Animal Spirits Podcast - BLOG POST: How I Invest My Money

Episode Date: November 14, 2020

Ben and I are trying something new. Once or twice a week we're going to read a blog post and drop it in Animal Spirits. If you like it, we'll keep going, if not, we'll stop. The first post from Mich...ael was inspired by Josh Brown and Brian Portnoy's new book "How I Invest My Money" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Why are you seeing a new Animal Spirits podcast on a Saturday morning? Ben and I are trying something new. Once or twice a week, we're going to read a blog post that we think you'll enjoy. If we get good feedback, we'll keep going. If you're not into it, we'll stop. This first post was inspired by Josh Brown and Brian Portnoy's new book, How I Invest My Money. In this episode, I will share how I invest my money.
Starting point is 00:00:22 Enjoy. What would you do if this is your house? I asked my gardener this question a few weeks ago. I needed some work done, and he provided me with three different options. But I wasn't interested in learning about the intricacies of how different lines will be put down under my grass. I wanted to know the bottom line. What would you do if this is your house? Opinions are everywhere in the financial services industry.
Starting point is 00:00:48 You can have the same person say one thing on TV on Monday and a completely different thing on Wednesday. And that's okay. People are allowed to change their minds, but I don't care about your opinion. I have my own. What I want to know is, how do you actually invest? Are you making decisions with your own money based on what you just said? Nasim Taleb, the most famous deadlifter in all of finance, once wrote, Don't tell me what you think.
Starting point is 00:01:11 Tell me what you have in your portfolio. Well, thanks to Josh Brown and Brian Portnoy, we're going to get some answers. In a new book, How I Invest My Money, Josh and Brian delivered to the audience, not opinions, but actual portfolios. they got some of my favorite writers and investors in the financial services industry to write a chapter about how they invest their money. Christine Benz, Tyrone Ross, and Perth Toll, just to name a few. Today, I want to share with you how I invest my money. Most of my investments are automated. I just can't trust myself to make decisions in the heat of the moment. So if stocks are going up,
Starting point is 00:01:46 I buy. If stocks are going down, I buy more. My automated investments happen in three different and counts. Every other week, I'm buying stocks in my 401k. That's a blend of domestic, international, and emerging market funds. I use the same funds that we are recommending to our clients. Once a month, I invest in my liftoff account, a taxable account powered by Betterment. And once a month, I invest in Titan, an automated asset manager, much like Betterment. Unlike Betterment, however, they pick individual stocks. Ben and I had them on the podcast last year if you're interested in learning more about them. To give some context for how much money goes where, for every $10 I invest in my 401k, I put $6 into liftoff and $3 into Titan. Not all of my investing is automated. I have a
Starting point is 00:02:34 play account where I pick stocks. I'm not trading. I'm building positions in a combination of what I think are stocks for the future and some beaten down value stocks. I like to think of this as a tortoise and the hair sort of portfolio. I have zero expectations of beating the market. This is purely for my own enjoyment. I'm all in on automating your investments, and I believe that the stock market offers the best long-term returns. However, my entire financial future is tied to the stock market. Between my ownership stake in Redholt's wealth management, which is my largest asset by far, and my 401k, I will go where the stock market takes me. So for this reason, I have been diversifying into other asset classes. On animal spirits, Ben and I have spoken to companies like
Starting point is 00:03:17 Equity Zen, Masterworks, Fundrise, and Edley. I've invested in all of them. Equity Zen gives investors the opportunity to access private companies before they go public. This is not seed investing or even Series A. It's companies that are already real businesses and are on track for an IPO. I have no desire at this point to invest in individual names, so I invested in a fund that Equity Zen manages. Masterworks allows you to invest in art, an asset class traditionally only available to wealthy people. The global art market has a long history of delivering attractive risk-adjusted returns. That said, each painting has its own idiosyncratic risk that I frankly know nothing about. I am speculating with this money. Moving on,
Starting point is 00:04:02 Edley allows you to invest in income share agreements or ISAs. An ISA is a contract where a college student borrows money for their education, and in exchange, they agree to pay it back and then some from their future earnings. Edley focuses on potentially high earners from top schools all across the country. Fundrise gives investors access to private real estate, another investment that typically had high minimums and in many cases high fees. From commercial properties to new apartment developments, I have access to different areas of the real estate market in different areas of the country. Lastly, and I hesitate to even share this, yes, I have been buying Bitcoin. My first purchase was on June 2, 2020.
Starting point is 00:04:43 My thesis for owning Bitcoin is really simple. Some of the smartest people in the world are bullish on it. That's it. Why didn't I buy sooner? Because some of the least intelligent people in the world are also bullish on it. It was hard for me to square the circle, but I did it. I bought an initial chunk in June, and I've been buying every week since then. I'm not a zealot.
Starting point is 00:05:02 I have no predictions of $100,000 a coin, but it's an asset class that is about as far away from the stock market as possible. All of these alternative investments have come about as a result. of what's happened to interest rates. With, quote, high-yield savings accounts offering 0.6%, I didn't see the point of having so much money earning basically nothing. I still have some money there in the case of an absolute emergency, but there are plenty of other accounts that I can draw
Starting point is 00:05:29 from in the event of something going bad. So that's it. That's how I invest my money. The only part of this set in absolute stone is what I'm doing inside my 401K. I plan on buying stocks every two weeks for a long, long, long. time. As far as everything else goes, we'll see. I view all of the alternatives as speculative,
Starting point is 00:05:49 pure and simple, meaning I will not invest any more than I can afford to lose. If something goes to zero, sure, I'll be annoyed, but it won't change my financial situation in any way, shape, or form. So congratulations to Josh and Brian. I cannot wait to read this book.

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