For the first time as a host combination, Ben, Dan, and Cameron sit down to discuss the most controversial topics in personal finance. We begin with identity and how it informs decision-making. Then, we revisit the renting versus buying debate, why this remains a highly controversial topic, the ins and outs of income investing, and understating the fervor of dividend investing. We also unpack FIRE as a branch of self-help; how it informs happiness; and how personality influences one’s approach to the FIRE principle. To end, we closely examine Bill Bengen’s 4% rule, and the aftershow encourages us to maintain high podcasting standards while revealing what you can look forward to in our latest Rational Reminder t-shirt release.
Key Points From This Episode:
(0:01:25) Cameron’s positive LinkedIn experience regarding insurance.
(0:08:10) How identity informs decision-making.
(0:15:24) Why renting versus buying a home remains a controversial topic.
(0:27:50) Income investing, covered calls, and the fervor of dividend investing.
(0:46:34) FIRE: Financial independence, retire early.
(0:54:36) Unpacking FIRE as a branch of self-help, and the role of FIRE in happiness.
(1:07:07) How personality and identity inform one’s approach to FIRE.
(1:10:34) Addressing the 4% rule.
(1:14:16) The Aftershow: Setting and keeping high standards, and Rational Reminder t-shirts.
Read The Transcript:
Ben Felix: This is the Rational Reminder podcast, a weekly reality check on sensible investing and financial decision-making from three Canadians. We're hosted by me; Benjamin Felix, Chief Investment Officer; Cameron Passmore, CEO; and Dan Bortolotti, Portfolio Manager at PWL Capital.
Cameron Passmore: Welcome to episode 359. Very momentous event for me. First time, Dan, you and I have been on in this fashion on the podcast together. Very exciting.
Dan Bortolotti: Yeah, that's great. We've had a lot of different combinations of hosts, but this is the first time we've had the three of us. Looking forward to it.
Cameron Passmore: Yeah, it's fun to be back. It's been super fun to listen to you guys and see how it's evolved over time. Today we got spicy Ben. Don't we, Dan?
Dan Bortolotti: Got some controversial topics to discuss. And as usual, Ben has put together a great outline of the major ideas and then we can duke it out and see where we agree and disagree.
Ben Felix: I wasn't trying to be spicy, for the record. I was trying to be very balanced in presenting topics that are controversial.
Cameron Passmore: You can't be two things at the same time. You can't be spicy and balanced.
Ben Felix: Okay.
Cameron Passmore: You don't shy away from being spicy, though.
Ben Felix: That's fair. No, I don't.
Dan Bortolotti: Yeah. I think all of these topics, you can definitely approach them in many different ways. It doesn't have to be confrontational. But, certainly, all of them have had some controversy online in the discussions. And so, interesting to get into it and see what we can tease out of them.
Cameron Passmore: Before we get to that, I wanted to just talk about an experience I had lately on LinkedIn actually. We're looking to bring insurance services like life and disability insurance services in-house, build out a team internally to help deliver that service. Because as we all know, a big part of our service is the implementation part of financial planning, and we've outsourced the insurance part for a long time. We have a fabulous relationship for years, but I think at our size and scale it'd be great to have it brought in-house.
I decided to go to LinkedIn to get advice from who might be out there. Much against what Ben you suggested might happen, which I could be bringing all sorts of people that might not be great to chat to about it. I met some unbelievable people through LinkedIn. I probably had a couple dozen phone calls from people who just wanted to help. They had nothing to sell. They had nothing in it for them. I'm really grateful for the people that did reach out and taught me a ton about how the industry works. And got into some pretty detailed parts of the plumbing of the business, which we knew little of anything about.
It was a very worthwhile outreach, and got a chance to meet lots of people. And hopefully, within the next month or six weeks, we should have a solution in place for that to happen. And this will be a service that will be available to, of course, all of our clients, but also non-clients who are looking for life and disability type insurance solutions.
Dan Bortolotti: It's really such an important part of a financial plan, and it's difficult to get unbiased advice about it. Like all of you and all of the other advisors here, we've always farmed out that responsibility, but it's difficult to find people that you trust to give unbiased advice, not to oversell products that people don't need. I think if we're able to bring this in-house and bring on people that we trust and we can help guide them as financial planners and not let the insurance be considered outside of the context of the larger financial plan, I think that's the big part that sometimes goes awry. Yeah, hopefully, it'll work out well.
Cameron Passmore: There's such a big disparity in compensation around this, too, that so much of the industry just leans towards where the larger compass, which is in the permanent insurance. We've done episodes in the past, and Ben's done a great white paper on this. We're going to have very much a principle-based approach on any sort of possible permanent insurance usage.
But the singles and doubles of term insurance, term life insurance and disability insurance, which I spoke to someone over the past two weeks who is pretty senior in the disability industry, he says there is so little in his opinion. I'm not an expert on this, but in his opinion, there's so little disability insurance being written. It's hard, hard to get underwritten, hard to get approved, and it doesn't pay a lot of commissions. So people tend to follow the larger commissioners. And I think that's a fair statement.
Dan Bortolotti: In many ways, it's more important than life insurance for a lot of people. I mean, obviously, they go hand-in-hand. But we don't see a lot of people who have too little permanent life insurance, but we definitely see a lot of people who have too little disability insurance. But to your point, it's fairly easy to find insurance salespeople, insurance agents who are solid on the life side. The disability takes a lot more product knowledge, I think, and a bit better people skills to do those longer interviews and client discovery. And we've got a couple of people that we work with who are excellent, but they're hard to find.
Ben Felix: Even on life, it's hard to find people who have the right mix of tax and estate planning knowledge, insurance, product knowledge, and are not heavily conflicted toward a certain type of high commission product. We're hoping to build that type of expertise in-house at PWL where, for sure, for term insurance and disability insurance, we want to have that expertise because those are so important for so many people. But there are cases. I hope we've said this in past episodes where we've talked about permanent insurance. Even though we don't love it in general, there are certainly cases where, because of the way that it works in the tax code and the legal code, that it can make sense. They're very niche cases. And I think in general, permanent insurance is massively oversold. Like you just said, Dan, you don't meet too many people that have too much or too little permanent insurance. But there are cases where it does make sense. We're hoping to build the expertise to write those types of cases in-house and be able to give that type of advice without us being worried about the conflict of interest you'd normally be worried about in these scenarios.
Cameron Passmore: The other takeaway is the quality of the community that's been built around this brand. People that reached out have never reached out to me before. They said, "Look, I just saw your post on insurance. You guys have been so gracious with what you've given to us. I want to give something back." Pretty amazing experience.
Ben Felix: Very cool.
Cameron Passmore: All right. Can you go to the spicy episode, Ben?
Ben Felix: Hopefully, it's not too spicy. But yeah, let's go to the main topic, what I'm calling the most controversial topics in personal finance.
[EPISODE]
Ben Felix: As always, I'll go through the notes I have, but I want you guys to jump in with your comments, too. Some personal finance topics are perpetually controversial. And they're not like, "We disagree, but let's be friends kind of controversial." They're like, "You've offended everything that I stand for controversial. And my blood pressure is increasing as I read your disagreement."
I think the fact that there are controversial topics is not that interesting because there are controversial topics anywhere where you look. But I think understanding the reasons why these topics are controversial is pretty interesting. We start to dig into the different layers of what makes them controversial. We're going to go through what I think are some of the most controversial topics in personal finance, and we're going to try and explain the psychology behind the controversy, and then we're going to give our thoughts.
We're going to do renting versus owning a home, which is good timing actually because the episode last week that has not come out yet at the time that we're recording is with Eli Beracha, who's an academic that studies that topic. This will be a good follow-up from that. That's one, renting versus owning a home.
We're going to cover income investing, which includes dividend investing, covered calls, any preference for income over capital or over total return. And we're going to cover financial independence, retire early, or FIRE. Those are all topics where like any time you get into a discussion on the internet at least, sometimes in real life too, people just get impassioned about their view and why it's right and everybody else must be wrong. And it's really hard to have nuanced discussions about them, which is what we're going to try and do here.
One of the common threads throughout these topics is that they're controversial because they go beyond understanding simple trade-offs. It's not something that you can solve on a spreadsheet. They have deep psychological roots and they form part of people's identities. And I think that there are also moral implications or the perception of moral implications. You are good if you buy a home and bad if you rent. I think that filters into some of these topics, just as one example.
Cameron Passmore: I'm curious, because you've mentioned this debate fairly often in the community, but also on Reddit. Can you think of many cases where you've actually changed people's minds?
Ben Felix: Oh, it happens all the time. For sure. I know for a fact that lots of people have had their minds changed based on the content that we've made on this topic because they tell me. I don't know what the proportion is of people who have changed their minds versus not. There are definitely a lot of comments whenever we cover that topic from people who clearly didn't watch the video, or read the paper, or listen to the podcast episode, but are adamant they were wrong about it. People can change their minds.
