Segment 1 · ~12 min
Segment One
The Market Right Now
A · Records, then a chip shakeout
B · Earnings season kicks off
Theme A · Lead: Alfie
Records Meet a Reality Check
Discipline vs. euphoria for someone in or near retirement — not a market call.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- The Dow made history Monday: its first-ever close above 53,000 (53,055.91 on 7/6), then gave a little back Tuesday to 52,925. Records are fun to say on air — but they're a starting point for a conversation, not a victory lap. [Dow: CNBC/TheStreet, 7/6–7/7/26]
- Under the surface, leadership wobbled: a semiconductor selloff on AI-valuation jitters dragged the Nasdaq down 1.16% Tuesday while money rotated toward steadier ground — insurers, banks, blue chips. That rotation is the story, not the index headline. [Markets: BBN Times/CNBC, 7/7/26]
- The fuel behind it all is enormous: the biggest cloud players are on track to spend roughly $700 billion and up on AI in 2026 — some analysts put the top five near three-quarters of a trillion. Real money, real buildout — and real expectations baked into prices. [Est.: CNBC/press, 2026]
- A voice of caution worth quoting: Bank of America's Savita Subramanian warns "speculation is hitting extreme levels" and holds the Street's lowest year-end S&P target, 7,100 — below today's level. That's her view, not a forecast we're endorsing; the point is that even the pros disagree, so your plan shouldn't hinge on any one call. [BofA via Fortune, 7/5/26]
Story hook
Records are like a mountain summit selfie. The view is spectacular — but nobody gets hurt at the top. People get hurt on the way down, when they're tired, over-confident, and moving too fast. For someone near retirement, the summit isn't the moment to take on more risk; it's the moment to check your ropes.
Handoff
Alfie → John: "John, the Dow just printed 53,000 and a respected strategist is calling for lower by year-end. For someone five years from retirement, how do you tell the difference between healthy discipline and just being scared out of a good market?"
Theme B · Lead: John
Earnings Season Starts — Watch the Grades, Not the Gossip
Why the numbers companies actually report drive prices over time.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- The calendar is set, the results are not: Delta opens the season Friday, July 10, and the big banks — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Goldman, Wells Fargo, Citi — all report Tuesday, July 14. As we tape, these are still ahead of us; we have expectations, not answers. [Company IR / previews, accessed 7/8/26 — scheduled, no results yet]
- Expectations are high and rising: FactSet pegs S&P 500 Q2 earnings growth at about 23% year-over-year, revised up sharply since spring. When the bar is raised that fast, even a good report can disappoint an optimistic crowd. [FactSet, 7/2/26]
- The banks are the market's tell. Five of them reporting on one morning matters far beyond their own stocks, because banks lend to everyone — their loan growth and credit commentary are an early read on the whole economy. [Sector preview, 7/7/26]
- Estimates are not guarantees, and a "beat" isn't automatic. Same company, different analyst models can sit dollars apart. That's exactly why a disciplined investor waits for filed results instead of trading a preview. [Est. spread, previews 7/8/26]
Story hook
Earnings season is report-card day for the companies you own. The daily headlines are hallway gossip — a rumor here, a pop quiz there — and they swing the mood hour to hour. But over a full year, it's the actual grades that decide the future. Delta and the banks are the first cards coming home; we read what they earned, not what the hallway whispered.
Handoff
John → Alfie: "Alfie, say a company beats on Tuesday and the stock drops anyway — it happens all the time. How do you keep a retiree from panic-selling on the reaction when the underlying business was actually fine?"
Call to Action · Segment 1
"When the market's hitting records and the headlines are this loud, the thing that keeps you steady isn't a hot take — it's a written plan. That's the whole idea behind our Tax Plan Playbook. Text the word PLAN to 239-747-1077, reply Y to the confirmation link we send, drop in your email, and it's yours — free, no pressure."
Flow: text PLAN → confirmation link → reply Y → enter email → Playbook delivered.
