Episodes

  • Episode 49: Delaware Statutory Trusts, Illiquid Business Wealth, and Designing Legacy Homes
    Mar 23 2026

    In this episode, we begin with a listener looking to simplify a real estate portfolio in their early 60s. With multiple properties and significant appreciation, selling outright would trigger both capital gains and depreciation recapture. Stephan walks through how Delaware Statutory Trusts function within a 1031 exchange, the appeal of moving from active management to passive ownership, and the tradeoffs around fees, control, and long-term flexibility. He also reframes the decision more broadly: whether continuing to own real estate still aligns with the family’s overall plan.

    Next, we turn to a common but often overlooked issue among entrepreneurs. A listener with $12 million in net worth, largely tied up in a business and real estate, has very little in traditional retirement accounts. Stephan outlines how to begin correcting that imbalance over the decade leading up to a potential exit, including building liquidity through taxable accounts, using high-contribution retirement structures like cash balance plans, and shifting the business from a growth-focused model to one that generates consistent cash flow and commands a higher valuation multiple.

    In our From the Field segment, we explore what separates homes that simply look expensive from residences designed to endure. The conversation with Blake Sutton of Est Est Interior Design covers how assembling the right team early can reduce uncertainty in the custom home process, why experienced homeowners approach design decisions differently, and how timeless materials and thoughtful planning contribute to homes that function well across multiple properties and generations.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome

    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    29 mins
  • Episode 48: Stock Compensation, Inherited IRA Taxes, and Documenting Family Legacy
    Mar 16 2026

    Why do companies sometimes pay employees with stock instead of cash? And what happens when you inherit a multi-million-dollar IRA under the 10-year rule?

    In this episode of the Scholar Wealth Podcast, we answer two listener questions that highlight how compensation structures and tax rules shape financial decisions.

    First, we examine why publicly traded companies use equity compensation for employees and executives. We discuss how stock grants and restricted shares align incentives, why companies may prefer equity to cash compensation, and what employees should consider when their income and investments become tied to the same company.

    Next, we address the tax reality of inheriting a large traditional IRA. With the elimination of the lifetime “stretch” strategy, many beneficiaries now face compressed withdrawals under the 10-year rule. We explore practical approaches to managing the resulting tax burden, including withdrawal timing, income coordination, and portfolio positioning strategies.

    Finally, in our From the Field segment, Stephan speaks with Susan Brody, founder of Family Legacy Videos, about how families can document personal stories, preserve values, and create lasting records of family history for future generations.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome

    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    37 mins
  • Episode 47: AI Concentration Risk, Concierge Medicine, and Avoiding Trust Disputes
    Mar 9 2026

    This week, we begin with a listener whose $6 million portfolio has drifted from 25% to 42% in large-cap tech following the AI-driven surge. Stephan reframes the issue as portfolio drift rather than a market call, and walks through how to think about concentration risk, disciplined rebalancing, and tax-aware trimming without reacting to headlines.

    Next, we examine healthcare planning after financial independence. A couple in their late 40s with $11 million in investable assets is relying on catastrophic coverage while self-paying for routine care and considering a concierge medical practice. We explore whether this structure represents a rational tradeoff, how to stress-test tail risk exposure, and what healthcare decisions look like over a multi-decade retirement.

    Finally, Stephan is joined by Ellen Morris, Chair of Fiduciary Litigation at Cozen O’Connor, for a conversation on how trusts and estate plans unravel in practice. They discuss undue influence, capacity concerns, sibling rivalry, and the practical steps families can take to reduce ambiguity and avoid preventable disputes.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/

    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome

    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    34 mins
  • Episode 46: Evaluating PPLI, Investing in a Child’s Startup, and Cross-Border Tax Complexity
    Mar 2 2026

    This week, we begin with a listener question about Private Placement Life Insurance. While the promise of tax-deferred growth and liquidity through policy loans can sound compelling, Stephan walks through the real tradeoffs: layered fees, insurance drag, liquidity constraints, and whether similar outcomes can be achieved more simply through traditional brokerage structures and securities-backed lending.

    Next, we tackle a question many affluent families quietly face. A daughter launching a venture-backed tech startup has asked her parents to participate in a $250,000 seed round. Stephan explores how to separate parental support from investment discipline, why matching venture terms matters, how to avoid distorting the cap table, and how to protect family relationships if the business struggles.

    In our From the Field segment, we are joined by Christine Concepción, an international tax attorney who advises globally mobile families and closely held businesses on cross-border structuring. The conversation covers tax residency rules, center of vital interest tests, entity restructuring when moving abroad, permanent establishment risks, PFIC traps, and why advance planning is critical before relocating or investing internationally. Christine also explains why it is often easier for foreign investors to structure investments in the U.S. than for U.S. citizens to invest abroad.

