Renting vs. Buying a Home: The Largest Inhibitor to Financial Freedom

Buying vs Renting a Home

The Biggest Money Mistake That Will Affect YOUR Financial Future! 









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Don’t make this money mistake and delay yourself from achieving financial freedom! 

Accredited Coaching Call w/ 3M Business Owner

https://youtu.be/JKLMtMtybQ8

 Hey, simplepassivecashflow listeners today, we have another coaching call for an accredited investor.  Net worth is around a couple million.  He’s got a pretty decent size rental property portfolio. But the question we’re going to try and answer and strategize is how do we get into the simple passive cashflow gravy train, pay less tax as well, work in the day job.

Hey Steve, you there. Yes, I’m here.  , thanks for doing this. I know a lot of people will get a lot of value out of it. And, I think a lot of people will get to your position one of these days, but I want you to give people a little bit of background on yourself and, how you came into this world of alternative investing.

Okay. Thank you. I appreciate the opportunity late and, again, my name is Steve. I’ve, an accredited investor. I actually own a company in the construction industry here in California, where I reside. I’ve been living in California now for about 20 years. originally grew up in Pennsylvania and, made my way West stopped in Texas for a few years where I worked as a mechanical engineer before I transitioned into sales and, made my way to California, even had a background, worked at UBS and financial services for.

Two years in between, doing equipment sales and, ended up, acquiring a business from, one of the competitors, to where I had sold equipment before, which was a nice transition since I had quite a bit of background in mechanical engineering. And, but at the time at UBS did, opened my eyes up a lot about what’s going on.

it was very interesting to see that, most financial advisors there knew absolutely nothing about investing. and I don’t know if I should really say that or not, but it’s true. Most of the financial advisors were really there to gather assets, , and there wasn’t a financial planning aspect.

I shouldn’t say that I learned a ton in the couple of years I was there and it was a good way for me to diversify from my mechanical engineering background and really learn a lot about some other things, before I ended up acquiring the business and really starting to grow that and, really start to build my network.

my first rental property, I purchased a fourplex back in Pennsylvania, next to where I went to university, probably about 15 years ago. I knew some other people,  I knew the area, cause it was, by where I went to school back at pop now. so , I bought a place back there, and , that’s more of a place where you’re going to see it, cash flowing type real estate.

You’re not going to see a lot of appreciation. I don’t know that it was the best investment when I made it, it was a fairly old building and definitely over the years have put some money into that. Cause it was probably a hundred year old building my bought it, for the most part I do get, at this point, 15 years later I get quite a bit of cash flow off a bit.

for the most part that one’s almost paid off. but then I, hooked up with another, property manager there and they started bringing me deals, back there. And then I bought another unit that actually bought the.  the unit next door is the one that I had, which was a vacant building at the time.

The owner really just, didn’t keep up with it and it, lost its occupancy permit at some point. I had the opportunity a few years ago that kind of go and add to my portfolio there and, So , I went and bought that building and, fixed that up. And, that was a seven unit apartment building next to the  fourplex I bought.

And that’s seven flags I found actually, after it took a while and a significant amount of money and, probably more money than I had originally budgeted, which has, especially, that’s again, another, probably a hundred year old building that wasn’t occupied at the time. but it was right next to the building I owned and actually cleaning that one up and getting that fully rented now probably made the building I have next to it.

probably a little bit more valuable, at least that’s one of the, cemeteries I thought about that. let’s pause there, Steve, a little bit. Let’s catch people off. So like your profile is pretty typical. A lot of my investors are engineers technical background. you moved off to a different industry.

But today’s, you’re in sales and that’s something I noticed is very common. the guys who are  the linear path thinkers are the ones that stay in their technical roles. And you guys, I’m sure you’ll vouch for this, that I’ve heard it from a lot of other people in similar situation that the sales job.

That if you can speak the technical language in the sales job, that’s like the ideal strategy and lifestyle and highest pay. Okay. Oh, for sure. and, now I own a company where I hire technical salespeople and, I actually have a very interesting story about how I was recommended to go into technical sales.

I don’t know if it’s interesting or not, but, it, yeah, but if you can actually speak the technical language. And understand the interpersonal relations with people and going out and, convincing them,  and being able to speak in layman’s terms would be able to speak the technical jargon and be able to, accurately and quickly learn products and be able to actually articulate and go out and speak to people.

yeah, you can earn a lot more money than the person that’s just going to sit there and run calculations and not be able to have those effective communication skills. I think, especially now that I hire a lot of people doing that as well, to find that person that can handle both the technical aspect and the people aspect, it’s a rare commodity.

And it sounds you’re in that boat as well with the technical background. Yeah, we can do a spreadsheet or two, but we can talk to people. Yeah. Most anybody can learn to talk to people. I can learn to do the spreadsheet, but it’s, some of those, innate qualities of being able to have the communication skills and, being able to relate to other people sometimes more difficult for.

We’ll learn that side of the business. and I think as a credit investor, that’s the name of the game is building connections with other accredited investors. of course, getting in the right room is a big thing, but once you’re in there at Rome, being able to build organic relationships, which I think kids these days, especially in a pandemic world are just Sol.

Yeah, I don’t, it’ll be interesting to see what happens  I have a daughter  that’s one of the other things about my background. I have an 11 year old daughter now and   last year she finished up her school on zoom this year, know she’s doing two days a week and zoom in two half days in person.

really being able to learn at that age to form those interpersonal relationships is probably one of the most important things in life. If you’re having to do school on zoom and not really having some of the, it’s going to be interesting to see how that affects the long-term impacts of, our society.

hopefully it’s only for a year here, but we can get back to normal and the kids aren’t, they can get back to forming those interpersonal relationships and really, probably one of the best things about learning. At least that’s some of the things I hope for the next generation, especially with my daughter.

 You’re right on the verge here, your net worth is around two and a half million. If we can get you up to four and a half, we can turn that daughter into a trust fund kid pretty easily. So we don’t have to worry about that too much. Yeah. And to be honest, like that’s my net worth excluding my business.

Yeah,  that’s icing on top of the cake. Let’s try and get top of the cake, and that’s how I’ve looked at it from my personal perspective. If at the end of the day, I do want to sell that business. And if I am fortunate enough to be able to get anything out of selling that business, that’ll just be icing on the cake.

I really want to build my net worth and my passive income. So I don’t have to rely on my primary business during the day. And I don’t have to worry about it cause I have seen, and that’s one of the things I’ve seen in my life. So many small business owners really just overvalue their business. And when they go to sell it, they put such a high value on their business.

 They can’t sell it because they can never get as much as they think it’s worth. And I guess I’ve been coached along the way , cause I’ve been on both sides of the fence, working, I did sales and I did a little bit of financial advisory work. now a business owner. So I try to see it from all  sides of the perspective here.

I don’t want to have to rely on being able to sell my business for, an astronomical amount that I might not be able to get someday to be able to retire. I really want to build my assets and my passive income to really be able to take care of my lifestyle outside and my business. And then if I am fortunate enough to be able to sell my business for a good amount of at some point.

yeah, that’ll be like you said, icing on top of the cake and yeah. Yeah. I think what I would like for you is get proof of concept with this 2 million bucks before and see if this is all a sham or not. Yeah, for sure. When you can sell the business, you definitely just triple charge yourself and go into Lightspeed with this stuff.

 went back to the rentals. So like this one, the six Oh six Lake and. This one here you bought.  in a previous life, right? A long time ago.  Where were you at? Like career-wise or like net worth wise back then, or so career-wise, I didn’t have much of a net worth probably then and the six Oh six Lake street, to be honest, I’ve never sold a piece of real estate, gave one away in a divorce one time, but I’ve never sold a piece of real estate.

The six Oh six Lake street was one of my first purchases, but , It’s a condo  in the city that I live in and, I was where it was my primary residence at the time. I was very fortunate in life. When I did go into technical sales, I was able to quickly become probably one of the top technical sales reps in the company that was working for very quickly and became a higher earner.

You know what I’m saying, making a high six figure income at that time. really, I started out of college with. maybe a thousand dollars in my pocket, just from working summers lifeguarding back in Pennsylvania. So I really didn’t have much of a net worth. but I was fortunate, when I did go into sales, I.

Lived off of my base salary. And every one of my bonuses I got from doing sales, I started putting away it started maxing out my 401k every year, as soon as I started, as I moved to California 20 years ago. so that’s really helped as well. But yeah, like I said, the six Oh six, I really didn’t have much of a net worth then.

I was fortunate enough to have a 10% positive. Which surprisingly in 2005, when I went to the bank and told them I had enough for a 10% deposit, they’re like, wow, most people hardly have anything, cause that was the time when everybody was doing negam loans and all kinds of crazy things that, ended up, causing that the great recession of 2007.

But sorry, I’d say, I really didn’t have a lot of a network at that point. I was really just, starting to build from scratch. If you will. I was fortunate enough to be successful at work. I was doing as working as a sales engineer during the day, had a pretty good , high six figure income at the time for being fairly young at the time in my twenties.

But I went and bought the six Oh six Lake straight again, not with my primary residence at the time after I moved out. I just really just turned it into a rental, the one 19, place in Pennsylvania, I went and, acquired that as, startup. Somewhat trying to start building my passive income and, as an investment strategy as well.

But so if you guys have been, also check this out on the YouTube channel, we have the personal financial sheet of then the property, cashflow worksheet of,  Steve was talking, I was playing around with some members here. I got  the amount of equity you have in each of these properties.

And I did some quick calculations on the percentage of equity you have.  so the game plan here is to go after, you kinda know this, You know how this,  we gotta go shoot the or whatever animal you’d like to eat. Buffalo status Buffalo here. So that’s probably looking at like the three Oh one North property that you acquired in 2016.

You have no mortgage on it. Is that right? No. I bought that one for cash and, being that one’s, in the South that, I was fortunate enough to catch  A good rise. And, versus the properties I bought in the Northeast, I would say never really appreciated that much, that one, which was in the South, you seem to get good appreciation down there because so many of the folks are moving from the Northeast and going South the same space.

Exactly. . Yeah. It’s a great shifts. Is the book about that?  what did you buy that one for I bought that for $65,000 cash and I just paid cash for it at the time. but it’s, it was located in a redeveloping area outside of the city, down in Florida. It was a redeveloping area at the time.

And, it’s funny on that property. I probably get two, three calls a week from people trying to buy that property from me now. But  I bought it for about 65,000. I did have to go in and, it needed a new air conditioner, some new plumbing, some new electrical, but it’s a nice three bedroom, property down there in Florida.

Okay. Okay. And  you don’t put any other like improvements in it. For $225,000 capital gain, is that right?  I don’t know. I guess that’s an estimate. It can be a high estimate too. People always say Oh, I got to check with my CPA. I was like, your CPA, it’s going to take them two hours to figure this out.

And they’re going to ask them the same questions I’m asking you now.  that could be a little bit of a high estimate. Yeah. that could be a little bit of a high estimate on that property, but that’s what, I do get quite a bit of calls. Nobody’s probably quite offered me that for it, but, 

 I guess I did make some improvements on it. Like I did new plumbing, no electrical and do air conditioning. there were a couple of maybe new windows and things like that. And , it was about five years ago, but that part of Florida really seems to have been a redeveloping area.

And I think I got that one for a pretty good deal. I bought it from somebody who was looking to sell it. it was a cash as is deal. So I’m sure I bought that way under market at the time as well. So it was probably also a good purchases of $300,000.  It might be,  maybe it’s only two 50 or maybe it’s even 200, but, it’s definitely, probably it’s in that range.

I don’t know. I’ve always. Put 300 in there. Okay. let me just catch it down to two and 54, just for calculation sake. And then what I’m also trying to do is  you got to add a little bit more, maybe like 20 grand to each of these, for the depreciation recapture.

 you know what that is, right? Like you’re probably thinking of loss on the building value every year. And then this, the property that you bought 15 years ago, 2005, 2006, maybe I’m just going to hard type that in an extra, maybe  50 grand. So  how do you monetize that depreciation recapture, if you will.

because I don’t know, is there a way to monetize that? I’m just throwing it a placeholder of 50 grand.  here’s how you do it. Would you buy this one at the  six Oh six language you buy it at? So I actually paid 665,000 for that one, back in 2005.

Okay. And  where’s this at? Okay. So expensive area. So this is good for taxes because I’m just, shooting from the hip here. Like usually one third of the property value or 0.3, 3% of that six, $665,000 is the. Building value. Yeah. Yeah. The improvements versus the land. Correct. And some of the other ones I’ll use a third for, or two-thirds of the building. So  that’s the total building value is 221,000. And then I’m to divide that by 27 years. Yeah. And I know my accountant on a annual basis on my taxes does. Use some of that. And I don’t know what the numbers are off the top of my head, but I know my accounting firm, the used do depreciate, those assets and the rentals versus the net income that I get from on an annualized basis.

Yeah. So they are probably doing around 8,200 bucks a year. And  we’re doing the math right here. It’s super simple.  it’s not perfect, but it’s close enough for government work for our purposes.  you’ve owned us for what? 15 years? Yeah. About 15 years.

So I’m going to say $123,000 is what I think you should add to your capital gain. Oh, I see. So what you’re saying is, yeah, you’re adding that back into the capital gain. Yeah. So I’m going to do that, the same thing to that other one that you bought in 2008.  that one you bought one about for what? 200 hundred?

Yeah, 189,000. Okay, let’s call it 200 grand just to be more conservative and that’s in California too, or no that one’s in Pennsylvania so that the land value is probably much less for sure there. Yeah. Yeah. We’ll call it half because half the Democrats have for full weekends, stay away from that. I dunno.

I don’t know how, it’s definitely not like Texas or Alabama or Georgia. I don’t know, let’s just call it half. You’ll have a split state, as we know, it was a split state for sure.  and then you own that one for a while? About 14 years. Yeah. So boom, 51 grand.  so then we T we add that to that, and then that this is our real tax one.

This one it’s we could probably do the same math. Sheila, I’ll just, I don’t, I dunno if I want to do that, but I just, I don’t have a central little purchase price. Yeah. Yeah. these are like, you bought it sold little bit and only like a few years ago. it’s probably not much, if I would just be conservative, maybe add an extra 20 grand, I don’t know.

But the big ones we got, right? Yeah. So the reason why I’m doing that is like you’re going to sell these things, but let’s also look at, that’s a two factor decision here. We have to go kill the Buffalo. That is the fattest and not doing anything, the laziest money, which is this one and this one, but we also have to factor in all right.

when we do that, will we have $195,000 of passive losses to offset that transaction? This is the decision process, or instead, maybe we go after this one first that’s $150,000 of passive losses, or I know you went into the last deal with us, in Houston. I don’t know how much you put in, but let’s just say you put in a hundred.

Yeah, I didn’t do the Houston one. I did the Dallas one and the Alabama one. So I did two deals. Yeah. Oh, okay. Okay. Okay. Yeah. The Dallas one thing, hopefully you got your check already. I did, yes. I got my first check from, investing in one of the simple passive cashflow and one of Lane’s, deals.

So I did, I just got it. Yeah, it worked. I got my first check. So my, yeah, check. Oh, you did you get your K one? No, I didn’t get a K one. I did. I invested in that one. it was called the colony. and that’s it now on this summer, what was it maybe June or may you, haven’t got your K one. You’ll get your K one in March for that.

Yeah, my guests that was pre all these, so like  lately, like all these deals have, like these COVID reserves, it’s dilutes the pot, so it lowers the motto, the deduction. So I think with colony. Don’t quote me on this. Of course, we’re on recording here, but maybe you’re going to see if you put in a hundred grand, you’re going to get like 60 to $80,000 of passive losses back.

Okay. let’s just go with that. Okay. So  I don’t know how much passive losses you have. You have to look up. I think it’s the 58 something form. people can figure out this form, go to my taxPage@simplepasacastle.com slash tax. But this is a question to ask your CPA’s okay, can you go to my tax 58, whatever form.

And tell me how much passive losses I have now. , I’m just guesstimating with the amount of stuff you have. I’m guessing you have maybe. A hundred thousand dollars of passive Boston’s plus or minus 50 is what I’m guessing. So with your hospital, I don’t know, off the top of my head, but yeah, usually you’re surprised that you have more than what you’d think.

Typical.  label this pals. So now you have to, you went into the colony for a hundred grand. Let’s just say you get. I don’t know, to be conservative $60,000 of passive losses. So now you’re walking around with $160,000 of passive losses. And then I did the one in Alabama, too, which is I don’t. That was more of a buildup deal.

I don’t know if there’s going to be passive offices for that. yeah. Not until we put the asset in service. So that’ll be on the 2021 K one,  just for. So show the scenarios, let’s see you. That was a regular deal, right? Where it wasn’t a development deal where you got the losses this year, or it was already making money.

 As long as we can we’re making $1, we can do, we can give you the losses that exceed the income. So let’s just say, that one, maybe you got $70,000 of passive losses just saying, so add this up. Let’s just say. You’re walking around with $230,000 of passive losses. So that would allow you to sell this asset, take your hundred $95,000 depreciation, recapture and tax hit, but then you have 230,000 to offset it.

So you have to deduct this from your two 30 and you should still have some leftover, but when you take this deal and there’s what $250,000 of equity and.  That’s the game plan, And you got the deployment tab. We’ll get, maybe we’ll get to the deployment tab on this personal financial sheet, but that might be, I don’t know what your goals are for 2021, but maybe that’s your goal is to invest all $250,000 into two, three deals, whatever.

Okay. And then let’s just say you. You invest that money. And an add a 50% ratio, maybe you get $125,000 or more passive losses to replenish that. That kind of makes sense. Yeah. So if I invested that two 50, I might get another, 125,000 pops of losses for the following year. yeah.

And this is what I call the simple passive cashflow gravy train. You don’t seem like a drug user, but if you were a juggler user or not the old days, this is going from one high to the next.  any questions on that? no, I’d have to get the concept where, you’re redeploying, you’re selling those assets that are appreciated and going back in and, redeploying those assets and something that’s flowing more cash, That’s. Or a higher rate of return. Really? That’s what you’re talking about doing,  you got a lot of things going on. You got the witch Buffalo. You’re going to go on hunt down first this isn’t going to happen overnight. this is positive two or three years to sell all these.

Yeah. And then I also, I’ve been redeploying quite a bit of cash. I made probably four or $500,000 in investments this year alone.  just based off of last year. It was a good year. My income as a business owner now is completely variable, but. In a good year, I can go and invest, significant some that as well.

and I think that’s good. Like you segregate. That’s what I do with my business and education side. Like I segregate my investing and  and sometimes I’ll have, even my wife will have her investment stuff that I segregate even more, just so I can see how I’m doing.  but we’ll look at this personal financial sheet.

And what I looked here is like, all right, what velocity are you moving at? Just set a cashflow standpoint. So   you make about 37,000 of income. your expenses going out is actually pretty good. I’ve seen people that make a third of the less money of you have just as much expenses.

So you’re doing a good job there. the magic number, the net is 27,000 a month. so yeah, you’re in the top, 1% of my investors. I would say if you’re making, if you’re able to net more than a hundred grand, you’re doing super well. Okay. Yeah. And to be honest, like those income numbers are.

