Should you invest money you’re saving for a house, or keep it in cash? How does an inherited IRA actually work when it’s split between siblings? What should a single person think about differently when planning for retirement? And is SGOV a reasonable place to park your emergency fund? Joe and OG dig in. These aren’t questions from this week. They’re questions Stackers sent in over a year ago — and people are still asking every single one of them.
What You’ll Walk Away With
- The house down payment question: why OG flips it around and asks what happens if the market is down 20% when you need the money — and how the answer tells you exactly what to do
- Why the juice-worth-the-squeeze question matters more than the optimal investment question when your timeline is three to five years
- How inherited IRAs actually work: the 10-year rule, required minimum distributions, what happens when multiple siblings inherit the same account, and when it might make sense to just pay the tax and be done with it
- Why a spouse inheriting an IRA follows completely different rules — and why you cannot add to an inherited IRA even if you don’t have one of your own
- The single person’s financial plan: why disability insurance is the most important protection nobody thinks about, why your estate plan needs different beneficiary logic than a married person’s, and why being your own backstop means advocating harder for your own income
- Michelle’s numbers run through the Rule of 72: why a 35-year-old with $270,000 already saved may be closer to Coast FI than she realizes
- SGOV as an emergency fund: when treasury ETFs make sense as a cash alternative, when they don’t, and why over-optimizing your cash flow can cost you more in overdraft fees than you ever gained
- Why keeping one to two months of expenses in your checking account isn’t lazy — it’s a system that protects you from the chaos of a missed transfer
- The student loan bankruptcy debate: why Ron’s argument has more merit than most people admit, and what the real structural problem is
- The Edward Jones response: what’s actually Joe’s job in the headline segment and what belongs to a company’s PR department
Why This Matters Now
Good financial advice doesn’t have an expiration date. These questions were relevant a year ago, they’re relevant today, and they’ll be relevant next year. If you’ve been putting off answering any of them for yourself, this is the episode.
From the Basement
Joe and OG work through the mailbag — house down payments, inherited IRAs, single-person planning, SGOV, student loans, and a spirited defense of Edward Jones from an actual Edward Jones employee who has some notes. The trivia question is about Michael Jackson’s best solo hit according to Billboard. Mom has the curtains drawn.
Resources Mentioned
Stacking Benjamins Community — stackingbenjamins.com/basement
Stacking Benjamins voicemail line — leave your question; stackingbenjamins.com/voicemail
SGOV — iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF; referenced for emergency fund and cash management discussion
Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) — stackingbenjamins.com/201
OG financial planning calendar — stackingbenjamins.com/og



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Written by: Kevin Bailey
Miss our last show? Listen here: The Retirement Wall of Shame: Mistakes That Wreck Retirement Plans (SB1863) | Stacking Benjamins


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