Sound Investing

Paul Merriman

Weekly podcasts with Paul Merriman. Strategic planning for investing at every stage of life.

  1. AAII Presentation Follow-Up: ETF Tax Efficiency, Rebalancing, and Smarter Diversification

    2天前

    AAII Presentation Follow-Up: ETF Tax Efficiency, Rebalancing, and Smarter Diversification

    First, a big thank-you to everyone who joined me for the AAII presentation last Saturday. I appreciate your patience during my rocky Zoom start—and a special shout-out to Suzette Moskwa, who saved the day by running the slides! As promised, I’m following up on your chat comments and questions from the session. This week’s focus is on your insights; in the next couple of weeks, I’ll share a full Q&A edition covering listener questions on portfolio construction, diversification, and long-term investing strategy. Key Takeaways from This Week’s Discussion ETFs vs. Mutual Funds — Tax Efficiency MattersMutual funds often create higher annual taxes in taxable accounts. ETFs and index funds are more tax-efficient because of how they handle capital gains—saving investors up to 1% a year. Keep mutual funds inside IRAs to avoid unnecessary taxes. Equal-Weighted vs. Cap-Weighted PortfoliosThe Invesco Equal Weighted S&P 500 (RSP) holds the same 500 companies as the standard index but gives each stock equal weight. This creates different exposure and more turnover, yet the ETF version reduces the tax drag—a key advantage for long-term investors. Small-Cap Value Funds — Choosing the Right FitVBR (Vanguard) performs best when large-cap growth leads, while AVUV and DFSV outperform when smaller value companies rise. The lesson: size and style matter in long-term returns. The Power of Rebalancing & “Shannon’s Demon”Mentioned by Bill Yount from the Catching Up to FI podcast,  Shannon’s Demon illustrates how periodic rebalancing can turn volatility into profit. By selling high and buying low, you can enhance long-term performance while keeping risk in check. Morningstar Ratings — Don’t Chase the StarsStar ratings mostly reflect recent trends, not future potential. Focus instead on the underlying asset class and decades of evidence, not last year’s winners. Small-Cap Value Slump — Patience Pays OffSmall-cap value has struggled this year, but historically it offers one of the best long-term premiums. Remember: asset class selection drives up to 99% of overall portfolio performance. Risk Parity Portfolios — Balancing Risk the Smart WayPaul compared traditional diversification to risk parity, which balances exposure across stocks, bonds, and commodities. He prefers government bonds over commodities since bonds generate income and often rise when stocks fall. Diversifying Within an Asset ClassInstead of going “all or nothing,” you can hold multiple ETFs—like AVUV and DFSV—for extra balance within a category. Just keep the lineup manageable for your brokerage or platform. Factor Investing — What Really Drives ReturnsThe strongest long-term drivers are size and value. Momentum and quality can help, but smaller, cheaper companies historically deliver the best rewards. Growth Funds & Ten-Year PerformanceTen-year snapshots can mislead. From 2000 to 2025, small-cap value funds far outperformed growth and the S&P 500, showing the value premium remains powerful across full market cycles. S&P 500 vs. Total Market — Nearly Identical Over TimeSince 1928, returns differ by only 0.1%. The S&P’s recent edge comes mainly from a handful of mega-cap tech stocks, not fundamental differences in the indexes. Hiring an Advisor — When It’s Worth ItA skilled fiduciary advisor can help manage emotions, discipline, and rebalancing. If you struggle to stay consistent, professional guidance may be worth far more than the fee. The DIY Investor Myth — Overcoming Human Biases“No one cares more about your money than you” sounds good, but behavioral biases—recency, overconfidence, and loss aversion—can derail results. Automation or a trusted advisor can protect you. For more insight, see Paul Hayes’ free book Spending Your Way to Wealth, especially the appendix on 48 investor biases. Thank you again for your time, attention, and thoughtful participation. Despite the technical hiccups, your engagement made this an incredibly rewarding session!

    52 分钟
  2. Staying the Course — Insights on Reasonable & Unreasonable Portfolios, Quilt Charts & 2025 Returns

    11月5日

    Staying the Course — Insights on Reasonable & Unreasonable Portfolios, Quilt Charts & 2025 Returns