They don’t really include the profits of my business either. in good years, it can be significantly higher than not, but in bad years, if you run a business and the type of industry, especially with COVID this year,   we may not make it. We’re certainly not going to make a lot of bonuses or anything like that.

Other than that. Yeah. Yeah. And a lot of my clients are just. Working stiffs, That W2 guys. but there are some business owners. definitely a minority of my clients are business owners so they can relate. But,  but yeah, if I would say whether you’re a business owner or you’re W2 guy, if you’re netting more than a hundred grand a year and your net worth is a million dollars, at least.

 you’re on the, you’re going to be in five or 10 years, you’re going to hit financial freedom unless you spend a lot of money. Yeah. And that is the trick. Cause if it’s sitting there, people tend to spend it. Yeah. Yeah. But I would S the reason why I say, I just want to point that out to you is because you’re doing like better than two and a half times that.

So I would say, you’re going to get there. I don’t know what kind of lifestyle you live, but yeah. Fly first class, buy a nice car, yeah. Relax a little bit. Take your time. Getting there. Yeah. That’s for sure. So yeah, I think that’s just a matter of, you don’t really need to sell 

these types of properties, because you have so much cashflow coming in, you can invest your normal liquidity, but maybe just, I dunno, if these are fun to you, they’re probably not what rental property is fun. just to simplify your life and lower your liability,  getting rid of these rental properties, like I would be concerned with one of these rental properties that 10, the liability and 10 or 20 LP investments.

Okay.  I don’t know what you’re doing with asset protection. Now we don’t have to get into this, but because it’s recorded, but for you, I would definitely be looking into more of an irrevocable trust or something more heavy duty, like a bridge trust. Yeah. We can talk about that. I really haven’t done too much.

yeah, there are certainly things I have done already, but yeah. I don’t know if I’ve done everything yet, either on that. But yeah, definitely get rid of the direct frontals simplify her life.

But yeah. any questions you had, some of the things I really haven’t, you said you are a proponent of the infinite banking thing, and that was something I put on there. and I’ve had a couple of scenarios run and I guess. How do you utilize that infinite banking concept? You yourself have a whole life policy and do that.

It is something I’m looking into, but haven’t really done it, but it is something you’ve mentioned to me before I’ve heard on your things that you do. how do you utilize that and does that help increase your cashflow? I personally do it, but you gotta find other guys that are in your situation, I guess maybe you and I are in the same situation.

a lot of guys in my mastermind, I put them together because they’re in the same situations. They’re W2 guys.  but I need to have a few hundred thousand dollars in case that deal doesn’t go that well, or we need to put money in escrow as a requirement of the lender. So for me, it’s a very good like place to store  liquidity because I need it at hand.

Whereas if you’re just a W2 guy, a doctor, you don’t really need that much liquidity and you can run pretty neat,  I don’t know how you do things, whether you keep cash reserves in the business. I do keep Castro’s within our business as well. And we have, obviously lines of credit with our corporate banking relationships.

We have, lines of credit for things with the business as well. But, I do like to keep some liquidity on hand, but I have gone and invested very aggressively at times and taken that down.  yeah, I do need to keep some liquidity, obviously because of the rental properties. Because things come up, you might need a new roof somewhere.

You might need a bunch of appliances somewhere, but about, if it’s 50 grand, a hundred grand or less that’s me meal, right? Like I’m talking to a capital overlay of a quarter million, half a million for your business that you potentially need. that’s what I skip in that bank for personally.

 but yeah, I would probably put you in the category of just, you can probably run pretty lean with your liquidity. Therefore you can load up your infinite banking and just start investing the majority of it where I, what I’m saying is for me, I load up my infinite banking, but I got to keep it.

In fact,  My thought with the infinite banking was I could load up money in there and then deploy it into something like these LPs or other rental investments or other passive potential passive cashflow. For you, it’s a no brainer.

 But for the guy who’s like under a half, a million dollars net worth, they need to get every penny they have. And not funnel that through something where they’re going to get hit on fees, 10, 20%, their first few years, they need to invest it where  this is  perfect for you because you’re a little bit inefficient with your liquidity.

you’ve got a bunch of liquidity parked in rentals. You got money coming in. I don’t know if I call some of those rentals, liquidity. Yeah. But just, just in your, like your money yeah. Your net, 200,000 plus a year. I don’t know   what’s your practices on your, just personal finances on your checking account savings account?

How much liquidity do you keep in there? But I would move towards keeping most of it in your infinite banking. And, it’d be less than 10, 20 grand in your checking account. Okay. But that’s what you do, some of your cash on hand, you move into the infinite banking. Cause even if you’re getting, that three, 4%, at least that’s what I’ve seen from some of the illustrations that, you know, and it also takes that what, four to five years now, maybe six years to where what you’re putting in kind of hurdles over the.

to you’re actually getting money, you need to be setting it up where that, whole life policy needs to run for a significant amount of time before you start seeing higher cash values than what you’re putting into it. Yeah, but if you would have taken all those like fancy things, they show you, it’s not entirely true.

They don’t have parrot. If you would have taken that money and put it into a rental or syndication, if you do that, that’s going to skyrocket way more. So there’s opportunity lost costs that not taking into effect, but you don’t need to be.  super efficient, right? Like you’re paying costs to  silo to put this money.

That’s tax-free and it is off the table litigators for the most part, there’s a benefit you’re getting, and there’s a cost from paying for it. And for you, it’s a no brainer, but it’s just to what extent. let me just throw something out. let me know what your thoughts are, if you’re able to save 200 grand a year and you’re making a commitment to at least going into a couple of deals every year, so maybe $150,000, you’re deploying every year religiously.

 and that leaves you 50 grand of play money. Maybe I would throw in at least 30 grand a year, I would feed into a policy. Okay. Yeah. I had done looking at 25, but yeah, that’s kinda, I always say, I tell people start off with a lot less than they think. Maybe because when I did it, I did  50 grand a year.

I got a few years and I was like, Oh shoot, this is a lot of money because then I start to go into all these deals that my money disappeared.  yeah, your liquidity dries up outside of, Your cash flow bank, at least. Yeah. Now my deals are starting to go full cycle and cash out.

So I have big liquidity events. So now I’m going to make a much bigger policy for myself to right-size and that’s the idea like once you make a policy, like my strategy is making a policy. They’re usually like five to seven years. Get as the shortest period as you can. And then go in knowing that maybe in the next two or three years, as you , start to see this strategy, play out, you layer up another one on top of it.

You layer another one on top, like layering, whole life policies are infinite banking, concept type policies. If you will, you don’t necessarily need to do it all at once. You can go in and do one and just get the shortest timeframe to where it’s actually,  Cashflow flexible. I don’t think it’s too much of a pain to do the physical thing and do the application.

No, it’s not that  I say that because the life insurance guy is always going to be like, trying to sign you up for the longest line. Like it’s just the nature of the salesman. Yeah. You want the one with the shortest duration. So that makes sense. Yeah. and then, for me, as, especially as a business owner tax reduction strategies really have to be, top of mind and especially living in California,  the,  the California, government seems to be going crazy on us, with what they want to do for taxes.

not to mention, we’re  going to becoming under a new administration. Who’s already talking about maybe increasing taxes as well. tax reduction strategies obviously are. something that are very key, to me as well. And I don’t know if you guys have any good tax reduction strategies or what you do for tax reduction.

Yeah, you’re damn right. We do. this is why like people are interested in deals, but when they come into the mastermind, they start to realize that deals is only one third of the picture. Yeah. The bigger part is keeping most of your money by paying very little taxes. Yeah, because that’s, I feel like I was fairly tax efficient, but my tax bills are enormous.

And not even just to the federal government, also to the state of California where,  they’re significant sums on annualized basis. There’s ways to better recapture some of that, I’m definitely open to listening to that. And where is your current. AGI at L ox event, Bentley adjusted gross income.

 last year it was probably after certain adjustments, like I said, it is variable. I don’t know. It was probably in the six, $700,000 range last year. Sure. Yeah. So you’re probably in the category of most doctors, so the general ideas we’re trying to get you out of the red zone, which is under 330,000 or so.

Married filing jointly.  yeah. Are you’re married? No, I’m filing single now. Oh no.  we got to find you somebody who’s willing to just say nevermind. Yeah, it was funny because there’s plenty that would probably do that. But,  I got a lot of, pilot, single pilot investors personally, like four or five of these guys and I keep telling them the same thing.

So this whole real estate professional status, 750 hours. You can’t do it. My friend. I’m sorry. , this is another idea. Maybe for the next five to 10 years is you sell your business and you become more of a passive entity, right? This is another hierarchy thing you need to be thinking about is  changing our income from ordinary to passive.

And most people think of it as terms of changing their W2 job to more rental properties indications. But it can also mean changing your business, whether it’s a chiropractic business or your business where you’re just.  you’re not an operation you don’t do work. You just have other people work for you and the business category to the eye category.

But maybe you can munch on that in your head, over the holidays or something like that. But for now, certainly I always try to adjust. and my income, this not all of it comes out as W2 income. Certainly a  large portion comes from distributions, from profitability on the company.

Versus W2 income. But again, in a perfect role, if you could maybe sell the business to some other poor soul wants to do all the works, create a royalty stream for yourself in a way. But I know the guy that we ran a corporate office building and I know the guy comes around on the first of the month or he did before he passed away, that he owned like 10 of those buildings.

 

Kind of an interesting guy and just yeah, you work way too hard for all your money goes on the first of the month. I just drive around and pick up checks. So exactly. that’s where you get to,  like for me, I don’t make much active income.  it all comes as passive income now. Yeah.

Yeah, but, and that’s what I’m trying to get to the point where I am generating more passive income and I’ve taken some steps. I still think your highest and best use is just keep doing your business because you do well there. Yeah, for sure. I’m not gonna, I’m not looking to give that up anytime soon, but I also want to have that safety net of,  substantial, passive income that, I can, Switched back into a lower gear if I need to at some point, or, If something happens or if I cancel the business, I want you to keep working your day job because that’s your highest and best use.

That’s like Tom Brady when I don’t know how old he is, but he’s just keep throwing the football. Tom’s almost my age. I don’t know how he’s still through it. He’s younger than me by I think a year or two, but I don’t know how I can still throw a football like that. I went out on the beach and was throwing a football the other day in a flag football game.

And. Yeah, this is actually like even a year or two ago. And I was like, I don’t know. My arm was about to fall off after. Yeah. The same analogous shape for me. I bet. I bet he’s super sore still too. I think his arm is falling off, but at the same thing for you,  I know that the business gives you headaches, but I think just do it a few more years, maybe five or 10.

I don’t know, get it to a level where it’s manageable, but like now you’re trying to create legacy wealth from your family. You’re going to blow past four and a half million. I’m looking like we want to get you to eight figures. yeah, I think it’s definitely within the realm of possibility, with my trajectory and, obviously the, you got get a few lucky bounces or along the way, and you’ve got to hope nothing catastrophic happens and you got to plan for the word, you got to plan for the best, also, make up.

contingencies in case something bad happens. But yeah, if everything keeps going the way it is and keeping fortunate, like I have been in my life and keep working hard. I think I should be able to blow past that. I’m just on the precipice of, starting to build wealth, and like I said, I acquired that company about 10 years ago.

And when I did that, obviously all of my rental property purchasing stops, all those types of things and everything up. Dumped into the company. And now I’m just actually getting to the point where I’m starting to get out of the company. some of everything I had to put back into it when I first started it years ago.

so again, real estate professional status. but we’ll talk again, if you ever get married, try and integrate that. And for people listening, what we’re talking about is, using the passive losses to lower his. AGI down to that 300 level or when Biden starts to, just destroy people over that $400,000 AGI Mark.

But, that’s the game there, but since I become comment just as, so as soon as I become a real estate professional, if you will, then I can net off these passive losses from investing in your LPs or from my other real estate properties  against my income. And you do 750 hours of active participation.

Okay. So that’d be, yeah, but you have to do whatever it does to get qualified as a real estate professional. You’re right. You’re right. But because you are a single guy and you operate a full-time business, it ain’t going to happen for you. I know. I mean my account one that I actually had my real estate license at one point when I went and just got it years ago, when I started doing some real, I let it lapse now I don’t have it anymore, but that’s a misnomer.

So that’s not going to help you get the 750 hours of active participation. Yeah, it’s not in your personal portfolio is going to be those rental properties or what a lot of guys will do is they just get a little dinky short term rental and play that off.

Or they do a little thingy flip  just pure for taxes, but they can’t have that full-time day job, which is why. You need a spouse that is willing to not have a day job. That’s difficult. Yeah. There’s plenty of those out there. Looking for that position. We should have a dating thing.

That’s why in the mastermind thing, I put it here. No, we’ve got to match, make people we’re just going to get together and talk about it. Dating tips and stuff like that.  so for you, like the only thing that you have is And  I don’t do these myself personally, but I know a lot of guys in my group does them is like the land conservation easements, donating money at a five to one multiplier at most staying out of like the prohibited transaction or the greedy land where you’re abusing the system to bring down your taxable.

Like AGI or different other strategies like oil and gas investments, which isn’t the nicest, the best thing these days. And it’s really hard to find the operator in that. but really those are the only options to you.  The analogy I use a lot is  the passive loss is real realistic professional status.

That’s  good diet and exercise, good sleep, right? It’s the holistic solutions to good health. You can’t do that. Steve,  we can only give you like Lippert tour or whatever, like high blood pressure, like keeping you back from the edge right now. That’s all you got. And ideally you don’t want to be doing that stuff forever.

We got to get you to a point.  but yeah, whatever life choices you want. Yeah. I want to start working on building more of my life resume and, not so much at the office, I guess at some point, but, yeah, I got to keep doing the office thing for a while longer, for sure.  To get to that point, but right.

But that’s, that those are your options and . If you’re at $600,000 AGI, and the goal is to get you around 300 or less, maybe throw in 50 grand into a land conservation easement to get $250,000 of, lower your AGI. But there’s a max.

You can do that. I think. And this is where all the things always change. And this is why we mastermind about this stuff. And we have that group, we’re just going over this on a high level, but not getting advice. Yeah, I’ve not heard of that land conservation easement. I’ll have to do a little bit of research into that or, yeah, I, there’s a page on my website that kind of has an overview.

I think it’s that simple passive castle.com/land. I think currently you can deduct, you can only do 50% of your income now. So I don’t know if it’s AGI or GI or what, but.  you can’t drive your entire AGI down to zero.

be able to qualify for a loan again either. Yeah, no. Would you want to, but  there’s been a lot of scrutiny over these things, which I think is a little overblown, but people are doing these fee simple arrangements where. I don’t entirely know what the heck it is, but I know you for fee simple, you can only drive it down 30%, but I think still think that’s good enough, right?

Like I’m not saying go from 600 down to 300, but maybe this year, if you want to try it, maybe you put in 20 grand to get a hundred thousand dollars deduction. See how it works. Yeah. Okay. Yeah, definitely do a little bit of research on that. Thank you for the tip. I hadn’t heard of that before. It’s a it’s in December already.

So you got a couple of weeks of research study. Yeah, I guess I’ll have to get on that for sure. Yeah. But yeah, guys we’ll do this every year. Especially doctors high paid W2. Guys. They’ll do this in combination too, with real estate professional status. So you don’t burn out their passive losses. Okay. How does the doctor go about getting, a real estate professional designation?

A lot of times they have a spouse that it was a homemaker. I said, yeah, they’ll go do it.  that’s pretty common, right? Yeah, no, it is. Yeah. it’s, Actually, I do get a lot of clients where it’s like both spouses.  I have the  onboarding call with them and they both come.

I’m like, okay, this is refreshing. And they’re both super excited about this financial independence stuff. And I’m like, Oh my goodness. don’t tell me, you guys both love your job. we both love our job and Oh my goodness, how is that possible? So I was asked like, what should you guys.

Dislike your job the most, or I don’t know, we got a word in our special way, but,  typically there’s one person that’s yeah, I’ll quit my job part time. Okay. That’s the ideal arrangement? that’s what I do. I just use what I strategize with my accountant and said we just use them.

We just burn up our passive losses to drive it down to nothing. Got the texts about that thing because their logic is a tax savings. I could probably make more money than a potential to pay 10, 20% less taxes in a future year. If you can eliminate taxes, that’s the best thing, but the second best thing is delaying them.

And if you can delay it by having, offsetting them, by some of the losses into and reinvesting into the future year. yeah, plus we’re making money on all of , those investments in the meanwhile, here’s the argument for example,  mr.

Sanders scenario, where you, again, where you have $230,000 of passive losses, Yeah. And let’s just say you already driven your HEI down to 150,000. And for folks listening, if your AGI is less than $250,000 chillax dude, like you’re not paying that much taxes for you to thrive it down even more and to  execute and  activate these passive losses that get you even lower.

It may not be worth it because the  lower your AGI goes, the less taxes percentage-wise you pay because we’re not progressing tax system. So what I was  telling Mike, my accountant was like, why wouldn’t we save this extra a hundred thousand dollars and I’ll pay some taxes, but they ultimately got me to side with their strategy.

But I think in different situations, it’s different for some people. So not one situation fits everybody. At least  you and I can intend on the G have this conversation and take that information and tenancy co converse with our tax accountant because the tax accountant is not going to really be mindful of this stuff.

Yeah. You have to guide them. Yes. Yeah. You need to guide them in the know somewhat of the overall strategy for sure. But, yeah. anything else, anything, any other strategies that you were looking at? I made, it sounds like I should probably be looking at the infinite banking system.

I haven’t, I get what you’re saying about maybe,  taking the equity out of some of the properties I have and start to redeploying that at , higher yielding assets, and possibly, limiting liability by going into some of these. And I was happy to see, I got my first check this month from the first deal we did.

So that’s working so far, you got a lot on your plate, man. You gotta sell assets. You gotta go into deals. You gotta infinite banking and you got a.  I got to run a company on my spare time. Maybe do land conservation, EAs conservation.  dude, join the mastermind. like I guarantee if I don’t  double your money.

Once you paid,  let you blog I’ll refile. Like it is a no brainer, man. Like you need to talk, even build your network with the right people around you. Okay. Yeah. I definitely have some high net worth friends as well, but some of them are much higher net worth than me then, they aren’t necessarily doing some of these strategies because they’re already over that.

That’s the problem there. Second generational wealth people. I have friends, yeah. That are like second generational wealth. And they didn’t start with zero in their bank account when they got out of college and started. Yeah. So when I can’t say I had zero, I was fortunate. At least I didn’t have huge loans that were overbearing, but, I didn’t have, obviously that thing, I didn’t have anybody to lend me a ton of money or to give me a ton of money to start with.

I was, started by saving and just, driving the first car. I had 200,000 miles.  this is your tribe, man. this is all first-generation. guys, and they’re like 35 to 55 range.  They got kids your age. They’re in that one, the $4 million range. this is your child.

Yeah, definitely. I look at it then. And how often you guys meet with the mastermind and, Oh, we just, we do a live zoom call every couple days, week. So whatever you got going on, we can take care of. But what I say is I don’t want you guys to spend more than a few hours a month with this group.

Just jump on the calls. We’ve recorded them. So that’s going to keep you busy, but use the database to just book a call with every member and see who you get along with. You got a lot of people in California and you meet up for beers or something like that. Okay. So you do have a number of members out here in California.

