BiggerPockets Money Podcast - How “Regular” People Can Achieve FIRE (Early Retirement) by 40!
Episode Date: August 1, 2025Join hosts Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench as they sit down with Cody Garrett, a former musician turned financial planner who discovered the FIRE movement seven years ago and is now just four years away... from achieving financial independence by age 40. Cody's unique dual perspective—as both someone actively pursuing FIRE and a professional helping others achieve it—makes this conversation particularly valuable for anyone on their own early retirement journey. Cody shares the practical strategies, mindset shifts, and career decisions that accelerated his path to financial freedom. He breaks down his personal approach to portfolio management, explains how to avoid the lifestyle inflation trap, and discusses building multiple income streams through business ventures. Whether you're contemplating a career change, looking to optimize your FIRE timeline, or seeking guidance from someone who's walking the walk, this episode is packed with actionable insights you can implement immediately. This Episode Covers: Cody's journey from musician to financial planner and FIRE discovery Strategic career pivoting to accelerate financial independence Portfolio theory and investment strategies for early retirement Avoiding lifestyle inflation while building wealth The importance of finding your "why" for financial independence And SO much more! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today's guests discovered the fire movement seven years ago and has been methodically building towards
financial independence and is now just four years away. Cody is going to break down the strategies,
mindset shifts, and practical steps that have kept him on track towards early retirement.
Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen. And with me as always is my
advice-only co-host Scott Trench. Thanks, many. Great to be here dispensing free only,
financial advice for entertainment purposes only, of course. We are so excited to be joined by
Cody Garrett today, you may recognize his name because he is very active in our Bigger Pockets Money
Facebook group community. He is a frequent guest on ChooseFI and in the Choose FI Facebook group.
He's a musician turned financial planner at Measure Twice Financial, and we're going to hear
his FI story today and then end our conversation talking about portfolio theory, which you'll
definitely want to stick around for. Cody, welcome to Bigger Pockets Money.
Thank you. Thank you. So glad to be here. It's always fun talking with my fellow nerds in the
community. So Mindy and Scott, you might not know this, but you are one of the first podcast I
ever listened to in this space as a professional musician. It was you. It was Joshua Sheets
from Radical Personal Finance, Choose FI, your mad scientist. You are in the core. You were in the
core for back in 2018 when I first started listening to podcasts at two times speed.
Well, thank you for listening and thank you for making it come full circle and coming on the
show today. In terms of musician turned financial planner, that's like left brain and right brain
sort of thing. So are you like whole-brained? Yes, I call it left-brain creative, which means I'm an
analytical data-oriented person, but I'm always working in creative fields, right, which have
variants and like, you know, which adds the fun, right? So it's not just the black and white
spreadsheets, but like, how can we add, I literally have a trademark, keep finance personal,
even now as a financial planner, where it's all about, hey, how can I take all this quantitative
stuff, but actually like put in the qualitative side. So I love being a left brain creative.
A lot of people say, oh, moving from music to money, that must have been very difficult,
but it was actually something that I felt like a natural transition for me.
And what kind of musician were you?
The one who tried to get paid.
No, the one who actually charged money.
I was a professional musician from 2008 to 2018.
So give an example of like a day, you know, like a week in the life of Cody back in,
let's say, you know, before I became a financial planner.
I was a full-time contemporary music director at a church.
Like in one month, I was working full-time as a music director at a church.
I played 31 Broadway shows in one month on stage with full wig and all that crazy stuff.
I also did wedding gigs, music camps, being a church director, also a contractor ranger.
So I worked for Motown gospel back in the day.
So I love anything with a good baseline and a beat I'm down to write music for.
So I mean, as you know, like as a musician, you usually can't just do one thing and be financially secure.
So, you know, wearing multiple hats.
I effectively did everything but one-on-one teaching.
So, you know, you usually have your performance.
and your teachers. I was a performer, arranger, music director. I would wear whatever hat was
necessary to play the gig. When you performed, what instrument did you play? Oh, I played keyboards.
And by the way, some people ask, what's the difference between a keyboard and a piano? So a piano,
you play sitting down and a keyboard, you play standing up. So I play keyboard. And what kind of salary were
you making? What kind of annual income were we seeing as this musician who is getting paid? Because I have a
lot of musician friends who don't have the same resume. You know, down in the south, down here in Texas,
the most stable form of income for a musician is being a church musician. So as a music director,
keyboardist, I was making about $40,000 as a W-2 employee at a church. And then I made about 20 to $25,000
per year in 1099 gigs, the wedding gigs, the Broadway performances, all that kind of stuff,
you know, kind of that on call. And along the way, I actually, it's funny, I pulled up, I'm a nerd here,
I pulled up all of my tax forms. I went to the IRS,
website and pulled up all my old tax forms from like 2016, 2017, and saw that effectively I made
about $60,000 as a musician. I got married in 2015. My wife has always been a stay-at-home spouse.
I guess another way to say that is she's never worked outside the home, but she works a lot inside
the home. So we've been in that like $60,000 to $80,000 range before I became a financial
planner. Okay, so not destitute, but not rolling in it either. What was your financial position
when you made the switch from musician to financial planner?
So back in 2018, so I was a professional musician Wednesday night
and a financial planner Thursday morning.
I can see here looking back there, it's funny.
We talked about the income there.
My 403B balance for the church was $5,000.
I started my first Roth IRA at $5,500.
And that was my only source of investments out of side of about $10,000 or $20,000
in a savings account back in 2018.
I didn't know what an IRA was or anything like that at that point.
