If You Have an Existing WL Policy What Should You Do With It

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_HE_HgsFLA

Hopefully your existing policy has no additional P lease. A lot of them that either evaluated existing policies, even. And this is where the design is so important because it’s a guardian policy. It’s a foster guardian policy. Yeah. It’s a fair product that we use heavily and it was just designing. So the other person couldn’t contribute anymore.

It was basically all based premium and he couldn’t put in Peewee. And if you can send him, reached out to me, I’m wanting teachers quickly. I can do a quickie, which of the color. But yeah, this is more than likely the guy built it. Not with the idea that you’re going to get the liquidity. Right out of it, you know, I think my wife had something like this, but we just chose to just cash it out.

Or I think Tyler, you can do like a 10 31 exchange or life insurance too. Why would you do one or the other, like the cash it out or that template? What is it called to building one for life insurance? What was that called? 1035.

Close. 

Basically, I will do a tender most of the time. I would recommend doing a 10 35 just because you don’t wait when you do the withdrawal, it becomes a taxable event.

You do the 10 35. You can reserve all that cash value, put it into a new policy. Then you’d have access to that cash value via policy. I personally, haven’t had a pretense. I still have a Prudential spot on me. It’s so small. I was about to just take the cash value and instead I’m keeping it there and I’m just taking all policy loans.

I didn’t do a 10 35, cause it didn’t make sense because it’s already paid up, but you can just access that cash value via policy loans. There you could possibly even just do a reduced paid-up exercise and reduced on your policy and you could kill the fees and maybe that may even be the better option.

Right. Good to know. If you don’t mind, I’d like to send you over what I have and have you take a look. It depends if it’s big enough, like over 25 grand or if it’s less than that might be easier just to simplify it like 125,000 dollar 401k. I mean, that’s not too much money as well just get rid of it.

Yeah. I mean, right now there’s 105,000 and cash value in there. So it’s grown to be significant. I think I just didn’t want to pay that. My wife’s slimeball.

Yeah, I hear ya. I think he’s trying to sell me on like a, another policy now. 

It’s usually the guy that you’ve never seen since college or high school, they take you out for lunch, right? Field trip, you that your kids and your family are up the creek and you don’t do this.  They’re building you up with everything that you don’t want. It’s not like they’re trying to screw you. They’re just building it the way that they were taught. And a lot of this is very counterintuitive, which is high liquidity, low death payout, which is, goes against everything that they’re taught.

And then low interest rate too, which doesn’t make sense. I’ve had these guys, they challenged me. They’re like, I thought you’re like simple passive cashflow you want returns, right? Don’t you want good returns on this? I’m like, dude, like you don’t get it. Yeah. It’s not the case.

How Much Cash Should You Have in Order to Invest

Is there a certain percent number that you’d like to keep as cash. It’s a couple hundred dollars, $200,000. I think people will get nervous if they say, oh, where do we only have a hundred thousand dollars in the bank? Just because there’s always paid just as money comes in every day. There’s bills that come in.

And once in while almost like an emergent, Hey, we got to cover this taxes today or something like that. So there’s always typically a hundred or 200, lots of times more. And we try to manage that sometimes we’ll get significant payoffs or Oreos or significant money comes in or investments come in and it’s not readily deployed.

We sweep that money to a money market account. So we’re earning some anemic rate of interest, but at least there’s a little bit of money versus sitting in the kind of operating account where they’re earned zero. So that’s done regularly. It doesn’t add up to much, but it’s fine.

Pref Equity vs Traditional Equity explained

https://youtu.be/q5i0sG8KCOk

Hey, simple, passive cashflow is listeners. Today. We are going to learn the difference between equity and traditional equity. Seen in a lot of deals out there when go through the pros and cons but before we get started, let me show you a little bit. What’s going on the website got we set dates for the year 2022.

We mashed my retreat this past year. We had to do it virtually, but we’re bringing the gang back together and we’re inviting all people. Bunch of folks those people in the widow pipeline club, you guys can sign up there for simple passive cash.com/club joined there. And, check out this retreat.

I have set up@simplepassivecashflow.com. 2022 retreat is the URL. You can check out all the cool videos that we have, from last year sealed testimonials and see what we got planned during the weekend. This is going to be taking place Martin Luther king weekend, 2022, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, packed with fun stuff.

It’s going to relaxing to, you’re going to be in a walkable in Hawaii. I’m going to take you guys throughout the island and it’s a great way to meet other pure passive accredited investors. And we’re going to do it the simple, passive cashflow way. So again, check that out.

And if you guys can please do a survey for me on the top of the page, I haven’t set the pricing yet, cause I haven’t figured out what you guys want. How extravagant you guys want to have this thing? I know a lot of you guys are pretty rich out there, but a lot of you guys are really frugal too at the same time.

But let me know. If you guys want to smoke cigars, golfing or just hike and people, stuff like that. Let me know. Again, do that survey for me, simple passive cashflow.com/ 2022 retreat. If you haven’t done so yet. So you can get a say in what we’re going to be doing this year at the annual retreat.

And if you guys want to join our community and get the free courses that we have go to simple passive cashflow.com/club. And for a special limited time, get my free remote investor light equals. By a sign up for that club and then shipping it. Shoot me a quick email@laneatsimplepassivecasual.com, which subject line L I T E lights team knows to hook you up with that free course.

And here’s the show.

 

 

Hey, investors want to go over preferred equity versus traditional equity.

This is in different deals are called different things. A one 82. Or class ABC. But if this is new to you, we’re going to be going over, the story and how we started to implement these options in. Deals. And, maybe stick the end or some advent stuff some more experienced investors. Maybe this is the tool for the job in the certain situation, the first thing. traditional equity was how we first started out. Very simple deals, a straight split, such as a 70, 30 split with 70% of profits going to. Passive investors and 30% going to general partners. And of course that kind of changes based on a better deal or thinner deal. But, it’s very simple, very transparent. And that’s where we started out with this traditional equity. Option. And then we started to realize that, some investors coming in. They may want a more conservative option. They may not want to be in the deal as long as potentially three to seven years. Or even more. And, or maybe they had a lot more money, they were up to that. And gave me a point where they had three to $5 million and they just wanted a straight coupon paid monthly. They don’t really care about growing their money. More.

Also, there are a lot of. Newer investors that maybe came from the private money lending world. Of course, when they see this stuff, they’re like, why the heck would, I want to give up a huge chunk of money to these unsophisticated house flippers it be ordinary income, which we don’t want passive income. We created this pref equity class, which is a very small layer. It’s very small part of the equity. And so this was born. Perfect equity. We’ll just in this case, we’ll call it AWA of course it’s always called a different things and different deals. So always check the PPM. What the naming convention is used. So we started to go in with two different classes of equity, the preferred equity. And it acts like a debt investment. Where you’re getting a straight preference chart. And you’re from like eight, 10%. Maybe I’m at 11% we’ve had in the past and certain deals can cover it.

It acts like a debt investment, like a private money lending deal. But you are an equity investor. The cool thing about that is you’re getting the piece of your, percent per rata share of the cost segregation. Appreciation and losses.

Implications for pref equity. , like I said earlier, this may be a good thing for more mature investors out there who have a higher net worth. We just want to collect a steady income check or newer investors looking to move away from ordinary income to more of the passive income, or just want to try us out. Right way to sit at the top of the capital stack. With a more conservative option where you don’t have to wait. And maybe a couple of quarters for the DOE to get restabilize, to start to see distributions typically with the pref equity or Awan. In this case, you’re going to get paid out a lot quicker. In the past, we started hanging out distributions right after the first complete month. And that paid monthly distributions after that.

Great situation. If you have a skeptic spouse at home, if you guys are looking for the cheat sheet, Working with a skeptic spouse, go to simple passive castle.com/spouse. Also shoot me an email. I got some videos for you guys. That we did at the last. A virtual mastermind. But great way to show about that. My favorite turn a month or two after you. Initially invested in the deal now, nothing. Gives them more confidence than seen. That almost 1% of your investment. Going in the bank account on our routine Buffy basis like that. And hopefully. Gives your skeptic spouse, the confidence that lets you invest some more, which is ultimately what you want to be doing. Cause where else are there are you going to find better returns out there? That’s backed by real estate. And not only any real estate, but stabilized assets with a great business. The bump, the rents up. Another person that makes it’s great for as investors who. Maybe they want to be a hybrid investor. They want the upside. So they’re going to hop in the 82 or traditional equity piece, but they also want some peace of mind. What’s that steady peak. Income stream. Some people will cobble this. They’ll maybe go 50 grand in eight, two and 20 grand or 10 grand or 50 grand in a one. Great way to play on both sides.

Maybe you just want to put in 10 grants. So your skeptic spouse get to see a few dollars hitting the bank account every month, but you have the majority of it is the equity piece, which is ultimately going to grow or, and have a bigger equity, both the poll at the end.

They’re sharing a couple of examples of some people doing this, make it, how to investor , they learn about all this alternative investing information and they had their paid off house and they realize what a mistake that was. So they get a HELOC on it. And now they have access to $400,000. And, they went in a hundred grand into the deal, but they had stale maybe. The remaining $300,000 and they had another a hundred thousand dollars. Liquidity lack around and they had all this cash, right? Like just sitting around doing nothing. What they decided to do is plop down a couple of hundred thousand dollars to 81. Knowing that they would get that money back. Earlier, and that’s how typically it works. What we’re trying to do is like the pref equity kind of gets us off the ground, gets us rolling. But make no mistake. We’re trying to remove those investors as soon as possible. Typically, once we get a lot of the rents, Stabilize. We get the initial bump, maybe in the first few years, we’re trying to do that. Refinance. To get these people out of the games to make all our. Traditional equity, the two guys. Our return squat. Thanks. It’s thanks for helping us. So the guys, now we don’t need you. You guys are out and hopefully it’s like a mutual thing where investors, another reason why they go into the pref equity Awan is they don’t want to be locked up in a deal that long. And I don’t know where that really comes from. Maybe it’s a non-committal thing. Really? Where else are you going to get better returns, but look. Everybody’s got different situations and even people in different situations want to segregate their portfolio a certain way. Maybe you have some part of your portfolio, a little more conservative. You want to take a little bit more asymmetric risk. Which I don’t think these deals are right when you’re investing in stabilize assets that produce cashflow every month with a good business plan. I don’t really call that asymmetric risk, like investing Dodge Clyde or. Altcoins. Out there. Or doing more of a development deal. It would be an example of more.

 

 

 

Another investor asked me one time, what do you think I should do? I’m torn between the two. They both sound right. I asked him the question like, Hey man, how’s your job, ? Do you think you’re going to get fired anytime soon? The company downsized. The reason I asked that as well. If there, if if you’re a government worker or you have a pretty steady W2 job, Is that a ride? If you’ve got your emergency savings account, a few months of expenses, the kind of tie over to find your next job, or you have opportunities to harvest some cash, maybe from a Roth IRA, cash savings, or he locked your good put in traditional equity, especially if you’re under a million or two network, you need to grow your money. Pref equity. 10 11% a great return, personally, I think you can grow it better in a traditional equity. That’s what you should be doing. If you’re not to two to $3 million and above, you’ve got to grow your money. You’ve got to, use that analogy. You got to score more points. You’ve got to put up more points on the board. If not, you’re not going to win the game.

And the flip side of that is say in an investor, said, I worked for oil and gas industry. Things are weird. Or. I’m on a contract work this year. I don’t know what’s going to happen in six months then I would say, you should do the private equity at the stage of the game. Get your money working and get the cash flow. That might be a better way for that particular person to go. But again, it’s different for every situation, every person. Has different, ideally you’re segregating your portfolio as you’ve seen you see my portfolio. Sometimes I take more risks. , most of my portfolio is pretty conservative. Most of these stabilized cashflow deals. And then the last example, some investors, they have a huge glut of , lazy equity. Maybe even half a million or $2 million of lazy equity that they haven’t done. Like I said, I’ve seen investors, invest a million dollars in the first year with me. But I think that’s an outlier, right? I suggest people try things out slowly. Hang out for a year, make sure we’re competent. I know we’re competent, we’ve done a lot of deals thus far, I’m just being empathetic to new people coming in. Because that’s the prudent thing. That’s the thing I would do. I don’t recommend anything that I don’t want to do. At the same time you got money burning a hole in your pocket and for every million dollars of Lacy liquidity you have, you could just stick that into something at 10%, pretty easy. It’s such as HP. I wouldn’t suggest putting all that money. In one place or all that money in a private equity deal. But, you wanted to apply the funds, but you want to do it prudently. A nice way of doing this is putting a chunk in pref equity to just get it working because the idea is you’re going to get that much quicker. A lot of these deals, they make us put a lot of this money is reserves. So once we hit certain milestones, we refinance the money out, we return a lot of that initial Private equity capital to investors right off the bat. And, maybe originally went in with a hundred grand of equity. Maybe you’re only sitting with 50. Grant in a year’s time, not every year, every deal is different. And I want to say any precedents here, but, the pref equity is a shorter term lifespan. If you’re sticking money in there, you got to think that you’re getting a heck of a lot faster than most people on the , traditional equity side. So it can be a strategy thing. The way of thinking about it is you’re putting loading money in, but you’re leapfrogging it to maybe one to three years into the future that you know, you’re going to get it back. Then you go to be deployed into more of a traditional equity, eight to scenario. I do this a lot of times. It’s kinda like a short term, one to three years. Speed in a way, you want to get your money in traditional equity, but you’re waiting for the deals to come around, which, and they’re pretty infrequent. And if you’re starting out, you may not have good deal flow. You’d likely though, right? So you want to be patient, but you still want to get your money working and that’s what the pref equity option. Allows. Just going over, A scenario here, a hundred K investment with a 10, 11% return. Just using that as a. Example. Annual projected cashflow of. Around. 10 to $12,000 a year, right? That’s 10, 11%. I think there’s a typo in this should be $11,000 for 11%. But as it comes out to be on a hundred thousand dollar investment, a little under a thousand dollars. Paid monthly.

