Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin - Financial New Year’s Resolutions That Work with Peter Mallouk (CEO of Creative Planning)
Episode Date: December 30, 2024Let’s harness the New Year energy and make 2025 a good year for our wealth, shall we? To help you do exactly that, Nicole sits down with Peter Mallouk, CEO of the award-wining wealth management and ...investment advisory firm Creative Planning. Peter shares what you can do to make your New Year’s resolutions actually stick, and what common investing mistakes we should all leave in 2024. If you want some help making a strategy for your 2025 financial goals, set-up a free 15-minute consultation with Creative Planning at creativeplanning.com/nicole
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I'm Nicole Lapin, the only financial expert
you don't need a dictionary to understand.
It's time for some money rehab.
Oh, hey there, money rehabbers.
I told you you'd be hearing from me
while I'm on maternity leave.
So as 2024 comes to a close, I wanted to give you a little jet fuel to help propel your
financial goals for 2025.
And what you're about to hear is exactly that.
Today you're going to hear a new conversation between me and financial rock star Peter Maluk.
Peter is the president and CEO of Creative Planning, an award-winning wealth management and investment advisory firm with over $300 billion, yes with a B, of assets under management
or advisement.
You guys know Peter, he's been on the show before and is truly one of the smartest people
I know in the industry.
I am such a fan of Peter's and the work that he and his team do that I wanted to combine
forces and do even more together to help money rehabbers with their financial goals.
So I joined Creative Planning as a financial education advocate and Peter will be sharing combine forces and do even more together to help money rehabbers with their financial goals.
So I joined creative planning as a financial education advocate and Peter will be sharing
his expertise on money rehab every quarter ish to answer the questions that matter most
to you on your wealth growing journey.
Today you're going to hear Peter share the best ways to make your financial resolutions
stick and the common mistakes that investors make that you should definitely leave behind
in 2024.
And if you need help putting together a strategy for your financial goals in 2025,
I recommend, of course, Creative Planning.
You can set up a 15-minute consultation call at creativeplanning.com slash Nicole.
Now, here's Peter.
Peter Maluk, welcome back to Money Rehab.
Great to be back.
So last time we spoke, I was just Creative Planning's biggest fan.
Now I'm a member of the team.
So excited, so thrilled to be working with you.
Everyone here is very excited, Nicole, to have you as part of it.
You've been an amazing follow.
And so it's great to have you in our ecosystem.
Thank you.
I'm so happy to be talking to you right now, because it's the end of the year.
It's the time, as you know,
people start making all of their New Year's resolutions.
So many people, 61% make money-related resolutions.
But honestly, New Year's resolutions often get abandoned.
What do you think the secret is
to making some of the goals truly actionable?
I think that the thing with all New Year's resolutions,
especially money ones, is that everyone gets motivated
and motivation only gets you so far.
Motivation's like just getting the engine started,
but it's totally different to keep going.
And the real way to win isn't motivation,
it's the consistency and persistency.
So the things you can do to put that on your side
are to make things automatic
because inertia is a pretty powerful force.
Netflix knows this, the iPhone knows this, the second that we sign up for something,
we're probably going to stay in it forever. So if you're saying, hey, I'm going to save more going
into the new year, instead of saying, okay, I'm going forward, I'm going to start putting money
in my investments, make it automatic. Just do one thing, get motivated enough to have $100 or $1,000, whatever it is,
go from your paycheck into an investment account,
every paycheck, and when it automatically happens,
that will give you the consistency to succeed.
If you don't automate it,
the probability you're gonna stick with it
is gonna be pretty low.
Yeah, and I think that sometimes people come up
with really lofty goals.
Hey Nicole, hey Peter, just want to be a millionaire this year.
And that's great.
Having seven figures in your bank account or your brokerage account,
hopefully more your brokerage account, is an amazing big goal.
But don't you think sometimes people need to make those bridge goals,
mini goals to get to the finish line?
You have to reverse engineer it.
If the goal is to become a millionaire, then you start to back into how much
has to be put away to do that. If you're younger, it can be a much smaller amount because you have
the biggest advantage any investor has, which is time. Let's say that your math says you've got to
save $500 a month to get where you want to go. If that's over the next 20 years, you may not have
to do 500 a month today, right? It could be a smaller amount today and as your income grows,
make it bigger. So we don't have to start really big. We just have to start now and we have to do 500 a month today, right? It could be a smaller amount today. And as your income grows, make it bigger. So we don't have to start really big. We just have to
start now and we have to have it be repeatable. And then we can adjust as time goes on.
