should I buy now or invest my down payment?
(8:23) The emotional trap of FOMO and rising prices
(11:45) Why “live there now, rent it later” rarely works
(22:14) The hidden cost of long commutes and lifestyle tradeoffs
(29:38) Anonymous Aristotle’s question: how do I calculate my true investment return?
(39:44) Joel’s question: Is umbrella insurance worth it and how much should I buy?
(56:13) Julia’s question: what high schoolers should learn first about money
Share this episode with a friend, colleagues, or with the person at your school that teaches personal finance classes: https://affordanything.com/episode649
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I was like, who is the cute old man listening to the podcast?! And it's Paula's dad?! I love it.
This guest is insufferable. Paula is patient and asks the right questions, but the guest can't respond with any nuance. This attitude turns me off crypto even more.
Small world. I interviewed for that same job he had back in 2010 in Iowa and I didn't even get it. 😂
Great interview
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no offense to your cohost, but I'd love a podcast with just Paula. it's just that her style resonates more with me.
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Hi Paula, love the show and I look forward to the new episodes. I know you generally try to be really positive answering the questions, but I was bothered a little with the one where the woman from Florida who wants to retire at age 60 and is currently 44 with no retirement savings. I think you and Joe did a good job of trying to keep her hopes up, but it seemed the bottom line for her was she just may not be able to retire when she wants to. She said she already had a debt to income ratio of 45 pct and continues to add to her debt and has no emergency fund. That combined with other expenses and her income of 112k I bet she would have a hard time saving even 10k a year for retirement. And even if she could do it, that amount over 16 years at 7pct return would yield less than $300k. Hardly a nest egg. I know you mentioned that she didn't say in her question if she would be working part time when she retires or not, but sometimes people just need the hard truth and I don't think she got
Love you Paula!
10:54 Are you going to die young and wealthy, or old and broke? As if those are the only two choices! Who is young and wealthy? You cannot have your cake and eat it too, unless you are extremely lucky AND diligent.
Thanks, it's actually useful! I can tell you that I've been planning of getting into this field for a while, and I've already installed kitchen and bathroom cabinets from https://kitchensearch.com/ in order to increase the price of my house, and I feel like after a while, I'll decide to sell my house.
Thanks so much for answering my question! -Eve
Another one
The global gambling industry is becoming more and more cryptocurrency-friendly, I found here https://dailyiowan.com/2021/10/18/top-3-best-crypto-betting-sites-players-pick-in-2021/ the best options for my leisure
Understand your objectives > Narrow down your strategies to achieve these > Apply the right tactics. I appreciate how you guys were able to break this down following Jordan's question. #FinancialWisdom 🤓
What a loon. Paula trying to add nuance while this guy is one track.
Awesome episode! Thanks to both of you for breaking everything down so clearly!
Love Suze,she always tells it like it is.
You can do monte carlo simulations on Vanguard's website.
Can't download it using beyondpod. It keeps failing!