Rule Breakers Presents: Foolish Tips on Financial Gift-Giving

On this segment of a very special Rule Breaker Investing podcast, Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner gets back to the business of investing, but with a holiday's related spin: financial gift-giving. It's advice that suits this season, and any season, and to guide him through the details and different options is Mohna Shah, director of operations for Motley Fool Wealth Management -- a sister company of the Motley Fool. But she's not picking specific assets -- this is more about approaching such gifts with the right philosophy and mindset. And that can include gaining and sharing knowledge about finance, both generally and more personally.

A full transcript follows the video.

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This video was recorded on Dec. 13, 2017.

David Gardner: It wouldn't be a Motley Fool Gift-Giving Special if we didn't talk a little bit about financial gift-giving and gift-giving writ large. It can take different forms, and here to help us think through that is Mohna Shah. Mohna is the director of operations for Motley Fool Wealth Management, which is a sister company of The Motley Fool company that I work for and that Rule Breaker Investing, the podcast comes from. Mohna, a delight to have you with me.

Mohna Shah: Thank you so much!

Gardner: So obviously, a couple of tough acts to follow, but I know you're worthy of it. Because it's one thing to say, "Do this or that," or with Chris Hill, walk through on Dec. 24, local stores. But it's another thing if you're thinking about financial gifts this time of year that might be appreciated or might be efficient or just a good thing to do.

So Mohna, start us off with your first one, but before you do I'll just mention one of my childhood memories -- it was more around birthdays than, let's say, the holidays, but for some reason I would get a gift card and it would have dimes stuck in little slots in it. Now, dimes don't really work as much these days anymore, but that was my memory. When I think of financial gifts in my own youth, it was flipping open a gift card and there were little dimes inserted in the slots, so it may have been $1 or something like that. That definitely was one form of a financial gift. What do you want to kick us off with?