Sometimes, people ask, what if we don’t get paid? A lot of times you have to understand that the Private equity is a very small part of the capital stack. In deals pass. The amount of capital we’ve raised in the Avon portion is very small. Like maybe five or 10. At most, maybe we seen 15%. All the capital stack. Sometimes people get concerned like, oh, there’s a investor class ahead of us. There is, but it’s pretty small potatoes in the grand scheme of things. And we wouldn’t put that. One class in there. If we knew we it off and that’s how we as sponsors response speed. Create the allotments for each of these classes and the It may seem like it’s a little arbitrary, some deals are 10%. Some, these are a week take great care. And there’s always a reason why things as So the Awan is a pref preferred rate of return, which starts accumulating once the property. Closes. we’ve had investors as. Does this compound? No, it does not compound. That’s not. That would make things very complicated. In terms of, paying people back. The compound rate. Normally what we try and do, if things are going a little slower, we will. We may start off the payments slower the private equity guys, our full intention is to catch right up the first year to make people whole at that, whatever the 10 At the end. And, I think at this point, like there’s also a question that came up. Hey, once you returned my money back, let’s just say in year two, there’s a refinance where I gave you half of your a hundred grand backs. You’re in the deal with only 50. And the guy asked. Am I still getting my 11% on my a Or on my 50 I was like, only getting money at your 50 minutes.. I wish if I, if that was the case, I’ve invested that too, but no, you only get money that you’re making in the pref equity on what you have in the deal. Again, our intention is. You out. So our traditional equity investor returns can’t And again, like I said earlier, you’re still an equity investor, even though it acts like a that you have equity, which means, yay. You have the tax benefits and you get your pro-rata share of the The cool thing. And I said this a lot as a little trick or hack I’ve had some syndicators invest in our deal, kind of shows. other people like to invest with us. And when this stuff was all new, there was another syndicator that actually took a big chunk of my pref equity investment. And I was like, are you doing? Talk to the logic. And they told me that, we liked the fact that we can. the money in and get our share of the losses and then get out of the deal sooner than everybody else. But we get out, our CB has told us that we get to retain hold onto those losses until the whole deal exits. So let’s just say. We refinance every, all the pref equity guys out in year three will all that depreciation recapture. Capital gains. They don’t have to pay that. Until the whole deal exits potentially another few years later, or maybe even another five years after that. It’s a great way of kind of stock piling, passive activity losses. If you’re somebody who runs low on that.

Yeah, you will get a one, we’ll get the full benefit of the cost. Based on your pro-rata share of the capital stack.

And said in a different way, one are entitled to the losses. But their original principal. But of course consult your CPA. A tax professional. Here, just getting more into the advance. Aspects of the pref equity. Some people are like, Haley and I trust you. Should I do pref equity on this one or traditional equity? And again, every situation is different and in everybody’s portfolio, you have different applications, and that’s just based on your personal preference. But, this particular individual, I know their portfolio pretty well. They trust me and I know what they’re trying to do. Long term. And in this particular case, there was not a yield deal was more of a medium to heavy value. Add. So there was a lot of upside in that way. And as this says right here, It is less advantageous to do pref equity when your upside is higher. Because you’re giving it up. To use an analogy. It’s kinda LeBron James signing with Adidas, obviously that didn’t happen. And obviously Adidas gave LeBron James a low-ball offer or a much. Lower offer than Nike. In a way. I don’t want to take my 10, 11% straight preferred return even though that’s great. I think this one’s a good one. It’s going to pop. And therefore I wanted to go into the traditional equity. If you want to have a part of your portfolio where you just get a straight 11%, 10% return. You’ve got your deductions, your passive activity losses coming from it. You want to have a part of their portfolio? What I would look for are the more yield deals. As opposed to the more value add type of opportunities with the upside. Now you might have the complete opposite viewpoint at this. And you’re like, the ones with the more value add, those could potentially be more risky. I don’t necessarily agree with that logic, but Hey, that’s you guys, right? You guys can think whatever you guys want. That person may think. If in a more riskier project perceived risks, even though it is real sand stabilize after all, if people need a place to live. They may want to go for the private equity side. It’s just, I’m just giving you guys ideas out here.

So instead in a different way might be more appealing with the 82 and the 81 does not have a large gap.

And said in another way. The more the yield deal. The better candidate. It is for pref. Equity, whereas the more value add the more pop. The potential pop. There could be, It makes I would do the private equity less. But then again, it’s just timing, right? When deals pop up, you don’t really like. And you want pref equity, you feel like that I’d like to have a little more stable cashflow on a month to month basis and the next step comes up and it’s a value add, you got to get what you need, that’s life. I don’t know. A lot of these deals, you can’t really go wrong. Pref equity, eight one. One B2, just kind of personal preference. Digging in here more, since those stuff is the same stuff we’ve been talking about. Difference between private equity and traditional equity. Again, 82 has, or the traditional equity. Has the higher potential returns and one could say, if you’re not getting the upside, why are you playing the game? Maybe like they said, if you got four or $5 million, you don’t care. Already at end game. But, for most people under a couple of million dollars net worth. You got to play the game. And you got to put your money in traditional equity because you need the girl. While we’re on this topic, people are like, I went into the V deals at the minimum. Why am I not to financial freedom? Do you only put in $150,000, $150,000, even if you made 15, 20%, it’s not that much money. You got to put in more money. You gotta do more skin in the game. A lot of these, like what people don’t realize is, most sophisticated investors are putting in maybe 50, a hundred thousand dollars, but they’re going in a lot of deals. They’ve got a big chunk of money and they’re working. And the nice part of that is it’s 82 investors than traditional equity investor to turn to equity for life. Whereas, and in this case it was a 70, 30 split. Whereas the eight. One investors are exited early and do not get the upside. We said this before. This is just saying it in a different way. Equity investors are chipped off the bus, kicked off the boat or whatever vehicle you want to use. We’re basically using them. And we’re paying them for their services of their money. But once we get the money, we’re kicking them off because their equity. They get their passive losses. But they are not entitled to the upside. They just get a straight return. And that is the downside of A1C. The website, you’re just getting your street, maybe 10 or 11%.

 

Or pref equity or move earlier. A lot quicker than eight to investors where the eight two investors typically stage. To the area and at least how I do it. Again, always check your PPM, right? Cause there are deals out there where even a two investors are debuted it out. I don’t think that’s fair. But I’ve seen deals out there where people do that. 82 has a slightly, above break, even point in terms of. Occupancy of gala and whatnot. Gets 12% let’s just say the deal struggles. Technically the A1C guys are going to get people first. But if the one’s at eight tunes, aren’t getting paid. You know that the break even point on all of these deals pretty. Pretty low. Most of the time the deals go stabilize above 90%. No problem. And sometimes even in really hard times, it goes up to 80%. But a lot of these deals, you start to lose money. Again, it ranges, but anywhere from 50 to 70%. The typical program. It’s going to take a lot. For a one and. Traditional and private equity to not get their distributions. Sometimes, of course we always fall back. Because it’s the responsible thing to do. It’s not like we don’t have the money. Losing money. But we always want to be conservative and protect the asset.

This is, a good example is like when we had COVID right. There were a lot of more terms of fictions. There was a lot of insurgencies, a lot of times we held back distributions. On investors, but we still paid out the 81 for the most part. You’ve been through COVID.

Something that we’re working through now and probably after the year 2022. So probably be an afterthought. Nobody will ever think about this again, but. During COVID, a lot of the lenders froze up. For good reason, right? This country has never been through anything like this and it’s unprecedented. When things are uncertain, What banks usually do is they get lot more conservative. And they require a lot of these, what I call COVID reserves a huge chunk of money , I’ve seen it in our deals and you’re from like a couple hundred thousand dollars to $600,000. That they want us to stick in the back. Now the pref equity came in. Great for the situation because the deal with the lender that we had, that’s written into documents is. Once we hit certain metrics or in a couple of quarters into the deal. They are too. Re release these covert reserves and we are going to get it back. And that’s where we like to exit out these private equity investors. It’s great for these situations. And I’ve used this, sane in the past. Pref equity makes good deals better because it allows us the timer, leverage and our debt. By taking on that little, extra debt in the beading. Yes. For paying a little bit higher rate for it. We’re able to time it out at the right exact time. And us to shed that debt. And give most of the returns, the traditional equity investors at that point. And, but the flip side is like in bad deals, pref equity makes it worse. I’ve used this same. Terminology and same verbiage in terms of bridge loans. Using the right situation, bridge loans are the perfect usage of debt. And, it allows you to be very flexible or prepayment penalties and allows you to get the rehabs done. And, Reposition the asset. But in bad deals, it can be very risky. And that’s why sometimes the use of long-term agency financing with big prepayment penalties may make sense. I think this is what’s hard for most passive investors you’re looking for general rules of thumb and there is none. It’s never a case of bridge debt versus agency debt is best. It’s never the case that using a little bit of private equity, in the capital stack is good. It’s hard to tell if you’re a passive investor. But just know that it’s not always, oh, if they’re doing this type of thing, it’s always bad. It’s always on a case by case basis.

But yeah, that’s sorta how that these Clover reserves are working. And , I anticipate after the year 2021, we won’t really be talking about these types of things. There’ll be something else that pops up. I’m sure. We get these coal reserves back based on occupancy levels, relationships with the lender and could range anywhere from six to 12 months. A lot of investors have they’re asking oh, When you think you’re going to get a good chunk of the pref equity back or my investment back, cause I want to kind of time things and I’m like, here’s the situation, right? And we don’t know, it’s unprecedented, nobody’s had their COVID or reserves or these yet. Nobody has gone through a pandemic and had to go to these lenders restrictions or terms. And, so we don’t know, we just know what kind of, what the deal was with the banks, which was based on occupancy levels, good relationship, and six to 12 months. But, as anything. In investing there is risk. You could be in there longer. But. Accumulating your breath, right? Money is good. And that’s the nice thing about being a. Pref equity investor. But yeah, hopefully this helped out guys as a pref equity, traditional equity one oh one. If you guys got any questions, please let me know.

Creating your Family Estate + Trust w/ Andrew Howell

https://youtu.be/aATY_Mo8X8U

What’s up simple classic cashflow listeners. Now this week, we’re going to be listening to a reporter that I do with Andrew Howell, who puts together a lot of trusts for folks, but not those type of trusts that just nearly gets you around probate. Again, a little PSA for you folks. If you guys have a will, that ain’t gonna work, guys, that’s going to go through the probate process and.

It’s going to take a lot of your money. You need to have a trust. So it skips over that and doesn’t get tied up in the process and all your dirty laundry or how much you have gets up without there in the public domain. So you want to trust, but not any trust, is what we’re going to talk about today.

We want to trust that facilitates the wealth. So it grows creates a structure for the next offspring to come along and not Raleigh, screw it up. No, I have a new child now, and although I’m changing like 13 diapers a day, at some point, I’d like this person to grow up, maybe not easy to grow a multimillion dollar real estate investment company.

I just want them to be good contributors to society or good people and just to be happy. Certainly don’t want them to be a cocaine or heroin. Or like a lot of trust fund kids, they just become lost because , they haven’t had the need to go get a job to create skills that the world uses.

And therefore they haven’t gotten any traction in life.

I think at the very least, want to create a structure to allow. Offspring to take our wealth and to just not mess it up. So how do we do that? So one of the biggest activities I’m doing right now as I’m building up staff and creating that growing company is values.

And I see this no different than creating a family office and a trust, which is just a document that kind of pulls together your family office, going into the field. So going back to the business, right? A lot of the is predicated on your values and some of my values I’ll go through them right here, just listed out.

But in order four of them that I have written down now is honor ownership, accountability, initiative, and Kaizen. So going in more detail on that honor, we say where we’re going to do, we don’t reach straight with our sellers. We honor the commitment to our clients to get their expectations.

And if not, we’ll make it right. So that’s similar to integrity, not chicken shit and no nickel and diming, if something is wrong, call me out. That’s what honor is to me, ownership and accountability. If there’s a failure, there are no excuses. We take ownership and fix the problem too often.

I see people just not take accountability, blame it on other people. The last, the third out of four that I have now is take initiative. This kind of goes hand in hand with accountability, where creates a business or a family where everybody’s empowered to improve the processes and to make decisions.

A lot of people out there floating around, make light. They don’t have the ability to change their life. It’s a value that needs to be instilled. And the last one is. For some strange reason, the way I’m wired up, I always like to be implementing new things and improving the processes, improving myself.

Kaizen is the constant improvement and this kind of goes in with the whole accountability initiative for my staff is I don’t dictate costs as is their means or methods. I don’t like when people do that to me, in fact, it drives me so crazy. That’s been one of the big motivators to leave. An be two job, but I want people to create the processes where it works for them. And I, I want these values to be distilled down to everybody in the organization. And these are the values that I want to create in my family office. But now here’s where the bridge and the difficulty happens.

You may have these values, or you may not have these values created at this point, which you really should sit down with your partner and figure what these things are. But how do you create a document that rewards these types of values such as honor, ? Doing what is right. Making the world better than you found it.

I’m thinking ownership, accountability, maybe the trust creates a certain amount of money, but once you run out of it, you’re done. Or, maybe there’s some kind of, for Kaizen, the value of KZN, maybe the trust creates this program, or you’re able to get essentially unlimited funding, but you need to be constantly improving yourself.

Sure. You might squander it. Maybe go into a bad business deal here. But if you’re continually developing yourself at some point, something’s going to hit and you’re going to get that traction and you’re going to be able to grow the family office even more and, initiative, I’m not, nothing’s coming to mind right now, these are the ideas that are different to everybody.

And obviously my family office is going to be looking different than you are. A lot of us in the family office, a Honda mastermind, which you guys can join it. Civil plastic, hassle.com/journey are going to be having a in-depth discussion about this in the future and more, I think it’s going to be better in person when we do the annual retreat in January of 2022, when everybody comes down to Hawaii, these are the homework that I think people need to do before they start to create that family office style. That document can be changed in the future, but I think the quicker you start to create this value system, I think it starts to give you the structure and the path to create what kind of behaviors you want to motivate .

So I was watching the movie Jiro dreams of sushi. So it’s that Netflix documentary, you wear that thing. Three-step. Michelin star restaurant in Japan where this guy chiro, if you watch him, he’s a G the way he does things is very stoic. And I like that and it’s a lot of the values that I you know, the way I live my life by, but it may not be for you.

And I think that might be a good way to brainstorm or at least get the conversation started with your spouse. Or with your kids, as you’re watching these types of documentaries or movies, even movie stars, right? Why do you like James Bond? Why do you like this certain character?

What are the values that this person or this potential fictitious character represents? What are the values that this person demonstrates and start to list them down and then start to use that as a brainstorming. To start to narrow down your top four to 10 values that you want to use in your trust.

Anyway, that’s just a little bit of my input. If not, you’re just starting out in the dark. No, this is not a sure-fire way to get to your family office trust document. But, it’s just one thing that I was thinking about the other day. I was third to create my business and kind of be tinker by family office document.

And if you guys haven’t yet, please check out the websites and we’ll pass a castle and join our private investor club@simplepassivecashflow.com slash club. And here’s the show.

 

Hey, simple, passive cashflow nation. Welcome today. We are going to be talking to Andrew Howe who does a lot of trusts for folks in our group, and we’re not going to really get into, LLCs or all those entities, but , everybody says that you need to have a trust. And most people in our group are like, all right, cool.

