Accredited Coaching Call – CPA from Hawaii

https://youtu.be/0NaO8faSOdY

What’s up guys on today’s podcast, we are going to be interviewing on a coaching call and a credit investor who is a CPA here in Hawaii. We’re going to dig in and see what his net worth, see what he’s been up to and advise them along. But before we get going, and I just wanted to give some commentary on where we are in the year 2020.

I think most people will say, it’s been a pretty rough year. depending what you’ve been up to. we’ve been. In our week group, we’ve been pretty much prudent picking up deals that cashflow staying away from more of those class C deals that have bad collections, that tenant base. And I’m thinking of better assets with better tenants, with a little bit of a value add.

I don’t see all the strategy can go wrong, right? if it’s cash flowing day one, you underwrite it where the occupancy can drop 20, 30% and you’re still in the black. I don’t see why. Why you would need to wait like this narrative, a lot of people go by, Oh, I’m waiting until their lecture. I’m waiting until next year. Just three reasons why I think waiting is just a bad idea here. Like number one, you’re not gonna have access to those deals. If you’re not already in the game plan, you’re not going to have access to those relationships, the lender relationships. And you’re not going to know what the deal is.

Most people who say that assert the guys get started. Number two, I’m not buying assets that are distressed deals. Anyway. if you notice that my stuff is 90% occupied or more so I can get that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac debt, but you per se, I don’t really go after distress assets. And I think like a lot of these guys are saying, they’re going to wait till this distress inventory comes online and I’m like, dude, you’re not even a sophisticated investor.

You haven’t bought anything. What are you going to do with the distress asset? It falls into your life. You’ll probably screw it up. I don’t want, I don’t want to touch those distress assets. Neither, personally. I like stabilize ass to make it go. And lastly, by the time you’re ready to jump in. How are you going to know?

Like we, did you jump in around 2009 to 2014? No, a lot of people did it. They didn’t know when the bottom was maybe because they didn’t have the relationships and connections. Those who are already in the game strategically and prudently picking up Castro were the winners back then. And I think that’s what it is now.
And I do believe that this will all pass and I don’t follow people who are trying to get rich off doom and gloom and getting people to buy gold and get a little bit affiliate commissions done in that way. A little bit of me personally, lately, I’ve been trying to not work 12 to 14 hours. Been taking a little bit of a lunch break.

Normally I just work right through, but I, make my simple little lunch put on the YouTube. And yesterday I was watching a video by Kevin O’Leary, the shark tank guy, people call him mr. Wonderful. And I’m looking here with a video. If you want to look it up, how I made my first million dollars part one, it’s a 20 minute video, but I thought it was pretty cool.

And he talked about it, the story of how. No, you can get tricked into taking a salary. He gives a story. He repeats a story a lot, but I’ll summarize it, he, his first job was working in ice cream shops. Who’ve been ice cream. And the reason why he did it was there was like a cute girl next door in the adjacent store.

He wanted to be close to her. So he took that job. And after his first day at work, he was scooping ice cream and they’re wrapping up shop and. normally when people ask for samples, they throw their gum on the ground. And it’s, I guess it’s really nice Mexican tile. It looks really beautiful.

And so he was wrapping up and then the owner told him to go pick up the gum that people dropped on the floor. And of course, he sees the girl in the adjacent story. He doesn’t want to bend down and do it. And he’s no, you paid me to scoop ice cream, not like scraped gum off the floor.

And then she told him to get on his bike and never come back again. And today he’s very thankful for that. Because after that, he said he never really worked for money now, I think not a lot of people were like, mr. Wonder, he comes, it comes across as a little jerk. But I think that, a lot of people that they follow their career path a little bit too long and it never really go after their passions.

And maybe they’re, they just want to hit a financial freedom. That’s cool too. And a job is a means to the end. Not everybody’s going to become an entrepreneur and crack that $5 million, $10 million, $15 million net worth level for a lot of us, they listen to the civil past the cashflow that come out to our events and know your guys’ profile. You guys are hardworking professionals. It’s not practical to tell your boss that you’re just here to scoop ice cream. You’re not going to pick gum off the floor. You got to go pick up gum off the floor because you guys got a, you got families and you got to put food on the table.

But I think for me, the takeaway and where I disagree with mr. Wonderful. Here, you got to pick up gum off the floor, but if you put your money to good sound investments that all perform the retail stock and mutual fund market, and he’d do it in such a manner where you paid very little taxes. you guys can check out my taxes on school, passive cashflow.com/tax, but that’s enough on that.
you’re going to get financially free. And, I’d say under a decade, if you’re able to save 30 and $50,000 to investments every year. maybe your goals as in five, 10, $15 million, but mr. Wonderful kind of also outlines, how do people get to that level? Five, 10, 50, a hundred million dollars net worth.

Now maybe I don’t aspire to be there and maybe you don’t either, people who get to that level. There was always this getting to this pedestal of your first million dollars. And somebody talks about in this video is stories was going and learning how to be a cinematographer, making videos.

And that was his trade. He made a deal with his business school to make a MBA video promoting the program, but he just made like 40,000 bucks, but he parlayed that into another venture. Putting together short bits. And then he eventually sold that company or a, undervalued dollars amount of money, but that allowed him to get into the next software venture with another person who did the software.
He sold it. And that was obviously a soft key and his other business there that parlayed into the five, $10 million plus range. But yeah. all these entrepreneurs that you see that are very famous, it’s usually about two or three steps, two or three things that went right for them to get there.

And they’re outliers, I’d say most of us that are listening on the podcast. We’re just trying to get our first one and then invested smartly. And yeah, you may not do some business venture, but your job can get you there. Especially if you’re making over a hundred, 200 grand a year. If you just invest there, Be smart with taxes. You’re not going to make soft key, like how Kevin Larry did and sell it in a few years. if you work at your job for 10 years or maybe even 20 years, if you’re doing it the slow mutual fund way, it’ll get you to that first level. And once you get up to that first level, that’s where you take it up to or legacy wealth creation.

I talk a lot about, getting to your first hundred thousand dollar level for the guys in the incubator group, getting their preferred keys. And then once you get up to the half, a million million dollar Mark is a net worth, and then you get to this, a credit investor status. But for those who are credit investors, the next nice threshold they get to is a three and a half, $5 million market.

At that point, you’re able to live pretty comfortably. And when he talks about this video as most entrepreneurs. At some point, they just realize that they’re rich, they’re affluent at that point. And it’s a very binary thing that you’re living very cheapy me personally. I feel like I’m still pretty poor at this point.

Maybe I’ll one day I’ll have that epiphany, but check out the video, how I made my first million dollars part one asked mr. Wonderful is the YouTube and continuing to watch more of these, inspirational videos. But yeah, enjoy the coaching call. And if you guys would like to get on a coaching call and we still do these four volunteers are willing to put themselves out there.

I haven’t checked out the website yet, and there’s a whole bunch of stuff out there. One thing I would suggest is if you’re looking for some kind of activity to do in the winter time from home, try and check out our guide on trade lines, go to simple, pass a castle.com/trade lines. It’s a great way that I made at least $10,000 these past two years doing this on the side, renting out my credit card slots, my authorized user slots on my credit cards.
And if you haven’t yet join our club at simplepassivecashflow.com/club. 

Hey, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today. We are doing a numb, another who we member coaching call. And I think this one’s gonna be a good one. We’ve got a credit investor here worth 1.2 million bucks, a semi high income earner, not too high, like in the three hundreds, like some of the doctor dentists we’ve got, but definitely making a good professional salary.

So this should apply to a lot of you guys. But we have Brian, who is a CPA from Hawaii, a local guys here, but yeah, Brian, why don’t you tell us your story a little bit. Give us the context. Before we start digging into your personal financial statement. Yeah, sure. So like many folks, I ended up leaving Hawaii and I went to college on the mainland.

I got my undergraduate degree from Oregon, a school in Oregon. And after that, I was fortunate enough to get a job here back in Hawaii. So when you get a degree in accounting, usually start off as like in public accounting, working for a firm. So that was the route I took. I was doing, assurance or audit work.

And after about three and a half years there at that firm, I was like, I don’t think this is really for me. I don’t think it’s going to be, I’m not going to be in the partner track. so to speak. So I jumped off and went to private industry and I’ve been there ever since. I’ve worked a few different jobs.

I actually ended up working for a few real estate companies and I’m still working for one right now. They’re a developer of resort properties. And golf courses and similar type acids and yeah, that’s basically it. Oh, and prior to that, I was working as an analyst for a home builder, a national home builder.

So I was able to get a good grasp on the numbers side of working for a real estate company and working real estate deals. But now I don’t really do that. I focus more on the accounting side, so not as cool. That is exciting. And sexy, but it’s a job. Yeah. Pays well. And just for a little context, probably of a, I would say nine, 10% of the members are actually here from Hawaii, but it’s so Brian and I actually went to the same high school.

I don’t know. We haven’t seen each other since what, like 15 or 20 years ago. we’re on the golf team. We both kind of suck. yeah. And for those of you guys don’t know the bottom tier guys. Yeah. Like they send us out and because we have to play for a position, but it’s just we’re just here because it’s free.

And our parents told us to do it, told us to do it because this is the way to stir up resumes to get into college. At least that was what I was told to do. but yeah, so people in Hawaii, they usually go to school in the mainlands because the school is not too good here. Yeah. How long were you on the mainland?