    In this episode, Paul dives into one of the most important themes in long-term investing: staying the course, even when individual asset classes deliver unexpected short-term results. Whether you’re a seasoned DIY investor or still building confidence, Paul shares timely lessons to help you make better decisions—and support others who rely on your guidance. Paul also previews his upcoming presentation for the AAII Puget Sound Chapter, where he’ll take one of the deepest dives yet into Daryl Balls’ latest quilt charts, the Sound Investing portfolios, and the vital differences between traditional and non-traditional index funds. You’ll hear Paul discuss insights from two of the industry’s leading “truth tellers”:• Jim Dahle (The White Coat Investor) and his Bogleheads presentation on reasonable vs. unreasonable portfolios• Dr. Bill Bernstein, and why staying disciplined may be investors’ greatest lifelong challenge Along the way, Paul reviews 10-month, year-to-date performance for the Best-in-Class ETF portfolios—including the 10-fund, 4-fund, and 2-fund strategies—and explains why the surprising 2025 return patterns are completely normal. Key topics include: Why some equity asset classes “disappoint” this year—and why that’s expected The resurgence of international value, small international, and emerging markets How Chris Pedersen’s 4-Fund Worldwide strategy kept pace with the 10-Fund The powerful role of non-traditional index funds (DFA & Avantis) Why small-cap value’s recent struggles shouldn’t discourage long-term investors How to access DFA-style factor premiums through today’s ETFs The importance of keeping an investing approach simple, reasonable, and durable Why staying the course—not forecasting—is the true key to long-term success Paul also shares personal updates about moving back to Bainbridge Island and reflects on what it means to serve a community of dedicated DIY investors. If you know someone who would benefit from this work, please share this episode. And don’t miss the links in the show notes—including Jim Dahle’s video, portfolio references, quilt charts, and upcoming AAII registration details. Thank you for listening—and all the best to you and your family.

    19 分钟
  3. The Merriman Financial Education Foundation: Plans, Priorities & Lessons for 2026

    10月29日

    The Merriman Financial Education Foundation: Plans, Priorities & Lessons for 2026

    Paul Merriman welcomes back Chris Patterson, Director of Research, and Daryl Balls, Director of Analytics, for another thoughtful roundtable discussion. These three “underpaid volunteers” reflect on how far the Merriman Financial Education Foundation has come — and where it’s headed next. Together, they cover everything from new educational tools to a data-driven look at one of the most common investor questions: Has small-cap value lost its punch? The episode revisits this hot topic with evidence from decades of historical data, including several key Merriman Tables that illustrate why small-cap value (SCV) continues to deserve a place in long-term portfolios. 📊 Quilt Chart: Year-by-Year Performance of the Major Asset Classes Created by Daryl Balls, this visual “quilt” shows how the four major U.S. equity asset classes — large-cap blend, large-cap value, small-cap blend, and small-cap value — have rotated in and out of favor since 1928. The randomness of short-term returns underscores the importance of diversification and patience. Despite long stretches of average performance, small-cap value’s cumulative results remain powerful. ➡️ View the Quilt Chart on PaulMerriman.com 📈 Table G-1b: Fine-Tuning Table — S&P 500 vs U.S. SCV Equity Portfolio Outperformance Prepared by Daryl Balls, this 54-year comparison (1970–2024) demonstrates how small-cap value has consistently outperformed the S&P 500 over time. The two rightmost columns — highlighting rolling 15-year and 20-year outperformance — are especially compelling, showing that even after periods of apparent weakness, SCV regains its strength. ➡️ Explore Table G-1b: Fine-Tuning S&P vs SCV 📉 Tables B1, H2, H2A, and D1.4: Core Bootcamp Comparisons From the Foundation’s Sound Investing Bootcamp series, these tables reveal how diversified equity portfolios have performed versus the S&P 500, both in accumulation and distribution phases. They help investors see that broad diversification — especially adding small-cap value — historically improves returns and risk-adjusted outcomes. Table B1: All-Equity Portfolio Returns by Asset Class (1928–2024)Table H2: 60/40 Portfolio Distribution Outcomes (1970–2024)Table H2A: All-Equity Portfolio Distribution Outcomes (1970–2024)Table D1.4: Historical Equity Premiums and Drawdowns➡️ See all Bootcamp Tables Paul, Chris, and Daryl explain that small-cap value premiums come in bursts — often following years of average performance. As Paul notes, SCV has had multiple 15- to 20-year stretches of breaking even with the S&P 500, followed by explosive 3- to 10-year “catch-up” periods that deliver outsized gains. The data in Table G-1b makes this clear: over 54 years, SCV continues to deliver a meaningful performance edge. As Daryl reminds listeners, “those two columns on the right are powerful.” They show that long-term investors who remain patient — and maintain a disciplined exposure to small-cap value — have been well rewarded. Patience is the premium. Factor returns are unpredictable year to year, but history rewards persistence.Diversification is defense. Combining S&P 500 with small-cap value reduces regret during both booms and busts.Data over drama. The Foundation’s free tools, calculators, and tables are designed to help you make rational, informed choices for the long term. 🎧 Listen now on Spotify or YouTube to hear Paul, Chris, and Daryl discuss new tools like the Two Funds for Life Calculator, updates to the Best-in-Class ETF Recommendations, and their vision for the next generation of financial education. Featured Tables and ChartsWhy Small-Cap Value Still Packs a PunchEducational Takeaways