Segment 2 · ~12 min
Segment Two · Featured Guest
In the Studio: Cheech, Advantage Wealth Partners
A · Structured notes, in plain English
B · Tax-smart portfolio techniques
★
Guided interview — Cheech is NOT scripted
Alfie & John carry the structure; Cheech carries the substance. Educational only — no rates stated as offers, no suitability claims. Let him run; steer with the questions below.
Alfie — warm intro read (~30 seconds)
"Our next guest is someone we've wanted in this chair for a while. Cheech is a top advisor over at Advantage Wealth Partners, right here in Southwest Florida — the person a lot of families sit across from when their money gets complicated. He spends his days on the stuff most people find intimidating: structured notes, tax-smart investing, building portfolios that can take a punch. Today he's going to translate a few of those into plain English for us. Cheech, welcome — glad to have you."
Theme A · Structured Notes, Demystified
Two rapport questions first to settle in, then escalate. Approved framing from the firm: a note is a bond + a payoff, "contingent income," barriers, worst-of underlyings, autocall, issuer credit risk — all hypothetical, never an offer.
★ Rapport 1 · easy opener
Alfie: "Cheech, before we get technical — how'd you end up doing this? What pulled you into the deep end of the pool, the complicated products most advisors avoid?"
Why it works: lets Cheech tell his origin story and relax; humanizes the expert before jargon starts.
Likely covers: his background, why he enjoys translating complexity, his role at Advantage.
★ Rapport 2 · warm framing
John: "When a new client hears the words 'structured note,' what's the look on their face — and what's the first thing you tell them to take the mystery out of it?"
Why it works: invites his one-sentence definition on his own terms and sets the plain-English tone.
Likely covers: a note is essentially a bank's IOU (a bond) with a built-in market payoff (a derivative) — appeal and the catch in one breath.
Q3 · the core concept
Alfie: "Walk us through the 'jobs' a note can do. If someone wants income versus growth versus just not losing money — how do notes get built differently for each?"
Why it works: reframes notes as a category of tools, not one product — the education the audience needs.
Likely covers: income/contingent-coupon notes, growth/participation notes, principal-protected notes; that the right question is "which job is this note doing?"
Q4 · the crucial distinction
John: "Two notes can both say 'protected' on the cover — one with a buffer, one with a barrier. In plain English, why can the one that sounds safer actually be the more dangerous one in a real downturn?"
Why it works: this is the single most important, most misunderstood idea in the whole product — worth the airtime.
Likely covers: a buffer absorbs the first X% of loss no matter what; a barrier looks safe until it breaks, then exposes the full decline. Same-sounding names, opposite risk.
Q5 · the fine print (deepest)
Alfie: "What's on the term sheet that people skip right past — and should never skip? Where does the 'protection' quietly have conditions?"
Why it works: surfaces the risks a fiduciary must disclose; keeps the segment balanced and compliant.
Likely covers: issuer credit risk (you're an unsecured creditor of the bank), holding to maturity, liquidity limits, return caps, autocall/early-redemption, complexity and cost. "Protected" is not "risk-free."
Pivot line for John (if an answer runs long): "Cheech, that's the kind of detail that separates a real advisor from a brochure — let's hold that thread, because it leads straight into the other half of your world: keeping more of what these strategies earn. Which is taxes."
Theme B · Tax-Smart Portfolio Techniques
Escalate from concept to nuance. Give Cheech room to touch concentration risk in cap-weighted index funds and how direct indexing addresses it. Educational only.
Q1 · set the stage
John: "A lot of folks own an S&P 500 index fund and feel diversified. You've pointed out there's a hidden concentration problem in there. What do you mean?"
Why it works: starts with a comfortable belief the audience holds, then gently complicates it.
Likely covers: the top handful of mega-caps now make up a historically large slice of the index (about a third in the top ten), so a "diversified" fund is quietly a big bet on a few names.
Q2 · the technique
Alfie: "So how does 'direct indexing' change that? What does owning the actual stocks — instead of one fund share — let you do that a fund can't?"
Why it works: lets Cheech contrast the tool with what everyone already owns; concrete and visual.
Likely covers: owning the individual names in a separate account so you can trim the overweight mega-caps and harvest losses stock-by-stock — even in a year the index is up.