So what prompted the switch to much more aggressively pursuing wealth creation? What was that trigger point?
The biggest catalyst for me, from going from music to money, actually wasn't to make more money.
It was actually, I was working 8 to 5, 5 to 8, and 8 to 12 almost every day.
And the number one catalyst was, how can I create a life where I get to eat dinner with my wife every day?
That was like the simplest way of saying it is how can I design a life where we can maintain our desired lifestyle,
which, by the way, was only spending about $4,000 to $5,000 a month at that point,
how can we maintain that lifestyle but still be able to eat dinner with my wife every day?
That was kind of the seed that grew into like, okay, maybe I go into the direction that
I naturally enjoy, which is personal finance, after listening to your podcast and others.
Awesome. So what changed about your situation from that point? How did you begin shifting
towards this present lifestyle? So the big levers for me was prioritizing education.
Again, I already had a degree in music, but that wasn't necessarily going to help me.
moving into personal finance. So I went into the CFP education program, which is kind of like drinking
out of a fire hose, right, in terms of education. It's like just go super deep, you know, super
fast. So prioritizing education, accelerating my experience. So as you can imagine, in 2018,
you know, I was about 30 years old at this point. I felt like I was 10 years behind. I had a 10 year
career in music and now I feel like, oh, wow, like I'm quote unquote competing in this world
of personal finance with people who have been doing it since they graduated 10 years ago.
So rather than getting, you know, 10 years of experience in 10 years, I felt like I had to get 10 years of experience in like one to two years with the education and also developing, expanding my network and really talking to a lot of people.
Every time I drove even to my church job, I listened to a podcast at two times speed on the way there and back.
So I was probably listening to, you know, at least two to three hours of podcast a day during my breaks, during my lunch hour.
We mentioned the different ways to grow, you know, grow your wealth.
My was definitely like the create, right?
So I started creating really early on with like a go-giver approach, you know, kind of trying to give
to others without expecting something in return, which as you know, kind of like comes back to you.
A big part of it was avoiding unintentional lifestyle creep.
So most of the things that my wife and I enjoy, thankfully, are free or low cost.
So even if we eat out, we eat out once a week.
That's kind of like a rule for ourselves.
We eat out once a week.
And since being married about 10 years ago now, I think we've only eaten out for over $30,
maybe like a handful of times.
So when we do eat out, it's typically like the $20 to $30 meal.
The last one was simplifying and automating index fund investing.
And then a big part is paying myself like an employee.
Regardless of my income sources, I paid myself a base salary from my, you know,
from my taxable brokerage to my checking account each month, regardless of how much I was
making from my various jobs.
I love a phrase.
You said, we are avoiding unintentional lifestyle creep.
This is where I am starting to embrace intentional lifestyle creep, but I'm
struggling with like what's the difference between lifestyle inflation and intentional lifestyle
inflation. And I think it was that word intentional that you just used. I love that so much.
And you said paying yourself like an employee. If you have a company, if you're self-employed,
you should be making money. And if you're not making money, why are you doing it?
So one thing I want to mention about the lifestyle creep. One question I asked people when I first,
you know, learn about them and their money is I ask, do you earn more than you spend or do you spend
less than you earn. Both of those assume that you're spending less than you earn, but one of them
is out earning your spending and the other is under spending your earning. The intentional part
is that I'm intentionally spending less than I make rather than just trying to over-earn what I'm
spending. So that's where the intention really comes in. Curious to hear how Cody is investing
to achieve FI in four years, we'll be breaking down his portfolio allocations right after this.
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All right. On that note, let's jump in with Cody.
What I thought was awesome about what you said, you know, a few moments ago is you listed like
five or six different very powerful frameworks.
And then, you know, it's very clear we can go into the specifics in each one of those
to kind of think through them.
And I, and it's, that's what I think perhaps those podcasts or that self-education component
did for you, even more perhaps than the CFP training, I would imagine is these frameworks,
which are, which is clear to me, you have a very crystallized philosophy around wealth building
and what good looks like for you for money.
So first, did I get that right?
And then second, could I go into a couple of the frameworks, if so?
By the way, you might be wondering, hey, did Cody learn all this in the CFP curriculum?
I would say the CFP education program is primarily created to serve people who are retiring just right at 65.
They're claiming Social Security, right?
They're getting on to Medicare.
Yeah, all of those big levers that I pulled, those seven big levers were all things I learned
from the Phi community.
I didn't learn that through my academic education.
Let's start with the first one you listed, which is probably out of order here, but you said you created, you know, without any intention of necessarily understanding how that would come back. What does that mean specifically in your case? Yeah. So in my case, it's this term, when you teach, you learn twice, kind of tagging along with that idea of accelerating your experience, anytime I learn something about personal finance, whether qualitative or quantitative, I'd say, who can I teach this to? And as you know, teaching others, like as you do on the podcast every day, you know, helping millions of future millionaires. When you teach, not only a
you serving and helping others, but you also tighten your own knowledge along the way. So if you can
teach something, that means you truly understand it. At the very beginning, even just going into the
CFP education program, I surrounded myself with people, they weren't even necessarily interested,
but they at least allowed me to teach me what I was learning. So my wife, for example,
she is not the spreadsheet spouse in our family, but she understood how valuable it was to me
to be able to teach her what I was learning to tighten my own knowledge. She'd sit back and let me
teach her a concept about, let's say, oh, backdoor Roth IRA, this thing's so cool. These are the
types of things that I kind of get excited about. She's not necessarily excited about it, but she knows
it's valuable to allow me to teach that to her because she knows, hey, Cody's learning twice.