Yeah. How do you eat a millionaire elephant? One bite at a time. So Peter, we obviously
want to help people make their 2025 the best financial year yet. One way to do that is
by leaving behind financial myths
that don't work. And I think we all have some. We've been told a lot of financial so-called
truisms over the years. One of my favorite of your many books is the five mistakes every investor
makes and how to avoid them. I would love to go through these with listeners so they can leave
some of these mistakes back in 2024. The first one you mentioned is market timing.
You mentioned time just a second ago and how to break down $500 to get to a million dollars.
But market timing is something else.
Trying to predict these highs and lows is sometimes a problem that people fall into.
Why do you think that is?
I think it's human nature.
So market timing, like you said, predicting highs and lows.
A lot of people think I don't market time because I don't put my money in the market and then take my
money out of the market. Some people do that. I saw people when President Obama was elected, they went
to cash their market timing. There's some people when President Trump got elected the first time
he they went to cash. And both of those groups made a huge mistake because over the time the market
went up. So money going in and out of the market
is the most obvious market timing.
It's a disaster.
It really hurts returns.
But a lot of people go, that's not really me.
I don't market time.
But what they do is they say,
I'm gonna wait to see who wins Congress
or who's the next president,
or is there gonna be a war?
The war in Ukraine gonna expand and then I'll invest.
That's market timing.
All of those things are falling into that trap.
And the problem with market timing is the market has a very big upward bias.
Over time, the market tends to go up,
just like the price of a ticket to Disney World
or a meal at Chipotle goes up over time.
There might be little brief periods of time
where the prices come down,
but in general, inflation carries things.
So the more you're going in and out of the market,
the more likely you are to underperform.
We know statistically eighty ninety percent of people that market time lose so the odds you're going to win with that kind of strategy are very low what you identified the goal you're trying to accomplish it needs to be automatic regardless of where the market is just continue to invest keep buying every pay period that you can.
invest, keep buying every pay period that you can.
Yeah, because just like Chipotle or a ticket to Disney World might be at the all time high when you look at the market
and you're like, oh, this is an all time high.
I know you buy low and sell high.
So we're at a high.
But if you zoom out five years from now, then that high might actually be below.
And so we don't know where we are.
So time in the market, as we've said before on the show,
is better than timing the market.
What do you think people should do to safeguard themselves
from themselves and their emotional decisions?
The biggest part's education.
So Nicole, what you said's spot on.
Sometimes what looks high now might not be high
in the future.
And the reason that's the case is one in 19 days,
the market hits an all-time high, very frequent.
So a lot of people go, oh, I'm nervous about investing now. It's an all-time high. All-time high is generally the
norm. The market is usually at or near an all-time high. And so the best way to safeguard is education.
If you really understand, hey, the market does not go up and down. The market goes up with brief
periods, sometimes severe and dramatic, but brief periods of pullbacks, just like prices in the grocery store go up and down.
They go up just over periods of time. They might come down, right? So if you can educate yourself on that, then you automate your savings.
That's the best combination of protecting yourself against that market timing mistake. The next one you say is active trading.
You say newbie investors shouldn't constantly buy
and sell stocks to make a quick profit.
Why is that a mistake?
And can you clarify trading versus investing?
So an investor is basically saying,
I'm gonna buy things,
I'm gonna hold them for the long run.
And a trader is saying,
I'm gonna buy Coca-Cola today,
but next month I'm gonna sell it, and then I'm gonna to buy Pepsi, then I'm going to sell it, then I'm
going to buy Nvidia.
And so you're constantly moving, buying and selling a variety of stocks.
The issue with buying and selling stocks is the overwhelming majority of professionals
that buy and sell stocks to try to beat the market, lose to the market.
So if we're talking about, depending on what time period we wanna look at,
70 to 95% of professionals losing the market
over a 10-year period,
the odds that the regular retail investor's gonna beat it
are probably significantly worse.
On top of that, you pay a lot more taxes
when you're actively trading.
