PODCAST · business
Purpose Driven Finances
by Purpose Driven Finances
Welcome to Purpose Driven Finances — the podcast that helps you use your money as a tool to fulfill the plan and purpose for your life.Hosted by Allan Malina, founder of Servus Capital Management, each episode brings you practical strategies, insightful conversations, and timely commentary on personal finance and investing. We guide you toward clarity and confidence, whether you’re planning for retirement, navigating life transitions, or simply looking to make wiser financial decisions.We cover a wide range of topics—from budgeting, debt management, and investment strategies to retirement planning and legacy planning—plus commentary on current economic trends to keep you informed.Because money isn’t the goal—living with purpose is.Learn more at www.servuscm.comThanks for listening, and welcome to
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Your Retirement Plan: Rollover and Roth Conversion Guidance
Air Date: April 11, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS A Rollover Is a Structural Decision—Not a Form. Where your money sits determines how it can be positioned, managed, and protected. This is architecture, not administration. The Cost vs. Capability Wedge Matters More Than Fees Alone. Costs may rise after a rollover—but the real question is whether you gain better positioning, better decisions, and better long-term outcomes. Roth Conversions Require Coordination—Not Guesswork. Done correctly, they reshape your tax future. Done in isolation, they create permanent tax drag. Static Plans Fail in Dynamic Markets. Markets change. Signals shift. Your retirement plan should respond—not remain frozen in a prior environment. Most people approach a rollover with one narrow question: “Where should I move this money?” That question misses the point. At Servus Capital Management, a rollover is not a transaction—it’s a structural decision inside a larger system connecting investment positioning, tax strategy, and long-term income. We begin with a simple analogy: golf. No experienced golfer plays the same shot in every condition. Wind, terrain, and pressure all dictate the decision. Investing is no different. Markets send signals—and ignoring them leads to poor outcomes. Recent signals from our disciplined process, including the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM), pointed clearly: Favor energy exposureReduce bond exposureExit gold as interest rates shifted These are not opinions. They are responses to changing conditions. And that creates the real problem for most retirement plans: They can’t respond. Old employer plans are often static by design—limited menus, limited flexibility, no positioning framework. So the rollover decision becomes a question of capability: Will you gain better guidance—or just a different account?Will your investments improve—or just change?Will your structure evolve—or stay static in a new wrapper? Because here’s the truth most people miss: A rollover often increases cost. That’s not the risk. The risk is paying more—and staying the same. We also walk through what can be lost if the move is rushed: Access to loansInstitutional share classesCertain legal protections under ERISA And then we connect the most misunderstood piece: Roth conversions. A Roth conversion is not a tactic. It’s a multi-year tax strategy. When coordinated properly, it can reshape your retirement income and reduce long-term tax exposure. When done without a system, it creates unnecessary liability. This episode is not about convincing you to roll over your plan. It’s about helping you answer one question: Is your current structure actually built for what comes next? FAQ Should I roll over my 401(k) or leave it where it is? It depends on structural improvement. If a rollover enhances positioning, tax coordination, and disciplined guidance, it may make sense. If it simply changes account location without improving decisions, it likely does not. Will my fees increase after a rollover? In many cases, yes. Employer plans often benefit from institutional pricing. The real decision is whether increased cost leads to better outcomes. What are the tax implications of a rollover? A direct rollover is typically not taxable. However, Roth conversions—often paired with rollovers—create taxable income and must be coordinated. When does a Roth conversion make sense? Typically during lower-income years or before Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), but only within a broader strategy. Can I access my money after a rollover? Yes—but rules change depending on account type, age, and structure. Access should be part of the decision. Allan Malina is the founder and president of Servus Capital Management, a fee-only fiduciary firm serving Lynchburg, Forest, and Central Virginia. Through disciplined frameworks like Dynamic Asset Allocation (DAA) and QPM, he helps individuals move from static portfolios to purposeful financial systems.
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Your Retirement Plan: Scott’s Insurance & ESOP Planning — Opportunity and Risk
Air Date: April 3, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS Regime Awareness Over Autopilot: In an economic season defined by shifting energy demands and AI-driven disruption, a “set-it-and-forget-it” posture is a structural vulnerability. Stewardship requires an investment process that adapts to the current environment.The ESOP Concentration Wedge: Employee ownership at firms like Scott’s Insurance is a powerful engine for wealth—but it creates a Single Point of Failure (SPOF). When your income, career, and retirement all depend on one private company, you are a concentrated investor, not just an employee.Process Over Paper Wealth: Rapid ESOP growth often creates a “wealth illusion.” Without a disciplined diversification and income strategy, a large balance on paper may not translate into a sustainable, purpose-driven retirement income. Markets do not exist in a vacuum—and neither does your career. As we navigate a 2026 environment shaped by rising energy costs and the structural impact of artificial intelligence, the question for the local professional is no longer just about growth. It is about alignment. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, we move beyond the surface-level appeal of employee benefits to examine the mechanical reality of the Scott’s Insurance ESOP. Employee Stock Ownership Plans are exceptional tools for aligning teams with ownership, but they introduce a critical risk: Concentration. If your career, your current income, and your primary retirement asset are all tied to the same firm, you are navigating with a single point of failure. We discuss the fiduciary realities of ESOP planning: The gap between periodic private valuations and real-time market pricing.The impact of company repurchase obligations on your personal liquidity timing.The necessity of building a diversification strategy long before your retirement date. The SCM philosophy is simple: A growing account balance is not a strategy; it is a responsibility. True stewardship is the discipline to turn a corporate windfall into a purpose-driven, diversified income stream that can withstand changing economic seasons. FAQ What are the primary risks for Scott’s Insurance ESOP participants? The primary risk is concentration. If Scott’s Insurance experiences a regional or industry-specific downturn, your income and retirement assets could be impacted simultaneously. Diversification is a structural necessity to protect your long-term peace of mind. How does an ESOP valuation differ from public investments? Public stocks are priced in real-time by the market. ESOPs are typically valued once per year through a private appraisal. This can create a "valuation lag," where your account value doesn't reflect the current volatility or regime shifts seen in the broader 2026 economy. When should I begin planning for my ESOP distribution? Planning should begin 3 to 5 years before your target retirement date. ESOP distributions follow specific IRS and plan-specific rules that can create a multi-year delay between leaving the firm and receiving full access to your funds. Can I diversify my ESOP while still working? Yes. Most ESOP plans, including those in the Lynchburg area, allow for "diversification elections" once you reach age 55 and have 10 years of service. These windows are critical "Wedge" opportunities to move capital into a more liquid, diversified portfolio. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and professionals at Central Virginia’s leading firms. Through a disciplined, regime-based approach, Allan helps clients navigate complex retirement systems and concentration risks with clarity and control. As the host of Purpose Driven Finances, he provides the calm, structured leadership needed to move from financial uncertainty to intentional decision-making.
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Your Retirement Plan: Framatome
KEY TAKEAWAYS · Systems Over Containers: The Framatome 401(k) is not just a place to store money; it is a complex financial system. While contribution rates are the fuel, your allocation architecture is the engine that determines your reach. · The "Optimizer’s Trap": Engineers often fall into the trap of over-optimizing contribution percentages while under-optimizing regime alignment. Strong savings cannot outrun a portfolio misaligned with the current economic season. · The Match is a Floor, Not a Ceiling: Capturing the employer match is a baseline requirement for stewardship—it’s the "guaranteed return"—but it is only the first step in a disciplined, purpose-driven strategy. · SECURE 2.0 Complexity: New 2026 mandates, including Roth requirements for high-earner catch-ups, have turned "simple" planning into a technical coordination task. Macro Calibration: In an era of AI disruption and sticky inflation, your retirement "control rods" must be adjusted based on quantitative data, not market headlines. For the professionals at Framatome, precision is a professional requirement. Yet, when it comes to the "engine room" of their own retirement, many rely on default settings. This week on Purpose Driven Finances, we move past the noise of market predictions to focus on system architecture. The current environment—marked by AI-driven labor shifts and persistent energy-led inflation—is not a "set-it-and-forget-it" landscape. We analyze the Framatome 401(k) through the lens of a fiduciary, moving from the simplicity of participation to the discipline of positioning. We frame the Roth vs. Pre-Tax debate as a system efficiency problem: 1. Pre-Tax: Optimizes current-year liquidity (lower taxes today). 2. Roth: Optimizes future system output (tax-free distributions tomorrow). Neither is a universal "correct" answer; the solution lies in how these choices coordinate with your broader household income and the evolving SECURE Act 2.0 mandates. If you’ve spent your career maximizing contributions but neglecting your investment "regime," this episode is your guide to recalibrating for long-term stewardship. FAQ SECTION What is the first step for a new Framatome employee's 401(k)? Capture the full employer match immediately. It is the only "risk-free" return available in the market. Once that baseline is met, we move to optimizing the tax "bucket" (Roth vs. Traditional). Why is a Target-Date Fund considered a "default" and not a "strategy"? A target-date fund is a generic solution built for a demographic average. It cannot account for your specific tax bracket, outside real estate, or the transition into a different economic regime. Stewardship requires a custom-fit, not a one-size-fits-all. How do the 2026 SECURE 2.0 rules affect my catch-up contributions? If your income exceeds the threshold, the IRS now mandates that your catch-up contributions be made into a Roth account. This requires a proactive adjustment to your tax planning to avoid a surprise bill at year-end. Does SCM offer specific guidance for the Framatome investment menu? Yes. As a fiduciary in Lynchburg, we provide a Retirement Plan Update specifically for local employer plans. We help you map your plan’s specific fund options to our quantitative models. 📍 Servus Capital Management | Lynchburg, VA Aired: 3/28/2026
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Your Retirement Plan: BWXT
Air Date: March 21, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS System Over Product: The BWX Technologies Thrift Plan is a multi-layered architecture—not just a 401(k). True outcomes depend on the coordination of matches, service contributions, and pension interactions.The Vesting "Wedge": BWXT matches 50% of your first 6%, but the three-year vesting schedule means timing and tenure are critical variables in your realized return.Concentrated Employer Risk: Since your income, career, and benefits are all tied to BWXT, your portfolio must be intentionally diversified to avoid over-exposure to a single company.HSA as a Strategic Asset: A Health Savings Account is often underutilized. With its triple tax advantage, it should be viewed as a long-term capital pool, not just a reimbursement tool.Credit Market Stress: Beneath the surface of stable headline markets, rising rates are stressing high-yield and private credit. Discipline is required as companies face higher refinancing costs in 2026. In the nuclear industry, safety and stability rely on the precise composition of control rods—specifically the Silver–Indium–Cadmium alloy. Each element is vital; if the ratio is off, the system fails. This week on Purpose Driven Finances, we apply that same engineering discipline to your retirement strategy at BWX Technologies (BWXT). Your financial "control rods" consist of your 401(k), HSA, tax strategy, and company exposure. If one is misaligned, your entire retirement system is at risk. We move past the noise of the current 2026 credit market stress to look at the internal architecture of the BWXT Thrift Plan. We examine the 50% match on the first 6% and the critical three-year vesting cliff. More importantly, we discuss the "Guide" role of the HSA—moving it from a spending account to a tax-free growth engine. If you are a BWXT employee in Lynchburg, this episode is about moving from simply "having a plan" to leading a coordinated, purpose-driven financial system. FAQ SECTION Is the BWXT match enough to secure my retirement? The match is a powerful incentive, but it is a starting point, not a strategy. Real stewardship requires coordinating that match with your total contribution rate and external assets. Should I be worried about having too much BWXT exposure? Yes. From a fiduciary perspective, if your salary and your retirement are both tied to the same company, you have a concentrated risk. We discuss how to balance that exposure. How does an HSA function as a retirement tool? By paying for current medical expenses out-of-pocket and letting your HSA grow tax-free, you create a triple-tax-advantaged bucket for the future that is more efficient than a traditional 401(k). What is the "Systemic Risk" mentioned in the credit markets? Many firms that borrowed at low rates are now hitting a "refinancing wall" in 2026. This creates hidden volatility in high-yield bonds that generic portfolios often miss. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations across Lynchburg and Central Virginia. As host of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan focuses on translating complex market dynamics into disciplined, system-based financial decisions.
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Your Retirement Plan: Centra Health
Air Date March 14, 2026 KEY TAKEAWAYS The Rules Have Changed: Oil-driven inflation and AI disruption are creating a Quad 3 environment where old “set-it-and-forget-it” strategies are increasingly ineffective.Your Match Just Took a Pay Cut: Centra’s drop from 5% to 3% creates a long-term gap that requires a deliberate adjustment—not passive continuation.A Plan Doesn’t Equal a Strategy: Most Centra employees have access to a strong 403(b). Very few are using it as part of a coordinated system across taxes, income, and long-term goals. The environment has changed—and most people are still using the old playbook. Rising oil prices are not isolated events. They act as a system-wide cost driver, impacting everything from fuel and food to services and travel. At the same time, artificial intelligence is shifting from innovation to disruption—compressing margins, changing business models, and altering how markets behave. This combination reflects a Quad 3 environment: slowing growth with persistent inflation. Historically, this is where volatility increases and broad assumptions begin to break down. For Centra Health employees, this macro shift is happening alongside a critical internal change—the employer match has dropped from 5% to 3%. That is not just a small adjustment. It changes the long-term trajectory of your retirement. A retirement plan is a container. A process determines the outcome. This episode focuses on what to do next—how to adjust contributions, how to think about Roth positioning, and how to take advantage of opportunities like the Super Catch-Up (ages 60–63) and the 15-year nonprofit rule. Most employees are participating in a plan. Very few are leading it. FAQ SECTION How does the Centra match reduction (5% to 3%) affect my long-term plan? The 2% reduction compounds over time and can create a meaningful shortfall. In many cases, this requires increasing your personal contribution to stay on track. Should I increase my contribution to offset the reduced employer match? In most cases, yes. The right adjustment depends on your income, timeline, and overall strategy, but failing to adapt typically results in a lower long-term outcome. What is the “15-Year Rule” for Centra employees? Employees with 15+ years of service at a qualifying nonprofit may contribute an additional $3,000 annually (subject to limits). This is separate from standard catch-up contributions. What is the “Super Catch-Up” for ages 60–63? Beginning in 2026, eligible individuals can contribute up to $11,250 in additional catch-up contributions, creating a powerful late-career planning opportunity. Do high earners have to use Roth contributions? Yes. Under current rules, higher-income individuals must make catch-up contributions as Roth, making tax coordination an important part of the strategy. Is a target-date fund enough? Not always. While convenient, it may not reflect your full financial picture, including taxes, outside assets, and income planning needs. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in helping individuals, families, and healthcare professionals align their financial decisions with a disciplined, process-driven strategy. Through a structured approach to financial planning and investment management, Allan helps clients navigate complex retirement systems, tax strategies, and evolving market environments with clarity and control. As the host of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan provides calm, confident leadership for those seeking to move from uncertainty to intentional decision-making.
