What the Unemployment Rate Does Not Tell You About the Economy

https://youtu.be/4vPkhgIuZaA

The way they keep those statistics on who unemployment has been changing to make it look rosier than it really is. Yes. But I would say there’s another statistic, which is more important, which is labor force, the labor force participation rate, which is down around the 61% now. But as recently as the 1990s, early two thousands, it was around 67%.

So that’s a six and a half point. Decline or 10% decline if you think of it as a percentage of the whole, that’s a big deal. That number is the lowest. It has been since the 1970s, when women first started coming into the workforce in large numbers. Now, if you don’t have a job. But you’re not looking for a job.

You’re actually not counted as unemployed. The unemployment number we saw and yeah, declined from it was hit about 13%. Last spring came down to 10. Now it’s around a seven or so maybe slightly higher. That’s still high, but it’s a significant improvement over where it was last April, let’s say, but that’s not the number that matters.

The number that matters is labor force participation. So what’s happened is. Tens of millions of Americans have, have left the workforce there. And I’m talking to ages 25 to 54. I’m not talking about a 68 year old who wants to keep working or a teenager, or we’re not talking about disabled. There are perfectly good reasons for people not to be in the workforce.

There are always some, but we’re talking about able-bodied individuals between the ages of 25 and 54 prime working ages who have left the workforce. If you’re not. Banging on the door of the unemployment office is looking for a job. They don’t count, it was unemployed, but you’re not working and you’re not producing.

And so I look at that number because to me it’s a better gauge of economics displayed right here. So that’s just simply Google and the labor force participation. Right. Kept up by the U S Bureau of labor statistics. And is this pretty much it, this is what makes it hard, right? Because everybody hears the news headlines and we know they’re always just trying to sell use headlines, just like other talking about how collections are horrible, but I don’t see any of that issue happening.

In other words, saying that. Unemployment’s down, but is this really the way to cut through that noise? Yeah. This is a more manual chart than the unemployment rate. Again, this is the labor force participation rate. Now you notice you heard a lot of talk in the last March, April, may about the V-shaped recovery and pent up demand and all that.

And you look at that chart and look at labor force participation while you see the steep decline at the time of the pandemic. Okay. Got it. It came back. But that’s not a, the that’s like a half a B, in other words, the bounce now it’s flat and going down again. So yeah, you had a little bit of a bounce back.

That was to be expected after the, we got through the original round of lockdowns in may, in June, she had that bounce back, but then a flat line, and now it’s going down again. That’s consistent with what I said earlier, which is we’re heading back into another recession right now. Because there’s a new round of lockdowns.

You don’t need a Ph.D. to figure this out. You locked down half the economy. You’re going to get a reception. It’s as simple as that.

Never Enoughitis w/ Robert Althuis

https://youtu.be/l8-bwpOvvSE

Lane here. If you haven’t yet go and download the buy-and-hold analyzer for single-family homes, you can get an Excel or Google sheet format and just go download it from our Google drive with the full explanation of all expenses on there to spot check for performance given to you.

If you want to get ahold of that, go to simple passive cashflow.com/analyzer. Or go check out simple, passive cashflow.com/turnkey to learn all about turnkey rentals. And you can also find it on that page too. The common person that we’re going to be talking about throughout today’s podcast is this type A theme a lot of us are very hard workers and we’ve been.

Taught to save our money relentlessly. Now, when people usually find me, their net worth is typically over a million dollars and they’ve just gotten accustomed to just saving their whole life. And just like myself. My first 10 years out of college, I was saving at least 50 to a hundred thousand dollars of my salary every single year, putting it to investments.

I grew up very frugal. You guys can learn all about my sheeple tactics by going through the website and looking at that list, simple pasta castro.com/cheapo, but I was working with a client and we realized that it just made sense for them to just rent in a foreign country and they had way more money than they needed.

And I was kinda thinking about this for myself. I went and bought these really expensive abroad James’ shoes is my favorite player and they’re expensive for some basketball shoes, but, within the pandemic, that’s really the only thing I do and I spend money on. So in the past, what I’ve normally done is just buy a cheaper pair of Nike’s that I get on eBay for 60 bucks.

But then I start to realize, you know what, I’m just going to use those expensive shoes, because for all I know I could die tomorrow and it would be sure a waste. You can take any of this stuff with you. That’s just one way I’ve been loosen up, trying to spend my money on more experiences or things.

If you call it like that. It’s not like it’s a Ferrari or anything like that, And lift more of that fat FY lifestyle, right? And people talk about this fire move in F I already financial independence, retire, extreme. Most people think of the penny pinchers, the node latte people, and they think of, living well below your means. And I think that’s great to get yourself up to that first hundred thousand dollars net worth and get into your first few investments.

But after a point, it can be very debilitating. Some of the most successful people out there are very generous with their money. And not like giving money to other people, but they have this propensity towards money to let it flow. Because they know they have the confidence that they can recreate it with either investments or creating in their job or business.

The last finding I found was, another person in our family office will a mastermind. That’s it’s a classic case, same thing, big saver, able to save 40 to $60,000 a year. And I say loosen up a little bit. I tell them, it’s I have the same problem, right?

There are things that I probably should buy that I don’t, because I still live with the same mentality. Yeah, you don’t do the math. I think a lot of us will be financially free in five to 10 years. And it would be ashamed if something happens with us and, we had less than two years to live.

I think when you start to invest alternatively, with all these great wealth building strategies, you could press that timeline to get to that bold so much quicker that it may not make sense to white knuckle your way there. Safe to the extreme, but loosen up because you’re going to get there quicker than most people.

If you haven’t yet, make sure you sign up for the Hutto pipeline club that we dumped pipeline Columbus or free investor club, where I filtered vestments and underwrite the numbers and partners myself. I like other investor lists and groups out there. You guys get to know me.

We do that onboarding fall. To learn more, go to simple passive cashflow.com/club. And enjoy the show. This one’s going to be good for you. Take 8% is out there.

Hey, simple passive cashflow listeners. , we are going to have Robert ultras, the founder of whisper, a mindfulness organization that provides coaching strategies and tools and techniques to help private clients in their businesses. A great book coming out here soon, never enough itis.

And we’re going to be talking about this because a lot of the listeners are very type a personality. I consider myself a type a, but I can be lazy sometimes too, thought it would be break from the normal topic material of real estate Roberts also in real estate development too.

But I think there’ll be a lot to glean from this interview, but yeah. Welcome Margaret. Thank you. I appreciate it. Thank you for making the time to having me on. explain this term of never enough itis. Yeah. So the the book came about actually as cell therapy I sold a big part of my business in 2015.

And, I found myself having everything accomplished, which I thought was going to make me happy. And yet I felt. Something was missing. I had a restlessness and emptiness about me and that kind of prompted me on a, more like a spiritual search, what else is there to life than just making money.

And and that’s ultimately culminated in writing this book, which when I was going through some personal trauma and I also had some financial setbacks, I had a hurricane that wiped out a business and Yeah, nothing like a good crisis or catastrophe to do, meet yourself and look yourself in the mirror and take stock.

And the book kinda came from that. I was kinda looking at, what had been driving me in my life and how I could turn that around because I really had become to be honest and a narcissistic asshole. And I felt that the man I saw in the mirror, wasn’t really the man I wanted to be.

And so I started making some changes and. I think never enough as the title comes from this notion that we’re just always chasing more and it comes from this sense that we’re not enough. And we forget to look at all the beautiful things that we have in life already. We don’t live in the present moment, we’re always debating the past, then we’re peering into the future and we’re just on this carousel and forget to live life. And I think if you’re able to stop and ponder and think if you’re a narcissist, you probably aren’t and probably has a little bit of self-awareness there.

But I think that’s something, a lot of people that are listening, as their net worth grows, half a million million, 2 million, 4 million and above, they start to get to this idea. They’re just constantly going after the next thing I know personally, there was a number that I had in my head that.

I surpass that. I thought that I’d be super happy when I would get there, but it just came and went, but what was your moment where you hit this epiphany? That moment. When I sold like a large chunk of my business, I had a big payday, remember I was flying back from Bogota where that business was, and I was back on my way to Miami, driving, going to live in an ocean front community, a beautiful wife and kids and all the toys and all, everything.

And I was like, There’s something missing. I’m just not happy with this. This stuff is not filling me up. And my marriage, I’ve been so dedicated to my work and my career. I mentioned marriage suffered. I wasn’t the father that I wanted to be. And so I started analyzing that, what else is there and why am I doing this?

And I’m a capitalist at heart and I believe in the capitalist system and I believe that it motivates us. I just think that money is an amplifier. And when we have narcissistic behavior you just become a bigger narcissist with more money. When we are a good solid person, we have our integrity in place.

We have our values and our principles in place, money is just going to amplify that goodness at us. And I had lost myself in the game. And that was really the conclusion for me. I needed to get back to having integrity and showing up and living my truth.

And, there was my book details, a lot of different things where I got lost and I was doing high-level business and, in Latin America predominantly but I did it for GE as well. And it’s not always pretty what happened, and so you have to own that stuff and to look at it.

And is that the way I want to show up is that what I want to contribute to this world? And I’m a big believer that everybody’s true satisfaction is really making a contribution. Of some sort to this world, which could be, creating a business could be being a mother. It could be being a volunteer somewhere.

It could be being a doctor and, finding out some medicine that we don’t have today. But, I’m a big believer that, when we really want to fill ourselves up with what we do, we want to make sure that what we do has a purpose bigger than ourselves, and that can be translated into anything really.

It’s not limited what that looks like. And our listeners listening right now and they’re like, all right, I want to make a change. I don’t want to be forced to make a change. It seems like most people, they need to have some kind of thing to happen to them. But what are some things that they can ponder or changes made so that they can proactively make a change for a little bit of a better.

Yeah, I you’re absolutely right. We tend to learn humanity, right? Learns through crisis and catastrophe. That’s where we wake up and Holy crap, I need to do something about it. And that could be, a major illness. It could be a divorce, it could be, financial losses or whatever that tends to wake us up and do something where we don’t have to learn it that way we can obviously take a look under the hood.

And I think what I always tell people. Is the first thing you need to do is get a North star and your North star is the spiritual vision for your life. And that’s not necessarily a whole roadmap of airing you’re going to do, but I think you got to have something that gives you direction. And what you want to create in your life.

What’s important to you and, what’s that vision that you have for your life. I call it a spiritual vision because I think your soul once express itself in this life, for whatever you’re doing, everybody’s got unique gifts and talents and superpowers. And those we got to tap into because that’s going to be our most aligned work, our most successful flow state type of endeavors.

And we’re going to be most financially abundant there because. That’s going to come easy to us. So find your spiritual vision, get really clear about what you want to create, how you want to show up in life and then start taking congruent actions. Now, as a second offshoot of that is we can see what am I life is toxic right now.

That’s going to be people. It could be environments that could be situations that we look up or. That we’re part of, and, I think a big step is lose the toxic news in your life. And clean that up. So you surround yourself with the people that are going to support you in this vision that you have.

And then the third part is we all have limiting beliefs because we’re just mushy little humans. And we grow up and we have all these beliefs that start selling in when they’re in our childhood and, we’re in feta state. So we were very impressionable and, we have wounds and scars because we go through life, we get hurt, we get disappointed.

We have stuff that happens to us. And so it’s a good exercise to look at us and say, okay what are some of the things, the patterns that I can see in my life that I’m recreating all the time, that aren’t necessarily serving me. And once you got a drill down there, that’s the effect, right?

So what’s the cause of that. And the cause is always some kind of belief that you have, which could be like, I’m never lucky. There’s no good men in this world. I never make more than this much money, it could be anything I could never be this way. I could. Any limiting belief is basically a ceiling on where you’re going to go in life.

And once we can start addressing that, we can remove these artificial ceilings, cause it’s just fog and your beliefs, triggers, thoughts, flaws triggers your emotional body, your feelings and your emotions. That’s going to drive your actions and that’s going to get you results. So you have to address it at the belief level.

Yeah. There was a guy that we had on the podcast. My buddy Chris rush. Actually I haven’t seen the guy in a couple of years when Robbie’s doing it, but I remember. Great example of surrounding yourself with the right people. Like he had this thing where he would write down living beliefs. He had like about six or 12 of them.

I saw the list. I didn’t read it out to him, privacy, but he was there. He showed it to me and then say, he said, yeah, every like few months I go in there and I look at it and I try and add another one. Don’t I’m trying to get that next layer. And then I’m trying to work on one of those limiting beliefs, but that was a pretty good tactic.

Yeah. And working on limiting beliefs are actually decisions we once made and we then automated in our subconscious mind. So really the way you address a limiting belief is you make a different decision. And then you find the evidence in your life or anybody else’s life that supports that new decision.

And that’s how you actually change the neuroplasticity in your brain. Because just thinking or affirmations is not enough. It doesn’t change. Believes have really deep grooves, right? Like a record player. And so they get out of those grooves. You gotta make a new decision.

Can you tell me one here with an intro verdad mindset, it’s harder to open up for those folks. How can they rely on outside source for support, support? First of all, everybody’s supportive because this university is abundant and I only get depends on being introvert or extrovert.

I’m a big believer that the biggest challenge for us is to show up in a really authentic way, because we have so much societal programming, so much cultural beliefs, so much of our upbringing, potentially religious dogma, and all these things influence us and they make us believe we have to be something somehow.

And, part of, I think really getting to our core essence is stripping away the societal programming, I call it bullshit rules and really get to our core and what are you’re introverted or extroverted? That’s just a personality trait. I don’t think it’s going to stop you from attaining the success that you want to have in life.

There’s many introverts that are extremely successful, even successful salespeople. Yeah. So the most of the listeners here are higher paid working professionals. A lot of times to get to that point in your career, it is a bit of a toxic environment that people who are more stoic, more closed off, rise to those positions.

At our recent mastermind, we had almost a hundred participants. Average net worth was $1.9 million. So it was a high level group that came out virtually. And it was hard for me to get people loosened up because everybody has this corporate America kind of mentality, yeah. I don’t, I don’t know any tick. Maybe you can give some insights in how to loosen up. Yeah. I talk a lot about this in my book. I was a stoic when I was in my, the front of my career. And I was merciless. I was heartless. I would go over dead bodies to go what I needed if you go.