Q3 · tax-loss harvesting
John: "Tax-loss harvesting sounds like magic — turning a loser into a tax break. Where's the catch people trip over?"
Why it works: celebrates the upside, then makes him name the guardrail — good, honest radio.
Likely covers: losses offset gains plus up to $3,000 of ordinary income (rest carries forward), but the wash-sale rule disallows the loss if you rebuy the same/"substantially identical" security within 30 days — a trap that spans a spouse's accounts and IRAs.
Q4 · covered calls
Alfie: "Covered calls — people hear 'extra income from stocks I already own.' What's the trade-off you make for that check?"
Why it works: a popular income idea; forces the balanced "nothing's free" framing.
Likely covers: you collect a premium up front for selling the right to buy your stock at a strike — income now, but your upside is capped above that strike. A tool, not a free lunch.
Q5 · who it's for (deepest, honest close)
John: "Be straight with us — who is all this genuinely right for, and who's better off keeping it simple with a plain index fund?"
Why it works: ends on fiduciary honesty; protects the audience and models the firm's values.
Likely covers: these tools tend to fit higher-bracket investors with large taxable accounts and recurring gains; costs have to earn their keep; for many people, simple and low-cost still wins.
Call to Action · Segment 2
"Everything Cheech just walked through — notes, direct indexing, harvesting — only pays off if it's wired into a plan that fits your taxes. That's what our Tax Plan Playbook lays out in plain English. Text PLAN to 239-747-1077, reply Y when we text back, enter your email, and we'll send it over — at no cost, and nobody's going to hound you."
Flow: text PLAN → confirmation link → reply Y → enter email → Playbook delivered.
Segment 3 · ~12 min
Segment Three
Washington and Your Wallet
A · Fed watch week
B · "Trump Accounts" & kids' money
Theme A · Lead: John
A Divided Fed on Hold — What It Means for Your Income
Rate policy and the practical playbook for CD ladders, bonds, and income investors.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- The Fed has held rates at 3.50–3.75% all year. Worth saying precisely: Chair Kevin Warsh took over in late May and held at his first meeting in June — the earlier holds were under Powell. [Fed, 6/17/26; Warsh sworn in 5/22/26]
- This is the twist for savers: the June minutes released Wednesday, 7/8 were hawkish — of 18 officials, nine pencilled in a possible hike this year, only one a cut. The old "grab a bond fund before the Fed cuts" trade has no cut coming to rescue it. [FOMC minutes, 7/8/26]
- Meanwhile cash still pays: top CDs near 4.40% APY, money-market funds around 4%. Because the Fed is holding, not cutting, those yields are sticking around instead of melting. The move is a CD ladder — staggered maturities that keep locking in today's rates and stay flexible if a hike does come. [Rates: Fortune/Bankrate, 7/8/26]
- The next real fork is June CPI, Tuesday 7/14 — after we tape. Officials already lifted their 2026 inflation view. That's a reason to ladder and not to make one big bet the day before a data drop. [BLS schedule — scheduled, no result yet]
Story hook
Think of the Fed under Warsh as a new thermostat repairman who won't tell you where he'll set the dial — and half his crew wants to turn the heat up to kill the last of the inflation draft. You don't renovate the whole house betting the heat's about to drop. You put on a reliable sweater you can layer. A CD ladder is that sweater.
Handoff
John → Alfie: "Alfie, the Fed just told us a hike is likelier than a cut, and cash still pays around 4%. Why does a ladder beat both sitting in a long bond fund and chasing the single highest 5-year CD?"