    As families diversify not just portfolios but also residences, citizenships, and business interests, coordination across jurisdictions becomes essential. This episode offers a practical look at how to approach those decisions with clarity and discipline.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/

    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome

    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    38 mins
  • Episode 45: Family Travel Fairness, STR Bonus Depreciation, and Digital Risk Management
    Feb 23 2026

    This week: a family with three adult children is navigating an unexpected tension: two children still travel privately with their parents, while one prefers to fly commercial and would like the unused travel spend redirected toward charitable giving. We discuss the difference between gifting an experience and gifting cash, why fair does not always mean identical outcomes, and how families can use lower-stakes moments like this to establish governance norms that prevent larger conflicts later.

    Next, we examine short-term rentals and bonus depreciation under the One Big Beautiful Bill. A listener asks whether providing roughly 100 hours of management per year is enough to unlock enhanced depreciation benefits. We walk through how active versus passive income rules actually work, what the 100-hour rule really requires, the role of cost segregation, documentation standards, and why the investment itself must stand on its own before tax strategy enters the conversation.

    In our From the Field segment, Ghonche Alavi of Crisis24 joins us to explore how wealth, visibility, and digital exposure intersect. We discuss digital footprint mapping, AI-driven social engineering, crypto-related risk, seasonality in cyber attacks, and why cybersecurity for high-profile families is no longer just an IT issue but part of a broader risk management framework. Ghonche also shares practical guidance on incident response planning, family training, and proactive preparation before a crisis surfaces.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/

    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome

    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    37 mins
  • Episode 44: Oil Well Concentration Risk, Australian Superannuation, and Learning to Fly
    Feb 16 2026

    In this episode of the Scholar Wealth Podcast, we answer two listener questions that highlight how risk, complexity, and discipline show up in real financial decisions.

    First, a listener who recently sold part of a business and now has $12 million invested asks whether allocating $750,000, half of their alternatives bucket, to a single private oil well investment makes sense. We discuss concentration risk, projected IRRs versus lived returns, operator opacity, and why alternative allocations should be diversified across time and strategy.

    Next, a dual U.S.–Australian couple with $1.5 million in Australian superannuation plans to retire permanently in the United States. We explain how super funds work, why they can become complex for U.S. taxpayers, the reporting burdens involved, and how consolidation and investment selection may reduce tax and administrative friction.

    In our From the Field segment, Paul Sallach, founder and president of All In Aviation, joins us to discuss what pilot licensing actually looks like for busy professionals. We cover realistic training timelines, hour requirements, cost structures, ownership versus renting decisions, depreciation expectations, and how aviation can restore time flexibility for high-earning professionals.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/
    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome
    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    28 mins
  • Episode 43: Lean Family Office Builds, Trump Accounts, and Angel Investing
    Feb 9 2026

    How lean is too lean when building a family office, and when does early flexibility turn into future complexity?

    In this episode, we answer a listener question on scaling a family office thoughtfully, including the role of fractional CFOs and CIOs, outsourcing functions like cybersecurity and bookkeeping, and knowing when it makes sense to bring capabilities in-house.

    Next, we discuss Trump Accounts, the new 530A accounts launching in 2026, and how they compare to existing options like 529 plans, UGMAs, and parent-held brokerage accounts when saving for children. We explore the tradeoffs between control, flexibility, tax efficiency, and simplicity.

    Finally, in our From the Field segment, Stephan is joined by Christian Haller for a conversation on angel investing. They discuss how founders approach investing after an exit, how angel groups evaluate early-stage companies, and the role of judgment, diversification, and patience in building an angel portfolio.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/
    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome
    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    32 mins
  • Episode 42: Managing Inherited Property, Protecting Physician Wealth, and Inside the Bourbon Market
    Feb 2 2026

    What should you do when a large portion of your wealth is tied up in illiquid or misunderstood assets?

    In this episode, we tackle a listener question from someone who inherited a substantial real estate portfolio, including a primary residence, a vacation home, and rental properties. He walks through how to separate emotional and economic decisions, evaluate real estate as an investment, and avoid treating inherited assets as “default holdings” simply because there’s no urgency to sell.

    Next, a question from a neurosurgeon who is becoming increasingly aware that higher income often comes with higher exposure. The discussion focuses on malpractice coverage versus personal liability, the role of umbrella insurance, why liquidity itself is a form of risk management, and why overly complex asset protection structures can create false comfort.

    To close the episode, Stephan and Deon are joined by Brian Higgins, master distiller at 1861 Distillery in Georgia, for a conversation on bourbon. Brian explains what actually drives quality long before a label is printed, why age and price are poor shortcuts for value, how the secondary market distorts perception, and how to think differently about drinking, collecting, and investing-adjacent behavior in the bourbon world.

    Stay in touch beyond the podcast:

    Personal Wealth Conference: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/conference-2026/
    Newsletter: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/newsletter

    Start your planning journey: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/welcome
    Submit a question for the show: https://scholarfinancialadvising.com/podcast

    Disclaimer: The information provided in this podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended to constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The opinions expressed are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the views of any affiliated organizations. Investing in financial markets involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should consult with a qualified financial advisor who can assess your individual financial situation, objectives, and risk tolerance. Thanks for listening!

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    43 mins