A document that kind of avoids probate, but how do you create that document that is the living. Blueprint to pass down your wealth. After all 90% of folks wealth usually goes away in two to three generations. I know very well. I went to private school. I went to school with a lot of rich kids who is second generation, third generation wealth.

And I can see the wealth just squandered away. Not many of us are simple passive cashflow listeners who are first-generation wealth, creating their wealth and want to be good stewards of it and want to see it go somewhere, maybe something even bigger and better. But a welcome Andrew. Yeah let’s dive into the topic here.

Yeah, it was a huge topic before we started recording and we talked that this is going to be a big topic to discuss, and let’s try to find a starting point. I want to just make it clear. I think the only time you don’t need an estate plan a will trust. There’s a lot of things that go on of that is where you really just don’t care.

What happens with your assets when you die. And of course, there’s. A lot more going on with that. If you have minor children, you need to think about guardianship and all of those things that go along with it. So foundational estate planning is a must in my, but that’s, coming from an estate lawyer, what I want to concentrate on more is.

Is what I would bet and lean a lot of your viewers and listeners and so forth are thinking about, which is what our generation is thinking about. More and more this idea that , we want to do things for our children that give them a good start in life, give them educational opportunities, given up entrepreneurial log activity or onto potential things that they could do there.

 

 

 

But what we don’t want to do is just dump on top of a bunch of cash and these trust fund babies, right? You mentioned three shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations. It’s a common theme. In fact, I just had been. Pass this quote from the founder of Dubai. I’m not going to even try to say his name because I’ll butcher it, but he says hard times create strong men create easy times create weak men, weak time, create difficult times many will not understand it, but you have to raise warriors, not parasite.

This is a worldwide issue. It’s not United States. Everybody gets this idea that if they don’t create some sort of main motivational aspect within their planning, they really do , run the risk of creating a situation where kids as Warren buffet would say, have so much that they can do nothing.

You want to give them so much, they can do anything, but not so much that they can do nothing. So how do you do this and how I typically see most estate plans is work the way they did a hundred years ago where mom and dad pass away. The assets then get divided into as many shares as there are children.

And then that share of the estate gets dumped on that child. Maybe not immediately, but when they’re 25 or 30 or 35, and the asset now goes to that child. And again, this is all planning. That is the same. It was a hundred years ago because of how that generation viewed wealth. Our grandparents great-grandparents depending upon the age of the audience the greatest generation who unfortunately is leaving us too quickly, they viewed wealth completely differently.

There was a true economic hardship that they lived through. They, weren’t eating and standing in lines to get soup. In our generation, we’ve lived through some interesting times, great recession. We fell unhappy. COVID certainly been unhappy, but we’re still eating. There’s that hierarchy of priorities based upon safety. Human beings are always searching out safety. And my grandpa, he had the same that I always loved, which was money. Isn’t everything. But it sure. Quiets the nerves. And the idea being that if you can’t, or you don’t know where your next meal is coming from, how you’re going to feed your family.

As they were coming out of the great depression and that was no longer an issue that was, creating safety and that way they said, okay, what we want our estate planning to do is solely concentrate on the financial wealth and how we get the most financial wealth to that next generation.

But without any real thought about the consequences of the impact that wealth might make. What we try to do in our trust just to to draft them in a different way is number one, they should be personalized. You really shouldn’t have a trust that is cookie cutter, and this is just opening Pandora’s box or I guess it’s the man behind the curtains in my industry.

Most estate planning lawyers have a software program that create your estate planning documents. They punch your name into it. And it pumps out a document that looks like the one, they did five minutes. There’s nothing wrong with that. There are some clients that want to put some effort into it, just doing the basics and maybe their children are just amazing stewards over their assets, otherwise different reasons not leave it to a kid ever.

But they’re much more pragmatic reasons that we can talk about. The point being is that ought to be personalized. I had to be able to read your trust and, or read my trust. And you ought to learn more about who the hollow family is instead of just my name and my kids’ birthdays.

And there is very little personalization that goes on within a state planning these days. We call it trust mill. You run people in, they go through this very set process. You pump out documents that look the same as everybody else’s and you sign them. So personalization is a big thing for me and we’ll get into this and how it weaves into some of the.

Yeah, no books we’ve written and so forth and our thought process on that. But really what we’re trying to deal with are these three erosive effects that we see with wealth transfer. And this is how we do planning a little bit differently than I think other planners do. The first erosive effect is the division of an estate,

if mom and dad have a $10 million estate and they pass away , they have four children. Each of those kids are getting two and a half million bucks. If you’re looking at the standard estate plan and the power of 10 million. Is not the same as the power of 2.5 million, right?

You can get into deals and real estate projects and all of these different kinds of things at a $10 million investment level, then you can at 2.5 and it has more power, you can get better terms, better interest rates, you have power, the golden rule. He who has the gold rules. It’s one of those ways of maintaining the family financial power.

So how do you do that? We think of it as the mineshaft approach. You keep things together is the family as a whole, instead of the shotgun approach, which is at death, we’re just going to spray it out to the kids and in proportionate shares or disproportionate shares, whatever. So we’re preserving the power of the family wealth by holding it all together.

The second thing that people need to be concerned about, especially as high net worth individuals and in high-income earners. Is which are, exclusively my clients, they are going to exceedingly be looked at in the future to pay the tax bill. It’s already the case and it’s going to get worse.

I don’t really care about what your political preference is. I don’t care who you voted for, but from a tax perspective for high net worth individuals and high income earners. What happened on November 3rd it’s not good. We’re going to be some experiencing some significant tax hikes. And one of those is related to this success tax that people have to pay,

when you two successful the federal government and some state governments, depending upon where you live, one another crack at your assets, they want to come in and. Tax you at the federal level is 40% and States are usually lower than that. And usually on a grinding sliding scale. But what we’re hearing now out of Washington is there could be a big push to go back to the 2009 level under current law before that 40% tax kicks in.

Every us citizen can give away 11.7 million entirely estate tax free at their death. So as a married couple that’s $23.4 million, it’s a heck of a lot of money. And most people are in debt when it gets down to it, let alone having positive net worth in excess of 23.4 million. But what we’re hearing out of Congress right now, Or I shouldn’t say Congress, I watched Washington let’s say is that there’s going to be a push to lower that from 11 seven to three and a half.

That’s what you can give away. A state tax raise 7 million as a married couple with a potential 55% tax on a meeting over and above it. And essence, this is the Bernie Sanders plan. This is what he proposed through the campaign. Now keep in mind, the state tax is just like any other tax law change is political and there’ll be the whole political process that goes along with that, not just what the public sees, but the back office, you scratch my back.

I’ll scratch yours. And I think that it, as the negotiations on this estate tax goes down, it’s ultimately going to come out to be somewhere close to where we were under Obama. Where you could get five to 6 million as an individual, 10 to 12 million as a married couple, and then a 35, 40% tax on anything over and above.

I think that’s where it’s going to wind up. I, of course don’t have any clue for sure, but I don’t think anybody really does, but that does mean that 10 million or 7 million. It’s a lot of money. But it’s nowhere close to 23. Many more people are going to be affected. And then another really bad part of the estate tax lien is that first of all the IRS demands payment of the estate tax within nine months, following your data, Beth and the taxes have to be paid in cash. So let’s say your group has a lot of real estate. It’s not a very liquid asset, right? And if your death, you have a real estate holding of $15 million and all you can pass is $10 million away.

The other 5 million being subject to a 50% tax. Two and a half million dollar tax bill owed nine months in cash. So where are you going to get that liquidity to pay that maybe you’ve got to sell real estate and sell it quickly. So you’re not necessarily getting the best price for it. So a state tax planning is a really important thing.

It’s much more of the pragmatic tax stuff that, you do want to get attorneys and accountants and so forth, involved in. But I also do believe that the estate tax is a negligence tax and the only people who pay it are those who fell the plan. So planning around the estate tax is an important thing for clients that are at that level.

And I think if there are clients that expect to have a $10 million estate or in excess, that you really do need to look at doing some greater estate tax planning, I just don’t see the government needing less money in the future. Yeah. So few points here. I wanted to bring up, I think a lot of people are listening $10 million.

They’re thinking that’s a lot of money that ain’t that much money. Just in the last couple of years, you’ve had a lot of people come into my group that are $10 million or more. And I’ve got to assume that there’s a lot more out there that we just don’t know about that are hiding. I bet you three or four times a day, I tell people that they are multi-millionaires and they don’t feel that way because, cashflow or whatever, I’m still living paycheck to paycheck.

Maybe not that bad but you also have. An IRA, a 401k, you have equity in your home. You have a second home, you have life insurance that has a death benefit. Maybe that’s really high. You have equity in all these rental properties and maybe you have a privately owned company, right? You’re an entrepreneur in some way.

And one of the other issues with with clients that have privately owned companies, you don’t know what that company’s worth, it’s worth what somebody is willing to come in and pay you for it. And the problem is that at your death, the IRS is going to try to determine a value and they are going to try to determine it’s worth as much as they possibly can.

So some of state tax planning involves you coming in and taking control of, what you think your estate is worth at this time. Reporting all that to the IRS and then hoping they don’t challenge you on it. But if they do no big deal no planning should be done in a way that is.

We had this saying, which is in tax planning, pigs, get fat hogs, get slaughtered. You don’t do what you can, but don’t do too much. But it, you also just want to stay on top of it. And even though you may not have, people that you work with that are at that level yet. Chances are they’re going to get at that level.

And in less, maybe Baron Von Trump gets elected president and eight years or something where the estate tax might go back up to a hundred million dollar credit that you could give away a state debt free. I just don’t see that happening for some reason in this world, there has been this villainization of success, and I have no idea where it came from.

I can remember walking down the street. With my grandpa, who I worked at his office as a kid and he worked in downtown salt Lake and I love cars. I’ve always loved cars. I’ve always been into it and even was back then. And I can remember still to this day, this Lamborghini which was my.

Absolute dream car, right? The old school learns from the eighties drives by and I was just drooling. And my grandpa looks at me. He didn’t say, that’s an evil guy. He screwed somebody over to get that. It was look, you work hard. You create value for people. You make money, you can get one yourself, it wasn’t looked at as a negative thing. It was looked at. This is something that you might want to strive for. Again, anyway, I probably went off topic there, but yeah, no, I agree. Most people are a bunch of haters, and that’s what kind of limits some people behind anything. Money is easy.

It’s a V it’s a victim mentality. And if you don’t have what I have, it’s because you’re a victim. That’s the mentality and it drives me crazy, but we’re probably kindred spirits on that. Okay. So again, that kind of a state tax planning is an important thing. And, I talked to clients that have worked with other lawyers may have even heard of this estate tax because of that feeling.

It doesn’t affect most people. I just think that it will. As most recently as January 1st of 2013, the estate tax exemption, what you could give away a state tax-free was only $1 million. With a 55% tax on anything over and above that, that’s eight years ago now they fixed it the next day with the American taxpayer relief act.

But we fell off the fiscal cliff and we were that, that we went back to the 2001 level. We have no idea where it’s going to be, and that’s a lottery system, you’re playing the lottery about when you’re going to die and how big your estate is going to be. What we do have right now, though.

And this is important for your listeners and your participants to understand. Is that at least right now, the law says not just death. Can you give away 11.7? You could do it during your lifetime. The way that this works is, as soon as the IRS told wealthy people that if they were too wealthy, they had too many assets in their estate at death.

They were going to get taxed again. It’s okay. We’ll just give it away during our lifetime. IRA said, no, you can’t do that. Whatever you give away during your life will count against what you can give away at death. And we call that the gift tax. Now, as I mentioned earlier, we’re hearing, they’re wanting to reduce it down to three and a half million on the death estate tax side, but on the gift tax, what you can give away during your lifetime, they’re talking about reducing it back to a millionaire.

In essence 10.7 million that you could get away could go away, but at least right now you have that 11.7 and I’ve been doing a lot of work with clients that have been leveraging and using their gifting power that they have right now, because we don’t know when it’s going to be lost, but they have it right now to move assets out of their estate in a very strategic way.

And there is a short window to do that because. We don’t really know when the tax laws are going to change. I think most people are betting next year, 2022, but there was again, another whole rumor out of Washington that they were going to try to push things through labor push things through by labor day.

I don’t think there’ll be able to do that. That’s pushing it pretty hard, but I do think before the end of the year, we’re going to know what’s going to happen next year. That’s like the concept of people watch football. That’s the Wildcat offense, right? We don’t know what’s going to happen in the future.

It’s very much an art form, but right now you have that opportunity to pitch it out to the running back and get it out. Now, before you take a chance what we are forced to do in the future and also in the future might be good potentially. When was it? George Steinbrenner died? It was a hundred million dollar the, 2010.

He died three and a half, $350 million a state that 2010 was the throw momma from the train year. Cause if they died that year, there was no estate tax Steinbrenner was mentioned in the news. But the biggest one was this guy down in Texas. He was an oil guy and I think at the time he was the 14th wealthiest man in the world.

Again, this is 2010 and I believe it was a $19 billion estate that he had. His family said 10 billion, $8 billion. That’s with a B in taxes, just because he died that year. Now, one of the other things though, that happened in 2010. Is that stepped up basis went away, right? When you receive an asset at death you get it with a clean tax base.

You could say sell it the next day and not have any capital gains tax to pay. But in 2010, when they said you can pass everything, a state tax free, if you took that option, it had carry over basis. You had to take an essence what your parents, his basis was in it. But look, if I can save a 50% a state tax and paid 25% capital gains tax or whatever it was back then, you’re certainly going to take the second option.

There’s give and take. But why that’s important now is this is all cyclical and we’re seeing this stuff come back, right? They’re wanting to get rid of stepped up basis at death there. They’re talking about this right at death, whatever your basis in and your assets are as you pass them to your kids.

They pass to the kids. And so they’re going to pay capital gains tax. It’s so important on all of those assets. Now, I think that’s going to be a tougher tax law to pass because everybody has to deal with that. The average inheritance is 177,000 and most of it, consents of primary real estate or primary residences.

And there’s no child that’s going to want to inherit mom and dad’s house without the ability to sell it the next day. Tax-free the estate tax. It again, it doesn’t affect most people, even if it goes back to three and a half million, most people don’t have $7 million net worth, but you have to also consider, like I said earlier, all of the assets I glossed over this, but I want to touch on it pretty quickly.

Life insurance. Prior to going into law school in 99, I was a life insurance agent right in the three most hated professions in the world are attorneys, life insurance agents and use car salesman. And my best, friend’s a used car salesman. So I hit all three in some way, one of the selling points of life insurance is that It’s not subject to tax.

I have a $5 million life insurance policy on my life and my wife’s the beneficiary and I die. She gets $5 million, completely income tax rate. The only reason for that really is because the insurance companies have this really strong lobby in Congress, and they’ve been able to carve out the definition of income to include.