Again, I'm learning at 2X speed, not just listening at 2X speed when I surround myself with others that I
can educate through a blog or a podcast or even my wife in the living room after my long day at work.
Brainwork 8 is patient spouse. I'm very lucky in that way as well. Same. Same. Okay, great.
Walk us through, you know, on the income side, what did this change?
from being a full-time musician look like from an income perspective to the financial planning
world, were you able to retain any of the, I guess, bonus income from some of the extracurriculars
that were driving income as a musician? And did that help you realize this goal of dinner with
your family? Yeah, so thankfully, it wasn't too big of a change. I did have W-2 income. I wasn't just
a gig musician, so I had some W-2, so I was used to that. I became a financial planner in
September of 2018, and I played my last professional paid music gig in September of 2019. So I kind of allowed
myself to not have this really hard, you know, cold turkey. Like I'm no longer a musician, now I'm a
financial planner. I had kind of like a year of transition that really helped me kind of go through
that, you know, financially and emotionally. One of the hardest things for me is as a new financial
planner, I had somebody tell me, hey, well, now that you're no longer a musician, and I was like,
ooh, that hurts. It's like telling like a Marine that they're no longer a Marine, right? So, you know,
going from music to money, like, I very much had my identity as a musician. So it actually
took a year for me to like gently transition into saying, hey, like, I'm still a musician,
but that doesn't mean it has to like be my identity and I can only surround myself with other
people like that. When you're a career changer, you're going to realize kind of that a lot of
the people that you thought were your friends were really just your professional colleagues.
So I went from having like, you know, 500 musicians on my phone to a year later, like,
talking to maybe like one or two of them. Part of that's not being really intentional about
developing, you know, keeping that network strong. But I also realize in a good way that a lot of
times, like who you surround yourself with, like that's going to change as your life transitions,
whether career or moving into retirement as well. Yeah, I feel like that's true in a lot of different
fields, right? Sports, jobs, as life progresses, the few best people, a few closest people
stick with you. But that community is surprisingly malleable. Thankfully, the FI community
is like one of those that potentially could be with you, you, through the end of
It's like playing golf. You can play golf forever.
So Cody, what was your income transition? You were making around 60, 65 as a musician.
What does a CFP make?
So yeah, CFP is definitely all over the place because CFP is just a designation.
So there's some who only work in the, you know, commission insurance space.
Some don't do financial planning at all, even though it's in their, you know, in their designation name.
I would say on average you should expect to make within your first three years as an employee,
kind of in that like $50,000 to $100,000 range.
Once you become a CFP professional, start becoming a lead advisor.
or lead financial planner. I think you're in like, again, I'm just kind of ballparking here,
100 to 150,000. The accelerant or compounding really comes in terms of either staying as an employee,
but being more in like production, like AUM, like building up, you know, really gathering assets is kind of
maybe a colloquial way of saying that. Or you become an entrepreneur, which I felt a lot more
comfortable being really a financial planner rather than trying to get people roll over their 401ks.
Maybe we can talk about that in a future conversation as, you know, the different models out there
and which might be best for different phases of life. At this point, I own three businesses. But my
financial planning business, the first year, I launched it, made around like $125,000, $150,000. By this point,
I'm at $250 to $300 gross income. Like kind of take home net pay is $140,000 a year. So my net pay really
went from like 40 to $60 now to $140,000. But we're still in that way. We're still spending about $65,000 a
year in terms of personal expenses. So where's all that extra money going? My funny kind of ballpark
goal is to at least save $100,000 a year and to long-term investments. So for us, that's just,
we don't have any rental real estate. It's really just putting money into really broad,
diversified, low-cost index funds. Yeah, so looking back, you know, January 2020, which was kind of
when I got my roots in as a new financial planner, and now is July 2025, you know, now as an
entrepreneur, my total investments, which, by the way, is all low-cost, passive index funds,
went from about 77,000 to 486,000 in about five and a half years.
Annualized money-weighted rate of return is like a 25, 26% annualized return, which, Scott,
as you mentioned on your podcast many times and Mindy as well, that creation is one of those
things.
Like if you want to go beyond kind of like the 8 to 10% annualized return, you've got to do
something like create, right, or develop your income somewhere else.
So, you know, rental real estate leverage, other things.
So really entrepreneurship, launching three different businesses was the way.
most of that compounding wasn't really from the investments, right? The first 10 years of investing is really
going to come from your income and your ability to, you know, save and invest. And certainly I'm going to,
I'm definitely going to hopefully continue writing that compounding and decades moving forward.
But we feel really good at this place, kind of coast FI. Like we could kind of stop, we could
stop saving and investing and still retire at the typical, you know, 55, 65. But we really want
to push back that FI date to around 40 to 45. You've mentioned this. You started three businesses now,
a couple of times. And I'm missing two of them. We have the financial planning business. What are the other two
businesses that you started? The other two businesses are Measure Twice Money, which is actually a consumer-facing
business. That's teaching, you know, non-advisors how to become, effectively become their own
financial planner. You learn how to create their own financial plan. That's, you know, I have a video
course, a five-hour video course on how to create your own financial plan as a family without having to
hire anybody. I'm no longer accepting new clients as a financial advisor. So anybody here looking for an
advisor, it won't be me. I'm also writing a book with Sean Mullaney right now on tax planning,
and through early retirement. That's definitely on the consumer, you know, the Measure Twice money side.
