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#651: Many who reach CoastFI find themselves in a strange in-between: financially independent enough to stop saving, but not ready to fully retire. When you’re living off a taxable brokerage for decades, does the “never hold bonds in taxable” rule still apply?
This episode explores how traditional asset location advice meets real-life spending. We unpack how to balance growth, taxes, and stability when your taxable account becomes your paycheck. Then we shift to two more listener dilemmas: helping a parent retire through shared home ownership, and using covered-call strategies to earn income from a stock-heavy portfolio.
Listener Questions in This Episode
Brandon (1:28): “I’m CoastFI and will withdraw from my taxable account for the next 20 years. Should I hold bonds in taxable, or keep it all in stocks?”
Brandon’s retirement accounts can grow untouched, but his taxable brokerage will fund two decades of living expenses. The classic rule says avoid bonds in taxable, yet Paula explains why that advice isn’t universal. When your taxable account funds your life, it needs to act as a complete portfolio. We discuss how to balance risk, prioritize liquidity, and plan your glidepath into CoastFI life.
Andrew (22:07): “My spouse and I co-own a home with my mother-in-law. How can we help her retire without creating family tension?”
We explore fair, flexible ways to support an aging parent while keeping relationships healthy. Paula explains how to design a win-win deal and why seller financing can help balance cash flow and peace of mind.
Chandan (49:16): “Can covered-call ETFs help me generate income from my stock portfolio and RSUs?”
We explain how covered calls work, what “covered” really means, and the tradeoff between steady income and limited upside. For those with concentrated stock positions, Paula shares when covered calls make sense—and when simpler plans win.
Key Takeaways
Chapters
Note: Timestamps are approximate and may differ across listening platforms due to dynamically inserted ads.
(01:28) Brandon’s CoastFI question: bonds in taxable when withdrawals start now
(03:56) Why “no bonds in taxable” is a rule of thumb, not a law
(12:42) How to treat taxable as a stand-alone portfolio
(18:31) Balancing tax efficiency with cash-flow reality
(25:26) Helping a parent retire through shared property ownership
(01:05:40) Options: Buying or selling with Options
(01:07:07) Covered calls explained simply, income with a ceiling
Resources & Links
Asset Location Cheat Sheet (free): affordanything.com/assetlocation
Guide to Double-I FIRE (free): affordanything.com/fiire
Share this episode with a friend, colleagues, your the person you buy garbage bags from: https://affordanything.com/episode651
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Paula Pant | Cumulus Podcast Network4.7
34553,455 ratings
#651: Many who reach CoastFI find themselves in a strange in-between: financially independent enough to stop saving, but not ready to fully retire. When you’re living off a taxable brokerage for decades, does the “never hold bonds in taxable” rule still apply?
This episode explores how traditional asset location advice meets real-life spending. We unpack how to balance growth, taxes, and stability when your taxable account becomes your paycheck. Then we shift to two more listener dilemmas: helping a parent retire through shared home ownership, and using covered-call strategies to earn income from a stock-heavy portfolio.
Listener Questions in This Episode
Brandon (1:28): “I’m CoastFI and will withdraw from my taxable account for the next 20 years. Should I hold bonds in taxable, or keep it all in stocks?”
Brandon’s retirement accounts can grow untouched, but his taxable brokerage will fund two decades of living expenses. The classic rule says avoid bonds in taxable, yet Paula explains why that advice isn’t universal. When your taxable account funds your life, it needs to act as a complete portfolio. We discuss how to balance risk, prioritize liquidity, and plan your glidepath into CoastFI life.
Andrew (22:07): “My spouse and I co-own a home with my mother-in-law. How can we help her retire without creating family tension?”
We explore fair, flexible ways to support an aging parent while keeping relationships healthy. Paula explains how to design a win-win deal and why seller financing can help balance cash flow and peace of mind.
Chandan (49:16): “Can covered-call ETFs help me generate income from my stock portfolio and RSUs?”
We explain how covered calls work, what “covered” really means, and the tradeoff between steady income and limited upside. For those with concentrated stock positions, Paula shares when covered calls make sense—and when simpler plans win.
Key Takeaways
Chapters
Note: Timestamps are approximate and may differ across listening platforms due to dynamically inserted ads.
(01:28) Brandon’s CoastFI question: bonds in taxable when withdrawals start now
(03:56) Why “no bonds in taxable” is a rule of thumb, not a law
(12:42) How to treat taxable as a stand-alone portfolio
(18:31) Balancing tax efficiency with cash-flow reality
(25:26) Helping a parent retire through shared property ownership
(01:05:40) Options: Buying or selling with Options
(01:07:07) Covered calls explained simply, income with a ceiling
Resources & Links
Asset Location Cheat Sheet (free): affordanything.com/assetlocation
Guide to Double-I FIRE (free): affordanything.com/fiire
Share this episode with a friend, colleagues, your the person you buy garbage bags from: https://affordanything.com/episode651
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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