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Description

Don and Tom kick things off with a colorful history lesson on 19th-century “bucket shops,” drawing a sharp parallel to today’s emerging world of tokenized securities—digital representations of stocks traded on blockchain platforms. While proponents tout 24/7 trading and faster settlement, the hosts question the real value, highlighting added complexity, thin trading, pricing deviations, and unclear ownership structures. They frame tokenized investing as a solution in search of a problem—one that primarily serves speculators rather than long-term investors. The episode reinforces a familiar theme: avoid unnecessary complexity, ignore trading temptations, and stick with disciplined, low-cost investing. Listener questions cover whether retirees still need life insurance (generally no, if financially secure) and clarify that rebalancing means selling winners and buying laggards—not chasing losses.

0:05 Intro and setup with historical market story

0:24 Bucket shops explained—early stock market gambling

1:50 Transition to modern “tokenized securities”

2:35 What tokenized stocks are and how they trade 24/7

5:27 Blockchain explained in plain English

6:23 Ownership confusion—what do you actually own?

7:53 Custodian risk and structural concerns

8:33 Pricing issues and thin trading risks

9:01 Tokenization compared to past financial “innovations” (CDOs)

10:54 Why investors should ignore tokenized securities

11:26 New call-in system for podcast listeners

12:03 Listener question: keep or drop term life insurance in retirement

13:02 Why life insurance is unnecessary for financially secure retirees

15:05 Listener question: selling losers vs. rebalancing

16:05 Proper rebalancing strategy explained (sell high, buy low)

17:31 Jack Bogle philosophy—do less, win more

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