I also have Measure Twice planners, which is a community of about 500 financial advisors who really
want to go deeper in their financial planning, experience, and education. What I wish I had in
2018, I'm building that now to help really give new and aspiring financial planners that clarity
and confidence, the ones who feel behind like I did back in the day. So I've created a video course
and actually over 100 hours of on-demand educational content so that people can feel that really
be able to 10x their accelerated experience in those first few years.
What is your fire number?
I'm one of those who actually consider Social Security in my fire number because I like to be
more realistic.
So my fire number right now, I'd say, is about $1.25 million.
I expect to be there by 40, which is about four or five years from now, expecting kind
of like a 6 to 8 percent annualized inflation adjuster return.
So I've got, again, I've got all my own calculators for this stuff.
But I'm looking about like 1.25.
I actually created this little meme of Drake, which is kind of I redefined fire for myself
instead of financial independence, retire early. It's going to be financial independence,
recreational employment. Even when we reach our FI number, that FI number just gives me permission
to do more things without expecting anything in return. So like my core values are transparency and
generosity. And the closer I get to FIRE, you know, my version of FI, the more I can give to others
without expecting something in return, which is like, again, I love the feeling of helping people.
And as I've realized, like the more that you help people, like, first of all, you're aligning
with your core values, but it also accelerates your upside, even financially.
which is kind of the irony of all this stuff is I'll probably be financially independent and still
be able to save, you know, $100,000 a year at that point. But I like your redefinition of fire because
recreational employment, I think there's a lot of people who think that it would be really great
to be retired, but in fact, just don't like their current job. I hear from a lot of people,
as I'm sure you do. Oh, well, I would never want to do that because I don't, I like to work.
Okay, great. Have you ever gotten a new boss at that job that you used to like to work at? And then all
of a sudden you're like, maybe that fire thing sounds great. So I love this recreational employment.
I've served about 150 households to and through early retirement at this point. You know, you see the
books with like the hammock on the beach. Everybody has been, even the marketing in the financial
advisor spaces like, you know, like two, you know, like a married couple walking down the beach.
You do that for like a few hours. You're like, okay, now I've got to do something with my life.
Right. So again, it's okay if you're going to sit in a hammock, lay in a hammock for 40 years.
But most people who retire early, they still want to use those skills, their network. And I guess
the biggest part is they still want to help others. But they want to help. But they want to help.
others in their own capacity and their own, again, with their own command over their time,
energy, and their financial resources. All right. When we're back from this final break, we're going to
talk all about Cody's hot takes on phi portfolios and how you could simplify yours.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial
picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like
most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly
where your money is going. And more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest
impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your
finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life
easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments,
net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch
subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on
achieving, not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one
place. So every decision actually moves in Edle.
Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management
simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off
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Cody, if I handed you the $1.25 million fire portfolio that you're looking for in cash,
what would the future state portfolio look like?
I know that the current state is all broad-based index funds.
But would the future state look different? Would you diversify or how does that work, especially in the context of recreational employment, where you might earn additional income?
Yeah, that's a really good point. So I have a very simple framework that kind of aligns with, even after I do all the analysis, I'm like, hey, it's about the same, is I say, how much money do I plan to distribute from my portfolio over the next seven years?
And that's how much from a risk capacity standpoint that I put in fixed income. Since I don't expect to take any money out of my portfolio over the next seven years, I'm 100% equity.
You know, that's my risk capacity and also my risk tolerance because definitely highly educated
in the space, but also I've kind of overcome those emotional behavioral aspects of risk tolerance.
My risk tolerance or risk capacity are pretty well aligned that I feel comfortable being
100% equity, which is globally diversified, you know, between, you know, U.S. and foreign, you know,
international, you know, total stock market.
Can you clarify what fixed income means?
So fixed income to me is cash and bonds.
We could definitely, you know, dive into the portfolio part of this.
I really think of three parts of your developing your portfolio, which is the three dimensions of
risk need, risk capacity, and risk tolerance.
We could certainly jump into that.
But I would say that if I were to use bonds in my own allocation, it would either be,
maybe actually be a combination of using like a total bond.
You know, like for example, like not advice for you personally, but like B&D, like total bond index
ETF.
I would also build like a small bond ladder.
So I'd specifically use a bond ladder ETF.
I share I bonds is a product out there.
also invest go bullet shares.
Again, I don't sell these things, but those are two products that I really like the idea
of the asset liability matching of saying, hey, how much money do I think I need over the next
three to five years?
And how can I set up a portfolio where that money will mature and redeem as cash within my
account in the years that I need that money?
So I would actually do kind of a combination of a total return approach with a really like
the three fund portfolio of like VTI, VX, US, and B&D, but maybe have like maybe three to five
years, not in cash, you're not just like in a checking account, but three to five years in like a
bond ladder ETF. So I know a lot of people say, you know, the bucket approach like is,
you know, losing out because you have all this money in cash. Like my cash is still earning,
you know, four to five percent in these bond ladder ETFs. So in terms of, you know, really net,
as long as I, you know, stay invested, hold those to maturity, you know, I'm like locking in a net
yield of about four to five percent. And it'll learn a lot more than that if you're going to be
recreational employed and starting three businesses every five years.
Portfolio theory does not really account for the entrepreneurial itch that a huge portion of the fire community has.
I regularly pull the Bigger Pockets Money YouTube community to get data because I'm just curious.
I'm just fascinated about this.
A third of the people watching or listening to this show already own a business.
A little over a third, 35 percent definitely intend to start a business after they retire early.
another 38% are perhaps I might consider starting a business.
And only a quarter, 27%, say definitely not.
I will definitely not start a business.