Like after college working? I actually didn’t really work up there. Stayed up there for a little while after I graduated, but I graduated when times are pretty tough. So to speak is like 2010, 2011. So there were too many jobs available. I probably didn’t do a good enough job marketing myself when I was in college also.

So yeah, it was, I was lucky to get a job here. I think. Yeah. Around that time. Yeah, no offense, man. But you and I are similar. We’re like underperformers at the, the corporate life, which is probably why they didn’t read, circle you to a be partner or level thing, which is why we’re here.

And this is why your net worth is this way, because you chose a different path along the way. Possible. Yeah. Any feedback for younger guys and the CPA track? Cause you, you look like you’re 25, but you’re really actually Oh, you’re two years younger than myself. You’ve been working for quite a while.

how does it kind of work? You’ve worked for four years getting coffee for people or. How does it normally work? Yeah, I think it’s probably similar across the nation where you start out at a firm, you work these long hours doing pretty menial tasks. You’re the grunt, the low man on the totem pole, but I still would recommend.
That folks that are doing accounting out of college do work for a firm. I think you gain really valuable experience doing those horrible menial tasks for years and making a pretty poor salary. But yeah, overall, the experience I would say is it’s pretty good. And you come out of college with.

Sort of a year, your own group or cohort people that are similar aged with you. And they all are hired to firms at the same time. So it’s a nice stepping stone into work in the real world, so to speak. So you’re working with people that are your same age and similar experience and background a lot of times.

So it can be fun a lot of times. And also horrible, but yeah, I’d definitely recommend it. Yeah. So we break that we work backwards. The net worth is the score, right? A $1.2 million net worth. You make about 90, a hundred grand a year, living in Hawaii where salaries are maybe like 20 or 30%, less than counter promise on the mainland.
When I first see this, I’m a, head-scratcher all the C I do, unless somebody gave you a lot of money. She think you got a little help, I think, right? Like shit for a down payment, but not much, but I automatically know right now that you did something real estate probably related. I’m just have a hunch.

I kinda know, but tell us about like, when did she start investing in real estate? Because I see this all the time, right? Like doctors, for example, they make over 300 grand a year. I very rarely see them above one to $2 million network. But the guys who are investing and doing this stuff, like there are like three, four, five plus million at least.

So it’s like night and day numbers don’t lie. So tell us, how did you get to 1.2 here? Yeah, I guess part of it was luck and a lot of. some unlucky ness also, but I started young when I was about maybe two years out of college. I bought my first unit and it was a fixer upper that required a lot of a sweat equity, so to speak.

So I bought it. it was what’s called a leasehold property, which is common here in Hawaii. So people were overlooking it and while it was a leasehold, the fee was actually for sale. So you could buy it. Outright and own the unit. So I was able to get it all in with the fee at about 300 little over 300,000.

And I put in about maybe 20 or $30,000 of work and materials. And that was my first place. And I lived there for about three years, maybe two or three years. And I had a roommate also because it was two bedrooms. So that helped me out a lot, as far as paying down. My monthly expenses. So how’d you get the dump for that?

Cause it was like, yeah. So I was able to save up enough for the down payment myself. But on the fee portion, I had, a loan from my parents that I’m actually still paying them back right now. So I borrowed about maybe close to a hundred thousand from them to purchase the fee on the unit. And eventually I was able to refinance the whole package together.

To get a fee simple loan on it. So yeah, my parents definitely helped me out with my first place with the cash. they own rental property themselves. They used to. Yeah. Yeah. And the one of the units on my sheet is really, I code with them. So that’s a rental unit that they own, and they actually bought it for me when I was in college with the intent that I would live there.

But I stayed up on the mainland for a little while and then they ended up renting it out to a family friend. yeah, it’s the one that’s like on the bottom, the last one there. Okay. Yeah. So I. Yeah, I don’t really have anything to do with it, honestly, but I put it on there because I was able to get a line of credit on it because I’m technically the owner on it, but yeah.

I mean that worked right. That got you started. we could have, they could have not done that. You probably just working on your ratchet Subaru WRX drinking beers in someone’s garage right now. Just go into your day job, right? it couldn’t, that could very well happen at that point.

Yeah. Yeah, no, definitely. I, my parents definitely had a positive influence on labor. They’ve had rental units as far as long as I can remember, they had some, even off Island and out of state. So not anymore other than this one, but yeah. Yeah. that’s why we both went to the mid-back writer turns to cut in and have some money.
Not rich, but yeah. It was, I was fortunate enough just like you. I think my parents actually sold one of their houses, I think too, to put me to mid back in college, but I never really did that. though, they just did. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. But you and I both know that a lot. Yeah.

All of our classmates started like trust fund kids. And their parents did it incredibly the wrong way where they just paid for college. They, the kids didn’t do anything. And now we’re seeing them all like the grandparents, parents dying right now and giving their one to two to $3 million estate and then just buying a bigger house to live in.

What they did here is not to say there’s a lot of different ways to generate the second generation wealth. But this worked. So note that, some of the older listeners can, I think can, should think of that. what, looking back, would you do the same thing? you don’t have kids, but like that’s sparked it.
All right. Yeah. I think so. It was a good experience fixing all my first place. Some of it good. Some of them did that, but yeah, it was definitely a learning experience. Yeah, for sure. I think that’s the hard thing. A lot of people just can’t get that first 30 grand right. To get started. Yeah.

Yeah. so the next thing I look at here is after we look at like the net worth, I know where to start which side of the couch to start shooting. And then I break down the sort of the sources, which is you make a decent salary. You’re obviously not Like you said on the partner track, but Hey, that’s cool because your rental income is more than that, right?

You probably make, you probably make more money than your boss’s boss at this point. I don’t know about that patient. She’s a pretty, is a pretty successful dude. but yeah, I think I’m on the right track and I just, I need a while. I was hoping to get some guidance and maybe just if you were in my shoes or what would you do next steps wise?
career-wise, you’re already on the right track. you’re at this point, like when I got up to I’ll be on 11 rentals back in 2015. That’s like when I hit the hockey stick. And you’re right at that cusp. it took you what, 10, 12 years to get up to this point to build your passive cashflow up to about a few grand.
to double that it’s going to be like a quarter of that, That’s why I’m saying like, yeah, you’re just going to blow past your boss’s boss. Take home. Very soon. Yeah. I’d hope so. the tough thing is in Hawaii, I have a few condos here and the cashflow is really not that good. So I think long term, I’d like to sell them.

That was always the intent actually, but it just worked out where I kept having folks that wanted to stay in rent. So like I kept rolling. Yeah. And that’s the hard thing, right? Like you, I tell you one thing. But like until you go remote and you see it for yourself and get comfortable with it, it’s hard to get away from almost paid off.
Like these condos you have in Hawaii, you got a pretty good equity position and which is not good.

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, but they don’t really produce very much monthly cashflow, really nothing. I just look at them as pretty much breakeven. At least they’re paying off my monthly mortgage and maintenance, but. Yeah. you’re playing the appreciation game and up to this point, you’d been, you invested in the right decade and with the whole pandemic happening and the short-term sellers market, I think it’s a great time to start selling them off slowly, but we can get boring in that, but yeah, wrapping up that, and then I just peek over.

you’re pretty good. Your net cash flow, which is like your take your, how much money are you able to put to a new investments? Is over 60, 70 grand a year. That’s awesome, man. that’s, this is the most important number. I don’t really care how much money you make. It’s the kind of the net, right?
there’s so many guys and like the Bay area or bigger cities that make three times as you, but make, are able to see half this. Okay. Most people in our group, they’re able to save at least 30 grand a year. You’re in like the top 10% ish, but I know you. Yeah. And I didn’t really budget in for any major repairs or anything.

So that number can definitely go down pretty quickly. But I’d say in a good month, I guess that would be where we’re at. Yeah. I would say you. You’re already on the path and it depends like what your goals are. Like, if you just want to like stomp on the gas and get there really quick and love.

I know you probably live a little fruit, Billy. what car are you? Oh, I have a Ford truck. Yeah. Yeah. Go figure. look, if you want to go and spend like 10, 20 grand a year on a vacation or a nicer car. I wouldn’t have any Harper. It’s the guys who are able to save less than 30 grand a year.

That’d be need to type with bell a little bit and Schrader Tesla for that for Chuck or the, maybe not on the civic, but let me skid the Camry or something decent. But yeah, this, these are all, this is like your cash flow, right? This is your, where, what direction you’re heading. And I’m telling you, man, like you’re going to get there pretty damn soon, like three to five years to financial freedom.

So you can get there in two years or you can get there in four years, but like actually live a nicer life start living. that was. Like, there’s nothing sweeter than taking some of those cashflow and buying something nice for yourself. You never know what you’re going to die. Definitely. I think though, part of the reason why I listened to you and I started really getting into your content is I’d like to have the freedom or the option in the future to look elsewhere, for employment or maybe not work.

I probably would always work, but maybe just doing. Something else or just having the option. So I think that would be my main driving factor right now is just freedom. But yeah, on a scale of one to 10, how stressful your job? Yeah. It goes up and down and ebbs and flows, but I would say on average, it’s not overly stressful and I don’t not like what I do.

It’s not horrible. So it’s something that I could definitely keep on doing, but just having the option to maybe go on and follow something that I’d be more interested in or have more passion. I don’t know, maybe work for a nonprofit, even something with the mission really resonates with what I’d like to.

To see happen in the world. I don’t know. Maybe I’m speaking too crazy right now. it’s, I think it’s idea. And unfortunately, unless you’re like, you’re able to free your time up and get three to six months of twiddling your thumbs doing nothing. You don’t find that thing you’re talking about right now.