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INSIDE YOUR RETIREMENT: LIBERTY UNIVERSITY & THOMAS ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
KEY TAKEAWAYS Inflation Re-Acceleration Risk: CPI is forecast to climb from 2.39% toward 2.86%. This isn't runaway inflation, but a re-acceleration risk driven by energy and commodity pressure from Middle East tensions.Labor Market Softening: February saw a loss of 92,000 payrolls. While healthcare strikes distorted the data, genuine weakness is appearing in white-collar sectors (Information and Government). The market is cooling, not collapsing.The Quad Transition: We are entering March Quad 3 (Slowing Growth/Firm Inflation) with a high probability of Q2 Quad 4—historically the most challenging environment for broad equity "beta."The Liberty "Double-Max": Liberty University employees have a unique advantage: access to both 403(b) and 457(b) plans. By "stacking" these separate buckets, those over 50 can defer up to $61,000 annually.The 15-Year Catch-Up: A hidden gem for long-tenured staff at non-profits like Liberty and Centra. After 15 years of service, you may be eligible for an additional $3,000 annual contribution—a provision many never realize exists. EPISODE OVERVIEW The Inflation Forecast vs. The Headlines We move past the reported consensus to look at the real drivers of your cost of living. Allan examines the risk of inflation re-accelerating toward 2.86%, driven by energy pressures. This matters more for your bond duration and cyclicals than it does for the news cycle. Periods of re-acceleration demand disciplined portfolio alignment rather than reactive decision-making. Reading the Labor Market The unemployment rate has moved to 4.4%. Allan pulls back the curtain on the "noise"—including a 37,000-job drop in physicians' offices—to reveal the real softness in white-collar pockets. The labor market is no longer "recession-proof," and creeping long-term unemployment signals a gradual shift in economic momentum. The 2026 Roadmap: Quad 3 to Quad 4 Our model suggests a transition from March Quad 3 (where defensives improve) into a Q2 Quad 4 setup. Historically, this is a difficult environment for broad markets, rewarding selective leadership and high-quality balance sheets. In these periods, a "Wedge" differentiation—focusing on process over promises—is vital. Inside the Container: Liberty University & TRBC For the thousands of employees at Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist Church, the workplace plan is likely their largest asset. We explore the architecture behind these plans: The Liberty Advantage: Moving beyond the 5% match to utilize "stacking" strategies between Transamerica 403(b) and 457(b) accounts.Special Catch-Ups: Breaking down the $11,250 "Super Catch-up" (ages 60–63) and the 15-year service rule for non-profits.TRBC Focus: Understanding how to coordinate your 403(b) with household income and tax strategy to avoid missing out on compounding growth. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations across Lynchburg and Central Virginia. Allan is the host of Purpose Driven Finances, translating complex market cycles into calm, disciplined leadership.
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Inside Your Retirement: Lynchburg City Schools & City of Lynchburg
KEY TAKEAWAYS AI as a Margin Killer: Artificial Intelligence is a deflationary force for software and financial firms. It compresses margins by automating labor and workflows, meaning firms that don't adapt their value proposition will lose pricing power.The End of Generic Advice: If a financial advisor only picks mutual funds and rebalances quarterly, they are being replaced by AI. True value now lies in complex stewardship and "leadership language," not basic portfolio construction.Narrative Rotation (BLOK): Capital is flowing out of old narratives like blockchain and into AI. Thematic ETFs are high-beta and high-volatility; understanding these shifts is critical for risk management.VRS Strategy for Lynchburg: Your pension structure (Plan 1, Plan 2, or Hybrid) determines your retirement floor. For Lynchburg City Schools and City of Lynchburg employees, understanding your multiplier is the first step in successful stewardship.The "Double Max" Opportunity: Local civil servants have a unique advantage. By stacking both 403(b) and 457 plans, 2026 contribution limits allow for up to $61,000 in tax-deferred savings for those over age 50. EPISODE OVERVIEW The AI Inflection Point We begin with a warning: AI is not just a buzzword; it is a margin compression story. For software companies and financial firms, AI reduces labor costs and eliminates workflow layers. Allan discusses why "generic advice" has become a commodity. If your advisor’s value is limited to fund screening or quarterly rebalancing, AI can already do that. Moving from prediction to process is the only way to maintain a fiduciary edge in an automated world. Navigating the VRS: Lynchburg City Schools & City of Lynchburg For civil servants in the City of Lynchburg and Lynchburg City Schools (LCS), retirement is anchored by the Virginia Retirement System (VRS). Allan breaks down the three primary tiers: Plan 1 & 2: Traditional defined-benefit structures with strong multipliers for long-term employees.Hybrid Plan: A shift in responsibility, requiring employees to actively manage the defined-contribution component to ensure a secure future. The 403(b) and 457 Stacking Strategy One of the most underutilized tools for local civil servants is the ability to contribute to both a 403(b) and a 457 plan. Allan outlines the 2026 contribution limits and highlights the unique advantage of the 457 plan: no early withdrawal penalty upon separation from service. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS If AI can automate my portfolio, why do I need a financial advisor? AI is excellent at the math but poor at the meaning. A fiduciary advisor provides the "Leadership Language" and behavioral coaching that AI cannot—helping you navigate life transitions, tax law changes, and the emotional discipline required to stay the course. Can I really contribute to both a 403(b) and a 457 in Lynchburg? Yes. Because these plans fall under different sections of the tax code, they have separate elective deferral limits. For 2026, you can contribute $23,000 to each, totaling $46,000 (or $61,000 if you are 50 or older). What is the "457 Advantage" for City of Lynchburg employees? Unlike a 401(k) or 403(b), the 457 plan does not have a 10% early withdrawal penalty if you leave your employer before age 59½. This makes it an incredibly flexible "bridge" account for those considering an earlier exit from the workforce. PROFESSIONAL BIO Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations in Lynchburg, Bedford, and Central Virginia. Allan is the host of Purpose Driven Finances, where he translates complex market data into disciplined financial leadership. Aired: February 28, 2026
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Inside Your Company Retirement Plan: Getting Advice & the ROTH Option
KEY TAKEAWAYS The Supreme Court IEEPA Ruling: The Court held that the President lacks unilateral authority to impose tariffs under IEEPA. While legally significant, the market impact is "marginal" compared to the primary drivers of your wealth: inflation, liquidity, and economic regime shifts.Containers vs. Strategies: Your 401(k), 403(b), or 457 is merely a tax-advantaged container. Real stewardship is defined by the investment menu, fee transparency, and your personal discipline—not the name of the provider.The RIA Advantage: Traditional broker-dealer plans often harbor hidden payout grids. A fiduciary RIA model removes these layers, utilizing institutional share classes to ensure your interests are the only priority.The Roth Decision Filter: Choosing between Roth and pre-tax is a seasonal decision, not an ideological one. The Roth option is a powerful hedge against future tax uncertainty and a key tool for long-term tax diversification.Behavioral Opportunity Cost: The greatest threat to your retirement isn't market volatility; it's the cost of sitting in cash too long, reacting to headlines, or failing to maintain a disciplined contribution rate. Legal Headlines vs. Market Reality We open with the Supreme Court’s decision regarding the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). While the ruling limits executive authority to impose tariffs, Allan explains why this is a "policy tail-risk" event rather than a structural shift. Portfolio positioning should be driven by economic regimes—inflation trends and growth data—not isolated legal cleanup. Inside the Container: Retirement Plan Architecture For professionals at Centra Health, Liberty University, and BWXT, a workplace retirement plan often functions as a "black box." This episode pulls back the curtain: The Recordkeeper Reality: Why some 403(b) platforms remain more restrictive than 401(k)s and how to build a disciplined portfolio within those constraints.Cost Structure and Plan Design: Identifying the difference between bundled product pricing and transparent, institutional share classes.Real Advice vs. Digital Interfaces: Why a "fancy app" is no substitute for fiduciary guidance on allocation alignment and behavioral coaching. The Roth Decision: A Strategy for Financial Seasons Should you pay taxes now or later? We simplify the Roth vs. pre-tax debate into a Strategic Decision Filter. Early Career: Prioritize the power of tax-free growth.Peak Earning Years: Maximize the math of the upfront deduction.The Hedge: Learn how a "blended" approach provides flexibility for an uncertain tax future. FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS Does the Supreme Court tariff ruling mean I should change my portfolio? No. While it reduces a specific legal uncertainty, your positioning should reflect broader economic conditions—such as the transition from Quad 2 to Quad 3. We lead through math, not headlines. Why does my 403(b) seem to have fewer options than a 401(k)? Non-profit platforms often operate under different regulatory structures. However, a well-constructed menu should still provide the essential "building blocks"—Bonds, TIPS, and Global exposure—required for a disciplined strategy. What is a “hidden cost” in a retirement plan? In many traditional structures, advisor compensation is embedded in product expenses through revenue-sharing. A fiduciary RIA model removes this conflict, using transparent fees to keep your goals in focus. PROFESSIONAL BIO Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations across Lynchburg, Bedford, and Central Virginia. As host of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan translates complex market data into disciplined financial leadership. Author: Allan Malina, Fiduciary Advisor — Servus Capital Management Aired: February 21, 2026
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Your Company Retirement Plan, Picking Investments
CPI printed at 2.39% — inside our projected 2.37%–2.90% range — confirming inflation is persistent but not re-accelerating. Yet markets sold off. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina of Servus Capital Management explains why liquidity and “negative gamma” drove the volatility — and why the shift from Quad 2 to Quad 3 should influence how you structure your 401(k) or 403(b) in Lynchburg and Central Virginia. Key Takeaways • The Math Holds: CPI at 2.39% confirmed disinflation remains intact. • Mechanics Over Macro: The selloff reflected positioning and negative gamma — not economic collapse. • The Regime Shift: On February 11th, our models signaled a move from Quad 2 (accelerating growth) to Quad 3 (slowing growth, rising volatility). • Seasonal Positioning Matters: Retirement allocations should reflect economic seasons. • Three Paths to Clarity: Simplicity (Target-Date), Structure (Three-Bucket), or Discipline (Regime Alignment). Distinguishing Signal from Noise Headlines framed the market move as alarming. The data did not. On January 17th, we projected CPI between 2.37% and 2.90%. The 2.39% print confirmed the broader disinflation trend. Inflation exists — but it is not accelerating. So why the volatility? In a negative-gamma environment, dealers must sell more as prices decline. When JPMorgan issued a hawkish forecast, it collided with thin liquidity and fragile positioning. The result was mechanical selling — a temporary liquidity event, not structural deterioration. More important was the regime change. Quad 2 → Quad 3 Quad 2: Growth accelerating; favors pro-cyclical exposure. Quad 3: Growth slowing; volatility rising; defensive leadership strengthening. For professionals in Lynchburg, Forest, and Bedford, your largest exposure to this shift is likely inside your company retirement plan — 401(k), 403(b), or 457. This episode outlines three ways to align your allocation with the current season: 1. Target-Date Path Maximum simplicity. Broad diversification. Built for averages. 2. Three-Bucket Path Intentional weighting across U.S. equities, international equities, and bonds. 3. Disciplined Regime Path Quarterly alignment based on quantitative data — tilting toward growth or defense as economic conditions evolve. Stewardship is not about prediction. It is about positioning. Frequently Asked Questions If inflation was “on target,” why did my account drop? Markets are influenced by liquidity and leverage. In negative gamma, volatility amplifies. The selloff reflected positioning pressure, not a collapse in fundamentals. What does Quad 3 mean for my 401(k)? Quad 3 historically favors balance sheet strength and defensive posture. That may mean reducing aggressive, high-beta growth exposure and emphasizing stable core allocations. How often should I change my retirement investments? Not frequently. We recommend a deep annual review and quarterly check-ins during regime shifts. Discipline, not reaction. Is the SCM Retirement Plan Update really free? Yes. As a fiduciary firm serving Central Virginia, we provide quarterly retirement plan guidance for local employer plans — including Centra, Liberty, and BWXT — to bring clarity before commitment. Allan Malina is the founder of Servus Capital Management, a fee-only Registered Investment Advisor based in Forest, Virginia, serving Lynchburg, Bedford, and Central Virginia. Through a macro-aware, quantitative framework, he helps families and mission-aligned organizations move beyond market noise toward disciplined, long-term stewardship. Allan hosts Purpose Driven Finances and the weekly radio show on WLNI 105.9. Aired: February 14, 2026
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How to Maximize Your Company Retirement Plan
Is your 401(k) a strategy or just a container? Allan Malina breaks down the 2026 volatility in silver and software before explaining how to move from passive participation to disciplined stewardship of your largest financial asset. KEY TAKEAWAYS Volatility Is Often Technical, Not Fundamental: Recent weakness in silver and software stocks reflects forced deleveraging and AI-fear repricing—not a collapse in long-term value.A 401(k) Is a Tax Container, Not a Strategy: The container itself doesn't determine your future; the intentional allocation inside it does.Default Does Not Mean Optimal: Target-date funds are designed for the "average" person—not necessarily your specific timeline, income needs, or risk tolerance.Margin Creates Stability: Employer matching and disciplined contributions create the financial flexibility needed to endure market cycles without making emotional decisions.Structure Over Headlines: Market noise is temporary. A well-constructed portfolio structure is enduring. EPISODE OVERVIEW Stewardship Over Default: Leading Your Retirement Plan Through Volatility In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina connects two things investors often view in isolation: short-term market turbulence and long-term retirement structure. The first week of February 2026 brought sharp moves in silver and software. Silver volatility was driven by position limits and leverage constraints on the Shanghai Futures Exchange—a liquidity event, not a fundamental breakdown. Similarly, the 23% decline in software (IYG) reflects a "fear-driven repricing" around AI rather than deteriorating earnings. When hedge funds deleverage, they sell what they can, not what they want. The Kitchen Table Reality Most working families are more exposed to market volatility through their company retirement plan than any other account. Yet many don’t realize how their 401(k) or 403(b) is actually positioned. Whether you are a professional in Lynchburg, Forest, or Bedford—working at Centra, Liberty University, BWXT, or Framatome—your investment menu offers institutional building blocks, but it requires intentional construction. This episode challenges you to move beyond the "default" and take ownership of the equity exposure, bond duration, and expense layering inside your largest asset. FAQ Why is my portfolio down if the broader economy appears stable? Markets are driven by liquidity. When institutional investors face margin pressure on short positions, they often sell profitable long positions (like metals or tech) to raise cash. This "indiscriminate pressure" is technical, not a sign of economic failure. Should I change my 401(k) investments during market volatility? Reactionary changes often lock in losses. Instead, evaluate your structure. Are you in a target-date fund by default? Does your equity exposure match your timeline? Strategy should always precede reaction. Are target-date funds bad? Not inherently, but they are built for the "average participant." If you have a pension, business ownership, or specific charitable goals, the "average" may not be optimal for you. What does a fiduciary retirement plan review include? At Servus Capital Management, we provide a no-cost review of your company’s investment menu. The goal is clarity: understanding what you own and ensuring it aligns with your long-term objectives without the noise of broker-dealer incentives. Allan Malina is the founder and fiduciary advisor of Servus Capital Management, a fee-only Registered Investment Advisor located in Forest, Virginia. Serving the Lynchburg and Central Virginia region, Allan specializes in purpose-driven retirement planning and disciplined portfolio construction. He focuses on stewardship over speculation, helping families navigate every financial season with calm, quantitative leadership. Originally Aired: 2/7/2026
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NEW FED CHAIR NOMINATION: THE PERSON, THE POLICY, AND WHAT MARKETS ACTUALLY HEAR
NEW FED CHAIR NOMINATION: THE PERSON, THE POLICY, AND WHAT MARKETS ACTUALLY HEAR Aired January 31, 2026 Leadership at the Federal Reserve is entering a new season. With the nomination of Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell, markets are beginning to recalibrate—not based on politics, but on what this change signals about credibility, discipline, and the future posture of monetary policy. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina moves past the headlines to examine what markets actually hear when leadership changes at the Fed. Rather than predicting outcomes, the discussion focuses on differences in emphasis: a potential shift away from gradualism and expansive balance sheet policy toward institutional discipline, balance sheet restraint, and a narrower mandate centered on price stability. From there, Allan walks through the real-world implications for families and investors—covering how markets are responding across the U.S. dollar, equities, metals, bonds, housing, and even emerging proposals around using retirement funds for homeownership. The goal isn’t certainty. It’s clarity. KEY TAKEAWAYS A Shift in Emphasis, Not a Shock: Markets are interpreting a Warsh-led Fed as more focused on institutional credibility and balance sheet restraint—not abrupt tightening or policy whiplash.The “Orderly” Dollar: A potential 75-basis-point rate cut would likely produce a gradual softening of the U.S. dollar—not a collapse—preserving America’s role as a global yield anchor.Markets Still Discriminate: This is not a blanket “Fed save.” Equity strength continues to favor quality, cash-flow-positive businesses over speculative excess.Housing Reality Check: Mortgage rates are unlikely to fall point-for-point with Fed cuts. Insurance costs, taxes, and supply constraints remain the dominant affordability pressures—especially in Central Virginia.Stewardship vs. Access: Using 401(k) funds for home down payments may expand access, but carries real trade-offs: lost compounding, reduced flexibility, and long-term retirement pressure. FAQ: UNDERSTANDING THE TRANSITION Who is Kevin Warsh, and why does his nomination matter? Kevin Warsh served as a Federal Reserve Governor from 2006–2011, including during the 2008 financial crisis. His public commentary has emphasized institutional discipline, balance sheet restraint, and a narrower policy mandate—signals markets translate into expectations around liquidity and credibility. Will my mortgage rate drop immediately if the Fed cuts rates? Unlikely. Mortgage rates typically lag policy changes and may only decline modestly. In local markets like Lynchburg and Forest, affordability remains more constrained by insurance premiums, property taxes, and limited housing supply than by rates alone. Is using retirement funds for a home down payment a good idea? It can provide short-term access to homeownership, but it’s a high-stakes decision. From a fiduciary perspective, the loss of long-term compounding and increased future retirement pressure must be weighed carefully. ABOUT THE HOST Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven financial planning and quantitative portfolio discipline for families, retirees, and mission-aligned organizations. Through Purpose Driven Finances, Allan helps listeners navigate markets, policy shifts, and life decisions with clarity, discipline, and long-term stewardship.