And that became worse as there was more money at stake and I’m so much, Oh, I shot my wife out. I was very unexpressed in that sentence and there’s there’s a lot of work around the masculine, the feminine energies that we each have. And the heart is the Citadel, the feminine energy.

And it’s really where we feel. It’s also where we’re vulnerable. And, when we open up the vulnerability, we want to be heart-centered, we have to open up our heart, we have to share. And that’s not something that men especially in our culture are encouraged to do because from a very young age were little boys like boys don’t cry, you’re tough.

You gotta be fearless. You swallow all these emotions and feelings. So it doesn’t surprise me in this corporate environment and the type of audience that you have that. People feel like you can’t really share that side of you. The irony is, or the paradox is I’ve come to find out that when you’re vulnerable and you share your heart you’re actually become indestructible and invincible because, you can only be hurt when someone is trying to protect something.

But you can’t kick it in an open door. And so when you share your heart and your heartfelt and you share maybe some of the things that, your fears, your worries, or some of the things that aren’t going well in your life, you’ll be hard pressed to find anybody that’s gonna in any way take advantage of it.

What are they going to do? Because you just shared the truth. You owned it. It’s actually, when we hide it and we try to, paint this picture on the outside, this kind of, we live by our social media accounts and by our LinkedIn profiles. And we want to look at this perfect, smart and successful.

There’s a lot of vulnerability actually in that, because now we’re very vulnerable because, we’re not like that. We, none of us are perfect. We screw up all the time. We make mistakes, things don’t go we have fights with our spouse or our friends or family members.

Anyway, life is messy. It’s messy for all of us. Yes. And just being human about that and discussing that in an open way, in my personal opinion makes you only stronger that makes you more trustworthy because it’s more real. It’s what people can connect with is yeah, I have that in my life.

That makes sense. Nobody’s perfect. Whenever I see anybody like painting this perfect picture of their life, I just shrugged my shoulders and it’s I know it’s not like that. Yeah. That’s still a mentality is a little bit needed, right? Because you need to go after your goals, especially in the beginning and not listen to what anybody has to say and just move forward.

Despite all obstacles, but once you get to a certain inflection point, I think opening up, this is the way to go. But why do you need to be stoic early on? I think it’s a gray area, right? I think people. When they’re starting on their career or doing some new venture, there’s a lot of naysayers out there that the peer group might not be at that evolved.

So you’re going to have to shut people out and you may be a little bit closed off, but in the process. So you see I think you anchor it in your spiritual vision. Because if you’re very clear on where you’re going with your life, and you’re very clear on what you like, what you’re passionate about, what your gifts, your talents, your super powers are, what makes you go in the morning?

What gives you mojo? What gives you energy and vitality when you’re very clear about that. You’re not relying on this motivating muscle, right? Now you’re just sheer power. You’re clear, you’re intentional, you’re determined and it comes from a different place. It comes from a completely different place than, you feeling your way out there and like someone might upset your Apple cart by being a naysayer.

I think you just take these opinions in you filter it because it’s their lens that they look life experience life Ru. But if you’re very clear in your spiritual vision and you you’re really committed to that. I think really that’s where you anchor and ground yourself and you don’t have to be a stoic.

I think you can share it as, and I think, I’m very public about my spiritual vision. It’s inspire and create a world of love and truth. That’s in alignment with everything I want to do. No, that’s part of the message of the whisper and what I’m trying to create. And I want to empower people.

But it’s all based around love and truth, which really opened up your heart and living in truth. So right now the guys are listening, they are mowing the lawn and some dishes driving home. They were like, I’m on board. I’m on board with this. What are some like quick wins that what are you things that matter to you most now?

And how does that kind of show up and kind of small habit changes or quick wins and, your audience is probably pretty disciplined, I would assume because they don’t get where they are by not being, but, one of the first things I tell everybody is the way you do anything is the way you do everything in life.

And look at those areas in life where. You’re not counting the reps. And you might find a couple of areas where you’re not. And there’s something that’s pervasive throughout your life, because if you do it in one area of your life, I can guarantee you it’s showing up somewhere else in your life, too.

It shows just the way it works. It’s the way you train to condition yourself. So I always tell people be very honest with yourself, the way you do anything, usually you do everything. I think in terms of my in business, what I’ve found is this notion that you have to be very cunning and and very astute and all those things.

Yes, you have to be smart about things, but I actually think people do business with people. And I even noticed this when I was at GE I was a very successful salesperson at GE. I was a Rainmaker. They called it, but I related to people, even when it was company to company, business, to business, it’s still human relationships that are going to drive all these things.

Even when you’re in real estate, if you’re going to go find a deal and you want to, sit down with the owner and there’s multiple buyers there. Guess what? It’s going to have a sway the way you show up, the way you hold yourself, the way you respect people, the way you treat people.

This follows you for out your life. I’ve never missed a bill in my life. And, you get a lot favors from a lot of people when you show up like that consistently. And we tend to abuse power sometimes a little bit and, leverage our power. But I think, be really cautious in the more means and resources you have.

Be more salad and really protect the integrity and the way you show up, be human be cause we’re ultimately we’re interacting with people, right? Every business transaction at the end, unless you’re buying Bitcoin online or something like that. For the most part, there’s some human interest there.

Being a nice guy, be an honest guy, be a guy or woman that you would want to do business with. Yeah, something I can share from my first few years or five, six years working was very different. Holly was my last few years working when I didn’t give a crap. And I was definitely on the way out.

My last few years I ran meetings differently. I stuck up for the subordinates and the consultants. They didn’t care. And I think that came across as more of an authentic leader and much more efficient leader too. You got stuff done a lot quicker. And I think that’s what financial freedom allows people to do is.

Kind of treat people how they’re supposed to be treated, but without that other constraint of making our boss happy, or these other external factors, when you don’t have to worry about, I got to still stay employed by these guys or get the next job. But yeah let me put up the book, Robert ultras, a L T H U I S never enough illness.

yes. Just released January 1st, 2021. So pick it up guys and yeah, appreciate it. Robert, for joining us. I really appreciate the time and I wish everybody a well, it’s just such an interesting time, there’s so much flex in the market. It’s so dynamic.

This is when the greatest opportunities of marriage to, when there’s chaos, when there’s a lot of fog, amazing opportunities come about. So I think for everybody just stay alert, play within your strengths. And lots of really good stuff can come from these things as unfortunate as it is for other people that have lost their jobs or their financial hardship and all those things, I feel terrible for them, but, I think it’s a great time to be out there and scouting for opportunities.

Yeah. Just like hard work pays off. Passive cashflow pays off, got that t-shirt made already, but you guys can buy the book and thanks for joining. We’ll see you guys next week. Bye. All right. Thanks so much, Lynn. I appreciate it.

Coaching Call w/ Accredited Engineer & Hui OG

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvMIlR6ADa0&ab_channel=LaneKawaoka

Hey guys Lane here. Normally I don’t like to brag at all. But yeah, I just want to highlight a few of these recent closings that we had. We sold off a lot of these class C properties that were a little bit of a headache to deal with some of the properties didn’t cash flow initially, which is pretty common with class C collections up and down.

But. Yes, total 114 unit in Atlanta. We a hundred percent return investors’ capital two and a half years. Crazy on another one in Huntsville, we still have 70 unit there, again, another class C for 108% return. And to be years, cut back early on another class C where we 26% returning two years.

And then in addition to a Chattanooga property class C almost a hundred percent there three years now, to say that it was a lot of hard work and dedication, but, quite frankly, we didn’t rehab all the units. We didn’t take it the full business plan yet. We felt like it was prudent to cut bait and with these great returns already.

And investors pumped to the next deal. And keep the good times. Rolling. But yeah, a lot of good things are happening, I think, especially in Huntsville. It’s one of its deepest tertiary market out there, emerging markets. If you watch my monthly reports, and just did a report of top of which in markets and it’s on there.

So a lot of the first investors we have one today, we have a coaching call. This client has been with me for quite a while. We’re going to call him the wi OJI investor, Mike. But yeah, starting to see the successes come through and people’s lives are changing through this stuff. It’s not only the deals, but it’s the holistic tax and legal asset protection.

And how do you move money around, and also lifestyle changes such as not buying your house to live in, renting for a lot of us. Makes sense. Granted though, those people aren’t listening to this podcast don’t really have interests in personal finances and financial freedom. They should go probably go by their house because it’s a forced savings account, but you guys are different, right?

So hopefully you guys enjoy this podcast with a current investor of ours and yeah, you guys want to build a relationship with us. Go to simple passive cashflow.com/club.

Hey, simple passive castle listeners. Today. We have a, another exciting coaching call with an OJI of the who pipeline club. Mike here we’ll call him like, cause that’s how people know him as, but yeah, accredited investor in several deals. We’ll talk about that, but I think today’s call is not.

Really on the basics. But where do we go from here now that we have proof of concept? But Mike wants you to give people a quick overview on yourself. What do you do for work? Just so people can get a little context. Sure. Currently I’m a construction manager with the city of Seattle. I have a civil engineering background.

Did the consulting thing for a little while but have been working as a government project manager for about six years now. It’s been doing real estate investing since 2017, started with two turn key rentals in the Birmingham area. And then along the way they come up to six or seven syndications with lane.

And yeah, just trying to see what the next steps are here for me. Yeah. So I think when you came in at 2017, your original goal was to buy some rental properties. What was your net worth? Like 600 or something or 500? I don’t know around there, I’d say, yeah. Yeah. In what, under four years you almost two X that, yeah.

Okay. Okay. So I’m just looking million-dollar net worth in terms of salary and income, you’re another frugal guy, so you’re able to put away 40 grand or so to investments every year. So just giving some people some context here. Again, if you guys are listening to this and podcasts for me, you guys can go to the YouTube channel where we have this displayed.

Also club members get access to all of these investor calls or investor coaching calls. Sign up for the club@simplepassivecashflow.com slash club. And you can watch all these. And I arrange all these coaching calls based on net worth. So you guys can quickly fall in to where you’re at super watchable.

It’s perfect. But help us out Mike, for the new guys because you’ve went through the whole entire Genesis where you started with turnkeys. Take us back to that point, some of the takeaways, but a few years after that, Yeah. To be honest, that it really mirrored your journey, I definitely piggybacked on all the training that you took, all those networking opportunities that you did, jumping on with the turnkey providers that you found in the Birmingham area made it really easy cause he hadn’t been there before.

And just decided. I couldn’t keep doing the same thing and expecting the same result and also had my son in 2016. So that was kinda my Han solo moment, as you say find a way to increase my income, to get more time to spend with him. So along the way just with the two turnkeys, and then seeing these syndications starting to pan out.

My wife’s been able to leave her job and spend her time with our son because he’s about to start kindergarten. Yeah. It worked. Huh? Good.

So you jumped on a few of these deals where a couple of these yeah. Two of them cashed out for you. Money. So that probably makes indices very happy. Yeah. It was nice to see that 40 15, I’m trying to capital come back and looking forward to what to do with the distribution. Oh, how did you guys manage your guys’ finances prior?

Like she gave you some sort of like allowance or allocation to do this crazy stuff with in the beginning. And she said changed her. I do most of the finances in my family. I think it was a real as you said, we’re very frugal. It’s very tough for us to spend a dollar. It’s not essential.

But I guess along the way just showing the math of, what we’re putting in and what we’re getting out on a month by month basis has been helpful. Using a lot of the graphics that you show in that Sankey diagram that kind of unlocked everything that really broke the dam and getting us able to be comfortable with doing the syndications slowly, building them up and just increasing that, that extra cash buffer and savings.

And then as has it progressed throughout the years, you got more and more. Investible capital that you can touch. Yeah. Yeah. It, a lot of it is from my day job that is where I get the bulk of my savings from. I’m a little conservative with the rental properties. I don’t really pull much in terms of profit.

I just keep building up that stash in case something goes wrong with them. But yeah, at least with the multi-families I feel like that’s been able to start compounding here. So one thing I know you guys did, if you guys, you can help out people, is the whole, do you rent or do you buy I’m a big proponent for renting.

I rent you had to talk to your spouse since we’re doing this crazy idea of not buying, but maybe. Help out the poor souls that need to do that thing too. I think for you, it was harder because it’s not like you didn’t have investible funds, but when we sat down and outlined it, it makes so much sense.

Site’s there. Yeah. I was lucky enough to ride the appreciation wave from 2011 to my wife and I owned a condo. In North Seattle and we sold it for more than double than what we paid for it. So that was pretty much our equity that we used to invest in first, the turn keys, and then the first batch of syndications.

So we’re most small spouses would probably chop your head off if you took that money and buy a house, a bigger house to live in, that’s the status quo. Yeah. That’s exactly what the traditional plan was. So it, really was a long road to get to, renting and then using money from the sale of a property that equity to start investing.

And it’s starting to really. Come home to roost right now. Yeah. Yeah. Cause you sold that and you got what, 300 grand that stuff after all the closing costs and whatnot we cleared about two 50. And did you invest all that two 50 or what was the deal within the household that you could invest?

I think along the way we have been. Wanting to get a primary residence again. But I asked her, let’s rent for a little while. We’re, we’re not tied to anything. And just give me a little bit of time and let’s see how this goes. And at any point, if it doesn’t seem like it works, we’ll sell these turnkeys, I’ll stop investing in these multi-families.

We’ve been able to see proof of concept. And this’ll be our fourth year renting now. And so there still is the itch to buy a primary residence. But at the same time, we haven’t completely shut the door on renting. Yeah. But I’m looking here I’m, you’re still able to put away 40 plus grand a year to investments.

The syndications are starting to cash out. You’re going to have more investible funds. Now the, again comes into play, right? You’re you’ve got to make a new deal. Or are you thinking about getting a new home to live in? Because I’m a little bit more yeah, if you, maybe if you want to, you could at this stage, cause you, you put in the three, four years of delayed gratification and. At what point? I know personally, I probably will never I don’t want to say never, but I liked renting and it’s a lot cheaper than buying a yeah. Yeah. I dunno if we’re just trading one thing for another, but there’s always the thought in the back of our head, whatever it landlord’s plans change year to year.

Now that we have our son, we’ve got a lot of stuff in the closet that I’m not really looking forward to moving. And I really want to get him into a good school district. So that’s the main thing. It’s just the stability is what we’re looking for now. And I know I don’t have to be a homeowner forever, but for me, it’s the stability for the family and the the school district.

