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Selling Fear
Description
Don and Tom take aim at the booming annuity industry, arguing that most annuities are sold through fear, confusion, and unrealistic promises rather than honest financial planning. They explain why indexed annuities are especially problematic, why annuities should be viewed strictly as income tools rather than investments, and how even “good” annuities often return your own money back to you first. The episode also covers smarter retirement income strategies, including maximizing Social Security benefits, plus listener questions on “Trump accounts” and youth retirement accounts, taxable investing with DFAW vs. VT, factor investing, and whether U.S. government bonds remain safe despite soaring national debt. Along the way, the hosts detour into a spirited discussion about Pacific Northwest town pronunciations and Sacagawea.
0:14 Why annuities are booming as baby boomers retire
0:38 The illusion of “market returns with no risk”
2:11 How annuities are actually sold through fear and seminars
3:22 Why annuities should be viewed as income products, not investments
4:17 Immediate vs. deferred vs. variable vs. indexed annuities
5:03 Indexed annuities and the “no risk, stock market returns” pitch
5:36 What people really want from annuities: guaranteed income
6:17 Liquidity, guarantees, and the hidden costs of annuities
6:50 Why single premium immediate annuities can disappoint
7:29 How SPIAs often return your own principal first
8:03 Inflation riders, survivor benefits, and reduced payouts
9:13 Longevity fears and unrealistic retirement assumptions
9:47 Social Security as the best inflation-adjusted annuity most people underuse
10:13 How to submit questions to Talking Real Money
10:45 Listener question: “Trump accounts” and YRAs explained
11:57 Why YRAs are not especially tax-advantaged
12:40 529 plans vs. youth retirement accounts
14:25 Listener question: DFAW vs. VT in taxable accounts
15:47 Foreign tax credits and overthinking portfolio optimization
16:17 Factor investing, Dimensional, Avantis, and small value tilts
17:38 Listener question: Are U.S. bonds safe with $39 trillion in debt?
18:31 Why U.S. Treasury bonds remain highly secure
19:10 Who actually owns most U.S. government debt
20:36 The origin and pronunciation battle over Sedro-Woolley
21:33 Lewis and Clark, Sacagawea, and Pacific Northwest pronunciations