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FROM MARKETS TO MEMORIES: PLANNING VACATIONS THE SMART WAY
From Markets to Memories: Planning Vacations the Smart Way Purpose Driven Finances | Aired January 24, 2026 Process Over Prediction: Utilizing the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM) allows for disciplined navigation of market pullbacks, focusing on data rather than the alarmist headlines of the day.The Necessity of Financial Margin: Anticipating legislative shifts—such as Virginia’s rising auto insurance and energy costs—is a critical component of stewardship that protects your household’s peace of mind.Travel as Stewardship: Vacation planning is not merely a transaction; it is the management of emotional and financial capital. Strategic guidance ensures these "big moments" are protected from poor timing and rushed decisions.Guidance Over Options: In both markets and memories, the goal is not to have more choices, but to have the right framework to make the best decision for your current season of life. Learn how Allan Malina (SCM) applies quantitative discipline to market volatility and lifestyle planning. Explore the intersection of fiduciary-first investing and intentional travel planning with guest Laura Tyree. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina addresses the intersection of disciplined portfolio management and the emotional weight of family life. The discussion begins with a technical look at a Quad 1 market environment, examining how the S&P 500 and the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM) responded to recent pullbacks. Allan emphasizes that for the disciplined investor, volatility is not a signal for alarm, but a validation of a robust, process-driven approach. The conversation extends into local stewardship, highlighting upcoming Virginia legislative changes that may impact household expenses, including energy costs and auto insurance liability. Finally, Allan is joined by Laura Tyree, owner of Travel Lovers, to discuss why travel requires the same fiduciary-level discipline as a retirement plan. They explore how "Wave Season" hype often leads to rushed choices and why a guided approach to travel protects a family's most valuable asset: their time and memories. How does the QPM model handle market volatility? The Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM) is designed to remove emotion from the equation. By focusing on mathematical indicators rather than market noise, the model provides a measured response to pullbacks, ensuring that long-term stewardship remains the priority during short-term fluctuations. What Virginia legislative changes are affecting household budgets in 2026? Current proposals include increases in auto insurance liability requirements and shifts in energy costs. These changes reinforce the need for financial margin and proactive planning to ensure that rising expenses do not derail a family’s long-term financial peace of mind. Why should I use a travel professional instead of booking online? Just as a fiduciary financial advisor provides a "wedge" against market noise, a travel professional offers advocacy and customization. They help families avoid the pitfalls of one-size-fits-all trips, ensuring that travel plans are aligned with their specific season of life and protected from unforeseen disruptions. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations. As a leader in the Lynchburg community, Allan focuses on helping families navigate the seasons of wealth through quantitative discipline and a commitment to stewardship over speculation.
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Planning the Moments That Shape Your Life
First aired on 1/17/2026 Inflation: Direction Over Headlines — Inflation continues to cool (≈2.7%), moving closer to long-term expectations. In a world of noise, disciplined monitoring remains superior to reactionary shifts.AI as a Tool, Not an Oracle — AI excels at accelerating understanding and organizing data, but it cannot replace human judgment or the responsibility of stewardship in high-stakes decisions.The “Decide First” Rule — Before price shopping for major life moments, the decision must pass a filter: Is the timing intentional or emotional? Clarity should always precede action.Structure Over Sticker Price — For significant commitments—like international travel or home projects—the structure (timing, terms, and flexibility) often dictates the true value more than the headline price. Join Allan Malina on Purpose Driven Finances as he explains why life’s “Big Moments” require a disciplined process over emotional impulse. Explore 2026 inflation realities, the proper role of AI in financial planning, and the "Price Band Method" for better stewardship. Modern finance is often dominated by noise—inflation headlines, AI hype cycles, and speculative narratives. In this briefing, Allan Malina, founder of Servus Capital Management, cuts through the static to refocus listeners on stewardship over speculation. The episode unfolds in two movements. First, Allan provides a measured perspective on current economic signals, including cooling inflation and labor-market shifts. Second, the conversation transitions into a tactical guide for navigating life’s “Big Moments.” Whether you are planning a complex trip or a major renovation, the process remains the same: decide first, shop second. Allan introduces the Price Band Method and shares practical AI prompts to help you analyze costs without losing sight of long-term purpose and risk. FAQ What is the “Price Band Method” for big purchases? Rather than chasing the lowest price (which often hides trade-offs) or the highest price (which often includes "ego premiums"), focus on the middle 60% of the market. Use two to three reputable sources to establish a realistic range. The internet provides data; it does not provide a recommendation. Is there an AI bubble in 2026? Certain segments, such as large-cap tech and AI-adjacent energy, have attracted significant capital. A disciplined investor looks beyond narratives to the underlying infrastructure and cash flows. We emphasize a process-driven approach over market predictions. How should I use AI when planning major expenses? Use AI to compare total costs and trade-offs. It is an excellent tool to accelerate your understanding of a market, but it should not replace the final judgment of a steward. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the Founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. With a career grounded in quantitative discipline, Allan specializes in purpose-driven financial planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations throughout the Lynchburg region. He views money as a tool to serve life and values, helping clients navigate each financial season with calm, measured leadership.
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WHY BIG MOMENTS DESERVE BETTER PLANNING
Why Rushed Life Decisions—Not Markets—Are Your Biggest Financial Risk Is your "New Year, New Me" energy leading to long-term financial stress? In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina breaks down why the first two months of the year are the most dangerous for your bank account—and how to shift from urgent spending to intentional planning. 🔑 Key Takeaways: The Cost of Urgency The "Urgency Trap": Most financial regrets stem from rushed life decisions (housing, weddings, retirement) rather than market volatility.The Q1 Surge: January and February are peak months for high-impact choices that shape your financial trajectory for years.The Wrong Question: Asking "Can we afford it?" is a trap; true wealth planning focuses on flexibility, risk, and time.Market Context: While inflation is cooling and U.S. growth is stabilizing, markets only amplify existing stress—they rarely create it.The Solution: Purpose-driven planning replaces reactive spending with intentional clarity. 🎙️ Episode Overview: Planning for Life’s Big Moments In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, host Allan Malina explores the intersection of emotional milestones and financial health. While the economic backdrop shows cooling inflation and improving U.S. growth, the real "market risk" for most families is happening at the kitchen table. The "January-February" Financial Shadow Early in the year, emotions run high. Decisions regarding home buying, luxury travel, wedding budgets, and retirement timing are often compressed into short timelines. These choices "cast long shadows," quietly reducing your future cash flow and removing options you haven't even considered yet. Moving Beyond "Can We Afford It?" Allan reframes the decision-making process by moving away from binary "yes/no" affordability. Instead, he challenges listeners to evaluate four pillars of a high-impact decision: Flexibility: How does this choice limit my ability to pivot later?Future Options: What doors am I closing by committing these funds?Hidden Risk: What risks am I accepting (knowingly or unknowingly)?Duration: How many years will this choice follow my balance sheet? The Goal: Life is meant for meaningful experiences. By leading with purpose rather than urgency, you ensure today’s joy doesn't become tomorrow’s debt. ❓ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) Why do people make major financial mistakes at the start of the year? Emotional momentum and "New Year" milestones often compress decision timelines. When urgency replaces analysis, people commit to large expenses (like homes or weddings) without calculating the long-term trade-offs. What is the difference between affordability and flexibility? Affordability only looks at whether you have the cash today. Flexibility looks at whether that purchase prevents you from handling a job change, a market downturn, or a new opportunity tomorrow. How do market trends like inflation affect personal financial stress? Markets act as an amplifier. If your financial plan lacks "margin" or flexibility due to rushed personal decisions, a market dip feels like a crisis. If you have a purpose-driven plan, market shifts are merely data points, not disasters. What are the 4 questions to ask before a major purchase? What is the core purpose of this spend?How does this impact my monthly cash flow?Can I adjust this decision if my life circumstances change?What is the "downside" if my timing is wrong? Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations. This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be considered investment, tax, or legal advice. It is not an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy any financial product. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.
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What Actually Mattered in 2025 — And What Didn’t
Signal vs. Noise: Why 2025's recession headlines and inflation panic failed to derail the markets.Regime Shift Lessons: How understanding the "Quad" sequence (4,3,2,1) provided the real roadmap for 2025.The Year-End Clean-up: The critical difference between portfolio rebalancing and true "behavioral resets."Accountability: Why "what we got wrong" is the most important question an advisor can answer on-air. "Prepare for 2026 by reviewing what actually mattered in 2025. Allan Malina discusses macro regime shifts (Quads), market signals, and year-end planning in Lynchburg." Episode Overview In this year-end episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina steps back from the headlines to separate the signals from the noise that shaped markets in 2025. While much of the attention focused on recession fears and AI hype, the forces that truly mattered were liquidity conditions and shifting macro regimes. Allan explains the four economic “Quads” and how moving through those regimes determined market leadership over the course of the year. The conversation then turns practical with a year-end reset for families in Lynchburg and Forest, VA, heading into 2026. Allan walks through key portfolio and planning items that shouldn’t be carried into a new year, including concentration risk, cash positioning, beneficiary designations, and estate basics. The episode closes with a “Hard Questions” segment—an honest look at where assumptions and models fell short in 2025, and how disciplined, rules-based guardrails can help families move forward with greater clarity and resilience in 2026. Frequently Asked Questions: 2025 Year-In-Review Q: What is the difference between "Signal" and "Noise" in investing? A: In 2025, "noise" consisted of sensationalized recession headlines and AI hype that led to performance chasing. The "signal" refers to the actual drivers of market returns: liquidity conditions, price trends, and macro regime changes (Quads). Focusing on signals helps investors avoid fear-based decisions. Q: How did the economic "Quads" affect market leadership in 2025? A: Market leadership in 2025 was determined by the transition through macro regimes. By identifying whether the economy was in Quad 4 (deflationary) or shifting toward Quad 1 (growth), investors could move away from over-concentration and align their portfolios with the sectors historically favored by those specific liquidity conditions. Q: What is included in a year-end financial planning "clean-up"? A: A comprehensive year-end reset includes portfolio rebalancing to manage concentration risk and a planning audit of beneficiary designations, cash flow needs, and estate basics. At Servus Capital Management, we also prioritize a "behavioral reset" to establish rules-based guardrails for the upcoming year. Q: Why should a fiduciary advisor ask "Hard Questions" at year-end? A: Asking hard questions about where models or assumptions failed creates transparency and accountability. For families in Lynchburg and Forest, this honesty is a hallmark of a fiduciary relationship, ensuring that the planning process remains resilient and adapts to real-world outcomes rather than sticking to outdated narratives. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations.
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PREPARING FOR 2026 — WITHOUT PREDICTIONS
Economic Setup: Why "Quad 1" signals a shift toward growth and innovation.Resilience over Predictions: How to stay flexible when market forecasts fail.The "Why" of Money: Aligning your 2026 strategy with family and freedom. "Prepare for 2026 without market predictions. Allan Malina discusses regime-based investing, Quad 1 setups, and purpose-driven financial planning in Forest, VA." Episode Overview In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina explains why successful financial planning for 2026 isn’t about predicting markets, but about positioning thoughtfully through regime-based investing. As early Quad 1 conditions emerge—characterized by cooling inflation and stabilizing growth—Allan breaks down what this historical shift means for portfolio leadership, innovation, and broader market participation in the year ahead. The conversation then pivots from macro trends to the bigger picture: building a purpose-driven financial plan that serves your life, not just your portfolio. Serving families and professionals in Lynchburg and Forest, VA, Allan outlines how clarity around family, freedom, and flexibility creates a "margin of safety." Learn how to design a resilient plan that adapts as markets and life change—without the pitfalls of over-optimization or unnecessary risk. Q: What is regime-based investing? A: Regime-based investing is a strategy that focuses on identifying the current economic environment (growth and inflation trends) rather than trying to predict future market prices. By understanding if we are in a phase of rising growth and falling inflation (Quad 1), investors can position portfolios toward historically successful assets like innovation and growth stocks. Q: Why are market predictions often unreliable for 2026? A: Market predictions fail because they rely on forecasting specific events that are often impacted by "black swan" volatility. Instead, disciplined investors look at macro setups—like the current cooling inflation and stabilizing growth heading into January 2026—to stay flexible and resilient regardless of short-term fluctuations. Q: How does a "purpose-driven" plan handle economic changes? A: A purpose-driven plan builds a "margin of safety" by clarifying what your money is for—such as family experiences or financial freedom. By designing a plan that adapts as life changes, you create peace of mind that isn't dependent on "perfect" market timing. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations.
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PURPOSE-DRIVEN GIVING — BLUE RIDGE PREGNANCY OF LYNCHBURG VA
Air Date: December 20, 2025 Episode: Purpose-Driven Giving — Blue Ridge Pregnancy Center of Lynchburg, VA This episode connects market clarity with community impact. Allan begins with a portfolio and market update, then shifts the focus to purpose-driven giving, highlighting how local organizations strengthen families and provide stability during critical life moments. 📈 Segment One — Portfolio & Market Update Allan breaks down several key developments shaping the current environment: AI & Hyperscale Data Centers: Headlines around uncertainty near a major AI-linked data center project raise questions about infrastructure spending. Allan explains why hyperscale data centers matter to AI development and why isolated headlines don’t necessarily signal a slowdown in long-term investment.CPI Inflation Report: Inflation cooled to 2.74%, below expectations and down meaningfully from prior readings, reinforcing the trend toward easing inflation pressures.Looking Ahead to 2026: Despite narratives suggesting challenges ahead, current data shows lower inflation and stabilizing growth—conditions increasingly consistent with an early Quad 1 environment. The takeaway: markets are transitioning, and disciplined process matters more than reacting to headlines. 🧭 Segment Two — Purpose-Driven Giving: Investing in Our Community Nonprofit Spotlight: Blue Ridge Pregnancy Center — Lynchburg, VA Guests: Jane Oliver (Executive Director) & Adara Wright (Marketing Director) The second half of the episode focuses on purpose-driven giving and the real needs facing women and families in the Lynchburg community. Jane and Adara share their personal purpose, what led them to serve, and the mission of Blue Ridge Pregnancy Center. The discussion explores the challenges families face today, why local support matters, and how the Center provides care, guidance, and practical resources. Allan and the guests also discuss year-end giving opportunities and how listeners can support the Center through donations or involvement before year-end. This conversation highlights how generosity, when aligned with purpose, creates real and lasting impact. 💬 Key Takeaway Clear thinking in markets and purposeful generosity in community both stem from the same discipline: intentional stewardship.