And I know I talked to people, I know the people who’ve moved multiple times in their life and their parents have come back late and said, Oh my God, I’m so sorry. I moved from this town to that town, moved me from this school to that school and know the other kids are grown up. They’re like, I didn’t even know that was just used to that.

But just for me, my own wanting to be what I feel like is a good parent. That’s I guess my number one. Yeah. If you could keep moving at this space in 15 years, you can buy your kid up Dodge Viper. Doesn’t all will be forgiven before. It’s 21. That was my, that was what my mom was trying to get me to do this day at UHC.

And since you can buy whatever car you want, and then, so I actually just move myself too recently. And the mover is costing me a thousand bucks, but I boxed up everything and I was like, my God, that’s the last time I’m ever going to do that. But our other buddy is a mover and he said, yeah, you just tell them to come to your house and pack up all your stuff for you.

Yeah. You probably want to take your wife’s underwear with you separately, but they’ll do it for two or three points. So No, it’s just money. And you’re saving so much money every month anyway, growing your money so much before. And hopefully that helps. It’s just think of it as a few grant that you just to Chuck up to move it costs.

Yeah. I think honestly, we understand the math. I think it’s more of a feeling now than it is. Whether it makes sense, monetarily. Yeah. But we had talked about some other options, maybe outline it for folks like a bigger house or location-wise. So what are you currently thinking about now for the housing?

We’re still pretty narrow. And where we’re looking we floated the idea of moving out of the general area, but I know we seem to really like where we live. And so we’re going to. Try that at first, who knows, I don’t know, or at least as good for another few months, but we’ll see if the time comes that we have to move.

If we really have to do something. Yeah. The key is like finding a landlord that is also an unsophisticated landlord that loves a very stable tenant. And if you can bamboozle them into a longer lease, that’d be ideal for both of you and down. Yeah. I did contact the property manager recently and in the area that I wanted to live and I was like maybe we’ll just try out when you’re at first, but I really am looking for a place I want to stay long-term and she was like, Oh yeah this investor, she had a house for 25 years sold that, bought this one.

And that’s what she’s planning on doing for the next one. I’m like, Oh, that’d be, yeah, that would be perfect. But it’s. We’ll see what comes up to buy and what comes up to sell. And, trying to look for the right place to be at least for the next six years. Yeah. Yeah, because currently you pay how much per month for 2,700, which is a great deal.

Cause we got one of those landlords, this is a house they bought for their son to move into. Once he moves back to the area and we’ve been waiting for the son to move back for two years now. So who knows, maybe we even stay here another year. I don’t know. It’s probably one of those or for bearing that more, it’s probably why the son doesn’t want to go anywhere near them.

They live like five minutes away, so yeah, maybe it’s a little too close for the other guy to come back. But so when you’re looking for that next rental, what is your budget? 30 to 50. I think I’m keeping that budget the same for a house payment versus the rental. Do Jack it up to four grand.

Trust me at the end of the day, you pay four grand for a rental and you invest and it just keeps you on this path of renting that much longer. It’s going to be better. And, but just for kicks. See what you’re getting when you pressed up the Ford brand. Yeah. It’s, you’re already getting so much of a better deal when you compare what.

Rent is for that by costs. So yeah, it’d be like heads and shoulders above. Fine. Yeah. And now that you’ve been doing this for a few years, now, you can take some of these profits, the investible funds and start living with it. And that’s the way you start to do it because I know people like in your shoes, what you’re probably to keep doing is keep continuing to live in a.

Kind of like a dingier house rental for 2,700 a month for the rest of eternity, right? Yeah. But yeah. Try and consciously increase your means, which goes against everything in the personal finance world. That’s the whole point of doing this investing stuff, that’s why we’re doing it.

Is that what we’re doing at.

Yeah, I think that’s why some people do it. But I thought it was just a rack up money in your bank account. So I look at it when you’re not doing anything, but yeah, it’d be take it off the foreground. Yeah. And I’m curious what the missus says at that point. Once you start to tour those places or show pictures of it.

I mean it honestly they don’t care the, just the fact that she’ll have to tell her friends that she’s living in a place that costs four grand a month. She should, she won’t do it based on that principle.

Yeah. I know what you’re saying. The friends will probably think that she’s crazy and your likes and ADL, but. I tell my wife. Yeah, look, don’t think about what other people think about you. Life’s too short. Yeah, I know. It’s hard. Yeah.

I know. But that is a big thing. Cause people don’t understand it and they’re like, what are you doing? You’re just throwing money down the two crazy.

Okay, so let’s talk about this stuff. What do you got going on here? Why do you have so much? So that’s the thing it’s that was also part of the agreement. Oh, it’s like the COVID reserves right? Where the bank makes it, this is the life reserve that’s my escrow account.

Okay. So the deal was, if I recall you had to keep liquidity in the bank to be able to put down on a primary residence. Yeah. And so that money right there is our emergency fund, plus our future down payment. And that’s a lot of money to just be sitting at escrow. You got to ask the bank, they’re like a little bit, it’s been it’s been working really well with this arrangement.

And so I don’t know if I’m trying to. Break that arrangement at this point would be a wise decisions. Okay. So here’s some options, right? What about other than obviously investing at all? Surely you’ve seen some positive effects of this stuff starting to work and it’s real, but maybe put a portion of it as equity, right on the top of the capital stack, getting dirt.

10, 12% every month. Yeah, like an HP. Gotcha. I know a lot, what a lot of guys did was , they got to refinance their loan on their house. So he lock and they took a portion of that too. And then put it in for the equity to pay their key lock on their entire thing as arbitrage.

That’s the first option. The second option is what do you think of block five? Yeah, it’s putting money into, I can’t understand any of those terms. I’ve been, I’ve been working, trying to understand it with some of those folks in that Facebook group, maybe I just need to dedicate more time to it, but Yeah. So our mastermind is going to be doing a deep dive into this next month, but. What I’m advocating for is not really investing in block five or any cryptos in terms of Bitcoin or Ethereum. Have you heard of stable coins? Yes. After reading about it. Yeah.

Yeah. So for you guys don’t know what this is, that’s my understanding. And I don’t understand this entirely. So go do your own research, but stable coins are, as the term suggests it’s stable. But to me, like from what I hear from people who do this for what it’s worth, like most of the crypto, especially at theory and Bitcoin, now institutions are involved in this stuff and it won’t go 10 X and a couple of years anymore, but.

At least to me, I think that’s the point where I’m getting more interested in the stuff. Now, big institutions are backing it and they believe in it too, which just makes it more stable., but like the stable coins is another level beyond that of stableness. So what you’re doing, you’re loading money into this website.

You don’t have to deal with all that annoying. USB things. Some people will think that’s more security because you own it, but it’s no different than you going to, each trade or whatever stock investing thing where they app digital. But you mean like block five and I’ve done my research.

They’re, US-based, they’re insure supposedly they’re property capitalized. There are a bunch of others, but if I were to recommend one over the other, that one, just as a starting point to court research. But for if you put your money in, I think it’s G USD and block fi you’re able to make 8.6% on it.

Now, if block five goes on, there don’t come complainant. Maybe, I don’t know if, what, I don’t know, see what, like throwing 50 grand into something. That see us, like God lean more towards doing private equity versus the books, I think. Yeah. Yeah. Or maybe, go a hundred grand in pref equity and the salon and the next salon.

But in the meantime, when you wedding for the next one, just have 50 grand that block fire or something like that, or diversify over different coin basis. Coinbase Gemini. Yeah, yeah, you got to get that move in then it’s a big drag. Yeah, I know it’s a big drag or, okay, so here’s the other one.

Are you doing internet banking at this point? No, I’m not. I just didn’t feel like I had the right kind of net worth to be doing. Your net worth is higher than half a million. So it is a thing for you. Again, if we’re talking to the guy who is, has no money, don’t do and banking, right?

Put your ear my son, go focus on making more money or investing in a rental property for now. If you guys get shiny object syndrome so much, you gotta be like Mike and do this for few years. And then you can think about these things, but this is even if you’re a lower net worth, I would still recommend the jury because you have so much debt equity, you might as well just stick it into insurance product, which is probably the most stable things out there. And just let it grow at 5%, at least. So that’s the third option I have for you. Okay, it’s just load this into there. And then next question is how much do you do? What I’m looking at here is you’re able to put away maybe 40 grand a year, but you have so much built up in this escrow crowd and you have, you got to get it deployed.

So you have to build a plan that’s six years or five years, and you have to stick to a Mount. Obviously I wouldn’t go more than 40, 50 grand per year because that’s all your liquidity. Sometimes I have a general rule of thumb of one third of your net, which is in your case one third of 40 grand, so 10 to 15 a year.

Okay. But maybe I might bump that up because you have so much luck in the beginning. So maybe, we can connect you with the life insurance guys, but. Maybe I would go in with how does 20 a year for six years now? That’s the cashflow that includes the fees too. That is what you’d loaded in. The fees is probably gonna, you’re going to take the haircut that first year for sure.

But your money is not doing anything anyway. So it might as well loaded in there for now. Like you should be able to intellectually talk about this decision to your spouse who is controlling this escrow account for you, because I would make the argument that the life insurance is more secure than any of these things.

Okay.

Shouldn’t have more than a hundred grand in here anyway. FDI FEIC. Yeah. You load it in there. And another thing that we’re tinkering on in the mastermind is instead of taking loans from Penn mutual, the insurance company or whoever insurance company you’re using, we’re using a third-party bank to get an even lower interest rate.

So if we borrow from Penn mutual at 5%, There’s another third party bank that will do give us a collaterized loan on the life insurance. You sign the, like the bank and they’re giving us like 3.5% for prime, minus half a point or something like that. So it’s I think that’s better than a hilar.

Yeah. Yeah, crazy stuff right up there. So I would try and do 20. You know what if this is not going to go down, I would load it up with 40, 50 grand in the first year and try and backdate the first payment. So you can load a hundred grand in the first year. Okay. Does that makes sense?

Yeah, it does.

And then. Year two year three, you’re going to have to fund it know for 40, but if you only funded up to five or 10 grand, it’s not the end of the world. It’s going to take a lot for it to not cave in. If you understand that kind of, that concept. Kevin, what do you mean? Yeah. So caving in is just like non-technical term that I’ve created where it’s no, you have to commit to a certain amount, right?

Every year, where, if not the dividends I think the fees start to pay and cannibalize itself, the policy. Okay. And I’m not an expert, right? This is why we work with experts to originate these things. But I know from a high level to, amounts to put in.

But how it’s designed, just like in taxes, I know how taxes work and you should know how taxes work. But you don’t know what forms to do, right? That’s their job. In fact, that’s their only job. Their job is not strategy. That’s yours. It’s like how we’re doing here. Your job is to figure out how much you’re going to put anywhere.

And before I have the conversation with the salesman, because the salesman is obviously not really aligned with what you want, they’re going to probably try and load you up in the longest policy for the biggest amount, because that’s what lines their pockets with commissions. Okay. But. Yeah. I would just throw in a hundred grand right off the bat, and then you have a 150 grand.

So it gets you that in the next few years, and you’ll probably be making more money and hopefully the investments keep going well. But at the end of the day, or if the worst case scenario, you bring back how much you put in. Yeah. It’s not the end of the world. Initially when I did my infinite banking policy, I did 50 grand and I did, I actually the same thing.

I backdated the first payment to put in a hundred grand in the first month, one after it. Boom, boom. So then I was supposed to do a 50, 50, 50, 50, and then when I was first starting the syndication journey, , I. Spend all my money and invest it all. So I didn’t have much money. And I was like, Oh crap. So I had to go down to the minimum where it wouldn’t keep in.

And I think it was somewhere between on $50,000 commitment. I could put at least like five or 10 or something like that. You can do that. Or if not take a loan from yourself and paid the premium. So the backdating is like a year, zero. Contribution. Yeah. I talked to your agent on how to do that.

Okay. But that’s for your case, right? Because you have so much dead liquidity right now. I’m not doing anything. Whereas most people, they don’t have that much. Most people have a hundred grand or less, but they might have a higher net where you’re able to put away 40 grand per year.

A lot of other people, they might be higher. 50 to a hundred. But that’s how I would play this. And as you see, it’s a art form. But should you lower this amount that you have to keep in here as cash reserves? Because the boss says, do you know that strategy obviously changes a little bit too, but.

Those are the three in that order that I would allocate that stuff. Okay. But as far as investments, you’re just on the one or two a year plan, is that yeah, that’s what I’ve been able to do. Once I get enough to put into something, it goes right in. Yeah. This is not too important, but I know you got kids.

The term life insurance. Is this through your work or is this additional? The standard insurance is through my work and the mutual is my own policy. Okay. If you start doing an infinite banking policy with the whole life, you probably should just, this has been done, then I would get, just get rid of that.

That’ll save you 500 bucks a year. Yeah. But yeah, I mean it’s, so if you died a million, $2 million is good thing. Yeah.

But you still have, is this company like TSP or four Oh three B 401k stuff. So I did the 401k. I closed that out last year. And I have about. $20,000 in my Roth that I can take out as straight contributions without paying any penalty. And the other, the lower amounts are my spouse’s plans and that’s her money.

So I haven’t pressed her on pulling that. Yeah. But so this is not 133, it’s 20 now. And then. It’s like I could take out 20 of that without the pain. Oh, okay. Okay. Yeah. So it’s like what? Vanguard? 500 or something like that. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. That’s cool. You want some stocks and is that, I don’t need it.

It’s more like it’s there and I prefer not to touch it cause I don’t want to pay the fees, but I’m open to eventually taking that all out. did it with my 401k last year. I’ll pay the taxes on that. Yeah. And luckily, because the wife doesn’t work, you’re not in a high tax bracket, so you can make maneuvers like that.

I personally don’t have any paper assets, but I always just ask you guys and where your head is. That’s fine. I’ve already taken out a good. Chunk of my Groth contributions along the way over the past four years too. Is this all Roth or? Yeah, it’s all wrong. Okay. But only 20 grand has contributions, I think.

Yeah. That’s all that’s left that other contributions, but it’s not a self-directed. No it’s a wrong, yeah.

I might have up. Something for you later,

but yeah. Any other questions or, what level of tax professional should I be seeing? Cause my buddy who used to do it he took a real job, so he’s done taking clients and then I’ve always been wanting to sing that I needed an estate plan and a will like, cause the Anderson folks. Who should be talking to, is that, too much for me?