Yeah. I’m sure at least a dozen or two in California. that’s majority of where folks are at for guys too much taxes up there as far as for people paying all the taxes. Yeah. Yeah. But then we’ll show you the good stuff, like which word it puts your passive investments to circumvent the state taxes.

 That’s the one that I’ve been learning about from some folks lately. Okay. Yeah. I’d certainly be interested in learning more about that. If  were ways to play some of these, passive investments so that, the state of California can, not, have their greedy hands out into everything, but yeah.

But, but cause Steve, thanks for doing this. All right. thank you. there’s always a good talking to you lane and, so far happy with the deals I’ve done, so far, looking to see how they continue progressing and, be interested to see what you guys are putting out next year. I think, next couple of months I’m rebuilding up my cash reserves again, and then I’ll look to start deploying some stuff.

I got lost here in the research as well, too. Yeah. Yeah. It helped let me know, man. but yeah. Thanks everybody for listening. if you guys want to DDS, put yourself out to the world, shoot me an email at lane@simplepassivecashflow.com And, thanks for joining us, Thank you. 

2021 Changes to Real Estate’s Biggest Tax Incentive

https://youtu.be/GVD0DpFMY70

The 2018 tax and jobs act allowed for a bonus depreciation and whole bunch of passive losses that you could extract from deals that do cost segregation. The bonus depreciation was, Hey, if you have five, seven, 15 year property, anything less than 20 years. You could choose to accelerate the depreciation.

 

Now let’s say you have a carpeting and you put a hundred thousand dollars of carpeting into an apartment building. Normally you’d get to write off $20,000 a year as a deduction because the whole carpet will last five years. So you’d take $20,000 in June. What accelerated depreciation allows you to do is just take it in one year.

 

You have this huge incentive because about 30% of most buildings. Our five, seven, 15 year property. So all of a sudden you can accelerate your depreciation at any particular time. You can just, you can choose five years after owning a building. Boom, I’m going to take it. And you have this acceleration where you can really accelerate what you’re able to do.

 

Sometimes it’s 50. Sometimes it’s a hundred percent. It depends on when you put the building into service, but you can do the acceleration. And all you’re doing. There’s nothing crazy about it. You’re just writing it off early. You’re still gonna write it off over time, but it’s almost like getting a loan from uncle Sam for no interest and saying, Hey, I know I’m going to get the tax benefit over the next 20 years.

 

How about you? Just give it to me now. So if you guys miss it, the rule of thumb is about a third of the building gets written off in the first year, but to simplify it even more, a lot of these deals, you’re trying to max out the leverage 70, 80% loan to value. So what I’ve seen is passive investors that put in a hundred grand, they’re getting anywhere from 60 cents to almost a dollar back in that first year bonus appreciation, 60 grand or 80 grand back, depending on the deal.

 

Unless you qualify as a real estate professional way, what you might see as the accelerated depreciation. I think in 2023. So in three years, two years really will start to go down to 80% and I’ll drop to 60% and then go down from there. I’m not certain, but I may, I haven’t looked at it in so long. If it goes away completely, I’d be shocked, but sometimes it goes down to 50%, which is still pretty good.

 

Not always do we accelerate the depreciation, especially not on the five-year property. Sometimes you just let it spread because unlike you, like you’re a real estate professional, you had massive amounts of deduction, but it doesn’t help you to get really dizzy zero because the lower tax rates are pretty low.

 

Like I’m okay. Paying 12%. I’m okay. Paying 22%. What I’m not okay. Is paying 39.6% on rents. I’m not okay. Paying 37%. I’m not okay. Paying 32%. Like it’s getting too high plus by state. So sometimes it’s just about making sure that you’re hitting that number. So I tend to look at 200,000 and say, if I can keep people around $200,000 a year, That tax.

 

It’s not going to be so extreme. You get up into the half, a million, 600,000 rings, every dollar. So much of it is being taken away from you for every dollar you make. Let’s say we had the Biden for every dollar you made after a million bucks. If somebody was taking 60% of it. And that’s really what it gets up to.

 

If somebody is taking that much away from you, you’re probably don’t have much incentive to make money and it’s hurting. Cause it’s not always cash that you’re receiving. Sometimes it’s profit, that’s blowing down via K one or your investment. You don’t have the cash. Now you have to liquidate assets to pay the tax bill.

 

And that’s what we want to make sure that you’re never in that situation.

January 2021 Monthly Market Update

https://youtu.be/adRXM-HItHE

All right. Hello everybody. This is January, 2021. We made it yay. 35 monthly market update. We’ll be talking about the 2020 statistics, how it was for 2020 real estate versus the stock market and that rehab trends. Introducing Dean here. There’s this contact information you went to buy or sell your house.

Great time to sell. Does that sound happy? New year, buddy? Glad everyone made it through. Pretty exciting new years. I don’t know how the festivities were for you lean, but we saw quite a few areas as usual. Thankfully you weren’t in a beach or Waipahu, right? I think they, Oh yeah. So was like, It’s always a great shortage.

If you see those videos of people driving through, like on the freeway passing, when is the next Paki off like, Oh, I don’t keep up. Take your kids? Go on there for the next firework workshop. Why the ones here blew it away. Eight away starting off 2021. , as we always do talking about, August statistics for December, 2020, it was the same trend as we’ve had for the last, maybe nine months since the April, March of 2020, where we’ve seen Prices go up.

We’ve seen volume go up and we’ve seen days on market go down or signs of a strong, healthy market favorable for the sellers for the most part. So on the single family on the left, median single family prices at 870,000 increase of 6.1% from prior year. Or Same time in December, 2019 closed sales at 420.

It’s like almost a 36% increase from same time last year. And these are market in staying at 10 days for single family, which is as discussed before very low. And that’s from the point that the property is listed from the point it gets into contract. So on the condo townhouse side, we have 455,000 as a meeting conduct price increase of 7%, close sales 20% increase at 514 closed sales.

And these are markets still really low 19 days. That number is a little bit deceiving though, because I think overall yes, it is still a strong seller’s market, but it seems to be a way stronger on the single-family side. And part of it due to COVID. So now we look at closed sales, we see.

, I want to talk about just taking a look at the trends, right? So we talked about the five 14 and the four 24 single family. But if you see that trend going upwards, so we’re seeing, volume tending to go up and on the next slide side, we’ll see that the new listings are going down.

What’s that a S R E S next year name. What does that stand? Oh, yeah, that sounds for senior real estate specialist. Thank you for noticing that lane. Wow. You’re pretty. I so that’s why I don’t like that. Instead on the next slide The numbers we’ve talked about before is again, when you’re looking at the median sales price for single family, we’re looking at, it’s 70 years, the end of this year versus eight 20, was it in the last year? So that’s a 6% increase.

And for, condos, we see about a 7% increase, which is, really healthy considering all this current situation. So , when we look at that lane, What made me think, we talked about all the year and things and comparison. So , we talk about. Real estate versus other investment opportunities.

So I wanted to see how the stock markets did and how stocks did. So I pulled this off of a site and if you can see for the year 2020, SMP was up 16% and that’s pretty darn awesome. And it makes me think, Then, we’ve been proponents for real estate for a while.

And, we have our opinions about investing in real estate versus the stock. So I made me. Look into things a little more and just do a quick, not a really a case study, but I just wanted to put something up. So last night I pulled this stock market information and then the next slide you can see, I did it really quick just for SNG.

Just to take a look at, try to compare that to you. So I went onto the MLS and I looked at single family homes that closed on December 30, first, 2020. Just for fun. Again, just bear with me. So that’s 38 homes. I found right. So then what I did was I scrolled through the transactions and I tried to find one that was few years ago, not a flip.

So I came on as I was going through the details. I came up with this home. So on the next slide, and you’ll see this home hopefully none of our viewers homes, but this is public information. So anyway, at number 15 of 38, I stopped. So this is a single family home, a little more than 1500 square feet, three bedroom, two and a half bath sold for $800,000.

And was it days on market. Okay. Then I looked at its history. So if you’re going to next slide, we see. So yeah, again sold for 808 days on market listed for $50,000 less. So it was closed at $50,000 over asking price. That same property sold in about four years prior on February, 2017 for $690,000 even almost two months on market.

And it was listed, at a higher per click. It closed at a less than the listed price. Yeah. Slightly. So definitely a different market if three, four years ago. And simple math, you say, okay, that’s a 16% appreciation over four years. I’m like, Holy that’s. Still sound too good. We’re trying to pitch this and again, not as a replacement, as a way to, compliment your portfolio and then, but we’re saying, okay, on the slide few slides ago, I said, okay, but this P had a 16%, return right in 2020.

So they ha but then, I was thinking, Hey, , we forgot to consider leverage. So I then looked further to get more information on this property and as okay, let’s see if it was a leverage. So come to find out, this property was bought in 2017, it was purchased a hundred percent finance VA loan so that the buyer didn’t even pay any closing costs, anything, and all got rolled up, as you can see in that amount.

And that $110,000 of appreciation. , in theory that. Owner purchased with no money down $110,000 in appreciation, but no initial investments or nothing down. And he made a hundred, $10,000 in theory. So that to me, then validates. In my mind, why I’m also investing in real estate.

As well as in the stock market, because, when you take into the con the other benefits of real estate investing it does have its positives that you can’t just look at the 16% for S and P for one year versus the 16% in this appreciation for this home for four years.

So there’s a lot of things to take into account and also keep in mind that on the other end is, whenever you take into account, leverage it. Could be the dangerous you need to be leveraging. Smart. Yeah, because I think literally the first, I think this property might’ve actually went through a foreclosure process, but anyway, that’s beside the point, but, yeah, it’s a classic case of people just comparing rates or return.

But you got to leverage, so yeah. We didn’t even lever that appreciation of three, four X. We didn’t take into account the tax potential tax benefits. All that kind of stuff. Because when they sold that 110 K was P could potentially have been tax free for them as well difference.

Like the stocks is ordinary income and for people making over three, $400,000, you don’t want any of that. You want passive income. So again, yeah, I just did that for us in G last night as I was going to this. And yeah, one thing I wanted to talk through to end my section was my other day, I put the house bathroom trend studies for 2020.

And so how was, is a resource for homeowners to, that they provide information to . Help us know what the current trends are in terms of the home improvement activities going on throughout the States. So I pulled that and in doing so put some interesting data, if you want the report, just shoot me an email and I can send it to you.

But some interesting information we found for 2020, so average remodels Then on the next slide, you’ll see that the average remodels are in the realm of 8,000. So for the major remodels and upwards of, close to 20,000 and for the minor remodels where, below 5,000, but some interesting information, again, this is just trends.

So everyone has their. See, this is a way to see how you add up. But one thing was , 23% of renovations included bathtub removals. So I thought that was kinda interesting. And another, yeah that’s what we noticed on the apartments. People are optic for the really nice showers.

Getting rid of the Tufts or the other thing I was thinking of is , aging populations needing to age in place, or so they’re getting walk-in showers with, less chance of slipping as they step over the threshold. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Both. All right. And then, yeah, so I thought that was interesting.

And then another statistic per this study was that of everyone doing their innovations. They said that 41% use the bathroom to relax and rests or, ticket what it is. I don’t know if you count, like sitting on the throne and going number two or Sandy crutch. But I was thinking more along the lines of they’re having their tubs with their.

Either a jacuzzi tub or a soaking tub, which what’s the best time for that anymore. You got to get your shower, get the heck out this morning. Yeah. So the funny thing that you mentioned that too is because I’m working with buyers and sellers. And so , when I’m talking to every different buyer has their opinion.

So the I’m working with the , families , with young children and I’m like, Oh yeah, we need a tub because the child is going to love to play in it. Or the way they beat them. So the younger families need them. And then as we mentioned earlier the order.

Generations tend to not want one as much. Yeah. And it’s not as much of a necessary cause what else are you going to do besides that? Because it’s hard to soak in for, adults. Yeah. And then the other thing that came up was. This is on another deal in Texas. Like my partners are now in our Indian, so I was asking it’s a cultural thing.

Cause a lot of tenants are Indian. Okay. And they’re like, what do you guys do with your kids? Do you guys, do you bathe their kids and the sink or I don’t want me, yeah. What do you guys use? When my kids are young, Yeah. Yeah. When you’re a super small we bought like a little plastic support thing.

I was actually the designated beta. So we bought this plastic tub that they would sit in nicely with a nice padding and it would sit within the tub and it would hold them up. But I’ve seen people beat them in the sink too. Yeah. Yeah. My partner said, yeah, we just bathed them at the sink.

We don’t care. I guess no need for a tub, that’s true. Once they can stand up and say, okay, just take the shower head that comes off and you just. Should we shut them down time efficiencies. So a few other statistics guests I thought were very interesting vinyl flooring, although not very big had an increase.

So as you can see, on the left side, ceramic and porcelain still. Took the cake with 59% for, the flooring outside the showers, but the vinyl jumped up apparently 4% to 11, which is still relatively low for the flooring. With the luxury playing vinyl coming out with, so it’s waterproof.

It has, they have so much new styles coming out and so strong and reasonable. I thought that would have been up higher over the ceramic important, especially for the floor, and then little self selecting, people that are getting bathroom remodels or your affluent people. So that they’re getting that stuff.

LVT is more for like rental grade. That’s true. That’s a very good point. That’s a very good point. And then on the right side, we see four sinks. Whenever they’re upgrading sinks. Of course, the undermount sinks took the cake at 65% and then, the drop-in sinks were second and I was surprised vessel sinks.

We even made third place. Cause I thought those are a dated, but I think again, I’m not keeping up with the trends. So I know, what do you think about those vessels sinks that you see in the fancy bathrooms? So like the one where it’s like a bonsai pick a ball, it looks like a giant salad bowl.

Yeah. I’ll be honest, man. I don’t know what the weather undermount Drophead vessel. I don’t know until you said vessel and that I didn’t have call it. Who wants to get there for that one? Yeah. I just don’t care about that stuff. No you’re the pragmatic guy though.

So if we asked your wife, it might be different, right? Yeah. Yeah. She doesn’t know. But the last, just a slide I was going to talk to is I’m talking about premium features for toilets, showers and tub. So one thing I agreed with in this was the one-piece toilets. You can see, , 20%. Of renovations had one piece Torres.

I really liked those one piece toilets. It’s the one that the tank on top is, it’s one piece with the base so that it’s not screwed in. You don’t have to worry about any leaks in between. Sometimes if you lean back on the tank or you push it, that’s it creates a crack or the seal breaks and it starts leaking so simple easier to clean.

There’s no. Crevices and let at times the base of the one-piece toilets drop straight down. So there’s less dust to collect around the the edges. Something I didn’t care for so much that I not to say I disagreed, but the premium features for the shower, they talked about those rainfall shower heads, where it feels like it’s, it’s a big square and it’s like raining on you.

That was a 58%. Of installs had those as well as the dual showers, which are, I believe where the jets are right in front of you. And they’re shooting horizontally for me. I’ve used those at the hotels and I don’t really care for it. I’m old school. I like the high pressure to shoot the soap off of my hair and kind of feels weird when.

Something’s coming at me horizontally, but that’s just me. So give me one of those high efficiency things that you need to stay in the shower for 20 minutes you do something like, Oh yeah, those are super bad. Yeah. Then those, yeah. It’s like really mini sprees. We install them and all the apartments.

Oh yeah. Talk about money savers. That’s a great money saver from that standpoint. Yeah. It’d be being green, then that’s a different story though. Yeah. So , if you want a copy of the 20, 20 years how’s bathroom trends study, just shoot me an email and I can send it your way. So about 33 pages and I just tried to pull out what I thought was interesting.

So yeah, if you guys haven’t checked out my podcasts, we’ll pass the cashflow all about investing on the mainland for cashflow. But the free giveaway this month is a free buy and hold analyzer. And this thing called the bird calculator. I’m not a big fan of this burst stuff, which stands for buy rent, rehab, you finance.

But if you want to do it, I used to go in knowing your numbers. You can go download it simple past the castle.com/returns and download it there. But yeah, little teaching point. Paying off debt. I pulled up this check from 2011. We didn’t know each other back then. Did we? I don’t think so. Yeah, that was before BiggerPockets was around, right?

Yeah. So this is one of the checks where I would pay down my mortgage and then I realized what a mistake that was, and she saw. And I knew it didn’t make sense, but everything gets you taught right. Pay down debt, pay down that. But I will be one to tell you, that’s a tool use tools for the right job.

This might be the reason why I’ll ever be stocks is of 16% this year. If you look on the right side, that’s the amount of money that got pumped into the system the last five months. And. This is what’s surprising. Like you look at 2008, 2009, there was a lot of stimulus, but nothing compared to what it is in the last five months.

Yeah. That’s true. It’s being supported. Yep. So John Burns puts together these reports, different markets that he likes. And I think the real story is, yeah, I heard about it is the max Exodus out of San Francisco, New York. Expensive parts of California and going to more than the Midwest, South, Texas, and uncle bill Gates had a little predictor.

Some people don’t like them, but he had a phase, one health crisis. He got that one, we had 10 weeks of lockdown. He thought it was going to take 18 months to get a vaccine, took us what nine, nine or 10. Rented as it is it’s a fake vaccine, right? It’s an NRA or whatever they call it.

Wasn’t like the normal vaccines that we get. That’s cool. That’s pretty quick, right? It’s like super fast. Yeah. And then he also, I don’t know why the heck they’re asking bill Gates this stuff, but he also predicted that home buying. The market would take a very long time to recovery.

So he was completely wrong on that. We had just a nice bull run with prices going up and pretty much every single market due to low supply, billionaires got rich through COVID because they pivoted their business. Yeah, there’s always opportunity out there, people to capitalize on it. Jim Rickards.

Have you heard of that guy, but he’s a per repair. So I interviewed him last week or it might’ve been Monday. They just go by, but he’s right. He’s got this new book out, the new great depression. And I was expecting him again to let off a scuffle with him. Cause he’s like economists, I’m not to each big fan of economists because.

They’re like the weather man. They just make a bunch of predictions and change it when it doesn’t happen. And they’re never in the game, they never have money. They never have any investments. So they’re out of touch with reality, in my opinion, their academics. Yeah. Other academics that Howard Drake gets guys, right?

Like he’s the Hawaii guy, right? I’m like, I want to know what’s in his portfolio. I don’t want to hear his predictions. I want to know what he’s doing. Maybe he’s not doing it. I want to know his network. I want to know what’s under the hood, but yeah, Mr. Rickards said here that basically do not expect two, three, 5% GDP growth every year.

Like how we’ve been saying the last generations instead to expect maybe a zero to 2% increase every year. And I was like I’m cool with that. That’s fine with me. My expectations aren’t that high, and that he says, that’s the new great depression like a Japan in a way

pulled this one out. And if you heard about this project, a cool renovation of an older apartment, hi at the address and it’s somewhere downtown. But yeah, it’s cool to see these types of properties get rehabilitated,

but going back to the mainland stuff, if you are checking this out on the YouTube channel, we have a map of the United States. You see where a lot of the red is getting out of Seattle port plan Bay area, Los Angeles. And moving forward to places that are a lot less budget friendly and less crowded.