There's some interesting thoughts on that too, though, on how people process information when something disagrees with something that they have made part of their identity. I'll just mention that. With renting versus buying a home, it becomes part of someone's identity. Someone identifies as a homeowner. And someone who identifies as a homeowner and they feel that's something that's an important part of who they are, it's really hard for them to see alternative perspectives. And there's science behind what I just said. I'll get there in a second.
Same with income investing. Someone might identify a dividend investor. And there are many people who do because there are social media accounts, and blogs, and whatever about dividend investing or with dividend investor in the title. That has the same kind of implications. Those group identities, this is just kind of a precursor to the discussion about the controversial topics, but I think it's important. Those group identities matter to decision-making. We learned about this from Jay Van Bevel, who's a past guest on this podcast. This paper is not his, but he referred to it during that episode.
There's this highly cited 2017 study that aimed to determine whether someone's perceived identity affects their ability to think critically. The authors wanted to understand why public conflict over societal risks persist in the face of compelling and widely accessible scientific evidence. We have the evidence. We know what the truth is or what the consensus is. Why do we still have so conflict over those things? This is not what their paper was about specifically, but I think this is directly applicable to personal finance topics where people's behaviour is often at odds with academic research.
In the paper, they're looking at two possibilities. One is that people just don't have the cognitive ability to understand science. So you give someone the theory of dividend relevance paper and they just can't understand it, which is probably true. I've tried to read that paper. It's really hard to understand.
Cameron Passmore: I was going to say.
Ben Felix: Bad example, bad example. That's one possibility, that people just don't have the cognitive ability to understand science, which leads to controversy. The other possibility is that people with sufficient cognitive ability to understand science actually shut off their cognition when they're evaluating something that is at odds with their identity. And so what this study did is it presented people with a difficult problem that required them to draw valid causal inferences from empirical data. And the subjects who were better with numbers did substantially better when the data were presented as results from a study on a new skin rash treatment, which is a pretty benign topic. No one identifies with a specific type of skincare routine. Or maybe they do. I don't know, but it's not a common one. That's no surprise. People in the study who were better with numbers were better at solving this problem about the evidence on the skincare cream.
Where the study gets interesting is that responses became less accurate when the exact same problem was presented as results from a gun control study rather than a skin care study. And where it's even more interesting is that the more numerate subjects in the study, the people who were better with numbers in the study were more affected by the deterioration in accuracy than the less numerate ones.
What this suggests and what the authors of the paper suggests is that the more numerate subjects use their better quantitative reasoning capacity selectively to conform their interpretation of the data to the result most consistent with their beliefs. That's a pretty scary thing to think about on a societal level. But after reading all the comments on my videos, like you mentioned Cameron, and on other places on the internet, it makes so much sense. People just shut their brains off when something disagrees with a topic that they have made part of their identity.
Dan Bortolotti: I think on so many levels, people decide what they want to believe first at an emotional level, and then they look for evidence to support what they've already decided on. We all do it to some extent. It's a very human thing to do. The more open-minded of us will have an initial view, and then when we dig into it more deeply, we can have our minds changed by the evidence.
But all of us, I think, are wired to do that. It's sort of naive to think that we all make decisions by first assessing all of the data and the evidence dispassionately and then deciding. I mean, obviously, some of these investing questions are not quite as emotional as something like gun control, but certainly something like homeownership versus renting. As you said, it's very much tied up in a person's identity. I'm not a person who owns a home. I'm a homeowner, and those are different things. That's why I think it's really difficult to get at some of these subtleties. And the idea is not to hammer people with evidence, it's to try to understand what makes them think this way, even if it doesn't necessarily line up with the evidence, and then just try to get them to think of something in a different way. Hopefully, those beliefs will evolve.
Ben Felix: I'll tell you something interesting, too, that I thought about. We talked with this in our episode that we did on renting versus owning a home a while ago, Dan. A lot of these topics, someone who believes that they're a homeowner, they are really dedicated to making their home nice and taking good care of it. And it's a big part of who they are. They're probably going to have a reasonably good financial outcome, maybe even better than that specific person would have if they were forced to rent.
And you go down the list, dividend investing, same kind of thing. Someone who becomes a really dedicated dividend investor, assuming they've built a reasonably well-diversified portfolio, they're probably going to have a pretty good financial outcome. And likewise, for financial independence entirely, if someone saves 50% of their income and builds up a big portfolio and is living on a really tight budget, but they're happy, I mean, hey, that's great. They're probably going to have a great outcome. Following the advice can probably lead to good outcomes, but it doesn't mean it's the only advice that everybody should follow, which is, I think, what a lot of people get caught up in. Everybody should do this because it's right.
Dan Bortolotti: Or everybody should do this for some specific reason, that when you scratch the surface, you find out the reasoning is faulty. It's not that renting or buying is a bad decision, but you can certainly frame that decision in misleading ways and cause people to make bad decisions. Dividend investing, for sure, the same thing.
Cameron Passmore: The fervor for dividend investing, though, can certainly lead to great behaviour. People love it. The whole gets paid while you wait. I'm getting this much dividends per month. They get to reinvest. That gives you more energy to be more committed to the strategy and want to put more resources and more savings behind that, which will obviously help your balance sheet down the road. That's a great outcome to what might be, arguably, a suboptimal strategy, but still, if it works. And this is something that Morgan Housel has talked about a lot. People are messy. You can't spreadsheet everything.
Ben Felix: A lot of the dividend investors are anti-financial advisor. And that's interesting because investing in a dividend portfolio probably leads to much better behaviour. And so for a crowd who is anti-advisor for whatever reason, the fact that they're investing the way that they are is probably actually a half-decent replacement for having an advisor on that specific topic, on investing. Still not going to build their financial plan for them. Okay, should we jump into renting versus owning a home?
Cameron Passmore: Let's do it.
Ben Felix: I think this one's controversial because it's poorly understood. It's a big piece of it. But it's also culturally ingrained. And there's some interesting research we'll talk about on that. And it's highly emotional, because people need a place to live and people want to feel secure. And it's a basic human need. The misunderstanding thing, the poorly understood thing, a lot of people believe what I would say incorrectly, that renting is objectively financially inferior to owning. Just full stop, that's it.
Cameron Passmore: Rent is throwing your money away.
Ben Felix: That's it. Renting is a bad decision. You can't change my mind. That is something that's very hard to change people's minds on, I've tried. Some people do change their minds, that we talked about earlier, Cameron, but many don't. I did a recent video on this topic on my YouTube channel that did quite well. A lot of people watched it. I'm honestly still taken aback at how many people clearly don't watch the video, because they'll come to the comments and say, "Well, you didn't talk about this," when it was literally one of the main points of the video.
But anyway, I'm still taken aback at how people just won't hear the counter arguments. They'll argue their position without even trying to understand what I'm trying to say. The reality is, people who follow our podcast know it's pretty reasonable to expect renting and owning to be financially comparable due to simple equilibrium economics. If either renting or owning were cheap, people would switch to that option up until it stopped being cheap. When you take the total costs of owning a home into account, property taxes, maintenance costs, building depreciation, the opportunity cost of having equity in a home rather than invested in stocks, and the cost of borrowing if you have a mortgage, you typically end up with a figure that looks very similar to what you would otherwise pay in rent. The total unrecoverable costs of renting and owning are generally similar, and that makes their expected financial outcomes comparable.
Now, understanding that takes some thinking. I remember when that first clicked for me, I was like, "It was really interesting. Wow, that's so cool." So I started writing about it. But I think a lot of people don't have that click because they don't take the time to understand it. I don't know. If it conflicts with their identity, they may shut off their cognition. That's one piece, the misunderstanding piece.
Another big part of the identity piece and just the controversy more generally is that there's a big cultural aspect respect to homeownership. There are, in many cases, strong cultural motivations to buy a home, and that might have certain status or moral virtue associated with it. If your parents pressure you to buy because that makes you a good person or if it's seen as a prerequisite for dating in a specific culture, you're probably going to buy a home, even if it's a bad financial decision, even if we could measurably show it's a bad financial decision.
There is this 2017 study, this is quite interesting, that finds that second-generation immigrants to the United States with a father that emigrated from a high home ownership country. You can look around the world and different countries have very different home ownership rates. Some are really low, some are close to Canada, some are even higher. But if you go and look at – this is based on US immigrants. If a second-generation immigrant has a father that emigrated from a high home ownership country, they're significantly more likely to be a homeowner in the United States compared to a second-generation immigrant with a father from a low home ownership country. That's obvious, almost. Of course, that's true, but it's interesting that there's research supporting it. I could show people my rent versus buy spreadsheet or Britain's web app all day, and you can't math your way out of a cultural belief or a cultural identity. You can't.
Dan Bortolotti: Well, even if it's more than a specific cultural belief, which to me makes it sound like it has something to do with your family, your ethnic identity, whatever that happens to be. And I know we've talked about this on the podcasts before, but this idea that it may very well be that people just get a non-financial benefit out of owning a home. I think that's pretty clear. Pride of ownership, for example, is a benefit, but it's a non-financial benefit. And it makes sense that people would be prepared to pay a premium to receive that benefit. And it doesn't make it the wrong decision. If you're willing to pay more, maybe you would come out ahead if you rented and invested the difference. But you prefer not to do that because you would rather forego some financial benefit for a non-financial benefit. And that's just really hard to measure.