Theme B · Lead: Alfie
"Trump Accounts" Go Live — and the Grandparent's Menu
A new federal child account, compared factually with 529s, custodial Roths, and UTMAs. Educational — no recommendations.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- It's real and it's new: created by the 2025 tax law, "Trump Accounts" opened for contributions July 4, with a White House Oval Office launch event July 6. Every U.S.-citizen child born 2025–2028 can get a one-time, tax-free $1,000 federal seed — but you have to open the account. [IRS/Treasury; White House, 7/4–7/6/26]
- The mechanics: families can add up to $5,000 a year (the $1,000 seed doesn't count against it), it grows tax-deferred, and it turns into a traditional IRA the year the child turns 18 — so the seed and growth are eventually taxed as ordinary income, not the lower capital-gains rate. [CRS R48910; IRS, 2026]
- For grandparents comparing tools: a 529 lets you front-load big education gifts (up to $95,000 solo / $190,000 per couple in one year); a custodial Roth only works if the grandchild has earned income (max $7,500 in 2026); a UTMA/UGMA has no cap but is irrevocable and hands the child full control at the age of majority. [Fidelity/IRS, 2026]
- Frame it as complementary, not either/or — and stay educational. These differ on eligibility, limits, taxes, and when the child can touch the money. General information, not a recommendation. [Educational framing]
Story hook
Picture four piggy banks with four different lids. The 529 is the college jar — pack it full, but it's happiest spent on tuition. The custodial Roth is the "first paycheck" jar — it only opens if the grandkid actually earned the money. The UTMA is the "no strings" jar — anyone can fill it, but at adulthood the whole jar is the child's to do anything with. And the Trump Account is the government-issued starter jar: Uncle Sam drops in the first $1,000 for the youngest, family can add up to $5,000 a year, and the lid stays locked until 18.
Handoff
Alfie → John: "John — a grandmother calls Saturday with three grandkids: a newborn, a 10-year-old, and a 19-year-old with a part-time job. Purely educationally, how would eligibility and taxes differ for each across a Trump Account, a 529, a custodial Roth, and a UTMA — without steering her to one?"
Call to Action · Segment 3
"With the Fed on hold and the rules changing for everything from CDs to a brand-new account for your grandkids, 2026 is a planning year, not an autopilot year. Our Tax Plan Playbook lays out the moves in one place. Text PLAN to 239-747-1077, reply Y to the link, add your email — done, and it's free."
Flow: text PLAN → confirmation link → reply Y → enter email → Playbook delivered.
Segment 4 · ~12 min
Segment Four
Home and Abroad
A · Storm-proof your finances (SWFL)
B · Don't trade the headlines
Theme A · Lead: Alfie
Protect Your Financial House the Way SWFL Protects Its Real One
The state is hardening Fort Myers Beach before the peak — do the same with your finances.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- The state just modeled the behavior we preach: Gov. DeSantis signed the $117.6 billion budget on June 29, sending more than $13 million to Lee County — including a reported ~$2.5 million to flood-proof the Fort Myers Beach water-reclamation plant and $400,000 for Times Square-area stormwater. They're hardening infrastructure before the next Ian. [FL FY26-27 budget; Gulfshore Business/local press, 6/29–7/2/26]
- Timing favors preparation: NOAA calls for a below-normal season (8–14 named storms), but "below-normal" isn't "no risk" — it takes one. The season doesn't peak until around September 10, so this broadcast lands in the calm-before-the-peak window. [NOAA, 5/22/26]
- Run an insurance review like a facility assessment: confirm homeowners, flood (it's almost never bundled), and windstorm coverage reflect today's rebuild costs, and check your named-storm deductible. The town budgeted $400K just for stormwater — make sure your own water-damage exposure isn't uninsured. [Planning]
- Then fund the reserve and secure the documents: 3–6 months of expenses liquid, a little storm-cash for when cards and ATMs are down, and digital backups of policies, deeds, and IDs — so a physical loss never becomes a financial one. [Planning]
Story hook
The families who rebuilt fastest after Ian weren't the lucky ones — they were the ones whose paperwork, coverage, and cash were already on high ground before the water rose. The state is spending $2.5 million to raise the water plant now, in the calm weeks. Your plan works the same way: you don't buy the umbrella in the downpour.
Handoff
Alfie → John: "John, if a client called today wanting to storm-proof their finances the way the state is storm-proofing the beach — before the peak, not during it — what are the first three moves you'd have them make?"
Theme B · Lead: John
Scary Headlines, Steady Plan
Why long-term investors shouldn't trade the news — with the history to back it up.