I think they’re, I think they’re cheap for what they do. We definitely don’t need, like one of the white glove services that are gonna charge you 10 30 grand to do your taxes, but the trust, the state stuff, I think that’s separate. But yeah, I can connect you with a couple people on that side.

But, yeah. That’s so that’s next on your list of deep to do items. Yeah. So if you guys are listening, if you guys have a you guys don’t want that sucks. It’s going to go through probate, start do that. You guys need to trust, especially if you have kids.

Yeah. Yeah. We’ll play around with more that strategies like irrevocable trusts. Once the network gets a little higher, but. Can get the trust set up because the trust is just essentially instructions to avoid probate. So the state city, I don’t know who gets their hands over the place, but it’s just a way of taxing and running away.

But yeah, that’s a good goal. A lot of people in the bubble that was something that they need to get done. It’s something that people that lay. But yeah, as far as the taxes, you don’t have moving off the rental property, so things are getting easier just to have a bunch of Caitlin’s.

Yeah. I still don’t think you should do it in triple tax, but it didn’t take a genius to do it. And you’re educating yourself and you should be able to spot check what they want. Anybody does. Yeah. The situation is not super complicated, but. And you should be able to supervise them too.

It shouldn’t be that different from the last three years. Yeah. I’m curious how much passive losses you have on your 80 to 85 forum? Have we asked your buddy for that? Oh, I was looking at that the other day. Yes. So you guys, this is super important. If you guys don’t have over 85, 82 form, you need to get it.

And we’ll CPA. Typically they withhold that because they don’t want you to run off to another CPA. So the way they keep them keeping you under their collect checks. But but yeah, that, this is what is on your suspended, passive loss. Buckets these investments, rental properties, especially passive private placements in syndication gives you a lot of passive losses the first year that you may not use soft passive income.

So it goes on this 80 to 85 form taxes

of you guys are writing that number down, going to go home control F over taxes. But it is pretty neat to see those passive losses, that, those big numbers, how much do you have? Is it I think I’m like at 130 and that was at the end of 2019. Oh yeah. So who knows? Maybe two 50, 300 now. Yeah.

Yeah. You’re seeing, that is at this point, it’s don’t really need the pay taxes if you don’t choose to. But before we go, let’s talk quickly about real estate professional status. Cause your spouse doesn’t work. She’s working her ass off should help too much with your kids. Not that I’m working from home.

I really see how much work it is. Yeah. What about, so we had talked about this, you’re trying to get real estate professional status to use the passive losses to potentially offset your ordinary income. Income and capital gains on the sales of the rental properties. Yeah. One thing, your guys’ tax bracket is in that pie, right?

Because you took, you opted for their quality of life instead of you kicking more, but at work, getting paid more and for working. So you’re not in a huge tax bracket and I, and if you guys are under. No $330,000 AGI. I wouldn’t really freak out too much about getting that roasted professional status, Texas, but you still have you kinda given up on that, is it not make sense to you now?

Yeah, it doesn’t really make sense. Just trying to get the sheer number of hours to I don’t know. I wouldn’t, I would’ve had her like cold calling people that stuff that we hate to get. Yeah. If you are a doctor, and if only you are a doctor, then it makes sense, but you probably wouldn’t care.

You probably, and I probably wouldn’t be friends, probably wouldn’t care about this stuff, but cool. Anything else or any other stuff for the folks? No, I think it’s just interesting to see, cause we ran through this. Back when I was starting, I put together my little manifesto of what I was going to do, and we had a plan then, things change along the way, but it’s generally going along with what we thought it would be back in 2017.

Yeah. And another person who gets over the one, the two comma club. Yay. I’ll drink a beer tonight. Yeah. Yeah. You like expensive beers. That’s what the movers aren’t taking. I’m taking my boxes of beer in my own car. But but yeah, congratulations moving into the world of a credit status and I think you can agree that it doesn’t feel much different.

It really doesn’t, but happy to make it. Yeah. Now we’ve got to get you to four and a half million. Yeah. Yeah. That’s like graduating high school. So you go to your nephew’s high school graduation and you’re like, yeah, man, that’s nothing like, maybe I might come to your college graduation or when they actually do something in life.

But yeah. That’s getting to accredited. Status is all about that’s true. That is true. But yeah. Thanks for listening guys. If you guys liked this sign up for the investor clubs, we’ll pass the cashflow.com/club. Stuff really works. Real and yeah. Thanks for listening. Like.

Fun Cheapo Ideas w/ Marilyn Anderson

https://youtu.be/JndGlTr6hwI

Hey, simple, passive cashflow listeners. As you guys know, I am a recovering cheapo. I call this cafe style, which stands for cheap-ass free and easy. C a F E. You guys can read all about my cheapo adventures@simplepassivecashflow.com slash cheapo. If you’ve got any good ideas, let me know there, but today’s podcast.

I have Marilyn Anderson who wrote the book, how to live life like a millionaire when you’re a million short and we’re going to be going over seven pretty cool ideas just to get the wheels turning on. These are going to be more towards staying at home since the the pandemic everyone’s not going out to large gathering still.

What I realized is a lot of our audience out there, you guys are pretty affluent make a lot of pretty good money. But you guys are still let’s just call it. You guys like to go after value. When we have our Hawaii mastermind retreat the other year, I don’t think anybody stayed at the Hilton or the Sheraton, the five star resorts.

Everybody stayed in little boutiques or with relatives. So I think today’s content will be right up the alley for most of the listeners. But yeah. Thanks for jumping on and let me put up your book so everybody can go get it at amazon.com. We’ll put it up at the end, but yeah, let’s first thing first.

Seven free things to enrich your life. When you’re staying at home. The first one here is unclaimed property can tell us a little bit about that. There is so much money just sitting and waiting for people to claim that, and it’s like, Money that people never knew that they had, and there’s billions of dollars just sitting.

And if people vote to missing money, thought, Tom, and just fill in their name and the state in which they live their name may pop up and tell them they have money. The other thing it doesn’t have most of the States are there, but some are not. So if not you can go to the state website for wherever you live and putting unclaimed property.

And you should do it not just for yourself, but for your parents, for your siblings. And you may find that you have a lot of money. I told a friend of mine to do this, and he fought me all the way. He said, Oh no, this can’t be real. It must be a spam. And. Texas steady at somebody. So he filled out the forms and he got a letter from them in a couple months saying we’re sending you a check and they still thought it wasn’t real.

He ended up getting a check for $12,000. Now some people make that $10 and make it a hundred dollars. They make the 150. Alison powers, but the point is if people have money, they don’t know they have. So that’s an assignment. I give everyone that I talk to is to go to missing money.com for the state or any state in which you’ve lived with a lot of people these days move around.

So if you’ve moved from one state to another, do it for every single state you’ve lived in, put in your city in your name and also do it for your parents, do it for your siblings. And I bet you’ll find some money there. Nine out of 10 of your listeners will probably find some money. I know I did this at one time for the state website and I did find a little cash there, so yeah.

And just in the time you’re talking, I checked my stuff and I didn’t have anything but likely, cause I cleared my name out a little while ago, but yeah, next one. I’m going to Harvard or yell for free. How do we do that? Especially, a lot of these things, some things were available even before, but a lot of people didn’t know about it.

But there are actually about 5,000 different courses from Harvard, from Dale, from Princeton, from universities, all over the country where you can take classes for free and it can be from anything from computers to religion, to science, to technology. And there’s three places that I will tell you about now.

One is edX. Dot org. And one is coursera.org, and one is class central.com. And as I said, the classes and everything, and they’re free, or if you want a certification, you can pay a small fee, but it’s an opportunity either to just enrich your life, you enjoy or advanced your career, or even change your career.

So those are a couple of places I recommend for that. Yeah. And then now there’s a lot of paid ones, right? Like masterclass or teachable. Yeah, but people should also take advantage of these free courses too. Yeah. And if you guys haven’t checked out, we have a lot of e-courses at simple passive castle.com/ e-course the treeline cars, the new syndication LP course, and the Romo investor course are all on there.

If anybody or their kids wants to take courses in screenwriting, I teach those as well because I’m a TV and film writer. So I teach classes in screenwriting all over the world. Actually, I’m teaching a class next week in South Africa, glide to a broad rate show for free. I know

we had a past episode where my buddy, Matt, he would invest in like Moulin Rouge and Hamilton, but now it’s like one of the biggest, yeah, it’s definitely the biggest Hamilton is definitely the biggest.

Yeah. He invested in that and made a killing, but now the stuff isn’t going too well, everything in show business has been pretty much on hold. And the thing is I talk about in my book actually, how, when theaters are going full force and you could pay. $200 a ticket or in the case of Hamilton, what you said hundreds to $2,000 a ticket.

And I would tell people how to get tickets for twenty-five dollars, where in the case of Hamilton tens hours. But now that there’s a pandemic, actually people can see. All these Broadway shows for free. And that is first of all, if you go to YouTube we’ve just put in Broadway shows. There’s about a hundred different Broadway shows from rent to Moulin Rouge, which you mentioned to Aladdin to frozen the musical.

If they have kids or Mathil the legally blonde, I actually watched it the other day. And not only is it the full Broadway production. I think if you have the lyrics, so you can sing along with it and families love to do this. So one thing is, as I said, YouTube, they have all these great Broadway shows.

And if you’re watching musicals, you can’t feel bad. The other place you can go to Broadway HD and they have newer shows. And of course, Now, if you want to see Hamilton, you can see it with your whole family, just for signing up for Disney plus for one month, which costs eight $99 and 99 cents. Instead of paying, two to $800 to see it.

And it’s you have a front row seat because everything is right there in front of you on your TV screen. Green and it is a play it’s not redone as a movie. It’s actually the play Hamilton. So I definitely recommend that. So once things open up again how do you get $25 seats at one of these life?

When things open up again, there’s all kinds of ways to get discounted tickets. Of course, one way is if you’re in New York to go to the tickets booth, but. A lot of the shows. Now the Broadway shows have what I call lottery tickets. And for instance, Hamilton has lottery tickets for $10. And if you’re lucky enough, it used to be that you had to go to the theater two hours before and they would take the numbers out of a hat, but then they were getting too many people blocking the streets for Hamilton.

So instead they started doing digital lotteries. So for shows like Hamilton and practically every other Broadway show. And this is not just in New York, but we chose travel to your. City. If it had a lot of Rio, New York, there will be a lot of reef in your city. And if you’re lucky enough to win the digital lottery, you can see Hamilton for $10 and sit in the front row.

So that’s one way is as lottery, then there’s rush seats. Then there’s a thing called pay. What you can, a lot of theaters will have a night during the week where they have a pay, what you pad and you can pay. If tickets are normally $60, you can pay. $10. You can pay $5. You could pay $1 and it’s a pay what you can night.

So I have all of those different kinds of things listed. Also of course, people, sometimes people like to usher. If you have kids for instance, and they’re in college or something, not only ushering get them into all the shows for free, but they’ll get to meet the people who are in the shows and you’re doing them.

And if they’re interested in a show, but his career, that’s another way. By the way you mentioned that the guy who invested in Hamilton made a lot of money. If you remember the movie Blair witch project, if you had invested a thousand dollars in Blair witch project, you would have made back $7 million.

Of course that’s not the norm, but that is an example of how people made it with a horror movie, horror movies and thrillers are very big for that. Yeah. A lot of very high risk like just like startups. It’s a very small chance of it blowing up, but when it does, it goes crazy. But I like the idea of magazines. You can get a lot of free magazines because that’s how magazines make revenues. So they can, they send out a lot of free magazines to people, so they can go to their advertisers and say, look at all the subscribers we have, even though they’re fake subscribers. Like buying an apartment in St.

It’s 95% occupied, yet half of the people are paying rent, like it’s just it’s you got to make sure who’s actually paying of course, but yeah, good good stuff to think about. That’s like how Vegas is, right? When you’re walking around the strip, they have all this like wholesalers and outlets.

Is that kinda what they’re doing? Or you got to go direct to that. Vegas, you have all kinds of touristy things going on and whatever, but Hey, so actually, if you’re going to bake this and you want to see a show. For discounts. They’ve got all kinds of discounts available for Vegas shows too. When I do mention that and how to live like a millionaire when you’re a million short, so never pay full price for Vegas shows.

Obviously if you’re a, if you’re a high roller, if you do well at the casino, they’ll give you free passes, but there’s ticket booths. All around Las Vegas to get you into shows for discounts or go online before you go there. And there’s all kinds of discounted tickets for Vegas.

And another thing is people like make this. There are bangs now on your phone. Not only do you get the games for free, but you can win money. And I just put on my phone, which is listening to music, you can make money and they say, you can make $600 a year. Just keeping your phone on this app.

And I keep it low because I don’t listen to the music the whole time, but listening to music, you can make money and there’s all kinds of games. But what they do is. When you’re watching the games, they give you surveys or they give you other things to join if you want, but people are winning money on them.

But again, it’s a question of, do you want this stuff on your phone and, or are you lucky? And a lot of this stuff, it takes a little time, but. For me personally, I enjoy getting a good deal, even though it takes a little time. But yeah. Another thing is, if you like to buy things online, which I am buying a lot of things online now they have these places like rocket dim.

Or capital one shopping or piggy. And all you do is you put it on like your Chrome, where you buy things. And I get a check every single month from Rakuten, from things I’ve already bought. I get rebates. So I’ll get a 20, 30, $40 check every month. And it’s from stuff that I just normally wanted to buy.

Yeah. I’m goofy where I’ll go to Nordstrom and then buy expensive like lunch. Cause it’s they got pretty good food there and drink and I’ll go in there, walk around and see what I want to buy. Look it up on the internet or go to Facebook marketplace and buy it there. So I don’t waste my money on, yeah, you don’t have to buy it there as Nordstrom actually matches price.

So if you find it somewhere else, but you start at Nordstrom. If you ask them they’ll match the price for you. We’re not going to match Facebook marketplace for half of what they match Amazon. And we also the same thing with best buy and staples whenever I go to best buy and staples, which is a lot because I buy all my supplies there.

I will never just go to the checkout and pay the price. I’ll always price match. And even if they say something is on sale, as it mean that it’s not cheaper somewhere else. So whether I’m buying a 30. Dollar toner or a $3,000 computer. I will price match it while I’m there. Or you could ask the clerk to price, match it.