Cameron Passmore: That's me.
Dan Bortolotti: That's a lot of us.
Ben Felix: All three of us own our homes.
Dan Bortolotti: And not because we think that we're going to get wealthy, and our home is an investment, and it's a retirement plan, and all of that. It's just, I enjoy it. I like to have the pride of ownership. I like the ability to make improvements to the house or, in our case, condo without having to ask a landlord's permission. I'm almost certain that we spend a lot more than we would, but just the costs that we're willing to do. It's like going to a restaurant instead of cooking at home. It's not just a financial decision.
Ben Felix: I agree. It's like why are the expected returns of gold low? One of the reasons is that people collect an emotional dividend from owning it, which does not give you a financial return, but it does give you a non-financial return. Now, an interesting interaction with what we were just talking about is that some research has suggested, this is actually Eli Beracha, who was on last week, that the non-financial motivations to own a home, like the things that we were just talking about, and the perception that it's a better financial decision than renting can actually shift the financial equilibrium in favour of renting, which is an interesting concept to think about.
Now, their research, we talked about this with them last week too, where they used an analytical model calibrated to US data and markets all around the US and the US as a whole. And they do find that in their sample period, renting had come out ahead of owning financially most of the time. They're kind of saying, it looks like there are big non-financial motivations that are shifting that financial equilibrium a little bit in favour of renting, which again, that doesn't make owning or renting better, but it's an interesting thing to think about.
Having a place to live, like I mentioned earlier, is a basic necessity for people to live good lives, which is probably one of the reasons all of us own our homes. Although I've been very happy renting in the past too, but it's no surprise that this is an emotional topic because it's such an important part of people's lives. The idea of being evicted by a landlord or priced out of a home or neighbourhood is scary for a lot of people. And I don't want to minimize that. That's a real thing. I do think that the ability to hedge the cost of living in a specific home or a specific neighbourhood is one of the best arguments in favour of home ownership.
There is a really interesting 2024 study that finds in survey data and economic accounts data for a bunch of different countries that inflation protection is one of the key motivations for people to buy their house, especially after recently high inflation, and that people living in or emigrating from countries with high past inflation are much more likely to buy than to rent. That's pretty intuitive finding. It makes sense that past inflation experiences would make people more sensitive to inflation risk and therefore are more likely to buy a home, which hedges the cost of living in that home. But that doesn't make renting or buying objectively better or worse for someone making that decision today. And people with different past experiences are going to have different perspectives on that.
I can say that, but someone who recently left a high inflation country after they were priced out of their rental market would think I'm completely nuts to say that renting can be a reasonable way to pay for housing. And then somebody else from Germany, which has a relatively high rate of people who rent, they might think that renting is completely reasonable. And they've had relatively low inflation. Past personal experiences are going to shape the way that people see the world. And the fact that people have different past experiences contributes to renting versus owning being so controversial.
The last point I want to make on this one is that people are not financial models, and I think people know that. Rent versus zone models require renters to save and invest the cash flow cost difference between renting and owning into other assets like stocks. And when they do this in a model, the long-term financial outcomes are comparable. But real people might decide to spend the cash flow cost difference rather than saving it. Or they might make bad investing decisions, getting in and out of the market at the wrong times, taking the wrong risks, paying huge fees to own segregated funds, or mutual funds, or trade options, or whatever. I think that matters. And people say this all the time. Sure, that might make sense in your model, but nobody's actually going to do that. But the thing is, some people will. I know people who have been very financially successful while renting. And I know people who have, within their friend group, been more financially successful as a renter than their friends who decided to buy homes.
Dan Bortolotti: You can definitely make mistakes after both of those decisions. With the homeowner, the mistake is, yes, you have the forced savings and you don't have to worry about saving and investing the way that the renter does in order to come out even in that model. But man, we all know people, and maybe we are those people, who bought homes and promptly poured tens of thousands or more into renovations that maybe enhanced our lifestyle a little bit. But I think a lot of people probably regret some of the money that they spent on their home or might find themselves in a position where they have to spend a lot of money on improvements to the house that they get zero enjoyment out of.
My favourite is the new roof. Very expensive. I don't know anybody whose life was enhanced by a new roof unless you're getting wet before, but you can definitely make the mistakes on both sides. Just like it's easy for people to say, and they're 100% correct, if you're a renter, you have to be a disciplined saver and investor. And very few people are that. But if you're a homeowner, you also have to resist the temptation to unnecessarily pour lots of money unnecessarily into improvements, which as much as we love to convince ourselves that when we spend money on our homes, it increases the value, and it can to some limited extent. But I'm sorry, if you spend $50,000 on your house, your house is probably not worth $50,000 more.
Cameron Passmore: Maintains the value.
Dan Bortolotti: Exactly.
Ben Felix: The investment illusion is what I've heard has been called, that people are more willing to spend, overspend on fixing up their house because they expect to get that value back when they eventually sell.
Dan Bortolotti: They convince themselves that it's not really an expense, it's an investment.
Ben Felix: It's a really good point though that there's some pretty interesting stories about people who have stripped out all of their home equity over time. In Toronto, for example, where the market has just gone up, up, up, you find people who have very little equity because they've borrowed against their home. You've got to be disciplined in both cases. That's actually a really good point, Dan.
I think it has to be acknowledged that financially successful renting and owning, as we just talked about, requires discipline and maybe some financial knowledge. But for the right person, renting is a perfectly reasonable way to pay for housing. And as is owning. And I think there are a lot of cases where owning does make sense if you really want to stay in one place that hedges the cost of that, which is important.
And then the other interesting one is that the average person who has low financial literacy and doesn't know a whole lot about investing or financial markets and maybe doesn't want to take the time to learn about it, owning a home is probably better for them than trading options or something like that.
Cameron Passmore: Especially if they're debt averse. If people are more motivated to pay up debt than they are to build equity, use that to your advantage.
Ben Felix: I do want to say that I'm not currently anti-home ownership. I do own a home, as we've mentioned. I have spent more of my life renting than owning, and I was perfectly happy then, too. But I'm pro-rationally assessing housing options, which can mean either renting or owning depending on the specific circumstances. But I'm reminded every time I create content on this topic that that is a controversial take.
Cameron Passmore: But you don't get the same happiness dividend, I think, that I know I do, and maybe you do, Dan, in owning a home, Ben.
Dan Bortolotti: I would agree with that. And we've talked about it on the podcast before, I'm in an unusual position and that I own a home that I used to rent. I know exactly what sort of enjoyment we had because the property is exactly the same. I will say I enjoy owning it more than I did renting it. I just do. And is that, again, a better financial decision? Probably not. Condos in Toronto where I live have not gone up in value in about five years, but it's a place to live that I enjoy. I'm happy with the decision. That's not a spreadsheet decision.
The key idea here is the idea that “renting is throwing money away” is the wrong way to look at it. Throwing money away is throwing money away. Renting, and saving, and investing the difference is not throwing money away. Buying a home and throwing money away on senseless improvements and ill-advised renovations is throwing money away. It's independent of the decision of whether you want to rent or buy.
Ben Felix: I like that. Throwing money away is throwing money away. All right. Should we move on to income investing?
Dan Bortolotti: Oh, we're just getting warmed up, Ben.
Ben Felix: Just getting warmed up. Income investing is at least as controversial as home ownership. Income investors believe that it is prudent to invest in assets that distribute income, like dividends, interest. And in the case of covered calls, option premiums. Regardless of the source, income investors have a strong preference for income and a belief that income-producing assets are superior to the alternatives.
Dividend investing is another one that forms part of people's identities. Like I mentioned earlier, the r/dividends. Subreddit, for example, has, I think, $723,000 last time I checked. Maybe higher even now. Dividend investors, as they call their community members. And then there are countless blogs, social media accounts, other online communities that are dedicated to dividend investing.
I think this topic is controversial because, despite its popularity as an investment strategy and the dedicated following that it has, it is objectively wrong. Modigliani and Miller proved in their 1961 paper that in a frictionless market with no taxes, a firm's dividend policy is irrelevant to the valuation of its shares. And we know that when a firm pays a dividend, its capital value decreases by the same amount.
Dan Bortolotti: Shocker. I was laughing at this. I mean, sort of the basic thing that you learn in finance when a company announces a dividend, its price falls by roughly the same amount. And it is amazing to me how many people don't appreciate that. They feel like, "All right, the share price was $50. It just paid a $1 dividend." It's going to stay $50, and I've just got like a free $1, if it's a GIC or a bond that has a face value and then pays you some cash flow.
It's a fairly simple intuitive idea when you explain to me, like imagine a company and they pay out ten million dollars in dividends. The company now has ten million dollars less than it had. It must be worth ten million dollars less. It's such a simple point, but I think it's lost on a lot of people, at least early on in their investing education. I think most people get this after a while, and they see it in their accounts if you have dividend stocks.