Life insurance, death benefit. That’s it. So the reason the issue though, is that my wife would now have $5 million of cash as part of her estate. And now is there an estate tax problem? How to plan for that life insurance death benefit becomes a big one. Anyway, I don’t want to, that’s a much more kind of static.

Tax issue, and it’s definitely something that can be dealt with, but there is a small Wipro window of opportunity that can be going away. To close that portion out, right? I think it’s important for folks to be aware of this stuff and understand it because things are going to change.

And in the very end, you may just be stuck, it just may be how the times are, but there may be opportunities to. Do that wild cat off the, to the right. We’re all stuck, right? It’s the way the times are. And we’re just going to have to live through it now, again, I’m not coming from any kind of political side on this.

I just, as a tax attorney, I hate. Paying taxes. I pay my fair share and all of those kinds of things, but and by the way, if you’ve ever worked with a tax attorney that likes taxes, you’re working with the wrong attorney. But the point is that there really are planning techniques that can.

Put you in control and you in power of what happens with your legacy at your death, do you want to leave it to your kids in the most tax efficient manner or maybe you don’t right. You could have, and I have clients that are this way that say, yeah, I want to give my kids some, but I really want to benefit charities in some way.

Charities don’t pay taxes, including the estate tax. So you have a hundred million dollar estate and 80 million of it is going to go to charity. We don’t have an estate tax problem anyway, but it’s how do we leverage and use that financial wealth to accomplish what this next issue deals with?

. Just to refresh your memory. Cause we’ve talked about so much the erosive effects, number one, the division of the estate, spreading it out at death means that everybody gets less assets and we lose power. Second issue the estate tax, because if it ever, the regeneration of family is having to pay 50% of the tax to the government, that’s going to weed down a family’s financial wealth over time.

But then the biggest issue that bleeds into this. Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generation phenomenon. It is fact it happens. It’s not just this idea. It is fact is the third party attacks to the wealth. Meaning you leave an asset to a child and they go through a divorce or they get sued or they start a business and it fails and they have to declare bankruptcy.

And what mom and dad gave him gets taken by those creditors and then, and mismanagement, right? You give the assets to the kids and they go just. By Ferrari’s and I’m thinking against Ferrari’s beautiful cars. I like cars, but I expect my kids to make the money themselves to buy their own damn Ferrari.

They’re not using the money that I left in to buy the Ferrari. What I had, what I think is the worst one is like the parents give a $1.5 million state the kids go and break it down and go build a $3 million house with her $80,000 a year salary and get a new mortgage on that. That’s the account as a third party attack themselves, it counts as mismanagement.

And that brings into exactly this discussion of how do you deal with each of those issues? First of all, third-party attacks are pretty easy to deal with. One of the things that I see in a lot of people’s planning lane is that at their death again, They might leave it in trust for the benefit of their kids for awhile.

Understanding that an 18 year old is probably not well equipped to handle a lot of assets. You probably were at 18. I was not but Hey, we’re going to hang on to it for a little while longer. We’re going to put a trustee in charge of it. Who’s more responsible, but then when the kids reach 25, 30, 35, these are very common ages.

We’re start doling the money out to them. Literally requiring the trustee to give one third. Of the assets outright to the child. And to me, that’s a huge, no-no what I do. Like in my planning for my kids. In fact, I’ve done this in the planning for my mom, keep mentioning my grandpa just as a really big person in my life, but he’d done very well in life and he passed away in 2006.

My mom’s an only child. And she’d be game a pretty wealthy woman. And I’m a mama’s boy through and through. I talked to her every morning on the way to work, and I don’t want this lovely woman going anywhere. But when she does launch off, I want the last check she writes, but to bounce, but I don’t need her money just fine.

But when it comes to me, it’s coming to me in a trust. And then my sister had a trust that will exist for our entire lifetime. And the reason for that is number one, we deal with that erosive effect. We just talked about this, a state tax issue. Look, I’m going to do what I can to have an estate tax problem.

It’s not the only thing I’m striving for in life, but if my wife and I have a mast in the state of $20 million, let’s say I don’t need my mom dumping on top of me, half of her estate, because now my net worth increases. When I die, those same assets are subject to an additional state tax. I want to enjoy those assets, right?

I’m not completely altruistic by her leaving it in a trust that exists for my entire lifetime. It never becomes part of my estate when I die, if I’m worth $50 million and there’s $5 million in that trust that my mom left me. That’s not part of my estate. It generationally skips the estate tax and go on.

It goes on to my children, her grandchildren, a state tax-free. That’s a benefit of that lifetime trust. But then in terms of third-party attacks, if my wife decides that she’s tired of my horrible sense of humor and she runs off to The Bahamas with the pool boy The assets. My mom leaves me in that trust are for my benefit.

Nobody else. My wife is not a beneficiary of that. Trust a divorcing or a bankruptcy trustee. I literally could go through an entire bankruptcy, come out. The other side of that bankruptcy with the assets. My mom left me entirely intact. Now the downside of that of course, is this term lifetime. And does this mean that my mom has, in my case chosen some third-party trustee.

At her death to be in charge of what she leaves me and my sister. Thankfully she has this idea that I know how to run a trust. At her death, I get to be in control of what she leaves me as my own trustee. It’s not part of my estate and not available to creditors, even though I’m entirely in control.

That’s a big thing that your client or your associates should think about doing within their planning, leaving it in a trust. But not a trust that will ever make or be required to make outright distributions to that band fishing. Okay. Now, one potential issue with that, that I’m seeing as your sister, your sibling now she’s at the mercy of you, the trustee, right?

Nope. She gets to be her own trustee over her share. Okay. Everything stays together. But there’s individual trustees for their portion. Yeah. We have a family partnership that my mom and my sister and myself own and that’s where we concentrate the wealth. We hold it all together. So it’s not.

Split apart. And then ultimately what will happen at my mom’s passing is all own half of that partnership in this trust that I mentioned, and my sister will own half of the partnership in the trust, as I mentioned, and yet we need to work together on running the partnership, but we run our trusts.

However we want. I’m very handsy when I talk happens, if like your sister’s a drug addict or just not just doesn’t care. So now you bring up a funny story. I got to tell another story about my grandpa. He had this fabulous sense of humor up until the last breath that he took. And it sounds a little bit morbid, but we have this small, strange little family and we are around his house talking to him about his burial instructions.

And we always thought he wanted to be buried next to grandma on the family plot. And he said, no I’ve changed my mind. And I want to be cremated. I said, okay, where do you want them? What do you want your ashes spread? And he said, okay, Andrew we have a small ranch up in Montana. And he said he loved it.

One of his favorite places on earth. He said, take a box of ashes and spread it up at the ranch. And my dad said, okay, no problem. He, this river in Idaho that he loved and there was this one spot on the stretch of the river. He would always stop and have lunch when we were fishing. And I probably stopped there a hundred times over the years with him.

He said, I want a box of ashes spread on the bank of that river, and I’m not going to tell you where, so you can’t turn me into the APA, but he said, okay, what do you want done with this third box of ashes and the whole family’s waiting on bated breath. And he says, Andrew, I want you to take that third box of ashes to Nordstrom’s.

And I want you to sprinkle my ashes and every planet at Nordstrom’s that you can find. Cause that’s going to give me the best possible chance that my sister. Or that your daughter, your sister will actually come and visit me after my death. She has a quadruple black belt in shopping. I love her to death, but she doesn’t really have a good sense of finances.

She hasn’t wanted to learn about it. Big heart. Amazing person, but just not really the most financial savvy. You have to deal with that. And when I mentioned more cavalierly just a moment ago that she would be her own trustee, to an extent we have some safe cards in there just to protect their financial Ms decisions.

But in terms of drug dependency and it doesn’t have to be drug, it could be any substance abuse illegal or legal, right. You can have prescription. Drug abuse, anything that is causing an impact to that beneficiary you’ve got to deal with because money’s not good or bad, it just is. But what it has a tendency to do is enhance a good or a bad characteristic, right?

You have a child with a drug problem and they get a bunch more money. It’s going to increase that drug problem. It’s not going to solve it. So you absolutely need to have in your trust a way to deal with that. We probably have two or three pages alone on the ability for say a trustee that is managing a beneficiary’s trust, who hasn’t yet been put in charge of their trust.

Like my mom would put me in charge of, but like my kids, no way they will never, they will be in charge of their own trust until their behavior changes a lot. You put in some of those safeguards where the trustee of the trust can suspend making distributions to that beneficiary in the event, the trustee knows it’s going to be used for an inappropriate purpose.

Doesn’t mean that the beneficiary can’t still benefit from the trust. For example, you’re worried about giving that beneficiary money. Cause he’s, he or she you’re going to take it and go buy. Drugs, alcohol, whatever. And they’ve got the problem. The trustee can pay the person’s mortgage directly.

They can make sure that the mortgage payment is going to get paid. So you have to have some of those. And then we even put in ours The ability to, obviously drug testing gets involved, but also we get counseling and have that counseling paid for they get a second chance, right?

Although you gotta be really careful about that. Drug has a huge recidivism, right? Those are some of the hard things that you have to craft around and identifying those is a really big part of it. In fact, that’s where we always start out with saying is that people that successfully navigate this, idea of transferring wealth with more purpose and also I think preserving family harmony they routinely spend time knowing who they are and families don’t really do that very often any longer. How often do you sit down and say, okay, who are we as a family? What makes us unique?

What are our core values? And that’s the other aspect to what this lifetime trust provides. It’s a way for you to pass on that personalization that I mentioned earlier, that I’d come back to this. This is where you, as a family could come in and say, these are the five core values or. I don’t want however many values you want to put in there that we really want our trust to be driven by.

If you were to look at my trust document, you would see that there’s 35 pages, just giving directions to my trustees about the type of things that I would want to do, because I want to incentive my C incentivize my kids and much more. Then the static way that a trust is written, where it says the assets in that trust for the beneficiary are to be used for their health education, maintenance support.

That’s not where I want it to end. I want my kids to be able to use it for entrepreneurial activities. I want to use it while they’re alive to help teach them some of these financial literacy ideas. Right? Financial literacy is an extremely important thing for a parent to teach to a child because they don’t learn it anywhere else.

They don’t learn it in school. You wouldn’t want them learning financial literacy in school. Last thing you want to do is take financial advice from a teacher joking, but the point being is that you as the parent, whatever, however you define that really does have that responsibility for taking on that financial education to your kids.

How are you going to do that? Incentivizing them is just incredibly powerful. You’ll see things in people’s trusts where they will, provide for the family to be really thought of as a bank. And if a child wants something from the family bank, they don’t just get it given to them.

They have to apply for a loan. And if it’s for business, I don’t care if it’s a lemonade stand or like I have this fam actually my son is 15. Now he wants to start buying cars and reselling them and fixing them up or whatever, not in my experience, a real lucrative process, but he needs to learn his lessons and I’ll help him, and I say, okay, look, I’ll loan you the money to help buy your first car, but I’ll tell you what, you’re going to come to the whole family. Your brother, your sister and us, your mom and your dad, because you’re taking the family’s money and you are going to deliver us a business purpose. And I’ll help you write it.

I am teaching them how to write a business plan and I want to understand what you plan on doing. You’ve done all the due diligence on costs, startups and all of these different kinds of things. I want him to start learning those things, even if he blows the thousand dollars or whatever that I might lend him.

He’s had a learning experience. Now, if he has an outstanding loan, he’s got to regularly come back and deliver. State of the business address, if you will, to the family, cause that’s creating accountability, but it’s also teaching each other. There’s no better way to learn a topic or a subject than to have to teach it.

And my kids now are teaching each other about what they’re doing right. And what they’re doing wrong. In all these activities, because I know my kids are going to make mistakes. You learn from your mistakes, but I’ll be really pissed off. If all of my kids make the exact same mistake. And if they can learn from each other, this is what I did, this is what I did wrong. You’re creating family togetherness. You’re hopefully creating synergy for the kids working together. My kids are going to have to work together and how my plan is set up. Something happens to me. Nothing. No, it doesn’t go a third. Like I said, it all stays together and they’re going to have to work together on managing it under the principles that we’ve all laid out.

And I think the beauty of that is it’s kinda like when you go for a job interview, if you’ve never been on the interviewee panel, you don’t have that empathy. You don’t have that insight. But your kids kind of evaluating their siblings plans for the money. They gain that empathy and they realize how next time they come up for the proposal, next time they’re in the hot seat, how to, how it comes across and presents it.

And then ultimately they grow. It’s whimsical when they’re young, but it gets more serious, bigger dollars in the future. And all this, the foundation was set. That’s the point. And I literally did this with a lemonade stand where, we priced out the lemonade or the lemons priced out the sugar, priced out the water, all this kind of stuff had them do a whole progression on it.

And it was for my daughter. And then she had to come back and say, of course the 500 bucks was gone, but she, as you were definitely in the hole on that deal, But she had to explain that and she was doing that at nine years old. Now I’m not saying that’s what everybody needs to do or should be doing, but there’s all of these different ways that you can do it.

What you don’t want to do is just throw money at somebody with no accountability, because somebody else’s money never means as much as your own money means to you. We have this. This parable that we tell in our book, this gentleman has created these wonderful businesses and he has this, Arab parent, this son that he wants to leave all of these businesses too.

But the kids a spendthrift right, the standard go out and spend everything, and he wants this kid to get serious. So he tells the kid, look, you go and make $10,000 and you bring it back to me. And we’ll talk about me handing over your business. So the kid says, ah, I can, it’s 10,000. That’s not that much.

I can get that easy. It goes out, yeah. He talks to one of his buddies and he says, Hey look yeah, Gimme 10,000 bucks. And when my dad makes me in charge of the businesses, I’ll pay you back 20 and his friend says, no problem. Here you go. Here’s $10,000. So the kid comes marching into the dad’s office, hands in the $10,000 in cash.

The dad stands up, walks across the office to the fireplace. That’s burning throws, the $10,000 into the fireplace, burns it up completely. And he looks at his son and he says, I know you didn’t earn that money. You go out, make $10,000, bring it back to me and we’ll talk. So the guy’s going, Oh my Lord. How did dad know that?

I’ve got to talk to somebody that’s smarter. So he actually calls one of his dad’s advisors thinking that he can get his dad’s advisor in on the scheme. And he knows what his dad is worth. So we talked to the advisor and he says, Hey, look, you lend me , $10,000. And I’ll give you a percentage of dad’s businesses when he turns it over to me.

No problem. Here’s 10,000 bucks, right? It comes marching into dad’s office, hands in the $10,000. Dad stands up, walks across the room, throws it in the fire, burns it up. I know you didn’t make that money. Go out and make $10,000. This is your last chance. Now the kid by this point is really gone. Look, dad’s buddies are going to sell out on me.