You oftentimes find yourself with pockets of cash
that are invested while you're trading, you start to add those
things and you lag the market even more. So this is a kind of
an exercise in futility. If you're trying to own a bunch of
stocks for the long run, you want to find a basket of stocks
and you want to own them for the long run. There's a lot of ways
to do that. But this idea that you're going to pick and choose
and pick and choose and buy and sell, you're going to create a
lot of taxes, you're going to have what we call in the industry cash drag,
and even despite those things,
you'll probably underperform the market over time.
So you spend a lot of time
to diminish the probability of doing well.
Yeah, and I think it's an important point to say that
when you're doing that,
sometimes you're not putting that money to work,
so you're missing out on the value,
the beautiful, amazing force of compound interest over time.
So would you say limit your trading potentially to rebalancing your portfolio or responding
to some significant changes in your own personal financial situation?
That's right. If your own situation, things come up, obviously we have to place trades
to meet your needs if that's the situation. But otherwise rebalancing or moving from bonds
to stocks in a down market,
those kinds of moves, those are disciplined.
And we're not market timing.
We're not buying and selling individual stocks day to day.
We're saying, oh, COVID happened.
The market went down 35 percent and I'm with 70 percent stock and 30 bond.
And then my stocks are down.
I'm going to rebalance today to get back to 70, 30.
That kind of trading makes a lot of sense.
The next one I found super
interesting too and so important, it's misunderstanding performance. You see investors chasing these hot
investments all the time without understanding underlying risks. You talk about metrics that
people should keep an eye out for. Which are the ones that are often misunderstood? Well, I think a
lot of people could look at volatility and they confuse that with risk.
As one example, they go, oh, a stock market is risky or investing in the S&P 500 is risky because
look after 9-11 or the tech bubble or 809 or COVID, it went down 34 to 53%. That's really risky.
That's really just volatility. That's things going up and down in price.
Risk is really the risk of loss. The market went down, it
came back and went on to do highs every single time. There's been over a hundred market corrections,
drops of 10% or more. The average correction is 14%. All 100 plus had the same outcome.
The market recovered and went to new highs. It's been dozens of bear markets, a drop of
20% or more. The average one's a 34% drop. Every single one, same exact outcome, recovery, new highs.
So confusing risk and volatility is one of those measures that I don't think is relevant. And I
think it scares people away from investing that otherwise would do very well if they just understood,
hey, this happens all the time and you get these recoveries. Yeah, we've never not recovered from a single recession or depression in US history.
So keep that in mind.
Hold on to your wallets.
Money Rehab will be right back.
Let's be real.
Your financial goals deserve more than just a quick boilerplate plan.
That's where creative planning comes in.
Creative Planning is a wealth management firm that is all about personalized investing strategies designed to tackle your goals, not just one size fits all advice.
Creative Planning can help you with your financial dreams, whether it's investing in your future, tax strategies to optimize your wealth, making a dreamy retirement plan, whatever it is, creative planning has you covered. I am such a big fan of theirs that I proudly join their team
as a financial education advocate.
So if you're ready to get serious about turning
your financial dreams into real actionable steps,
give creative planning a try.
Go to creativeplanning.com slash Nicole,
where you fill out a form and schedule a free
15 minute conversation with a member
of the creative planning team,
who can talk to you about your specific needs and financial dreams and then connect you with a wealth manager.
Get started and invest in your future at creativeplanning.com slash Nicole.
And now for some more money rehab.
Are there any of the metrics that people should keep an eye out for?
I think when I think about metrics, I'm looking at indexes and trying to compare your returns
to indexes.
For example, if you're a large cap investor, the S&P 500 is an index of large company with
stocks.
If you're a small cap investor, the Russell 2000 is an index of small stocks.
If you're using a low cost manager, you wanna compare them to those indexes.
If you're using index based investing, which I love,
then you wanna make sure you're using an index
that has high tracking rate.
And so really being able to compare apples to apples
is the best way to really measure results as an investor.
The next common mistake you say is behavioral biases.
These are investing decisions based on emotion,
which sound like an obvious error
we would never ever make, right?
We know about panic selling, don't panic sell.
But that's not the only emotional kind of bias we have.
Buying into trends that maybe your favorite celebrity has,
that's an emotional bias too.
You say a way to avoid this
is to write an investment policy statement. I love that
What does that look like and why is that helpful?