It’s just an ideal, but it’s not like a concept people see will take to get there. So what I’m probably hearing, I’m just assuming this, like you’d rather take the 10, 20% pay. Cut. For a little bit or chilled job. Yeah, I think so. Or maybe not even more chill, but just having the freedom to look for something that would be a little bit more of a passion project, so to speak versus like just clocking in and clocking out.

Yeah. Unfortunately in your career, even still you gotta go like full-time right. You got to stay full-time. Yeah. I was just going to say, I might even consider working at a job like this, but just not full-time. I think it’s possibly an option, but I don’t know. I haven’t really explored it because I don’t have the ability to really, yeah, who does, right?

it’s funny people who do this stuff and then they go have that conversation with their boss. It’s funny that they often get more pay and they get a few days. Taken off of the week. Nobody has everybody else lives by this paradigm where they’re like their employer has a by the balls and they have to keep them.

Working and coming in just like everybody else, but yeah, you’ll get there, Matt. What’s your like your living situation and you’re married. You got 50 kids. Just get some context. I have, I have a girlfriend, lead. We both live together. We actually bought, if you look on my sheet, I think it’s five under the real estate tab, the primary residence there, we just moved in earlier this year and we bought a place here.
So that’s like she and I are both 50% on that are our primary. And the, we bought a big house here in Hawaii and we’re able to rent out half of it or so, so that’s why there’s some income there, but that represents my 50%. house houses here, like pretty crazy, ridiculous, expensive.

So yeah, that’s actually a cute house, right? 700 grand in that kid. She’d possibly. Oh, no, that’s well, that’s my 50%. That’s my 50% of the, okay. Okay. So it’s a $1.4 million house. That makes more sense. Yeah, we, we paid like 1.2, 1.3 million for it, but yeah, luckily we can rent out a lot of it or a portion of it.

So it helps us quite a bit with our money. Otherwise, we’d be stuck with this big bill every month, but what did they do for work? she works for the government for the state. So she has a pretty stable job, not really high, super high earner, but yeah, she has a stable career, I would say. Ooh. I don’t think she likes her job very much right now, actually.

Perfect. Perfect. I know she makes less than you. So at some point you guys need to start doing the real estate professional status gig. Yeah. I heard you talk about that before and she can get her license and we can get some better deductions, right? Getting your real estate license and doing 1000 hours of real estate has nothing to do with real estate professional status.

it’s going to silver. Yeah. She just has to have active participation in your real estate portfolio. But we talked a lot about this in the mastermind where it’s a little bit of a gray area, which is why I don’t like to record this type of stuff, but it’s totally legit BAE. It needs to be like 700 fishing.

It doesn’t have to, he can’t have a full-time day job, which I’m sure the state will be cool with her going like part-time at some point. And she has 750 hours of active participation using your portfolio. So at this point you’ve already got a lot of voice stuff, but we’ll talk a little bit here. I’d probably want you to unload the Hawaii stuff because the rent to value ratio soccer, right?

Like I would say like maybe think about doing like a little thinky, Airbnb rental or something. An average change sheets for 750 hours a year. That can be an option or some of the higher net worth investors. They like to come on as a general partner in our deals. That can be another one, but yeah, a myriad of different ways.
of course. Talk to your CPA attorney, but yeah, I would say that’s in the cards for you guys, maybe in the next, not now, but. I would say three, four years from now and beyond, but this is all coming together, right? this kind of optimal, she makes probably way less money than you. She doesn’t like your job.

Cool. This is really hard for me. When you guys love your job and you make a lot of money and I’m like, God, dang it. it’s hard. That’s hard. It’s good. When people have a mismatch in salary. So you cool. clear path there. But it makes sense. Okay. yeah. That’d be perfect.

she wants to stay, she wants to be a stay at home mom slash wife eventually. So that’s your girl. Yeah. that’s good for you, man. unfortunately that Mary or like a rich doctor, sugar mama, but this is not a bad second option. Maybe that was the one that, yeah, I hear what you’re saying.

The one that got away right by the one. So look at if they quit or went part-time, you still probably be good, right? That cashflow. there’s, I would say as long as you keep that above 30 grand a year, you’re already on crew, you should already be at cruise control at this point.

It’s just a matter of just digging into these properties and. I don’t know if you saw my return on equity spreadsheet, folks can download that@simplepassivecashflow.com slash Roe, but it’s basically what I’m the exercise I’m going to do right here is just figure out what your debt equity is at.

So I’m going to take your fair market value minus your how much work you have on here. I’m a sum them up. Does this make sense? You’ve got like about 1.1 million in equity. Does that sound about right? Or maybe, yeah, that sounds probably about right. like I was saying that last property though.

I don’t, I sorta, I wasn’t even going to put it on there, but I just put it on there because I have a line of credit on it. So I dunno, maybe it’s, it would be more accurate. You’d just take that off. Okay. Okay. Yeah. at some point, yeah. At some point we play around with it. I don’t even know if I spelled that.

But, so this is really bad, man. Like your net worth is 1.2 and your dead equity is 1.1. That’s really bad if I was a doctor. And these are like your vitals, right? I would probably wonder while you’re still living. So in this sense, I would probably picture a really like my, like really cheap, wiser, who is house rich or EKI rich or super poor and just rise, like drives around in a POS.

And it’s super cheap. I dunno. That’s how you feel like, but that’s how, if I didn’t know you and I was just looking at this, that’s how I would think, and people. Maybe people don’t give people more context. People in Hawaii, this is very common, right? And people are very debt averse, and they’ll have $1.2 million homes that are paid off, but they don’t even have money to fix it down roof because they don’t have cash.
She’s a strange phenomenon. It’s very unfortunate. But yeah, I do feel like that sometimes. Like I just, I have a decent amount of assets, but it’s, I know I’m not really utilizing them utilizing the assets to their full potential, I don’t even know if that’s the right verbiage, but yeah, I get what you’re saying.

So that was one of the reasons why I wanted to talk to you. Yeah. you can make up your own decision, but let’s just figure out which does sell first. So you can do it two ways with one, like how I outlined it here and just go after the biggest fish. Or you can go by percentage of equity, which one of these is making you the least amount of return based on equity or return on equity percentage.

So like you take this property, this condo, how much money you making per month on this one? What’s the rent. Yeah, I 25, 50 a month, but again, I counted as almost just net zero. Maybe I cashed a little positive, a small amount, but. Yeah, so that’s pretty common, a half a percent method evaluation in Hawaii with the big ass HOA and just sucks it dry.

So I would say probably be the first candidate to sell because of equity positioning or it’s one of the bigger fish plus it has the lowest amount of return on equity. you can probably, you should probably sit down and really watered down, but that’s what I would do both first after. And then probably this one, I, and I know this one has the highest amount, but like you said, your family part of it, right?

We don’t want to give mom and dad a heart attack. They’re old. Let’s get some, let’s get some proof of concept with these crazy ideas and filling your head with first, before we, we tell mom and dad. Maybe get married or something or have kids that are happy and then three candidates to that, but that’s a couple of years or something like that.

So I think the point money, especially for you, that someone super new at this stuff, like 200 grand deploying that in one year is going to be, I think that might be a little bit ambitious. So this is now I’m like starting to like Mark it off into a year. So like 2000 and. 20 2041, 2023. And you can make the diagram for this, for yourself later on, but I would invest maybe.

A hundred or 150. I don’t know. what do you want to do? Do you want to buy some turnkeys on the mainland or do you want to do like passive syndications? What do you want to do? I don’t know. I guess that what I was one of the questions that I had say you were. In my position, what would you be looking for and how would you want to deploy, say I was able to sell these places.

How would you want to deploy it? Would you try and look for syndications or multi-family or single-family home deals? That’s where I wasn’t too. Sure. Especially now the times are a little uncertain and shifting around everything is shifting around. So yeah, I was going to get your take since you’re pretty plugged in and tuned into this stuff.

I would just do also indications, especially if your network is over a million bucks. I think, what is seriously? What is like a hundred thousand dollars kinky property in Birmingham going to change your life other than just keep yet another headache, but it will. you already know how to be a landlord.

Yo, you already know how to dance. I, so I don’t think you would gain much in terms of experience being able, just buy like a turnkey or even you certainly shouldn’t do a Burr, That’s just for like broke people. We’re trying to, they need to take more risks and they need to go after business.

She’s thinking about, I was actually thinking about trying to do some out-of-state burgers after I listened to. I think one of the guys you had on your podcast was talking about managing burrs from auto state when I was like, Oh, that sounds interesting, but it always sounds interesting.

And then when they talk about it, they rave about all these returns, but here’s my thing, man. You’re fighting with one arm tied behind your back on somebody else’s home court. I wrote a big article on this, like why would not do like burgers, but like number one risk of embezzlement with contractors.

I comes from like construction management, right? So I’m the one who always works change orders with the contractor. I not pay these tasks, but dude, you’re, you’ve done this in the past. But most people they’re trying to play like. Owner and trying to do this, like it’s just outside your realm.

And you’re doing this remote me I’d much rather have you just flip a house in Hawaii, At least you’re you see this stuff as opposed to relying on a third party to do it. And it’s just not worth the risks. Yeah. Bezel man. Shit. Why I’m over large sums of money and you’re not able to verify the scope of work was completed and to what level of quality.