That’s the only way he could have found out. What am I going to do? I better go out and this money. So he does right. Most lawns does all the standard stuff makes $10,000. Comes into his dad’s office, hands in the $10,000. Dad proceeds to get up, walk across the room, throw the money in the fire. The kid jumps up and grabs the money out of the fire.

Dad says, I know you earned that money. It means more to you when you do it yourself. We always say, people need to put in sort of three things when they’re doing philanthropy or when a lot of our clients that are into generosity or want to include charitable organizations.

It’s easy to give away somebody else’s money, but you’ve got to put in your own time, treasure. And or talent into whatever you’re doing. So this idea of accountability creates the scenario where I am earning it, or I am losing it. And if I lose it, I need to explain why now they pay the loan back.

They get a higher credit rating and I’ll loan them more. Again, it’s one of those things where I’m not trying to be dictatorial with my kids. You have to be really careful about that. You don’t want to create a structure. That’s not going to work 50 years from now. But you want to try to create a situation.

Where kids are held accountable in some way, and not just accountable in terms of what we’ve been talking about so far, but also accountable in terms of what’s expected of them. And families just don’t have these conversations. So we have a whole process within trusted for families to go through and have this discussion where at the end of the day, every family member is very clear.

With their five core values and the family then creates a sort of a family crest motto, whatever, but of their five core values. And what’s interesting about the core values is are completely developed based upon your life experience. Let’s just say, for example, one of my core values is honesty which sounds strange coming from a lawyer.

But what that means to me is any meaningful relationship in my life, beyond the friend that you see every year at the Christmas party and say hi to, but everybody, that’s in my life that I have a meaningful connection to, there has to be this element of honesty. If not, it just won’t work.

I know myself and that comes from the fact that early on in my life, there was somebody in our family that was really dishonest with us and it really shaped my life and a lot of the decisions that I made in life that were turned out to be good. If I’m now having a discussion with my family about why honesty is one of my core values.

What I’m doing is telling my history, , my failures, , my successes. I’m not being preachy. I’m not sitting down and telling my son, Thomas who’s my oldest. Hey, look, Paul, you were really dishonest last week when you did this, but I’m not scolding him. It’s not in a bad light, pessimistic, light.

Honesty is important to me. This is why, so this is why I think it should be important to everybody, but then not, everybody’s going to have the same core values. In fact, if you take the 44 values that we concentrate on you would have a 15 million different renditions as those 44 values were condensed into five for each person, and then you can play it in the reverse as well.

I can play it with my wife and I can say, Hey, look, these are the five core values I see in you. And that’s a powerful conversation because you’re validating that other person. And again it’s a transformative way to start that discussion. It’s very similar to people read the book out there, EOS traction, they tell you to find these values, and it’s seems a little bit around about way to get there, but it’s really the only sustainable way of governing this money. That’s always, the first question is these are all great ideas, but how do I do it? How do I start the discussion? And that’s where we’re unique.

I think in terms of the other books that are out there and there’s a lot of books that are out there talking about this stuff. I don’t mean to name them, but they’re good books and there’s nothing wrong with them. But when the rubber meets the road and you say, okay, how do I do it? How do I bend this to begin these discussions with our, with my family?

That’s where the process we developed, I think is extremely helpful. , we basically tell a family that we need about six hours of their time to really get in there and understand the dynamics that are going on. And a lot of times you’ll find roadblocks families. A lot of families have communication problems.

Whether it be, they’re not communicating at all, when they do communicate, it’s not productive. I have members of my family that I can’t have a conversation with without it turning into an argument. There’s and so if you can’t communicate on this as a family, that’s something that needs to be overcome and, Through this, I think we’ve taken about 300 plus families through this process now.

And we’ve developed a lot of the outlets to that, right? A family has a connection problem or a communication problem, or like you were mentioning lane. If they have a substance abuse issue, look, you have a child out there with a substance abuse issue. The last thing you potentially think, or the last thing you’re thinking about is meeting with a bloodsucking vampire lawyer about death and taxes and doing your trust, right?

Your family is in crisis and you’re dealing with a member of that family. Now we’ve got to deal with that situation in some way, whether it’s we get help for that person or that person’s not willing to get help and you decide, okay, Then you’re not going to be part of the family legacy that we’re building.

, we can’t afford all of the damages is taking place to the rest of the family because you are choosing not to participate because you can’t. And I’ve had, those families that have made that hard choice, not cutting a member of the family out at all, but saying, we like this. It’s just that we have this thorn in our side with this person that can’t get their life together.

And it shouldn’t punish those who do have their life together any more than it already has throughout their life. What are some of those common safeguards for maybe not drugs in particular? Cause I think we’ve beat that one up, but other. Issues under the surface with when these, in these consults with families and how do you protect against how do you write it into a trust?

The biggest, again, communication is by far the biggest one and I’ll, but I want to hit that from a different angle, that I answer your question , in not a different way, but from another issue we wrote an article David York, and I he’s a coauthor on our books, but for, it was for trusts and estates magazine in 2017 and trusted in the States magazine and our.

Nerd world is, are our peer reviewed periodical, and you got to do annotations and case studies and it’s, I’ll never write one of these damn things again, but we call it Gratz versus gratitude. That was the title of the article. Now a graph in our world is a strategy for transferring wealth from one generation to the next extensor, grantor retained annuity trust.

But the point of the title was, are you trying to pass on it again, written to our colleagues, other attorneys in the state world. Are you trying to help your clients pass on wealth or gratitude? Okay. And. We took a look at all of our families that again, have done this very well. And one of the things that we found was the biggest deciding factor about whether or not a family stays in harmony, meaning that a year after mom and dad dies, they’re still having Thanksgiving dinner together.

Or we have this saying in the estate planning world that you never truly know a person until you share an inheritance with them. Because the best families, the claws will come out and people will Five-O fight over mom’s engagement ring. I don’t think it doesn’t say anything bad to the person.

It doesn’t necessarily mean that you’re greedy. Although I’ve seen a lot of greed in these scenarios, but you lose a loved one and you go through that emotional toil. And then you hang on to a personal item. I remember when I went. Duck hunting with my dad for the first time.

And he gave me a shotgun and to use, and I want that, whatever it is, it has this emotional attachment that because of the emotional turmoil you’re going through with that last one you latch onto that and I will see people fight over, tooth and nail over that. So the point of this is the biggest deciding factor is openness.

Being open with your family and having the open dialogue. And that’s a really counter-intuitive thing, not so much for our generations. Our generations are getting a little bit more comfortable with it, but you have the silent generation. There was a reason they were called the silent generation.

They did not want to talk about money. They did not want to talk about finances, include the family. David , one of my partners, he has this great story about this family. He was talking to this with, and the mom and dad looked at him and say, can we try to instill our kids, all these, financial ideas and how lucky they are all the time.

And we did that recently on a trip because we sat in first class and we made them sit and coach. You’re going, no, you don’t get it pal. Your kids still get it. Your kids still get that. They’re flying to Maui that you’re sitting in first class, that there are assets. There don’t act like they’re stupid.

People include them. Let them know though what they’re going to expect. Even if that they expect nothing, because then the aid, if you will, isn’t directed to you or isn’t directed to their siblings. It’s directed at you. Who’s six feet under and they can jump on your grave all you want. So the point being opened, the books is a really big thing that I encourage people to do.

And we really feel the kids can start getting involved in some of these discussions in age appropriate ways. But as early as five years old, Or just lie to them, tell them what your grandparents trust and it’s not yours. No, that’s a joke. Don’t do that. No because again, that’s our second principal with, first principle of them trusted families as they, like I said, they know who they are and they know who they believe.

But the second principle is that entrusted families prepare the next generation for the wealth, rather than concentrating on preparing the wealth for the next generation. And that’s all a state planning is doing right now is concentrating on preparing the wealth without again, the consequences it has on that next iteration.

Without question, including kids into meetings, I was in meetings with family. Advisors, financial advisors, accountants. I was told to sit in the corner, shut up and suck my thumb. But I was also told to listen. And if I had a question, I could ask it and so forth, but it was a way for you to start speaking that language, there’s a whole nother financial language that’s out there and you’ve gotta be able to speak it. Points that I know you got to get run into here. Andrew, I’m wanting. And once you got to get your information out there and be in case people want to get ahold of you folks use some of your guys’ content.

Yeah. Holding me is it’s corny and it’s, but it’s through email team andrew@yourcowl.com. That’s T E a M a N D R E w@yorkhowell.com. That’ll go to my two paralegals and my three assistants and me that way I never listed him. He never missed an email. Yeah. Welcome to reach out to me. I’d love to help anybody in my office can coordinate a time for us to talk.

All right. Thanks for listening folks again, if you want or looking for a peer network of independent office on a mastermind, the form, what we call it? Check it out. Simple. Passive cashflow.com/journey. It’s not fair professionals and good luck on your own. We’ll see you guys next time.

 

 

Timeshares w/ Alexandra Olson

https://youtu.be/IvBJDK9LB68

Hey , simple passive cashflow listeners. Today, we are going to talk about giving up your time, share, why they’re not the best of investments and what the process is to unload them. And I personally am always looking to take advantage of a distress. Seller, whether it’s an apartment building or I’ve interested in these timeshares to buy, but not from the the first buyer, but the second owner.

I’ll get into this and this kind of goes into the whole hobby lately. I’ve been having buying cars lately I’ve been realizing it’s not the greatest to buy a car new, all this, because of that, you take that big gut punch as you drive it off the lot. But as you, if you pick up a one to two year old car, you ride that decay curve down and then you sell it at some point before the warranties expire or shortly thereafter of you can capture a low cost of ownership.

And it’s very counterintuitive to the course. But as we’ve seen through the first two or 300 podcasts, passive cashflow land things normally are, but yeah. Why don’t you introduce Aleksandra Olson, who is from. The you guys want to check this out on your computer to give up my time, share.com, but welcome Alexandria.

Thank you so much for having me. Yeah. So I’m from give up my timeshare. We help people to get out of their timeshares. And we also, of course always sourcing a buyer for that, seller that is distressed, that wants to get out whose kids don’t want their ownership. yes, we are uniting sellers and buyers.

Some of them are taking over ourself and that’s our business. Friends don’t let friends buy timeshare. That’s a pretty kind of a crummy investment. It’s scabbing how they do things, right? You see them here in Hawaii and every time I go on vacation, you got like people handing out flyers and like trying to trick people into talking to them, especially at Las Vegas, by these timeshares. Let’s go through the process. So young couple, they get that booze loaded, the buying this thing up. How does somebody really end their time share? What’s the process like? First of all, if there is no mortgage on the property so it’s free and clear the maintenance fees are current.

Then it comes down to a matter of finding a new owner. There’ve been a lot of scams that have emerged about trying to help people say, Oh, we were frauded in the purchase or, all these different things. But what it really comes down to is this is deeded ownership. This is real estate. So you do need to find a new buyer just as you can’t walk in the street and declare, I don’t want this home anymore.

The property tax, bill and HOA fees and things are still gonna find you whether or not you’ve declared that to the world. It’s the same with a timeshare. It is a deed and you need to find a new buyer and that’s really the trouble is that the resell market has diminished incredibly in the last five to 10 years, just because of the different travel options that have emerged.

And just so that we can pinpoint it because every time people ask me why do you. I’m a real estate investor. I have a time share. I’m like, dude, that’s not, you’re not an investor. You just got suckered into a deal, but I can never explain. I can’t explain to myself. I just walk up upset and frustrated.

My understanding it’s because when people buy a timeshare, they not only is it an expensive and when you figure out the cost of ownership that you do, like a life cycle cost analysis, it doesn’t start a good deal. But also you get into these nasty arrangements where you have

annual maintenance fee. And then like you have a termination fee since they like negative equity. If you can explain that a little bit. Sure. It’s ultimately a timeshare was once sold as an investment and there was a resell market now because of Airbnb. VRVO the internet. Consumer confidence and being able to plan a trip short notice and having a condo, with accommodation, similar to the timeshares where you have a kitchen and space, there’s just no resale market for it.

That’s gone away. So what you have is it’s basically a prepayment of vacations and it can be really quality vacations. I, I actually believe there can be some value in the ownerships if you use them. Now getting back your original upfront investment that’s, as you’re speaking to them, With auto purchases certainly buying resale would be, much more advantageous.

You don’t have that 30 grand or whatever to recoup from the upfront. It can be a good value. I always tell people at our seminars or whatever, don’t feel bad. 10 million homes in America owned timeshares. And, you bought this because you wanted to spend time with the people that you love and a beautiful place.

And if it gave you those good memories, you probably wouldn’t trade those for the money. That being said, It’s really, not a good investment because at this point, and you can jump online, make reservations for anywhere in the world for this weekend and pay less than what the maintenance fee is.

In most cases. And that’s a bash on timeshares that much, but I got a buddy. See he bought him because it forces him to go on a vacation. If not, they never go on it. And, for. For kind of higher net worth families that are very tightly personality workaholics. It needs stuff like that.

Absolutely. If it ends up being the catalyst to create memories with the people you love. That’s awesome. And that is a great reason to look at owning one. Really, for probably most of your viewers, the maintenance fee annually is nominal, but if it does, force that commitment to doing the trip and knowing, okay, we have a week we’re going to do every year as a family.

Then it comes down to just picking something that’s going to offer the most flexibility and sometimes value. Isn’t the most important thing. But the economics have shifted, like you said, right? Because people can just go on Airbnb VRVO et cetera. Just book it. And it’s not like hotels, they don’t have availability.

Let me show you. You have to pay 600 bucks a night care on Hawaii, but there’s no lack of, I. Right. And, at the same time, like doing so many vacation rentals with timeshares, I definitely see that, if you are willing to understand the system, there’s no learning curve on the internet, that kind of thing.

Actually, most times your owners are older. Rather than young couples, it’s typically retired couples that now want to go and travel. They want to provide trips to their families. It’s not to say that young families don’t buy it, but more commonly the consumer’s kind of a baby boomer type. Just less educated on, what’s a good purchase and they just don’t have lack of information.

They just don’t care. I don’t work the system, so many ownerships that we take over, we’re able to get good value out of, book weeks in Hawaii for the equivalent of about a thousand dollars of costs. You’ve got to know where to click online and have the patience to do that.

What’s the process, somebody wants to sell their timeshare and then we’ll skip over to, I think most of us. Don’t really want, we want to buy timeshares from these distress buyers or sellers get into that at the end, but what’s the process if somebody wants to unload it, so if they want out of it what they would do is I recommend that everyone first contact your resource, see if they’ll let you out for free. That does happen on occasion, usually with, higher end brand so explore that option first, plus, you want to know that, you didn’t go and pay someone to get out of it when you could’ve gotten out of it for free through the developer.