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PURPOSE-DRIVEN GIVING — FIVE18 OF LYNCHBURG, VA
📌 PURPOSE-DRIVEN GIVING — FIVE18 OF LYNCHBURG, VA Air Date: December 13, 2025 Episode: Purpose-Driven Giving — Five18 of Lynchburg, VA This episode brings together markets, purpose, and community impact. Allan begins with a December market and portfolio update as the economy transitions into a more growth-friendly environment, then shifts the conversation to purpose-driven giving, spotlighting Five18 of Lynchburg and its mission to support teens and young adults navigating critical life transitions. 📈 Segment One — Portfolio & Market Update (December 2025) In this segment, Allan covers the key forces shaping markets as we head into 2026: The Federal Reserve cut rates by 0.25%, marking the first cut of the cycle and confirming a transition toward an early Quad 1 environment. The move signals confidence in cooling inflation and stabilizing growth—historically supportive for borrowing, investment, and equity multiples—while reducing the appeal of overly defensive, cash-heavy positioning.The Fed restarted quantitative easing, injecting $40 billion per month through at least April. This liquidity supports financial conditions heading into the new year and creates a classic early-cycle setup where rate cuts and QE tend to favor risk assets, growth sectors, and innovation. Allan cautions that QE can distort short-term price signals, reinforcing the need for discipline using the PVV and Quad frameworks, especially as tax refunds add further liquidity.Oracle announced a $50 billion capital expenditure plan for next year, up from roughly $35 billion. This reflects accelerating demand for AI infrastructure, data centers, and cloud expansion, signaling a multi-year investment cycle across corporate America. The implications are mixed for industrials, semiconductors, data-center REITs, and the broader AI supply chain. The takeaway from Segment One: markets are entering a more growth-friendly regime, but disciplined process matters as liquidity and policy shifts can amplify short-term noise. 🧭 Segment Two — Purpose-Driven Giving: Investing in Our Community & Harvesting a Tax Break Nonprofit Spotlight: Five18 of Lynchburg Guest: Jeff Nitz, CEO December’s theme focuses on purpose-driven giving—using money as a tool for impact, alignment, and lasting value. Allan highlights nonprofits that strengthen families, support young people, and improve the greater Lynchburg community. This week’s featured organization is Five18, which serves families facing instability, crisis, and major life transitions. Allan welcomes Jeff Nitz, CEO of Five18, to discuss the organization’s mission, impact, and the needs being met every day. Five18 fills a critical gap during the transitional years by providing structure, mentorship, life skills, and emotional support—helping families find direction, stability, and hope during seasons when guidance matters most. Jeff shares the personal experiences that shaped his calling to serve and explains what drives his commitment to the families and young people of Lynchburg. The conversation also explores how Five18 meets community needs through financial support, mentorship, skills training, counseling, and consistent adult presence. Allan and Jeff discuss year-end giving opportunities, how donations can be put to work immediately—funding meals, tutors, supplies, and staffing—and how generosity can align purpose with practical tax planning. Listeners are encouraged to support the mission by visiting five18.org. 💬 Key Takeaway When markets turn toward growth and communities face real needs, purpose-driven decisions—both in investing and giving—create clarity, impact, and lasting value. 📞 Connect With Us Call Allan: 434-316-0246 Learn more: www.servuscm.com
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Markets, Purpose & Year-End Decisions
📌 PURPOSE DRIVEN FINANCES — Air Date: December 6, 2025 Episode: When Plans Change — Markets, Purpose & Year-End Decisions When a scheduled guest couldn’t make the show, Allan shifted into an unscripted, practical conversation about markets, families, and end-of-year financial clarity. This episode blends real-world investing insight with purpose-driven reflections every family can use as 2025 winds down. 📈 Segment One — Market & Portfolio Update In this episode, Allan breaks down: Fragile December market conditions and an elevated-volatility setup. Moving into a good 2026.Tech concentration risk around NVIDIA and why diversification matters more than ever.Shifts in bond yields and increasing expectations for 2026 rate cuts.Clear principles for year-end portfolio positioning: quality, diversification, and disciplined process. The message is simple: emotions create chaos; process creates clarity. 🧭 Segment Two — Planning, Purpose & Real-Life Decisions With no guest, Allan turns the conversation toward what really matters: How to approach year-end decisions with clarity instead of stress.Why purpose must anchor your financial strategy.Practical reminders: retirement contributions, charitable giving, and family stewardship.Encouragement for families who want to finish the year strong and begin 2026 with direction. This is an episode about leadership — in your home, your finances, and your future. 💬 Key Takeaway When plans change, purpose steadies the wheel. Clarity and discipline help families move through uncertainty with confidence and direction.
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Proactive Tax Planning: Small Business
Air Date: November 22, 2025 Episode: Proactive Tax Planning: Small Business This week, Allan helps small business owners cut through complexity and make confident tax decisions. With markets shifting into late-year defensive quads and rate uncertainty rising, proactive planning becomes an essential part of protecting cash flow and positioning your business for the new year. 📈 Segment One — Market & Portfolio Update In this episode, Allan breaks down: Monthly Quad Shift: November tracking as Quad 3, December shifting into Quad 4, reinforcing the move toward defensive sectors and cash-flow-focused assets.Interest Rates: Fed Chair’s Thursday remarks pushed back on early rate-cut expectations → yields up, equity futures down.Japan’s Government + BOJ: United stance on yen weakness and inflation risk; “strong urgency” around FX stability adds global volatility.Flows & Gamma: Trend-following CTAs nearing forced-sell levels ($30–$40B potential). Dealer gamma flipping negative → heightened volatility as vol-control funds de-lever. Takeaway: Late-year markets are driven more by positioning and liquidity than narratives. Discipline keeps you prepared, not surprised. 🧭 Segment Two — Planning, Purpose & Real-Life Decisions Remember consult your CPA or accountant for advice that pertains to you. This is just an example and may not apply to you or may change due to tax code, etc. Proactive Tax Planning for Small Business Owners (LLCs Taxed as S-Corps) We answer the practical questions small business owners ask most: What an S-Corp election actually does — your LLC stays the same; you're simply choosing an S-Corp tax treatment.How income is split — salary (subject to payroll tax) vs. distributions (not subject to payroll tax).The core tax benefit — distributions avoid the 15.3% payroll tax; both salary and distributions are taxed at your income-tax bracket.What “reasonable salary” means — BLS benchmarks and Central VA norms often fall in the $36,000–$48,000 range.How owner distributions work — taken from profit, not payroll-taxed.Compliance responsibilities — W-2 payroll, quarterly filings, annual 1120-S return, K-1 for owners, and tight bookkeeping. A clear reminder: structure brings clarity, and clarity gives business owners the freedom to operate with purpose and confidence. 💬 Key Takeaway Proactive tax planning protects cash flow and strengthens your ability to run a business rooted in purpose, not pressure. 📞 Connect With Us Call Allan: 434-316-0246 Learn more: www.servuscm.com
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Risks to Your Retirement: Protecting Your Future from Fraud, Divorce and Death
Risks to Your Retirement: Protecting Your Future from Fraud, Divorce & Death Purpose Driven Finances — July 25, 2025 This episode blends your quarterly Quad outlook with a straight-talk conversation on the three threats that quietly destroy retirement plans when families aren’t prepared. 🎙️ Segment One — Portfolio Update: Quad 3 → Quad 2 Prep The quarter sits in Quad 3 (Stagflation), but indicators show a rotation into Quad 2, where inflation rises and growth softens. What the data is signaling: Industrials +5.1% — historically strong in Quad 2Utilities +0.5% — historically weakInflation pressures remain firmDollar strength now, weakness laterBonds require tactical positioning “Don’t chase narratives. Prepare intentionally. The quad shift tells you where opportunity is hiding.” 🛡️ Segment Two — Risks to Your Retirement: Protecting Your Future from Fraud, Divorce & Death Most families believe retirement risk is all about the market. It’s not. The biggest threats are human, emotional, and structural—and they hit when you least expect it. 1. Fraud — The Silent Retirement Killer The risk: Retirees are the #1 target for fake investments, phishing scams, romance scams, charity fraud, and even financial abuse by relatives. How to protect yourself: Enable fraud alerts & multi-factor authenticationAdd “trusted contacts” to every financial accountSlow down: real investments never require immediate actionUse Virginia’s Fraud Against the Elderly resources 📌 “If it sounds too good to be true — it is.” 2. Divorce — The Late-Life Shock The risk: “Gray divorce” is growing rapidly. One divorce can split retirement assets, disrupt income, and double living expenses. How to protect yourself: Clarify account ownership & titlingConsider prenups/postnups if remarryingUpdate beneficiary designations after divorce 📌 “Divorce is emotional — but the financial impact lasts decades. Planning early preserves your stability.” 3. Death — Planning for the Inevitable The risk: A spouse’s death triggers income loss, probate delays, and financial confusion. How to protect your family: Keep wills, trusts & beneficiaries up to dateMaintain enough life insurance to replace income or pay off debtCreate a survivor income plan (Social Security, pensions, annuities) 📌 “Love your spouse enough to plan ahead.” ✔️ Segment Three — Simple Action Plan Three steps every retiree (and their adult children) should take today: Audit accounts for fraud protectionAdd trusted contacts, enable alerts.Update legal documents & beneficiariesEspecially after divorce, remarriage, or major life changes.Create a survivor income planDocument what happens to each income source when one spouse passes. 🎯 Closing Message “Retirement isn’t just about saving enough — it’s about protecting what you’ve built from life’s curveballs.” For a personalized review of your retirement protection plan: 📞 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com Next Week: How inflation and healthcare costs quietly erode retirement—and how to guard against both.
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Risk Management in Retirement
Stagflation, Quad Shifts & Senior Risk Management Aired July 19, 2025 This week, Allan updates listeners on the economic transition ahead—and continues July’s series on Risk Management, focusing specifically on what seniors face in today’s environment. 🎙️ Segment One — Portfolio Update: Stagflation → Quad 2 The quarter remains in Quad 3 (Stagflation), but models show a transition toward Quad 2, where inflation accelerates and growth lags. Allan explains what that shift means for investors: Key Signals to Watch 📈 Inflation picking up (the key driver)📊 Inflation-sensitive assets rising: commodities, metals, oil💵 U.S. dollar strong short-term, weaker long-term🧾 Tariff letters? Mostly noise—no real impact yet🔄 Portfolio positioning: preparing for inflation, adjusting bond exposure, reassessing dollar-based assets The message is simple: “Prepare your portfolio for an inflationary push—not a collapse.” 🛡️ Segment Two — Risk Management for Seniors Seniors face the same risks as any family, but age adds new layers: fixed income, higher healthcare costs, physical vulnerability, and emotional risks like isolation. Allan reframes risk management as: “Protecting independence, preserving dignity, and preventing financial harm.” 🔹 1. Health & Long-Term Care Risk Risks: chronic illness, surgeries, long-term care needs Tools: Annual Medicare review (especially Part D)Long-term care or hybrid policiesAdvanced directives & living wills 🔹 2. Financial & Fraud Protection Seniors are the #1 target for scammers. Tools: Trusted contacts on accountsCredit monitoring & fraud alertsFamily or advisor oversightAvoiding pressure tactics “If it’s rushed or sounds too good to be true, it is.” 🔹 3. Social & Emotional Risk (Isolation) Isolation increases exploitation and cognitive decline. Tools: Church groups, senior centers, community programsTechnology for connectionRegular family/neighbor check-ins 🔹 4. Fear & Decision Paralysis Doing nothing can be the biggest risk. Tools: Break decisions into small stepsUse professionals (CFP, elder-law attorneys)Have family conversations early, not during crisis 🧭 Virginia Resources Virginia provides strong local support through Area Agencies on Aging, including: Transportation assistanceWellness checksFraud-prevention workshopsPlus community programs and SeniorNavigator.org for statewide help. ✔️ Action Plan for Seniors & Families Review wills, POA, and advanced directivesAdd fraud protections to financial accountsReevaluate Medicare, supplements, and LTC insuranceBuild a consistent social routineTalk openly with trusted family or advisors 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com
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Real-World Family Risk Management
Stagflation, Rising Inflation & Real-World Family Risk Management Aired July 12, 2025 In this episode, Allan breaks down the next phase of the economic cycle and continues July’s deep dive into Risk Management for Families—what it is, why it matters, and how to protect your household from the threats most people underestimate. Segment One — Portfolio Update: Stagflation → Quad 2 (But With a Warning) The quarter remains in Quad 3 (Stagflation)—slow growth, rising inflation. But models show a shift toward Quad 2, where inflation accelerates and growth stays “meh.” Allan explains what’s driving this transition and what investors should prepare for. Market Signals to Watch Interest rate changes as the Fed responds to sticky inflationInflation rising, fueled by energy, commodities, and government policyInflationary assets climbing sharply — gold, oil, industrial metalsThe U.S. dollar strong for now, but expected to weaken aheadDollar-denominated assets gaining strength Tariff Panic? New tariff letters caused a stir—but Allan calls them what they are: “A nothing burger.” No meaningful economic impact yet, but worth monitoring as policy evolves. Segment Two — July Theme: Risk Management for Families This week focuses on household-level risk, the everyday vulnerabilities families rarely plan for—until it’s too late. 1. Income Risk Job loss, disability, or reliance on a single income. Tip: 3–6 month emergency fund + disability insurance. 2. Health Risk High deductibles, medical emergencies, aging parents. Tip: Understand your health insurance options, including ACA, employer plans, and HSAs. 3. Life & Mortality Risk What happens if a provider passes unexpectedly? Tip: Affordable term life insurance—get it while young and healthy. 4. Property & Liability Risk Floods, fires, auto accidents, lawsuits. Tip: Add an umbrella policy—low cost, major protection. 5. Legal & Financial Risk Divorce, lawsuits, identity theft. Tip: Create a will, POA, and strengthen cybersecurity practices. Why Families Misjudge Risk Allan explains the psychological traps that lead families to underprepare: • Optimism Bias “It won’t happen to us.” • Status Quo Bias “We’ve always done it this way.” • Underestimating Long-Term Risks Inflation and healthcare costs in retirement compound faster than expected. Simple Steps Families Can Take This Week List your top 5 household risksReview all insurance policies annuallyBuild or replenish your emergency fundPut basic estate documents in placeHave an honest conversation with your spouse or partner Key Principle “Risk management isn’t about fear. It’s about responsibility, clarity, and peace of mind.” 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com 🎧 Teaser for Next Week: “What happens when your retirement plan meets a market crash?”