And everybody knows. You’re just some rich person from Hawaii, even though that’s not the case. You got to like a piece of junk Borg Ford, They don’t know that they, their ideas, like you’re just some like rich investor, polite drinking, pina coladas. Yeah. I just don’t think it’s worth it for people making over like 80 grand at their day job.
And especially having a net worth of over half a million bucks. But if you enjoy it. Yeah, man do it. But I think maybe a hobby, maybe I think it detracts, right? I think like the name of the game is networking and building relationships with higher net worth higher credit investors. That’s where you should be focusing your time and energy on.

Not to screw it around with some toolbox Tim out in Indianapolis or something like that. It’s no carry over. What are your thoughts on I have a line of credit on my place in Las Vegas. And I was thinking, instead of selling those two rentals I have in Nevada and in Texas, because they pretty much have been managed themselves.
they manage themselves, but there hasn’t been too many problems. There I’ve got pretty good tenants so far, not the wooden pretty good property managers. So I was thinking about maybe just pulling the money out of there and trying to do something with it. Instead of selling them off, that’s a good intermediary strategy, For an hour, To get you. We’re trying to get you proof of concept right before you go all in. So like when you have equity, if you have three options, you can sell the asset. Which is what I’m proposing. You can do a cash out, refinance get at it. But unfortunately you got to pay the lenders.

Love it, right? Because that’s how they make money. If you come to the origination fees or like you said, do a hilar, right? The problem with the hilar is that it’s, you’re not getting at the full, in this case, 194 grand probably wouldn’t get at half, but the half of it, you got a lot of money there.

Half of it. It’s enough to go into a couple of deals. It’s you proof of concept that way. you have so much equity here. I would say the HELOC is a great way to just test the waters and then eventually sell. But whatever you want to do, man, I think all those are all steps in the right direction.

is that what you’re probably going to do? He locked that thing and then play around with a hundred. Yeah. I already have a, I have a hilar on that property, and I, when I refinanced my first condo here, I paid off the loan on that house. So it’s, that’s why it’s free and clear right now.

So I was thinking, yeah, I was thinking I could take some money out that way. And just like you said, proof of concept and try it out and see how it goes. Yeah. however you want to do it either. This one or this one, getting a lock on both. Get it now. it’s just filling out the same paperwork, emails, just cut and paste the name and do it.
Get a geeky Lux on them. All. The locks don’t cost anything. And so what about as far as, what should I be looking for in say I do go into syndication. What should I be looking for? You think I see they have these ones that give you a debt position versus an equity position or some that are like value add plays.
And they’re trying to fix it up and refinance out or more of a, like a yield play. I saw some of those as well. what would you think would be the best that’s syndication as a very general term? You can syndicate anything. You can send the, get very like conservative stuff, like a debt position, or like value, add a light value, add yielding assets.

Or like a brewery, a restaurant like developments, like you can syndicate anything. It ultimately comes down to your risk tolerance. Like when I first started it, I was looking more for like late value, add more cashflow based type of deals, things that were cash flowing right away. And, or you start to collect checks and the second border, that’s what I thought was a prudent way to dip my toes into it.
And that’s what I learned. And I built my community around that, but I would say stick to like more of a debt position or pref equity position or more of a lighter, medium value add type of project where they’re, maybe putting in definitely less than $10,000 rehab, continuing every unit, but yet stay away from The developments and all that heavy stuff for now, I would say, especially, it’s baby steps, right?
I know you’ve been involved in a lot of these syndications and a bunch of folks that do this type of syndication deals. have you ever seen one that went wrong or went South and what happened? I’m in one of those, I had a bad partner and that’s pretty much the risk, right?

Like syndication deals. You’re going to always going to be better. If you invest with honest people that are competent and that’s the, to the GP kind of went astray on you. Yeah. Yeah. So then I had to involve my GP rights and I don’t want to go down a rabbit hole still fighting through it, but yeah, great example.

And that’s with uncertainty, right? You want to be investing with the pros, right? I would say this is probably the end of the road for most people. Who’ve made it as far as you, at least. That’s the way I saw it. I don’t think you can do this remotely. I don’t think you can. certainly you can’t run a syndication deal from Hawaii.
It ain’t going to happen. I have operational partners that are boots on the ground. And it has to be like your full-time day job, none of the site gig stuff, When you’re taking other people’s money, it’s gotta be full time and these guys can run it better than you. And I think what a lot of people don’t realize is if you’re working with the right people, they have much better deal flow.

They’re getting like the one out of a thousand deals because they’ve closed big deals on the past. And that’s just something that you don’t have access to, but it’s hard as an LP to figure out what’s what, because anybody can pay some VA 20 bucks to make a really nice, shiny PDF pitch deck.

Often there’s nothing in the pitch deck that tells you if it’s a great deal. So it ultimately comes down to your network. You need to build a network with other high paid professionals, people that do this stuff and kind of get referrals. And who are the right people to work with, Because you’re not shied away so far.

Yeah. Yeah. and this is why I’m like, don’t screw around with a Burr. That’s just a waste of time. Okay. Yeah. Going back to your point. I think that’s why I’ve strayed away is because I don’t really know exactly what I should be looking for in a syndication deal. So to speak. So that’s what I was trying to get your take.
And I did the same thing, right? Like I had 11 rental property and I knew about a performance in vacation, but what I was doing was working, I got in my net worth up to a substantial level by myself. And it was working, but I knew that it wasn’t going to be a long-term sustainable solution.

So I went and I eventually slowly went into it after I’ve built my network around it. And I was able to ask these guys, all right, are these deals actually really work in it, who to work with? So that was how I eventually I fell into this and I transitioned to bowl for, but that’s why it’s a reboot.

You’ve got to come into different circles and then you got to learn how to evaluate deals from more of a passive investor standpoint. But a lot of that is just can be like proxy by just. Building relationships with the right people. But I would say stay away from class C properties there.

They don’t really cash though, like how they do on paper or just stick to good yield based assets. And I think that this is where it’s a lot better than turnkeys cause turnkeys. Yeah. You’re not buying value. Add you’re not buying, you’re buying retail price. So if the market insurance on you or you’re gonna lose the value of your property, Maybe 10, 20%, which is fine because ultimately you’re just buying an income stream, but with a apartment deal that’s value add, it has real value add in under it’s in the right way.

In times of trouble. You’re often forced to appreciating that property. We haven’t units increasing NOI faster than the market can be tracked. So it’s the ideas like a turnkey you’re on by yourself, right? You’re in a little rowboat by yourself, but. In a syndication deal. You’re a passenger amongst a big priests battleship.
And that battleship has engine, which is in this metaphor, like the forced appreciation, couple of hundred to fight the tide, which is the market. It’s a good metaphor. Yeah. I had a lot of time to think about it. You want to join Noah’s arc? Who would you like to just be out there by herself? You got like ducks and events.
Monoceros to have every time. Okay. that’s what I think I’ve been with just shooting from the hip, on my own, trying to figure things out. I think there’s a lot of people just like in your same pedigree, where you in your twenties, you bought properties, you actually fixed it up yourself.

You save 10 years later, you have mass a pretty good at net worth. There’s a lot of people like that in Hawaii, everywhere. And. To me. I think all roads, the syndications, there’s no better way to scale up, build your wealth and especially with all the taxes, right? this is, this deal stuff is only a third of it, right?
Like in the mastermind, we like, it’s all about legacy creation. If net banking, if tax legal, like paying no taxes, like uncle Trump, right? It’s funny. People are talking all about that. Like he’s not paying in taxes. yeah. everybody does that. Biden does that too. Mick Romney did it.

Like we should be asking, how are these people doing it? I know how they do it. But we should be trying to implement their strategies. Instead of just saying that there are deed, right? I would say just to give you like a working blueprint care, maybe invest maybe a 20, 20, I would say invest like 50 grand and just so you can see like a Q1 come back March of 2021 and you can see, Oh shoot.
This is what that’s, what that damn Costech segment. No, I know. Understand why the rich do this. They’re getting the bonus depreciation. Now. I really love those house slippers because they pay all my taxes for all their active income taking all that risk. And the bird people.

And then I would say maybe get on like a routine where you go into a deal. I don’t know, every six months. So that’s like a hundred grand. And then at that point you should see these deals start to cash flow, Versus six months, it usually takes the deal to restabilize. And then maybe around late 20, 21, you should be able to realize, all right, where do I go for my next traunch of capital?

You’re still messing around with the hilar. So it was awesome. Like a law. This is first of all, You don’t have to sell anything. You don’t have to pay a mortgage broker to originate them a new loan and pay feeds. But eventually now you start to go pick her, You a hundred. And then you do that for a couple years.

Then you’ve deployed all this money, right? If I just sum this up, that’s 750,000 bucks. And then at that point, I would say around 20, 24, you might have an instance, we’re selling. deal in Atlanta that we did two and a half years ago. And we’re two and a half exiting people’s money. that’s, it’s phenomenal.

it’s not typical. But I would say if you go into four or five deals by year 20, 24, it won’t be that five-year period where we it was projected to sell. But I would say pretty confident. You’d see at least one like refinance. And then at that point it’s Oh boy, like this stuff works.

And that’s when you go to mom and dad and say, Hey, I’d like to buy you out for this thing. And then look at like, all this deployed capital. You’re not making any cashflow here. You have $750,000 on 0.2%. Well done. Let me go just 8% a year. That’s 60 grand. Tax-free right, because you’re going to have so much passive losses.
You’re not going to know what to do at that. it’ll sit this stuff. I’ll certainly be tax-free in the first three years, every year, the cashflow. And this is not what you’re not seeing now. You’re not seeing this additional sum come to your bottom line here. And if I just plugged that in year, cause right now this stuff just levels off.
You’re making 3000 a month. But if I just increased it by three valves and. see what that does now you’re making an extra 40 grand a year to put some more investments, right? this is a good problem that happened. Like it’s like eating Skittles on the rainfall. I can’t stop eating Skittles.