That would be step one. If that’s not the case, then you know, you need to go through a company that can secure a buyer for you. And I would encourage everyone to be very careful and not pay anyone up front. And I’m sure that your viewers are certainly a little more savvy than many of the people that have fallen victim to the scams.

But in general, don’t pay anyone upfront. If a client comes to us, all we’re going to need is the deed. A copy of the deed. If they have it copy of their IDs, copy of a recent maintenance fee bill, we can then price it out. We use a calculator, so we already have pricing preset for every resort in the world.

And get them a quote within minutes, and if they want to move forward, we send them an e-sign contract open escrow and it follows a normal real estate process. So we’re never paid until the close of escrow and we don’t even collect payment. It all goes through the title company. So it’s a very secure transaction and.

A guaranteed one. If we are not able to secure a buyer on our own, then we’re going to transfer it into our own name and turn it into vacation rental. It’s a guaranteed quick process. And what our clients are looking at is, Hey, we don’t use this thing. We’re paying for it every year anyway. And then, it’s going up at six to 10% a year.

We’re just throwing money away. Let’s, basically stop the bleeding . So what’s the normal commission structure like, with real estate. No deals. It’s 6% is usually the commission. And then how does it, what’s the normal range, to keep in mind.

 

 

Are you asking, what do we charge? Two, three to five years of maintenance fees is a good rule of thumb. The exception, there are some outliers to that which would be resorts that have very high transfer fees or require prepayment of two or three years of maintenance fees. Something like that.

I do have a webinar on our website that explains why we have to charge in the first place, all the scams to watch out for, if you’re just starting to explore how to get out of a timeshare and really covers the entire process. Yeah. What’s one of the better ones. The less nasty wants to get up and what are like the worst.

Okay. Probably the simplest would be a straightforward deeded week what’s happened over the last 10 years in the industry is a lot of resorts have moved to a, trust-based like it’s a real estate trust where they now, upgrade all the inventory into that trust. And it’s.

It’s points that the client is using collateralized by, this real estate trust. Those are a little more difficult because it’s basically a membership and you have to have the resort approval before you can transfer your title. So I am always like that, I think. Yeah. Disney your diamonds, your Wyndham’s, the big players.

And I prefer to deal with. Straight deeded, old legacy properties where someone owns week 42 and unit 10 that’s, always the quickest and easiest transaction that being said we’re familiar with and pride ourselves on being the best in the world at, getting through the process with whatever property it is.

That’s, how we’ve built. Our whole business model is around not getting paid until we’ve completed the transaction. And it has, of course encouraged us to be the best at getting it done. I’m not too familiar with timeshares. Normally they cost, what about 50 grand in cash in the beginning?

You can’t finance it, right? Average is about 20,000, you can finance usually at about 18%., and then they’re putting in 20 grand, the maintenance fees are about how much for a year is very typical. Okay. So for me to dump my 20 grand timeshare that I might have access to what, five, 10 days out of the year or something, correct?

Yeah. Typically seven days a year is what that will get you. I would have to pay maybe five grand to dump it and then get the 20 grand back or be a little bit more. There will be no getting the 20 grand back. And that’s the hard pill to swallow is that this is not an investment that, has any return other than in memories.

So if you used it had some good times great. But whether or not you use it, you’re paying for it forever. And there is no one on the other side, that’s going to pay for this repeat at this point. Okay. So what if I want to buy one of these things? How much could I buy one of those four? There are thousands of timeshares online for free?

Is that available on your guys’ website? Or how would I get for this? Yeah. This is actually never really come up in this kind of a setting. We don’t advertise it in that way. We do actually use like a shared Google sheet that will list all of the available bums on. So I guess the thing would be if someone had interests that was, listening to this, or, I can certainly send you.

Thanks for that. And we have seen, over the last few years, some nice portfolios be sold or, taken over by larger vacation rental companies. And if you want to work at, you can do well. You can make 10, 20% above the maintenance fees on these ownerships and sometimes much more.

It’s just a matter of, a lot of times, our owners don’t want to become an expert on vacation rental to deal with their one week a year. Now, if you’re doing like we do where you have a whole bunch of them and you’re making a business out of it. Yeah. Of course you can do well. And we are happy to give them away if there’s interest.

Our business model is, to get paid for getting someone out of it. We don’t worry about trying to money, reselling them. If I wanted to stock something here in Hawaii, just use an example like that, that somebody had previously paid 20 grand for maybe paying five grand a year. How much would I have to pay to acquire something like that for myself?

Oh, for free actually paying rather than the buyer in these transactions. And that’s what can be, a little confused. It’s so unusual, right? There’s not many things where you pay to sell it. And it could be like, not want to have it makes me not want to have it now. It’s like a, it’s like a monkey on your shoulder that you get for free.

And now you have that monkey. There are certain ones that, can be a good value. And if you’re going to use them great, we get a lot of Hawaii inventory. It’s a specific week, in a specific unit, if you’re going to go and use it, to pay 800, a thousand dollars for a week in a condo on the beach in Hawaii is amazing.

I don’t know. It’s just that these folks might live in Nebraska and aren’t wanting to fly far because of COVID now. And they’re looking at, Hey, we didn’t go the last couple of years anyway. And we paid, let’s just dump the thing. Yeah, I’ll definitely get on that list and I’ll be stocking it a little bit.

Cause I’m like one of those people that I need that motivation to actually spend money. If not, I just keep it in my bank or so it might be good for folks like myself with our listeners. Sure. To make a commitment, to doing something, With your loved ones at a specific time of year that you can plan around.

If that’s something that is of interest, we’re happy to, give you any of the ownerships that our clients are trying to unload. Anything else that you think listeners would be interested or you get very commonly asked on this topic that you think need mess. Probably, the biggest thing that I always want to communicate is to be very careful.

Unfortunately, the timeshare industry is not very regulated. Especially on the exit side of the industry, getting people out there are almost no regulations. And so there are a lot of scams, any kind of situation where you’re, bringing money to a transaction. Having to pay up front. If it’s not a legitimate title company, just stay away from it.

There are unfortunately a lot of bad players in this space. And I would just caution anyone to, do a little background research, look someone up on BBB, make sure they don’t have attorney general complaints because there’s very few out there that don’t. Yeah anybody can get on BBB.

I’m on there. I have an a plus rating, but just joking. But yeah, if you guys want our reach out to Alexandria, you can go to give up my timeshare.com. Yes. Any other, that’s probably the best way to get ahold of you guys the best way or a quick Google search, Alexandra timeshare, I’ll pop up, watch our webinars that will give you a lot of background information.

Feel free to reach out. If you are wanting to, have access to what properties are we in loading right now, we can definitely hook you up if you want to step in as a buyer. Or if you have one that you want to get out of then definitely start with watching the webinar and reaching out.

And I’d love to chat with you about it. Hey guys. So if Hey, no shame. If you bought a time share, we all make mistakes in the past. Luckily you can unload this monkey off your shoulder to somebody else be a, this means, if you guys have any friends or family members that need this information, feel free to pass this along a little hint, hint in there for you.

But Hey, if you get rid of that $5,000 a year payment, right? That’s a rental property of four years, or if it’s another syndication deal I think once you realize that there’s this alternative investing world out there, you start to look around the house in the points and the couches money all around.

You start to look to really deploy that money and you got a lot of dead Basie equity or Astro going out the door, one of these timeshares and you do the math, right? If you’re investing, making 10, 20% returns on your buddy with a tax advantage basis, Who cares about a $500 hotel timeshare that you get access to five times a year.

You could probably go like baller status and the Maltese for a thousand dollars a night, right? With the cash that you have in cash is King cash gives you freedom. Timeshares. You’re just stuck in that arrangement, but thanks for listening guys. Make sure you join the investor clubs and we’ll pass the cashflow.com/club.

All right. We’re back guys. Now it’s time for a little real talk with Alexandria as my personal questions here, which I use my podcast to ask my selfishly questions. All so if I’m thinking about buying like a Lonnie, just use that as the example, which is the Disney berserk here at Walker.

I got to pay the annual maintenance fees, which is like five grand a year for something like that once. Oh no, probably about 1200, a hundred while. So 12 pay 1200. And that gives me access to the property for how many nights a year you think, it will depend on this time of year, what week it is, what size unit, but around, a thousand to $1,200 for a week, pretty much anywhere in the world.

Okay. And of course I live here in Hawaii, so it’s the same season every freaking day out of the year. And I live here. So that would be ideal. So maybe I’m just trying to get a price for a day in my head, so is that five days? I find with doing the vacation rentals, we end up averaging around 80 to a hundred a night for what our cost is to make a reservation.

Okay. But this Alani thing is really exp, to stay there is like $600 I could think is a complete rip off. I’d never do that, but that’s what they charge. So that’s $1,200. Basis, they can charge $50,000 up front for a week at a place like Aillani because, then it’s all about the, Oh over the next seven to 10 years, you’re going to break even, on, because you’re only paying a thousand a year and, so you’re saying if I pay like my maintenance fee of a couple of grand, for that one, maybe. I would be able to stay there for five nights or something like that. So an average night of 200 bucks. Yes. It would be unusual in timeshare to ever even average paying $200 a night for somewhere.

Okay. That I can do. Cause I have to take these quarterly break out to do like personal goals and stuff like that and family stuff. This would actually work to that, yeah. And if know when you’re going to be doing those breaks, for the planner, for someone who’s organized plans ahead and schedules and is fine planning a year out, two years out, time’s just going to work very well for, that’s just not how people plan travel typically anymore.

And that’s where, there’s been this imbalance where about 80% of timeshare owners want out of their ownership. Yeah. And for you guys, listen, this is where it’s important to like the imbalance, right? So many people in California, Hawaii, Seattle, New York, they all think the buy their house.

This is why I see do the complete opposite. The imbalance. There’s so many desperate landlords out there that would love to rent their house for two to three grand to somebody like you guys. That’s where you guys make money on the Delta, just like in this circumstance. Cool. I’ll I’m going to try this out and, maybe update you guys on a future show.

Secret to Solving Your Student Loan Problem

https://youtu.be/BiKYFYkHGFg

It’s case let’s dig into this, like this common one, someone comes to me and they’re like, yep. This is stomach who doesn’t listen to podcasts, not simple, passive cashflow. They’re not investing. They’re just investing in their normal retail investments, mutual funds. And they’re like, oh, like, look at I did.

I consolidated all my loans through the company or whatnot. And it’s a lower interest rates. It’s a lower payment. How is that not a, uh, a losing situation? What are the negatives of just going down, just blindly going to these websites, you see them all the time, right? Lowering your interest rate and lowering your monthly payments.

What is the, the side that we’re not seeing here? And one of the first things I look at is if refinance makes sense for you, and if it does, it’s a simple solution. You don’t have to deal with all the federal regulations and programs and paperwork, or hire somebody like me to help with that. You just pay it like a traditional loan because I refinance with a sofa or Laurel road or common bond or whatever those companies they’ll call a student loan.

The product is a student loan, but really personal loan. That’s all it is. And at whatever terms they give you. So you’re going to forfeit all of your federal regulations and protections you’re going to, and the safety net that they provide, you’re going to forfeit the flexibility that federal repayment has.

Once you agree to those terms, unless you are able to refinance it in better terms later. You’re stuck with them as long as it is at that company. I would say a majority of the time, the payment does not lower when you refinance. So even if you lower the interest rate that does not ensure that your payments can be lower.

In fact, the payment usually goes up because typically lenders will tell you, I will give you a 3.0% fixed rate on a seven year term. If you are on a 25 year term before that are an income driven plan, the more typical the student loans, especially after federal consolidation. Your payment’s going to go way up, despite the fact that you get a lower interest rate, the Jan, my understanding.

How to Get Rid of Student Loan

Before we dig into this more, my full philosophy on people come to me. Should I pay off my student debt? Yeah, you shouldn’t write it. You should invest. That’s why, if we’re living the simple passive cashflow thing, so we can make returns at 10, 20, possibly 30% in a turnkey rental, and go look at the rate of return.

You can make it simple, passive cashflow.com/returns or break down a simple, just turnkey rental, how you’re making money. Four ways mortgage paid down, tax benefits, appreciation of property, which I guess you could say that’s getting low. And then of course cashflow, okay. We’re going to pay off the debt as slow as we can.

So to optimize our liquidity going through our investments, but how do we do this smart with these other strategies? Yeah. Cashflow is the hidden gem in the income driven and forgiveness programs. A lot of people don’t significantly pay attention to if you refinance your loan, let’s say you have $500,000 in debt at 7%.

And if you refinance that loan, you’re looking at a five or $6,000 a month payment. Even if your interest rate is cut in half, that’s going to eat up a lot of your cord that are, want to afford it. You have family. What other obligations do you have? What’s your cost of living? You live in San Francisco or in rural Alabama.

All factor into decision-making, but the cashflow is huge. You can use that for other financial objectives, especially like with my dentist who usually don’t work for nonprofits, massive debt all the way up to him.

How to Pay Your Student Loan: The Strategy

https://youtu.be/nkwc_fx-hY8

What are those techniques? If you can. I know you mentioned there were like for real, I’m finna go through them one by one. And there are basically four major repayments solutions. There’s private student loan refinance with a private lender where basically forfeit all your federal program benefits and you refinance it, hopefully a better interest rate.

Otherwise it doesn’t make sense doing it, but of course it’s like, you may have a higher payment because it’s a shorter term. Typically lenders will offer you a lower interest rate, but they’ll on the condition that you can afford. The payment that will create a seven or 10 or 12 or 15 year term instead of the 25 year term, sometimes associated with student loans.

And there’s also, if you work for nonprofit, of course, public service loan forgiveness is its own juggernaut is very nuanced and complicated and understanding how. Program works and whether it’s worth pursuing and its reliability, those are all issues that come up. That would be the second one. The third thing would be to, if you don’t qualify for the nonprofit forgiveness, you public service loan forgiveness for government income driven plans, which are either 20 or 25 years long.

All the way through to the end until you received the forgiveness there, or another solution would be the fourth option would be payment targeting or unorthodox method of putting some of the loans at a zero payment and accelerating your payments on higher rate loans, that type of thing, or making your student loan repayment work around your other debt or other financial obligations.

There can sometimes be a mixture, uh, several different of those strategies at once, but refinance public service, loan, forgiveness, income driven plans, and. Payment targeting are the four major solutions and then how to incorporate that into your own financial objectives. And of course the more complicated.

 

And then of course, for a lot of us that work time is more valuable than money. You guys do all the paperwork.

Jan Miller – Paying off Student Loans

Today’s podcasts are going to be talking about paying off student debt and give you a little bit insight if for a lot of you guys are, have that stupid debt or more importantly, I guess if you got kids that you want to send to college, one of these days now colleges and everything, but I think a lot of us are parents.