And one of the big headlines is of course, everybody is getting the heck out of California. If you watch any bit of YouTube, every single influencers, making a YouTube video on getting out of California, it’s such a big trend that just by having that in your video, it pulls a lot of things. Readers and viewers, because it is so popular.

Good to know. So if HP, they were the startups in the Bay area, and now they’re fleeing to Texas just like Tesla, just like many other companies out there because of put taxes out there. Effective rate for growth for multi-family. It was flat line this year, but that’s to be expected, right?

It’s a pandemic, have new single-family rental tenants coming from urban areas. And so 59% removing from urban locations, 41% moving from suburban locations. So this is a general trend of people getting out of the business court district. Going to a little bit more suburb type areas. Yeah. This is why ever beach in maca.

Kilo is single families are off the hook when you know that wasn’t the case before. Yeah. I don’t know. Th I think Hawaii is weird though. Like it’s, Hawaii is like the Island on that night. It’s just a long piece on the cause he gobbled up mountains, but like in a normal. It States ever say it grows outward like a web.

But I guess, yeah. People want to get away from the Seattle or maybe it’s just, they can’t afford it too. Yeah it’s the way they develop too. Because like you said, typically they talk about the urban sprawl where if it starts in Honolulu and starts to go out. But I think when they tried to do, a couple, a, the second city and Colina was that 20 years ago, it, they just said, okay, we’ll go all the way out there and just build, so that kind of.

Threw everything off and not in hindsight being 2020 the urban planners look at it and say, that may not have been the way to go, it is what it is, right? Yeah. People want to work, not really in the city unless they have to for connection, or, but I think people would rather just take a little shorter drive to the, the middle market.

Five story, high rise, like Milani has some of those, I think a small office building. I think so. Hopefully it has that. Yeah. So three big trends for multi-family and you could probably make the case for single families in 2021, a banner year for the transactions, because things are going to somewhat normalcy by mid to late 20, 21.

And just a lot of heads up transactional demand. People were frozen with the whole COVID-19 and also the election too, which came and went. The second thing was the crowding of the South East capital markets. So the, like it’s at the general trend to get out of those high price areas to more places that make more sense financially, economically.

And. A temporary boost for the suburbs that you just talking about on the last page with the remote worker cultural sort of sticking around and coupled with the desire to live in less than populated areas. Yeah. Should be interesting. And like you said, temporary, it should be interesting when people are starting to have to go back to work and now have to start fighting that traffic again.

And I call how We used to see, then that side we might, out in the suburbs might not be as appealing as it was earlier this year. Yeah. Yeah. But COVID accelerated a lot of trends, right? A lot of employers got confident. That’s true. Yeah. That is a very good point. My ordering from California pizza kitchen and some other restaurants.

It’s pretty sleek using those apps or stuff now. Oh yeah. Yeah. So $900 billion relief package. Got signed very recently. This is the latest round of stimulus. Everybody should have got their checks. You didn’t make too much, you got your checks. And a lot of this is somehow probably flows down to investors and the general public.

But I think that generally a lot of people are boarding this cash. They’re just paying down debt, keeping into savings accounts, very logical, but that’s not what the government wants. The government kind of needs it to get into the system spent yeah. Need to spend it. Yeah. Yeah. So we talked about stocks.

This is something I’m interested in investing in, like investing in websites and stuff like that because no. So like Blackstone, the big hedge fund, they’re buying ancestry.com, buying a website that has existing cashflow that they could do value add, or can improve the business. It’s like a digital asset that you can buy.

But I think , what I don’t like about stocks is like, you can appreciate the value that you can’t increase value just in Bibles. So high. I don’t think that builds like a C well, you can get lucky here and there and you can buy an option, but , real wealth comes to those who create value.

And you can do a plug for the mastermind this year. We’re not going to be able to do it in Hawaii. But we’re going to do it for Chile. We’re going to have almost a hundred people come into this. Wow. It might, you might help out. Yeah. Yeah. I had fun last year. That was the one we did last year.

They have to do it. Hi, I’m super bummed that we’re not having additional. Nope, no pick-up ball, no pickle. No. Knockout room. What does that room? Yeah. Yeah. They escape from escape rooms. They’re out of business now. I think that was a bummer, but that’s okay. How many days are this one for two days.

And I think it’s cool because look at then like already a, how many people registered, like so many other people are going to see the kind of people that we have in this school. So people want to register. You got another week simple, passive cashflow.com/bubble. And but yeah, if nobody has anything else to get any parting words, 13, what are you up to this month? This month? I am doing some refinances. I. Didn’t realize call me foolish, but I’m only doing my refinances now and that, in terms of some of my investment properties on the mainland, so China hit up a bunch of them all at one time.

And hopefully, bring down my debt servicing by a lot. I got a letter from my lender. It was a portfolio loan and they were calling my note due here in the next few months. And I was like, what did I do? But then it was a five-year note and they get you to five years already is a commercial.

And then, yeah. So you just got to refund it. It’s a little single family home, but Oh, that thing. So I don’t have to go through the trouble of refinancing then one of the last few ones you have. Yeah. Yeah. I should just fire. So bad thing. If somebody wants to buy up turnkey rental in Birmingham, No, but yeah, it’s been five years since I got that.

That one there. Oh yeah. I’ll hit you on. Maybe I’ll throw it into my solo 401k or something. I dunno. Cheap.

Yeah. I have something here, but all right guys, we’ll turn the recording off here and we’ll see you guys next week. Bye. See ya, Mike.

2021 Tax Changes | What You Should Do

https://youtu.be/LhFxKYm0ZMQ

What are you thinking it’s coming up in the future. It’s like the Biden clan going to be getting rid of that 10 31 exchange out of the 10 31 exchange. They want to get rid of step up and basis, and that’s going to affect all of us. That’s huge for anybody who has substantial amount of real estate, it’s going to force you to have to get rid of your real estate during your lifetime, because it’s not going to step up.

 

Which means if you’ve depreciated it, you’re going to have some substantial recapture. If somebody sells it after you’ve passed and the step-up in basis in English just means. If I have a building that I’ve depreciated or a piece of real estate or stock say I’ve owned stock for 20 years and it’s gone up in value.

 

The day I pass the basis, steps up to the fair market value on the date that I pass. So if I have a building that I’ve depreciated in my basis might be a little bit of land. Maybe it’s a hundred thousand, it’s a million dollar building right now. If I pass their base, that steps up to a million dollars. I live in a community property state.

 

So even my spouse could sell it the day after I die pay zero charge, no recapture. If that goes away, then assuming that somebody had to sell an asset after somebody passes or wants to, because they don’t want to manage it. No, they’re going to pay recapture in capital gains on that. So they’re going to pay up there.

 

Twenty-five percent on the recapture and up to a underbite and it could be 39.6% on the capital gains. So it’s a pretty big hit. Now the other side to that is if it’s real estate, not only does the patient have stepped up, but you can read deep, appreciate it. Sure. You can go back and write it off and you lose that.

 

So. That’s flying under the radar. And that’s the one that I focus on saying that’s the one that’s going to have the biggest impact. People who are investors are going to get punished under that the old strategy was accumulate real estate and capital assets, 10 31 exchange your real estate into more real estate.

 

Leverage. Use the proceeds if you need to, for other things. And then pass away and you don’t have to worry about any exams that they could either really appreciate it. So they’re not going to pay any tax on it in the wrench for a long time. So you’re going to appreciate it again after they’ve passed at that higher amount.

 

And all of a sudden they’re getting huge tax benefits or they sell it and they pay no tax. And so there was always that kind of a silver lining, especially in community property States where the first spouse, everything steps up, dad passes, and mom can sell the stock and not have to worry about getting hit with capital gains.

 

Now mom could be getting hit with as much as 39.6% federal plus the net investment income tax, which is 3.8, plus their state taxes, which can be as high as 13%. So you could be in a scenario where you’re paying 50, some odd percent you get, it gets a little ridiculous. So is the solution either to wait until a different party is in there and changes a login or some kind of dynasty trust or a trust irrevocable trust that owns the assets.

 

So it never does a step up. Yeah, that’s a tough one because yeah, because no matter what if I put it into trust, the basis is the basis I’m done. So when they there’s really not much of a strategy on the step-up you can do, what’s called a deferred sales trust. Um, substantial assets or you spread it out over time and you allow a installment sale essentially, and then step up the basis and you sell it and avoid the tax immediately, but you spread it out over, let’s say 20 or 30 years, and there’s still some strategies that you can do to lessen it realistically.

 

And under those circumstances, it’s just, you’re sitting down going option a, B, C at the time. I’ve seen people make changes. Where they were scared to death. So I’ll give you a good example. I had a client. That was siblings. So there was five siblings and the dad had a office building and this particular office building was in Ohio, but it has substantial value.

 

So they were worried about the estate tax. So he started giving away interest in the building wasn’t eliminated partnership. So this is back in the day when limited partnerships ruled the world and not LLCs. And he would give his kids these interests. So he transferred the entire building to his children before he passed it, own that building for going on 40 years, the basis was tiny.

 

And then when he passed, it was in the year that they had the unlimited state tax exclusion. So there wouldn’t have been an estate tax at all. And he would have still been underneath the threshold. It was multimillion dollar building, but he’d given it all to his kids. So his kids said they were going to sell it.

 

What our basis was his basis, which was almost zero. So they got hit with this huge tax bill that would have been avoided, completely had he just done nothing. And so I tend to look at attorneys that are pushing people to do huge gaps or we’ll make big changes. And I’d say, don’t do that. You don’t know what the future is going to be.

 

You could make you really hurt yourself. And those that hurt him. There was a little bit of a dispute over whether they wanted to keep it and operate it, but it was like they didn’t have the depreciation. So they actually had income coming in off this thing. And they were like, Oh my gosh, they had to do some fixed up on it.

 

There was some capital call issues. And so they decided they wanted to sell it. And instead of getting a dollar, they were getting 60 cents. And because it’s not cheap to sell a building. You’re paying the commission, you’re paying the real estate tax, the closing costs and all these things that eats away.

 

Plus you’re paying long-term capital gains on that thing. And you have a lot of recapture on the original building and in the improvements that they had done thereafter and ended up really hurting. And it was shocking to look at it. And I’m talking to the accountant who advised him the whole time. And I could tell, he was like, Oh, that was what the dad wanted to do.

 

Overreacted to reach law changes.

Essential Virtual Networking Etiquette w/ Deborah King

https://youtu.be/zmBt2VCsF5E

 Hey, simple, passive cashflow listeners. As you guys know, we are not doing the retreat this year in Hawaii. Unfortunately, a lot of you guys had a lot of fun office, back in the beginning of the year, but we’re taking it virtual this year and NBA style. We’re calling it the bubble.

We, if you guys want to learn more about this, go to simplepassive cashflow.com/bubble, but I wanted to, have a guest today, Deborah, who is basically, runs a charm school for professionals and she was going to help me out, and give everybody some tips on in this world of digital networking.

 

And we’ll also get into some professional networking etiquette, too. how do we extract the most value of, people are going to be coming into this bubble and it’s not cheap. And the people coming here and we’ll see, going to be accredited investors that A-list, that I’m going to curate and not everybody’s going to be allowed to attend this meeting.

 

A lot of you guys have said, I don’t have anybody in my network that invest in real estate or invest the people on the internet. I need to build a network. this is the time to do it. So how do you make the best use of the time? this event is going to be a lot of networking and in small intimate groups or even one-to-one with a guided topics.

 

So we’re not just staring out into the camera, , , , you got Debra on, she runs a charm school for professionals. I got connected with her. She’s not some just random guests. It’s someone I’ve actually worked with. I think a few years now when I was up in Seattle, she does these cool, in-person trainings that, yeah, it seems so long ago and you’d be able to do things in person, but she runs some in Texas and Seattle.

 

And, we’ll get into that a little bit, , but yeah. Thanks for jumping on. Appreciate having you. Oh, my pleasure. It’s so good to be with you and excited to learn more about your group and, what you’re doing it. you’re doing some incredible work and building a network of people, which is the whole key.

 

Isn’t it building networks of people that we can collaborate with and, do business with. I think I told you this earlier, like most of the people in my group are introverts myself included. that’s why I tried, I’m always like cognizant of connecting other people.    Cause I don’t like talking, I’d rather just connect to people.

 

So I can just into that vanish and go away and have them talk. So I don’t have to talk. I’ll do it. I’ll get it in front of the stage if I have to. But that’s what I prefer. And I think that’s what the bubble mastermind is going to be all about. But, yeah,  let’s start off with some general things.

 

the world is changing. What are some key things that you’ve been teaching your students, this past year that can help out the listening. we can dive into specific scenarios. 2020 has been a year. Hasn’t it? I think we’ve all been stretched to do things outside of our bubble and whatever we had done previously.

 

Maybe some of those things weren’t working quite the same way, or we needed to adapt some new skills in order to successfully move into the world we’re living in right now. as you noted all of my classes, everything I had done pre COVID. Was all in person we met together. It was face-to-face, I’m pretty strong believer that the best way we learn social skills is in a social environment.

 

And so we had to move that physical environment here into a virtual platform. And we’ve done that this year. but I am looking forward to the day where. We will resume, to face-to-face because I do think that’s most important. I think one of the things I saw this year unfold was, not only the heightened.

 

Realization for the need of social skills. Reality is that,  the talent professionals today are saying that it takes, soft skills are really the reason why most people fail in their job, whether it’s their own business or they work in a business. And there was a LinkedIn survey just recently conducted that said, okay, That 92% of businesses and companies believe that it’s more important to hire for soft skills than it is for hard technical skills.

 

And I find that’s really interesting because in the 32 years I’ve been doing the work I do. I have worked with every type of individual and. We tend to think soft skills, social skills, or are common sense and people should just know this. It should just be intuitive and it truly isn’t. And so where do we invest our time and our money and our effort.

 

it’s in developing those technical skills and we do need them. I’m not minimizing those at all, but what really sets us apart and allows us to reach those highest levels of success. Are going to be social skills and the ability to create human connection. this year lane, we’ve heard a lot about what’s essential.

 

I’m sure you probably have there in Hawaii as well. this is an essential business. This is an essential fill in the blank. I firmly believe that the most important and most essential tool that any of us have is human connection. And it’s really backed up by science because human connection allows us to, be healthier physically, emotionally.

 

mentally and look at some of what, at least I know some people in this past year and clients that have contacted us that have really struggled with dealing with mental challenges and physical health issues. Because they are isolated. And we’ve seen an increase in alcohol abuse and drug abuse, and people either are really exercising a lot, or they have set exercising apart and you might’ve heard of the COVID 15 or 20 for some people, not the 15 and 20 we want, and sleep quality is impacted.

 

So not connecting socially. Really has, an impact on us and interestingly pre COVID. Do you know what the cost to us companies was for disconnection in the business world? Talk to tell, right? Yeah, it was over $500 billion pre COVID. I would love to see new research on that number. Now where we’re at today, because the more we have isolated and pulled apart from one another, it’s impacted  how productive we are in business and in what you’re doing.

 

and that is critical. Human connection is absolutely critical and it’s key to networking. Isn’t it? Yeah. and that’s what we want, but a little bit off the wires, like I tell a lot of investors, right? When you’re investing in private placements and syndication deals, or you’re trying to find that lawyer or tax accountant, different service provider, it’s all referrals.

 

This is a referral based business. And how do you find those referrals? But you have to find a pure passive investors. And build relationships with them or jump into my master bag. But that’s a paid thing, right? It’s a, it’s a bat cave for that. So there’s two ways about doing it.  The cheap ways just put on a smile and get along with people which doesn’t come naturally to most of my folks, right?

 

Most of us are technical type of sighted people. I think when we step back, one of the taglines for final touches, how do you want to be remembered? And that’s not just thinking about some people take it to the morbid side of when I’m dead. certainly there will all be remembered at that point in some manner, but how do you want to be remembered when you walk out of the room?

 

When you click in the meeting on your zoom call, when you got off the telephone or you just finished that email, how do you want to be remembered? That’s really quite powerful. That takes, a big picture approach to every single interaction that I have with one. Whether it’s going to be brief in passing, maybe at a networking event or on a zoom call where I just see a little face on a tile or it’s long and lasting, maybe it’s somebody that I really do work at setting up engagements and having other points of contact.

 

how do I want to be remembered? And it doesn’t matter if you’re an introvert or not. Actually, I used to be much more of an introvert than I am today. I would stand back and observe and watch people and, it took practice. All I had to do was learn some skills, practice those skills. And it became much easier.

 

And once I understood the why does it really matter? Why does it really matter? What’s hate to all of us say what’s in it for me, but what’s in it for us in creating those connections. And, for me, when I go into a networking event, I’m always looking lane for, do I really see others?

 

Because I think it’s easy for our brain to get focused on everything else that’s going on around us. all the distractions, is my phone beeping at me or vibrating or is it not? And I’m concerned about that. who’s in the room. Do I have the skill? I’m a little bit nervous stepping up and speaking up, but do I come fully prepared, fully present, fully ready to engage with the people that are there.

 

That’s important. And if I really do see others. And then I look for ways to connect with them virtually or in person. Then I’m beginning to create those relationships that are going to enable me to find the clients that I’m looking for and find the people that I need to connect with because in business, everything is about those relationships.

 

And some of the basics there is, show up, . Turn on the camera, turn off all of these. I have the four screens here. Turn them off. Stop typing stuff. Face the damn camera and playful out and interact. This is not, at least my meetings. Is this not like the workplace where if you say something stupid will not be considered for a promotion for five or 10 years, I guess people don’t even stay at a company for more than a couple of years, these days anyway.

 

But yeah,  this setting is at least my bubble mastermind and all my other events that I do. It’s a place where it’s time to be vulnerable, which gets very out of your social norms for your professional work setting. Because. People come in and they have to protect their reputation.

 

Yeah. Yeah. And I think. I, we all do business with those that we know we like, and we trust that’s just the bottom line. , if you’re a fan of Starbucks and you buy your coffee at Starbucks or your local coffee place, and you are loyal to that location, you’ll drive further, you’ll spend more and you will be more consistent, then to accompany that you don’t really know where you don’t have that commitment to.

 

So to your point,  do I know you. So you have to show up and went in this format, you have to show up on video. so often I see people turn off their videos and there are some companies that do require that just because of the technical load in that. So I get that, but when you can’t see a person.

 

It’s very difficult. You’ve hindered the amount of connection you’re going to be able to make. we make fast impressions about people in a blink of an eye, and it’s primarily based on how they dress, how they show up. what am I reading when I look at you and research shows that we gather over a dozen.

 

Really core values about an individual within a blink of an eye. So if  my visual picture is missing or I haven’t put effort into showing up with some thought in how I wanted to show up, I’m missing a really important moment and I’m going to be invisible to that group, even though I might add value vocally or in the chat box or  in another manner.

 

I’m sure it is. People make snap judgements. They do. And so I do I show up and then, so do you know me? And then I do I have likability. Is there something about that individual that is likable and, that comes across in some pretty easy ways? we are always looking to have those, have the hormone oxytocin fire off in our brain, and oxytocin is known as the connection hormone.