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Stagflation, New Legislation and the Truth About Risk
Stagflation, New Legislation & the Truth About Risk Aired July 5, 2025 In this episode, Allan pulls listeners into the heart of what’s changing—both in the markets and in Washington—and sets the stage for July’s month-long deep-dive on Risk Management. If you want to understand where the economy is heading and how to protect yourself from your own blind spots, this is the one to hear. Segment One — Portfolio Update: Quad Shifts & Congressional Shockwaves The economic landscape is shifting again. July sits in Quad 4, but August moves into Quad 2, and September into Quad 3—all combining into a quarterly picture of Stagflation. Allan reminds listeners that: “The quarter matters more than any single month.” Investors should be cautious, disciplined, and process-driven—not swayed by headlines or hope. A New Bill Hits Congress A major piece of legislation is stirring up noise in Washington. How do you know something might contain good policy? “When the loudest complaints come from the same corners of the media and political class, you know it’s worth reading closely.” Allan gives a quick review of the analysis (from the printout referenced on-air) and prepares listeners for what the reforms could mean for inflation, markets, and household finances. Segment Two — July Theme: Understanding Risk Management This month, Allan transitions listeners into a four-week series on Risk Management—one of the most misunderstood pillars of personal finance. What Is Risk Management? It’s not fear-based living. It’s disciplined stewardship: Identifying threatsReducing avoidable risksPositioning assets to survive and thriveMaking decisions based on math and truth, not emotions Why You Need a Risk Framework Most financial mistakes don’t come from markets—they come from human behavior. Allan breaks down the four most common misjudgments: 1. Optimism Bias We assume “bad outcomes happen to other people.” This is why people under-insure, delay planning, or stay overexposed in markets. 2. Emotional Decisions When fear or excitement replaces process, portfolios drift off course. 3. Peer Influence Friends, coworkers, and social media often drive decisions more than data—usually to the investor’s detriment. 4. Overconfidence Believing “I’ll figure it out when I need to” is one of the quickest paths toward costly mistakes. Closing Message — Risk Isn’t the Enemy. Blindness Is. Allan challenges listeners to confront the assumptions that quietly shape their decisions. With clearer awareness and a disciplined investment process, risk becomes something you can manage—not something that manages you. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com
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Inflation, the Fed and Retirement Clarity for Purpose-Driven Families
Inflation, the Fed & Retirement Clarity for Purpose-Driven Families Aired March 22, 2024 This episode tackles two areas where most retirees and near-retirees feel the greatest pressure: inflation uncertainty and the fear of running out of money. Allan blends economic insight with practical planning—from managing retirement income to preserving purpose and legacy. Segment One — Portfolio Management: Reading the Fed & Repositioning for Inflation The Federal Reserve held rates steady this week and maintained its projection for three cuts later in the year. The headline narrative says inflation is easing toward 2%. The data tells a different story. What the Fed Said vs. What’s Actually Happening CPI/PCE near 2.5%, but long-term pressures remainReal-world inflation likely sits in the low–mid 3% range through 2024–2025Government stimulus continues to push asset prices higherWage growth isn’t keeping up—making cost-of-living pressure feel worse Portfolio Implications Inflation that remains higher for longer means investors should focus on assets that benefit from rising prices, such as: Oil (up 20% since mid-Dec 2023)GoldCommodities like cocoa (up 90% in 3 months)Selective growth sectors, while slowly rotating away from stretched tech leadership Allan’s key message: “Inflation changes the winners and the losers. Stay invested, but shift intentionally.” Segment Two — Financial Planning: Retirees & the Fear of Running Out This segment zeroes in on retirees who want to enjoy their life, support their family, and leave a meaningful legacy—without letting fear run their decisions. Congratulations First You’ve done the hard things: SavedWorked consistentlyCarried the load for your familyPrepared for your future Common Fears Allan Sees Healthcare needs and burden on familyOutliving retirement savingsWanting more income, not just “enough”Leaving a purposeful legacy without jeopardizing security Fear Cannot Lead Your Retirement Allan reminds listeners of a principle often repeated but rarely applied: “Life is a vapor—don’t let fear dictate what you do with the time you have.” Fear creates paralysis, not stewardship. Purpose requires movement, clarity, and process. Practical Guidance for Retirees 1. Layer Your Savings Tier 1: Cash + cash-like investmentsTier 2: 3–5 year moneyTier 3: Long-term growth bucket 2. Build a Balanced Portfolio Moderate mix of stocks and bondsAvoid extremes: all income or all growthProtect against chasing yieldBase risk levels on both comfort and need 3. Use a Process — Not Guesswork A good retirement plan requires: Clear risk targetsDefined buy/sell rulesAsset-focused structureA system that moves you out of danger, not just into opportunity Allan invites listeners to: “Review your plan, review your documents, and make sure your future and your legacy reflect the life you want to live.” 📞 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com
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Fear, Family and Financial Clarity for 30-Somethings
Fear, Family & Financial Clarity for 30-Somethings: Building a Purpose-Driven Plan While Life Is Moving Fast Aired March 16, 2024 This episode speaks directly to 30-somethings — young families, rising professionals, and individuals trying to do the right things financially while life gets more complicated. Allan blends empathy, practical strategy, and a purpose-driven perspective to help listeners move from fear to clarity. Segment One — Portfolio Management: When You’re Young, Busy, and Worried About Everything Allan begins where few financial conversations do — with encouragement: Congratulations. For saving.For working hard.For building a future for your family.You’ve sacrificed a lot to get where you are. But with rising costs, student loans, kids’ education, aging parents, and the pressure to “keep up,” worry becomes constant. Fear shows up — but it shouldn’t lead your decisions. Allan uses Zach Williams’ song “Fear Is a Liar” to illustrate how the voices in your head often say: “You’re not good enough.”“You’ll never be enough.”“You’ll never have enough.” He compares financial fear to swimming near Cherry Grove Pier at North Myrtle Beach — where sharks are caught off the pier. If fear governed every move, you would never set foot in the water…or build a sandcastle. Financial fear works the same way: If you stay out of the market completely, you miss opportunities that your future self will need. So what should a 30-something do when juggling limited savings, kids’ expenses, and career growth? Practical Guidance From Allan: For Retirement: Use target-date funds early on.Take the company match — always.Increase contributions gradually. For Kids: Mix conservative and growth options (even simple stock choices like McDonald’s for teaching long-term investing). For Personal Savings: Use a clear three-bucket structure: Cash & cash-like for immediate needs3–5 year bucket for medium-term goalsLonger-term bucket (5+ years) for growth For Investments Overall: Work with someone who has: A defined buy & sell disciplineA process for adjusting riskA system that is asset-agnostic, not emotionally attached to any stockA plan to exit when markets turn down And if you’re unsure? Test the process with a portion of your portfolio first. Segment Two — Financial Planning: When You’re 30 and Unsure What to Do Young families often feel overwhelmed because life is expanding faster than their budget: Kids’ educationVacations you want to createWhen to upsize a homeHow to support aging parentsWhat future stability looks like Allan breaks it down into a process: Step 1 — Get Clear on Where You Want Your Family to Go Define the life you want. Not someone else’s. Step 2 — Meet with a Fiduciary Who Listens First Discuss fears honestlyEstablish goalsIdentify the return you actually need to live out your purposeBuild a plan that adjusts over time Step 3 — Implement it (the hardest part for most people) Start smallAutomate what you canLet the process work Allan reminds listeners: “I’m fee-only. I don’t charge for financial planning. This isn’t a hard sell. My job is to serve you — not pressure you.” Purpose-Driven Insight Young families don’t need perfection — they need a process. Fear will always whisper; discipline creates direction. Your financial plan should support the life you’re building, not the life you’re afraid of. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 www.servuscm.com
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Fear, Discipline and The Bell Curve of Risk: How Purpose-Driven Investors Move Forward With Confidence
Fear, Discipline & The Bell Curve of Risk: How Purpose-Driven Investors Move Forward With Confidence Aired March 8, 2024 This episode speaks directly to the men and women who have worked hard, sacrificed, saved diligently, and still feel uneasy about the future. Allan opens with what most financial voices overlook: affirmation — and then addresses the real weight people carry in today’s environment. Segment One — Fear is Real, But It Shouldn’t Lead Your Financial Life Allan begins by honoring listeners: Congratulations for saving.Congratulations for working hard.Congratulations for sacrificing to build what you have. But with the political climate, rising costs, government spending, and cultural imbalance, it’s understandable to feel nervous. The problem? Fear leads people into financial decisions that feel safe but sabotage their long-term goals. Allan reframes fear with a real-world example: hiking Peaks of Otter. You don’t eliminate risk — you manage it. Boots, layers, water, awareness. You avoid the places snakes hide. You don’t stay home out of fear. Money works the same way. The Cost of Hiding in “Safety” A listener with $500,000 at age 50 who hides in a money market out of fear faces a new fear: “Will I have enough?” So Allan breaks down options that offer both safety and growth potential: T-Bills (5–5.38%)Long-term Treasuries (opportunity emerging)A balanced allocation like 30/70, historically one of the strongest risk/reward profiles But the differentiator is SCM’s process: A data-driven system that gets you out when weakness shows up. It identifies where growth & inflation are goingIt adjusts positioning accordinglyIt keeps clients asset-agnostic, not emotionally attached to any stock And for those hesitant? Test the process with a portion of your portfolio. Clients do it all the time — and increase over time as trust builds. Segment Two — The Bell Curve of Risk: Conservative Feelings Don’t Equal Conservative Planning Many listeners say: “I’m 50. I’m scared. So I’m very conservative with my investments.” Allan explains the mistake hidden inside that sentence: Investment conservatism is not the same as retirement-plan conservatism. Retirement risk isn’t linear — it’s a bell curve: The center = the perfect balance of comfort, return needs, and volatility you can emotionally handleThe left tail = too little risk → running out of moneyThe right tail = too much risk → concentration, unnecessary volatility, chasing yield And the numbers prove the danger of being too conservative: $500,000 growing at 2% for 25 years → $820,303$500,000 at 5% for 25 years → $1,693,177That’s almost double — without taking extreme risk. The Process to Get It Right Call Allan Share your fearsClarify your goalsIdentify the return you actually need Create a strategy and implement it over timeDo it without pressure SCM is fiduciary, fee-onlyFinancial planning is includedNo pushiness — just guidance Allan closes with a reminder: “Fear will always show up. But you get to choose whether it leads your financial life — or informs it.” 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com Clarity instead of fear. Process instead of emotion. Purpose instead of pressure.
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Your Future Needs a Process — Not Predictions: How Purpose-Driven Investors Prepare for What’s Next
Your Future Needs a Process — Not Predictions: How Purpose-Driven Investors Prepare for What’s Next Aired March 1, 2024 This episode of Purpose Driven Finances centers on a simple but transformative idea: your goals are only reachable if your investments follow a disciplined, repeatable process — not a collection of guesses, headlines, or hot stocks. Allan begins by reminding listeners why financial planning and portfolio management must always serve a larger purpose: Retiring to the beachTaking your spouse on a 25th-anniversary trip to the Amalfi CoastPaying for your grandchildren’s collegePurpose creates clarity. Process creates the path. Segment One — Portfolio Management: Why Process Beats Prediction 2023 was a reminder of how markets behave when investors chase narratives instead of discipline. The “Magnificent 7” lifted U.S. markets, yet only 38% of large-cap active managers beat their index. SCM underperformed the index — not due to lack of skill, but because the government-spending surge distorted signals, and now the process has been refined to address exactly that. 2024 is a phase-transition year: China, Europe, and global economies are beginning to turnInflation remains uncertainLawsuits against Apple, Google, Meta could reshape leadershipMomentum in the MAG 7 continues — but concentration risk is growing Allan explains why SCM stays asset-agnostic — never married to a stock, always married to the process. Their system evaluates: Where growth and inflation are goingHow price confirms or contradicts that directionWhich assets benefit, which weaken, and how quickly leadership rotates This means asking practical questions: If China turns up, how do oil, shipping, agricultural and metal commodities respond?If inflation stays elevated, what protects your purchasing power?If the MAG 7 loses leadership, what’s next — and will you participate? This is why process matters: “It keeps you aligned with where you want to go — not where the market tries to drag you.” And clients who want proof can test SCM’s approach by moving a portion of their portfolio, seeing the results firsthand, and adding more as confidence grows. Segment Two — The Risk You Take Should Match the Life You Want When determining the right level of investment risk, Allan highlights what NOT to do: Don’t compare yourself to coworkers, relatives, celebrities, or friendsDon’t respond to fear-based marketing (gold ads, collapse narratives)Don’t fall for get-rich-quick investmentsDon’t over-concentrateDon’t create a “retirement plan” that’s only 3–12 months deep Instead, follow a purpose-driven, data-supported process: ✔ Do a real financial plan SCM’s planning process is conversational, simple, and designed to give you direct answers — no jargon, no overwhelm. ✔ Determine the return you actually need Not the return you hope for. Not the return your neighbor claims. The return that gets you to your destination. ✔ Apply the Pillow Test How much loss would keep you up at night?Are you comfortable with the process selecting your investments?Does the strategy match your emotional tolerance and your long-term goals? Risk is personal — and purpose is the anchor that keeps it stable. Closing Thought — Process Turns Uncertainty Into Opportunity You don’t need perfect predictions. You need a process aligned with your purpose, built on clarity, discipline, stewardship, and long-term thinking. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com “Let’s talk through the simple process that gets you where you want to go — with confidence, not fear.”
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Changing Quads and What “Readiness” Really Means for Your Retirement!
Changing Quads, Global Shifts & What “Readiness” Really Means for Your Retirement As economic conditions shift and global trade reshuffles, Allan Malina helps investors understand how to position their portfolios — and how to measure true retirement readiness in a world full of opinions, noise, and misconceptions. 📅 Aired May 10, 2025 In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan opens with major movement in the portfolio landscape: economic Quads are changing again, signaling a shift toward equities. He breaks down how tariffs, employment trends, cheap-goods imports, and global supply chains (particularly the move away from China toward Taiwan and Vietnam) are reshaping corporate profits, compensation, and investment opportunity — including renewed attention on precious metals and the companies that mine them. Then Allan turns to the core questions on investors’ minds this week: Is sustainable investing still the future? How do I actually know if I’m ready to retire? His answers are direct, practical, and free from industry jargon — giving listeners clarity in a world where financial advice often creates confusion. Segment One — Portfolio Update: Tariffs, Global Supply Chains & Quad Shifts Allan explains how changing Quads are altering asset leadership, and why the models are pointing toward reallocating into stocks. He examines the economic forces reshaping markets: Tariffs and their effect on prices, profits, and supply chainsCorporate profits rising (+6%) while employee compensation falls (-6%)The U.S. shift toward cheap goods imported from Taiwan and Vietnam rather than ChinaThe renewed strength in precious metals — and why producers may benefit more than the metals themselves Key takeaway: “The global economy is changing teams. The question isn’t whether you like the new rules — it’s whether your portfolio is positioned for them.” Segment Two — The Real Questions Investors Are Asking 1. What is the future of sustainable investing? Allan cuts through the noise and politics surrounding ESG by focusing on what truly matters: Long-term risk managementCash-flow strengthGovernance and transparencyReal, measurable sustainability — not marketing labels Sustainable investing is not dead — it’s evolving into something more accountable and less ideological. 2. How do I determine if I’m financially ready to retire? Retirement readiness is not a feeling — it’s a calculation backed by clarity and purpose. Allan explains two simple tools listeners can use today: The Rule of 72 How long it takes your money to double based on your rate of return — useful for long-term growth planning. The 5% Rule A practical spending benchmark: if you can sustainably withdraw no more than 5% of your portfolio annually (adjusted for taxes, inflation, and cash-flow needs), you are much closer to readiness. But the deeper message is this: “Numbers matter. But purpose matters more. Know what retirement means to you — not what it means to everyone else.” Closing Perspective — Clarity Creates Confidence Markets evolve. Policies shift. Global trade realigns. But disciplined strategy and purpose-driven planning give you the confidence to move through uncertainty with direction rather than fear. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to learn how portfolio shifts and personal planning decisions work together to build a retirement rooted in clarity, stability, and purpose.