And portfolio theory, as we discuss it in the fire community,
and as we discussed it in a recent episode,
which I thought was awesome with Frank Vasquez,
discusses how to have a portfolio in isolation,
distribute in perpetuity in a very safe way
at the highest possible levels.
But at least with our audience,
the bigger pockets money community, this is a very, it was very rare for folks to really actually
assume no distributions following that. And I, I'm still grappling with what that means from a
portfolio theory perspective. I do think in practice, one thing it means is these people hold way
more cash. I hold way more cash than what most traditional portfolio theory calls for. But there's so
much more beyond that that, that I think it's just an open book in terms of that. But I would be
curious to see what a mind like yours has has to say on the subject because you've obviously spent a lot of
time thinking about this. Yeah, it's funny. Being an entrepreneur changes that the average advice.
Like, for example, I haven't contributed to a 401k in the last three years, right?
As somebody who talks about the order of operations, like, I haven't contributed to a 401k.
Because guess what? I really value, it's not less about short-term stability. It's more about
the flexibility. Maybe we could talk about like, you know, like the entrepreneurial middle-class
trap is when as an entrepreneur, you're still saving and investing like an employee.
Like, that is definitely like trap you can get yourself into. So for me, my kind of back on the
napkin is I wanted to build up $250,000 of taxable brokerage, so after tax investments,
before I start prioritizing, you know, the tax optimization and the traditional 401k and all
those things. So, you know, as an entrepreneur, it's actually, it's funny, too, it's not just about
the money that it takes to launch a new business, but it gives me permission to launch it without
having to feel like I have to succeed within three to six months because the average employee is
kind of expecting, you know, income loss for three to six months, kind of, you know, Dave Ramsey style,
whereas as an entrepreneur, I should expect, you know, like one to two years of runway. The thing is going
into, you know, beggars can't be choosers. Like, I don't want to launch a business that has to be
successful within six months. I want to launch a business that gives me the ability to slow down,
be intentional over like one to two years to really build what I wanted to build. Because again,
if you go in with needing, you know, like as a financial planner, if every prospective client
has to become a client for me to be financially secure, I'm not going to be a good financial
planner. I'm going to be rushing the, you know, the qualitative, the deeper,
conversation. So yeah, being an entrepreneur is very different on the path to five.
Okay. Hold on. You just said you haven't contributed to your 401k in three years that you want to
build up $250,000 in your after-tax brokerage. It sounded like before you continue to contribute to a
401k, why are you doing this instead of reducing your taxable income? Because you do have a
sizable amount of income. I'm pointing to my screen that you can't see. You do have a sizable amount of
income and reducing that taxable income by what is the contribution $23,000 this year,
you're not over 50, so you can't grab that other six.
But if you are self-employed with no additional full-time employees, you could do the self-directed
solo 401K, which I can't remember the limits, $58 or $64,000 could go into your 401K.
That's a lot less in taxes that you would be paying.
I know.
Can I try to answer Cody and tell me if I get the answer right?
Let's go, Scott.
The reason he does not contribute to his 401.
is because this man started a business a few years ago that has quadrupled or quintupled
in revenue and in profit over that same time period.
And it would be absolutely silly and foolish to attempt to get a 10% return, even if it is
tax advantage in a 401k in that same time horizon.
And the additional liquidity and optionality that the aftertax brokerage account will
give him and he can feel in real time will far outweigh the long-term benefits of a few years
of tax-advantaged contributions. I am also sure that Cody will soon begin resuming those
contributions to his tax-advantaged retirement accounts, but that will be because he has so much
more income because of the excellent investment he has made in his businesses that he can afford to
both fund his entire ladder of tax-advantaged retirement account contributions and still continue
to generate spendable liquidity today. How am I doing, Cody? Is that close? Before we allow Cody to
answer the question that I asked Cody, you're still putting money into the after tax brokerage
account. So you're not getting the tax advantage, but then you have more access to it.
But I would assume that since everything is in index funds, you would be investing in the same way
in the 401k or in the after tax. So I'm just asking the question that I hear people screaming at
their radio right now. Why is he not getting the tax deduction? Scott, I'll give you a B plus.
The first part is actually the part that doesn't apply. I do not think.
not investing to a 401k is getting greater returns by not investing, because you can see that
I'm still investing that money in a different account type. But the second part is where you absolutely
nailed it, that I want the flexibility and the optionality that if I do want access to those funds,
I don't have to do one of the specialized, again, I definitely know all the 72T and Roth conversion
ladders and all that fun stuff. I want to be able to do some tax gain, tax loss harvesting
with easy flexibility and optionality. So yeah, I'm still investing that money in the low-cost
index funds only earning, quote, unquote, you know, 10% annualized. Again, it's the, it's the future
uncertainty of, first of all, professionally what we'll bring. And also personally, one thing I haven't
mentioned here, my wife and I are planning to adopt a child, you know, infant adoption within
the next year or two. And that's a big part of it too, is professionally I want that flexibility
to, you know, build fund businesses. But I also want the liquidity and flexibility to say,
there's a lot of uncertainty that comes with adoption, right, including whether it's medically,
adoption for us costs $55,000. Right. So, just,
just really thinking, hey, there's a lot of really short term to intermediate term. And by that,
I mean like kind of five to 10 year money that we don't quite want to commit to, you know,
our 50s and beyond. Thank you for the generous B plus grade here. I have the same framework for a like
23 year old, for example, just getting started in life, making a median or maybe around that median
income level. And the idea is, I'm not against retirement accounts and I max my retirement accounts now here at 34.
But to get started on the journey of compounding wealth, that liquidity, you're so much more dangerous in a good way.