And almost 90% of the time you can find it somewhere else cheaper and they will give you that price. Yeah, such an items for sure. Other things. You’ve got to be careful of probably maybe better to buy a new, but. I don’t know. I just liked the socket dude, Nordstrom. I don’t like those kinds of companies.

I think it’s a waste of money. I had a thousand dollar jacket and I saw it at Nordstrom and I loved it so much, but it was way too expensive. So two of my rules are the first one is make an ask of yourself. In my first role asked, so I asked the sales girl, is this going to go on sale?

And she said probably necessary. I said can you call me when it goes on sale? And the other one is make a friend. So I made friends with her and she would call me every couple of weeks and say, Oh, your jackets on sale, your packets on sale. And so I would say, Oh I have a hundred is still too much in 300, still too much.

So she called me when it went out to 200 and I went in there and I was trying it on and I said could you do any better? She went in the back. She said, I’m giving you the family and friends price, $149. And it was a thousand dollars back then at Nordstrom’s. So she used to call me every time they were like good sales and I want to go in.

And then about a couple months later I went and she was no longer working in the Aaron wondered. Did she get fired because she has good prices. That’s the next one here? Take a virtual tour of foreign countries. Yes. Of course. Because of the pandemic. A lot of us are not able to travel now.

And if you like to travel there’s all kinds of places that you can go actually from the comfort of your own living room. And you could take virtual tourists all around the world. You can see the seven wonders of the world. You can see museums, there’s all different rooms in the loop you can visit virtually out of can city.

Other museums in Mexico city in New Zealand and Australia. What I like to suggest, because we are all stuck at home is if you want to go to a particular place and it could be a place you’re going to go to later, or maybe a place you’d never ever get to, make a plan. Maybe if you take Italy, go to Italy for the day.

Not only do a virtual tour, but make food from Italy and make it a whole day for the family where you have, lasagna for lunch and maybe, and Italian stuff, fish for dinner and boat, all the cities and the. Museums and make it a day and you can learn a lot. The thing is there are also lots of those tours, so you learn a lot and also you don’t have to take the plane.

You don’t have to schlep all that time or spend the money and you can see all these wonderful places around the world that you might not even be able to get to. Once things open up again. Yeah, something along those lines is if you go to wine.com and you search for this, but there’s, they have virtual wine tastings at home.

It’s cool. You got to buy their pack, you just watch the video. There’s a famous one where you get the Bonanza, the conundrum, and then the moneymaker right there. It’s fun. If you’re into that, you don’t need to leave your house splurge a little bit on good wine and your house, not the spend 50 cents on every dollar you drive or travel costs.

So that’s another idea there. my thing is it’s not just about saving money, but it’s about enjoying your life. And just because we are in this situation, we still need to take time. And those moments too, and max, what that’s what I believe. And that’s what had a live like a millionaire when you a million short, does it tells you not only how to save money, but also how to Enjoy every moment of your life to the fullest.

Exactly. I’m going to, into your closet, come out with some cash. No, this is good for people stuck at home, right? Yeah. Or even if you’re not stuck at home, it’s good because, like a lot of it has happened. NGS that we haven’t worn in years. We’re talking about clothes and I’ll start with clothes.

I had like jewelry that people had given me, like when I was 12 years old and it was literally sitting in my closet for decades. So I took it out and there’s a place called real, real.com. And it’s a high level consignment shop. If you put something in an assignment shop or a jewelry shop in your neighborhood, you have to.

Depend on people in the neighborhoods to buy it, but on the real, real.com, they. Publicize it to everyone around the world. So if you have find jewelry or you have designer clothes, the real, and they will either come to your place to get it, or you can do it all through the mail. Other places for things that might not be quite as upscale would be Poshmark or Etsy, you can sell things.

And even Facebook has a lot of marketplace groups where you can buy and sell things. Also, if you have. Of household items that you don’t Need you can go to offer up or next door com and sell them I go to the Emmy gifting suites every year, and I always get these fabulous gifts, a lot of which I don’t use.

So I had this beautiful gift box of. I have different types of honey and yesterday I sold it to somebody on nextdoor.com. I just put it up, Aaron. No, I’m not going to use it. I actually got three different packages. So I give some of them as gifts and some of them myself. So if you have good furniture and you want to try swap it out, this is called cherish.com, but there’s all kinds of ways for you to not only make money, but also

to buy things. If you’re looking to get things for less. And the other thing there’s a group called I nothing and buying nothing is in your local area. And there’s people who were just giving things away and. Sometimes it’s like brand new things that they’re giving away and you don’t have to trade.

You don’t have to do anything. If things you have, or you can take things that other people are gifting. I got a brand new shirt for my boyfriend and it still had the price tag of $150 on it. Somebody was just giving it away. There’s also a lot of furniture. If people give away. I see during the pandemic, a lot of people are getting like big desks because they don’t have their offices anymore.

Or they’re giving dressers or all kinds of furniture, lamps. And I have a girlfriend, actually, you can, of course, paint furniture, fabric. I have a girlfriend who actually painted her sofa. Now. I never knew you could paint, but, and one way of course, to learn how to do all this. Stuff is to go to YouTube.

They have all these, do it, yourself, videos of how to do all kinds of things. At some furniture and make it look brand new and make it look special because you can do it so that you have this only one piece that you’ve created. Yeah. Here in Hawaii, we have like bulky pickup days. It’s when everybody puts their crap out on the street.

I’m excited. When I get my new cyber truck, I can go drive around in the middle of the day and pick up some cool stuff. But yeah, that’s maybe that’s too much information, but Hey, just wipe it down. Make sure it’s it’s virus free. Yeah, and then redo it. I once did a, I had an old chest of drawers and my roommate at the time, she was very creative and she took this fabric of different colors and sheet.

We put the fabric on the chest and it was so beautiful. People wanted to buy it from us for tons of money because it was so incredibly special. So there’s all kinds of things you can do. And I liked those other more co-signer websites. That way it’s a little bit more secure. I do have a story where we sell a lot of stuff on Facebook marketplace and I don’t know what I was selling, but it was like a Bose speaker when I was like a hundred or $200 ones.

And I just never used it. I bought it because I had a gift card and then somebody was like trolling me or something. They’re like, Oh, how’d you get it? I was like I don’t need it. And there, somebody was like, Oh, what are you selling it for? And what the heck do you think I’m selling this thing for?

And then there’s this big troll thread of other people. And I’m like, man, like just people have too much time wasting on social media. Yeah. Yeah. You can’t worry about the patrols. It’s somebody, I have books out. I have used these out and there’s always pros. There’s always.

Even who were jealous, who are going to knock you down. But I have also sold a lot of things on eBay. I’m not like a regular eBay seller, but if I’ve gotten things again from Emmy gifting suites that I don’t want and they’re worth a lot of money, so I’ll put them on eBay. And I’m embarrassed to say I got something from buy nothing, a beautiful pair of Marc Jacobs shoes.

And they were too big for me. So I put them back on my thing because I was going to get them, but nobody wanted them while I put them up on eBay. And the next day they were bought for money. Yeah. That’s how I started with this entrepreneur stuff. I would buy and sell a lot of things on eBay.

I would sell my video games. And I don’t know. Maybe if you guys got kids up there, make a deal with them. If they sell it, do all the work, take all the fees, take it to the post office. Give them like half of the cut. Oh yeah. There are people who did that, I used to have a girl who just sold stuff on.

He ban, I would take our, all my. Because that was much easier and I didn’t have to spend the time doing it. Then there are shops that do it too, but they tend to take bigger commissions, but yeah, you can find a friend or someone that, that does it. That’s the easiest way.

Yeah. My wife likes to do that. She likes to waste her time doing this stuff. So sell stuff for her friends. And I think the deal that she has is she takes a 10% cut, but she sends up wasting so much time. Yeah. 10%. I’ll send my stuff to her. I know. Yeah. It drives me crazy. Absolutely crazy.

But cool. Last one here. Get furniture, household items for free. I think we talked about this, but any other. Sites to go to try. Oh yeah. I can tell you for medical procedures or for prescriptions I’ve found sometimes that has lower prices and in copay, and if you go to good rx.com, that’s a good place for checking how much prescriptions would cost at different.

Pharmacies in your neighborhood and sometimes it’s even lower than the pasta with your copays. The other thing is like I went to a periodontist, my dentist had been telling me for years, I needed to have a periodontist appointment and he wanted to do gum flap surgery, which would mean cutting the gums and then grafting from the top of my mouth.

And he said, Oh, it only cost $10,000. And I said, it’s $10,000 and cutting my time. And should I make an appointment? So I said give me some time. And I went home and I thought, what would the author of this book too? And so I went online and I looked for alternative procedures to go to flap surgery.

And I found that there was an alternative called LANAP and there was no cutting, no pain, no recovery. And it was about half the cost of the other. But I went further. I found the place that was about 30 miles away from LA, where I live and they was called millennium dental, and they actually trained dentist and periodontist all over the country to switch to this procedure.

So it wasn’t. Students, but it was actual dentists and periodontists. Who’d been in practice for 10 or 20 years. And this company, they were looking for volunteers. So I went there and I got the LANAP. I had no pain, no cutting, no grafting and no $10,000. I got it free. And I got a girlfriend of mine and for free plus, we got our cleanings free for the next year.

So sometimes if somebody gives you a high price, even if it’s a medical or dental procedure, or if you don’t want to do, you can actually negotiate with some doctors and say I don’t want to pay that to you have to be cheaper. Or sometimes you can offer to if they’re putting a video when their website, you can make a deal.

I’ll let you video me for whenever I’ve looked for alternatives because for instance, rhinoplasty is another one nose job can cost like from 15 to $20,000, but you can get a. 15 minute nose, job that has no pain, no recovery and no surgery. You come out looking better and it’s like a thousand instead of 20,000.

So there’s different ways you can find whether it’s an elective procedure or something like at my periodontist where they said, you must get this and they don’t tell you about the other thing, because they personally don’t do it. And take the difference and go blow it on something else. A Vegas, right? Another thing I was thinking of I, yeah, I had a rock stuck in my tire for the longest time. So I took it to Mercedes and they said I needed a new like wheel or something or new tire. And if they’re going to charge me like several hundred bucks and I was like, are you kidding me?

So I just went to Les Schwab. Down in the shady part of town and they fixed it for I called them and they’re like, Oh, it’s going to be like 29, 99. But of course, when I get down there, they see it’s a freaking Mercedes and they charged me like 60 bucks. But Hey, lot cheaper than buying a brand new tire.

That’s just ridiculous. But of course everything we’re saying here is a little, you don’t be a bonehead. Some of these things like meeting random people on Facebook marketplace be safe about it. Absolutely. Another thing that when things open back up again, I another thing I talk about in my book, one of my favorite tips used to be how you can get a vacation at a four star resort in Spain for six nights for free.

And people would say, how can you do that? And there’s actually a in town that if you’re a native English speaking person, they have four different resorts outside of Madrid and they will host you for six nights with all accommodations, all meals, activities, and why they want you. There is they have Spanish business, people who want to practice their conversational English.

And so the resort hosts. People, whether it’s from England or the United States or South Africa or Australia, but any English speaking people, and all you have to do is enjoy breakfast, lunch, and dinner and activities and pop. And people say, like I say I don’t speak Spanish. And the thing is you’re not allowed to speak Spanish.

She could only speak English. And I have a couple of friends who went and they said it was the best vacation it ever had in their lives. And some people loved it so much that we go back 15 times. So that’s another thing when things open up that I highly recommend. Yes, that’s on that one actually sounds pretty fun.

I do have an experience of my own going and do the Groupon China tour. Which I thought was a complete waste of time. I’ll never do again, but yeah, on Groupon, which also by the way, also does they fill seats at concerts. I’ve done that a bunch of times, but so Groupon has these like international tours and I don’t know if different countries are like this, but I know China’s like this, you go on there and it’s they even pay your airfare.

And it’s like a couple of thousand dollars, but it’s like a five or 10 day trip. It’s all meals, it’s five star hotels, but there’s always the catch. And the catch is that you’re pretty much captive to these like tour buses and then take you to a couple of these boring factory tours where you’re forced to buy stuff and you’re not forced to, but you’re just a time suck.

Thank you to the glass Floyd museum. They take you to the needlework museum. They take you to this clay museum to all, to like by seven years and you’re captive. So it was funny. There was like 20 people in the tour and there’s always four people or 20% of the group there.

they realize what’s happening. And they’re like, screw this. We’re out of here. This Texas, the hotel. We’ll figure it out, but yeah. Be aware of the the Groupon China tour. I use Groupon a lot for restaurants and also for my hair and stuff, but yeah. I still use it.

Now, when all the restaurants in LA are closed, even for outdoor dining, they were open for a while, but okay. Group bonds and use them for takeout now, but group bonds, I tell people don’t even buy the group regularly. Wait, so cause they always have sales for 20% off or 10% discount. So I wait.

So the sales and then I at discounts on my discounts and there’s also restaurants.com. That’s in, every year. City practically well, in the States, I don’t know whether it’s across the world, but there’s 18,000 restaurants where you can get restaurant Factom coupons. And so I use those too, but great restaurants I’ve used that before.

Like you said, you got to wait until the Groupon or the restaurant.com goes on sale, which happens. Most of the time, there’s always like a, I don’t know what it is. 35 or 50%. That’s the magic number, but yeah. Yeah. I wait for the restaurant coupons. Usually they’re like $10 for $25 certificate and they often go down to $5 or $4, but I’ll wait until they go down to $2 or $1 for $25 certificate.

And then I’ll on them at the restaurants that I like. So I’m getting a $25 certificate for a dollar. And then when you go, you have to spend 50. So you’re getting a, $50 meal for say 25, $26. So then it’s worth it. So I’ll one up you right there. You also run it through like Mr.

rebates.com or the Raku con. And they even will usually give you a 20% cash back on those. Coupons. So I’ve gotten it down to a dollar 40 cents for a $25 gift card. They pay you to go. I like it. I don’t do this anymore. Cause I think it starts to be a little waste of time and. Not all the restaurants are that great.

That’s why they’re on the damn thing in the first place. But yeah, like you would, I would buy them in like in 10 packs. You can buy them in five or 10 pounds. Here’s another thing too. There’s a couple of services. One is perfectly Frank and another one is I’m trying to remember the name of it, but they’ll actually pay you to go out to dinner or.