 

So when I see you, I immediately have some type of a response. And the response I want to have with another individual is a positive response, because I want to be able to create that oxytocin, which is a bonding hormone. It’s going to make us feel more connected. It’s going to create, like ability between the two of you and easy ways to do that is, smile.

 

A smile is so powerful, make eye contact and you can’t be looking down. And then this kind of a platform, a lot of times you’ll see people looking down or looking all around in, they’re not focused on what’s taking place. And it does take a little more effort. I do think in this format than it does face to face, frankly, but, do I really, show up?

 

so do I smile? Do I make eye contact? Am I fully present? Do I do something as simple as say hello? amazing. How many people don’t say hello or goodbye. Those are the two things I’m really always amazed by. Some of the research says that just as simple greeting of hello, how are you is really powerful and memorable.

 

Oh, and wear a decent shirt, right? Like you wear whatever you want underneath. Cause they don’t see it, but it’s fun. A decent shirt. That’s all I ask guys. But on a decent shirt, comb your hair, make sure that you look at least somewhat presentable given your audience, given your brand and how you want to be remembered.

 

Because you only have this little moment to do that.  . So do you, do you know me, do you, is there like ability there, something that makes you want a trigger that says, I want to get to know you a bit more or I want to be able to connect with you again and then last, do I trust you?

 

And again, oxytocin is that hormone that feel good hormone that does start to establish trust between two people really powerful and it helps to deepen our relationships and the connection and that bond so that you do think of that individual moving forward and a little bit of a tech tip here.

 

There’s a setting and Zune where , it can scrub your faces gives you makeup. Wow. So you guys are tech people, you guys can figure it out or Google letter. I’m sure there’s a YouTube video out there, but that can help, like you’ve got boogers under your eyes in the morning. I need to go find that it’s in there.

 

It’s in there.  So let’s move on to some more tactical tips once they get in the set, They’ve shown up, they’ve got their stuffs set. They’re smiling. And they got their cameras on. so one thing I got for a lot of people is the nice thing about this online settings, is like you get forced into the interaction.

 

It’s not like you’re him and hauling. I’m going to we’ll talk to him or her over there after walk over. It’s this is the beauty of virtual networking is I can force people into breakout rooms. And you’re stuck. You’ve got to do it, So there’s not that awkward feeling  the fear of approaching and starting that conversation.

 

But once you’re in the set, one tip I always have is yeah, you introduced yourselves, but it’s always about the other person help them out. Like one tip I’ve always followed for myself personally, is help out the other person first, which is why I do all these free onboarding calls to new investors is I’m just trying to add value to them.

 

In 15, 20 minutes. It’s a test, whoever reciprocates or stays around. That’s what food typically stays at my network for my circle. And so I would push that out there is like, when you get into a set with somebody or a few people learn what the other people are doing and see how you can add value means, add encouragement.

 

If you don’t know anything. give them a referral and articles, something you’ve heard, or maybe there’s somebody else in the group that you met five minutes ago, the day before that you can connect them with a way to add value. So you’re not just standing there spying, right? Yeah. you’re not a model or a statue.

 

and that’s,  part of connection because if I’m going to connect with you that it can’t just be this. Stoic stable face staring back at me. I have to give something to receive something. and we do, it’s the old  analogy of the farmer. You’ve got to go out and plant something before you can go out into the field and look for anything to harvest.

 

And so showing up smiling, engaging, asking about the other person. Get to know something about the other person. I have a friend a few years back and she used to say, if I ask somebody three questions about themselves or what they do, or the type of work they’re involved with, , and they never asked anything of me about me.

 

I write them off. Now that’s pretty harsh. I’m not personally going to take that stand, but it does make sense because it’s really a one-way street. And sometimes we do that because we’re nervous.  We know all the answers to our own story. I don’t necessarily know your story, but get good at having at least three good questions in your back pocket that you’ve thought about ahead of time.

 

So when you go into these types of settings, that you can start the dialogue and not feel uncomfortable. Now I can think of conversation. Lane is like playing tennis. if I hit a ball to you and you let it drop, I’m thinking you missed it. So I’ll serve you another ball. If you let it drop again, I might serve you another ball, but then I’m going to start saying you’re not a lot of fun to play tennis with.

 

 And that’s frustrating, right? All right, you’re listening to LAN and Deborah talk about these tips or asking questions, but it’s hard to do anything unless the other person is playing tennis, but you and being vulnerable, right?

 

Show your insecurities, tell people what you’re working on, what you don’t know. Maybe you haven’t heard about real estate professional assessment asks the freaking question because that’s how you hit the ball back over the net. And this is how it works. but it can be frustrating, right?

 

Debra, if you’re not in a place where people know how to swing the racket and get the ball over the net, right? and this is why I say it’s a waste of time to go to most. Local real estate club events or free online forums because you’re in a room with people who are all about themselves are selfish mindset and it’s all about what’s in it for them.

 

I’ve curated my group and people who come to my events. It’s a different type of crowd. mostly because I’ve gotten to help that people out of here. The people that don’t fit that aren’t this abundance mindset or not just in it for them, they’re gone. So I’ve set the culture in a way and curated the list to be decent tennis players here to spar with.

 

but that’s hard, right? It’s hard to practice with people who don’t know how to swing. It is. And then there’s the other side of playing tennis. So then you, I say to you Lang let’s go to the court again tomorrow. Let’s try again and you’re ready. So you’re there with your racket. And I stand on the other side of the net and just bounce the ball on my own racket.

 

And you’re saying, Debra, I thought we were going to play tennis and it’s we are. And you’re thinking if you were just going to bounce the ball in your own racket, you could have done that at home. And I didn’t need to even get dressed to show up. And that’s what I call a monologue. Not a dialogue.

 

When you ask somebody, how are you today? And they never stopped talking.  It’s all about them, as you just mentioned. And, Oh goodness. I’ve been to so many networking events where I’ve had people come up and shove their business cards on me and their books on me and their things and talk about what they’re doing.

 

And I walked away going, that’d be the last person in that field I’d ever hired. And those people typically never get anywhere. So there really isn’t much. Motivation to follow up there, being there. this is why my wife is like, why do you spend $25,000 to go to this? Like mastermind four times a year?

 

yeah, you don’t deal with people like that. There’s a reason why they’re in the wrong and they can afford that to it. The stuff, Yeah. Going to a dinner party to lane, you go to a dinner party. And if you sit down with a whole table of people that have nothing to share, it’s a really quiet, boring meal.

 

And you hope the food is really good. but if you come to the table and the food could be okay, maybe the environment’s okay. But. You’re sitting next to people on your right and your left, maybe across the table, depending on the size of it that are engaging and interesting and, sharing that’s a meal you leave not just fed physically, but you’re inspired mentally.

 

You’re encouraged and you walk away from that going. Wow. That was really an amazing night.  And you said it before, you said the word practice before, and it’s not like people , if they don’t do this, it’s not like they’re jerks or they’re horrible people. It may just be, they just don’t know how to do it.

 

Know all the time. I hear that all the time lane, that it’s all a matter of, gosh, I should know how to do this. I’m, 30 years old, 40 years, 50, 60 years old, I’m at this place in my career. Financially and I’m successful. And I can’t show up to this kind of a class because it’s been, make me look like I’m an idiot.

 

I should know this. Why would you know this over? I don’t know the real estate information, it’s not what I’ve studied. It’s not my area of expertise. So I don’t have any expectations on myself to know that same. Thing’s true about social skills. We only know what we know and we’ve only made it to the point we’ve made it because we have the skill level.

 

We have to go to that next level. You join mastermind groups, you go into other environments and you learn new skills so that you can boost every area of your life. And the exciting thing to me with social skills, it influences absolutely every part of our life. Yeah. . So let’s, kind of transition here to  some mistakes you’ve seen people make.

 

I’ll start off with one, give you time to think politics just don’t go there. I think I can agree with this, but here’s the funny thing. I think the majority. Of people who are normally not the talkers, they’re the listeners to the minority of people who go talk about left stuff, talk about rights stuff.

 

And the majority of people get this. So we’re talking to the minority of people who talk about this stuff and you guys know who they are. I’m so glad when,  I saw this at another very high level mastermind I’m in. we were finishing up the main talk and it was just Oh, this is a break time.

 

So a few people at the nominee chit-chat and I’m just sitting here doing my own thing, working on the computer and just listening and waiting for this next session to start. And there were like three very high level entrepreneurs. these are guys making over a million dollars a year and they got into this thing about some political discussion and I saw.

 

Three, very intelligent high-performing people and it just got derailed and they were never going to do business with each other ever, never, it wasn’t going to be a shot. And my takeaway from that was what is the purpose of having that conversation? Is it worth the risk for never working with each other in the future ever again?

 

And and that’s how do you want to be remembered? Correct. They will remember each other forever based on that political conversation they had, and it will frame up or destroy or undermine any potential business in the future. And we do that in so many ways. So politics definitely. And certainly in the last, I would say probably 10, 15 years.

 

Getting into politics is just bad news. It used to be in when I was younger, that we could have political conversations and we could agree disagree. We’d walk away and still be friends. And sadly, that’s just not what’s happening in this day and age,  it seems like so many of these social issues right now are just.

 

Highly charged. and I often encourage people to stay away from conversations that are emotionally charged or could potentially be emotionally charged because it does trigger. It’s not going to trigger oxytocin. I promise you, it’s going to create that divide. So you’re not going to create like ability you’re going to do exactly the office that I’ll know you, but I won’t like you.

 

And I certainly won’t do business with you. those emotionally charged, even talking about COVID right now for a lot of people. you bring up something about that and aspect of that, and that creates an emotional charge for people. Politics does it. so many issues that we’ve seen in the last couple of years have created really emotionally charged moments.

 

And so I always say, stay out of that. Territory find other conversations, starters that are going to be more engaging. one thing that I hear people say a lot when they first meet somebody is, where are you from? Have you ever heard that? And I used to say that all the time, Oh, where are you from?

 

And then I interacted with somebody that was, Not from, here they were from another country. And I sense that because they had an accent and so forth. but  they said, Deborah, that makes me feel really uncomfortable. And I said, tell me about that. And they said, when you asked me where I am, from what you’re saying without realizing it is, you’re saying I’m not from here.

 

So I’m not one of you. that wasn’t at all. What I was meaning, what I meant was I’m really interested in your, place of origin, your birthplace, or where your family grew up or where you may have grown up. And that was what was intriguing to me. Never entered my mind that maybe there was a seven message being sent to that individual that they’re not from here.

 

When I moved to Texas from Seattle, I would be in a store and people would say, where are you from? And I went, Oh, that’s what they mean because it was a very strong message. I wasn’t one of them, which is fine for me. I didn’t mind it, but that’s something to be mindful. So I’ve switched that language.

 

And now what I’ll say is where is home for you or have you always lived in Dallas? Is Dallas always been your home? Because everybody has a home. And everybody generally likes to talk about home. what kind of food did you grow up eating or that, and that has always, I found that it’s been received far more positively than where are you from?

 

Yeah. Yeah. it’s just part of this, it’s just the self-awareness right. And empathy. How does it come across? I know some people , it wouldn’t matter. But  just spell it out, right? If you ask somebody like that,  

 

what do you think I’m from? Like some jungles of Asia or something like that? Where are you from? Like it’s some people that’s just how they are and you just never know. So Y chip yourself off the starting line, but I say, I like, wow, I’ll look for those points of connection, Lane. I want to find, how can I connect with you?

 

Not how can I create a, something abrasive and it’s going to happen. This human connection is not about perfection. I’ve never met anybody. That’s perfect. I’ve just met some people that are really good, but I’ve never met anybody. That’s perfect. And so I always encourage people, take the press off of yourself to be perfect.

 

This isn’t about perfection. It’s about purpose. And so my purpose is I want to connect and I have to be able to read those non-verbals and say, you know what, maybe I missed it there. Maybe I missed it. And then step back and ask a question or find out a different approach. And that’s why having more than just one or two questions to dive into, but you’ve got to be using empathy.

 

it’s you can’t go overboard. You can’t be too subtle. if you’re trying to build connection, you’re going to have to take a little bit of risks with that kind of opener. you don’t want to be just, I’ve been vanilla, right? Unless you love vanilla ice cream, but you want something with some complexity and somebody that has a backbone and has an opinion.

 

But stay away from those emotionally charged topics. I know something that I’ll personally do. I don’t get along with most people. I’ll be honest. , I don’t really like my job. I never really liked it. so I can’t really get into rapport with somebody who just loves their w two job.

 

So that’s always been a hard thing for me, but what I used to do or.   What I do now is I just put it out there. Yeah. I stopped in my engineering dinner and they liked that. And then I just see how they respond. that’s a good icebreaker though lane, because that opens up where somebody else might say, you know what?

 

I don’t really either. And if somebody is like, they  think the complete opposite they’re totally company person. that’s cool. find some, move on, right? What’s the next like point of connection we can make and  the goal is to get into connection and to get into rapport and then figure out how we can help each other, what are the needs of the other person, And learn about them. You brought this up earlier is. I want to learn about what they’re doing, who they are, maybe a little bit about their family. why is that important? Because later on, when I connect with them again, then I’m gonna have a little bit of insight into who they are, what they do, and you start building, it’s a process.

 

It’s not  one and done. That’s not our goal. Our goal is for ongoing long-term relationships that we can go to at different points and we may not see somebody for five years and then you see them again and you’re able to pick up and move right on. Yeah. and this segment will probably be like required viewing prior to entering the bubble.

 

And for those of you guys in the bubble, if you guys get stuck, To say, Hey, I was listening to Lane’s podcasts on networking in the bubble, and I’m just trying my best. I’m very awkward. Tell me about yourself and what is it that you’re struggling with? So maybe I could help, just use that light.

 

if you get stuck, just use that like ice, but, any other  mistakes, people making it’s very common. Yeah, I think just being distracted, I think distraction. one is emotionally charged questions, conversations or topics, but the other is just distraction. Looking over  your shoulder for somebody better to come down 

 

the hallway or, into the room. Of course, virtually we don’t have that, but we do it virtually in other ways, by looking at our computer, by picking up our phone by looking at something else. And what’s interesting in this format because we only have this little tile that we see this small amount of space.

 

We can very easily misread those. Micro-expressions. When I’m with you face to face and a live networking event lane, I get to see your entire being and place you in context of what’s going on, not the case in this setting. So we have to be careful that we’re not just picking up certain, non-verbals and reading more into it than what it is.

 

But that also means I have to be responsible when I show up to really show up and be there be a hundred percent present. And, They’re simple things, eye contact focused, ask clarifying questions, make sure you come in with some good questions. be honest, be humble. You don’t know everything.

 

You might know a lot of things and you’d probably know way more than I’ll ever know. But you all, there’s always room to be gracious and people remember that. And when you’re remembered like that, you’re remembered for the right reasons and people are more likely to reach out to you when your services one that they might need in the future.

 

Yeah. And it’s also, I can think of one particular, he’s a pretty high , profile person in our real estate world. I remember having interaction with him and he was doing the show over the shoulder, looking at who else is coming down. I will never forget that. And you guys come in the above, I’ll tell you who it is.

 

I’m not too big fan of them. for sure, but I will always remember that. And same thing when you’re in this virtual setting, people remember that type of stuff, and you’re not going to be able to pick up on those social cues that you go down the wrong path on something to pull yourself back.

 

If you don’t have your camera’s on coming back to that again. And, I realized that there are times that if you’re called into a last minute meeting, maybe you’re not ready to be on camera, but. you just need to hustle, you need to make it a priority and then schedule those meetings so that you can be fully present.

 

it’s critical right now because we don’t have the opportunity to connect face to face like we were doing. hopefully we’ll be doing that again soon. When this is our primary format for connecting, we have to utilize every little inch micro inch of this screen space we have and make sure that we’re really showing up and putting the effort in.

 

and I recognize zoom fatigue is a real issue. It’s a real issue this year. I hear it a lot from people. I don’t know if you’re hearing people talk about zoom, fatigue. Yeah. Yeah, another thing, this is more of a technical thing, and I’d like to get your opinion on it. It might just be me being nitpicky, as more of a person born with this technology.

 

people jumping on these in calls on the call-in number, which is like the worst, because you’d never see who they are. Everyone’s a little wary of who that magical person is. and then even just using an iPad or their phone, right? , especially in the bubble format, I want everybody to be on their computers because you’re not able to navigate and jump into your breakout rooms unless you have the desktop software.

 

 Correct me if I’m wrong, but I see it as like a subtle thing of no, this is that important. I’m just going to do my own thing.  Maybe be at the at the mall waiting for my spouse while I’m jumping on this thing and just hop it on. As opposed to I’m in my dedicated place of work, I’m going to dedicate all my attention to this person on the other end, but that might just be me nitpicky, but I think there’s a subtle message there line. ,  it’d be like going into a live meeting across the desk from you. And I didn’t bring what I was supposed to bring to my meeting and I was half dressed. for that meeting and was totally distracted.

 

You would say, why did you even bother showing up? , I think what’s happened this year. What I’ve observed is this feels so casual to people. And because  we’ve dressed down more this year, people aren’t getting dressed up, people aren’t putting in a hundred percent and some people are working many more hours.

 

But are they being effective in those hours? and I think the whole experience has just taken steps down and then every once in a while we show up, we really need to shift that and think about, no, this is a time. I have an opportunity. This is the format right now. And how I show up now is going to be how others are going to see me when we are back out face to face.

 

Interesting about first impression, some studies say it can take up to five years to change a first impression. That’s quite. Staggering. And I think a lot of it has to do with so much of how we interact with one another, even pre COVID. and the lockdowns is because we had to, we spoke on the phone or we sent emails or we, occasionally may have jumped on these platforms.

 

And then that was my memory of that person. And then when I saw them in person, it took several of those interactions over maybe years before I finally started to see them slightly differently. Just like the man that you just talked about, what you remember is him looking over your shoulder. It would take a long time, a lot of interactions before that would shift and a willingness on both of you, to shift that, first impression and how you would interact with each other.

 

Cool.   Of people want to , work with Debra.  She’s taking her classes soon. I actually might jump on this. It’s every, in starting in January on the Saturdays, she  giving a live presentation and, tell us more about that event. And, you guys are doing some networking, so that’s what I’m particularly  , excited about kind of meeting some other people have that growth mindset too.

 

And you never know who you’re going to meet on the other end. And we never know who signs up for our programs because unlike you, we just, whoever signs up, as long as they have a room, they enter into the room with us. but it’s called confident connections and we hit over those five weeks. the key areas that we’ve been brought into companies to do training for, I did the training for Boeing for about eight years prior to COVID, worked with many fortune 500 companies, as well as.

 

Small startup companies, everything across the board, as well as individuals and some public programs. And we’ve taken many of those key elements and brought that into this five week. confident connections masterclass that we conduct. We will have some breakout rooms and interesting. we’ve had some people that have turned off their cameras and we use that as a teaching opportunity.

 

Everything’s a teaching opportunity. And so I say, all right, how did you feel connected to this person? When their camera is not on. And of course, everybody says, no, not the purpose to embarrass anyone ever, but it is important that we step back and vocalize and really think about how we show up really does matter because I think it’s easy to get fall into the pit of it’s just my technical expertise.