But when you talk about investing dividends, when you think about it on that sense, if the company pays a dollar dividend and then you use that dollar to buy back more shares, just seems to me like they give you money, you pay tax on it, you give them back what's left and then you're calling that a gain. There has to be something else going on in order for that stock to generate a positive return. And that something else going on is capital gains. It's not dividends.
Cameron Passmore: But you can see the appeal with prices being so noisy. Your statements are bouncing up and down all the time, but you get that cash flow, and we all get paid whatever frequency every other week or something. Getting that dividend, much like your paycheck, you can see the appeal.
Dan Bortolotti: Absolutely.
Ben Felix: When the dividend is paid, the investor is no better or worse off before tax after having received the dividend. They've changed the characteristics of the asset to include some stock and some cash before tax. As you mentioned, though, if they have to pay tax, it's going to be less. And that's an outcome that they could have achieved by selling some stock.
Dan Bortolotti: I always find this interesting, too. People talk about how they love dividends because it's cash flow, but then they have dividend reinvestment plans set up. If I was investing in a company and they said, "Well, I'm going to pay you a dividend," then I said, "Well, okay." And then as soon as you pay me the dividend, I'm going to give it back to you, and I'm going to reinvest in more shares.
If I was calling the shots, I'd say, "You know what? How about you just keep the dividend?" Because effectively, it's the same. If everybody just reinvested the dividends, it would be the same as if the company never paid the dividend on a pre-tax basis. But of course, on an after-tax basis, you have less.
Dividend investing has great intuitive appeal. But if you scratch the surface and you understand some of these subtleties, it actually doesn't have that much appeal. And if you don't actually need to spend the dividends, if you're drawing from your portfolio every month and you find it convenient to have those dividends paid, and they can't. Okay, that's one thing. But if you're just going to reinvest them, wouldn't it be better to just have the company reinvest them and have it grow in share value and defer that capital gain rather than paying you a taxable distribution? Clearly, the answer is no. From an intuitive perspective, that doesn't have very much appeal, but it seems to me like a better outcome for most people.
Ben Felix: I agree. People like to argue that the theory behind this, the Miller-Modigliani theory, that they make too many assumptions for the theory to actually be useful in the real world. But as you're just talking about, dividends are often taxed and disadvantaged relative to capital gains. We started introducing frictions and people say, "Well, no, this theory can't work because of the frictions." But you started introducing the frictions, and it makes dividends that would look worse, not better than what the theory would suggest.
Despite that, many of the most popular personal finance books, in addition to all of the blogs and stuff I mentioned earlier, but a lot of the most popular personal finance books, this comes from James Choi's paper, who was a past guest on this podcast, do recommend income focus investing, particularly for retirees. And some author, I think he's referring to Robert Kiyosaki's book, he goes as far as claiming that returns from capital gains are actually irrelevant. And the cash flow from the investment is the only thing that matters. That's a hot take for you. That's nonsensical because the total return of the investment, the combination of capital gains and income is what matters to investors.
One of the ways this gets confusing is that dividend-focused portfolios do tend to have exposure to stocks with characteristics associated with higher expected returns, like value stocks and stocks with robust profitability, maybe stocks that invest conservatively. That can really muddy the waters in this stuff. Fama and French did show empirically in their 1993 paper, got to be one of the most highly cited papers in finance, ‘Common Risk Factors in the Returns on Stocks and Bonds’, they show that portfolios formed on dividend yield have three factor alphas. They're just using size and relative price here, returns that are unexplained by other factors in the model, that's the alpha, that are statistically indistinguishable from zero.
That means that in that paper, they built these dividend-focused portfolios, and then they used a technique called regression to ask, "Were these returns explained by market, beta, company size, and relative price? Or are dividends doing something special?" And they find that there's nothing special. It's fully explained by other factors. It's been a while, but I have rerun those numbers using their five-factor model with a bunch of Ken French's dividend indexes, and you get the exact same thing, statistically insignificant alphas.
Dan Bortolotti: The idea here is that dividend stocks are kind of a proxy for value. There's a big overlap between a value-weighted portfolio and a dividend-weighted portfolio, because it's going to exclude a lot of non-dividend-paying stocks, which are typically big, growthy companies.
Ben Felix: Yeah, that's exactly it.
Cameron Passmore: It's like the old beer ad. If I wanted water, I would have asked for water. If I wanted value in size, I'll ask for value in size and not have it masquerading as a dividend stock.
Ben Felix: I said earlier that this muddies the waters on the comparison because it can be shown, in some cases, and especially over periods where value stocks have done well, that dividend portfolios have outperformed the market, which is true. But dividends are not the cause of the outperformance. They're this tax-inefficient sideshow. And you could have gotten to the same portfolio by focusing on the underlying characteristics that actually do matter instead of dividends. And you would have better tax efficiency, broader diversification because you're not excluding companies that don't pay dividends or don't pay the high enough dividends or whatever, and that just gives you more reliable long-term outcomes. Even if they're theoretically irrelevant from a financial perspective, I think the psychology of dividends is really powerful.
There is this 2019 paper from Sam Hartzmark, who's also a past guest, ‘The Dividend Disconnect.’ They find that investors view dividends as free money and that they account for them separately from capital gains, like you were talking about earlier, Dan. And they call this in the paper the free dividends fallacy. That effect makes the stock that pays a dividend seem more attractive to a dividend investor than one that does not pay a dividend. And the authors find that dividend investors in their sample are willing to pay a premium for dividend cash flows above and beyond what a rational investor would. That psychological preference, I think, is one of the reasons this topic is so controversial because people really, really like them.
Dan Bortolotti: To play devil's advocate here or to try to give some support to the dividend favouring argument, if you're a retiree, for example, and you need $4,000 a month in cash flow, and you build a reasonably well-diversified portfolio with an average yield of 4% on your million dollars or whatever it is, you build a portfolio that generates roughly $4,000 a month in cash flow. And you take some comfort in that, an academic would say to you, "Well, if one month you get $3,000, you can just sell $1,000 worth of stocks." And the person would say, "Well, but I don't want to sell my stocks," say, for example, during a period when they're down. Again, these are not necessarily arguments that will stand up to scrutiny, if you break down the math. It's not the worst idea in the world for somebody to build a portfolio that generates a reliable yield.
And as we were saying earlier, if one of the behavioural benefits is it makes a person say, "I'm not going to sell my stocks when they're down because they're still paying their dividends and that's all I care about." That's at least doing the right thing, if not necessarily for the theoretically correct reason. It's not just intuitively appealing. It might actually be at least a reasonable, if suboptimal, investment strategy for someone who is actually drawing down their portfolio for expenses.
Ben Felix: Totally agree. It is important. There's research on the marginal propensity to consume from dividends versus capital gains. People are much more likely to spend from their dividends. To your point, Dan, if someone is retired and living off of their portfolio, and needs income, and they won't spend from their capital, dividends are incredible. It's not the only way to do it.
At PWL, we focus on total returns, and then we manufacture the income that clients receive through some combination of dividends and sales, selling some stock. And the client receives what feels like a dividend because they just get an amount that shows up in their bank account. But if someone does not have that service or if they're a DIY investor for whatever other reason, yeah, I mean, the dividends are super valuable. To say that they're psychologically appealing and that they have powerful psychology is not to say that they're bad or that psychological motivations to own assets are a bad thing.
One common counterargument that I do want to address is that dividends make up a huge portion of total returns. I've seen this argument many times. How can you say that dividends don't matter when you look at the returns? I looked at December 1978 through May 2025, the total cumulative return of the US market is three times higher when reinvested dividends are included than when they are excluded. The price only return is much smaller than the total return when you include dividends.
And so people will say, "Well, how can you say that, of course, you should invest in dividends. How much higher?" The logic doesn't make sense in my brain. But people will use that to show that dividends are important. But it actually shows that reinvesting dividends is important. Not that dividends are special. It shows that dividends do come out of total return. And if you don't reinvest them, you're going to have a much lower return.
Dan Bortolotti: It's just terrible math. It's a bit like saying – and I'm making numbers up. It's probably in this ballpark, right? Long-term stocks have returned 5% due to price appreciation and 3% due to dividends, something in that ballpark. Well, if it returns 8%, instead of 5%, you're going to have a lot more money at the end. Wow, there's an insight for you.
I think the idea is if you got 8% capital gain and 0% dividend versus 5% capital gain plus 3% dividend, what would your return be at the end of any period? And the answer is, in a registered account, the same. In a taxable account, way less with the dividends. It's one of these things that if you don't understand the subtleties and you're just learning about investing, and somebody very confidently presents this kind of data to you, you're just blown away by the power of dividends. And really, what you should have been blown away by is the power of compounding. That's all it is. It's nothing to do with dividends or not dividends. It's just growth compounded over time builds wealth.
Cameron Passmore: And what would the company have done with that money that was paid out as dividends anyways? Well, they've just flushed it? It doesn't just disappear if they didn't pay the dividends.