If you're relatively young, relatively entrepreneurial, relatively flexible, and this money is in cash and not in your mind locked away in the 401K for a couple reasons.
One, a house hack, for example, is so powerful for that person.
There's no possible way that the benefits of a 401k in almost any situation you can really conceive of is going to beat out a well,
thought-out, disciplined house hack that involves that sacrifice from that person. And then if you know,
you take that next another year or two and you still defer those retirement account contributions and you
build up $30,000, $40,000, I mean, this person is going to be very dangerous in a sense that they're
going to be able to take a sales commission job, for example, that might have a lower base salary,
but way more upside, or they might be able to buy a business or take a year and start that business
idea if their expenses are low. That optionality and flexibility, even if it's not accurate,
it doesn't actually translate in a way that's specific to one of those examples, that flexibility,
I think will benefit that person so greatly that it will overwhelm the delay of the retirement
account investing for three or four years. And this only applies to the very aggressive
cadre of people in the personal finance world. This does not apply to the more moderate folks
who would absolutely benefit from just be getting those contributions early and letting that
compounding go to work. But that's the tradeoff. People in some situations, you can't max out all of
the order of operations financial stack and have liquidity to do entrepreneurial things, which can
generate way better returns. And so there's a sacrifice and tradeoff. And I think some people should
make them. And it sounds like you are. Yeah. And by the way, I'm still, I'm still maxing. We're
maxing out our HSA, right, our Roth IRAs. And just those two combined, you know, that's, that's,
you know, 20 plus thousand into those kind of more traditional like parts of the order of operations.
But one thing I want to touch on real fast is the difference between liquidity and stability.
So you do talk about having cash available. I will say that I think that I think,
I think once you build up a certain level of taxable broker's investments, you know, assuming
you're not actually going to spend all of it, right, within the next, like, one to three
years. I don't have stability in my taxable brokerage account because it's invested in equity,
but I do have liquidity. Like, I have quick access to be able to sell those securities
and convert, you know, again, kind of turn assets into income, you know, assets into cash flow.
So I kind of think about liquidity and stability as being like kind of, you know, two sides of the
same coin.
Let me go back a few minutes. And you kind of answered the first part of it. But if I handed
you that $1.25 million in cash for your fire portfolio, what would that portfolio look like specifically
these days? So the 1.5, are you saying like in continuing as an entrepreneur? Yeah, sorry, and specifically
in the context of the retiring as an entrepreneur, would you still hold the bond funds? Would you
still hold these other items? Would you get more conservative in some cases? How do you think
about it? Again, going back to that framework, you know, any money I'm planning to spend within seven
years out of my portfolio would be in fixed income. You know, if I were four years in the future at 1.25 million
fire number, I would still be 100% equity, just either, you know, one to two funds, it would be
VT or a combination of VTI and VXUS. So that global stock market index, I wouldn't have like a,
you know, a Humpty Dumpty portfolio of like growth value, mid, small, you know, I would just
have like the one egg rather than the Humpty Dumpty version of that model portfolio.
Okay, how about if I doubled it to two and a half million, which is the midpoint?
Same thing. Yeah, nothing would change. How about five million?
Nothing would change. Is there a point where,
it would change? I would say the total portfolio allocation would not change, but my asset location
considerations would definitely be in play. So if I were just owning U.S. and international equity,
I would want the international equities, right, in the tax deferred vehicles. And I'd want the U.S.
equity in the taxable brokerage account, assuming I had space in both of them to get that, you know,
that global allocation. So, yeah, so most likely if I had that kind of global allocation, like my U.S.
equity would fill up the taxable brokerage and my international equity would be in the, you know,
Roth IRA, the future traditional 401k and things like that. But yeah, the total allocation wouldn't
change even, you know, $10, $20 million. And why would you put the international in the Roth and the
U.S. in the other? So it's two reasons. So international equity in terms of dividends, the dividend yield
is much higher than U.S. equity. I don't have the numbers right in front of me, but I'm guessing
at least double. The dividend yield. And also there's a larger percentage of those dividends that
are non-qualified, which would be taxed at ordinary income tax rates rather than the favorable
with long-term capital gains tax rates. You're very clear on these two funds, VT and VXUS,
for entertainment purposes only, of course. What is your thought process on some of the other
portfolios that are coming out, like some of the work that Paul Merriman puts out or the
golden ratio portfolio, for example, that we talked about with Frank Vasquez. When and where would
you shift away from just those two funds that you've emphasized here into something else?
So the only shift I would make is adding fixed income. I can talk you about kind of like that,
you know, there is the constant duration bond funds like B&D, you know, that's the total bond market
ETF. Also those bond ladder funds, I guess the reason that I wouldn't start, again, maybe
a mean way to say like the Humpty Dumpty version of that where you split it into all
these different things and maybe go more into small cap value is really that's like optimizing like
the top five to 10 percent, right? Like I really value, I call a return on hassle, R.O.H.
And also this idea of what I call the headspace premium. I tell a lot of retirees and they want
this too. Mindy likes that headspace premium. Yes, I do.
Most retirees want to become more passive with their investments and more active with their lifestyle.
The thing is, the more complexity I've learned, the more I value simplicity.
So I know that Frank has talked about, you know, like make it simple but not too simple, right?
Like that's kind of my version effectively at this point.
And moving into retirement, my simple but not too simple would be VTI, VXUS, and then a combination
of a total bond fund and like a bond ladder, which again is kind of just like four little things
hybrided together.
What are cases in which you've deviated from this in your practice with the families that you work with?