 

As long as I’m good at that, the rest doesn’t matter.  And that’s the cool thing about these online settings and being connected with this random people is , you likely will never meet these people again. And if you’re trying to work on these skills, what better place to work on the stuff that messed it up royally, then people not at your workplace, right?

 

Like just random strangers on the internet. I think it’s a great opportunity to nudge at your self-aware and just practice. and it’s a safe place. these are live training programs. These are not recorded that you’re going to watch later. These are live interactive. We tried to make it as close to being in a real class.

 

Face-to-face as we possibly could. the interactions, the conversations, it’s right now in present. And it’s always interesting that people that show up around the table and the questions that they have, and it takes on a lot of the life of the participants. it’s always fun for me to see who’s going to be around the table.

 

And what will this particular program look like? as we walk through content, but people don’t leave jobs usually because of the technical issues, they typically leave jobs because there was something in that work environment that. was abrasive for them. most of us get a job and we’re excited about it.

 

And we tell everybody, and then we start hitting the snooze button saying, is it Friday yet? Or whatever your work week looks like. And it’s usually that sandpaper individual or that person I have to work with that is just very difficult. Because it’s relationships. and so the better I become at communication, creating connections at delivering a better service.

 

The more effective I am professionally. And so these classes are really fun. We have that one coming up and we do have some live programs that we’ll be re-engaging with this next year as well. But our is final touch school.com. And if anybody has any questions that you’ve been just totally off of topic of that, and they want to shoot me an email, I was open to reply to them.

 

Yeah, and you’re based out of Dallas. So we do have a lot of Dallas and Texas folks that are listeners. nothing earlier places, the in-person stuff. but, yeah, we’ll put that in the show notes for everybody and, yeah, appreciate you jumping on. thank you lane. If I were in your world, I would be at your masterclasses 

 

it sounds fantastic. And what a great, great, opportunity for those individuals that can participate and grow individually, grow professionally and grow collaboratively. , it’s what business is about. Yeah. And so if you guys want to jump in the bubble of go to simple passive cashflow.com/bubble, that’s going to be January 16th, the 17th Martin Luther King weekend.

 

or if not, she may email lane and simple passive cashflow.com. If you’ve got any questions, but, thanks for listening guys. And we’ll see you guys next week. 

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Pursuing Purpose Through Masterminds and Nonprofits w/ Tim Rhode

https://youtu.be/pH70LEehEQw

Hey, simplepassivecashflow listeners. Just want to wish everybody a Merry Christmas. I don’t know if you celebrate Christmas, but Hey, we got the day off, right? That’s all that really matters. Want to alert you guys that I dropped the new syndication. E-course. Now this is not going to teach you how to be.

No syndicator is going to teach you how to be , the best damn LP. Investor that you can be through a self-guided e-course. So I’ve been working a real long time on this. It’s got, eight modules taking you through every piece of the syndication due diligence process from just understanding what’s the syndication then also, where do you look for?

Like, how do you vet the people? How do you vet the numbers? I have a big section in there on what’s all the little dirty tricks That the syndicators pull to make a deal look better than it really is. And then once you get up to speed on syndications, I have a bonus series in there at least six hours where I’ve got in my mastermind students and some other volunteers together.

To ask me specific questions in an interview format where we really get into the nitty gritty and all of these nuances of great conversations, great insights that you’re not going to get anywhere else. If you don’t like it. we’ve got like a money back guarantee. But I’m pretty confident in this thing that you’re not gonna find anything better than this. So check this out by going to our freeze in a vacation guide@simplepassacastle.com slash syndication. And there you’ll find the link to the e-course, which has way more information than that free guide.

So I would say, yeah, check out the free guide And go from there.

Hey, simplepassivecashflow listeners today. We are going to be talking a little bit about  five Oh one C nonprofit  with Tim road   who’s built up his massive nonprofit and has definitely created his vision and serving that purpose. But if you haven’t yet, please join our mastermind group.

 

Check that out@simplepassivecashflow.com/journey and One two walk around Tim road. How’s it going to. Hey lane. Thanks for having me on look forward to hopefully helping you, where guests get what I call the gift of giving back, on our climbing the first mountain to success. A lot of times we forget about.

 

Throwing down the rope and helping lift others to come with us. And I want to put this bug in your ear of how much society needs that today and how you can be a hero in your community and help lift others while making millions for yourself. Hopefully. Yeah. And for those of you guys, we’re coming out of the election season.

 

 , you’re getting frustrated like me.  They see a lot of problems out there.  This is the way to go fix it yourself. Look at the Melinda Gates and bill Gates foundation, they went and did it themselves. And that doesn’t mean that, you can create your own little nonprofit, do it yourself also.

 

And great way to empower yourself after you’ve created your wealth. Tim maybe gets a little bit background. You started in real estate. Tell us how you found this. You got your head above water. Sure.  I’d like to say I’ve gone from one of the more selfish people you’ll ever meet in your life to one of the more selfless  you’ll ever meet in your life.

 

And this transition happened from 15 I’m now 61. Okay.  Barely graduated high school. I never went to college and I was what you’d call a late bloomer. And luckily I found my niche selling real estate and  I put the key in the lock and it finally fit. And I found my niche and I want to touch on one life fully lived on what we teach there later, because that’s what it’s about is figuring out where do you think.

 

Fifth and how can you thrive? And that’s the charity I created down the road. So here I am a lost soul at 25, with two small kids, barely getting by as a person, part time, grocery clerk, I get my real estate license. I sell three houses the first weekend. And I knew it was on, I knew I had found my niche.

 

So consequently. Doing what I love to do worked really well. And so I got better and better at listing and selling homes. And what I did differently that most don’t do is I still lived like a grocery clerk as my income went from 60 to 150 to 300 to 500. My expenses went from 30 to 35 to 40. That 50 to 60.

 

And so if you look at what’s coming in, what’s going out, what’s left to invest that number kept growing. And I was very aggressive by and single family duplex land in the path of growth, different,  just singles and doubles. To where I looked up at around 40 years old. And this was in 2007 in California and I was ready to retire and I sold  most of my properties right into the California craze and basically retired around 40 years old.

 

And since then I’ve been doing what I call getting the goods in the woods skiing, hiking, biking, all the NS that are so fun. And I helped start our for-profit company called GoBundance, which is really Blossomed, hugely and I at a nonprofit called one life fully lid. So I could throw down the rope and help those, emerging from hardship, those that never learn this stuff that most of us do how to find their best life also.

 

And I found that really rewarding. So a lot of folks listening are still working the day job. They have high salaries, but now there’s this concept. We hear a lot about putting your oxygen mask out before helping out others. , how did you in your thirties and forties, how did you personify that whole.

 

Thought I want to challenge that thought. Why do you have to wait?   So here I am like at 25, I’m a part-time last grocery clerk. And at 28, I started to have some success. I was probably making in real estate. I was probably making a couple hundred grand a year and I just. But stuck my toe in the water.

 

I went and spoke at a junior high to 13 year olds. And you talk about a tough crowd. And they were like, Hey, does he have a bugger? They were just rude. And it was a really not a fun experience, but it felt good to give back. And I also volunteered at my local boys and girls club and got on their board of directors and help them raise money.

 

While I was making my way. So I don’t think you need to wait till your ships come in or you’re on top of that first mountain and quote successful. Why not do some great things to help humanity along the way? So when you were making lessons 400, 500,000 a year, were you giving your time or was it more money?

 

Back then, because some people think when you’re in that early stage of your entrepreneurship journey are still building your net worth up, that you need to put that money into real estate agents, that brokerage businesses, a money intensive business too. Yeah. Yeah. Honestly, I wasn’t that generous financially.

 

Until after I was financially free, I gave more of my time and some of my money to the boys and girls club, probably a couple of grand a year. Whereas now I literally give, 50,000 to 75,000 of my own cash, as well as put in,  thousands of hours a year on my charity.

 

 Yeah. And I think  that’s the hard thing, right? I call it the sandwich generation is, the folks between the age 30 to 50, when you’re supposed to be building that wealth, the financial wealth,  there’s a huge demand on your time, so you pulled in two different edges.

 

Absolutely. Especially people with busy families and I’m talking to the moms, those are the ones,  doing the business or working and running a family. Boy are you squeezed for time? And this is something you can do. Just the volunteer and take your kids with you perhaps and get them understanding how important it is for us to all give back as we go.

 

But I understand those challenges between 30 and 50 of your just you’re on the hamster wheel, trying to make sure you make it up that first mountain yourself. And I say good for you for working harder than most trying to do. Everything you can do to make sure you make it up that first mountain. And believe me, I remember that timeframe and it was, I didn’t know, this was all going to work out the way it did until I looked up at 40 and said, Holy crimeny, I could retire.

 

And did what most don’t. I did retire. I did quit listing and selling and just put all my efforts into the things I spoke of getting the goods in the woods, taking care of my health, being close to my family and give them back through our charity. And when you started to come over that apex and you went to more of a retirement lifestyle.

 

, , you just start your nonprofit at that point, or  were you still searching for what really resonated with you? No, that’s a great question lane.  I tapped out around 2007, 2008, and it was you said a lot of people are upset of how the election went.

 

Around that time. I wasn’t too happy with the way the election went and I was upset and I was upset what humanity, it felt like it was going in the wrong direction. And so it took a couple years to figure out how can I make a difference? And it also took my mastermind partners. Calling me out. Cause I was bitching about how pissed off I was, how things were going.

 

They said, why don’t you do something about why don’t you quit wine? And we’re sick of hearing you whine about it. And I was out getting the goods in the woods, which you have more time to think when get quiet and meditator, pray. And really get quiet. The answers come to you and it hit me out in the country.

 

Dude, you know how to be successful in life. You have all these friends who are really successful. What have you got all those friends together and had them help you? Teach others, these basic concepts of how to create your best life. And if you don’t mind laying really quickly, I’d love to talk about what one life teaches.

 

Is that okay? Yeah, sure. Sure. So I talked about putting my key in the lock and it fit. That’s what we want for everybody. Where will I fit in and thrive? So we created this thing called the fulfillment triangle. And if you look at a triangle you look at where do my passions meet my talents, where there’s opportunity, where can I figure out what to do, where I’m good at it.

 

I love to do it , and I can make a lot of money doing it. That for me, was selling real estate. So that’s the first concept is where will I fit in and thrive? And then there’s the second  concept. And that’s our one live roadmap, which is available on Amazon. And that’s figuring out vision, where am I going with all this?

 

Finances, how will I fund it relationships? Who’s my posse. Who’s my mentors and wellness. How can I be healthy in my mind, body and spirit to pull off this amazing life I’ve been blessed to live. So that’s our one life fully lived teachings, and we want everybody to be empowered, to find their best life.

 

And can you see how. I’m alive when I’m speaking about that I am so passionate about helping everybody find their best life. And I challenge you to find something you’re so passionate about. Maybe it’s climate change, maybe it’s, something maybe it’s battered women or becoming clean and sober, whatever it is, put your heart and soul into it and find a way to to lift others.

 

It feels great. Or another question I’ll ask is what upsets you in the world? Or what gets you really fired up? For me, it’s  people there’s so much bad financial advice out there, right? Like by a big young family buying a big house to live in they give up their cashflow, they can’t buy rentals or all this, investing in retail investments, like the 401k, Bad financial advice in my opinion.

 

And it just robs a lot of people of retirement, but looking back, what was the thing that you’re bitching about? And maybe it seems like I’d love to tell you I’ve changed the whole thing or one life has, but it seems like it’s harder today for the average person just getting out in the world to find their best life.

 

And it seems like they’re being told you can’t do it. Your screwed. There’s nothing you can do and be pissed at them,  instead of them being them Howard, to go inside and find the tools for their best life. So I think that would be just like you said, wrong information with. Financing. I would say it’s wrong information as to how to find your best life.

 

And one of them is the one size fits all. All you need to go to college here, sign here. Don’t worry about the debt. Just sign. Everything will work out fine. And no one’s telling them about trades. The country is screaming for plumbers and electricians and welders. You can make a hundred grand out the gate with no debt.

 

 So  we’re really into empowering people to find their best life and go after it with that. Is there a such an age range that you dial in on or is it a wide range, right? Yeah, we most concentrate on those, just getting out in the world either in the, let’s say 10th grade and we have the one life.

 

One life is the number one, one life. Roadmap on Amazon for students, those still in school. And then we have the one life roadmap for adults. And mainly it’s for those, just got out of school up until gosh, some of them are 40 and having to  reboot, if you will. So it’s mainly for those just getting out of school and those kind of struggling with what they’re going to do.

 

I sure wish I had this at 17 years old. My life would have been way different. I would have gotten it together earlier. If I  only had a roadmap to follow.  Now, one of the nice things about having a nonprofit is, some of the tax advantages, if you can give us some insights on, when you initially started  your foundation,  how did you use that five Oh one C3 and maybe just,  a lot of people, I don’t know too much about it, but I know that there’s some benefits in there.

 

Sure. There’s a lot of benefits. If you want I’m kinda weird. I don’t take any salary from one life. So I don’t benefit financially at all. I’ve put hundreds of thousands of dollars of my own money and hit up all my GoBundance friends. David Osborne, Pat. Hi Ben, Mike McCarthy. And our tribe has literally given millions to go by minutes to help others.

 

There are tax advantages.  To, there is no tax on the nonprofit, but all of our funds go into, serving the community and helping lift the others. It gives you like that basket to go and pull other people who haven’t don’t have the time. But maybe have the money.

 

Is that right? Yeah. And everybody’s different. Some have time and no money, some money and no time. And everybody’s looking for a way to serve. And one thing that one life’s done really is made it. We call it easy to serve in your neighborhood by teaching our teachings to those you want to live.

 

And because of that,  there’s a group of clean and sober people. One guy was a heroin addict for seven years. Got clean. Came to our teachings in the last year, he’s bought his own home and two rental properties, including a fourplex. And he said he learned more from our community in six months than he had in seven years.

 

 One thing I say a lot of times is the relationships is the currency of the wealthy  I get it when you’re starting out. And this is the way I was in my twenties. When I was really frugal still am, but I wouldn’t spend money on anything. And  I’ve heard the wisdom where, money augments, what you are.

 

Inside,  it’s a multiplier. So if you’re cheap and  you’re wanting things all by yourself. Even when you have money, you’ll be that way. But for me, when I got more money, it kinda opened my eyes to seeing how. Other people were doing it  better models.  We have our free Facebook group, the who we that you guys are welcome to join you guys listing.

 

But if you notice in that free group, there’ll be some folks who just dive in, dive out, ask for some free advice, peace  in and out. And I’ve mentioned on the show that I’m in, I’ve been in several masterminds. Some of them are over $25,000 a year.  And I’ll just say it’s a different species of people in those groups that fly around 25 grand.

 

And, not that they have  25 grand to burn on something like that, but  it’s their opinion on like money flowing. I don’t know if you can talk about the contrast because a lot of people listening, they’ve never been in a mastermind before. It’s just that W2 working lifestyle where it’s just, it’s competitive.

 

There’s , not much  collaboration. There’s none of this pay it forward type of attitude amongst the cubicle dwellers.  Maybe you can talk a little bit about that, Tim. Sure.  That’s touching more on the tribe. I also help create called GoBundance and GoBundance is helping wealthy, generous people who choose to lead Epic lives.

 

I don’t know when this podcast is gonna come out. But as of now, it costs 7,000 to be in our tribe is going up January 1st to 10,000 and we feel about some bargain and in our tribe or many  W2, people who want to be 10 99 people, we actually have a micro tribe within our tribe of people. Who are current W2 and are working on their investing to take over to where they can just go off into that world.

 

And we’ve had some amazing people speak at our events and beyond something within the tribe. That we call seven to eight and seven to eight is how do you go from seven figures for a million dollars to eight figures worth $10 million. And there’s a gentleman who was on there just recently.

 

That was a W2 person three years ago, I believe. And he’s now, or some crazy number. 28 million or something like that because he’s been flipping triple net lease properties for the last three years and making millions doing that. And when you surround yourself with people who are doing the things that you want to do, but at a much higher level, you seem to come up to that level.

 

And that’s what we’ve noticed within GoBundance. And that’s. From my standpoint is one of the founders of go Bennetts and one with a big heart to lift others. Here, we’ve created this one life community. And in there we have something called three to five, but take off on the seven to eight. How do you make your first hundred bucks?

 

And how do you turn that into 10,000 and become entrepreneurial in nature? 

 

Hey guys looks like a Tim’s internet went out, but just to cap things off, we’re not telling you to go and join GoBundance, which I think is a pretty moderately price mastermind I’m in another mastermind called collective genius that one’s 25,000 a year. But  I’ve been in a lot of masterminds and it really changed my life.

 

I think if you’re listening right now, you’ve never been in one. Yeah, don’t go join in a $10,000 one in a year, right off the bat, but maybe just start off with a small one of even your, just your friends and family,  get a few people together. Get some drinks, go out for dinner and make the discussion a little more focused around what are your goals?

 

Not only money-wise or business-wise, but also career family relationships, et cetera. And I think at that point you start to see the value and the power of these types of masterminds. And when  you’re able to. Become more vulnerable, share what you’re working on, what are the good things?

 

What are the bad things? And one of the very famous very popular formats we’ll use is that the thorn and the Rose, so that the Rose is that you talk about something shiny that you’re working on or a win, but the thorn is designed that you get vulnerable and you share, what’s not going well.

 

And that’s really where the power of these masterminds come because it’s the aid of the other people listening. That they come in and either have a connection for you, or they went through the same circumstance and they can guide you through it. And this is what separates, the average folks from a lot of, like just the people who are killing it out there that they’re able to graduate to higher level masterminds and.

 

It’s really where the connections, the same, your net worth is. Your network is so true because when you go higher and higher, which is why pay so much money to be in the masterminds that I’m in, you get access to people who have the connections and have the social capital to call upon to give it to you.

 

And the thought is you need pay it forward and you help out each other. And. , if you would have found me five, 10 years ago, I would have thought you’re crazy. My wife thinks I’m crazy for spending $25,000 a year, when somebody from one of my masterminds that I am in visits Hawaii,  it’s just night and day different than connecting with some person who’s never been in a mastermind.

 

And I think even she gets it at that point, why it’s so valuable or  how it keeps me. Sane when I have to talk about my 401k or why I don’t have one to my mom around Thanksgiving time or whatnot, or, get into those types of arguments or go and congratulate somebody for buying a house that they live in that just messed up their financial future for a really long time.

 

 Yeah, it keeps me sane. If I have a  peer group that I know is out there that I’m a part of, but yeah  I’m not saying that you guys should be joining one, but try and create your own one. And if you guys are looking for the right peer group of the right people, cause that’s the hard thing, and this is probably one of the reasons why pay so much money.

 

Too. So I just don’t screw around with the wrong people. We have our,  own passive investor accelerator that I’m rebranding as the family office Ohana mastermind. You guys can get more details@simplepassivecashflow.com slash journey, but high paid professionals pretty much all accredited investors at this point.

 

Who are busy professionals still gonna spend most of their time at the day job, but looking to build connections with other pure passive investors and to find more deals, figure out what are the best practice for tax legal, infinite banking. And more importantly, which I don’t think they realize until they get into it for about a year is it’s the relationships, right?

