I Checked Dave Ramsey's 12% Math. Average Rate Of Return Is Misleading…
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In this episode, Hans tackles the two questions every listener is asking right now: is AI a bubble, and why does the market keep hitting record highs while everyone feels anxious? Then he dismantles what he calls the "holy grail" of mainstream financial planning, the average rate of return.
Using the exact numbers from a popular Dave Ramsey article, Hans proves that a projected $2.6 million retirement would have actually delivered far less, even with perfect hindsight and zero down years to spare. If you've ever been shown a smooth, parabolic growth chart by an advisor, this episode will change how you read it forever.
Chapters:
00:00 – Opening segment
00:35 – Two things at once: record highs and record-low sentiment
02:10 – The cash flow vs. net worth philosophy
04:30 – Building a guaranteed cash flow floor instead of chasing FOMO
07:25 – Is AI a bubble? Bubbles with value vs. bubbles without
13:40 – Why AI is shattering earnings: more profit on a shrinking workforce
17:25 – The companies that won't survive the shakeout
22:30 – Oil, the Fed, and why rate cuts don't move the market like they used to
27:50 – The myth of the perfect parabola
29:25 – Math is not money: the grift in action
33:40 – $2.6 million vs. reality: running 30 years of actual market data
36:20 – Grifter math and the 34% shortfall
38:35 – The erosion of the castle: layering in fees and taxes
43:50 – Why you only get one shot at this
45:00 – Where guaranteed compounding actually lives
50:40 – Closing segment
Key Takeaways:
Two opposite things can be true at the same time. The stock market has hit roughly 21 record highs this year while consumer sentiment sits near historic lows. Understanding why both exist at once is the key to reading today's economy without panic or FOMO.
Cash flow beats net worth. A large, untouchable retirement account at 65 is worth less than a guaranteed, steadily increasing floor of monthly cash flow you can rely on. Build the floor first, and the question of "what will my 401k be worth?" stops mattering.
Record profits are coming from shrinking workforces. Companies are blowing out earnings reports by replacing expensive human labor with cheap AI tools. Same revenue, drastically lower cost, and profit margins explode. That is why the market climbs while sentiment falls.
The average rate of return is a meaningless metric. The math is correct, but the money is wrong. Averaging 100% gains and 50% losses says you made 25% a year, when in reality you broke even or worse. Averages hide the gravity of negative numbers.
The projected $2.6 million was never real. Using the exact data behind a Dave Ramsey 12% claim, $100,000 over 30 years should have grown to $2.585 million. Run the actual year-by-year returns and you end up with $1.72 million, a shortfall of roughly $857,000, with perfect hindsight and only six down years.
Guaranteed compounding only exists in one place. Every other vehicle, from high-yield savings to MicroStrategy preferred shares, has rates that fluctuate. Contractual, uninterrupted compounding growth lives only in whole life cash value, where the best case is the case you actually get.