Keep in mind that I work specifically with DIY investors on the path to early retirement.
So most of them are listening to Frank's podcast, which is, by the way, amazing.
I love it.
Risk parity radio.
A lot of them are coming saying, hey, I've listened to Paul Merriman or I read, you know,
I'm in the Bogleheads forums.
So a lot of them come to me with their bias.
I would just say this.
They all have a bias toward optimization.
All these things we're talking about are ways to optimize.
they aren't like the fundamental kind of if you think core and explore like there's core and then there's
exploring on the top 10 5 to 10 percent like everybody kind of has the same core which is like hey like let's say
you know in retirement you know let's say like 50 to 80 percent equity rest is fixed income but then we
explore in terms of like okay well which products do we actually put all those things into and I would
say people come to me with a bias typically toward how they want to explore but they all have the same
core philosophy so frank and I can certainly talk about you know the correlation between pretty much all
U.S. equity is very highly positively correlated to each other, whether it's like large, mid, small cap,
again, international and U.S. has been pretty highly correlated to each other. In terms of diversification,
you're looking at negatively correlated assets. The only really negatively correlated asset I'm
looking at are treasury bonds, right? Looking at different durations. And I would say we probably
have the same overall fundamental philosophy, but we like to tweak in the top five to 10% of
optimization based on, again, going back to that risk need, risk capacity, and risk tolerance.
I mean, there's a million questions to ask about portfolio theory.
I guess the one that I'll bring to the surface is it seems like lately in a lot of circles,
the concept of small-cap U.S. value stocks as a component, half of, for example, the equity position for
the U.S. allocation in a portfolio and then half growth, for example, instead of a broad-based market
index fund is becoming more popular.
I actually saw a recent article, I think Big Earn did, kind of refuting this.
with where he felt, he felt that that was not true.
Or there was, you know, in the recent times it had been less effective.
But is that becoming a more, a question that you're increasingly getting or noodling on
when you think about portfolio construction?
So I think we need a break out.
There's really two people in the five community.
There's those with a high risk capacity and a high risk tolerance.
And those are kind of like the logical thinkers.
I'll actually share here briefly.
So risk need, by the way, is the level of portfolio growth required to achieve your financial
objectives.
So effectively saying, hey, if my whole portfolio were in cash, would that be okay?
And by the way, what's kind of ironic is a lot of people retiring in the FI community,
they could put all their money in a checking account and probably still be fine because they
underspend and undergift.
But the risk capacity part, another objective measure is the amount of potential portfolio
loss that you can sustain without jeopardizing your ability to maintain your financial
objectives.
So that's saying, hey, if I did go 100% equity and it dropped by 50% would I still be okay?
And again, a lot of people in the FI community, they have a high risk capacity.
But here's the part that where those, the small cap value and all that comes in, risk tolerance.
This is a subjective measure, the emotional and behavioral willingness to endure market volatility
and portfolio losses.
And Scott, what you mentioned there, the people who are really into the small cap value,
they have a high risk capacity and a high risk tolerance.
They're very logical.
They're like, how can I increase my risk adjuster return?
And they're mostly looking at upside rather than protecting downside.
Because as you know, if you're doing a small cap value tilt, like you've got to be on that
roller coaster for a long time to really for it to pay off.
Like, that's not something that you just put it in there for five years.
And again, you know, Frank would say the same thing.
Like, if you're going to choose a small cat value and only be in there for two to five years, like, don't.
Don't.
It's like, that's a long term play.
But then there's the high risk capacity, but low risk tolerance.
By the way, that's most of the five community.
Like, that is most of what I see is.
And those are the people going into like the time segmentation, the bucketing.
Then we talk about morning stars research, Christine Benz, the 4% rule.
They have the ability to be 100% equity most of the time.
but they have such a low risk tolerance and a fear of spending and of course a fear of volatility.
They had the scarcity mindset. Their grandparents went through the Great Depression and taught their
parents to keep everything you have because you never know when you're going to need it.
So I think that maybe we could break down high risk capacity, high risk tolerance investors
versus high risk capacity, low risk tolerance investors because those are the two people in this
community that have a very different approach to investing.
Who's going to be richest over the next 10 years?
Well, definitely the high risk capacity, high risk tolerance,
people from a logical perspective. But at the same time, what's really funny here is that they have a
confidence in their ability to adjust. But both of these parties, high risk tolerance and low risk tolerance,
it's funny, they focus on education with a confirmation bias of what they already believe. So the people
with a high risk tolerance, they just get more educated about how to increase returns. And then the low
risk tolerance people get, they love when they talk about, oh, the 4% rule becomes the 3% rule.
They act scared, but they're actually inside. They're actually really excited because they're like,
oh, good, I can be more safe. I can be even more.
with my portfolio and stack. I'm going to assume no social security. You can tell I'm getting
really excited about this because there's a lot of missing pieces in these conversations. I think the
logical thinkers are going to be best off financially, but the less off in terms of, I guess,
maybe both parties will be less off in terms of really missing out on a lot of life because they're
so focused on the numbers and they kind of put all the physical, mental, spiritual, relational
health on the back burner because they're so focused on either upside or protecting downside and they
kind of lose the forest for the trees. I think the guy who's going to be best off here is the one who
retires with a portfolio they're comfortable with either way and then spends all of their time
as passionately discussing the business that they're doing as you do, Cody, and has the liquidity,
of course, to invest in that to some degree as as opportunities arise and make sure that there's
time share for that. The best investor doesn't spend money, right?