Dan Bortolotti: One would hope not. And this is why we were saying, if you could convince all companies that you didn't need dividends, then they could just reinvest it in the business. I think it's worth mentioning, too. Whether a company pays a dividend or not is irrelevant from the investor's total return standpoint. But it's not irrelevant to the business. We all kind of understand this. I think that if you're a mature business and you don't have a lot of opportunity to grow with your profits, it makes a lot of sense for you to pay that dividend to investors and let them do whatever they want with it.
For more growth-oriented expanding companies, they're likely to invest all of those profits into growing the business. And that's why if you go one way or the other and you invest only in dividend-paying stocks or only in non-dividend-paying stocks, you're going to end up with portfolios that are very different from a sector breakdown, right? You're going to end up with a lot of mature, low-growth companies paying dividends or the opposite. I think we all agree. Our perspective is hold them both, hold all of them, and then you get much more diversification in that way. And if you're indifferent to whether the growth comes in the form of capital gains or dividends, a total market approach is the way to do it.
Ben Felix: Totally agree. All right. Is that enough for dividends? I think we're probably good there.
Dan Bortolotti: I think so.
Ben Felix: I do want to touch on covered calls, too, which also fall into the income investing category. And they're more of a recent phenomenon, not in terms of their existence, but in terms of their popularity with investors. They've got their own pitfalls, derivative income from selling call options on securities held in the portfolio. That's what happens in a covered call strategy. You own some stocks, you sell call options on the stocks, collect option mediums. That does create an income stream. Selling the option creates an income stream, which results in a high yield most of the time, which is why investors like them. But that income is mechanically coming at the expense of foregone expected returns.
This great paper, it's got a great title as well. It's a 2024 paper, ‘A Devil's Bargain: When Generating Income Undermines Investment Returns.’ The authors explain that when someone opens a position by selling a call option, the trade has not ended, it has only begun. The seller has a liability that is not resolved until either the position is liquidated or the option matures and is settled.
And so they explained that when covered calls are implemented to deliver higher derivative income, what investors should actually be expecting is lower total returns, higher tax realizations along the path because the income is being distributed, and a more negatively skewed return profile. If you asked someone if they would want those characteristics or their opposites, those are unfavourable characteristics. People don't generally want those. Thanks. Lower returns, less tax efficiency, and a more negative skewness. No thanks.
And so what the authors are cautioning is that investors who allocate to these strategies for their income alone without accounting for these other considerations might have made a devil's bargain. That's why they called the paper that. I do want to mention that a covered call strategy is not necessarily bad because what it does offer is reduced exposure to the equity risk premium, plus exposure to something called the volatility risk premium, which in some cases, maybe somebody would want to build that portfolio.
But I think the problem and what the authors of this paper are talking about is that investors don't invest in these strategies for that reason. They don't say, "Oh, I want a lower beta strategy with access to the volatility risk premium." They say, "I want the 11% yield," or whatever it is. I think that's the problem. It's just not fully understanding the trade-off and being blinded by the income.
I do want to say, as we've talked about, that income investing can have significant psychological merit, which is probably why it persists as a strategy and probably why it's so controversial. There's this mathematical or theoretical way to say, "No, this is wrong." And then psychologically, it's so right for so many people. And those things conflict so deeply, and they're so far apart from each other, it becomes a controversial topic.
Like I mentioned earlier, investors are much more likely to spend from their dividends rather than from their capital. Psychologically, an income portfolio for someone who's drawing down their investments could be really valuable, can help them spend their assets, which is great. Now, I would add that a better result could be achieved by focusing on total returns and systematically selling from a more well-diversified portfolio to fund consumption. But overcoming that psychological preference is easier said than done, especially for someone who's not working with an advisor.
But I think to the extent that income investing improves investor behaviour, and as long as the investor understands the trade-offs they're making, and I think that part's really important, it's probably fine. I mean, in some cases, it's probably better than fine. It's probably really valuable.
Cameron Passmore: It really comes back to the same idea as the rent versus buy. It's not that one is right, one is wrong. Although, I think this one leans a little bit more, I want to say, wrong, but certainly suboptimal in a way that the renting versus buying doesn't necessarily do. But we need to just be careful that we understand what we're arguing about. I think we all agree. If dividend investing turns everybody into a stock picker who only looks at yield and nothing else, of course, it's a terrible decision. But if it turns you into kind of a dedicated buy-and-hold investor, whether you're reinvesting dividends during your accumulation years or drawing down your portfolio when you're retired, it's not a bad thing. If you trust that strategy more than you do a total return one.
And I've had this discussion with a lot of investors and some people kind of say, "I understand the trade-off. I don't disagree with you, but I'm still going to be a dividend investor." And I respect that. There are certainly worse investment decisions you could make than buying a bunch of blue-chip dividend stocks and holding them for the long term.
Ben Felix: It is true. All right. Let's move on to financial independence, retire early. Our last controversial topic.
Cameron Passmore: Light the FIRE.
Dan Bortolotti: Save the best for last.
Ben Felix: This one really does get people fired up. All these topics do, though. I don't know if I can say any one of them is more controversial than the others. Depends who you're talking to, I guess. The original premise of FIRE, of financial independence, retire early, was that people should aim to earn as much income as they can, even if that means enduring work they don't necessarily enjoy. You hear a lot of people from very high-income professions thinking about this and talking about this, saving as much as possible of that, hopefully, high income, often 50% or more, even if that means making meaningful lifestyle changes. You're enjoying work you don't necessarily enjoy, saving a whole wackier income, which is not a bad thing, inherently. You're doing those things in order to attain the ability to choose to stop working for money as soon as possible. In principle, that's not terrible.
Similar to other controversial topics, there are large online communities of people seeking financial independence. And I think being an adherent to this philosophy does form part of people's identities. I would say in terms of being part of people's identities, this one's probably stronger than the other two. It doesn't mean it's more controversial overall. But in terms of being part of who someone believes they are, I think this is probably one of the strongest ones.
Now, I don't want a straw man fire. I want to be clear up front here that the concept has evolved over time. They really gained widespread popularity around 2011. But today, there are a ton of different versions. There's lean FIRE, which is retiring with enough to fund the bare necessities. Fat FIRE, which is retiring with a much higher net worth and higher expenses. Coast FIRE, which is earning enough income to cover your expenses, but not having to save anymore. So you're kind of coasting. Then barista FIRE I think is earning enough so that you can work as a barista and the rest of your expenses are covered by your portfolio, I think. I hope I got that one right. There's probably lots of other variants as well.
The fact that there are so many different versions that have evolved from this idea I think speaks to the fact that FIRE means different things to different people. There are a lot of different interpretations and applications of these ideas. Now, I think, in my opinion at least, it's kind of easy to argue against the most extreme saving 75% of your income and retiring at 30. But I also don't think that's what most people are actually doing and how they're applying this. And I do think it's very hard to argue against the fundamental lessons that come from this idea. I'm going to try and go through both.
Now, ultimately, FIRE is self-help ideology. That statement's controversial, as I found out in the Rational Reminder community. That's what it is. I don't think that there's an argument about that aspect. It is self-help ideology that leverages frugality, often in the extreme, and knowledge of capital markets, which is an important part of FIRE, the financial literacy aspect. It leverages those things to achieve freedom or the feeling of freedom from the need to work much earlier than normal, and different motivations people have to get there. But that's ultimately what it is.
It rejects over-consumption and being on the hedonic treadmill, which are great things to reject. And I think those are lessons a lot of people should learn. But it's moral judgments on the value of consumption and work, I think, are what make it controversial. There's this 2021 paper, it's really interesting to read, 'The Financialization of Anti-Capitalism? The case of Financial Independence Retire Early.’ And this paper explains that FIRE shares certain elements with the dominant traditions of self-help, which exhort individuals to work upon themselves, take charge of their lives, and become free. Those ideas are not new. What FIRE has added to it is the financial literacy aspect.
That paper quotes this 2005 book written by an academic, Self Help, Inc.: Makeover Culture in American Life. That book describes how self-help literature defines its readers as insufficient, as lacking some essential feature of adequacy, and then offers itself as the solution. And then it says, "The resulting contagion of insufficiency constitutes the self-improvement industry as both self-perpetuating and self-serving." That all sounds gross, and I'm not saying that FIRE is all of those things in a negative way. However, fire has spawned countless bestselling authors, ad-filled blogs, and pay-per-view features from people who supplement their own income by telling others how they, too, can be financially free.
Dan Bortolotti: This is, I think, where it becomes problematic. All of us can agree. Look, if this is important to you and whether you want to work until you're 30 and then retire and live off $30,000 a year, that's great. Knock yourself out. Do whatever makes you happy. And I mean that honestly. Where it becomes a big problem, I think, is when people sort of present their own lifestyle as something that you can learn from and copy. And what they're presenting is dishonest, because this is where I think a lot of people will present themselves as, "Look at me. I retired early."
