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Financial Grand Rounds
with Bryan Jepson, MD, CFP®


The 5 Conversations to Have With Your Partner Before Retirement, Career Change, or Any Major Life Transition
Transitions are rarely just financial decisions. Whether you are thinking about retirement, cutting back clinically, selling a business, changing careers, or stepping away from a role that has defined you for decades, the hardest part is often not the math. It is the conversations. Most major life transitions place stress on identity, relationships, routines, expectations, and communication long before they create financial problems. And yet many couples spend far more time d
bryanjepson
May 205 min read


Three Foundational Financial Decisions for Physicians That Matter More Than Choosing the Right Index Fund
Your dream house should not become the reason you lose financial freedom. Physicians tend to be detail-oriented and data-driven folks. You have to be if you want to be a great clinician, surgeon, or medical researcher. And, in my experience, that mindset often spills over into their investing style, especially for those who enjoy doing it themselves. Paying attention to those details is important, absolutely. It can save a lot of money over the long run. But it is also s
bryanjepson
May 18 min read


Real Estate Depreciation for Physicians: Separating Tax Strategy from Sale Pitch
Of all the alternative investment options marketed to physicians, real estate probably gets the most traction. And I understand why. Doctors tend to have more discretionary income, even after maxing out their 401(k), and the smart ones are looking for ways to leverage that income for their futures, rather than just spending it on a fancier lifestyle. Because of that draw, a whole industry has emerged—physician real estate investing. And with any industry that involves mon
bryanjepson
Apr 179 min read


Anchoring Bias: How the First Number You Hear Skews Financial Decisions
Doctor dragged down by anchoring bias Have you ever noticed how the first number you hear tends to shape everything that comes after it—whether it’s the price of a house, a job offer, or even your retirement target? That’s not just a quirk of human thinking; it’s a well-documented psychological phenomenon called anchoring bias. It affects our financial decisions more than we realize—quietly influencing what we think something should be worth, what we feel we deserve to earn,
bryanjepson
May 25, 20255 min read
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