I’m a parent myself, want to give our kids a leg up in that category. Been a dad here for about a couple of weeks. You don’t quite see the bags under my eyes . We’re past the first three-day period where we uh, yeah. Punched in the face and you realize you’re not going to sleep for awhile.

But now two weeks in, I know what to expect and it’s kinda like losing the first game of the playoffs and a know how things are gonna work. That’s where we are at today, but things are good. Things are good here.

For those you guys have young kids or expectant, new mothers or fathers, check out the infoPage@simplepassivecashflow.com slash baby got a lot of parenting advice. Shouldn’t you focus? And got a little shopping list there. You probably don’t need all that stuff in that shopping less. We were fortunate enough to get a lot of hand-me-downs for a lot of things from other people barely bought any clothes since everybody dumped their old baby clothes on us.

The only things we had to buy were, I could probably count on one hand, Chris. All these baby carriers, know what this stuff is for quite honesty, we don’t have to buy a lot of this stuff and our strategy is the buy it use.

Most parents are freaked out and they don’t want to buy you stuff, but, I do it where it makes sense. And I like to go to a north shore. See what the cool baby things are, then check it out at Facebook marketplace or Craig’s as well. I stay away from Craigslist these days.

Cause they’re a bunch of weirdos on there. I like to be able to vet the people that I’m buying from. But yeah, we bought one of those snooze cribs from Facebook marketplace magically rocks your kid to sleep with an app. It also, you strap up and there’s a steep on their face.

And then I got one of those that pneumonia and not one of those fancy baby strollers that makes you look really cool on Facebook marketplace for like half price. Other than that, yeah. We got very fortunate that a lot of cook gave us a lot of this stuff as my kid squirms in my arms here.

But, think two weeks into it to this and fun or see. It gives you another why you’re filling up all this passive cashflow, and really start to build that legacy right after all. It’s not that hard to get financially independent, look that passive cashflow, most of our clients do it in a decade or less, the bigger ideas of what do you do after that.

And how you build that, see, and I think that’s where the next chapter is full passive tasks. It’s going to be a headache. It stays as we’ve been having a lot of conversations about this and our after hours of our family office, a Honda mastermind breakout groups where, this is where a lot of the conversations go a lot more of these soft topics that how to simply just pay off your student loans or where to get the best rates on the Heliox.

For example.

But yeah, just wanted to let you guys know I’m alive and well. Babies. Well, Mom as well, and check out those baby tips@simplepasacastle.com slash baby. And enjoy the podcasts.

Hello, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today, we are going to talk about student loan, forgiveness programs, how do you pay off your student loans? The best way a lot of us unfortunately, or fortunately went to college for way too long and saddled with all this student loan debt. Now I am I was born in the 1980s and I was lucky enough to have a good job and I paid mines all off personally.

But some of the kids out there, man, I feel sorry for you guys. Cause it’s a Hutch several hundred thousand dollars, at least, especially a lot of dentists guys and doctor guys out there. So this podcast is going to be for you. We have a young Miller who is a student loan consultant and we’re going to be talking all about student loan.

Tips and tricks. How do you pay it off? What’s the best way, Yon once you give us some background on how you got started doing all this. Yeah, sure. I actually started working directly for several different loan servicers back in 1997. I worked for Nelnet and fed loan servicing, and also worked on the private side for discover financial and Citibank

and saw the student loan world from every point of view on, I worked in 11 different departments during that time. My career eventually went into the brokerage industry as an investment advisor at Morgan Stanley and financial planner and advisor there. But all the while helping people on the side with student loans, everybody, I knew Mike dentist might.

Brother-in-law whoever they all had student loan debt. And so I would help and eventually started helping people on a more professional level. While I was working at Morgan Stanley, not for Morgan Stanley, but on the side. And eventually the demand got so big that I retired from work and Stanley in 2010.

And made it my sole focus. I’ve been an advocate for borrowers for student loans since for the last 20, some 22, 23 years. And I’ve been at a professional capacity doing as my sole focus since 2010. And yeah, I’ve just been helping borrowers manage it, using my financial background, understanding and conjunction with the student loan expertise and knowledge of how the system works.

Both from an administrative level all the way up through the regulatory level, as well as just the practical level of how to apply that to your student loan repayment. That’s what I’ve been doing for the last decade. A little bit of backstory here. Why are we talking about this subject?

I was asking you guys in the community. If you guys want to join our Facebook group, let me know. And we’ll add you to that private group, what are the problems you guys are facing out there as high paid professionals, looking to invest your money?

And this definitely came up as one of them. I always asked you guys, who are you working with right out there. That’s the power of our community. And if you want to join the group, go to simple passive cashflow.com/club. Or if you want to join the inner circle, that’s what the incubator and the mastermind are for.

Your name came up beyond I got to admit a couple other guys names came up too, but I didn’t want to work with them because they wouldn’t return my phone call. I want to talk to the principal, right? Like I don’t, there’s a lot of people who do this, if you Google it, there’s a lot of people that spend a lot of paid advertising on this stuff and have very pretty websites.

Not saying that yours isn’t good, look, this is just my brand. So this is simple passive cashflow brand. I always go off of value, right? Like I’m not going to go to a CPA that charges me 10 30 grand that do my taxes. That’s ridiculous. Nor am I going to go to like H and R block or do it on triple taxes for goodness sake.

I’m looking for value and think Yon fits this this category here of somebody who. Offers a very good service and charges a fair price for it. Why don’t you let’s go over like a typical client? Cause I think. And the one we were talking about earlier and what is it exactly that you do with them?

Again, if you’re going to hire me in to justify my fees, I’m going to need to provide a pretty significant return on investment. Of course. So as result and because of my background, majority of my clients are professionals who have six figure debt. What’s your debt rises about one and 200,000 so forth. Every decision you make impact your total cost of that repayment by huge factors, tens and tens, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars between the two. When that happens to make sure that you get the best, repayment experience you often will reach out to a borrower, reach out to an expert

and again, one of the ways that I run my businesses, I’m looking out for the borrower. So I’m going to design a plan or repayment strategy. That’s best for them. Not best for. The actual loan, servicer or lender. When you see advertisements for sofa they’re gonna obviously want you to refinance that loan, but a majority of the time, that’s not the best option for the borrower, just because you can get a lower interest rate.

Doesn’t mean it’s the best solution for you. And we need to evaluate all of those solutions. And make sure they make sense with your financial objectives. My job is to look at all of the variables , what are those techniques, if we can, I know you mentioned there were like three of them.

You can go through them one by one. There are basically four major repayment solutions there’s private student loan refinance with a private lender. We’re basically forfeit all your federal program benefits and you refinance at hopefully a better interest rate. Otherwise it doesn’t make sense doing it, but of course you may have a higher payment because it’s a shorter term.

Typically lenders will offer you a lower interest rate, but they’ll on the condition that you can afford the payment. That will create a seven or 10 or 12 or 15 year term instead of the 20 year terms sometimes associated with student loans. And there’s also if you work for non-profit of course public service loan forgiveness is its own juggernaut is very nuanced and complicated and understanding how that program works and whether it’s worth pursuing and its reliability.

Those are all issues that come up. That would be the second one. The third thing would be to, if you don’t qualify for the nonprofit forgiveness, you public service loan, forgiveness, or government agency work then you can also in some circumstances that make sense to do the income driven plans, which are either 20 or 25 years long, all the way through to the end until you received the forgiveness there.

Or another solution would be the fourth option would be. Payment targeting or unorthodox method putting some of the loans at a zero payment and accelerating your payments on higher rate loans that type of thing, or making your student loan or payment work around your other debt or other financial obligations.

There can sometimes be a mixture of several different of those strategies at once, but refinance public service, loan, forgiveness, income driven plans, and. Payment targeting are the four major solutions. And then how to incorporate that into your own financial objectives. That’s of course the more complicated.

And then of course, for a lot of us that work time is more valuable than money. You guys do all the paperwork and just tell me where to send, help with execution. It’s not just, Hey, and this is what I found early on doing this for 23 years. Now I can tell you how to do it. And about half the people I talked to.

especially physicians, where they all they educate themselves on how it works. So they have an understanding they talked to all the other residents and they have an idea of how to enroll in the program and so forth. They don’t need help with that. And then you just need the finer details worked out, and then they can do it on their own, the other half of the time.

It’s just too much of a mess for them to deal with and they want to hire somebody to help them. Not only. No what to do, but the execution, how to do it and help doing it so I can prepare and submit all the paperwork for them. So that the only thing they need to do are make payments and I’ll take care of everything else.

And they’ll always be able to contact me and talk with me if they need to. It depends on where you are, what your needs are, a lot of people would prefer to have hand-holding through the whole process. Before we dig into this more, my full philosophy on, people come to me, should I pay off my student debt?

Yeah, you shouldn’t right. You should invest. That’s why, if we’re living the simple, passive cashflow thing, so we can make returns at 10, 20, possibly 30% in a turnkey rental. Go look at the rate of return. You can make it simple, passive cashflow.com/returns. Or I break down a simple, just turnkey rental, how you’re making money, four ways, mortgage paid down, tax benefits, appreciation of property, which, I guess you could say that’s getting lucky and then of course cashflow,

okay, we’re going to pay off the debt as slow as we can. So to optimize our liquidity going through our investments, but how do we do this smart with these other strategies? , cashflow is the hidden gem in the income driven and forgiveness programs, that a lot of people don’t significantly pay attention to. If you refinance your loan, let’s say you have $500,000 in debt at 7%. And if you refinance that loan, you’re looking at a five or $6,000 a month payment. Even if your interest rate is cut in half that’s gonna eat up a lot of your cash flow each month.

You may not even be able to afford that or want to afford it. Do you have family? What other obligations do you have? What’s your cost of living? You live in San Francisco or in rural Alabama, these. All factor in the decision making, but the cash flow is huge. You can use that for other financial objectives, especially like with my dentist who usually don’t work for nonprofits, massive debt all the way up to a million dollars in debt.

And they’ll tell me, Jan, if I can Lord this payment, I can use the extra cash flow to build my business mill practices and expand my business so that my return of investment might double every month, in that circumstance, which. For extreme certain situations.

It doesn’t make sense to accelerate a payment on an 8% loan or refinance it and save a little bit of interest when you can benefit so much from investing that extra cash flow. Those are all considerations for sure.

That’s why started this podcast.

There’s so much bad financial advice out there. Pay down your debts. It depends, right? If you’re bad at your handling your money, just spend it like a bozo then yeah. You should go pay off your debts. But if you’re a responsible person, I think most people that are listening to podcasts educating themselves.

So you fall on the other side of the coin on this and, check out my article about that. It’s simple, passive cashflow.com/debt. But yeah, I, to me, the best strategy is pay down the student loans or your mortgages as slow as possible because it’s a pretty low interest rate and invest the money otherwise basically interest rate arbitration, right?

Just what the banks do. They lend out at this rate and they go invest it in this much and they make money on the spread. It’s not, you’re responsible, your grandma, your grandpa, your mom, your dad probably thought otherwise, but amen. If you want to get what other people don’t, you got to do different things, right?

Yeah. And even the psychology of the borrower comes into play. Some people can’t psychologically watch their balance grow. When they’re paying less than the amount of interest screw in each month and they’ll send me Jan, I know what you’re saying. I’ll save hundreds of thousands.

I’m doing the income driven plans or what have you. I just can’t watch grow. Okay. That’s fine. As long as you’re making an informed decision, but that’s a part of it. And again, every situation is a snowflake. I always tell people, if you hear a one size fits all solution, it’s wrong.

Everybody’s needs a very, a detailed assessment especially when you have six figure plus debt to determine what’s the best solution for you. Do you qualify for the program? That doesn’t necessarily mean you should do it. That has to be looked into. And add onto that, like even like investing in rental properties or syndications, for some of these younger dentists, like I tell them you’re an entrepreneur, your liquidity and money.

Certainly shouldn’t be going into paying off your student loans and maybe it shouldn’t even be going to investments, but putting that money into marketing or into improving your operation as a dentist practice is probably your highest and best use. And it always comes back to it. What’s your highest and best use for your time and also your money or liquidity in this case.

Let’s dig into this, like this common one. Someone comes to me and they’re like, this is stomach who doesn’t listen to podcasts, not simple, passive cashflow. They’re not investing. They’re just investing in their normal retail investments, mutual funds. And they’re like, oh I like look at, I did.

I reconsolidate all my loans through a sofa company or whatnot. And it’s a lower interest rates. It’s a lower payment. How was that? Not a losing situation. What are the negatives of just of going down, just blindly going to these websites, you see them all the time and just lowering your interest rate and lowering your monthly payments.

What is the side that we’re not seeing here? One of the first things I look at is if refinance makes sense for you and if it does, it’s a simple solution. You don’t have to deal with all the federal records and programs and paperwork or hire somebody like me to help with that.

You just pay it later a traditional loan because I refinance so fire and Laurel road or common bond or whatever those companies They’ll call a student loan. The product is a student loan, but really it’s just a loan. You’ll a bank. It’s just a personal loan. That’s all it is. And at whatever terms they give you.

So you’re going to forfeit all of your federal regulations and protections. You’re going to, and the safety net that they provide you’re going to forfeit the flexibility that federal repayment has once you agree to those terms and unless you are able to refinance it and in a better terms later, You’re stuck with them as long as it is at that company.

I would say a majority of the time, the payment does not lower when you refinance. So even if you lower the interest rate that does not ensure that your payment’s going to be lower. In fact, the payment usually goes up because typically lenders will tell you we’ll give you a 3.0% fixed rate on a seven year term.

If you are on a 25 year term before that, or an income driven plan more typical to student loans, especially after federal consolidation then your payment’s going to go way up, despite the fact that you get a lower interest rate. Jan my understanding of student loans is, it’s a government loan and you’re switching over to more of a privacy of private loan where you don’t have those government protections. But I thought that. It’s, everybody talks about how the forgiveness of student loans is not permissible, right?

Like a mortgage is, but what are some of those protections, if it not for that, what protections somebody giving up by, making a deal with one of the private lenders, like in this case? With federal student loans, they cancel upon death. Immediately after loans. So if it’s a federal loan that’s a given a hundred percent of the time.

If you’re looking at a private loan that might not necessarily be the case. So the devil’s in the details, right? These guys might be signing on a lower interest rate and a lower payment. Which is the same tricks that the car lenders use, but they may be signing up their kids and grandchildren or whatever to pay this debt off eventually.

Yeah. There’s a little bit of a risk there. And then of course the, flexibility. What if there’s no guarantees? What if, for example, a crazy pandemic comes along. And causes you to lose your job and your income goes way down. If you have a private loan, you’re going to be very limited on what you can do to lower that payment with a federal loan it’s going to be easy you’re going to get built up first, just like those you guys would Fannie Mae Freddie Mac loans, and you think you’re all clever by getting these portfolio loans.