There’s so much Skittles because once I put more Skittles up there, it comes in my mouth. Like one of those unicorn rainbows, right? This is where it starts as the most important, all this stuff will just happen. That’d be good. I can get some losses and enroll them if ever sell those. Let’s talk about that.

When I sold my seven rentals in 2018, Ida $200,000 capital gain. And because I went into four, I think four deals at that point I had over three, I think at $300,000 of capital gain. So I bought the 300,000 or 200,000 other passive losses offset the capital gain. And this is why 10 30 ones are obsolete at this point, as long as bonus depreciation is in play.

So let’s just say you sell. You sell this one, right? Your cost basis was two 50 and you sell it for that much. I would say you’re actually, it’s the same thing as me, right? $200,000 capital gain plus depreciation recapture 200 grand. That’s not about right. So you’re, you probably have a lot of passive losses built up right now.
I’m guessing you might have 50 grand. I’m just guessing, but when you go into these deals, He put in 150,000 bucks, you probably will get maybe a hundred grand of passive losses from this. Of course, you’ll see this firsthand, right? don’t listen to me. It’s see it for yourself on the Caitlin, right?

With this first 2020 K one, which you’ll see in 2021 March. So you’ll have a lot, 150, a hundred thousand dollars of passive losses. Plus you have, like I said, you probably have $50,000 of passive losses now. So $150,000 passive losses. And that is what offsets this sale. But if you’re smart, you do it.

You sell the asset probably in 2023. When you have, when you’ve deployed this 200 grand and you’ve gotten in another hundred grand, a passive losses from that. So total you’ll have $250,000 of passive losses to offset this $200,000 gain. And you still have passive losses, the despair that may make sense.

Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Yeah. Why would anybody want to flip houses, right? Yeah. How the wealthy deer, I don’t know what I was thinking of doing, but I just wanted to get some. Confirmation. yeah. Yeah. that’s hard, right? who the heck does this, right? Yeah. Yeah. It’s hard. Other than reading, like blog posts or watching your videos since like you I was still felt like I was piecing it together myself, so yeah.

I’m, this is the public service announcement. Like I am not a CPA. I’m not giving you tax illegal advice, but. I think I, Michael, is to empower you guys with a working knowledge of this. So you can have the right information to go have an educated discussion with your CPA. Be tax guy. Because you’re the one who should be driving the ship.

Most CPAs and tax guys are lazy and they don’t know what they’re doing. That’s why they have a day job. Any last questions, maybe some specifics on what, as far as a syndication deal, I should look for any regions maybe that you think are worth looking into, or I don’t know, maybe even diving down into some of the.
Yield percentages are, what should I be looking for? I, this is where you just talked to you build up a network and you ask people, what are you investing in? Why? What is your risk tolerance? if you asked me, I like stabilized deals from the get-go, where it’s already cash flowing, and there is a proven concept for some value add where you just do simple things and you change out the flooring and new appliances.
You’re not putting any more than like $6,000 to rehab into a unit like value add. And if you can lock it up for like under 3% debt, I think that’s a no brainer in secondary markets, tertiary markets in both population areas and in red States. So that’s what I do. If that doesn’t make sense to you, but we’ll go find something else.
But I think that’s. Again, it comes down to your network. Your network is your network. Everybody has a different investment philosophy, too. But to me, for the greatest amount of success, with the least amount of risk, I don’t think that there’s anything better than that kind of strategy or risk return spectrum that you staying in that middle America, where the rents are 700 to a thousand bucks a month.
The pandemic it’s pandemic proof it’s been proven. Okay. So stay away from C-Class jumping into a good cash flowing syndication with some trusted partners. Right? Sound advice. Sounds good. It’s all right. It’s all simple. But it’s the hard part is connecting with the right people, right? Because they’re not at the local RIA.
They’re not at. the free websites, right? Just finding the guys who are just here, that real estate is a great way to make some money, to get on broke or get out of debt. Okay. And maybe you could speak a little bit more by your mastermind group. how exactly does it work? So my group is all about, we split the group up.
I have a incubator group for like people just trying to get their first rental property. That’s probably not for you. But that allowed me to make the mastermind group or for accredited investors. But I do like a mastermind in January. If like people want to check out the last name and go to simple passive cashflow.com/ and check out what we did there last time with great opportunity to meet past investors, accredited investors and.

Drink beers, go hiking, build a real relationship. That’s the key here. I’m thinking about doing, I gotta do some meditation on a plane here shortly. I think I might do the thing virtual this year. I was in another mastermind and we did it virtually. And then the organizer, there was a lot of planning involved, but they hadn’t been, we used the breakout rooms very creatively in a very different formats.
So I think that might put this thing together for a Chile. And I think that’s, you’re not gonna there. Ain’t going to be some that comes close, man. You don’t want to sound off over profit, but I’m super confident that this is what I would want it right when I was starting out. Unfortunately I had to spend almost 50, a hundred grand to get into groups, myself and do a lot of travel.

But, we do things for our credit investors here in Hawaii when people are, there’s no pandemic, but I’ll let you. Okay. That at least you can actually see cause. I think that’s the trouble, right? if you’ve never been in, you never been around. Yeah. More than two accredited investors. You don’t understand what the value is there.
And that’s why I think why I want to do that for actuals networking. I’ll be at like a two day event, you get it. And you’re like, there’s no going back to rubbing shoulders with not a credit investors anymore at that point. Yeah. I think that would be super valuable. And like you’re saying, just to hear what they’re doing and where they’re investing and how they’re investing.

I think it’d be really, yeah. Cause there’s discussions. Turn more into like, all right, yeah, this is what everybody is just doing. Check. I answered that question, but now you can build relationships to have discussions on Oh, you’re 20, 23. When this, when you go all in, right? that’s where your life starts to open up.

Maybe you, you already got a big house, but maybe that’s when you like you quit your date or you have your spouse quit your day job at an old car. Yeah. Okay. But that, those are like those higher level decisions. And then you wonder if you want to send your kid to private school. It’s the first world problems. Sounds good. Lang yeah. Anything else? ELLs? I think, yeah. I’m just leading you to water, right? Like it’s the people I know, like I think that’s pretty much it. I think it’s been really helpful. Like I said, just talking through this. Yeah. Like I say, I’m pretty impressed.
Most people are H with good paying jobs. They’re lucky if their net worth is half a million bucks, if they invested in that garbage stock market 401k stuff. Good job, man. thank you. High five. Yeah, this is a clear indication of how real estate works right here, but you can do a lot better.

And now I would say you got to focus on most credit investors. The goal is to get to four and a half million. That’s the real goal. That’s like a seat wealth right there. Cause you can have two, you can have two or three bonehead offsprings, send them the mid pack, have them do whatever. And it’s really hard for them to squirrel what you built.

Yeah. So gotta make sure they on the golf team though, So that’s where the apparently that’s where we met. All right. Cool man. Cool. If you guys like this and you guys want to do one of these two, let me knowLane@simplepassivecashflow.com. Join the, clubs, simple, passive cashflow.com/club, and yeah, be on the lookout for the next mastermind, whether it’s in person or virtual, a simple passive cashflow.com/week three was last year’s event.

You can check out the video there. And I’ll see you guys next time. Bye
website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes. Every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained here.