So the idea is to basically put on a piece of paper
Here's where I am. Here's what I'm trying to do and based on what I'm trying to do
Here are the things I should own I should have this much in stocks this much in bonds and so on and
Here's how much I'm gonna save and put in these buckets over time. And that marries you
to a plan that makes sense for you versus reacting to the market. If you start reacting to the market,
then we're going to make the behavioral mistakes. So one of the big ones is recency bias, which is
people, all I remember is what happened recently. Like with your sports team, whether there,
you might feel more confident or less confident just based on what you happen to see on TV over the last couple weeks
Instead of maybe looking at all of the games and all of the totality of what's happened with investing
We tend to look at what's happening right now and we magnify it
For example, 2024 the market went up most of the time investors became very confident and started throwing more money at the market
During coven the market went down people freaked out. they started taking money out, that was a big mistake.
We also have confirmation bias,
where we get married to certain ideas.
This is why some of your conservative listeners,
Nicole might read the Wall Street Journal and watch Fox,
and some of your liberal investors
might read the New York Times and watch CNN.
And we go to this place that reaffirms what we're doing,
and we ignore the places that disagree with
us and the investors do that. You own a certain stock, you go look for things that validate why
you should own that stock. People tend not to look for things that tell them they're wrong or they
should exit something that they want to keep. And so Warren Buffett famously said when he buys a
stock, he just doesn't look for things on why it will do well, but what could go wrong? And he is
really looking for counter opinions.
And that's a great way to fight that confirmation bias.
And then lastly, another,
and we cover a lot more of this in the book,
but another one that's very powerful
is the endowment effect,
which is once you own something, you don't wanna let it go.
This is why when you go to a car dealer, they say,
hey, do you wanna get in the car and go for a drive?
Because now you can see yourself owning the car
at the jewelry store. They say, hey, go ahead and to get in the car and go for a drive? Because now you can see yourself owning the car at the jewelry store.
They say, hey, go ahead and put these earrings on or put this necklace on
because now it feels like it's yours.
That endowment effect kicks in.
And that endowment effect is very powerful.
If you own a stock, it takes a lot to get you to want to sell it
because you feel very married to it.
And so it's a, the, if you can become aware of these biases, it makes it easier to become a disciplined investor and stick to your plan.
Yeah. You fall in love with your investments. You're like, I'm on the team.
I want them to do well. And the recency bias is so real.
I saw it last weekend with my husband. He's a diehard commanders fan,
and they'd been on a winning streak and they just lost the game to the Eagles.
And he was so upset. And I'm like, honey and they just lost the game to the Eagles and he was so upset and I'm like
Honey, they've lost for years. Did you forget?
And he's like I know but they just lost this last time and we forget we have this sort of amnesia around
Especially things we love and then we get into that echo chamber
so I think it's really important to be aware of those biases and
get into that echo chamber. So I think it's really important to be aware of those biases
and try to detach yourself from that emotional draw. It's really hard though. I'm sure you've fallen in love with a stock or two. You can't help it. Especially if you've
bought something that's done well, it becomes very hard to part ways with.
So we're leaving those five things behind in 2024, Peter. is there anything we should make sure we prioritize
for 2025 specifically? You mentioned the election and our biases that potentially we fall into an
echo chamber of news. With the recent election, is there anything that we should specifically
prioritize or keep in mind for the next year? I think there's so much noise. Politics and social media have really put a lot of people on edge and it's starting
to impact decision making.
And I personally see it with the thousands of clients that we work with at Creative.
I see it impact the thinking of some of these clients.
And I would just say, ignore the noise, stand tall, let the wind blow all around you, make your investing about
you and your goals and not who's the president, not who's in Congress, not what someone tweeted
yesterday.
It should really be about what are you trying to accomplish?
What do I need to own to accomplish that?
And then just put yourself in a pattern where you do it over and over again, no matter what
is happening.
And that gives you the absolute highest chance of success.
Yeah, we can't predict the future. If we could, we would be in a different industry, I think.
But are there any economic changes that the financial industry you think is going to go
through under this new administration and anything we can do to prepare for that now
or just continue to stay the course.
I think so one big thing people talk about is taxes, but really for the last 20 years
under Bush and Biden and Trump and Obama, the taxes policy has not changed significantly.
Income tax rates have barely moved.