Talking points — Alfie riffs, not a script
- The news is genuinely loud: a Strait of Hormuz flare-up pushed Brent oil back around $80 this week, and Russia escalated in Ukraine on the eve of the NATO summit in Ankara. Yet the S&P fell less than half a percent on 7/7. That gap between scary and market-moving is the whole point. [CNBC/Al Jazeera, 7/7–7/8/26]
- History is remarkably consistent: LPL Research finds that across ~20 conflicts since WWII, the S&P fell about 6% on average but recovered within roughly a month in 19 of 20 cases; Hartford finds stocks were higher a year later about 70% of the time. Sellers usually had to buy back higher. [LPL / Hartford, 2026]
- Three quick, real examples: the Cuban Missile Crisis — nuclear brink — down ~7%, back in two weeks; 9/11 — down ~11%, even in about a month; the 1990 Gulf War — down ~16%, but that one took months because it hit oil. Conflict matters; patience has paid. [Historical, 2026]
- The one channel worth watching isn't the battlefield — it's energy and rates. Oil-driven inflation fear has nudged the 10-year toward 4.5% and raised September hike odds. That's the real transmission line, and the reason to hold a plan instead of a hot take on Hormuz. [TradingEconomics/CNBC, 7/7/26]
Story hook
Trading your retirement account on war headlines is like yanking the wheel every time you hit turbulence on a flight. Your stomach drops — but the pilot doesn't turn the plane around, because turbulence almost never changes where you land. Since WWII we've hit this kind of turbulence about 20 times and been back to cruising altitude within a month in 19 of them. The passengers who stayed buckled got where they were going.
Handoff
John → Alfie: "Alfie, you've sat with clients through 9/11, '08, and the 2022 selloff. When someone calls this week terrified about Iran and $80 oil and wants to go all cash, what's the exact conversation you have?"
Call to Action · Segment 4
"The families who weather storms — financial or literal — are the ones who got ready in the calm. Our Tax Plan Playbook is your calm-weather checklist, before the wind blows. Text PLAN to 239-747-1077, reply Y, enter your email, and we'll send it. It's free, and there's no pressure."
Flow: text PLAN → confirmation link → reply Y → enter email → Playbook delivered.
Ten ready reads, quick to story-length. All drive PLAN → 239-747-1077 for the free Tax Plan Playbook. All compliant: no promises, no pressure, no urgency.
Compliance · reviewed by Mary (CCO) before broadcast
[Firm Name] — This program is for general educational purposes only and is not individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. All figures cited are drawn from the sources and dates noted and were current as of the research date; markets move and figures are subject to revision. Nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell any security or to adopt any strategy. No strategy can guarantee a profit or protect against loss; past performance does not indicate future results, and no return is promised or implied.
Market opinions and price targets are attributed to their named sources (e.g., Bank of America / Savita Subramanian, FactSet, LPL Research, Hartford Funds) and are those sources' views, not ours. Scheduled events (June CPI on 7/14; bank and Delta earnings on 7/10 and 7/14) had not occurred as of taping — no results are stated. The Segment 2 discussion of structured notes and tax techniques is educational only: no rate is an offer, no product is recommended, and suitability depends on an individual's circumstances. Structured notes are unsecured obligations subject to issuer credit risk, caps, liquidity limits, and complexity; "protection" features (buffers/barriers) are conditional. Tax-account rules (Trump Accounts, 529s, custodial Roth IRAs, UTMA/UGMA) are summarized for comparison only; confirm current details with a qualified advisor.
The Tax Plan Playbook is offered free with no purchase or obligation, consistent with the SEC Marketing Rule — no testimonials presented as typical, no false scarcity, no false urgency, no promised outcomes. Confirm the on-air CTA mechanics (text PLAN to 239-747-1077; confirmation link → reply Y → email capture) and this disclosure with [Firm Name]'s Chief Compliance Officer prior to air. Advisory services offered through [Firm Name] / [RIA]. Cheech is affiliated with Advantage Wealth Partners; any firm relationship or compensation should be disclosed on air per [Firm Name] policy.