73% of our community is going to do that, at least consider it, once they fire. I'm sure you're
already seeing that as a entrepreneur with the tax advantages that accrued.
the ability to drive revenue and actually take control of that income stream. And I can't wait to
see how that's going to turbocharge for you the next couple of years. And I also want to just
quickly add that I'm an entrepreneur, but out of the 150 people that I've helped retire early,
over 90% of them were employees their whole life, their whole career. Right. So like I love
speaking kind of to this two sides. And those the ones who have been saving and investing for
decades, you know, as employees, when they retire, they're the ones that typically go into the
high risk capacity, low risk tolerance. Because entrepreneurs naturally have a higher risk tolerance.
So that's where we get into the heavy cash positions that I've got CDs and five different banks
to make sure I hit all the FDIC limits.
They would actually benefit from using annuities, but they're very anti-fees and anti-flexibility.
So they just end up in this place of having all this cash in their bank account and not wanting
to hire an advisor, which, by the way, those are the big fish the advisors are chasing after.
So there's definitely like that realistic tension of like, hey, I'm the person who needs the
most help spending and giving, but yet the advisors who want to work with me that have an
incentive for me to underspend and undergive based on how they manage my.
portfolio. It's a very hard part of this industry is working at those people who have the money
to live their big, juicy life, but have a scarcity that's going to be backed up by how they're
paying their advisor, which I know I'll probably get a lot of hate mail on that on that little chat
right there. But there's a lot of conflict in our industry that's thankfully slowly changing.
I think that the folks that really highly defend the, you know, AUM financial planners
or the financial planners that sell various products and generate commissions, they don't listen
to Bigger Pockets money. We've had plenty of ragging on those types over the years. The anti-advival
community is here in this podcast and the advisors are listening to other podcasts that are
focused on the things they care about. Yeah, definitely. I guess that's a great question to wrap up on.
Could you give us a brief overview of the financial planning industry that's a little bit more
in depth than what my like off the cuff remark there and what it specifically you feel are
the channels that people should be looking for when they're looking for a CFP? How much should one
plan to spend on financial planning if they're avoiding the assets on the AUM types or the commission
types. The two parts of this are which services do you actually want and only pay for those services,
right? So if you want financial planning, you shouldn't be paying for investment management.
If you only want investment management, I'll try to convince you that you need financial planning,
but that's a big part is only pay for the services you actually need and are provided.
The second part is if you want financial planning, there's only really three options, right?
Do you want to work on an hourly basis where you just say like as needed, I just, you know,
I reached out like, you know, nectarine is a, you know, I'm not affiliated with any of these companies,
but hellonectrine.com. You can hire, you know, an advisor, literally just,
one hour at a time, right, just kind of as needed. Others say, hey, we'll do like 10 hours together
as like a package. So there's hourly. There's project base, which is, hey, we're going to have
a two to three month engagement to do a comprehensive financial plan. We're going to look at everything
in your life with a number on it. We're going to give you like kind of a what I call the measurable
action plan, the map of, you know, what are the things we're going to do over this next year to
optimize your financial plan? Then there's ongoing. These are the people who are saying, hey, I want
somebody who, like, it's going to keep me accountable, not just for saving and investing, but
keep me accountable in retirement to actually say, hey, you said you want to go on that big
trip, did you actually go on to Airbnb and book the nice cabin and all those things?
So if you need accountability, ongoing monthly is great.
Like, Abundo wealth is a great firm that does that.
It's like just a few hundred bucks a month for ongoing support.
Project based for a comprehensive financial plan, you should expect to spend between
$2,500 and $5,000 for that kind of that full comprehensive two to three month engagement.
And then hourly, you should expect to spend between 250 to $450 to $450 an hour,
depending on their level of expertise and experience.
Super helpful.
Yeah, I just want to say here, even though I'm a certified financial planner professional,
a CFP professional, I'm not your financial advisor.
So the content I provide today does not provide financial, tax, legal, or any professional
advice, right?
So do not act on any of the information, the tickers that I talked about.
Those are not advice for you, just the things that I would do personally based on my own
situation.
And certainly consult with a licensed investment tax or legal professional before implementing
anything that you heard today.
Awesome. Cody, thank you for the disclaimer and thank you for your time today. This was very enlightening. Where can people find you online? My biggest excitement right now is Measure Twice Money YouTube channel. You can actually watch real financial planning meetings with real retirees struggling with what we talked about today. By the way, I might even send one your way that you could interview a real retiree who retired last year and what the emotional behavioral elements of scarcity. And also, if you go to Measure twicemoney.com forward slash book, you can see,
sign up for just a simple email whenever that tax planning to and through early retirement
book is coming out in September later this year. Awesome. Cody, thank you so much for your time today.
And we'll talk to you soon. Absolutely. Take care of you guys. All right, Scott, that was Cody Garrett.
And that was a lot of fun. What did you think of the episode? Although it was great. I love the
passion for personal finance and the shift to aligning his career with that passion. And that allows him
to pursue fire faster. So I think it's great. I think we need a lot more of these, you know,
advice only financial planning folks in the industry and I think it's great and we're starting to see those
pop up more and more and more with hello nectarine and Cody's firm and and more like it. So I think
it's great and it was fascinated to hear that story shared from him. I love his new definition of
fire financial independence recreational employment. I think that is a great mindset to be in,
hey, I could be retired, but I don't want to be. I like my job. I'm going to continue. I am declaring
myself fire, Scott, financial independence, recreational employment. Me too. Perfect. All right. Should
get out of here? Let's do it. That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
He is Scott Trench. I am Mindy Jensen saying time to soar dinosaur.