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Changing Quads, Retirement Questions and Finding Your Real Number
Changing Quads, Retirement Questions & Finding Your Real Number As markets shift and retirement questions rise to the surface, Allan Malina helps listeners cut through noise, fear, and comparison — and gives a clear path toward confident long-term planning. 📅 Aired May 3, 2025 In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan opens with the portfolio: economic Quads are changing, leadership is shifting, and the data is pointing toward reallocating back into equities as markets push toward all-time highs. The message is simple — stay disciplined, not emotional, and let the process guide the adjustments. Allan then turns to the biggest retirement questions people are asking right now: What is my number? When can I retire? Am I making the right decisions? When should I take Social Security? What income option should I choose for my pension or annuity? He addresses each one with clarity and purpose, helping listeners focus not on comparison — but on the life they want to build. Segment One — Portfolio Update: Changing Quads, Changing Positioning Economic conditions are shifting again, and with them, optimal portfolio exposures. Allan breaks down: Changing Quads and what that means for risk and opportunityHow investment leadership changes as the Quad shiftsWhy SCM is reallocating toward stocks as conditions strengthenHow ATH (all-time high) environments reward discipline, not predictions He reminds listeners that the process — not emotions — determines the right allocation. “Markets change. Your process shouldn’t.” Segment Two — Your Real Retirement Questions (and Real Answers) 1. What is my number? Retirement isn’t a guess — it’s math, behavior, and clarity. Allan explains how to calculate your real number based on spending, taxes, inflation, and lifestyle design. 2. When can I retire? The right time is when your plan, your cash flow, and your purpose align — not when someone else retires or when a chart says you should. 3. Don’t compare yourself to others Comparison destroys confidence. Your goals, your values, and your resources are unique. Success is personal, not universal. 4. What do I want? This is the real question. Without clarity, retirement becomes a fear-based decision. Allan encourages listeners to be specific about goals — not vague or generic. 5. When should I take Social Security? The answer depends on health, life expectancy, cash flow needs, taxes, and marital structure — not on blanket advice or rules of thumb. 6. Am I focusing on the right financial decisions? Allan helps listeners eliminate distractions and focus on what actually moves the needle: spending, savings rate, investment discipline, and risk management. 7. Pension or annuity decisions Choosing between single life, joint life, or period-certain options requires understanding your plan, your spouse, longevity risk, and your total financial picture. One choice doesn’t fit everyone. Closing Perspective — Purpose Brings Clarity Allan closes by reminding listeners that retirement is not a date or a dollar amount — it’s a purpose-driven life decision. The more clarity you have, the more confidence you gain. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to learn how changing markets and changing goals come together in a disciplined, purpose-driven retirement plan.
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Green Shoots, Real Questions and How to Navigate What’s Next
Green Shoots, Real Questions & How to Navigate What’s Next Short-term optimism is appearing in the markets — but how do you separate a temporary breather from a real trend? And what questions should investors be asking right now? Allan Malina breaks it all down with a disciplined, purpose-driven approach. 📅 Aired April 26, 2025 In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan opens with an update on the portfolio: both Dynamic Asset Allocation (DAA) and the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM) are showing early signs of strength — temporary “green shoots.” But how long will they last? What signals matter? And how do you stay confident without getting caught in the hype? Allan then shifts to the three biggest questions clients are asking right now: How will U.S. economic policies affect my investments?Is my portfolio truly diversified?How should I navigate market volatility with confidence? His message is clear: your success doesn’t come from predicting the future — it comes from having a dependable, repeatable investment process that tells you when to buy, when to sell, and when to hold. A process grounded in data, not narratives. Discipline, not emotion. Segment One — Portfolio Update: Temporary “Green Shoots,” Not a Green Light Allan explains that DAA and QPM are showing early improvements, but temporary strength is not the same as a long-term trend. Markets may be taking a breather, but investors should avoid assuming momentum will continue without confirmation. Key takeaway: “Optimism is welcome. Blind optimism is expensive. Follow the process.” Segment Two — The Real Questions Investors Must Ask 1. How will U.S. economic policies affect my investments? Policies influence markets — but investors get misled when they react to headlines instead of following a structured framework. Allan emphasizes the importance of a buy/sell/hold process that adapts with data. 2. Is my investment portfolio truly diversified? Many investors own multiple positions but still lack true diversification — especially across inflation, interest rates, and economic regimes. Allan explains why diversification isn’t about quantity; it’s about exposure that behaves differently under stress. 3. How should I navigate market volatility? You don’t manage volatility by guessing what happens next. You manage it with a defined system, a measured allocation approach, and the emotional discipline to avoid reacting to noise. Closing Perspective — Purpose Outweighs Uncertainty Markets shift. Policies change. Narratives confuse. But a disciplined strategy — and a clear financial plan — brings confidence in any environment. Allan encourages listeners to schedule a review and align their investments with their long-term purpose. 📞 Contact Allan Malina: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to understand what green shoots mean, what they don’t mean, and how a repeatable process helps you navigate whatever comes next.
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Looking Over the Horizon: How to Face Market Fear and Pre-Plan What Matters Most
Looking Over the Horizon: How to Face Market Fear & Pre-Plan What Matters Most Learn how to steady your finances in uncertain markets — and why pre-planning end-of-life services protects your family with clarity, dignity, and stewardship. 📅 Aired April 27, 2024 In this week’s Purpose Driven Finances, Allan continues the “Looking Over the Horizon” series, helping listeners confront fear in both investing and life planning. The first half of the show focuses on portfolio management — where investors often make emotional decisions at the worst possible time. The second half welcomes Paul Whitten of Whitten Funeral Homes to discuss why pre-planning end-of-life services is an act of clarity, responsibility, and love. Segment One — Portfolio Management: How to Navigate Fear with Discipline Allan opens with a reminder: fear is normal, but unaddressed fear becomes the most expensive decision in your financial life. He walks through SCM’s Dynamic Asset Allocation approach and how it adapts to conditions across: Bonds: essential stability, but shifting with rate expectationsStocks: especially U.S. equities transitioning from MAG 7 dominance to MAG 3Inflation-sensitive assets: critical as inflation, jobs, and taxes remain areas of concern He then connects this with the QPM (Quantitative Portfolio Model) — showing how disciplined signals help protect clients from headlines, narratives, and emotional whiplash. Key takeaway: “You don’t overcome fear by reacting. You overcome it by having a process that outlasts your emotions.” Segment Two — Estate Planning & Pre-Planning Services with Paul Whitten Allan welcomes Paul Whitten of Whitten Funeral Homes (Lynchburg, VA) to discuss one of the most avoided — but most important — aspects of financial planning: pre-planning final arrangements. Paul explains what he sees every day — families overwhelmed because decisions weren’t made ahead of time, costs weren’t understood, and wishes weren’t communicated. Together, they walk through: The greatest needs families overlookWhy pre-planning relieves emotional and financial pressureWhether to plan now or waitGuidance on documenting preferences, selecting services, and coordinating with estate plans Paul also shares how families can contact Whitten Funeral Homes and what the first steps look like when beginning the process. Whitten Funeral Home Website Closing Perspective — Stewardship in Every Season Whether the conversation is about volatile markets or end-of-life planning, Allan reinforces a consistent theme: clarity beats avoidance, stewardship beats fear, and preparation always protects the people you love. 📞 For consultations: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to learn how disciplined investing and thoughtful pre-planning help you build confidence over your finances — and peace for the people who depend on you.
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Looking Over the Horizon: Managing Fear, Building Strategy and Getting Estate Planning Right
Looking Over the Horizon: Managing Fear, Building Strategy & Getting Estate Planning Right Learn how to face market fear with confidence and how the right estate-planning structure protects your family, preserves your values, and keeps your financial life aligned with long-term purpose. 📅 Aired April 20, 2024 In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan opens with a forward-looking discussion on portfolio management—specifically how Dynamic Asset Allocation and the Quantitative Portfolio Model respond to fear, volatility, and shifting market signals. He then welcomes attorney Rich Gilman (“The Law Dog”) of Day Law Group in Forest, Virginia to break down what families get wrong in estate planning, why a simple will isn’t enough for most households, and the essential steps to protect assets, avoid probate, and maintain control. Day Law Group Website Segment One — Portfolio Management: Seeing Beyond the Fear Allan begins by acknowledging what every investor feels but rarely says out loud: fear is a normal part of markets, but it’s a terrible investment strategy. He explains how SCM’s Dynamic Asset Allocation framework navigates changing market conditions across bonds, stocks, and inflation-sensitive assets—and why no single asset class earns the right to dominate your portfolio forever. The conversation then shifts to the Quantitative Portfolio Model (QPM), which is already signaling strain in certain areas: U.S. stocks remain selectiveBonds continue to play a stabilizing roleAnd tech… is getting wrecked Instead of reacting emotionally, Allan shows how disciplined models, data, and repeatable processes outperform headline-driven decisions. “Fear is real. But strategy is stronger.” Segment Two — Estate Planning with Rich Gilman (“The Law Dog”) In the second half of the show, Allan brings on estate-planning attorney Rich Gilman to tackle one of the most misunderstood areas of personal finance. Rich explains what he sees every day: families with assets, values, and people they love—but no structure to protect them. Together, they walk through the essentials: The greatest needs families overlookWhy a simple will often isn’t enoughWhen a Revocable Living Trust (RLT) makes more senseHow to keep your estate private, efficient, and aligned with your intentionsPractical suggestions for getting started, avoiding probate, and safeguarding decision-making during incapacity Rich also shares how listeners can contact him and what first steps to take if they’ve delayed planning. Closing Perspective — Purpose, Not Panic Whether the topic is markets or estate planning, Allan stresses that your financial decisions must be driven by purpose, not fear. Markets fluctuate. Life happens. Strategies evolve. But clarity, stewardship, and preparation always win. 📞 For consultations: 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to learn how disciplined investing and thoughtful estate planning help you stay grounded, confident, and prepared—no matter what’s over the horizon.
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Quad 1 Investing Strategy and Virginia Energy Policy: Financial Planning for 2026
Explore how the U.S. economy is transitioning from Quad 4 to Quad 1 — and what new Virginia vehicle, energy, and emissions policies mean for families, investors, and business owners. Allan Malina connects macroeconomic conditions with real-world financial decisions in this forward-looking episode. 📅 Aired November 15, 2025 In this week’s Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina breaks down the critical economic transition from Quad 4 to Quad 1 and provides a forward-looking investment strategy for 2026. Learn what this shift means for equities, inflation trends, and your personal portfolio. Allan then connects this to Virginia's evolving energy and vehicle policies—including EV mandates and the financial impact of RGGI re-entry—and how families and business owners must prepare. Segment One — Quad 4 to Quad 1: Macroeconomic Transition & Investment Strategy The economy in late 2025 sits in Quad 4 (slowing growth/slowing inflation). But early 2026 is shaping up as a move toward Quad 1, historically the strongest environment for equities, tech, and industrials. Allan outlines the portfolio positioning and rotation strategy: remain liquid now, selectively build growth exposure, and shorten duration as the yield curve steepens. He provides specific planning guidance for retirees (real-yield Treasuries) and business owners (locking in financing). Segment Two — Virginia Vehicle, Energy & Emissions Policies: Impact on Household Finance Virginia’s 2035 electric-vehicle requirement will phase out new gasoline car sales, leading to higher new-car prices and elevated demand for used vehicles. The state’s re-entry into RGGI (Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative) means higher energy prices as utilities pass carbon-credit expenses to consumers, potentially raising power bills by 5–15%. Grid modernization, widespread EV charging, and clean-energy targets will require significant infrastructure spending. Allan highlights how these policies influence trends: rising demand for lithium and copper, inflationary pressures, and new opportunities in green technologies and battery storage. Financial planning takeaways include budgeting for higher utility bills, considering EV charging installation costs, exploring energy-efficiency tax credits, and focusing investment exposure on scalable clean energy technologies. Closing Perspective — Translating Regulation into Strategy Allan closes with a clear reminder: “Policy changes are more than headlines — they affect household cash flow, taxes, and long-term opportunity. Our job is to help clients translate regulation into strategy, not stress.” 📞 Call Allan Malina at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to understand how Quad transitions and Virginia policy shifts can shape your financial decisions heading into 2026 — and how proactive planning turns economic change into opportunity.
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Virginia Election 2025: Financial Impact on Taxes, Wages and Investments
Virginia Election 2025: Financial Impact on Taxes, Wages & Investments Analyze the financial impact of the 2025 Virginia Election with Allan Malina. Learn how new VA policy shifts will affect your taxes, minimum wage, healthcare costs, and investments, viewed through the lens of the Fourth Turning economic cycle. 📅 Aired November 8, 2025 In this post-election episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan explains how Virginia’s new policy shifts could reshape your taxes, wages, healthcare costs, and investments—while placing them in the broader Fourth Turning cycle of economic renewal and generational change. Segment One — Virginia Taxes & The Digital Economy: Service & Cloud Tax Impacts Virginia’s proposed service and digital-economy taxes could soon reach everything from home repair and dry cleaning to streaming and cloud subscriptions. Allan breaks down how a broader Virginia tax base might mean higher local inflation, tighter small-business margins, and mild pressure on consumer and service-sector stocks—while creating potential tailwinds for municipal bonds and infrastructure projects. Households should audit recurring subscriptions and use HSAs/FSAs to offset new costs. Segment Two — Labor, Wages, & Union Expansion in VA: Navigating the Minimum Wage Increase A higher Virginia minimum wage, union growth, and new worker-protection rules could lift incomes but raise prices and business costs—especially across Central Virginia’s restaurants, retail, and healthcare sectors. Allan outlines how employers can adapt through automation, process gains, and better entity structures, while employees prepare through budgeting, retirement contributions, and tax-efficient savings. Segment Three — Healthcare Policy & Public Service Funding: Budgeting for Higher Premiums Medicaid expansion, new public-health funding, and stricter employer mandates may widen coverage but raise state spending and compliance costs. Expect 6–8 % annual health-inflation in planning models. Allan highlights which investment sectors may benefit—managed care, hospitals, and health-infrastructure REITs—and how families, retirees, and small businesses can budget for higher insurance premiums and taxes. Closing Perspective — The Fourth Turning & Financial Renewal From the 2008 financial crisis to today’s digital and geopolitical shifts, Allan ties this election to the ongoing Fourth Turning—a generational transformation expected to peak in the early 2030s. “This is the decade of participation. Free-market, purpose-driven Americans will be the ones who rebuild the next chapter.” 📞 Call Allan Malina at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now to learn how new laws, higher wages, and shifting healthcare policies could influence your financial plan—and how purposeful planning can turn political change into opportunity.