That is a huge safety net. I have, for example, I have a physician client who have for over a decade and she was in a car accident and she could no longer operate. So now she’s a teacher at a university and her income has went down. From, three or $400,000 a year to $80,000 a year.

That changes her financial outlook and her strategy for repayment on her large student loan debt completely because her loans are still in the federal system. She had several options and manageable ones. But the private loans are not necessarily, you may have to pay or default in the story and you may have to do harsh things like negotiate settlements after you’ve defaulted and no one wants to do that.

Those are protections, a lot of my clients, they have like several hundred thousand dollars in their infinite banking or they might have, nice parents with deep pockets, like they’re good. So they might as well do it and get the lower rate and. They’re good, right?

It’s in a way self-insuring themselves. . Yeah, exactly. If you’ve got the deep pockets and like I’ll tell my ER docs and I’m just using to say I have so many doctors as clients, ER, docs usually work for contracting groups or physicians or hospitalist groups, and they don’t directly work for the hospital as a result.

They don’t qualify for public service loan forgiveness. Typically they’ll have. Three years of residency, and then I’ll jump right in as an attending. And they’ll have usually their income is maybe 300, two 5,300 and their debt is 250 to 300. In which case refinance makes more sense for them because the income driven plans wouldn’t really lower the payment that much anyways.

And they might as well just accelerate the payment and paid off. They can afford it. So when your debt to income is strong, Then refinance is more often a solution, but if you’re upside down, which is Mary common, 80% of the people call me or don’t call us, they have problems, that’s right. Exactly.

I’m like the mechanic for expensive cars, and they come in with a problem and usually they owe more than they make. And because of that the refinances, not as It’s greatest solution for them in most cases. In my search for this doing a little studying on this topic, I don’t have any student loans personally.

But just doing some research. I found what this, I don’t know if this is a scam or whatnot, but like some guys are like, they found the company to create an LLC for them. That is set up as a nonprofit. So they can pay themselves via this nonprofit so they can qualify for the tenure student forgiveness thing.

Have you heard of this thing? What’s your thoughts? Yeah. And I’ve been asked over the years, Jan, I don’t work for a nonprofit. What if I own my own nonprofit or I create a nonprofit. And technically as long as it’s structured so that you are an employee of that nonprofit. Then you do that will technically qualify.

It’s interesting because not enough people have been eligible for forgiveness yet for to see how the auditing process works with those specific borrowers. But technically it is possible. It’s a risk though, right? I think so. I always tell people, if you’re gonna do it anyways.

Sure. You might as well shoot for the forgiveness, but if you’re going to open a nonprofit. Just so you can get the forgiveness, then that’s risky because you’re opening yourself up there’s some gray areas in the regulations there in regards to owning your own. Non-profit.

It could cause problems when you actually applied for the forgiveness when they audited. And I seen like the set, one of these things up, it’s not cheap. Definitely not something I personally recommend, if you’re going to if you’re going to do it anyways.

Sure. But if you’re doing it just for the student loan forgiveness, then it’s probably not as good. It’s just an example. There’s so much random stuff out there in terms of the financial world. And yet it makes sense. We’re always looking for the loopholes, to me, the intention is not there.

That’s why I’m like, yeah, that’s a black hat tactic. I agree. Are there any other techniques that you would think that people should know about that maybe they wouldn’t have known otherwise that you’ve been using for some of your clients? I think that one of the biggest things is understanding.

A very complicated subject whether or not to file separately or jointly to exclude the spouse’s income, whether you need to do that how your spouse, if you get married, it’s going to impact the program is a very complicated program because if your spouse has a significant income and doesn’t have any student loan debt than , their income is going to increase your payment dramatically.

It might even just qualify you for the program, but if your spouse has student loan debt and you can prorate the payment the other thing is if you need to exclude your spouse’s income, but your spouse has an escort or something like that, where they have huge expense write-offs that could be very costly to file separately.

Which is sometimes necessary to exclude this as income. And then add into the fact, what do you live in a common property state? , all these things make a massive difference in Filing your taxes and how much the forgiveness program is going to benefit you and whether or not you should pursue it.

If you are married or you planning on getting married in the middle of one of the income driven or forgiveness programs, definitely find out all the nuances of how that works and how it’s going to apply to you. And probably again, you want to talk to somebody like me to help you sort that out because it’s complicated, but that’s the first thing.

That I would say you want it to take into consideration, you’re opening up a can of worms. Cause then I would say probably like at least a lot of people in my mastermind group, the dentists, the doctors that were just one single income, we’re using that spouse to qualify for a real estate professional status.

We can use passive losses to offset active income. Yeah, worms there, it is a can of worms. I always tell people that. I should charge married couples five times as much as I can charge individuals because I don’t, but I should, because their situation’s always more complicated, especially when situations like that arise.

And you got one situation where one spouse is qualifies for public service, loan, forgiveness, and the other doesn’t. So how do you file then whichever creates the largest payment or the most forgiveness, or, you’re always want to look at total costs over time. It’s, everything’s gotta be evaluated, gotta crunch the numbers to really determine what the best solution is.

And that’s I’m growing up. I used to be super cheap and try and do everything myself and trying to learn everything myself. And now all I do is I build up a network and I ask other people who’ve done this before. Who the heck did they work with? And then that’s how I find guys like yourself.

Here’s a perfect example. As we were talking earlier, my wife’s a teacher and she’s been working like 10 years. So I was like, Googling the Publix or forgiveness thing. I don’t think she has that much loans. It’d be like 10 or 20 grand. Something, definitely could pay it off, but I want to do it smart, but it’s man, what a pain?

I got all these forms. I got to learn about it. It’s like government stuff. Can you figure out how, like far to stay apart from each other when you wear a mask when you don’t? I dunno. It’s just so good to using and I’m getting to a point where I’m like, all right, timer’s more valuable than money pay the man, get it done.

Don’t screw around. My days of just trying to do this all by myself are over. And I think if you’re listening out there and you’re making under a hundred grand a year, Your net worth is under a quarter million. Cool. That’s what these podcasts are for. Everything’s on my website for free.

Go ahead and learn it all by herself. But that’s why people sign up for the group coaching, or services like this, because time is more valuable than money. What is your highest and best use for a lot of my guys, it’s like it’s doing an extra surgery on the weekend, picking up extra shifts.

That’s screwing around with some Burr by rent, rehab, nonsense that thought of the kids talk about all the time. I’m glad I found you because I don’t want to do that paperwork. And if I can spend 500 bucks to just get it done that’s what I’m going to do. Yeah. No, I don’t. I don’t blame you.

, you mentioned before, there’s a lot of resources out there, but. There’s a lot of debt relief agencies, which were more like call centers. Yeah. And they’re really good at that called content marketing internet nonsense. Really just write bogus articles just to get the SEO, the search engine optimization, right?

. They’re not student loan experts. I have to tell you. They have a business model and a lot of them want a slang unit income-driven plans or, they’re not really looking out for what’s best for you individually. They’re looking to sell a model on how they can lower your payment or what have you.

And I always tell people, if you’re betting student loan experts to get help, number one, have they worked in the industry? Number two, do they have a actual, real financial credentials? And number three, when you talk with them, you can always tell when somebody knows. What the heck they’re talking about, are they trying to sell you on something, or is it more like a meeting you’re having with the financial planner accountant what it should more resemble somebody who’s has your best interest in mind and is not trying to sell you products, , I don’t sell people insurance or try and get people into an annuity. That’s your long lost college friend as far. Exactly. These are, another piece of advice I can give people who are looking for help is you can tell when you talk to the person, if they know what the heck they’re talking about, and they have your best interest in mind, not their own.

Like a lot of internet influencers, bloggers, podcasts, they all have the affiliate links to these loan consolidator things. You don’t know who to trust. And that’s why I always tell people, build your own network. Of other people you trust organically, not influencers, not people with podcast, land or blogs.

And then find the right consultants to work with and pay the consultant. On an hourly basis or where they don’t really have a skin in the game again, that’s the whole problem with the financial planners, right? They’re just here to sell you stuff.

They don’t know what they’re doing. That’s why I have a job. That’s exactly what I’d say about student loans. Same thing you just said. The reason I have a job is because of the loan servicers. Are poorly trained and the reps would frankly rather be on Instagram than talking to you about your student loans and you can’t talk to a bank, they don’t know anything about it.

Your school knows how to get you into debt. They don’t know how to get you out. They don’t really, they understand less than they realize, especially financial aid. They’re just clerks. Financial planners don’t know anything about student loans or they’ve had a diet Coke version of training of it, but they are not real experts on it.

It leaves us niche open for me that just developed itself where. I already had the background and I just put it into use to help people. What about you help people on the back end once they get into student debt. What about like people with young kids or they’re going to go away to college soon, getting the most student loans, any advice there?

It happens too, because even though my speciality is in student loan repayment, a lot of my clients are families and they’ll have kids 15 to 25 years old, and some of them are in debt. Some of them are going to college and some of them haven’t gone yet and they’ll have options to take out parent loans or the child needs to take out private loans.

That needs to be evaluated, when you’re taking out student loans, for example should I take out federal private? What are you going to school for? How much money do you expect to make when you’re finished with school? These things need to be taken in consideration. If you’re going to be a social worker take out federal loans.

You’re probably going to qualify for the forgiveness, and you’re also not gonna make that much money. So I promise you that private loan payment’s going to hurt when you enter into repayment after school on the flip side, if you only need a little bit of debt temporarily, you can get a better interest rate and plan on paying it off.

Anyways then, private loans can make sense, but if you need parent loans, there are circumstances for that, but that actually makes more sense than other things, those things it’s hard to give a general answer to that, those things do need to be evaluated. Yeah. So if any of the listeners out there, you have any best practices, let me know.

Or, if they work with anybody. This is how we build the community with the right people, not with big conglomerates who are really good at internet marketing, but guys like Jan , he geeks out on this stuff and he’s made a nice business out of it. I’m sure you enjoy doing this.

Just like how these travel hackers love which credit cards to get it’s collecting points, how you redeem the points, it’s cool. . How I built simple passive cashflow initially. Yeah. You’re passionate about it. Mainly because people have so much anxiety about it.

I often refer to myself as a student, one therapist because people call freaking out about their student loans and at the end of the call, they always feel so much better about their options and it’s a nice feeling and it’s great. And I feel like I wanted to be very few people on the planet who truly understands.

The micro and the macro picture surrounding student loans and how to apply it individually. I think it’s a rare niche that I fell into like I said I love it. Reach out to Jan and tell them you guys came from simple, passive cashflow. You want to get your contact information or website information out there for people to reach out.

Yeah. Sure. The best way to to find me is just to go to student-lone-consultant.com, which is my website. If you Google student loan consultant, I’ll be one of the top organic search results, Miller student loan consulting. Once you’re on my website, you can click to schedule an appointment.

And then I will contact you at the appointment time and I have tons of availability and the best way to get started as always with the initial consultation. From there, we can evaluate to see in what ways I can help you, in what ways you can help yourself with the loans. And I’ll be booking mind’s here to hopefully pay off that loan that my wife has.

Yeah. I already have some thoughts about that. I’ll save it for our call, just from what I’ve heard you say about it, all right. Everybody will thanks for listening. Please share this with your friends really helps us grow the show more. And if you guys are interested in the mastermind or.

Go to simple passive cashflow.com/journey. And if you’re looking to pick up the first few rental properties, remote investing, if you’re non-accredited investors, that’s what the incubators for simple, passive cashflow.com/incubator. And if you haven’t chatted before, feel free to book a call. It was looking to get to know each other a little bit better.

I ocular guys. Bye.

Don’t let YOUR MONEY go down the drain!

https://youtu.be/WY9E4kWFz50Yeah, I think it’s, I think there might be a divergence within like residential stuff, which you guys work with. And then the commercial assets, like I haven’t seen the run-up in prices in commercial assets, maybe like a quarter point across the board of cap rates, lowering. By the way it’s you guys means that the prices are going up when the cap rates are what they sell for lower, but nothing nearly is like the residential.
Well, that’s what I’m like. I lower my like waterline for like people to buy turnkeys to me, buying turkeys make absolutely no sense right now. But so if I were to understand how you’re thinking and summarize it, you’re thinking this is the opportunity to sell residential properties. What do you think? A lot of people in the middle of the pandemic, the summertime, we’re creating a lot of videos, the YouTube.
God love them. Right? They’re always doing those tweetable or those SEL terms where the world’s going to end. There’s the way, lots of foreclosures. Is that really going to happen? Where you put, I put my money on that. I think that will be a big disruption. I think I was Dallas, Texas last week for a couple of conferences, had a meeting with some, the manager of the billion dollar fund that we were talking about what they’re thinking and it lines up with I’m thinking this cycle will end and we’re not sure if it’s going to end in six.
12 months, 18 months, but this high that the cycle will end and then it will go the other way. And the managers words, it will lead to an extended period of depreciate. And we’ll see these prices steadily declined. Oh. And his thought was late. This decade, our economy is really weak right now and the fundamentals are not good.
I think there’ll be some significant challenges ahead had they’re not reflected in the current real estate market, but at some point they will be. And most of the rosiness today is a result of that. A good chunk of it is government intervention, which is the record, low interest rates are near record low.
And then all of the stimulus money that has been pumped into, into the, the economy, uh, over the last year that’s been, I think that’s, there’ll be another side of this that will pay for it. I think. 2000 5, 6, 7. It was such a dramatic run-up there had to be a turn and eventually it turned in late oh seven and through oh eight.
And it became a people were at that point, but you got to, oh, nine, 10 people are looking back at oh seven and oh eight and oh six and thinking, what were they thinking? Why did they think this would keep going up? Why were they paying so much for houses? And I think right now, fast forward a year, two years, three years at some point.
There’s going to be people looking back and saying, what were they thinking in 2021, people were paying for assets, be it a mortgage or real estate. I’m happy to sell into that market. In fact, I’m thrilled to sell in that market, but I’d be really scared as a buyer I’m having to buy. And I know talking to some of the funds, they have to buy, they have money.
They can’t not use it. And as they have to buy, they’re buying with expectations of very modest. Like low single digits that they have here, they’re getting four or 5%. And that is not even three-and-a-half percent people. It’s better either. They have a super cheap cost of capital, which some of them do, or it’s better than not investing the money at all, but I’d be nervous if you buy something and you’re getting three, four, 5% return.
And then the market turns and suddenly you lose your road, your principal, that would be challenging. So my thought, if you own real estate or you own a mortgage or any kind of type of asset with the exception of probably hospitality or our office buildings, which are probably you sell in today’s market, you probably won’t do well, but everything else by and large, not residential real estate, anything to do with that, I think it’s definitely, yeah.