A restaurant club and what it is, you should have a mystery shopper. And I don’t do the mystery shopping thing where you have to go to a gas station or you have to go to target. But on the food ones, if you sign up for upscale restaurants, I have a girlfriend who’s been doing this for seven years and they’ll pay her to go to dinner at the peninsula hotel.

So they’ll pay for her dinner. And then she comes home and she goes out a questionnaire and then they’ll pay her like $60 or $200. Oh, she’s gotten to go to dinner with a friend at a big hotel or a fancy nightspot. So those are fun too. When things open up again, I got a question on that rush rushed on.com thing.

Like my big beef with that is you actually had to go sit down and dine in which now you’re cutting into my T I M E D. Now with the whole pandemic, they allow you to take out now. Yes. Oh, I’m on this. Yeah. I guess it depends where you live in LA everything is closed for any kind of indoor or outdoor dining.

And they want you to take out because the restaurants are failing now. So yeah. I’m using them for for take out. Yeah. And it helps them get their churn, to get people in and out buying stuff. Yeah. I use them all the time. The other thing I do is I go to happy hours.

Cause this is like Ruth, Chris. A lot of expensive restaurants in your neighborhood. If you go to there for dinner, you have two people. It’ll cost you a hundred bucks, but if you go for happy hour, you still get the ambience and the food. And some of them have really nice. Appetizers are like Ruth, Chris has steak sandwiches, burgers and fries, lobster tacos things that are substantial and you can get out of there for $25 instead of, a hundred dollars a person.

Cool. Cool. Yeah, once you drop you out so people can find you and also make sure folks did check out marlon’s book on Amazon, how to live with a millionaire when you’re a million short,

a millionaire.com. Oh, appreciate for coming on the podcast and like again, everybody be safe with this stuff. Don’t be a bonehead, but Yeah, hopefully you save some money and, take the money and put it right back into the economy somewhere else and have some fun. We’ll see you guys next time, but thanks so much

How Do You Want to Be Remembered?

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

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

Maybe it’s somebody that I really do work at. Setting up engagements and having other points of contact. How do I want to be remembered? And it doesn’t matter if you’re an introvert or not. Actually, I used to be much more of an introvert than I am today. I would stand back and observe and watch people and it took practice.

All I had to do was learn some skills, practice those skills. And it became much easier. And once I understood the why does it really matter? Why does it really matter? What’s Hey, to all of us say what’s in it for me, but what’s in it for us in creating those connections. And for me, when I go into a networking event, I’m always looking reign for, do I really see others?

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

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

The New Great Depression w/ James Rickards

https://youtu.be/4eVAskRng9Q

Today. We have James Rickards here, author of the new great depression. Check it out on Amazon. It should be out now, but let’s dig right into it because a lot of you guys know who James is and he writes a lot about, bat girl economies. And I thought bringing him on would be a great way to get a little bit of different contexts or different viewpoint on things too.

When you’re reading headlines, how do you take it in? But I guess James, let’s start off with you’re saying that we are in the new great depression. If you can explain that to us. Sure. It’s important to understand the distinction land between a recession and a depression.

A recession has a kind of a technical quantitative definition. It’s two consecutive quarters of declining GDP. There are a few other bells and whistles involving employment, so forth, but two consecutive quarters of declining GDP is a good rule of thumb. There’s actually a body that determines that it’s a national Bureau of economic research in Cambridge.

So the, they call the Boston strikes on recessions. They tell you when to start it when it ended, they said, pardon me? That this recession began in February, , 2020 . I think that’s correct. They haven’t said it’s over, but we can look at the data and. Pretty much see that it was over by probably July a third quarter growth was very strong, not strong enough to get us out of the hole we had fallen into, but but strong enough to end a recession.

Depression is different. Depressions are much more long lasting and people incorrectly assume that well, Jay, if a recession is two quarters of declining GDP depression is versus depression must be 10 quarters of declining GDP, like a really long recession. And that’s not the definition of depression.

Is you can have growth in a depression, but the point is it’s depressed growth. In other words, it’s growth below trend. For example, take the expansion from ten-year expansion from 2009 to 2019. The economy grew for 10 years. It was the longest expansion in us history, but it was also the weakest expansion in us history.

Average annual growth was about 2.2%. And all recessions are all recovery since 1980 average growth was 3.2%. So in other words, you were growing at a full percentage point less. Than the trend. And so it’s that below trend growth, depressed growth relative to trend. That’s what makes the depression.

That’s what we’re in now. So we had growth in the third quarter. That’s fine. We’ll probably have growth in the fourth quarter, although the data is that they keep revising the data downwards. So that target gets smaller for the full year to 2020. It’s going to be one of the Weakest year as largest negative growth, largest drop in GDP ever recorded.

The question is where are we now? My view is when a second technical recession in. The depression, by the way, this happened in the original great depression from 1929 to 1940, there were two technical recessions. There was a recession from 1929 to very severe. And then there was growth in 1933. It was one of the best years in the stock market.

34, 35, 36. We had growth. But the problem was we had dug such a deep hole. That even with growth, you weren’t back to where you were. So in 1934 or 35, unemployment fell from 25% to 14%. That’s sounds good. Except it’s still 14%. In other words, it’s still so extraordinarily high. And then 1937 38, we had a second recession and that’s what prolonged it and turned it into the great depression.

We’re going through something similar right now. I would we’re going to have a recession. In the first quarter of 2021, the quarter we’re in right now this will be what they call back-to-back recession. We had a recession and pretty much the first half of 2020 and a newest session beginning in the first quarter, at least of 2021.

All in the context of a great depression. So I focus on the depression aspect of it. You can have growth, you can have declining unemployment. There are certainly investment opportunities, but you’re looking at the press growth. You’re looking at prolonged period change behavior. We’re not going to get back to normal or there’s forget about normal.

We’ll live through it. We’ll cut out the other side, but things will be permanently different and that. Affects all kinds of expectations about growth asset allocation. And that’s really what I focus on in the book hit some of these COVID questions here at the end, cause that’s a little bit more of the micro cycle, right?

What we’re talking about today is more of a longer time horizon. So just to understand it correctly, from my perspective, you’re saying depression is you can still have growth. In a depression, but it’s just not at the pace of 3%, 4%, 5%. Correct is depressed growth in other words, right? One, 1%, 2% a year over five, 10 years, that can still be in the technical term, but depression is what I’m understanding.

That’s right. But again got to go back to the 2009, 2019 recovery ten-year recovery. And I said growth was 2.2% trend growth. Prior to that, going back to 1980, it was 3.2%. If you want to go back to the end of world war two, it was more like 4.2%. So that’s the kind of goes, so you say Jay, 2.2, 3.2 it’s only one percentage point.

What’s the big deal. No one percentage point apply to a $20 trillion economy. Compounded over 10 years, that has up to four to $5 trillion in lost wealth. In other words, yeah, we had an expansion, but it would have been $4 trillion greater. There would have been $4 trillion more wealth created. If we had been able to get back to 3.2% at which we did not The same thing is true today.

So yeah, you had growth. The numbers are in the first quarter, going back to 20, 21st, first quarter, GDP was down about 5%, second quarter down about 31%. And the third quarter, it was up about 33% and people go well, okay. We went down 31%. We went up 33%. Aren’t we back where we started? The answer is no, because the 33% was applied.

To a much lower base. In other words, if you start the year at a hundred, say 2019, is your baseline. Just call it a hundred percent of 2019. You go down 5%. And then you get down 32%. Now you’re around 67% of the old baseline. So even if you go up, let’s say 30% or a little higher at 32% that only gets you back to 87.

It gets you to 20 points. You get us back to 87. You’re still. 13 points below 13 percentage points below the old trend. And even if we have say 10% growth in the fourth quarter, which is some estimates show, okay, that gets you another eight points, but you’re still back to 95. In other words, you’re still.

Below 2019 baseline growth. We’re not going to get back to 2019 levels of growth until 2023 at the earliest. We’re not going to get back to 2019 employment levels in terms of total jobs until 2025 at the earliest that’s if nothing goes wrong in the meantime but I expect a number of things would go wrong, including a new recession right now.

Lot of people don’t know lane Yeah. They know that the stock market peaked in a night, October, 1929, and it crashed 89.2% by 1932. So almost 90%. That’s what a real market crash looks like. And then you ask people when did they get back to the 1929 level? When did it get back to the old high and people go, Oh, it must’ve been late thirties, early forties.

No, it was 1954 and it took 25 years. To get back to the old high, the Nikkei index in Japan hit 40,000 in 1989. It’s still not there. That’s, be able to talk about the last decade. We’ll try three last decades. Here we are 30, over 30 years later and it’s still nowhere near the old high.

And so that’s, I would say Japan has been in a depression the whole time. So that’s what depression is look like. They’re multi-year, they’re actually intergenerational You can have growth, but it’s not try and growth and it’s not enough to overcome the damage that was done. So we’re still way below, even with growth in the third and fourth quarters, we’re still well below the 2019 base.

And we’re not going to get to that level for several years, at least. So I think a lot of people understand this as, if you have your stocks drop a bunch where it’s going to almost have to come up twice as much to get to where you were, that phenomenon with numbers. And then you also mentioned something there too.

I think a lot of us, we understand what’s going on in Japan the last decades. Do they have negative GDP growth or is that kind of what you’re alluding towards that you. The U S is going towards, they have both I think the U S is going to resemble Japan. I think it has resembled Japan since 2007.

Going back before the global financial crisis, but I think that will continue. So just use Japan as example, I said during the 30 year depression, which they are, they’ve had a series of technical recessions. Now the recession might last. Six months, nine months a year, sometimes longer.

And then they have growth, but they never get back to trend growth. They never get back to the old level. That’s my point, not Japan’s nitrous in place. And I had a conversation with. He was known in 19 years and said, Mr. Yan, he was the assistant finance minister of Japan. But I was talking to him about this.

So we’re in Korea, about exactly what we’re discussing now, which is that Japan is growth has been very weak within and out of recession with a prolonged depression, but some growth along the way. And he said, yes, but you have to understand that the population is declining. So , if you calculate Japan on a per capita basis, They were actually doing better than on an absolute basis.

Absolute growth has been very weak, but if you spread that growth with a much smaller population, the per capita numbers, they’re actually significantly higher and which is true, just, fifth grade math

so where are you? Ended up as one person knows the whole country and he’s the richest guy in the world? That’s the deal ad absurdum of what he was describing. He was technically correct, but is that doesn’t work in the market? May our population is increasing we’re a country that likes growth.

We like both at the individual level and at the national level. So the idea that we could be satisfied with we growth in a declining population is just, it’s just not going to happen. Could be inappropriate long bout of weed growth. And then the policy question as well.

How do you change that? How do you get out of that? How do you deal with it? Yeah. So if you guys haven’t heard of this term of, changing worlds, demographics, aging, and birth I think that was in. Mr. Rickards last book. She just want to check that out, but definitely a big impact too.

So America’s population is growing. Barely, it’s funny looking at it as a great question. You look around the world. Japan’s population is declining. Russia is declining. Europe is declining. China is flat, but they’re approaching a level where they’re they’re not going to be at replacement levels.

Chris, this is the legacy of the one child policy, which is, we don’t have to do a deep dive on that, but that was one of the great plungers of history and aging rapidly. So Japan is flatline now until recently. United States population had been growing not at a high rate, but faster than all those other countries.

I mentioned mainly because of immigration , the natural birth rate of people in the country was not much better than Europe is at, or slightly below replacement level, but we had enough immigration to increase the population, but pardon me, partly because of policies during the Trump administration that immigration has been truncated.

So we may now be closer to a flat shall we say a population growth. And of course that, that affects output. There are lots of ways to think about GDP, the four part definition consumption investment government spending and net exports. But there’s an even simpler way to think about it.

It get to the same place, which is how many people were working and how productive are they? It’s working population times productivity. Productivity has been flattish, not very strong for reasons that are not entirely well understood, but it’s just the case. And population growth. Here, we’re talking about the labor force not the total number of people, from coast to coast, but how many people are in the labor force that labor force participation has been declining and fell very sharply during the technical recession that we had , in 2020.

If your population’s declining and your productivity is declining, your GDP is not growing very much at all. That is the situation we’re facing in the United States. And also like the way they keep those statistics on who unemployment has been changing to make it look rosier than it really is.

Yes. But I would say there’s another statistic, which is more important, which is labor force, the labor force participation rate, which is down around 61% now. But as recently as the 1990s, early two thousands, it was around 67%. So that’s a six and a half point decline or 10% decline if you think of it as a percentage of the whole that’s a big deal.

That number is the lowest. It has been since the 1970s, when women first started coming into the workforce in large numbers. Now, if you don’t have a job. But you’re not looking for a job. You’re actually not counted as unemployed. The unemployment number we saw and yeah, declined from it was hit about 13% last spring.

It came down to 10 . Now it’s around a seven or so, maybe slightly higher. That’s still high, but it’s a significant improvement over where it was last April, let’s say, but that’s not the number that matters. The number that matters is labor force participation. So what’s happened is.

Tens of millions of Americans have, I’ve left the workforce there and I’m talking to ages 25 to 54. I’m not talking about, a 68 year old who wants to keep working or a teenager, or we’re not talking about disabled. There are perfectly good reasons for people not to be in the workforce.

There are always some, but. We’re talking about able-bodied individuals between the ages of 25 and 54 prime working ages who have left the workforce. If you’re not, banging on the door of the unemployment office is looking for a job. They don’t count, it was unemployed but you’re not working and you’re not producing.

And so I look at that number because to me it’s a better gauge of economic growth

displayed right here. So that’s just simply Google and the labor force participation rate. Kept up by the U S Bureau of labor statistics. And is this pretty much it, this is what makes it hard, right? Cause everybody hears the news headlines and we know they’re always just trying to sell news headline, just like other talking about how collections are horrible, but I don’t see any of that issue happening.

In other words saying that unemployment’s down, but is this really the way they cut through that noise? Yeah. This is a more manual chart than the unemployment rate. Again this is the labor force participation rate. Now you notice you’re heard a lot of talk and last March, April may, about the V-shaped recovery and pent up demand and all that.