And it's like you didn't retire early, you are now an entrepreneur, and maybe you have created, whether it's a blog or a YouTube channel, or you sell books, or you do something that earns you probably quite a bit of money. That's not retirement. Good on you, you're obviously a very good business person. But don't present that to people as something that they can also do because you did it. That's just dishonest and misleading to people. And it may take them some time and some investment in both time and money before they figure out that what they were modeling their lifestyle on is just simply dishonest.
Ben Felix: I take issue with that, too. And people in those communities take issue with me taking issue with it, which is interesting. The idea of retirement is also an interesting piece of this. I think that the FI community, as they refer to themselves, has really tried to get away from the RE part. I think that's one of the straw man concerns is that people will just say, "Well, no, nobody actually wants to retire. We just wanted to have enough money to be financially independent if we want it to be." Normal financial planning, saving money, spending less than you earn.
Dan Bortolotti: It's hard to argue with that premise. It's just a matter of how it's presented to people. I think you have to disown the term FIRE if that's your goal, right? That you're saying, "Well, I have no interest in retiring early. I just want to be financially independent so I can make what was my side hustle my full-time job." Great. That's amazing. Great financial goal. Not retirement. Call it what it is.
Ben Felix: Is it even financial independence, though?
Dan Bortolotti: Yeah. I mean, it depends.
Ben Felix: If someone saves up enough money to live at a subsistence level, but then has to do other work or chooses to do other work to supplement their income, are they financially independent? Or are they just putting a title on having some savings?
Dan Bortolotti: That's a good point.
Ben Felix: I don't know what it is about this topic that just bugs me. I'm trying to be impartial.
Cameron Passmore: But think back to the interview we had, Ben, with Scott Rieckens and the movie that came out. Remember, him and his wife went through the decision from a value standpoint of a lot of the things they spent money on. They realized that having – I think it was a BMW SUV, didn't give them the pleasures. They went down a much more modest vehicle. And these choices, based on values, they moved from Southern California to somewhere Upper Northeast, I believe, and their costs dropped dramatically, and they were no less happy. But you need to kind of do a follow-up, perhaps, on that and see where they are now. But it took that values lens and went through their spending and realized they were just spending because the crowd they were in and where they were living and working, that's what the people spend money on. They're like, "Hold on a second. This is not necessarily who we are and where we want to bring up our daughter in this environment of consumption." There's nothing wrong with that.
Ben Felix: Totally. Scott's a great example where this became a really important concept for him. And he made it a source of income, which is great for him. And he's probably helping other people. But we could go on, paid 10 US dollars to watch his movie, which is great. That's not a bad thing. But I don't know. There's just something about telling other people how they can stop working by telling people how you did the same thing while making income off of doing it. That just doesn't sit right with me.
Cameron Passmore: I get it.
Ben Felix: I don't want that whole dialogue that we just had to come across negatively, but it kind of is what it is. It's a form of self-help that people are making money off of. If it's helping other people, that's great. Self-help's not a bad thing. And if it helps people feel better about their lives and make better decisions and better values, judgments about how they spend their money, that's great.
Now, what does make FIRE stand out from other strands of self-help is that it emphasizes a certain form of financial literacy and the use of financial markets through low-cost index funds to achieve this ultimate goal of freedom, freedom from necessity, freedom from the need to work. And I say a certain type of form of financial literacy because it focuses heavily on the 4% rule, which, as we've talked about ad nauseam, is questionable. It focuses largely and typically on investing in US stocks, which are two things that are problematic, maybe.
I think FIRE came of age over a period of time where the US stock market has performed incredibly well. I would even maybe venture to say unsustainably well. I hope a lot of people don't have a rude awakening at some point if that performance doesn't continue the way that it has. Scott Rieckens is another interesting example of this. By its nature, FIRE implies that, left to their own devices, without FIRE and without the evangelizing of the FIRE concepts that a lot of people do, that people are going to over-consume and they're going to waste their lives working miserable jobs they don't enjoy. And FIRE offers the promise of this simple mathematical 4% rule solution to freedom.
I do want to mention that FIRE is not anti-work. We talked about the retirement piece, Dan. It promotes autonomy. Not retirement, but autonomy, which is the freedom of the need to work for money. And that freedom is minimized by unnecessary consumption and anything else that contributes to having to work for money. Debt is another one. If you have debt, if you spend too much money, you need to keep working, and FIRE wants to get away from that. Those are powerful ideas. I think that aspect is really useful.
Connecting your spending to your values, like we talked about with Scott Rieckens, is a very worthwhile exercise for anyone to do. Everyone should do that. Overconsumption is probably not going to bring you lasting joy to yourself and your family, and it comes at the expense of needing to work longer to be financially independent.
Spending less than you make. That's always a good idea. Certain types of FIRE take that maybe to an extreme, but it's not bad information for people to consider. I think being in a financial position to choose the work that you want to do, that is also incredible. And the problem, I think, is that a lot of spending, even on things that are not necessities, and even on things that are luxuries, and some but not all people who practice the FIRE concepts might say are a waste. Sometimes spending can be perfectly fine, and it can be valuable, and it can create great experiences for your family. That doesn't mean over-consuming. It doesn't mean buying material things. But I think the focus on minimizing spending can be harmful.
The other thing is that work is an important part of human happiness. You go through the permanent model of well-being. It's positive emotion, enjoying what you're doing minute to minute, and being grateful for what you have. You don't really need to work for that, I guess. Engagement, finding states of flow and being fully immersed in an activity or task. Positive relationships, you can get that outside of work, but I think you can also get it within work.
Meaning, finding purpose beyond yourself through work, hobbies, or other stuff, like spiritual beliefs. And accomplishment, setting and achieving goals that provide a sense of accomplishment and mastery. A lot of that is stuff that, yeah, you can get it without working. But work is a really good way to get a lot of it. And again, FIRE is not necessarily anti-work. But I think to the extent that it requires extreme frugality, which again is something that people argue with, that it doesn't require extreme frugality because there are all these different types of FIRE. But at the extreme, if it requires that. And enjoying unenjoyable but high-paying work so that you can save and reach your FI number as soon as possible, I think those things can be problematic. As opposed to finding work that you do enjoy or building your professional skills so that you can find other work in the future that you enjoy.
Another issue is that – well, past research, is showing that people don't need much money to be happy. More recent research actually disagrees. There's 2010 research from Kahneman and co-authors that suggested a happiness plateau at around 75,000 US dollars. That was 2010. If we brought that forward, adjusted for inflation, it'd be a higher number today. That research used a measure of happiness that was later deemed by Kahneman and the coauthors of this new paper to be insufficient to draw conclusions from. It was based on asking study participants to recall if they had smiled or laughed a lot the previous day. That plateau after $75,000 of income came from that question.
Now, subsequent research, a 2023 paper with Kahneman as a co-author, used a more continuous measure of happiness. It had an app on people's smartphones and it would ask them throughout the day how they were feeling. That research found that happiness does increase linearly past $75,000 and all the way up to $500,000 of income. And the reason that they find in the paper is that because as people earn more money, they feel more in control of their lives.
And the example that one of the co-authors gives in an interview that I watched is that people with higher incomes can choose to buy organic raspberries instead of dried pasta. Again, that's just the example the author gave. They also have more financial resources to do things like change jobs if they don't like their job. That starts to sound kind of like the same things you get from FIRE.
Just an interesting note here is that income above $100 ,000 in the study did not have the same linear effect of increasing happiness for the least happy people in the study. I think that's how they tied this result to the 2010 paper, is that the 2010 paper was more connected to unhappiness than happiness, and so that's why they found the plateau. They replicate that finding with the least happy people in the study, but it doesn't replicate anywhere else. In the happiest people in this sample, the effect of increasing income actually has a kink in it where it starts to become more extreme. People started to get even happier after $100,000 if they were already the happiest people in the sample.
Dan Bortolotti: It's a really interesting finding, but it sort of tracks if you think about people who are truly miserable are probably not miserable for financial reasons. And so adding more income is unlikely to improve their outlook. But if you're a person who has a real thirst for life and you have good relationships with friends and family, then having more money can really help you enjoy more experiences like that with the people that you love doing the things that you love to do.
I was always very skeptical of this idea that once you hit $75,000, it doesn't matter. Now, again, I never really understood that. Is that pre-tax income for one person or is it household? It's a meaningful difference. But any of us who have been in a position where we used to make that much money and then make more can probably say, "Yeah, it's nice to make more money." But yes, it levels off at some point. I don't know where that number is, but it's interesting that they said it's somewhere around 500. It's a big number.
Ben Felix: It is increasing with a log income is an important point. It's the amount that your income has to increase to get that linear increase in happiness increases with your amount of income. The way the author described it is that it's like adding $10,000 to your income doesn't have a linear effect. But adding 10% to your income does have a linear effect.
Cameron Passmore: Yeah, that makes sense.
Ben Felix: It really looks to me like FIRE, achieving financial independence/retire early, and just drop that part off. Achieving FI and earning more income are two ways to get to a similar place. Neither one is going to solve unhappiness. Both can make people happier. Achieving a state where you have the financial flexibility to choose the work that you enjoy. Keeping in mind that some form of work is probably a good thing for most people to have in their lives, even if it doesn't pay that much.
