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In episode we answer emails from Nick, Patrick and Aaron. We discuss matching goals with portfolios for an early FI person, review an Early Retirement Now blog post about diversification misperceptions, and discuss using STRIPS funds instead of regular treasury bond funds.
Links:
Early Retirement Now Blog Post: How to "Lie" with Personal Finance - Part 3: Diversification - Early Retirement Now
Large Cap Growth and Small Cap Value Long Term Comparison: Asset Analyzer for ETFs, Stocks, and Funds | testfolio
Portfolio Comparison With Sharpe and Sortino Ratios: Portfolio Backtester for ETFs and Asset Allocation | testfolio
Breathless AI-Bot Summary:
Retiring early doesn’t magically change the laws of investing, but it does expose your real priorities fast. We read an email from a 35-year-old on the FIRE path with a $1.5M portfolio, a conservative 3.5% withdrawal rate, and a not-so-conservative 100% stock allocation. That mismatch opens up the biggest theme we keep coming back to: your portfolio tells the truth about what you value, whether that’s sleeping well at night or trying to out-run every bad decade and still “win” against the S&P 500.
From there, we tackle a common myth in the early retirement community: that a longer retirement means you need a completely different approach. We argue the first 10 years are the make-or-break window for sequence of returns risk at any age, while the true long-horizon enemy is inflation. That leads to a practical discussion of cash drag, why holding too much cash or short-term bonds can quietly reduce outcomes, and why a risk parity style portfolio can trade a bit of upside for shallower drawdowns and more predictable behavior across tough markets.
We also respond to a listener who asks about a blog post attacking “exotic” diversification, breaking down what diversification really means (hint: not counting ETFs) and why correlations shift across economic regimes like recessions and inflation shocks. Finally, we answer a question on Treasury STRIPS funds like EDV and ZROZ: when they’re useful, why they can feel like leverage, and how volatility matching and position sizing matter, especially after a 2022-style rate move. If you find this helpful, subscribe, share the show with a fellow DIY investor, and leave a rating or review so more people can find it.
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By Frank Vasquez4.5
270270 ratings
In episode we answer emails from Nick, Patrick and Aaron. We discuss matching goals with portfolios for an early FI person, review an Early Retirement Now blog post about diversification misperceptions, and discuss using STRIPS funds instead of regular treasury bond funds.
Links:
Early Retirement Now Blog Post: How to "Lie" with Personal Finance - Part 3: Diversification - Early Retirement Now
Large Cap Growth and Small Cap Value Long Term Comparison: Asset Analyzer for ETFs, Stocks, and Funds | testfolio
Portfolio Comparison With Sharpe and Sortino Ratios: Portfolio Backtester for ETFs and Asset Allocation | testfolio
Breathless AI-Bot Summary:
Retiring early doesn’t magically change the laws of investing, but it does expose your real priorities fast. We read an email from a 35-year-old on the FIRE path with a $1.5M portfolio, a conservative 3.5% withdrawal rate, and a not-so-conservative 100% stock allocation. That mismatch opens up the biggest theme we keep coming back to: your portfolio tells the truth about what you value, whether that’s sleeping well at night or trying to out-run every bad decade and still “win” against the S&P 500.
From there, we tackle a common myth in the early retirement community: that a longer retirement means you need a completely different approach. We argue the first 10 years are the make-or-break window for sequence of returns risk at any age, while the true long-horizon enemy is inflation. That leads to a practical discussion of cash drag, why holding too much cash or short-term bonds can quietly reduce outcomes, and why a risk parity style portfolio can trade a bit of upside for shallower drawdowns and more predictable behavior across tough markets.
We also respond to a listener who asks about a blog post attacking “exotic” diversification, breaking down what diversification really means (hint: not counting ETFs) and why correlations shift across economic regimes like recessions and inflation shocks. Finally, we answer a question on Treasury STRIPS funds like EDV and ZROZ: when they’re useful, why they can feel like leverage, and how volatility matching and position sizing matter, especially after a 2022-style rate move. If you find this helpful, subscribe, share the show with a fellow DIY investor, and leave a rating or review so more people can find it.
Support the show

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