Capital gains rates have not moved at all.
Really taxes have not changed a lot and the changes they talk about making are very much
on the periphery.
The other big thing that impacts the economy
is interest rates.
The president, Congress don't control interest rates.
The Federal Reserve does.
We're the same Federal Reserve under Trump
that we had under Biden.
But we do expect rates to come down a little bit more.
And when they do, it tends to be very good for the markets
because the cost of companies to borrow, to operate goes down. And so it has them do well.
The one thing that's interesting is they've got this committee, Elon and Vivek, that are
going to be doing apparently cost cutting across the federal bureaucracy. So there's
a good way to look at this and a bad way to look at this. The good way is that if they
really did that, that would lower a lot of the expenses of the federal government. And the single
biggest crisis the United States faces is the federal deficit. It's not debatable at
all. It doesn't matter if you talk to a liberal economist or a conservative economist, this
is the single greatest threat to the future of the United States is the deficit. So cutting
federal spending would be positive in that regard.
If they really went really over the top and really terminated a lot of people, that would
drive unemployment up a little bit, and that can also start to slow down the economy to
lose all of this government spending.
To me, this is still noise.
And as an investor, there's too many things going on in the world these
are just a couple things that'll be fun to watch and fun to follow to see how
they play out but shouldn't change the way someone looks at their personal
plan. Oh my gosh so fun to watch. Elon in the White House with the Doge that
they're calling at the Doge Department or something. So fun to watch and I think
people are feeling though there's this idea of a vibe session that we're not
in a recession, but somehow it feels that way.
And yet the market is up and all of these economic indicators, unemployment is low.
What do you make of that?
How people feel versus what the numbers are?
I think it's because there's two different groups of people, Nicole.
So I think that for the group of people that own stocks and own real estate or they own
stock in a business
that they're a partner in, everything's great. There was high inflation and what else inflated?
Stocks inflated, the home value inflated, your real estate inflated, your business inflated.
But the overwhelming majority of Americans, they don't have those things. They go to work,
they get a paycheck, and they're making $50,000 a year or whatever the amount may be.
they get a paycheck and they're making $50,000 a year or whatever the amount may be.
Then they've got their expenses and their expenses went up 30%, 40%, 50% at the grocery store and housing and taxes and everything else, but their income did not go up as much. We know that for
sure that the income inflation for that group was less than their expenses. They are in a severe recession.
So the majority of Americans are going to the grocery store, trying to take a family
trip or trying to cover the cost of their car and their property and casualty insurance.
Everything is rocketed and their pay is not kept up with it. They are in a recession and
the rest are in great times. And that's why we have this vibe session. It's just this,
it's two
different groups experiencing a very different economy right now.
Yeah, it's like it's a tale of two economic stories. And I think the idea of inflation
is important to keep in mind that we don't want prices necessarily to go down from where
they are here, because that would be deflationary. So what should people keep in mind about prices moving
forward with the power of inflation?
And why do we sometimes need inflation?
The dream scenario is inflation is just under control
and we can get wages to rise without the price
of all these goods to continue to go up at the same pace.
And that would solve the problem.
And that's what we're really looking to see happen here.
That's the, what we call the Goldilocks outcome.
And very rarely is it not too hot or not too cold.
I'm sure there'll be a few missteps
before the Federal Reserve gets it just right.
Well, Peter, I'm excited to talk about
the entire Goldilocks saga as it plays out with you
with more of these episodes in 2025
to help listeners accomplish all of their financial goals
for the new year and keep the motivation going
all year long.
It's always great to be with you, Nicole.
Happy new year.
For today's tip, you can take straight to the bank.
If you're finally ready to make 2025
the year you make a plan for your financial future,
go to creativeplanning.com slash Nicole.
That's where you can fill out a form
to schedule a free 15 minute conversation with a member
of the Creative Planning team who can talk to you about your needs and financial dreams
and connect you with a wealth manager.
Take the first step toward the financial future you want at CreativePlanning.com slash Nicole.
Money Rehab is a production of Money News Network.
I'm your host, Nicole Lapin. Money Rehab's executive producer is Morgan Lavoie.
Our researcher is Emily Holmes.
Do you need some Money Rehab?
And let's be honest, we all do.
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Thank you for listening and for investing in yourself, which is
the most important investment you can make.