And you look at that chart and look at labor force participation while you see the steep decline at the time of the pandemic. Okay. Got it. It came back, but that’s not a B that’s like a half a B in other words, the bounce now it’s flat and going down again. So yeah, you had a little bit of a bounce back.

That was to be expected after the, we got through the original round of lockdowns in in may, in June, she had that bounce back. But then it flat lines and now it’s going down again. And that’s consistent with what I said earlier, which is we’re heading back into another recession right now. Because there’s a new round of lockdowns.

You don’t need a PhD to figure this out. You locked down half the economy, you’re going to get a reception. It’s as simple as that. And the other thing lane is that People go, Oh, the stock market’s at all time highs, my 401k is back where it was or even better, et cetera. There is a major disjoint, if you will, between the stock market indices and the health of the economy, you have stock markets who are back to all time highs, but I look at the S and P 500 and I call it the S and P six, or maybe S and P seven, if you want to count Tesla now.

And that was the S and P 500 is the cap weighted index. That means if you have a larger market capitalization, you count for more, in the index itself? 40% of the index is a Dell seven stocks and you know what they are, it’s, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Netflix, Apple, and now you can throw in Tesla and maybe one or two others, and they’re the ones going up.

They’re the ones that least affected by the pandemic. They’re overwhelmingly digital. Okay. Amazon owns whole foods and Apple has some showroom type stores. But not much, mostly they’re online and they’re selling digital products and advertising and data mining, et cetera. So they were not only unaffected by the pandemic, but did better because that was the only place people could shop or communicate.

But what about the S and P 490? What about the other stocks in the S and P 500? Have a look. They’re all the kind of flat to down there. Yeah. There’s some individual cases that have gone up, but on average they’re flat to down. So we’ve bet our whole economy on so there’s six or seven stocks.

So there’s no. Relationship between how the stock market and the seas are doing and how the economy is doing. When we get back to the economy who suffered the most and who continues to suffer the most small and medium size enterprises. So restaurants, bars, nail salons, dry cleaners Boutique shopping on and on.

There’s a long list and people look down their nose at that and they go, Oh, you’re a small business who cares? You’re not Apple, computer, whatever, sorry. Those small businesses are 45% of GDP and 50% of all jobs. That’s half the economy right there. If you crush it, you’re going to crush the economy.

I don’t care where Apple stock goes. It’ll, I’m not going to short it’ll probably go up more, but you’ve crushed and destroyed half the economy. And we’re doing it again with the new outbreak in COVID cases and fatalities, which are actually higher. Then they were less March and April when everyone thought the world was coming to an end, it’s worse right now with this second wave and it may get even worse because some of the new variants or strange, or whatever you want to call it, it’s not clear that they will be controlled by the vaccine, even if they are.

It’s not clear that the virus won’t mutate further. To escape the vaccine, they call it mutation as escape or the immunity escape. In other words, the idea is that the virus first of all, the scientists and I’m a sheriff is alive or not. I talked about that in the book.

It’s a it’s something, it’s got some RNA in it. It’s got a shell and it exists. We can see it under electron microscope. It’s not clear that it’s alive, but it’s really good. At replicating a cell by taking over cells and cell infection spread. Now, if you create antibodies to the virus, so you can get antibodies through a vaccine and you get hit with a virus, your body can fight back.

That’s what vaccines do. But so the virus think of the virus is trying to survive, right? It, all of a sudden more and more people have the vaccine more and more people have immunity get close to her, to immunity. The virus has nowhere to go. Every time it jumps from one body to the next, it runs into the antibodies.

Or as I say, the vaccine or whatever what does it do? It mutates in ways that do an Enron around those particular antibodies, you need new vaccines, new antibodies to stop it. This is just how viruses behave. It’s been true throughout history. It’s why you get these second waves or in our case remain.

B heading for third wave. So this pandemic is far from over, right? The vaccines. Great. That nice job. The pharmaceutical companies, the Trump administration did a great job of funding it and getting bureaucratic roadblocks out of the way. And it was in redundant record time for something of this magnitude.

That’s all to the good, but it doesn’t mean it’s over because we actually already, with this new UK, South African. Strain or variant could be saying the virus like Houdini escaping from the existing antibodies and finding new ways to infect people. So I want to go back to wrapping up the depression discussion.

So you, you mentioned productivity and the percent of. Labor force participation rate. What is the cause of that? I don’t know if you can speculate. Maybe it doesn’t matter, but what do you think is the general cause of that? Is this people lazier these days or, no, there are a couple of causes.

One is demographics, as I said, the populations aging and not expanding as fast as it used to so that some of it’s demographic people get to retirement as, no reason you can’t work it. 68 years old. Bernie Sanders has gone strong and he’s just getting close to 80. But the point being that is a time when people retire and check out, then the workforce has to decline and you don’t have as many younger people entering the workforce.

You have millennials now gen Z is coming along, but I’m not quite at that replacement level, but that’s not the only factor. The other factor is Because so many jobs have been moved to China and elsewhere, it’s not just China, but China’s probably the biggest culprit. Where are the the mining jobs, the steel jobs, the assembly line jobs, the skilled craftspeople, et cetera.

You don’t need a nothing wrong with college, but you don’t need a college degree to. To work on assembly line. You need some training and some smarts but yeah, jobs are largely gone. And what have we done replacing them with? We’re replacing them with, the gig economy, barista, Sarah, and by the way, there’s dignity in all work.

There’s not nothing, wrong with being a barista, good for you or an Uber driver, but those jobs don’t have the benefits and the pay scales and the security that we’re talking about. So a lot of people just drop out of the workforce. Drug use is going up. Obesity is a problem.

Diabetes is a problem. A lot of areas are just totally depressed. There aren’t any jobs around people don’t have the resources to necessarily pick up and move. I remember the 1980s, there was a migration from Detroit to Dallas. People just got to you all and moved to Texas and got another job. That’s harder to do now.

Not just the question, having the resources, there are plenty of jobs in Austin, but they’re the high-tech jobs. You do need an engineering degree or something like that to jump on board there. The quality of the jobs the lost opportunities, the depressed area, drug addiction, demographics, all these things come together and people just say, you know what?

I’ll sit on the couch in front of my wide screen TV and watch a football game and maybe. A relative as a job or someone else is paying the rent or you got some a government check or something, but it sounded long-term solution. And that’s part of what we’re going through.

I’ve heard that there is immigration still coming into America and that’s a lot of the blue collar workforce coming in. And a lot of markets there are new. Assembly, plants opening up, Mazda and Huntsville, stuff like that. But , you think it’s more of a paradigm between the coastal markets and more Southern Southeastern States, Florida?

Is there a different between, people moving out of California or no jobs in California. I know homelessness is really bad out there in Washington and a lot of other cities. Yeah. When you talk about immigration, that mean there are two completely different kinds of immigration going on.

There’s legal immigration with, an H1B visa or some other visas. And yeah, if you’re an engineer from India, come on and you’ll get hired, before you’re off the plane. But that’s okay. A limited number. And those aren’t really creating jobs for Americans or creating jobs for Indians who got an engineering degree, but that’s relatively small compared to the whole, most of the immigration is the opposite.

They’re, coming through the Mexican border. They’re pretty much impoverished. And then they’re not all Mexicans, by the way, they’re from Guatemala and El Salvador and Nicaragua, and actually all over the world. If you can get to Mexico, you can probably get into the United States.

Those people are not getting jobs in Huntsville. They’re they’re either dependent on the state or, yeah. Okay. Landscaping jobs waitress jobs maybe babysitters, et cetera. And again, let me be clear. There’s dignity in all work. So I’m not sure. Disparaging prefer illegal immigration.

I’m not disparaging people who do what they have to do for themselves or their families. And I’m not disparaging that type of work. What I’m saying is that those jobs do not have high salaries. They do not have benefits. They’re not going to lead to a particularly a high growth or higher consumption. Maybe in the next generation, that’s fine but not now.

So moving on to the COVID 19, which we know we’re moving into 2021. Where were we? About half time, first quarter. How do you see this playing out this year? The pandemic is getting worse and it may get worse than that depending on how the mutations go, which are unpredictable while lot mutations mean nothing.

They’re like right. A couple sequences change, but it didn’t really change the behavior of the virus and the vaccines still works, et cetera. Some mutations are favorable in the sense that the virus gets less contagious and eventually it can fail entirely. Those are possibilities. The history of pandemics is that in most cases, not all, but the most that the mutations actually get worse.

And then the classic example of that was the Spanish grow which by the way, lasted for three years and especially in 1918. Okay. But it was very bad, 19, 19 and continued into 1920. So that was really spread over three years. And the first way it was kind of March April 1918, which was horrific, but then it seemed to go away in the summer.

July, August, September were much better. It came back with a vengeance in October, 1918, and most of the fatalities were in that October, November, December. 1918 period, and then it faded again. They came back for third way of 19, 19, not as bad. So the, and that’s true of the Hong Kong flu in 1958. And the several other flu epidemics we’ve had recently.

And I COVID is not the flu. It’s a coronavirus, but some of the mutation dynamics are the same. So the point is the place you don’t know, nobody can sit here today and predict. What will happen exactly, but history and biology and virology suggest that, mutations that, as I say, do this immunity, escape that I talked about earlier can make it a lot worse and we seem to be seeing something like that right now.

But even if we don’t, even if. The vaccines where the mutations don’t get worse in this phase, over the course of 2021, it’s going to take a year by the way at best. It doesn’t mean the economy comes roaring back this whole notion. You’re Larry Kudlow and everyone else talking to me. And last April may is I guess, bad right now we’re locked down.

But we’re at least there’s pent up demand. Where the economy is going to come roaring back. As soon as we get through this and a lot of the policy decisions in March and April were based on the fact that we’d be able to remove the lockdowns by July and August. And they were expecting as they say, pent up demand, but that’s not true.

For example My wife and I, we were locked down kinda quarantined like everybody else in March, April and may. And usually we go out to dinner on a Friday night, but we didn’t because we were locked down. Eventually in June, the restaurants opened up and my wife and I went out to dinner.

We didn’t order 10 dinners. We ordered one. And as if we had skipped nine weeks of dinners and then went out, we ordered one dinner. Those other nine were permanently lost. That was not a temporary loss. That was not a timing difference. That was a permanently lost income permanently lost revenue, besides which when a restaurant let’s say had 20, the waiters and cooks and maitre D whatever, and you shut down.

And then you reopened in the summer. You didn’t hire back 20 hard back 10 maybe because capacity was reduced. People still weren’t going out, et cetera. That’s if you even reopened at all, a lot of small businesses did not reopen those. Those losses are permanent. Again, I’m not talking about Apple computer, I’m talking about.

The other half of the economy, which is small and medium size enterprises. And there’s data on all this. I’m not just speculating, and this is all in my book. By the way, in the book it’s got 200 end notes. So you might want to buy it just for the endnotes alone, because I I researched everything.

I read over a hundred peer reviewed papers, and I should more than that. And and all the citations are there. So if I’m saying something, I tell the reader, don’t argue with me, argue with scientists. Cause they’re all footnoted and you can look at the source papers, but we have data on all this.

Now we didn’t have as much data. In may and June when I was writing a lot of the book, but then the publication date got pushed back a little bit because of supply chain problems actually in the printing industry. But that gave me an opportunity to freshen it up in September, even as late as October.

So we have the most recent data and it shows what I’m describing. This is a mess migration. Out of New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, and a few other cities. And the people are going to, Phoenix, Scottsdale, Miami, Nashville, Portsmouth, New Hampshire Boulder, Colorado, Denver, and a few other places.

And part of the reason is climate’s nice, but there are jobs there, but the taxes and the crime, you didn’t have the kind of rioting and destruction that you saw in New York and Seattle and Portland you don’t see that in Phoenix and some of the other cities I mentioned or Miami for that matter.

So whether it’s high crime, high taxes, density, functions, lost jobs or whatever, there is this massive migration, which is interesting because. In certain sectors, residential real estate is doing extremely well. Usually residential and commercial kind of move together based on interest rates and economic cycles.

They can go up together or down together in a recession. But right now there’s is a bifurcation residential real estate in the destination, cities and suburbs is going up very strongly. Commercial real estate is nowhere near the bottom. It’s just going to get worse. At least through 2021, probably even longer.

veteran, you mentioned in your past book the move towards the urban Exodus. I like that idea. That’s why we try and stay out of the city core out to the more suburbs investing in those multi-families out there. And I think, with the pandemic, I don’t know if you want to expand anymore, the big cities are mostly blue.

Mostly bird moving up to the red States any other kind of newer developments on that? That’s, I don’t really I don’t really get into politics. I say in the book, the virus is not a Republican or a Democrat. The virus just wants to kill you. So the virus, you need to understand epidemiology and virology and what’s going on, but yeah.

It by itself. It’s not political. Now you can politicize it if you want to. And a lot of people have but I would simply make the point that the reason commercial real estate is down. Across the board, even in stronger cities like Miami and Phoenix, that’s suffering. And clearly the exit of cities as I call them New York and Seattle and others is suffering even more.

A lot of that has to do some of it has to do with crime in the streets and the mayors and all that. Yes. But a lot of it has to do with the work from home environment, which very few large companies would have said. No two years ago, Hey, I think everybody can work from home. We’ll figure it out. We’ll get some software or whatever nobody was saying that but in the pandemic and the shutdown last March, they had no choice.

You had to work from home, because of the lockdown, it turns out it worked pretty well. There are pros and cons. We all get a little tired of living on zoom, a little bit. Personal contact is socializing is a good thing for your mental health, but that aside from a purely business point of view, the work from home model still works.

So if you had 10 floors of a, Midtown office building prime location in New York, And they’re vacant because everyone’s working from home. You’re not going to go back to 10 floors. You might go back to two floors. You might have a locker room. Not like we had in high school, but yeah, a nice facility with a lot of attractive office space where people can basically reserve the office.

So you’re working for him. You call up say, Hey, I need an office and a conference room two days next week. And you book it as yours. You come in, you open your locker, there’s a laptop and a sport coat and a tie or whatever you need. Nice scarf. And you go sit in the office and you do your business, and then you go back and work from home.

If that’s the environment where everyone, it’s not quite like a, it’s a kind of office Sharon, but it’s not, we works in the sense that everyone’s crammed in together. You could have a nice facility, but if it’s always temporary and always rolling over. You only need two floors instead of 10 floors.