How to Get Into the GP With No Money Down

https://youtu.be/a6YimSdAVu4

0:15  

So the question often comes up, how do I become part of the general partnership and get a little bit more bang for my buck, one of those ways is becoming what’s called a key principle or loan guarantor for the team. So what this is here for as we go out and get one of these big loans for these Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or any other loan, we need to have a partnership team or keep principle slash loan guarantor roster of individuals whose network gets us over the hump greater than or equal to the loan. So for example, for going after a $20 million building, probably going to need a several guys or one guy who has $20 million net worth to be able to sign a debt. So in order for us to qualify, or in order for your qualified typically, that means, you know, you’ve got a million dollar net worth or above, I mean, most guys in our sphere about a one to $2 million range. So guys, unfortunately, those guys are kind of a diamond doesn’t just one of the guys, it’s the same. But if you know, if you’re above $3 million dollars or more, you’re actually very valuable. And you can definitely get compensated for sending off a debt on one of these deals, it has nothing to do with bringing in any money involved. So what a lot of these guys will do these high net worth investors, they’ll sign on debt, and I get a little piece of the deal just for doing so there is obviously risk involved, right. But I think there’s a difference between non recourse and recourse that and before you start doing this, you know, I would say you got to really strongly feel confident in you’re working with defeat, I wouldn’t be doing it on your first board round with somebody doesn’t matter how much they’re paying you. Because essentially, in a way, you’re putting all your family network on the line. And you can encumber your debt several several times. So I’ve signed on, I don’t even know how many deals at this point, also with non recourse debt, but it’s crazy to me how you could sign on multiple walls. But then again, you know, a lot of these are asset backed deals. And as real estate bows, the value is there built into the asset with some common questions that come up are how does this work? How does this book my return? Well, it’s not really bumping your return, you’re just kind of picking up some general partnership shares overall shares in the process. So there’s always a set aside a certain amount for people who do this type of stuff. And talking back about the non recourse components, you got to remember that even if a deal is non recourse, there’s usually a bad actor clause involved with the bad boy carve out where if somebody in the general partnership does anything fraudulent steals money and vessels that the agency lender can avoid that non recourse component and come back for everybody for the debt. At that point, I’m just speculating, you know, I think they’re gonna kind of come after the people with the biggest wallet folks. And then it becomes definitely an internal litigation issue, but hopefully it never goes that far. And you know, another way that people will get into deals with Latino money as a general partnership is for putting up the hard money on these deals. So certain markets such as Dallas are super competitive and to be considered serious and for them to even look at your offer, they have to put in 100 or $200,000 of hard money and for a lot of new sponsors, they may not even have that money in their pocket. And this is why I like working with people who are at least a million dollar net worth and above the fray Why’d I shy away from investing with house flippers because a lot of those guys are under half a million billion dollars unless they’ve been doing it for several years. I just don’t want to get screwed over by guys who don’t have a net worth to cover it personally and this is one of my criteria when investing personally but I digress there so what you could do is you could come in and put up the hard money for somebody who doesn’t have it and negotiate some percentage of the general partnership for doing so there it is long as the deal closes you should be able to get your hard money back and in return you get shares of the deal but I don’t know I feel uncomfortable with this. I think it’s a lot of money I don’t know if it’s quite worth it. I’ve seen deals go through due diligence and for some reason it falls out I also see a lot of deals that get shoved through because the operator doesn’t want to lose their hard money or they don’t want to pay off their hard money lender and not because they didn’t close the deal. That can always be a little shady too but are they for me I sign on the debt on loans I think that is pretty fair in terms of what you’re compensated with and you know you should like the deal you should trust the people you’re working with. The same goes for any work with people you know, like or trusts to begin with, and yeah can be a great way if you’re higher than a few billion dollars net worth to get a little bang for your buck but if you if you guys have any more of these questions, I would check it out at simplepassivecashflow.com/kp or go to simplepassivecashflow.com/syndication for the complete syndication guide there and I am coming up with the ecourse I’m actually working on this month as I’m wrapping up wrapping up the home arrest here why it’d helped me get stuff done without a lot of other distractions. So be on the lookout for that and we’ll catch you guys next time.

 

5:07  

This website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained herein information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

 

How to Best Utilize Passive Losses w/ Brandon Hall

https://youtu.be/umCsNG8sLNc

0:00
The passive loss will be suspended in period four because I cannot use it I don’t have I’m not a real estate professional, I’m not defending anything, so I can’t use that passive loss.

0:13
Anyone they even try to rent them out.

0:21
Hey, simple passive cash flow listeners. Today we have Brandon Hall, a CPA, we are going to be talking about some of the very commonly used tactics that we talked about almost every other week in the mastermind, you guys can learn more about that. It’s simple passive cash flow, calm slash journey. We’ll see accredited investors in there. We’re talking about how we’re going to customize what we’re going to talk about generally today. But yeah, thanks for jumping on Brandon, these questions always come up. So it’s always great to get a real CPA to kind of break it down for us.

0:53
Yeah, happy to be here and happy to help.

0:55
So let’s kind of start start from the top right, like syndication investors get passive losses, maybe you can kind of break that down, and then we can kind of get into Well, how do we use those? Sure,

1:07
sure. So when you invest in a syndication as a limited partner, the losses coming back are definitely going to be considered passive. And those passive losses can only offset passive income from your other passive activities. So I could have like a syndication that is producing positive net income, and that’s passive income. And then I could have another syndication that I’ve just invested in, that’s going to push back at the last from like a cost of creation study, I can use the losses from syndication beams offset the income from syndication a, so you can cancel them out. But if I have net losses, even after I do, even after I offset all my income, by net losses, they are net passive losses, and they get suspended and carry forward into future years until it can generate passive income, or until I sell a syndication investment adding game. So we don’t lose the suspended losses, they just sit on our books to hang out until we can generate income to tap into them at some future point.

2:05
And one of the main reasons why I invest in syndications these days, instead of your little one off single family home is single family homes, you can deduct it over what 27 years or so which is very lame, it’s gonna take forever to get that but with those with when you do a cost segregation, which I typically pay maybe five grand to do one of those, I can extract a third of all the depreciation in the first year distribute that to all passive investors. And I don’t know what you’re seeing Brandon, but like, typically, on an investor load where they’re using pretty healthy leverage 70 to 80% loan the value, they put in 100 grand they’re getting anywhere from 50 grand to over 100 grand a passive losses to the first year. But what do you kind of seen as you guys put together all these k ones?

2:54
Yeah, yeah, I think we pegged somebody with somebody my firm was tracking, I believe the average was around 90% of whatever dollar you invest is going to come back as a passive loss across all syndicates investments that are out there. So that includes the 50s. That also includes hundreds.

3:11
Yeah, something I’ve been seeing these last few months. And if you’ve been seeing deals with like COVID reserves, I don’t know if that’s the right term, but you’ve got to stick three to six months of reserves in the bank can be a substantial amount of money, but it’s definitely been diluting the cost segregation a little bit, maybe bringing it down. 10%. But still pretty good. I mean, can’t complain. Yeah,

3:32
yeah, definitely. Definitely. I mean, we’ve seen I think gold reserves smart. Just never know what’s going to happen over the coming years. But yeah,

3:41
yes. And what’s a newer thing too, yet, you’re seeing a lot of these deals that people are using this different class of investors private equity, what it’s called, it’s kind of a fixed rate of return. They get paid first, but they don’t get any upside. But the one cool thing is they still are considered equity investors and therefore get a piece of the losses too. Yep. Yep. The nice thing about LLC syndicates is that you can structure them really hard you like losing all sorts of interesting structures. I mean, the typical structure is some sort of 2080 3070 4060 split between the GP and LP pref on there. But we’ve seen special allocations of depreciation and all sorts of fun stuff. Well, so investor, you know, puts in 100 grand and maybe gets 50 or $70,000 of his passive losses. Maybe take us through how to use that, right?

4:34
Yeah. So if I invest in syndication, and I receive a passive loss of Indian mount, the question is, can I use the passive loss and let’s assume that I don’t have any other passive income. I don’t have any other passive activities, that passive loss will be suspended in period four, because I cannot use it. I don’t have I’m not a real estate professional. I’m not materially defending anything, so I can’t use that passive loss. But on the flip side, let’s say that I’m built out my own real estate portfolio, so I have five duplexes, and I self manage those five duplexes. And let’s assume that on those five duplexes I, I’ve materially participate and I qualify as a real estate professional. So those five duplexes are non passive activities. When I then go and make a syndication investment, I can make an election to aggregate all of my rental activities into one activity for the purpose of this section 469 tests. So what that means is, if I put $50,000 into syndication, when I’ve already qualified as a real estate professional, and I already materially participate on my own portfolio, I can aggregate in the syndication investment into my overall portfolio. And then I can take a loss, a non passive loss from that syndication investment. If I don’t make that aggregation election, what happens is that syndication investment will still be considered passive. So even if I’m a real estate professional, and even if I materially participate in my, my own portfolio, if I don’t make that aggregation election, I still might not be able to use those losses. So by making the aggregation larger, what I’m, what I’m effectively doing is I’m re characterizing that loss from passive to non passive, and then I can take that loss. So what we’ll see a lot of our clients do is build out their own real estate portfolio, they’ll self manage, it will do all the repairs, or coordinate with all the tenants themselves. It doesn’t have to be anything, it doesn’t have to be a substantial portfolio, but one that will drive you to the 750 hour test in more than half your time test to qualify as real estate professional. And through that they’re also materially participant, so they have that non passive portfolio, and then they’ll go and place syndication investments to boost their current year losses.

6:46
And that’s something that’s common that CPAs will not get on board with the aggregation or that grouping.

6:53
Oh, no

6:54
aspect right there. That’s probably why you need a new CPA, listen to this right now, and need to look at you cross side, I just all I say is like, well, that’s why they have a day job, right?

7:08
So but if you if it’s a good point, and if your CPA ever challenges you on that, then I would ask them to go fill out form 8582. That’s where all these losses get aggregated at the end of the day. And see what they say that

7:23
a good point. I mean, we talk a lot about this stuff on these podcasts or in these groups. And we’re just giving you the ideas and the ammo. I mean, it’s, I always tell my folks in my mastermind, like, Look, you guys are empowered with this information. Your CPA to me isn’t really a tax planner. I mean, they’re not planning for you that they’re there to do your paperwork. If you get a good one. Yeah, maybe they can, but they don’t know what deals are going into. They don’t know how much passive losses they’re going to be. They don’t know what the time horizon or the risk reward profile of those deals are. It’s unfair for them to be able to tax plan out in the head, this is your job. This is your number one costs him like a to do it yourself. But these are kind of the building blocks of starting to do it by yourself and kind of steer the ship on your own. But you kind of are talking about a little bit so people ask a high paid professional making over 200 $300,000 a year, how come I can’t get these passive losses are pals for short and offset my active that’d be to salary that I chose supposed to eat them down? What’s the deal, man?

8:26
Yeah, well, the most simple way to explain it is that your W two business income, capital gains, stock sales, interest, dividend income, all of that income is considered non passive. So if I go out and create a passive loss, I can’t net my passive losses against my non passive losses. So my goal then should be to re characterize my passive losses as non passive. And there’s quite a number of ways that you can go about that one of which I just described is especially affecting those that are investing in syndications. But that needs to be the goal at the end of the day is how do I re characterize my passive losses as non passive if I’m trying to offset my other non passive income?