If you can put yourself in a position to do work that you want to do, that's great. And if that work is having a positive impact on other people, you're probably going to feel even better. I think that's a great goal to have. But so is finding work that's rewarding both financially and psychologically. In either case, FIRE or earning more income, however you want to approach it, knowing what's important to you and being intentional about your objectives, I think, is really important. I think to the extent that FIRE helps people get there, I can see it as being very useful.
But I can also see the focus on minimizing spending, the focus on an FI number as an inflection point in your life, because we know that post-goal attainment pleasure tends to drop off pretty quickly. It might feel really good as you progress toward a goal. But once you achieve it, people tend to be quite disappointed with how they feel. And I do worry that settling for high paying work that people really don't enjoy with the intention of, at some point, exiting the capitalist system altogether, I can see those combination of things being harmful in some cases.
Dan Bortolotti: That sounds like a real recipe for unhappiness to me. To devote all of your energy in working very hard at a job that you despise just because it pays well and you see some point where you can exit that job, and use the money you earned to do what you really enjoy. I mean, more than the other two issues that we've talked about today, this one is all over the map. There's no FIRE or not FIRE. There's this massive range of what people mean about it, and it's impossible to say too much generally about it.
I think we can all agree, as you've sort of explained, Ben, is focusing on the idea that you should try to be more meaningful in your choices. Don't focus on making a ton of money and then spending on things that don't make you happy. Don't work so much that you sacrifice all of the other things that are enjoyable in life. These are all very obvious things and can be discussed within a FIRE framework, but don't necessarily have anything to do with retiring early, or even, frankly, financial independence. It's just about being a little more mindful in your life choices.
Ben Felix: Cameron, you have thoughts on this?
Cameron Passmore: I agree with you. And that's what I said about Scott Rieckens. That was my big take away from that. Then you mixed in our conversation with Professor Meir Statman, he talked about that as well. How many things cost a lot of money? And he says, "My life has better being able to afford these things." For sure. But to make mindful choices as you spend, absolutely. But the hedonic treadmill is just so easy to get on and stay on it.
Ben Felix: Yeah, it is.
Cameron Passmore: It was Meir that talked about that, was housing sizes have doubled over the last, I don't know, generation or two. Are people necessarily happy? Why do we have all these great big houses? It's incredible.
Ben Felix: Personally, I thoroughly enjoy what I do for a living. We get to think about topics like this I get to hang out with guys like you guys and how we get to help other people make better decisions. And I get to nerd out on topics like this with all the people in the Rational Reminder community who agree and disagree with me, but still have thoughtful discussions either way.
I wrote the notes for this episode in the morning on a holiday. Monday this week was a holiday. I didn't have to work. PWL office was closed. My parents were coming over later in the day, and we had a great day hanging out together. But I had these ideas in my head, and I wanted to sit down and write it and work on it. I would have been frustrated if I couldn't. I don't want to overemphasize meritocracy. I think back to the episode that we had with Robert Frank, who talked a lot about the role of luck in outcomes. I don't want to minimize the role of luck. There were lots of that as well. But I've worked here for almost 12 years. I've worked my butt off, as I know you guys have too. And I've gained qualifications, and skills, and whatever else, social capital. That's allowed me to choose the type of work that I want to do and get paid well for doing it.
I get not everyone feels they can achieve the same thing. And I can see FIRE as an attractive way to exit the system altogether. For me personally, and I'm not saying that FIRE is wrong or anything like that, but I would far rather focus on that side of it, on working hard and gaining valuable skills, and being financially successful from that direction than the other way.
Now, that doesn't mean I spend all my money. I think I'm still doing a pretty good job saving. But at the same time, we don't worry a whole lot about budgeting, or money, or whether we're going to buy used or new bikes for the kids when they decide that they want to get more serious about mountain biking. For me personally, I like that. And I think if I were being really restrictive about our spending in order to be financially independent, it wouldn't be the same. That's just how I feel personally.
Dan Bortolotti: There's different kinds of people. I think I'm wired the same way you are, Ben. I worked on Monday holiday as well not because I'm on a Hedonic treadmill or I'm a workaholic. It's because I didn't have anything better to do that day. And I genuinely enjoy what I do. But any time I think about these kinds of lifestyle choices and get involved in these debates, I always say like, number one, I get up every morning and recognize how fortunate I am to be doing a job that I really love. Because there's very few people, I think, that can say that.
Typically, when I talk to people who talk about early retirement, it's less about a desire to not work than it is about a desire to not do the specific job they're doing now. And those are very different things. And I can think of a few people who kind of left the job that was grinding them down and found something that they work fewer hours, they make less money, but they're much happier. That's the winning formula, if you can do it. But it is really hard to find that.
I'm thinking of a client of mine who was a dentist and worked very hard, built up his practice, retired "in his early fifties", and now does volunteer dentistry or serving underserved communities. He only works a couple of days a week. It's perfect for him. But that's really hard to find. I know other people have kind of done the leave my full-time job that I hated because I wanted to retire early and the barista sort of thing. People say, "Well, I'm just going to get a job like in retail because I just need to make a little bit of money." And they hated it.
Because if you're a professional and you spend decades working in a certain job, you're probably not going to enjoy working in retail with people who are 30 years younger than you. It's just unlikely to be a recipe for success. It is so difficult for each individual to kind of figure out the work-life balance that makes sense for them. And to put it under the umbrella of FIRE or any other name, I just think conflates an enormous range of possibilities here. I always have to be really careful if we're going to sort of say this strategy makes sense or this strategy is problematic. It's like, which strategy are we talking about?
Ben Felix: I agree with all that. Another thing on that idea of really not enjoying parts of your job or a specific job, you can skill out of that too. As you get better and better at something, at a job, you have to do fewer and fewer of the things that you don't want to do.
Dan Bortolotti: You delegate them.
Ben Felix: Exactly. Maybe I'm biased here because that's been my experience and maybe that's not what everybody experiences. And for those people who don't experience that and feel like there's no way to get out of the bad working situation that they're in, I think that financial independence is probably extremely valuable. I do find it difficult how evangelical many of the people who promote this concept are.
I've discovered the holy grail of living a good life and everybody must know about it. I don't know how much of that is promoting the idea for financial gain and how much of it is promoting the idea because they truly believe that they're helping other people. That's one of the things about this topic that I find the most grating. The evangelizing of, "I've discovered how to live a good life and everyone must know about it."
Dan Bortolotti: I agree with that. And I fear that it's mostly the former. In other words, people sort of glamorizing it and painting as a winning formula because it's a formula they want to sell to you.
Ben Felix: We haven't mentioned the 4% rule. We did mention it maybe briefly. It underpins so much of this, the simple math of retirement. The 4% rule has a lot of problems. We've covered this extensively in other videos and interviews, including with Bill Bengen, the guy that created the rule. But it basically says you can spend 4% of your portfolio value in the first year of retirement and then adjust that amount for inflation each year thereafter. And that math makes it very easy to calculate your FI number, your financial independence number.
We talked with this with Scott Rieckens, too, Cameron. I don't know if you remember that part. But he basically said, "Ben, I know you've done a lot of work in the 4% rule and you think it doesn't make sense. You think it's kind of stupid or whatever. But it's a really, really useful tool for people to set financial goals." For sure. That's got merit. And I think even though the 4% rule rules imperfect, it's not terrible. It could be worse. And if someone's going to use that, the way that you'd use this to calculate your financial independence number is you would take your spending and you would divide it by 4% or multiply it by 25. It gets you the same place mathematically. And that number gives you how much you need to save to achieve whatever your financial independence number is. To the extent that that motivates people to save for their future and avoid spending too much, that's great.
It should probably be lower, practically speaking, and people probably shouldn't use a fixed withdrawal rate, which I think people in the FIRE community do acknowledge, that you should have some flexibility in there, which probably increases your average lifetime spending rate. But you just can't follow a fixed inflation-adjusted spending rule, which is worth mentioning the problem with the 4% rule there.
Cameron Passmore: That's an easy rule to keep in mind, though. Every $1 of perpetual spending you put in your lifestyle, you need $25 of retirement assets. I remember in that movie, they had that meter above the financial decisions they were making. A smaller car saved us, whatever, $1,000 per year, which equated to 25 times that of retirement assets.
Ben Felix: That math is elegant. And again, if that helps people make better decisions, I think that's really valuable. But I think people do have to be aware that it stems from research that came out in the 1990s was based on historical US market returns, which we know now looking backward has been the best performing market in the world. It's also based on a 30-year retirement period, which is clearly insufficient for someone who is retiring early or becoming financially independent early. That's just one other gripe I have with a lot of FI and FIRE is that it focuses on the 4% rule, and it focuses on past US stock market returns.