 

As your journey to financial freedom, Moves on. Most people get financially free in five to 10 years and have a good paying job that, what do you do for the other 10, 20, 30 years? What’s the relationships that you forge in your first five years are the relationships that at least I cherish, but yeah, if you guys haven’t connected me I still do those free calls for new Club members for your onboarding call check that out.

 

Simplepassivecashflow.com/club. And we’ll see you guys next time. Bye. 

How Many Rental Properties Do You Need to Retire?

https://youtu.be/JA5sHtI_MYw

How can I continue getting bank loans for my buy and hold properties? The banks will not count rental income until it’s full two years of tax returns, which is almost three years of ownership. If I keep buying five units per year, my debt to income would be too high to qualify very soon. I have good W2 income and earn a good amount of cashflow.

But the bank sees me as having less and less income. Every time I buy a new unit until it’s seasoned, even though the reality is I’m increasing my income, your net worth is over half a million. I think you should probably look to investigate more scalable investments. That way you don’t have to do anything.

You don’t even have to put any debt in your name, private placements and syndications. You can get more information at that on my ultimate guide, it’s simple. Passive cashflow.com/syndications. But to summarize here, this is kind of a moot point. I’ll just say from my experience, I had 11 rental properties and I had one or two evictions a year and some kind of big issue that came up like in a basement or a tree fell on my house, maybe four times a year with that many rental properties.

Normally I’d cashflow two or $300 a month on each of those rentals. So we’re talking about 2,500 $3,500 of cashflow a year. Not bad, right? I mean, I’m not complaining, but let’s face it. A lot of us two or $3,000 a year is not enough for you to quit your day job or be financially free. You’re going to need to triple that number.

So if you’re going to triple that amount of rentals, you can get up to 20 or 30 of those things. Now you’re talking about an eviction every other month and some kind of big catastrophe that happens every other week. Pretty much. And you’re starting to realize how this is becoming quickly, not scalable.

2021 Housing Market Preview w/ John Burns

https://youtu.be/2Fs7CYzzGrM

We are going to be having a presentation done by Mr. John Burns from John Burns real estate consulting.com. John gave a great presentation to a mastermind that I’m personally in collective genius, and I thought it really, great for a lot of us viewers to go to the same presentation, but tailor it a little bit for our group.

individual investors, vacation investors, and some of us with still some single family calls and portfolio. We’re trying to get into that, but, thanks for joining us, John, and, appreciate taking us through. There’s going to be a lot of insights to do this deck. Yeah. We collect a lot of data that’s for sure.

You guys like my, monthly reports, you guys can get access to that. It’s full passive cashflow.com/investor letter. But from time to time, I’ll take a thing from John Burns like there you haul report that always comes from them. a little bit on my business then to start, we’ve got 70 people all over the country, nobody in Hawaii. but we do a little bit of work there and we focus on big companies, who believe it or not. Even the biggest companies in the industry, don’t have big research departments to figure out what’s going on in the housing market.

A lot of them. So they outsource that to us. So we’ve got 70 people trying to figure out what’s going on in the housing market. I subscription research product, and then also individual consulting. And one of the things I’m trying to get closer to and you guys can help me with the fair trade here is I’ll share all this information with you, but, I want to really understand what’s going on at the individual investor level.

And since they’re not clients of ours and you’re not, we do a survey of investors. And a couple of questions once a quarter, just got to email me or, Devin Bachman. And I will, we’ll send you the content plus some of your local market, research that you’ll find interesting. And her email is D Bachman, B a C H M a n@realestateconsulting.com.

So we’ll put this all in the YouTube channel, show notes, and then the webpage for this. but yeah, this, and this is what makes this data so great is John actually goes and gets this from folks like ourselves instead of, and they bring it to the institutions out there. So this is great data, but he needs some help here, from the foot soldiers like us that see what’s actually happening out there.

Yeah. data includes just comments. like John, you’re totally wrong. I’m seeing this, I’m seeing that. I learned more from my clients’ stuff. They’re seeing in the field than actual from data. so I’m gonna bring back a couple slides from a presentation I did in April, just to compare and contrast with where we are today.

And then, I think this has been totally underplayed, even though everybody knows it. the government stimulus was just massive and it, if it was $500 billion, it would’ve helped. It was a couple of trillion dollars at more than helped. And it really was a government induced housing boom that we’re in the middle of.

And, then we do one of the surveys we do is we survey people that own single family rental home. So you can participate in that. We serve at the landlords that own 175,000 homes. I’ll share you with you. What’s going on. There. It is one of the reasons that so much capital is pivoting into single family rental homes right now is our thesis was, it was a pretty stable recession-proof is too strong, but, Doesn’t cycle as hard as real estate normally does in a recession.

And man, is that definitely playing out right now? So we call it the safe and stable investment. If you will, single-family rentals. I know it’s getting a little more challenging because prices are going up faster than rents though. Then, I’ll talk, I’ll share with you some of the public data on how the new public companies are doing.

Just, I’ll give you some metrics with that. Do a quick regional overview and then a little wrap up of some risks and rewards. So back in April, we actually started this in March. We started weekly webinars for our clients. We do them monthly. Now that there’s day in fact tomorrow, we started calling it a global reset in March and here are the slides that, it was more than a reset.

It was a complete rocket taking off. So one of our clients is Oak tree capital. They manage 130 billion assets under management. Howard marks is one of the most brilliant people out there. If you could pick up some of his investing books, I would highly recommend it, but here’s what he was saying in April.

just back up, this is one of the greatest pandemics in history, the greatest economic contraction in 90 years, the greatest oil price declined practically ever. But this was the key that the greatest central bank and government intervention of all times. So if you study the economics and demand and supply, what the government does is not in response to demand and supply, it’s just massive stimulus.

And he called this one, And he was on the sidelines for a while. and this has been the big boost to housing. So as far as the vaccine was concerned, We turned to bill Gates. Who’d been studying this heavily. He said 10 weeks of extreme lockdown. And then we’ll open up in may or June. You got that, You said probably 18 months to vaccine, which seemed optimistic at the time. But actually there, it looks like we’re beating his forecast, so that’s pretty good. And he got this one wrong and he really just mentioned quickly. He didn’t think it’d be a while until housing recovered, but he wasn’t focused on what Howard marks was focused on, which is what the government was going to do to intervene.

And the intervention, even though it’s been much more significant than the early two thousands, if you study housing cycles, it reminds me of the early two thousands. When housing was 10 to 12 years after the great SNL crisis that had wiped out all the capital to housing, this felt very much the same.

And then we have a recession and Greenspan at the time drop the fed funds rate 550 basis points, 5.5%. And housing was in great shape and housing led the recovery and in a bit of a different way, I think the exact same thing is going on right now. So the other slide that we showed was that. There were really three arms of the federal government coming to the rescue.

All of our elected officials, all of the appointed officials overseeing the mortgage industry, which you remember at the time was in a complete upheaval and the fed. So let’s talk about what they did, the government induced housing built. So this is a timeline, and I’m going to show you about where we are right now that we’re getting a little bit toward the end of Q4 here, but.

670 billion dollars in PPP loans. they throw around these billions of dollars of numbers. And if it was a hundred billion or 670 billion, most people don’t know the difference, but this was all of the payroll and all of the rent for two months for all small businesses in America.

Now that wasn’t enough for retail or a restaurant in New York. But it was a hell of a lot for a lot of other businesses that were struggling a bit, but they were covering almost all of their expenses. And I’m in a CEO group where more than two thirds of the CEOs, we just pulled them. Their balance sheets are stronger today than they were back in February, JP Morgan, chase and others have released some data that consumer’s checking account balances.

Now, not everybody, but on average are higher than they were in February. This is just a lot of cash. This is the $290 billion stimulus check. They’re talking about doing another one. you got 26 weeks of unemployment that got extended the 39. Hey, we’re going to put $600 more per week. Into everybody’s unemployment check that is more than enough to pay the rent.

And then when that expired, through executive order, there was another $300, and that’s getting ready to expire. So the government has been paying for people’s expenses here, Stu loans, Hey, don’t worry about them. You don’t have to pay it mortgage. you don’t even have to prove that you’re in distress.

Just, you can stop paying if you want to 15%, 16% of FHA mortgages, which are the mortgage is to the people that are putting the least amount down and have the lowest credit scores, are delinquent right now. some of those people have their job. They’re just not paying it. And the government has said, we’re not going to foreclose on you.

We’re going to restructure your loan. So if you miss those payments and you’ve got a job and you can start paying again, where it’s going to tack all the missed payments onto the end. I’m sure there will be foreclosures that come out of this. but it won’t be anything like the last time.

And then I don’t know where the center for disease control thinks that they’ve got the power to tell people to stop paying rent, but they did interestingly though, at least among my clientele and some of whom have pulled their clients who are definitely out of work, they’re still making their rent payments.

because they know what it’s like to have to rent a new place. When you got kicked out of the last place for not paying rent, it’s pretty hard to rent a new place. So people are still paying their rent. So this has been like the U S government, took a helicopter and flew all over all of America and just spread cash all over it.

That could the consumer financial obligation ratio, which is people’s debt in relation to income is down. The actual, balances of consumer debt. Now mortgages are trending up because mortgages are doing great, but everything else is 10. People are paying down their debt. the rent collections, as I mentioned, have been pretty darn high in December.

They were pretty bad, but this is through the sixth of the month and the fifth and sixth for the weekends, I’m expecting it to get a little bit better. But if I told you that, Hey, we were going to. Have 30% of America lose their job in March and everybody would still pay their mat. you’d said that was crazy, but that is what’s going on because they were given the money to do And this has been what people call a K shaped recovery, which I like to distinguish it, sadly between the haves who are at the top of the K and the have nots who are at the bottom of the K. and if you’re at the top of the K, if you had some assets going into this, your stock is up, your home prices are up, your retirement savings are up.

If you’re employed in an industry that’s doing okay, you’re fine. they have nots where people that were really, in an industry that was paying people, minimum wage or close to minimum wage that, also involved group gathering so that all the headlines have been there. There has been a lot of distress there, but.

What we’ve seen for housing is that’s not the majority of America. It’s part of America and it hurts, but a good chunk of America is doing fine. Yes, John, like you said, it in the last presentation that I jotted down as a note here. not to be tone deaf or anything like that. If you go back to your last slide, but I think a lot of the people that are listening to this podcast and investing, they have very stable, white collar jobs.

And it’s the people that are more in the travel entertainment industry, food service industries, which were typically the ones struggling out of work, but there’s a lot of people, I don’t know what percentage of people out there that are doing just fine. And , they’re paying down debt.

They have quite a bit of money on the sidelines. And if you noticed that the things that we can’t do, like we can’t go to sporting events. We can’t travel. there’s a lot of white collar professionals out there. Just itching to spend the buck. yeah. when people are wildly vaccinated here, I think in fact, I was just telling my wife , we’re going to book a hotel in New York for the month of October now.

Cause it’s really cheap. I think things are going to get really busy. People are dying to get out. And the other part of this I didn’t really talk about is that, the government took away your ability to spend a lot of your money. You can’t go on vacation, you can’t go out to restaurants.

So people have been saving. So on top of the here’s some cash, you forced people to save more. I think there’s a lot of potential at the end of this year for the economy to be on rocket fuel. If all these vaccines happen, like it, it seems. I think so myself, I think it’s going to be a big party coming late next year, especially for those who have money.

just for scale, like the 2008, a lot of money got dumped into the system. Is it more or less, or what kind of order of magnitude are we talking? yeah, it’s I think I have a slide coming in the neck coming up and it’s a, it’s $3 trillion and 2008 through 2014, it took per Nikki. Six years to spend that three term dollars.

Jay Powell did at this time at five months, same amount in five months. I mean we borrowed the playbook. I said, why let it play out over time? And we may get some more here too. I think I have a slide on that, but the other thing he’s doing this time, which Bernanki did start doing last time, that the fed controls the short end of the curve, how much the bank borrowing rate is overnight.

But he said, I’m going to control the long end of the curve, but I’m going to actually be the purchaser of 10 year treasuries and be the purchaser of mortgage backed securities. And that extra demand from me is going to drive mortgage rates down. So that mortgage rates are below 3%. It’s not because of the free market.

Although the part of that is that the fed is interviewing. and it said we’re going to be intervening for the foreseeable future. Even if we see some above normal inflation here we want to see that. So here’s the chart you were alluding to where the fed back in 2008 had an $800 billion balance sheet.

Then it started buying mortgages and tenure treasuries grew to $4 trillion. And then in just this year has grown to $7 trillion. it’s just. Treasury is printing money and the fed is buying it. And, I’m not smart enough to predict interest rates. but you can go into the bond market and see what the bond market is forecasting and they’re forecasting that the 10 year treasury rate stays relatively flat over the next four years.

Mortgage rates usually trade as a premium over that cause a typical pool of a thousand mortgages. Pays off over 10 years. Cause somebody replies after two, but somebody else takes 30. So they trade off the 10 year and the bond market is saying, rates should be flat. So I’m saying I’m not smarter than the bond market.

And assuming rates are going to be flat. if the bond market is wrong, then I can change the game here dramatically. So just wrapping this section up, the government lifelines have just been unbelievable. They’ve helped businesses. Keep people employed. they’ve helped consumers pay down debt, pay their rent, pay their mortgage, avoid paying student debt.

A lot of my builder clients are saying to their clients have got the down payment now because it only requires 5% through FHA due to somebody’s savings. And then the artificially low rates of boosted home prices and sales volume. So housing is just booming, if you turn to housing investment, being a landlord.

So here’s our survey where we got 192 people to fill this out who oversee 175,000 properties. We got it at the local level two and 55 Metro areas. I didn’t just go to the big boys and say, give me your numbers. On the average, we have this by market. and we do share I’m only sharing part of it here, but we do share all the detail with people that participate.

it’s a 50 page report for a couple of questions. I am putting here on the slide, the email again, D Bachman, B a C H M a N, every real estate consulting.com. So here’s what they said. So 32% of new tenants are coming from apartments. it’s a different demographic as your clients know.

I find that the wall street types who all own their home, Or a young smart kid in New York who grew up in an owned home, doesn’t understand single family rentals. And I’m trying to educate. And it’s those of you that are raising capital, probably understand those two people. why aren’t people buying homes?

There’s just, there’s a lot of people who are just, I live in a single family rental home, cause that’s what I want to garage laundry. I want yard. It’s those folks. and then 59% of their tenants are coming from an urban location. Now we weren’t able to say, okay, was that downtown Los Angeles or the San Fernando Valley?

So I think, urban areas is the right way to look at it. Median rent is , $1,753 per month. That’s within a dollar of what the big professional landlords are saying. and rent growth, which was still growing, but at a lower rate during the first and second quarter is climbing back up. And what we’re learning, I think I show this later is that landlords by and large, not raising the rents very much on tenants that are renewing, but the demand is so strong that when your unit goes vacant, you’re able to release it at a lot higher rates.

So there’s a tale of two stories in here. There’s also people wanting to avoid headline risks, particularly the institutional companies of being known for Jack rents during a pandemic. They don’t want that. And 60% of them are now telling us that leasing activity is strong or very strong. So here we are at the end of the fourth quarter saying leasing activity is great and going forward, I expect it to be great too.

So that gives me a good eye on what the demand is like out there. only 11% say they’ve got lower occupancy than a year ago. They’re 97% occupied. So if you own a hundred units and 97% of them are full you’re in pretty damn good shape. And, that’s the recipe for a business that needs some more supply.

And we are seeing more supply come on the market, actually with newly built rental homes. Really in a mass way for the first time ever. So let’s look at the cycle of, okay. I could make a few comments. I think you hit it right on the head there, John, like I’m coming from the apartment world. And, you had that slide there where you had people moving out of apartments into homes.

definitely saw that in one of our apartments, that’s more on the B plus a minus fringe where it’s a clientele that is very good with their money. Let’s call it that. And they, when they saw race drop under 3%, we had a lot of people move out because they were buying houses to live in that has come and gone over a few months.

We had to get through that struggle where, went from 90 something percent down into like the eighties, which that was an interesting phenomenon and you hit it right on the head. and then, demand is definitely coming back overall. but we are still doing concessions cause it’s weird.

we don’t know. What’s a really thing with this. The CDC. But I do think that data is definitely skewed, right? if it clumps in there, all the Bay area, blue markets difficult non Lord laws areas. And then there are some areas that are undesirable that suffer because of this.

Yeah. and, if you’re a tenant basis, people who can work from home, , we’ve actually seen people move further out to get cheaper rent. and then there also is, they happen to have a neighbor who’s a bit noisy and interrupting their zoom calls. They’re gone. I think that’ll all come back if you will, but we have some pretty good data and a lot of confidence because I’m allowing my employees to do it.

More of them to continue working from home in perpetuity, some privacy and some quiet is more important in an apartment situation than ever before. So it can come down to the building and even who’s in the building. so here’s some data from our big single family rental report that we publish regularly.

So we do have a dashboard or where we can slice and dice all the data on rents and job growth and home prices. And one thing I wanted to point out here is actually during this pandemic, we’ve seen the gross yield and in places like Atlanta actually tick up, where rents have been. Growing. So 8.1% gross yield versus 7.9 a few months ago.

but that’s hair today to a year ago and just call a massive shift here. So a year ago, incomes are growing, say two and a half, 3% on prices. We’re growing four. So they’re growing a little bit faster, but rates were falling. payments weren’t growing faster than incomes. Single family rants were growing a little bit better, than incomes and apartment rents were going a little better than incomes, but basically you had a stable environment where three to 4%, payment or rent growth.

That’s a re that’s a market where demand is exceeding supply, but just a little bit. And there’s a lot of people running around saying, we need millions of more homes built or under supplied to the extent I think they’re overstating that, but to the extent it’s true, rents and prices have already adjusted.

And I think it’s important to remember that the look of what we’ve got going on right now. Home prices are up 10% year over year. We think they’re going to end the year up 11% single family rats, pretty much the same, about 4% single-family rent growth. And on average, apartment rents down because of some of the concessions you’re talking about.

But you want to pick the San Francisco Bay area? It’s down 30% plus in San Francisco, it’s up in Sacramento. So that’s a good example of people moving somewhere else to pay a heck of a lot less in rent. And here’s a good example of what you were illustrating. There’s a publicly traded company out of Toronto that owns a lot of rentals in the United States.

They own 22,000 single-family rental homes in 8,000 apartments. They’re called Tricon. they just reported their quarter. It was a phenomenal quarter where net income was up 74%. But since it was the exact same company, I thought I could compare and contrast their single family rental portfolio with their apartment portfolio.

So their apartment portfolio, the occupancy was down 2.4% to 92.8. the bad debt was up, to two and a half percent and rents were down to their single family. Rental portfolio. Occupancy was up to 97 and a half bad debt. And in a pandemic, a bad debt was down and a rent growth was a very strong 5.2%.

And when you drill down to that 5.2%. It was 2.4% of renewals and 12 of 0.6% on new leases, they were able to increase the rent. and this is the reason why, this is some census Bureau data. It’s the best data out there. It’s not perfect, but, they’re showing 95% occupancy, which is the highest occupancy in 25 years.

