Nearly every major index is at a record high — and everyone’s asking the same question: is this the beginning of something great, or the end of something that’s gone too far?This week on Money On Tap, Ben Brayshaw and Dan Michelon take that question apart with 75 years of market history, a few statistics that genuinely surprised them, and a clear look at what a record high means for you — whether you’re decades from retirement or already drawing income.What you’ll learn:<br /><ul><li>The Fidelity data showing investing at an all-time high beats investing on a random day</li><li>Why a record high is usually a signal of a healthy economy, not a top</li><li>A walk through 1982, 1987, 1995–1999, 2000, 2009, and 2020</li><li>Why today’s AI market looks more like 1995 than the 2000 dot-com bubble</li><li>Why timing the market is a loser’s game — and why taking profits isn’t fear</li><li>Sequence-of-returns risk — why the first years of retirement decide everything</li><li>Buffered ETFs — staying in the market with downside guardrails</li><li>Annuities with lifetime income and long-term-care riders</li></ul>Plus Money In The News:<br /><ul><li>American financial literacy hits a 10-year low — U.S. adults answered just 47% of the TIAA Institute’s 2026 questions correctly (Yahoo Finance, Kerry Hannon)</li><li>America’s data-center build-out falls behind schedule — Google’s $80B equity raise and what it signals about AI’s real cost (WSJ, Katherine Blunt)</li><li>Exxon chief warns oil could spike to $160–$170 a barrel as strategic reserves run thin (Fox Business, Robert McGreevy)</li></ul>Mentioned on air: Our short sequence-of-returns risk video — watch it at <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com</a>.Read the companion blog: <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com/blog" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com/blog</a><br />Schedule a free consultation: <a href="https://app.greminders.com/t/9f3ce72e/initialconsulta" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">app.greminders.com/t/9f3ce72e/initialconsulta</a><br />Full Money On Tap episode library: <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com/money-on-tap" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com/money-on-tap</a>Contact Us<br />Phone: 855-226-8551<br />Email: info@yourmoneyontap.com<br />Office: 116 South River Road, Bedford, NH 03110<br />Web: brayshawfinancial.com<br /><br /><ul><li>What is the retirement red zone, and why does it matter? The retirement red zone is the roughly ten-year window covering the five years before and the five years after your retirement date. It matters more than almost any other period because of sequence-of-returns risk: a major market downturn while you’re beginning to withdraw income can permanently damage the plan, even if the market later recovers. Two people who invest identically but retire a few years apart can end up with opposite outcomes based solely on timing. Navigating the red zone means shifting from maximizing gains to mitigating losses — stress-testing the plan, building a cash runway, rebalancing, diversifying, and adding guardrails like buffered ETFs and guaranteed income.</li></ul>

Money On Tap

Ben Brayshaw & Seth Krussman

Risk, Reward, & Record Highs

JUN 11, 202656 MIN
Money On Tap

Risk, Reward, & Record Highs

JUN 11, 202656 MIN

Description

Nearly every major index is at a record high — and everyone’s asking the same question: is this the beginning of something great, or the end of something that’s gone too far?This week on Money On Tap, Ben Brayshaw and Dan Michelon take that question apart with 75 years of market history, a few statistics that genuinely surprised them, and a clear look at what a record high means for you — whether you’re decades from retirement or already drawing income.What you’ll learn:<br /><ul><li>The Fidelity data showing investing at an all-time high beats investing on a random day</li><li>Why a record high is usually a signal of a healthy economy, not a top</li><li>A walk through 1982, 1987, 1995–1999, 2000, 2009, and 2020</li><li>Why today’s AI market looks more like 1995 than the 2000 dot-com bubble</li><li>Why timing the market is a loser’s game — and why taking profits isn’t fear</li><li>Sequence-of-returns risk — why the first years of retirement decide everything</li><li>Buffered ETFs — staying in the market with downside guardrails</li><li>Annuities with lifetime income and long-term-care riders</li></ul>Plus Money In The News:<br /><ul><li>American financial literacy hits a 10-year low — U.S. adults answered just 47% of the TIAA Institute’s 2026 questions correctly (Yahoo Finance, Kerry Hannon)</li><li>America’s data-center build-out falls behind schedule — Google’s $80B equity raise and what it signals about AI’s real cost (WSJ, Katherine Blunt)</li><li>Exxon chief warns oil could spike to $160–$170 a barrel as strategic reserves run thin (Fox Business, Robert McGreevy)</li></ul>Mentioned on air: Our short sequence-of-returns risk video — watch it at <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com</a>.Read the companion blog: <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com/blog" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com/blog</a><br />Schedule a free consultation: <a href="https://app.greminders.com/t/9f3ce72e/initialconsulta" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">app.greminders.com/t/9f3ce72e/initialconsulta</a><br />Full Money On Tap episode library: <a href="https://www.brayshawfinancial.com/money-on-tap" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">brayshawfinancial.com/money-on-tap</a>Contact Us<br />Phone: 855-226-8551<br />Email: [email protected]<br />Office: 116 South River Road, Bedford, NH 03110<br />Web: brayshawfinancial.com<br /><br /><ul><li>What is the retirement red zone, and why does it matter? The retirement red zone is the roughly ten-year window covering the five years before and the five years after your retirement date. It matters more than almost any other period because of sequence-of-returns risk: a major market downturn while you’re beginning to withdraw income can permanently damage the plan, even if the market later recovers. Two people who invest identically but retire a few years apart can end up with opposite outcomes based solely on timing. Navigating the red zone means shifting from maximizing gains to mitigating losses — stress-testing the plan, building a cash runway, rebalancing, diversifying, and adding guardrails like buffered ETFs and guaranteed income.</li></ul>