Dan Bortolotti: I would say, too, when you look at that multiply by 25 number, it's huge. Based on the 4% rule, if you want $40,000 a year, you need a million dollars. Great. How do I get a million dollars? Most people will work their whole careers and not save a million dollars. How are you going to generate that kind of income? And this is where I feel like when you start to look deeper, people are only living partly off their savings, but they're also doing self-employment, which is great, which is not retirement. Let's just make sure that we describe it accurately before we present it as an option for other people.
Ben Felix: I like that. To wrap this up, personal finance is personal, as the title would imply. What's right for one person is often wrong for another. And given that level of subjectivity, I think it does make sense that there are highly controversial personal finance topics. And when people make their financial decisions part of their identity, it becomes really difficult to objectively evaluate whether what they're doing actually makes sense. My hope with this episode is that detailing some of the most controversial topics in personal finance, including the psychology and moral philosophy that makes them controversial, is going to equip listeners to make better decisions.
Ben Felix: All right. Aftershow?
Dan Bortolotti: Let's go.
Cameron Passmore: It's been a while. I'm rusty at this.
Ben Felix: Well, do you want to read the first review then, Cameron?
Cameron Passmore: Sure. If I can pronounce the name here. Lately. This podcast is so well done. Crisp, concise and interesting. They set the bar so high and it has actually led me to stop listening to some of my previous favourite podcasts, which simply aren't done this well. Keep it up. By The Auge from United States of America on iTunes.
Ben Felix: Like I say, when I saw that review come in and it said lately, I was getting ready for lately to be like, "Lately, this podcast has been terrible." It was the opposite. That was nice.
Cameron Passmore: From Rick in Prague on LinkedIn and said, "It's been two years since I last sent you a message. And as I just finished listening to AMA 6, Episode 357. I thought I'd send another. I wish you all the best in your new role, and continue to enjoy the content you, Ben, and your other colleagues roll out. Greetings from Prague."
Ben Felix: Very nice. I did want to mention that there was quite a lively discussion. I posted my notes for the FIRE topic in the Rational Reminder community because there was a discussion that had started on that topic. I just said, "Hey guys, I'm working on a topic for the podcast and for my YouTube channel on this. Let me know what you think." And I posted it in there that it led to a big discussion.
In a lot of places on the internet, that could get pretty ugly pretty quickly. I can say for sure that the topic is controversial based on the discussion that ensued. But I do find that the RR community, the Rational Reminder community, is an incredible place to have thoughtful, intelligent, respectful discussions even when people disagree with each other, even on controversial topics. And some of that is the moderation. We have an incredible moderation team. Some of it is the fact that we don't let just anybody participate. Some of it is the fact that people who have been problematic in the past have been removed from the community and not allowed back in. But we have almost 12,000 people in there. And a lot of them highly active in discussions. And a lot of them highly educated and intelligent people. And it's just a really neat place on the internet. Do you want to talk about the t-shirts? Or should I?
Cameron Passmore: Oh, this is your happy place. You go for it. Selling to my brother, he got a to kick out of it once I explained what it was.
Ben Felix: Does Dan have a shirt yet? I don't think he does.
Dan Bortolotti: I don't have one yet, but I hope you're sending me one.
Ben Felix: Oh, yeah. It's in the mail. Right, Cameron? We're sending him one?
Dan Bortolotti: Yeah, double XL.
Cameron Passmore: It's in the mail.
Ben Felix: The premium t-shirts. It's a very nice cotton t-shirt. But on the front, emblazoned in big, white, bold letters are the five factors in the Fama and French five-factor asset pricing model. You've got market minus risk-free, MKT minus RF, and then you've got SMA, HML, RMW, and CMA. I don't have it with me, otherwise I'd hold it up. Then it has Rational Reminder on the sleeve. As far as nerdy t -shirts go, at least within this niche of dirtiness, it's got to be one of the nerdiest t-shirts that exists.
Dan Bortolotti: It's got to be top three. Don't wear that one outside the house.
Cameron Passmore: But it is a premium t-shirt, Dan.
Ben Felix: It is a premium t-shirt, a five-factor premium t-shirt. By the time this episode's released, my understanding from talking to Angelica is that those will be up in the store, which is at shop.rationalreminder.ca. It's also linked on the main Rational Reminder website. So it's easy to find.
Cameron Passmore: I have a show for you guys. Are you guys watching MobLand?
Ben Felix: No.
Cameron Passmore: Oh, what a show. If you kind of like that Ray Donovan sort of show, which I do, a lot of action.
Dan Bortolotti: I love Ray Donovan.
Cameron Passmore: Oh, if you like Ray Donovan, you'll love MobLand.
Dan Bortolotti: Sure.
Ben Felix: I did watch the last season of – there's a show called Animal Kingdom. Do you guys ever watch that?
Cameron Passmore: Oh, yeah, that's in that same vein. Absolutely. Then you'll love MobLand.
Ben Felix: Okay, yeah. That was a great show. We hadn't seen the last season yet, but it was on Netflix. We binged it over the last couple of weeks. It was great.
Cameron Passmore: That's a phenomenal show.
Ben Felix: Yeah, it's a good show. Alright, I think that's it for this episode. Anything else from you, guys?
Cameron Passmore: No. Well done, Ben. Well done, Dan.
Dan Bortolotti: All good.
Ben Felix: Nice work, as always. Thanks for listening, everybody.
Cameron Passmore: Stay well.
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Books From Today’s Episode:
Rich Dad Poor Dad — https://www.amazon.com/Rich-Dad-Poor-Teach-Middle/dp/1612680194
Self Help, Inc.: Makeover Culture in American Life — https://www.amazon.com/Self-Help-Inc-Makeover-American/dp/0195337263
Papers From Today’s Episode:
Motivated Numeracy and Enlightened Self-Government — https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/behavioural-public-policy/article/abs/motivated-numeracy-and-enlightened-selfgovernment/EC9F2410D5562EF10B7A5E2539063806
‘Nevertheless, They Persist: Cross-country differences in homeownership behavior’ — https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1051137721000590
‘Rent or Buy? Inflation Experiences and Homeownership within and across Countries’ — https://www.researchgate.net/publication/379974645_Rent_or_Buy_Inflation_Experiences_and_Homeownership_within_and_across_Countries
‘Dividend Policy, Growth, and the Valuation of Shares’ — https://www.researchgate.net/publication/24102112_Dividend_Policy_Growth_and_the_Valuation_Of_Shares
‘Chapter 3 - Behavioral Household Finance*’ — https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2352239918300046
‘Common Risk Factors in the Returns on Stocks and Bonds’ — https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0304405X93900235
‘The Dividend Disconnect’ — https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2876373
‘A Devil's Bargain: When Generating Income Undermines Investment Returns’ — https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4580048
‘The Financialization of Anti-Capitalism? The Case of the “Financial Independence Retire Early” Community’ — https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17530350.2021.1891951
‘High Income Improves Evaluation of Life But Not Emotional Well-Being’ — https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1011492107
‘Income And Emotional Well-Being: A Conflict Resolved’ — https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2208661120
Links From Today’s Episode:
Rational Reminder on iTunes — https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-rational-reminder-podcast/id1426530582.
Rational Reminder on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/rationalreminder/
Rational Reminder on X — https://x.com/RationalRemind
Rational Reminder on TikTok — https://www.tiktok.com/@rationalreminder
Rational Reminder on YouTube — https://www.youtube.com/channel/
Rational Reminder Merchandise — https://shop.rationalreminder.ca/
Benjamin Felix — https://pwlcapital.com/our-team/
Benjamin on X — https://x.com/benjaminwfelix
Benjamin on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjaminwfelix/
Cameron Passmore — https://pwlcapital.com/our-team/
Cameron on X — https://x.com/CameronPassmore
Cameron on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/cameronpassmore/
Dan Bortolotti on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/dan-bortolotti-8a482310/
Episode 358: Eli Beracha: An Academic Perspective on Renting vs. Owning a Home — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/358
Episode 214: Jay Van Bavel: Shared Identities and Decision Making — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/214
Episode 260: Prof. James Choi: Practical Finance — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/260
Episode 273: Professor Samuel Hartzmark: Asset Pricing, Behavioural Finance, and Sustainability Rankings — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/273
Episode 95: Scott Rieckens (Playing with FIRE): Finding Financial Education, Perspective, and Freedom — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/95
Episode 258: Prof. Meir Statman: Financial Decisions for Normal People — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/258
Bonus Episode - Prof. Meir Statman: A Wealth of Well-Being — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/2024/4/18/bonus-episode-prof-meir-statman-a-wealth-of-well-being
Episode 230: Prof. Robert Frank: Success, Luck, and Luxury — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/230
Episode 135: William Bengen: The 5% Rule for Retirement Spending — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/135
Episode 164: Comprehensive Overview: The 4% Rule — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/164
Episode 357: AMA #6 — https://rationalreminder.ca/podcast/357
Morgan Housel — https://www.morganhousel.com/
‘Renting vs. Buying a Home: What People Get Wrong’ — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4H9LL7A-nQ
MobLand — https://www.imdb.com/title/tt31510819/
Ray Donovan — https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2249007/
Animal Kingdom — https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5574490/