9:07
And one of the big strategies that we like to use, if that’s possible, is the real estate professional status that any breakdown that I don’t know what we’d call it, but that it’s like a two part test, right? there’s kind of two things that they need to qualify for.

9:22
Yes, yeah, two steps toward tests. And then the third hurdle that you have to get over. So the first two tests, you have to spend 750 personal service hours in the Real Property trader business in which you materially participate, personal service hours, real property, trader business, material participation, 750 hours, the second,

9:43
let’s let’s break that one down real quick. So that means being an LP and five syndication deals does not work, because you’re not you’re not a managing member. But what are a couple of examples that you see, like you mentioned, a few rental properties is that work?

10:00
It will. So let’s talk about that syndication investment. So it’s 750 personal service hours a real property trader business in which you materially participate. Now the syndication is going to qualify as a real property trader business, but you your personal service hours, if you think about the litmus test of a personal service, our what that really means is or the litmus test for it is, if I did not log the time that I’m logging, or if I did not spend the time that I’m spending on this activity, the activity would fail the operation, the day to day operations would cease. If you’re a limited partner, investors in your personal service hours are not going to affect the underlying deal. So therefore, we’re automatically out. But then we’re also not materially participating as a limited partner, there’s just no way that we can. So whenever we invest in limited partnership stakes, or syndications, as a limited partner, we’re not able to hit personal service hours for material patients. So we’re trying to hit 750 personal service hours, and real arbitrators in which we materially participate. We’re already out because none of the hours that we log against that activity will actually count towards that 750 hour test.

11:09
And another thing that we will just leave as a teaser for now is becoming us all part of that general partnership and being an active participation in there get we can we’ll talk about that more next week when you come in, join us on the mastermind call. But that’s more of an inner circle type of activity. But what about for moving on to rental properties? Somebody just owns a few of them?

11:29
Yeah, well, so that second test that second statutory test for real estate profession, statuses spending more than half your time in real estate than you do anywhere else, which could, we will kick out the W two people and business people to be working part time or not at all, in order to hit that second test. So assuming that you can hit both of those tests, 750 hours, and more than half the time, the next hurdle is to materially participate in my rental portfolio. And the the issue that we run into or is typically, it’s typically not gonna be an issue for landlords if you if landlording is your only real estate activity, and whether your landlord in large projects or single family homes, if that’s your only activity, you typically don’t have to worry about the material visitation tests, because you’re going to hit them to visitation on your way to 750 hours. But if you are a real estate agent, then you’re not materially participating in your rental portfolio, but you at the same time can still be a real estate professional because I as a real estate agent could spend 1500 hours brokering deals all day long. Well, that’s a real property, trader business. They are personal service hours, and I materially participate. So I meet test one 750 hours. And by spending 1500 hours during the year, that indicates that it’s my full time job. So I also meet test too. So I’m a real estate professional as a real estate agent. But what if I forget to also material materially participate in my rental portfolio, then my rental losses are still passive. So what we’d like to see is pretty significant participation by either you or your spouse in the rental portfolio itself, in order to hit those material participation pass, or you do the landlording full time, that’s all you do.

13:16
And that was that’s a big misnomer, right? Because people think, oh, I’ll just have my spouse get a real estate license. So then just sell one house a year or something like that. It does not gonna work. Not gonna work. Yeah. Yeah. Another other thoughts are that I think for more of a credit investors listen to his podcasts. It’s like, Is it worth it to buy three crappy houses and be the landlord and get real professional status? Well, in my opinion, unless your AGI is over 300,000, in probably a year, you’re not paying too much taxes? Let’s be honest, it may not be worth it.

13:50
Oh, we have a progressive system. Right. So I think 300 K, I think the 24% tax bracket goes up to $317,000. If you’re married filing joint, so only after 317. Are you taxed at what’s the next 130 2%? So if you’re in like 30 to 3537. Okay, yeah, we want to get creative here and try to mitigate but but it’s also similar conversation to what I’ve been had with a lot of clients and cares Act came out. Everybody wants these big net operating losses. And so they’re like, how much real estate Should I buy to create a non passive loss that wipes out all of my income and increase the net net operating loss that I can then carry back five years? Because that sounds cool. And like, Well, sure, but 100 and whatever $15,000 of this real estate loss that you have is only going to save you 10 to 12% per dollar. So to what extent do we want to create this loss, like we want to maximize the savings, so we might not want to create a huge loss in one year, we might want to space it out. So we stay in that 35 37% range? Yeah,

14:57
just to kind of highlight that for people. If you’re making over $300,000 a year real estate professional status is definitely something you should be looking at. I mean, there’s wonderful things that can come with this, right? Yeah, one spouse being a lot of money, one that isn’t perfect, that person can stay at home, take care of the family more. And actually, at the end of the day, the net on the financial statement is better. Because you’re enacting this strategy. And if you’re I would say, if you’re under 100, maybe even $200,000 of AGI this stuff isn’t probably for you, which is why this is accredited investor mastermind Today the topic. But I think for the lower net worth, guys, the lower income guys, it’s Can you still take 25 grand of passive losses off of like, if you’re making under 100? Was 100 150, or something like that? Yeah, we get gifts, some of the lower the lower income guy something.

15:47
Yeah.

15:49
Yeah. And I think that if you’re in the 22, to 24%, tax bracket, these these losses are still beneficial to a degree in for married filing joint, you drop into the 12% tax bracket, you earn less than $80,200. So that’s that 22% threshold. And 24%, I said was 115. But that’s actually 171. So between 80,000 and $171,000, by married filing joint, I’m getting taxed at 22% after 171 K, now I’m being taxed 24%. So if you’re in that threshold, I still think that it’s potentially applicable. But to answer your question, specifically, if you’re earning less than $100,000, you have what they call a $25,000 passive loss allowance that you can claim, you have to be actively participating, you also have to own 10% of the activity. active participation just means management decisions are much lower bar than real estate professional status than material participation, you have to worry about all that, if you’re earning less than 100, you get a full $25,000 passive loss allowance. As you scale up to 150 k in earnings, that $25,000 passable, passive loss allowance phases out, it phases out $1 for every $2 above 100 K. So if I earn $110,000, I phased out $5,000 of the passive loss allowance and half of whatever my income is above 100, is how you calculate that. And so there’s some strategies here, the first strategy is to manage my income. If I’m in that, in that area, how do that I can max out my 401k contributions, we’ve had people at 150 K, contribute the full 401k contributions of 19,000. And whatever that is, in 2020, make that full contribution, drop your income, your modified adjusted gross income down to 141. And now you’ve just unlocked 90 $500 of that passive loss allowance that you can then claim. And that 90 $500 passive loss allowance then yields another $2,000, assuming taxing for you. So all of a sudden, my $19,000 contribution, my 401k saves me a lot more money than it would otherwise because it unlocks some of this passive loss allowance that I’m able to claim. So if you’re less than 100 K, you get a $25,000 passive loss allowance. If you’re more than 100 K, that starts phasing out. And once you reach $150,000, you’re 25,000 passive loss allowance has been paid down to zero dollars.

18:18
And I think like most I don’t know about most, but a lot of CPAs, especially the more conservative ones will definitely say yeah, you’re not active manager, they’ll tonight kind of fight you on that claim. So you as an investor need to kind of know what the rules are to get what you’re looking for. Because if not, they’re not going to check the box for you. And this topic comes up a lot, right? Like their CPA says, Well, are you actively participating? And they’re like, well, you have a property manager. So they say you’re not?

18:46
Hmm, yeah, you can be actively participating with a property manager, you might not be materially participating if you have a property manager. But those are two separate tests.

18:56
Right? material participating, like you said, is for real estate professional status, but for what we’re talking about right here is just active participating. And you’re you’re making the shots, somebody else is doing your dirty work, but you’re calling the shots.

19:07
Exactly.

19:09
And but like just using an example, this is kind of tax time right now, this is tax time for everybody who is more of a sophisticated investor, that actually files in October, like once you get your return back, this is the stuff you should be checking, right that they they maximize that $25,000 if you have the passive losses, if you’re under that threshold, so this is where you would have to kind of keep that in check and kind of drive the ship. But I’m sure that it just does it does it automatically.

19:37
We trained our staff and try to do that automatically. We do make mistakes. I think everybody makes mistakes, especially when you’re trying to crank through tax returns leading up to the deadline but for the most part, we get it right we ask you questions.

19:50
Yeah. And I know you guys you kind of share my the same sentiment as me is like you’d like to work with good clients, right that know this stuff as opposed to walking in a meeting with a client and then They are asking you why blue ocean questions? What should I do Brandon, those, those are bad clients to work with. Like, you want them to kind of know this stuff. And that kind of you can work collaboratively with them and see what you guys can create.

20:14
Yeah, absolutely well, and that’s kind of my my new mission is to educate investors across the country and empower them to have better conversations with their own advisors. So we’ve been like focused on a lot of educational content recently, to help facilitate that it’s been going pretty well.

20:31
So just to kind of wrap things up, things that you’re seeing in the the stimulus plan, I think we’re recording this in October before the election. But what do you what are you kind of excited that might happen to be on the lookout for Trump’s taxes?

