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Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

Q&A: Should You Keep Part of Your Money Outside the U.S.?

Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

Paula Pant | Cumulus Podcast Network

Entrepreneurship, Investing, Business

4.73.6K Ratings

🗓️ 30 December 2025

⏱️ 65 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

#676: Ally:How can I optimize my asset allocation and Roth contributions now that I’m over $1 million in assets? I’m 45, single, never married, with about $1.2 million in assets. Roughly $100,000 is in stocks, which might scare some people. Here’s my breakdown: Vanguard brokerage account: VTSAX $132,000, ISCV $5,000, VOO $5,000 Vanguard Rollover IRA: VTSAX $65,000, IVV $25,000, VOO $62,000 Vanguard Roth IRA: VTSAX $228,000, ISCV $6,000 Pre-tax 401(k): Active stock fund $218,000 (0.01% expense ratio), Equity dividend fund $55,000 (0.01% expense ratio) Russell 1000: $270,000 (0% expense ratio) HSA: $9,000 in the Russell 1000 and Russell 2000 ESPP: $90,000 Savings account: $12,000 I view my brokerage accounts as savings, where I can sell assets if I need cash, as well as sell my company shares. My questions: How far am I from the efficient frontier? How efficient is my asset allocation? I’ve mostly been a “VTSAX and chill” type. If I rebalance, what’s the best way to do it without incurring taxes? Next year, I’ll make more than $150,000, even after contributing $24,500 to my pre-tax 401(k) in 2026. Can I still do a backdoor Roth, given that I already have an IRA balance? I was told it could be complicated. Am I out of luck investing in a Roth next year? Also, should I roll over my 401(k) into my existing Rollover IRA to gain more investment options, even though the 401(k) fees are very low? I’ve reached over $1 million in assets, but I’m not confident my first million was invested efficiently. I want to correct it before reaching my next million. Emma: Can We Split a Dependent’s Tax Status Midyear to Maximize Health Insurance Subsidies? We’re a family of four with two adults and two children, ages 15 and 21. Our 21-year-old is a full-time university student and is expected to graduate in May 2026. The hope is that she’ll secure a full-time job after graduation. Our health care broker told us that we could claim her as a dependent for half of the year and then have her claim herself for the second half. According to the broker, this would allow her to stay on our health insurance and help us qualify for a larger premium subsidy. Is it actually possible to split a dependent’s tax status this way within a single year, or is this a misunderstanding? Anonymous: Is It Wise to Hold Some Investments Outside the U.S. for Geopolitical Diversification? I’ve always believed that “this time isn’t different,” but lately I’m feeling uneasy. I’m increasingly concerned about what seems like a slow erosion of institutional trust in the U.S., especially regarding agencies and structures that support our financial system. From leadership changes at key government institutions to growing political influence over economic policy, I’m starting to wonder if it’s prudent to hold a small portion of assets physically and legally outside the U.S. I’m not talking about exotic offshore schemes. I mean legitimate ways to invest in broad index funds or ETFs through a brokerage account based abroad—as a form of geopolitical diversification and personal contingency planning. I’d love to hear your perspective. Share this episode with a friend, colleagues, your brokerage rep: https://affordanything.com/episode676 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Joe, welcome to our last episode of 2025.

0:03.0

I can't believe it.

0:04.5

What a year.

0:05.7

New Year's Eve coming up.

0:07.5

Do you have any goals for the new year?

0:09.4

I just want to be in the moment more as much as I possibly can.

0:14.1

That is my sole goal.

0:15.8

That was my goal in 2025.

0:18.0

And 2025 seemed to go very quickly, seemed to go by very, very quickly. And I just want to

0:24.0

live less in the future and more in the now. And that means learning to divorce myself from my phone,

0:32.4

to be in conversations, to get rid of notifications.

0:38.2

That's my goal.

0:41.4

Oh, Joe wants a Christmas present.

0:44.5

Look at that.

0:45.8

Look at that.

0:47.7

But for the entire year.

0:49.1

Christmas all year long.

0:50.0

That's beautiful.

0:50.9

What about you?

1:13.9

I think 2026 is going to be the year that I start putting a book in motion. What? Yeah. Oh, she said it out loud, everybody. For years, people have asked me, when's your book coming out? When are you going to write a book? And I've always said it's not the right time. It's not the right time. It's not going to come out in 2026. but I think I think this, no, no, not even close. It's coming out in 2028. Yeah, at the earliest, maybe 2029. Sure. But I think the process begins

1:20.9

in 26. I think it's finally time to shop the proposal. That is fantastic. Now, New Year's, do you have,

1:28.4

you doing anything big for New Year's Eve?

...

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