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What’s My Number? — Estate Planning Edition
⚖️ What’s My Number? — Estate Planning Edition 📅 Aired November 1, 2025 In this week’s Purpose Driven Finances, Allan tackles political gridlock, shifting market sentiment, and the power of planning ahead — in both portfolios and legacies. Segment One — Market & Portfolio Management: Political Gridlock and Market Jitters Washington’s shutdown threat and debate over SNAP benefits ripple through the consumer economy — with $8 billion in monthly grocery spending at stake. Meanwhile, Meta’s earnings miss pressures the broader tech sector, and the Supreme Court’s review of tariff authority could reshape U.S. trade policy. Allan explains why “markets like rules — not debates about the rules.” He also covers the Federal Reserve’s expected rate cuts, small-cap earnings up 25 %, and what easing inflation means for both risk assets and real returns. The message: opportunity exists even in uncertainty — if your portfolio adapts. Segment Two — What’s My Number? for Estate Planning Estate planning isn’t just for the wealthy — it’s for anyone who wants clarity, control, and confidence about their legacy. “Everyone has an estate plan — the only question is whether it’s intentional or accidental.” Key topics include: Beneficiary Designations 🔁 – IRAs, 401(k)s, annuities, and life insurance pass by beneficiary — not by will. Review them after major life events.Revocable Living Trust (RLT) 📜 – The cornerstone of modern estate planning: avoids probate, keeps affairs private, and provides continuity during incapacity.Insurance 💡 – Adds liquidity for taxes, balances inheritances, and funds charitable gifts. “Insurance isn’t the estate plan — it’s the financial muscle that supports it.” Allan also previews the upcoming 2026 Estate Planning Dinners, designed to help families build purpose-driven legacy plans. Fiduciary & Fee-Only Financial Advisor 📞 Call Allan Malina at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit www.servuscm.com 🎧 Listen now and learn how an intentional estate plan can turn complexity into clarity — and values into legacy.
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What’s My Number? — Education Planning Edition
🎓 What’s My Number? — Education Planning Edition 📅 Aired October 25, 2025 In this week’s Purpose Driven Finances, Allan connects the markets, the metals, and your family’s future — showing how economic shifts and personal planning go hand in hand. Segment One — Market & Portfolio Management: Inflation, Quad Shift & Precious Metals The latest CPI report shows inflation easing faster than expected — a clear shift from Quad 2 (growth + inflation rising) to Quad 1 (growth up, inflation down). Historically, that favors growth assets, technology, and small caps, while inflation hedges like gold and commodities cool off. Allan also breaks down the risks of using self-directed IRAs for collectible metals. Some investors are paying massive premiums — 80 %–90 % over spot — for coins like Silver Buffaloes or Australian Wildlife gold, compared with just 6 % for standard Gold Eagles. The lesson? Treat metals as portfolio diversifiers, not collectibles, and beware of fees, storage, and resale limits that erode returns. Segment Two — What’s My Number? for Education Planning Education planning isn’t about control — it’s about freedom of opportunity. Your number depends on the kind of education you value, how much support you want to give, and the time horizon before enrollment. “We plan not because we can control outcomes, but so our kids can explore theirs.” Key strategies: 529 Plans: Tax-deferred growth, tax-free withdrawals for education.Coverdell ESAs: Flexible but smaller limits.Custodial UTMA/UGMA Accounts: Great teaching tools, but ownership shifts to the child.Trust-Based Accounts: Maintain control for larger, purpose-driven gifts.New 2024 Rule: 529 funds can roll into Roth IRAs or vocational training. The education world is changing fast — fewer traditional college paths, more trade programs, certifications, and entrepreneurship. “The best education system today rewards curiosity, not conformity.” Teaching Hope — The Real Education Number Money funds education, but hope fuels achievement. Allan shares why the most valuable lesson isn’t financial—it’s emotional: Hope they can do things.Hope they can learn new skills.Hope they can overcome challenges.Hope they can find opportunity in change.Because money can buy opportunity, but not drive. The goal isn’t to fund dependency — it’s to fuel purpose. 📞 Call Allan Malina at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit www.servuscm.com 🎧 Tune in and discover how education planning isn’t just about funding learning — it’s about building hope, purpose, and opportunity.
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What’s My Number? Health, Disability and LTC Insurance
💰 What’s My Number? — Health, Disability & Long-Term Care Insurance Description: 📅 Aired October 18, 2025 In this week’s Purpose Driven Finances, Allan connects the market headlines to real-world planning — showing how protecting your health and income is just as vital as growing your investments. Segment One — The Headlines: Bankruptcy, Gold, & The Quad Advantage Two notable bankruptcies — First Brands Group, known for FRAM filters and other auto-parts brands, and Tri-Color, a regional used-car financing company — reveal pockets of credit stress in consumer spending and lending. These are isolated events, not systemic collapse. “Higher interest rates are exposing weak balance sheets — not killing the economy.” Allan explains why healthy companies with pricing power and cash flow continue to thrive, and how Quad-based investing remains a smarter approach than chasing the S&P 500. While the S&P is down 1.93 % from its all-time high, Quad portfolios are only 0.63 % off their peaks — because they adapt dynamically to each economic environment. Then, a look at why gold is down sharply today — stronger U.S. dollar, rising real yields, short-term profit-taking, and traders trimming inflation hedges. Allan answers the key question: Is this a warning sign or a buying opportunity? Segment Two — What’s My Number? for Health, Disability & Long-Term Care Insurance This week’s “What’s My Number?” turns from markets to personal protection: the coverage numbers that preserve your security and dignity. Health Insurance — Knowing Your True Coverage Number Budget for your maximum exposure: premiums + deductible + out-of-pocket costs.Example: $1,200/month premium ($14,400/year) + $5,000 deductible + $3,000 out-of-pocket = $22,400 total exposure. “If you’re not budgeting for your maximum exposure, you’re not really insured — you’re just hoping for the best.” Disability Insurance — Protecting Your Income Your paycheck is your greatest asset. Aim to replace 60–70 % of your income.Example: $100,000 salary = $70,000 target coverage. Employer covers $36,000; your gap = $34,000. “If you wouldn’t drive your car uninsured, why insure your paycheck halfway?” Long-Term Care — Planning for Dignity 70 % of Americans over 65 will need some form of long-term care.Average cost $65 k–$100 k per year → plan for 2–3 years ($200 k–$300 k protection).Hybrid life + LTC policies can offer flexibility and preserve legacy goals. “This isn’t about fear — it’s about freedom. Planning now means your kids don’t have to make crisis decisions later.” Allan closes with a reminder that financial planning is stewardship, not just math. When your insurance, savings, and investments are aligned, you live with clarity — not fear of the next headline. 📞 Call Allan at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com 💬 Schedule a review of your current health, disability, and long-term-care coverage — and discover your number today.
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16
What's My Number? Homeowners and Auto Insurance Edition
Purpose Driven Finances – October 11, 2025 What’s My Number? — Homeowners & Auto Insurance Segment 1: The Headlines — Trump, China & Credit Risk Allan opened this week’s show with a look at two key headlines shaping the markets: renewed trade tensions between the Trump administration and China over rare earth materials, and renewed talk of credit risk creeping into the economy. A. Trump & China: The Rare Earth Materials Story Rare earth elements are the unseen backbone of modern life — critical for technology, defense systems, EVs, and semiconductors. China currently controls nearly 70% of global production, giving it tremendous leverage in global trade. As discussions of tariffs and supply restrictions resurface, investors worry about volatility in the materials and tech sectors. Yet Allan reminded listeners that this is a strategic, long-term shift — not a crisis. “This is one of those global stories that feels dramatic, but for most investors, it’s a slow-burn trend, not a market-breaking event. It’s about positioning, not panic.” He noted that the long-term opportunity lies in U.S. reshoring and diversification of critical supply chains. B. Credit Risk Entering the Economy — “Much Ado About Nothing” Allan also addressed new headlines about rising credit card delinquencies and consumer debt. While delinquencies have ticked higher, they remain within historical norms, and most U.S. households continue to show resilience. Banks have already tightened lending standards, suggesting the system is adjusting — not unraveling. “Every cycle, we hear ‘credit risk is coming!’ But the data shows stress, not crisis. It’s part of a healthy market adjustment.” “Allan, you’ve helped us see the big picture clearly. Let’s bring it home — literally. How does all this translate into protecting what we already have? Today’s ‘What’s My Number?’ is about homeowners and auto insurance.” Segment 2: What’s My Number — Homeowners & Auto Insurance A. Why Insurance Is Part of the Plan Allan emphasized that insurance is risk management, not an afterthought. Too many people insure what’s easy, not what’s essential. “The goal is simple — protect your assets and your cash flow from unexpected loss.” He noted that inflation and rebuilding costs have risen sharply since 2020, leaving many policies outdated or underinsured. B. Homeowners Insurance — What’s My Number? Dwelling Coverage: The cost to rebuild your home, not its resale value.Personal Property: Contents such as furniture, electronics, and valuables.Liability Coverage: Protection against accidents or lawsuits. A sample framework: $400K rebuild + $150K personal property + $300K liability = ~$850K total coverage. “Your number for homeowners' insurance isn’t what your house is worth — it’s what it costs to start over.” C. Auto Insurance — What’s My Number? Key coverages include liability, collision, comprehensive, and uninsured motorist. Allan recommends a minimum of 100/300/100 limits and umbrella coverage if your assets exceed those protections. With auto repair and liability costs up 20–30% since 2021, he urged listeners to review policies annually. “Auto insurance protects your income and your assets. Insure like someone who plans to keep their wealth — not rebuild it.” “Allan, sounds like whether it’s trade headlines or insurance coverage, it all comes back to the same theme — know your number.” “Exactly. Don’t let the noise distract you. Whether it’s protecting your home, your car, or your family — your number defines your peace of mind. Get it right, review it yearly, and keep it aligned with your purpose.” 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management at 434-316-0246 or visit www.ServusCM.com Live with Purpose. Plan with Clarity.
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What's My Number? Life Insurance Edition
Purpose Driven Finances – October 4, 2025 What’s My Number? — Life Insurance Segment 1: Credit Risk & Being Purpose Driven Allan began this week’s show by connecting two powerful themes — financial risk and personal purpose — showing how both can quietly shape our lives if left unexamined. A. Credit Risk: The Tri-Color Auto Loan Company He discussed the unfolding story around Tri-Color Auto Loan Company, a deep-subprime, “buy-here, pay-here” lender now under scrutiny for double-pledged assets and questionable lending practices uncovered by Fifth Third Bank. Many of these loans were reportedly extended to undocumented borrowers, adding another layer of risk to already fragile portfolios. “When you don’t know what’s underneath the surface, you risk building on sand instead of stone.” Allan reminded listeners that in markets — just like in life — character and structure matter more than appearances. Investors and consumers alike need to look beyond the headlines and understand what truly supports the value of what they own. B. Being Purpose Driven Transitioning from credit to character, Allan shared reflections inspired by Viktor Frankl’s Man’s Search for Meaning, written out of Frankl’s experience surviving the Holocaust. He described a striking modern image — a woman attacked on a train while passengers did nothing — as a reflection of today’s spiritual and moral fatigue. “Too many people have lost their sense of purpose and hope. Purpose doesn’t just happen — it’s planned, chosen, and pursued.” Allan encouraged listeners to: Take time to dream and plan.Determine what it will take to reach that destination.Get it done — with intention and perseverance. Segment 2: What’s My Number — Life Insurance & Risk Management Allan then turned to one of the most practical and emotional topics in financial planning — life insurance. Why Life Insurance Matters Life insurance isn’t for you — it’s for the people who depend on you. It offers peace of mind, stability, and time for loved ones to grieve without financial pressure. Two Broad Categories Term Life Insurance: Pure insurance for a defined period (10, 20, or 30 years).Low cost; ideal for income replacement during working years. Permanent Life Insurance: Lifetime coverage; includes Whole Life, Universal Life, and Variable Universal Life.Higher premiums but can build cash value and serve in estate or charitable planning. Key Difference: Term = Affordable safety net.Permanent = Long-term, flexible protection with potential legacy benefits. “Most families simply need term coverage, but permanent insurance can make sense for business owners or families focused on legacy and giving.” Determining Your Number Two main approaches guide how much life insurance coverage you need: Income Replacement: Generally 10–12× annual income.Example: $75K salary = $750K–$900K coverage. Income + Debt Coverage: Add mortgages, student loans, or college costs to ensure total protection. Ask yourself: Who depends on your income?How long will they need it?Should debts be eliminated immediately or paid over time?Do you want to leave a charitable or family legacy? Practical Example For a household with one working parent earning $100,000, a $250,000 mortgage, and two children with future college costs of $200,000, Allan suggested $2 million in coverage. This ensures enough to replace income, cover debts, and support education — allowing the family to heal without financial fear. “The goal is simple — provide enough so your loved ones can grieve with peace, not panic.” Life insurance is about love, not loss — a commitment to protect your family’s purpose when life takes the unexpected turn. 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management at 434-316-0246 or visit www.ServusCM.com Live with Purpose. Plan with Clarity.
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What's My Number? Savings and Cash Edition
Purpose Driven Finances – September 27, 2025 What’s My Number? — Savings & Cash Segment 1: Crypto, Inflation, and Risk Factors Allan opened the show with a timely discussion on where risk and opportunity meet in today’s market — from cryptocurrency in retirement plans to inflation and new forms of corporate risk. A. Crypto in Retirement Plans Interest in adding crypto to 401(k)s and IRAs continues to grow, but Allan urged caution. While digital assets can provide diversification and innovation, they also bring high volatility, limited regulation, and suitability concerns for long-term investors. “Crypto is speculation, not foundation. A retirement plan should be built on purpose, not hype.” B. Inflation Inflation has eased from its peak but remains above comfort levels, continuing to erode purchasing power. Allan highlighted that while savings accounts feel “safe,” holding too much idle cash in an inflationary environment means losing real value over time. He encouraged listeners to evaluate where their cash resides — balancing safety with strategic positioning to preserve buying power. C. Corporate Risks Around Vaccines A new layer of non-financial risk has entered markets as companies face litigation and workforce challenges related to vaccine mandates and side effects. Allan reminded investors that such risks can affect corporate earnings and stock valuations, proving that headline risk can become market risk when ignored. Segment 2: Savings & Cash Flow After the break, Allan turned to the heart of personal finance — how to save wisely and manage cash flow with purpose. A. Why Savings Still Matters Despite rising incomes, the U.S. savings rate is near historic lows. Savings remains the foundation of financial peace, providing margin, stability, and emotional security. “When you have margin, you have freedom — the ability to make decisions from strength, not fear.” B. Cash Flow as the Lifeblood Cash flow — the relationship between income and expenses — is the number that truly determines financial health. By tracking where money actually goes, families uncover hidden leaks and can realign spending with purpose rather than impulse. C. A Practical Framework for Listeners Emergency Fund: Maintain 3–6 months of living expenses.Buckets of Savings: Short-Term: Cash for liquidity.Mid-Term: Conservative investments.Long-Term: Retirement and growth. Cash Flow System: Track inflows and outflows monthly.Separate must-haves from nice-to-haves.Automate savings wherever possible. D. Real-World Applications Allan closed by explaining how families can rebalance cash positions after market run-ups — avoiding both extremes of too much cash (inflation erosion) or too little (liquidity stress). At Servus Capital, cash isn’t an afterthought; it’s a strategic tool for both protection and opportunity. Savings and cash flow are the quiet engines of long-term success. They bring structure, peace, and resilience through every market cycle. “At Servus Capital Management, we help families balance liquidity, safety, and growth — ensuring their cash serves a purpose, not fear.” 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management at 434-316-0246 or visit www.ServusCM.com Live with Purpose. Plan with Clarity.
