You wake up, check your portfolio, and realize one stock has quietly become your entire retirement plan. Maybe it came from an employee stock purchase plan. Maybe Grandma left you a pile of Apple shares. Maybe you bought NVIDIA in 2012 because you liked the graphics card and forgot about it. However you got here, the problem is the same: one company now owns you. Joe and OG walk through exactly how to unwind it -- slowly, tax-efficiently, and without making the emotional decisions that cost people the most money.

What You'll Walk Away WithThe four ways people end up with concentrated stock -- and which one has the easiest fix that most people skip entirelyWhy inheriting stock is actually the best time to diversify -- and the step-up in basis rule that eliminates most of the tax billThe conveyor belt strategy for employee stock purchase plans that keeps you collecting the discount without piling up company riskWhy "I'll just grow around it" almost never works -- and the math behind why your stock tends to outpace your ability to diversify around itThe question Joe asked every client in this situation: which outcome would upset you least -- and why that's the right starting pointRSUs as a paycheck, not a loyalty pledge -- and the mental reframe that makes it easier to sellWhat the Merck/Vioxx story teaches about why the tax bill is almost never the real reason to hold concentrated stockWhen a slow systematic sell makes sense versus ripping the Band-Aid -- and how to decide which one you can actually live withThe estate planning mistake that turns a free inheritance into a massive capital gains bill -- and why the $1 trick backfires every timeThe insurance planning framework OG and Anna walk through: life, disability, long-term care, and property/casualty -- including the umbrella policy most people skipWhy This Matters Now

If you've spent years building something -- through your career, through conviction, through an inheritance -- the last thing you want is to lose it all because one company had a bad quarter. The diversification conversation feels complicated, but the framework is simpler than most people think. The hard part isn't knowing what to do. It's making the decision when the stock is moving and your emotions are loud.

From the Basement

Joe and OG dig into concentrated stock risk -- how people get there, what it actually costs them, and the five strategies for getting out without making it worse. OG and Anna return for episode two of their financial basics series with a full insurance planning walkthrough -- including the disability insurance gap most people don't know they have. Doug arrives with Mount St. Helens trivia and a dryer situation that may or may not involve auto parts. Stacker Molly's car repair HSA story gets a full investigation and a satisfying resolution.

Resources MentionedStacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- season one and season two workbooks free at stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguideStacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vaultStacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basementYahoo Finance / CNBC insider trading tracker -- referenced for monitoring executive stock sales


See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Stacking Benjamins Show

Joe Saul-Sehy and Josh ‘OG’ Bannerman, CFP

Too Much of One Stock? How to Diversify Without Blowing Up Your Tax Bill (SB1843)

MAY 18, 202665 MIN
The Stacking Benjamins Show

Too Much of One Stock? How to Diversify Without Blowing Up Your Tax Bill (SB1843)

MAY 18, 202665 MIN

Description

You wake up, check your portfolio, and realize one stock has quietly become your entire retirement plan. Maybe it came from an employee stock purchase plan. Maybe Grandma left you a pile of Apple shares. Maybe you bought NVIDIA in 2012 because you liked the graphics card and forgot about it. However you got here, the problem is the same: one company now owns you. Joe and OG walk through exactly how to unwind it -- slowly, tax-efficiently, and without making the emotional decisions that cost people the most money.What You'll Walk Away WithThe four ways people end up with concentrated stock -- and which one has the easiest fix that most people skip entirelyWhy inheriting stock is actually the best time to diversify -- and the step-up in basis rule that eliminates most of the tax billThe conveyor belt strategy for employee stock purchase plans that keeps you collecting the discount without piling up company riskWhy "I'll just grow around it" almost never works -- and the math behind why your stock tends to outpace your ability to diversify around itThe question Joe asked every client in this situation: which outcome would upset you least -- and why that's the right starting pointRSUs as a paycheck, not a loyalty pledge -- and the mental reframe that makes it easier to sellWhat the Merck/Vioxx story teaches about why the tax bill is almost never the real reason to hold concentrated stockWhen a slow systematic sell makes sense versus ripping the Band-Aid -- and how to decide which one you can actually live withThe estate planning mistake that turns a free inheritance into a massive capital gains bill -- and why the $1 trick backfires every timeThe insurance planning framework OG and Anna walk through: life, disability, long-term care, and property/casualty -- including the umbrella policy most people skipWhy This Matters NowIf you've spent years building something -- through your career, through conviction, through an inheritance -- the last thing you want is to lose it all because one company had a bad quarter. The diversification conversation feels complicated, but the framework is simpler than most people think. The hard part isn't knowing what to do. It's making the decision when the stock is moving and your emotions are loud.From the BasementJoe and OG dig into concentrated stock risk -- how people get there, what it actually costs them, and the five strategies for getting out without making it worse. OG and Anna return for episode two of their financial basics series with a full insurance planning walkthrough -- including the disability insurance gap most people don't know they have. Doug arrives with Mount St. Helens trivia and a dryer situation that may or may not involve auto parts. Stacker Molly's car repair HSA story gets a full investigation and a satisfying resolution.Resources MentionedStacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- season one and season two workbooks free at stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguideStacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vaultStacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basementYahoo Finance / CNBC insider trading tracker -- referenced for monitoring executive stock salesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.