Thanks for reading History Lessons for the Modern Investor! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
On December 10, 1972, a couple of paddle controllers and a bouncing pixel in a California tavern redefined fun—and set the stage for the video game revolution. But Pong’s real legacy isn’t just about nostalgia or high scores—it’s about smart strategy, discipline, and avoiding classic pitfalls that still trap individual investors today.In this episode of “History Lessons for the Modern Investor,” discover what Pong and the arcade boom can teach you about:
âś… Why chasing the hottest new investment fad usually drains your quarters (and your retirement)
âś… The real power of keeping your portfolio simple, balanced, and tax-efficient
✅ How to avoid “lifestyle creep” after a lucky streak, and make your gains last for the long haul
✅ Staying sharp about taxes and planning—because what you keep matters more than what you win on screen
From managing FOMO in markets, to setting sustainable withdrawal rates, to knowing which moves to replay and which to retire, Pong’s story is your playbook for turning small moves into long-term victories.
👇 Hit play for strategies you can use, and subscribe for a smarter game every week!#HistoryLessons #Investing #Pong #PersonalFinance #RetirementPlanning #TaxEfficiency
Thanks for watching the video 🕹️ The Pong Principle: Investing Lessons from a Coin-Op Classic.
Thanks for reading History Lessons for the Modern Investor! This post is public so feel free to share it.
Another Fed Rate Cut: What It Really Means for Your Money
Reuters’ latest piece walks through how the Fed’s third rate cut of 2025 filters through to real life: a bit of breathing room for borrowers, more pressure on savers, and a shifting landscape for bonds and mortgages.
On credit cards, the article notes that average APRs are still punishingly high at 23.96%, even after drifting down from last year’s record. My view, quoted in the story, is blunt: “A quarter‑point cut is a drop in a very expensive bucket. Any relief should be used to accelerate payoff, not justify new balances.” In other words, don’t treat slightly lower interest as permission to spend more; treat it as a small tailwind to get out of debt faster.
For savers and conservative investors, lower rates create a different kind of challenge. Traditional savings accounts continue to yield next to nothing (around 0.6% on average, per Bankrate). In the article I point to tools that can still work in a falling‑rate world, provided you match them to your time horizon:
CDs for FDIC‑insured, defined‑term cash you know you won’t need for a while.
MYGAs (multi‑year guaranteed annuities) for those who can tolerate insurer risk and surrender charges in exchange for higher fixed rates and tax deferral.
As I explain, “CDs work well for FDIC‑insured, defined-term cash. MYGAs, issued by insurers, can offer higher fixed rates and tax deferral, but come with surrender charges and insurer credit risk, so time horizon and due diligence matter.” The message: don’t park large sums in 0% accounts just because “rates are down”—go shopping for yield, but understand the trade‑offs.
The article also highlights how short‑term bonds and cash-like instruments feel cuts first. T‑bill and short-duration fund yields typically slide as cuts accumulate. Here again I caution that the middle of the bond curve is where things get more nuanced: “Intermediate‑term bonds can see price gains if markets expect further cuts and contained inflation, but there’s still interest‑rate risk if the Fed’s path changes.” Translation: you may see some price pop, but don’t forget that if the Fed has to reverse course, those same bonds can give back ground.
Meanwhile, mortgage rates may drift lower over time rather than immediately. Home equity lines, which track prime, should reflect the cut within a couple of cycles. And on the equity side, the move was widely anticipated—so markets have largely priced it in, with future Fed guidance doing more to sway stocks than this single step.
Bottom line: A quarter‑point cut doesn’t change your life on its own, but it should change your behavior at the margins. Use any break on borrowing costs to pay down high‑rate debt faster, refuse to settle for near‑zero yields on cash, and be deliberate about how you’re using bonds in a falling‑rate environment. The Fed sets the backdrop; your choices determine whether lower rates help or quietly hurt your long‑term plan.
This episode is sponsored by Victory Independent Planning. Ready to take the stress out of your retirement? At Victory Independent Planning, we put you on the right trajectory with our exclusive VIP Retirement Glidepath™️!
Schedule an assessment now: CLICK HERE
🎯Patrick Huey is a small business owner and the author of three books on history and finance as well as the fictional work Hell: A Novel. As owner of Victory Independent Planning, LLC, Patrick works with families and non-profit organizations. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional, Chartered Advisor in Philanthropy®, and an Accredited Tax Preparer. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in History from the University of Pittsburgh and a Master of Business Administration from Arizona State University. Patrick previously served as a Naval Flight Officer from 1996 to 2005, earning the Strike Fighter Air Medal during combat operations and two Navy Achievement Medals. 👉🏻 Reach him at 877-234-8957 or schedule a time NOW.