Episode Description
In this episode, we explore one of the most important but overlooked questions in investing: what is the purpose of your portfolio? Through a series of powerful clips and reflections from Aswath Damodaran, Meb Faber, Ben Hunt, Cullen Roche, Corey Hoffstein, Daniel Crosby, Larry Swedroe, and Wes Gray, we examine how goals like financial freedom, funded contentment, liability driven investing, retirement planning, and multi generational wealth shape the way we invest. This conversation goes beyond beating the market and focuses on preserving and growing wealth, reducing financial stress, aligning money with meaning, and defining what a life well lived truly looks like.
Topics covered include:
Why the end game of investing matters more than beating the market
Preserving and growing wealth vs trying to get rich
Freedom as the ultimate goal of financial independence
Funded contentment and what it means to live a life well lived
Liability driven investing and matching assets to future needs
The difference between getting rich and staying rich
Needs vs desires and understanding marginal utility of wealth
Retirement planning and redefining success beyond a number
Multi generational wealth and thinking beyond your own lifetime
The psychological impact of growing up with or without money
Financial freedom, stress reduction, and peace of mind
Tactical financial goals vs long term purpose driven investing
Education, legacy, and investing in the next generation
Why once you win the game you may not need to keep playing
Timestamps:
00:00 Aswath Damodaran on preserving and growing wealth
10:04 Meb Faber on freedom, contentment, and the hedonic treadmill
22:36 Ben Hunt on funded contentment and finding your pack
28:23 Cullen Roche on risk as uncertainty of consumption
33:25 Corey Hoffstein on liability driven investing and not worrying about money
41:50 Daniel Crosby on financial freedom and living life on your own terms
47:33 Larry Swedroe on needs vs desires and staying rich
55:54 Wes Gray on big blue arrows, tactical goals, and peace of mind