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Don and Tom tackle the behavioral trap of “home bias” in investing—why U.S. investors tend to overinvest domestically and why it’s dangerous. They compare global fund allocations across countries, poke fun at nationalist investing instincts, and explain why international diversification is essential. Listener calls cover early Social Security regret, 72(t) withdrawals, covered calls on Palantir, and what happens to target date funds after they “expire.”
1:52 Home bias explained: Americans (and Australians) overweight U.S. stocks
2:58 U.S. vs global stock market value debate
3:42 Fund companies pander to investor bias
4:14 Vanguard Australia fund: 42% Aussie stocks?!
5:25 Why home bias hurts—Australia’s 25% bank exposure
6:26 Dimensional and Avantis global tilt: 70% U.S.
7:52 Long-term global diversification reduces volatility
8:17 The 2000s: Global funds outperformed U.S. funds
9:21 Call: Donna in AZ – Regret over early Social Security filing
11:29 Don confesses he took his at 69: “I’m weak”
12:02 Donna’s still in great shape—no panic needed
13:04 Timing Social Security: Only critical if it’s most of your income
14:45 Emotional investing vs logic—why home bias persists
15:51 Japan: Home bias disaster, zero returns since 1990
16:07 Call: Kyle in TX – 72(t) withdrawals and bond reluctance
18:21 Tom explains why bonds matter when pulling from a shrinking stock portfolio
19:51 Call: Jason the Tesla Bull – Covered calls on Palantir
21:15 Covered call mechanics explained
23:14 Don’s 1980s crash story: When covered calls fail
24:14 Covered calls appeal to greed, often backfire
25:20 Palantir’s PE ratio? Try 1,058—yikes
26:30 Meme stocks vs megacaps: Palantir’s government dependency
27:05 Call: John in OH – Fidelity fee confusion update
28:16 John’s advisor can’t see the same statements—sus?
30:32 Make sure to bring statements and get written answers
31:29 Don’s birthday, Father’s Day gripes, and Twain wisdom
32:22 Call: Elizabeth in SC – What happens to a 2010 target date fund?
33:37 Vanguard 2010 funds merge into 70/30 “retirement income” fund
35:14 Performance? ~5% annualized—above inflation
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Don McDonald4.5
711711 ratings
Don and Tom tackle the behavioral trap of “home bias” in investing—why U.S. investors tend to overinvest domestically and why it’s dangerous. They compare global fund allocations across countries, poke fun at nationalist investing instincts, and explain why international diversification is essential. Listener calls cover early Social Security regret, 72(t) withdrawals, covered calls on Palantir, and what happens to target date funds after they “expire.”
1:52 Home bias explained: Americans (and Australians) overweight U.S. stocks
2:58 U.S. vs global stock market value debate
3:42 Fund companies pander to investor bias
4:14 Vanguard Australia fund: 42% Aussie stocks?!
5:25 Why home bias hurts—Australia’s 25% bank exposure
6:26 Dimensional and Avantis global tilt: 70% U.S.
7:52 Long-term global diversification reduces volatility
8:17 The 2000s: Global funds outperformed U.S. funds
9:21 Call: Donna in AZ – Regret over early Social Security filing
11:29 Don confesses he took his at 69: “I’m weak”
12:02 Donna’s still in great shape—no panic needed
13:04 Timing Social Security: Only critical if it’s most of your income
14:45 Emotional investing vs logic—why home bias persists
15:51 Japan: Home bias disaster, zero returns since 1990
16:07 Call: Kyle in TX – 72(t) withdrawals and bond reluctance
18:21 Tom explains why bonds matter when pulling from a shrinking stock portfolio
19:51 Call: Jason the Tesla Bull – Covered calls on Palantir
21:15 Covered call mechanics explained
23:14 Don’s 1980s crash story: When covered calls fail
24:14 Covered calls appeal to greed, often backfire
25:20 Palantir’s PE ratio? Try 1,058—yikes
26:30 Meme stocks vs megacaps: Palantir’s government dependency
27:05 Call: John in OH – Fidelity fee confusion update
28:16 John’s advisor can’t see the same statements—sus?
30:32 Make sure to bring statements and get written answers
31:29 Don’s birthday, Father’s Day gripes, and Twain wisdom
32:22 Call: Elizabeth in SC – What happens to a 2010 target date fund?
33:37 Vanguard 2010 funds merge into 70/30 “retirement income” fund
35:14 Performance? ~5% annualized—above inflation
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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