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What's My Number? Investment Planning Edition
Purpose Driven Finances – September 20, 2025 What’s My Number? — Investment Planning Edition Segment 1: Let’s Talk the Portfolio Theme: The Fed, Interest Rates, and the Quad 2 Outlook for Q4 2025 Allan opened the show with an update on Federal Reserve policy and what investors should expect heading into the final quarter of 2025. Current rate levels remain restrictive, but the Fed’s tone has shifted toward caution — signaling potential adjustments if growth or employment begins to slow. Allan explained that interest rate policy directly shapes the performance of stocks, bonds, and real estate, emphasizing how critical it is for investors to stay aware of the economic backdrop rather than guessing market moves. He then introduced the Quad 2 framework — periods of rising growth and rising inflation — noting that historically, this environment favors equities, cyclical sectors, and commodities, while long bonds and defensive assets tend to lag. “This isn’t about predicting every tick of the market. It’s about knowing the environment you’re in — and positioning accordingly.” Key discussion points included: What exactly defines Quad 2 in plain English.Whether Fed policy risks pushing the economy out of Quad 2.Why understanding this framework helps everyday investors make smarter, more disciplined decisions. Segment 2: What’s My Number — Investment Planning Edition Allan transitioned from macro strategy to personal planning, explaining how every investor needs to know their investment number — the set of figures that define a portfolio’s purpose, risk, and sustainability. Why You Need an Investment Number Avoid blind risk-taking or emotional investing.Balance growth goals with your real risk tolerance.Tie your investments to your purpose, not just performance. The Numbers That Matter Rate of Return Number: The average return needed to meet your financial goals.Risk Number: The level of potential loss you can realistically handle in a down year.Asset Allocation Number: The right mix of stocks, bonds, alternatives, and cash for your goals.Savings Number: How much you must contribute annually to stay on track.Withdrawal Number: A sustainable retirement draw rate — typically near 4%, adjusted to personal needs. How to Discover Your Investment Number Start with life and retirement goals.Work backward to determine return needs and acceptable risk.Use planning tools and stress-testing simulations to confirm sustainability. Practical Investing Applications Rebalance Regularly: Keep allocations aligned with your plan.Stay Flexible: Adjust if market conditions or Quad cycles change.Maintain Discipline: Don’t chase headlines — stick to your purpose and your plan. “Most investors fail not because of bad markets, but because they abandon their plan. Knowing your number helps you stay anchored through the noise.” Every investment strategy needs structure — and that starts with knowing your numbers. At Servus Capital Management, Allan and his team help clients: Define their return and risk numbersAlign investments with personal purposeAdjust portfolios proactively through each economic cycle 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management at 434-316-0246 or visit www.ServusCM.com Live with Purpose. Plan with Clarity.
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What's My Number? Retirement Edition
Purpose Driven Finances – September 13, 2025 Segment 1: Let’s Talk the Portfolio Theme: Job Data Revisions, Inflation Trends, and Market Shifts Allan began this week’s program by unpacking the latest Non-Farm Payroll (NFP) adjustments, revealing that 911,000 phantom jobs were removed from the prior 12-month reports. Combined with last year’s 818,000 downward revisions, that’s 1.73 million fewer jobs than originally reported, cutting the true average monthly job gain to roughly 76,000, not 150,000. Inflation remains elevated at 2.92%, up slightly from 2.83%, with forecasts calling for a potential rise toward 3.2% next month. Allan noted that these pressures echo the early-2000s environment, where political and faith-driven shifts intersected with economic uncertainty, influencing both consumer sentiment and market behavior. “The numbers matter—but context matters more. Markets are emotional, not mechanical.” Segment 2: What’s My Number? — Retirement Edition Why Your Retirement Number Matters Retirement planning isn’t just about math—it’s about clarity, confidence, and peace of mind. Clarity = Confidence: Knowing your retirement number replaces uncertainty with purpose.Peace of Mind: It helps answer the question, “Will I outlive my money?”Avoid Guessing: Without a defined plan, people risk spending too little out of fear—or too much out of false security.Purpose in Retirement: True freedom comes from aligning money with meaning—living the life you were called to live. How to Discover Your Retirement Number Define Your Lifestyle Goals — What does retirement look like for you? Travel, downsizing, family, giving?Translate Goals into Dollars — Include all expenses: living costs, healthcare, taxes, inflation, and long-term care.Subtract Guaranteed Income — Factor in Social Security, pensions, and annuities.Calculate the Gap — Determine how much your investments must generate annually.Run the Math — Multiply annual needs by expected retirement years (inflation-adjusted). Use a withdrawal rate under 5% for sustainability. Living with Your Number Budgeting: Review annual spending to stay aligned with your plan.Flexibility: Adjust withdrawals in strong or weak markets.Healthcare: Account for rising medical and long-term care costs.Legacy & Giving: Define what portion supports family or charitable goals.Periodic Reviews: Recalculate every few years—your number should evolve with life and markets. Every retiree needs a number—a clear guide to freedom, not fear. “At Servus Capital Management, we help you discover your number, live within it, and adjust as life changes—so retirement becomes purpose, not pressure.” 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management for a personalized retirement review. www.servuscm.com Live with Purpose. Plan with Clarity.
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What's My Number? Practical Steps to Discover.
Purpose Driven Finances – September 6, 2025 Segment 1: Let’s Talk the Portfolio (10 Minutes) Theme: Quad 3, Inflation, and Interest Rates on the Horizon Allan opened this week’s show by reviewing the current market environment — Quad 3, characterized by slowing growth and rising inflation. He explained that in this phase, investors should expect more volatility across equities and credit, and that interest rate shifts are likely in the coming months. The conversation highlighted how the Federal Reserve’s next moves could reshape both bond yields and consumer borrowing costs. Allan reminded listeners that inflation-sensitive sectors — such as commodities, energy, and utilities — often perform better in Quad 3, while high-growth tech and consumer discretionary stocks can face headwinds. “Understanding where we are in the economic cycle helps you protect your purchasing power and position your portfolio with purpose.” Segment 2: What’s My Number? — How to Discover It Following last week’s question, “Why learn about your number?”, Allan walked through a practical, step-by-step framework for discovering it — turning a vague financial target into a clear, actionable plan. 1. Goal Setting – Clarify What Matters Most Define what you want your money to accomplish: retirement, travel, education, giving, home ownership, or legacy. “Your money should serve your purpose, not the other way around.” 2. Cost Discovery – Translate Goals into Dollars Convert dreams into measurable numbers: monthly living expenses, debt, healthcare, and lifestyle choices. Account for inflation, taxes, and emergencies — today’s $5,000 per month may need to be $9,000 in the future. Build a margin of safety rather than relying on averages. 3. Communication – Align with Your Partner Financial planning is relational. Make sure both spouses or partners share a unified vision. Different priorities—early retirement, travel, or legacy—can be balanced through open conversations and professional guidance. 4. Calculating the Number – Put It All Together Estimate how much each goal will cost, when it will happen, and how much you’ll need to save each month based on your investment rate of return. This converts abstract goals into a workable savings and investment plan. 5. Flexibility – Update as Life Changes Your number isn’t permanent. Major life events—new jobs, marriage, children, illness, or market changes—require regular reviews to keep your plan current. Closing Thoughts and Call to Action Every household has a number, but few know it. Finding yours requires: Clarity about goalsHonesty about costsCommunication with familyCalculation through disciplined planning “At Servus Capital Management, we help families not only discover their number, but keep it updated as life evolves.” 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management to review your financial plan. 434-316-0246 Every purpose needs a plan. Let’s define your number — and help you live it. www.servuscm.com
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What's My Number? Why Do I Need One?
Purpose Driven Finances – Aired August 30, 2025 Segment 1: Let’s Talk the Portfolio (10 minutes) Theme: AI, Markets, and the “GenAI Divide” – Lessons from MIT’s 2025 Report This week’s show opened with a discussion about the state of artificial intelligence in business—specifically MIT’s 2025 report titled “The GenAI Divide.” The conversation explored how massive investment into generative AI has created both opportunity and frustration for investors, executives, and markets. Billions Spent, Few Results:Despite $30–40 billion invested in GenAI through mid-2025, most corporate AI efforts have failed to produce real profit or measurable productivity. Only about 5% of projects have delivered meaningful returns.The GenAI Divide:MIT calls this the gap between AI adoption and real impact. Many organizations remain stuck in pilot mode, unable to translate potential into performance.Execution Over Hype:The main obstacle isn’t the technology — it’s integration, strategy, and expectation. Tools like ChatGPT are powerful individually but difficult to scale inside large, complex workflows.Agility Wins:Smaller firms and startups are succeeding faster — often going from concept to implementation in 90 days, while large enterprises take 9 months or longer.Market Reality & Workforce Shifts:Investor enthusiasm has cooled, with some AI stocks pulling back, while automation begins replacing offshore roles — affecting 3% of U.S. jobs today, potentially rising to 27% in the coming years.What Works:Success requires focus and discipline:→ Target high-value use cases→ Build around existing workflows→ Stay agile with smaller, adaptive teams→ Manage expectations and execute consistently Segment 2: What’s My Number? — The Foundation of Financial Confidence After the break, Allan shifted gears from technology and markets to something far more personal — your financial “number.” It’s a question every listener eventually faces: How much is enough? Key Conversation Points Why a Number Matters:Many people assume saving and investing automatically lead to financial freedom. But Allan explained that without a specific target — your number — it’s like driving without a destination.Benefits of Knowing Your Number:Knowing your number provides clarity, peace of mind, and direction. It acts as both a roadmap and a measuring stick for daily decisions, helping align spending, saving, and investing with your long-term goals.Impact on Daily Choices:With a defined number, clients tend to make more confident financial decisions — whether it’s upgrading a home, helping a child through college, or choosing when to retire.The Risk of Not Knowing:Without a plan, people risk over-spending, under-saving, and reacting emotionally to market changes. Uncertainty creates anxiety; clarity creates calm.Where to Start:Begin by assessing your current income, assets, and spending patterns. From there, Servus Capital’s team builds projections to identify how much you’ll need to sustain your desired lifestyle.One Number or Many?Allan emphasized that there isn’t just one number — there are different “numbers” for retirement, investments, insurance, and risk management. Together, they form the blueprint for a Purpose Driven Plan.A Dynamic Process:Your number isn’t fixed. It evolves as life, family, and markets change. That’s why every Servus plan includes periodic reviews and adjustments to stay on course.How Servus Capital Helps:Allan closed by reminding listeners that Servus Capital Management combines purpose-driven planning with disciplined portfolio strategy.“We help you define your number — and more importantly, live it with confidence and clarity.” 📞 Contact Servus Capital Management to review your financial plan. Every purpose needs a plan. Let’s analyze your portfolio together and make sure you know your number.
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Questions You Should Be Asking Yourself Regarding Finances.
❓ The Big Questions You Should Be Asking | Purpose Driven Finances Description: 📅 Aired February 15, 2025 Over the past five weeks, we’ve been walking through the top questions every prospective client asks — from Fiduciary responsibility to Fee-Only advice, Account Monitoring, and Financial Planning. Each week, we’ve provided a free resource on the Servus Capital Management blog to help guide you further. This week, we shift from advisor-driven questions to the questions you should be asking yourself. We begin with a portfolio check-in: Gold and silver have been on a tear, though Friday brought some setbacks 🪙The U.S. dollar is breaking down, with notable correlations:• Gold: -0.65• S&P 500: -0.84• Commodities: -0.60The outlook for the next two months: a mix of opportunity and weakness depending on where you’re invested 📉📈 Then we ask the tough but important questions in financial planning: How much should I safely spend from my assets in retirement?Should I pursue divorce, or work on my marriage from a financial perspective? 💔❤️How much life insurance coverage do I really need?Is long-term care (LTC) insurance important for me and my family? These are the real-life questions that shape not just your portfolio, but your future security and peace of mind. 📞 Call Allan at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com
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What does Financial Planning Really Mean For Me?
📝 What Does “Financial Planning” Really Mean? | Purpose Driven Finances Description: 📅 Aired February 1, 2025 We’re wrapping up our series on the top five questions prospective clients ask most often. Each week, listeners have had access to a free downloadable resource on the Servus Capital Management blog — and this week’s episode is no different. We start with a market check-in: slowing trade tariffs 🌍, anticipated government spending cuts 🏛️, and what DeepSeek and NVIDIA may be signaling about the next chapter in technology. Then we turn to the main focus: “What does Financial Planning really mean?” How extensive should your plan be? From estate planning to portfolio design to risk management (insurance for auto, home, life, and long-term care)How holistic should it be? Do you want every piece of your financial life integrated, or just a portion addressed?Should planning be tied to product sales, or delivered as independent advice designed for your goals? Financial planning is about tailoring the process to your needs — ensuring that every decision is made with clarity, alignment, and purpose. 📞 Call Allan at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com
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A guide to how your investment account should be monitored.
📊 What Does “Account Monitoring” Really Involve? | Purpose Driven Finances Description: 📅 Aired January 25, 2025 We’re in week three of our series on the top four questions prospective clients ask most often. Each week, don’t forget to check the Servus Capital Management blog for a free downloadable resource to guide your planning. This episode opens with commentary on the Trump inauguration 🇺🇸 — the optimism it’s created, the push to fulfill promises, and the challenges of bureaucrats and elites acting like “sand in the machine” of Washington. We also look at post-storm recovery in North Carolina vs. California, the outlook for alternative energy ⚡, small business sentiment 📉📈, and even the role of crypto in portfolios. Then we dive into the week’s main topic: “What does Account Monitoring mean?” Managing expectations: why your portfolio is structured the way it is (value, growth, etc.)Managing risk: balancing what you want vs. what you need in the current economic environmentAlways invested vs. making adjustments in response to recessions, inflation, or strong growth cyclesRebalancing: systematic vs. adaptive approachesWhy you need more than just “Don’t worry, it’ll come back” when the markets turn Account monitoring is about clarity, discipline, and making sure your investments are managed with purpose in every environment. 📞 Call Allan at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com
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What Does Fee-Only Mean?
💵 What Does “Fee-Only” Really Mean? | Purpose Driven Finances Description: 📅 Aired January 18, 2025 We’re continuing our 4-week series on the top four questions every prospective client asks me. Each week, you’ll also find a free downloadable resource on the Servus Capital Management blog. This episode opens with reflections on the upcoming Trump inauguration 🇺🇸 — the optimism it has stirred, why details are being held close to the vest, and how businesses are responding in this moment of change. Then, we dive into today’s big topic: “What does Fee-Only really mean?” ⚖️ The difference between broker-dealers and fee-only Registered Investment Advisors (RIAs)Fee-only vs. fee-based models: how each is structured, and what it means for you as the clientKey comparisons:• Fee-Only ➝ paid directly by the client, fiduciary standard, no conflicts of interest, highly transparent, best for holistic planning• Fee-Based ➝ client pays, but firms may also receive commissions or incentives, varying conflicts depending on the fine print, often best for certain financial productsFlat fees vs. blended fee percentages 💵Financial planning fees vs. all-inclusive asset-based fees The goal: to help you understand exactly how advisors get paid, and why the fee-only model provides greater alignment, transparency, and peace of mind. 📞 Call Allan at 434-316-0246 🌐 Visit: www.servuscm.com
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Welcome to Purpose Driven Finances — the podcast that helps you use your money as a tool to fulfill the plan and purpose for your life.Hosted by Allan Malina, founder of Servus Capital Management, each episode brings you practical strategies, insightful conversations, and timely commentary on personal finance and investing. We guide you toward clarity and confidence, whether you’re planning for retirement, navigating life transitions, or simply looking to make wiser financial decisions.We cover a wide range of topics—from budgeting, debt management, and investment strategies to retirement planning and legacy planning—plus commentary on current economic trends to keep you informed.Because money isn’t the goal—living with purpose is.Learn more at www.servuscm.comThanks for listening, and welcome to
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Purpose Driven Finances
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