    53 分钟
  4. The Biggest Mistake Beginner Investors Make - and How to Avoid them

    10月22日

    The Biggest Mistake Beginner Investors Make - and How to Avoid them

    In this practical and inspiring ETFatlas podcast episode, host Jack Lempart welcomes Paul Merriman for a return conversation focused on the biggest mistakes beginner investors make—and how to avoid them. The discussion reveals why most investing errors are emotional, not technical. Paul emphasizes that successful investing is usually simple, though almost never easy. Paul Merriman draws on decades of experience as an educator, advisor, and founder of the Merriman Financial Education Foundation to spotlight key pitfalls: Trusting the wrong adviceStarting too late with investingLetting emotions drive decisionsChasing recent performance Paul’s conversation goes further, sharing actionable tips: How defensive investing and diversification protect you from major mistakesPractical ways to automate good habits and avoid behavioral biasesInsights from both US and European market examples You’ll also hear why academic research has shaped today’s best investment practices. Paul strongly advocates: Automating decisions wherever possibleBroad diversificationMaintaining discipline during market turbulence Listeners receive clear advice on keeping investing simple, avoiding high fees, and building portfolios designed to withstand uncertainty. The episode closes with tips for further reading—including free educational resources and helpful links—to support every investor’s learning journey. Agenda Paul Merriman’s journey from stockbroker to financial educator and foundation founder​Introduction to the most costly mistakes for beginners and how they can affect lifetime wealth​Why trusting the wrong advice is potentially the biggest error investors make​The importance of choosing academically sound, evidence-based sources over industry “experts” or neighbors​Analysis of how starting too late in investing can dramatically reduce future wealth​The emotional traps beginners face and the impact of behavioral biases on decision-making​The problem of performance chasing and recency bias in investment choices​Automating investments and the value of regular, disciplined contributions​Why diversification is considered “the only free lunch” in investing by experts​Advantages of keeping portfolios simple with solutions like target-date funds and low-cost ETFs​Examples illustrating the massive impact of investment fees over decades​The difference between defensive and offensive strategies in long-term market success​Real-world lessons from market history, including US, Europe, and Japan​How to avoid paralysis from choice overwhelm in a landscape of thousands of ETFs​

    1 小时 47 分钟
  5. Chris & Paul October 2025 Q&A: Best-in-Class ETFs, Equal-Weight vs. Cap-Weight, and How Much Small-Cap Value?

    10月15日

    Chris & Paul October 2025 Q&A: Best-in-Class ETFs, Equal-Weight vs. Cap-Weight, and How Much Small-Cap Value?

    Watch YouTube video here. Paul Merriman and Chris Pedersen tackle your biggest questions—from simplifying portfolios and picking best-in-class ETFs to understanding equal-weighted funds, tax efficiency, and how much small-cap value to own. They dig into factor investing (size, value, quality, profitability, momentum), why reversion to the mean matters, and how to think like an owner—not a speculator. Plus: mentors, work-life balance, and the real risk investors face. Chapters 00:00 – Intro & Mentors 05:07 – Portfolio Simplification 10:13 – Work-Life Balance 11:39 – Which ETFs will outperform? 20:15 – Importance of Quality 22:45 – Equal-Weighted Funds 26:14 – History: how long is enough? 29:58 – Cost of public indexing 33:30 – Equal-weight fund tax vs. ETF 35:21 – How much small-cap value? 39:47 – Why three EM ETFs? 42:28 – “All Avantis” risk? 49:45 – Technology sector history & mean reversion 53:00 – Be an owner, not a speculator 55:27 – Outro Key Takeaways “Best” ETF ≠ next year’s top performer—seek consistent factor exposure, low costs, broad holdings, and tax efficiency. Equal-weighting boosts small/value exposure but can increase turnover and tax drag; pairing large-cap blend with small-cap value can be more efficient. Decide small-cap value allocation by temperament (common range: 10–50% of equities when pairing with S&P 500/target date). Index approach vs. index label: DFA/Avantis are systematic and rules-based without telegraphing rebalances. Think like an owner: over decades, earnings—not sentiment—drive returns. Resources • Best-in-Class ETF Recommendations (2025): https://www.paulmerriman.com/best-in-class-etf-recommendations-2025#gsc.tab=0 • Sound Investing Portfolios, Returns & Risks: https://www.paulmerriman.com/sound-investing-portfolios#gsc.tab=0 • “Tune Out the Noise” (DFA Documentary): https://youtu.be/T98825bzcKw?si=kFMugnSSCn2E76sI

    57 分钟
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Weekly podcasts with Paul Merriman. Strategic planning for investing at every stage of life.

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