So first of all, that’s slams the landlord, but the ripple effects are huge because it’s not just that it’s okay, what about commutation? What about public transportation, food trucks, restaurants, cleaning staff, maintenance, staff shopping is so all the things that surround people coming to cities and working in fairly dense environments, that’s down 80%.

And it’s not coming back because the model’s not coming back. We’re a long way from the bottom. I understand what the stock market’s doing. I would say again, B seven, not the S and P 500 and query whether that’s a bubble, I don’t want to go short Tesla right now. You probably get the getting run over by an 18 Wheeler, but I don’t want to buy it either because I do see it as a bubble, something that’s going to reverse fairly.

Severely wants this new stage, two of the recession sinks in, but again, commercial real estate and small and medium sized enterprises, including a lot of retail, which has half the economy have been slammed and are not coming back quickly. So our listener base is pretty smart.

They don’t just read general headlines on, people are moving out of the cities. They understand somewhere in the pilot, there is an emerging market out there that is doing better than the rest. Any particular emerging markets in America that you like or. Yeah. As I said, we already talked about residential real estate and the target cities, I would say again, Nashville, Miami, Phoenix, and others as attractive 10-year treasury notes are set to rally and we’re probably going to get to a negative yield to maturity and yield matured in a 10 year note is set by secondary market trading.

So that has nothing to do directly with the fed funds policy rate, which is Yeah, with basically an overnight rate. The fed can stay at zero, not go negative in terms of the policy rate, but there’s nothing stopping 10-year treasury notes from having a negative yield of maturity. All it takes is, secondary market trading.

I’m a seller, you’re a buyer. There’s this triple coupons associated with. The tenure note, the minute you pay me a price, that’s greater than the present value of the coupons and the principal. You’re going to have a negative yield to maturity. Now that’s okay. There might be a lot of reasons to do it. One might be that you think rates are going to go even lower so you can sell to somebody else at the higher price.

The other thing is, if you’re a foreign investor, you can lose on the dollar denominated, yield maturity, but make money on the currency. If the dollar gets stronger against the Euro. Based investor can make profits in Euro, even though the cashflow in dollars was negative because you have higher exchange rate.

So there’ll plenty of reasons for it. And we see this all over the world. Buns are a negative buns, Japanese government bonds, awesome. Bond markets have negative deals to mature. There’s no reason to doubt the treasury, no market can’t do the same thing. If it does, you’ll be looking at huge capital gains because right now the.

Yield to maturity is about 95 basis points. So if you go up from 95 basis points to, let’s say negative 50 basis points, that’s a huge capital gain because the interest rates go down prices go up. And so that’s how you You capture your profits. So that can be large. I like gold. For about 10% of your portfolio, there are opportunities and alternatives.

Again, we talked about residential real estate funds, but I think natural resources, water, agriculture, some other sectors will define this also room for a big allocation to cash. And people go, wait a second though. Why would I want cash? It has no yield a couple of things. Number one if you had deflation.

And I think right now, deflation is a greater danger than inflation. If you have deflation, even with zero return, your real return could be. 2%. It could be your best performing asset because in deflation prices are dropping. So you’re not getting returned a nominal return on your cash, that the cash is worth more because the price has dropped.

So there’s a real gain there. But number two and probably more importantly, cash has huge optionality. If you have cash. That’s the functional equivalent of not the money call option on every asset class in the world. And we’re going to need greater visibility and you need to be nimble to decide what to do.

So you can have some investments today, but if you go all in. You say why? No. I want to be all in residential real estate or all in some alternative funding, whatever it may be. And you find out six or eight months from now that OJ to places worse than I thought, maybe inflation’s worse. And I thought maybe this particular sector is not so hot.

It can be very expensive. If not impossible to get out of. Those asset classes. Try getting your money back from Henry Kravis ahead of schedule. It’s you know, good luck. So the point is the person with cash can be more nimble because as we get greater visibility, you have no impediments to the pivot.

You can pivot here or there, depending on where the opportunity lies. And that’s valuable. The most people, a lot of experts will say, you know what? The fed printing all this money. It’ll be leading towards inflation, right? $3 trillion, $4 trillion in the last few months. Pop the stock market. And that’s one of the ways it’s shown its ugly head, but you’re saying the complete opposite it’s deflation that’s coming.

Maybe why is the whole inflation story? Not true, first of all, it hasn’t been true for 13 years. Go back to 2009, between late 2008 and 2009, the federal reserve expanded its balance sheet from about $800 billion. Two something just under $4 trillion. So they increased it by the 300% and it was like, Oh my goodness, they’re printing all this money.

We’re going to get inflation. We never got inflation. We didn’t have inflation for 10 years. We still don’t. The money supply has nothing to do with inflation. Milton Friedman was wrong about that. The Austrian school was wrong about that. The Neo Keynesians are wrong about that. Inflation is not caused by money printing.

Inflation is caused by velocity of money and it was this, the turnover of money. So you can take the fed balance sheet to 7 trillion. My friend, Stephanie Kelton, she’s the big brand of modern monetary theory. They say, why can’t it be 10 trillion? The answer is, it could be 10 trillion, but it’s not necessarily inflationary unless you get the turnover.

So I’ll give you a simple example. Let’s say I go out to dinner and I tip the waiter and the waiter takes the tip money and takes a taxi or an Uber home, tips the driver. And then the driver takes the tip money and puts gas in his car. My $1 had velocity of three. It supported $3 of goods and services that, the restaurant tip the taxi tip and the guests.

But what if I stayed home? And watch TV. Then my money has philosophy of zero. I didn’t spend my money. There was no turnover and I remind people $7 trillion times zero. Is zero in others. If you don’t have velocity, I don’t care how much money you print. If you don’t have velocity, you don’t have an economy.

Velocity has been dropping for 22 years. It started to drop in 1998. It’s been coming down ever since our head larger spikes down and the 2008 global financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic collapse. the clear line has been going steeply down and it’s still going down.

So my point is, And we need inflation. Inflation is not good in some ways, but you can’t print your way out of a liquidity chap. You can’t borrow your way out of a debt trap. The only way to get out of it is with inflation.

And the only way to get inflation is to change the psychology because it’s not controlled by my supplies control by how people feel. And right now they’re. They’re savings. Savings rates are sky high is precautionary savings. People feel it, prices are going to get lower, so they defer consumption.

Now I’m talking about consumer price inflation, which is what the fed looks at and what’s policymakers. I got a few, if you think the stock market is a place, I can call it an asset bubble. Yeah. Stock prices are going up. That’s not inflation as. Economists and policymakers understand it.

Those are just asset bubbles and they are happening. So the money has to go somewhere. I’ve heard of people got these $1,200 checks last. Think around last June, may and June, they’re probably going to get another $600, in the next month or so. What are they doing with the money?

Some people were paying the bills, but a lot of people are investing in stocks. You’ve got all these newbies, they’re on Robin hood, their first time investors. They don’t really know what they’re doing, but they know that stocks only go up. They’re not spending the money they’re investing in the stock market.

They’re just in plating the bubble, not doing anything for the real economy, which would come from spending. And there’s something to be said for savings. But that’s what people are doing, the saving the money and investing the money. They’re not spending it. So the money printing doesn’t work.

Yeah, no, that makes total sense. The money’s out there, it’s just, the government needs have to try and find a way to incentivize throwing it into the real economy. Getting abundance mindset for consumers. That’s right. And there is a way to do it, which I talked about in the conclusion of the book.

Not to tease it, but yeah, it’s out there. What I tell people is that policymakers don’t. I understand that. So I explain it clearly. I give two historical examples, two different presidents, one Democrat, one Republican of the 20th century who pulled this off successfully. So it does work.

There is historical precedent for it. Central bankers have forgotten it if they ever knew, so they should read my book. If they want to know how to get in place and get out of the debt trap. But the point I make for the reader is even if the central banks don’t do it, even if the government doesn’t do it, you can’t, you can personally go on a gold standard one, a hard assets standard and and benefit personally, preserve wealth and make money.

Even if the government doesn’t find a right. So I guess the, I was going to ask you about the Biden camp or anything coming down the pipeline, but it may not matter, if they have another couple of rounds of stimulus checks, this money is just being diverted to the stock market. It’s just not getting to where it needs to go.

That’s exactly why I’m proud to say, I barely talk about politics at all in the book, but partly for the reason you mentioned, which is it doesn’t matter. Monetary policy doesn’t work because of declining velocity, fiscal policy deficit spending doesn’t work it because the debt to GDP ratio is so high that we’re through the looking glass that what people are doing now is they’re saying, look, I don’t know how it ends.

It could be inflation. It could be higher taxes. It could be a debt default. There could be a number of different scenarios, but they’re all bad. And so I’m just going to save more, spend less on a precautionary basis to get ready for that day. When other, inflation kicks in or I have to pay higher taxes or whatever.

, and that pressure by the way, is 90% debt to GDP. Right now, the debt to GDP has gone up from a hundred, 6% pre COVID to around a hundred. 30% today. So this is for the United States. The U S is now in the same league as a, Lebanon Greece, Italy there’s your club. So my point being we will have large deficits.

We will have more deficit spending. We will have more debit. It doesn’t work because we’re through the looking glass. We’re through that 9% critical threshold where now behavior changes and people don’t spend the money. So monetary policy doesn’t work because of philosophy and psychology fiscal policy doesn’t work.

Because debt to GDP ratio is too high and people are getting ready for bed ending. So it, Trump Biden administration, they’re going to pursue the same policies. You can print money, but that’s not stimulus. You can run deficits, but that’s not stainless. I always tell people stop calling it stimulus.

You can call it deficit spending. If you want, you can call it money printing if you want, but it’s not stimulus. It doesn’t stimulate anything. Yeah, no. Very interesting. For the guy under a few million dollars net worth, what would you be suggesting at this point for their portfolio?

Yeah I think I have about 30% cash, but sounds high to most people, but we already explained that I’d have 10% gold or gold mining shares. There’s room for a residential real estate. We talked about that you need the right fund manager but there’s a way to do that. Some for alternative investments, I’ve some money in some venture capital and startup type companies they’re risky, but they can be.

Very attractive, depending on the management again, and the business plan this one for listed equities, but pardon me, and have more than about, Oh, 20% or so in the stock market, people say to me, Jim, yeah, you’ve got 10% in gold. How can you sleep at night? And I go, you’re 90% in equities.

How can you use sleep at night? Because that’s really the risky asset class. Yeah. That’s something, I don’t have any paper assets personally, we’re always trying to move people to alternative assets. It’s either, do they take the money in their home equity or they take their money in their stock holdings or mutual funds?

And I’m like, I don’t know if it were me, I’d take it out of the stocks, but look, that’s just, who knows. but thanks James. For coming on. Folks get his book, the new great depression, winners and losers in a post pandemic world found on Amazon and yeah. Thanks for coming on.

Appreciate it. Thank you.

Can You Put Cash from ROTH into an LLC?

https://youtu.be/xu1_N2ryVjc

Question. Can you put cash from Roth into own LLC that owns passive income? No, you cannot. That would be oddly what’s called a prohibited transaction. So when you own rental property in your IRA, or any of these self-directed IRA accounts, there’s a arms length transaction rule where you can’t be adding sweat equity.

For example, when you buy a property and yourself director, I R a, you can’t be doing the property management. You have to pay third parties to do that. So by putting cash into your Roth and investing in Roth into your LLC, you also are violating like you can’t self deal. And I believe you cannot even partner with relatives or something like that.

As far as there’s, I’m sure there’s a lot of people that do this thing where they have a good buddy. Who’s good. At real estate, they invest. Their Roth IRA or self directed Roth IRA with their buddy and vice versa the way I see it, I think that’s a good way to getting around that totally follows the rules.

And yet I don’t do that because I don’t do any debt, investing. Everything I do is equity. And I also do that because I get the appreciation alongside of it.

Pursuing Purpose Through Masterminds and Nonprofits w/ Tim Rhode

https://youtu.be/pH70LEehEQw

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

 

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

How Many Rental Properties Do You Need to Retire?

https://youtu.be/JA5sHtI_MYw

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

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

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

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

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

How to Build a Recession Proof Portfolio

https://youtu.be/2yvR4h9thos

2020 has been a crazy year for the stock market with many companies going bankrupt. Well, the fangs, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google, all rising and value. Becoming very costly. You might be asking what makes the Fang stocks so POS and what is the key ratio? The PE ratio is the price to earnings ratio is the current stock offer cost divided by the profit per share.

For example, if company ABC. Has 1 million portions of stock currently priced at $20 and offering and offer earn $9 income or $2 per share. And the PE ratio would be $20. But if I can dollars, which gives a ratio of 10. Another way of looking at this example would be how long would it take to make money back?

If you purchase all the portions $20 million, assuming the company consistently earns $2 million per year, it would take 10 years to recoup your investment, which is a long term ROI of 7.2% per year. Not bad. At all, but what’s an acceptable

it’s the typical benchmark of a good PE ratio, but it depends on the industry. It’s difficult to compare tech companies like Apple with a retail company, like Costco. The lower the PE ratio, the less expensive stock and vice versa.

Currently the high work of stocks does not correlate the Dow, which is presently at around a P ratio of 29. And over. Nearly double the historic average of 15, which is why I don’t think this stock at the time of this video, the tank ratios are 34, 100 1934, 85, 34. Obvious that the stocks are overvalued and investors are seeking alternative investments.

Like gold, which doesn’t cash flow. And as pit all time highs after the big recession, it crashed to an all time low, shortly sophisticated investors should look into recession resistant investments. Cashflow stabilize apartment buildings with some value, add opportunities. Talk to, so we’re looking at, but strong, existing cashflow already in place. All time, low interest rate now is the time to take on good. Get ready for inflation because it’s comfortable.

How else are you? April? My stock portfolio can be compared to a person with an injection in suddenly struck in weekend.

My multifamily portfolio, access of vaccine, keeping my overall net worth intact, helping we stay afloat during downturns.

Over my 4,200 unit portfolio. We’re still well above 90, 95% of collections through this epidemic. When the government prohibited ports from evicting tenants, there weren’t no noticeable changes in rents and collections coming in.

The steady in my portfolio may have been because after all people need a place to live and they need good value base places to live between the $700 to $1,200. At the end, it comes down to supply and demand. This country needs more value-based options for regular people.

But speculating in the stock market and investing in real assets.