And so that’s where we sit right now is very high occupancy on single-family rental. One of the other big differences between apartments though, is we’ve been we’re at a 40 year high of apartment construction. So when demand slows and you dump in all these brand new, beautiful, vacant homes, that creates a lot of incentive where we have not been building rental houses like that.

So rental housing is not having to deal with all these brand new, beautiful rental. It was coming onto the market. There’s no competition. And that’s historically why this has been a more stable investment. And to compare in the apartment tenant versus the single family rental tenant. They’re the real amenities they want.

I get this question with our developer clients a lot. What amenities do they want? single family ranch just wants things I can’t have in an apartment complex, like laundry in my unit, more privacy, I garage, more square footage place for my pet, a tiny yard for a barbecue and the pet. those are the amenities.

Skip over this. And we have this in 63 markets around the country and probably the easiest way to say it is that the rent growth is the least along the California coast and in the Northeast. And it’s the most in the South. and the Southwest were these. Population growth we were seeing to those areas has just accelerated even more right now.

there’s been a lot of headlines of, big companies leaving California just in the last month. So the big guys, here’s how they’re doing. So there’s 80,000 homes, invitation homes. They’ve got the most expensive rents too, because they focused on what they call supply constraints.

Sub-markets places where you’d never see a lot of construction because there’s homes everywhere. So that they’re in it. From there in the eight locations, if you will, American homes for rent right behind him at 50,000 homes with slightly lower rents around 1750, both of them are clients of mine. And both of them say the average income on their tenant is as a dual income household.

That makes more than a hundred thousand dollars a year. And there’s a privately held company called progress that just bought a public company called front yard. And they’re going to be the same size as American homes for rent, but with an older, Less of a great location. Property, if you will, and these guys all need to grow.

So this is one of the reasons why I want to pull you and your, clients is, I think, an under reported factor. I think your listeners probably get it, but most people don’t is all the investment activity that we’re seeing in the housing market and investors competing from home. It’s not, we’re talking about mortgage rates and consumers, but.

That’s not helping invitation homes who needs to grow. That’s not helping American homes or needs to grow. American homes is building, I think about 1500 homes a year for their own account, brand new homes, plus buying off the MLS and same with Tricon. So I think there’s an investor frenzy. If you will.

everybody’s got what they call quote unquote, their buy box, their locations and price ranges. And as soon as one of those homes hits the market, there’s three or four beds on it. That could disappear. It did in 2007. so that’s why I want to pay attention to this. Then let’s talk about the rentals in America.

So there’s almost 46 million people who rent something 14.79 of them, or any large garden, a pump apartment complex, or a high rise. So that’s less than a third. Another 10 million or in a small rental building, like three to nine units, another 3 million in duplexes, another 13 million in old homes and another 3 million in condo.

So you probably hear people quote 13, nine or 16, nine or 19 nine. It depends whether they’re including condos or duplexes in their definition, if you will, but why are we building 400,000 new homes a year? Just for this segment up here that is garden apartment complexes. And we’ve been building nothing for the rest forever.

So this is the real opportunity where we’re seeing a lot of money come in and say, okay, if these guys can manage thousands of units all over Atlanta, if I put 200 units right next to each other, I’m confident they can manage that and do a great job. And there’s so much real estate capital out there right now.

th that’s the only safe place to go. You’re not going into apartments. They’re not going into hotels. You’re not going into office. You’re not going into retail until those things really become distressed. Then maybe we’ll see some capital pivots. They’re not. So I don’t skip over that. whereas, Oh, the greatest names of the apartment world than all of this.

So these are the biggest apartment companies out there, and they have not been participating in this at all. But I think this is going to change. We’re talking to quite a few of them. They’re not going to be building another garden, apartment complex when they’re giving away two months of free rent and the one they just opened, they’re pivoting over to what I think is going to be a brand new asset class, where we have more than a hundred thousand, brand new single family rental homes built every year.

the data right now says that we’re at about 55,000. And the big home builders know how to build these homes more efficiently than apartment developers and get the cost down. So you’re seeing Dr. Horton, Lennart told Taylor Morrison LGI the new Hong company. All play in this space in one way or another.

Some are building subdivisions and selling them. Others are, most of them actually are selling three homes here, four homes there, to people. Some of them are now in partnership with some of these companies to just basically feed, build the home for them since they know how to build. so here’s what we’re seeing nationally.

So in four years, the rent, has gone from 1400 bucks to 1,753. That’s a pretty substantial spike. The net operating margins have gone from the high fifties all the way up to 64%. These companies are becoming very efficient and, a percent now is a lot to add, but they’re adding a 10th of a 0.2 to 20 basis points, all the time getting more efficient on expenses and growing revenue.

And then, rent growth on new leases as a six and a half. And on renewals is three. So again, that’s the disparity I w I was talking about. I think one of the more interesting opportunities on acquisitions here, if you’re looking at acquiring a property, that’s leased, whether or not the current tenant is fully a market and whether or not you can take them to fully a market once you purchase them.

And the turnover has, people are locked down in their house in COVID right now it’s down to 29% turnover rate, which is just extremely low 97% occupancy. So getting to what’s going on around the country. this has not been an equal recession as we talked about earlier with the K recovery, but this has also hit various markets very differently.

So some of the markets that we’re already growing, like gangbusters are the ones that have had less job losses this cycle too, because people are moving to these places. Boston salt Lake Dallas, Phoenix. They’ve got 2% fewer jobs than they did a year ago, but the country has seven in places like New York and Las Vegas have 12% less.

So you got to pick your geography very wisely. And then if you’re targeted to do something new or class a or B plus you’re focused on high-income tenants. Austin actually has 4% more high-income jobs than it did a year ago. Dallas is higher. And that was before Tesla and Oracle and all these other companies announced that they’re leaving California officially and move into Austin.

So Austin is just absolutely on fire with people that make big bucks. what we’re seeing on the, if I transitioned over to the home price side of things, the number of homes in escrow pending sales is up 41% year over year. It’s up in every major market in the country, even Houston, where wild prices, I thought Houston was going to get killed.

We’ve got three people in Houston. they’ve been busy all year long. And one of the things you mentioned that you haul analysis, we price out, renting a U haul truck from one city to the other. And, if it’s the exact same price to take it to one city as to take it back, there’s an equal number of people leaving and coming and going.

But even during all of this where you think Houston would be in a big oil related recession, people are still moving to Houston because it’s cheap. And I can work from home. I can work from anywhere. It’s a better way of saying it. this is some data we got from a company that, analyzes mortgage data.

And you think of investors is paying all cash, but we’re now. So I talked about a hot Austin is with real people moving in. 15% of all the houses sold in Austin with a mortgage are going to investors right now, including some second homes. So this is a big part of the market and its cycle is pretty good.

Darn hard. Very interestingly to me that the investor percentages have been similar over the years, but who the investors are changes, dramatically. And that’s why I want to stay close to your listeners. Supply with that high demand supply is extremely low. We’re down to 285,000, homes for sale in the entire country.

That’s next to nothing. and, it’s down in every market except the two where the media is located and they’re pounding on San Francisco in New York. So yeah, San Francisco, New York housing markets are not the same as the rest of the country. They’ve seen more flight there and it’s more expensive and all the fun things to do have been shut down.

That’s why they’re struggling. lots of suppliers got really low. And so what happens when that happens is prices go through the roof. So we’re seeing even some of the markets that weren’t doing very well. Like the Chicagos of the world, our prices are up 7% per year. I do think that is driven by the fed with the low mortgage rates.

Then you go to some of the boom markets like Nashville and Portland up nine to 10%. A Phoenix home prices are up 15%. And that’s very interesting. I think for investors. Phoenix is one of the hottest rental investment markets in the country. but home prices are up 15% and rents are not up 15%. And so the yields have gotta be falling there.

And now we’ve got some markets where, homes are 20% of the homes, almost one in five and Seattle and Portland are selling within two weeks. And this has been such a big change from the old days when you had to go get a broker and you wouldn’t even get your open house, done it in two weeks. Technology has really accelerating the industry here.

this is probably too much detail, but I want, I wanted to point out there’s been a big shift in price in activity in the high-end lately. The a lot of the homes under $200,000 have now appreciated. And that used to be 50% of the market. It’s only 25% of the market, but this year really starting around.

June a little bit in may, but more in June, you started to see, people sell their home and buy a bigger, nicer home. We’re seeing a significant increase in activity about $550,000. And this is, that goes in with the K shape, recovery. It’s either the haves and have nots. I know here in Hawaii, The condo sales are staying where they’re at. those are you could say they’re the have nots, at the bottom half. And then the million dollar homes. Multi-million dollar homes here in Hawaii. It’s a lot of people coming in, moving in, trying to get away from the big cities or they just have money to spend on this stuff.

It’s the great chef, right? Not the great chef. No, I think, you’re talking about the high rise condo, so I assume, there’s that’s not something people are seeking during COVID, but I think that’s going to change. yeah. And then just wrapping it up today. So we did, I showed them a graphic here of a video we did 12 years ago.

but it smells a lot to me like, We had a little mini recession here, just like we did in when NASDAQ crashed in 2000. And then there was nine 11 in 2001, but we’ve got all this fed stimulus, just like we did back then, in, on the housing industry, which was in phenomenal shape. going into this recession and I just, I think we’re in the midst of a boom, how long it goes.

I don’t know, but I do advise all of my clients keep your eyes wide open as we go through this, because you can make a lot of money, but the last thing you want to do is give it all back. so managing your balance sheet and being careful and diversifying and all those things, I, and I’m sure that’s what you advise people to do.

It is the right way to play this and watch your debt levels as well. So there’s two charts here. They’re really compare and contrast what I’m talking about. Some of those, the home price to income ratio, we call it the home value to income ratio, which is actually creep it’s up at 2004 levels already.

It’s if you just looked at prices in relation to income, which is what investors are paying you say, this is absolutely insane. and we think it’s going to get more insane that’s how the. Tea leaves or how we’re reading them right now. but with payments so damn low, I’m not getting a lot of color from our clients that sell homes that they’re having a tough time getting people to qualify.

In fact, they’re getting three, we have offers on every house. so you’d say, Hey, this is sustainable. But the important thing to point out here is it’s sustainable because rates are so damn well. And, We think rates are going to be low for a long time. That someday if they’re not, or when they’re not, that will be a challenge.

they’ve been low in Japan now for 20 plus years. So it’s impossible to say this is going to change anytime soon. So just wrapping this up, that the payment matters more to the consumer, but the price matters more to the investor. So just pay close attention to that. Okay. I hit all these other things in here.

so let me just get to why we’re so bullish on the short-term resale homes are now sitting on the market for 21 days. That’s it? 71% of homes are selling less than a month compared to 49% a year ago. And we were talking about how ridiculously quick that was a year ago. Builders are selling far more homes than faster than they can build.

D R Horton, which builds 50,000 homes per year. So 81% more our homes last quarter than they did a year ago and a year ago was a good quarter. so they’re just struggling trying to get these things built, which by the way is great for the economy that all that construction is going on. And there’s a shortage of lots.

For the home builders to build on because all of the demand and job growth is in the urban areas, this cycle, and all the land is really far away and people hate to commute. And so there wasn’t a lot of demand far away, but I do think this work from home shift has change that permanently. and we have some survey data on that if you want to get into it.

I mentioned the bidding Wars, Bob Shiller want to know about prize and I’ll just. No wonder for a lot of things. But one of the main things he did was looking at investor sentiment and how that can drive prices too high. So that’s why I want to get an appetite on sentiment. And one of our signs of a housing bubble is a, when my cab driver, I guess now it’s an Uber driver or the lady who was cutting my hair is flipping homes are we’re back at an all time high number of realtors, which by the way, we are that’s, that can be a sign that things are getting too frothy.

So just keep. Keep those factors in mind. So I’m assuming continued economic growth continued though mortgage rates and increase in closures, but pretty modest, thanks to government controlling the process this time. And this may not happen, but a reduction in home price euphoria. it actually could go the other way.

So I’m being a little bit conservative here. But if that happens, we think rents are going to grow three to 4% a year, but home prices could grow 8% next year and then six and then five, if I don’t see that reduction in home price euphoria, I think we could see a couple of years in a row of an eight or higher.

We just are. We’re coming off in 11. that would create a housing bubble, that you. Want to be prepared for, with your debt structures. And if anybody wants to see the slides, just send me an email to Jay burns it real estate consulting.com. Or if you sent that email to Devin Bachman to, she, she can share the slides with you as well.

Yeah. And if you guys want to help us out and, do the survey for us, you don’t have this, shoot me an email plain and simple passive cashflow.com. I can connect you with the folks and get you set up with that. I think. If you guys do the survey, you guys give them the survey results right after the data’s all compiled.

So that’s you guys want to see this for yourself. That’s the way of getting that data logging at all. But if you go back to the last site, John, the way I’m reading this, you’re calling there’s a big STEM of less what, five to 10 trillion who knows there might even be another stimulus early next year, but you’re seeing this push through in the next year.

Two or three years like the, the benefits or I’m seeing a push through now. And, there’s this year, there’s probably been an overemphasis on where you live because you’re, there’s more people in the house all day long. I do think some of that will cool next year, people are going to take vacations instead of remodeled their house.

But, I see a sea change now to people who wanted to become homeowners someday becoming homeowners, settling down, being far less worried about mobility issues, because, Hey, I’m a great computer programmer. And, even if I switched jobs, I don’t have to move. there’s a really good chance here that we’re going to see home ownership skyrocket because of technology.

And I have, always been a big fan of these presentations you guys put together. And I think the reason why as you guys get right down to the weeds level, where we are simple, passive cashflow nation is not mainstream by any stretch of the imagination. And I think it’s, that’s a great place to get some data from.

like you said, when the text, when the Uber car driver is flipping houses or buying turnkey rentals, that’s the way I really have to all worry that ain’t happening yet. Oh, one thing that I did want to mention, when I was at CG, one trend that is coming up and I think you had it in a few of your slides, but you didn’t really mention it, a lot of.

there’s turnkey buyers that buy, rehab properties that are a few decades old, but you’re starting to see a lot more of the build to sell to landlords, new builds because people want newer properties, more workforce housing types, but they want new stuff. So you’re having a lot of these home builders are smaller guys like in CG built these brand new rental properties, turnkey rental properties.

But with which at a local level can create an oversupply issue. So there are parts of Phoenix where we’re starting to get concerned about that. So it is something to look at for the first time. yeah. Let me ask you a question. I’m sure your listeners would be interested in this too. What is your sense of, the number of people that are interested in passive investing like this?

how much is it up versus a year ago? like in March and April, we were doing, we were actually buying the Rockefeller, building in Cleveland, Ohio. And it was like, Oh crap. Like the Dallas, when the world was going upside down. And investor segment kinda got cut in half. Normally we can bring in like $10 million and that just got cut in half, just from a pure numbers perspective.

People were afraid. I didn’t know what to expect. It’s a multi-family residential, it was just, I don’t know if it really matters what it was. It’s just, I think it was just general, uncertainty, but it’s been slowly on the rise. Coming back. I feel like the L I thought it was the election was going to be a big part of this, getting back to normal.

But I don’t think it was, I think it was just a distraction, if anything, but I think people are, that’s presentations like yours, that really shines the light that, yeah, this is big government stimulus. The wave is coming these next few years better get on it, or you’re going to be missing out on one of the best bull runs ever.

I didn’t know how much stimulus money was coming through the pipeline. Now that I thought it was less than the 2008, 2009 stimulus times. no, it was more it’s R what’s already out there. and actually, I should mention too, a lot of the stimulus last time was on bank balance sheets and just sat there.

Now it’s on business owner, balance sheets and consumer balance sheets. And so it could be spent pretty quickly. And that’s the fear of some people is that if there’s some big resurgence in spending here and everybody’s competing for stuff, we could see a lot of inflation and we’re seeing a lot of inflation and home price, just not in everything else.

I’m more of a moderate, I don’t really get too excited. this is very exciting. Data that you’re showing. I try not to get too excited about these types of things and just stay in my range of the welfare cash flows. We have the good debt service coverage ratio. We’ll have God, can it be?

but I think what confuses a lot of investors, there’s a lot of, PERMA bears, right? If you’re Peter shifts, your guys are always saying that the world is going to collapse every other month and it doesn’t. Yeah. And I don’t think anybody listens to them. I’m far more interested in how many permeables out there, particularly under the age of 32 that can’t afford to buy a home where they’re currently live, but are buying homes, sight unseen in Memphis.

So that’s what makes me nervous. and so you’re telling me you’re not seeing a huge boom in that I’ve been speaking to the number of events I’m smelling one. it’s, it seems to me like, Hey, I’m not going to the stock market. I’m not going in the bond market. That all feels really frothy the housing market.

That’s what to do. Yeah. I think I, my, I’m speaking on behalf of my investor club, which I feel like are still, we’re not huge family office. We’re not institutional money. I like to think we’re sophisticated mom and Paul money, we’re not buying some random, crappy turnkey rental.

That’s overpriced. Like we’re a little bit better than that. Oh, you’re way better than that. But I would be very interested in learning if you’re starting to lose out to some of those non-professionals who are overpaying for things, because definitely like the guys that have joined in my group maybe a few years ago.

They’re starting to realize, yeah, I can’t be buying turnkey rentals anymore. I can’t be using all the same techniques, the, these lease option, things that used to, because yeah. Now the new guy is eating my shorts on that. I’m like, yeah. wake up. You’re 30 years old. There’s another 22 year old kid doing the same thing or somebody who started up a few years ago was doing this.

You know what you’re doing Fabi better or are willing to take more risk. I think I see a lot of kids that they’re doing that burst strategy where they’re. Right throwing over 30, 50 grand wiring cash at him and see the property. it works in theory, but I’m not a big fan of that stuff.

Especially for high net worth investors. It’s not worth the risk. That’s what happened last time when they started borrowing a lot of mine to do those things. And so I do not think that’s going on right now, but that’s why we want to do this survey because if it does start going on, I want to identify.

there’s a couple of companies Roofstock and another one, I just talked to you where you can now buy part of a home online. And in fact, the one I talked to yesterday, you can start at a hundred bucks. So they’ve, they just got started. They’ve sold six homes this way. I don’t know how many people have been involved, but I bought pieces of these houses.

And as does it’s designed for people to build an ETF in housing, I’ll take, 5% of that home in Vegas and 10% of that home in Houston, wait until somebody starts loaning them the money to do that. And I don’t think it’s a huge issue right now, but I’m starting to see it coming. and I think they’re lowering that barrier to entry, to investors, which I think is a great thing.

I’m all for people getting out of the stock market and that retail investments. But when you look, when you lower the barrier to entry too much to, that’d be bastardized the, get anybody can get in and anybody can run up and buy a hundred bucks here. It’s like the Robin hood thing.

No it’s Robinhood for housing. And what happens to home prices when that happens? They go right through the roof. Same thing happened to the stock market. So you don’t get in now or get a little more sophisticated and do something else that the normal guys don’t do mean. One premise I always do is do things that the average guy can’t do that can’t compete and always try to stay a half step of the game.

But well, John, yeah, again, help me out guys. want to have John back on here, so let’s try and help them up on those surveys. It doesn’t take too much time. jayBurns@realestateconsulting.com or just shoot me an email. I’ll connect you guys with the right folks. And I appreciate it, John.