20:48
So the new stimulus plan, not a whole lot in there for real estate investors or the real estate investors should be aware from a tax perspective, obviously, they have all the eviction moratoriums, and definitely get up to speed on. But going forward, right now we have this big payroll tax deferral that nobody’s using, that I’m aware of. If the republicans win in November, the thought is that they will make that that payroll tax deferral permanent next year, that’s the thought that’s a that is a prediction, I can’t confirm that that will or will not happen. But that is something that they have promised, if they win. On the flip side, if the democratic party wins in November, then we’re going to, we will most likely see a lot of changes related to the tax code, we’ll probably see some 2017 tax cuts and jobs act provisions rolled back, we might see the elimination of the step of basis rules, whenever you pass away and you pass real estate on to heirs. They get to inherit the property at the fair market value, they can start depreciation all over that wipe out all the gains all the depreciation recapture. So that could potentially go away. And then 1031 exchanges are being challenged again, but I don’t think that I would expect in 31 exchanges to stay within the code and not actually be pushed out.

22:12
Yeah, I’m a big advocate for like, I don’t really care about the 1031 exchange let them have it. I mean, with bonus depreciation, that’s what I really care about. Right now the sunset it starts at what 2022 or something like that starts to step down. And phase out. You think that’s going to be going away or extending gym bonus depreciation? Yeah, with the heavy with the cost segregation to bonus depreciation.

22:37
Yes, bonus depreciation is going to start being phased out in 2022 or in 2023, it drops to 80% and then the next year 60 then 40, then 20 and zero so I would expect at some point Congress to reconvene on that and try to figure out if they want to keep it or not bonus appreciate has been around for a while whenever it sunsets it gets extended we might see similar treatment again

23:03
Yeah, and when you seen Democratic or Republican Party you’re meeting the senate right so that people okay, clear. Yeah, presidential just a figurehead. Yeah, but yeah, I want you to give her contact information folks get a hold of you and yeah, thanks for coming on.

23:18
You had a problem you can contact me at www.therealestateCPA.com we’ve got a lot of educational content on there, that real estate professional status, we have a 12,000 word guide on exactly how it works for with Internal Revenue Code citations and Tax Court cases that we’re not seeing you. There’s a lot of bad content out there on real estate professional status. So we decided to set the record straight so check that out. That’s all on our website. Again, that’s www.theRealEstateCPA.com

23:48
and I’ll put on all these resources including this video a bit simplepassivecashflow.com/tax, that’s slash tax. And if you guys want to join our mastermind, check it out. It’s simplepassivecashflow.com/journey. Brandon’s gonna be in there I think next week Monday answering all my more devious questions on tax and different ideas I have that we kind of talked about in our little cave works ourselves. So Alright guys, we’ll talk to you guys later right this website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained herein information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

Cons of the BRRR Strategy

https://youtu.be/blqXBWlg3lQ

0:24
Today we’re going to talk about the cons of why you should not be doing these burbs. So for those of you guys don’t know what bearse stands for its acronym for by rehab, rent, refinance, repeat. It’s this clever little term created by folks on the internet, where you pick up a property, you rehab it, and you increase the value of it, you rent it out in the meantime. But then the trick comes is when you get a loan on it from a bank, and you get all your original capital back out. And a lot of times, in theory, you can get all your initial capital and be sort of in the deal for nothing. If you’ve done one of these deals before. Well, good job for you. You’ve probably made a bunch of equity this way and likely gotten into the deal for no money, like I said, but from my outsider’s perspective, it’s successful most of the time, like 70%, but it always takes time.

1:19
So as higher net worth investors, like in our group, for some of us, at least time is more important than getting the best deal or in this case, free equity. When you add in the element of the risk, it takes the decision closer, most accredited investors would not bother with a turnkey renter or any type of bur because of the scalability. The sub $200,000 net worth bro might be really excited about getting into a cool $60,000 property with no equity after doing a successful for over $20,000 of manufactured equity means very little for an accredited investor. So if you’re going to do these things, here are some considerations for you to think about. First, have you done a partnership with this general contractor before is this small time general contractors or larger, bigger size builder, a lot of our apartment deals. That’s why I like this commercial world because a lot of our contractors and vendors are big companies with a lot of times 510 million dollars plus of insurance.

2:19
So just on that scale, and they’re much more sophisticated than your run of the mill general contractor that run that drives a little Toyota truck around. So I’d be very skeptical of the deal. Unless you’re incentivizing the person who is your builder or your rehab or your general contractor to do a good job and not cut corners behind your back, especially if you’re a remote investor, like a lot of us are, really there’s no recourse for you to kind of have oversight. But some people will have like an inspector kind of verify this stuff. But to me, it’s just a matter of time before you get screwed over. So maybe I’m just cynical, but I feel like this business proposition puts all the risks on you, the investor, and you basically are giving your GC or rehab or free rein to possibly the screw you over.

3:10
So right now I’m actually doing one of these on one of my properties where I have property as is value of $160,000. in Birmingham. It’s actually I’ve held this property for a number of years and then saying I’m going mostly to syndications of private placements for the scalability. And I feel they’re stronger returns risk adjusted returns. So I’m looking to rehab this property, the rehab estimates around $40,000. And there’s seems to be a bunch of margin the ARV or after repair value is about $250,000. So one of the things that could possibly go wrong here are another renovation could easily go over, as most larger renovations typically do. What many translate to a 25% overrun on the $40,000 estimate is in total, in the realm of possibility. That could be a swing of plus about 100,000 or $10,000. So let’s say the builder has other high paying renovation jobs are priorities that he would rather concentrate on. And your project kind of falls by the wayside. At least the schedule goes back a lot of these markets, if you don’t get the property on the market by September, October, you knew you’re waiting another three to five months to really get it back on the market in March, or the summertime of the next year. And in the best case scenario in this situation. Maybe I make an extra $20,000 of profit here.

4:40
But the question is, is it really worth the time and the headache The other thing to think about is your why and huge sums of money. A lot of times these guys will want to do want all the money up front which I would never recommend you always want to have some kind of a draw schedule and to be able to control the funds Granted, the general contractor needs to purchase supplies, and probably backfill the payments on their past project not associated with you too, because it’s this big, continuous cycle. And that’s, that’s why I don’t really like working with these general contractors, because a lot of these guys, their net worth is under $200,000. And they frankly just are insolvent. And when things get really tough need to pay off, pay their family bills, and put food on the table, they’re going to screw you over the person who’s potentially 1000 miles away, that has really had no recourse.

5:34
So at the very least, make sure you have some kind of draw schedule or control, create project completion milestones. And just like when I was a project engineer, it all comes down to your scope, schedule budget, like we’ve talked about the budget there, but also the scope, what are you guys working on, create a full scope of work and sign construction contract. And then also, no contract is complete without a detailed schedule. So the reason why you get the schedule is because now you can point to certain milestones along the way and hold them accountable for it can’t just be completed by a certain date. And, and needs to be some level of detail in there. because inevitably, things will pop up. And there’s, there’s some of the internal milestones that are in the control of the contractor, you can hold them accountable to them much easier.

6:23
Of course, I’m kind of glazing over the top of a lot of this stuff. And like it’s just from the my perspective, for a lot of working professionals that we work with even a lot of doctors, lawyers, engineers, folks making over 100 200 $300,000 a year to get a 20 to $30,000 equity by doing one of these burrs that take anywhere from three to nine months, it’s just not worth the trouble. Now it’s, it’s fine. If you don’t have that much money, your net worth is under a quarter million or half a million, this is the stuff that you potentially have to do. But the way I grew my net worth from zero to half a million was I just bought that first rental property then I bought the next 134 years later, I didn’t get up to 11 rental properties until I bought my first one in 2009. And I didn’t get that loved one until around 2015 16. So what a lot of people don’t realize it took me almost a decade to get up to that stage. And I just closing things out focus on being an investor, not a landlord. They’ll do the math here, like picking up single family home rental properties, that cash flow 300 bucks a month, you’re going to need 20 or 40 of those things to replace your income.

7:37
Again, I had 10 of these things. And I had an eviction or two every year and three or four big things that happen such as like a trap going out or some kind of plumbing leak. But imagine if he had 30 of those just three x those numbers now you’re talking about an eviction seemingly every other month and some kind of big catastrophe every few weeks. Not directly investing in turnkey rental or small multifamily is a great way to start to build up and learn but to create that war chest to go into more scalable investments should be the progression and that’s personally why I do private placements in syndications today.

8:14
Now if your net worth income minus expenses under $300,000 are you’re barely able to save $30,000 look syndications are not for you. Stick with these turnkey rentals or even do these burrs that were kind of against in this whole video you’re going to have a little more gains that way what you’re doing is you’re essentially trading your sweat equity for that extra equity at the end. If you guys have any other questions please submit it to simplepassivecashflow.com/question and we are also starting a new program to help all newer investors trying to pick up their first few single family home remote rentals. Check out more details of that at simplepassivecashflow.com/incubator.

How to Lead a Fulfilling Life w/ Mariko Frederick

https://youtu.be/hthUUGjsxUs

Hello, simple passive cashflow listeners. Today. We are talking to Merico Frederick, give me a little bit different today, a little bit more touchy, feely. I’m not too much of real estate or wealth building today, but we’re Rico does work with a lot of high end professionals, Olympic and professional athletes, CEOs of seven and eight figure businesses.

And she is a transformational speaker and performance coach. And she is founder and CEO, so pro priority and, that she would bring her on and kind of talk about some findings, with folks that are, you know, sort of listeners of this podcast and insights. but welcome. Merico. Thank you. Thank you for having me on today.

Yeah. So let’s get right into it. you know, you, you and I were kind of talking before and, you know, you, you work with a vast variety of high level performing folks. I would say the people that kind of listen to this podcast primarily are working professionals, but man, these guys are high performing folks making over a hundred, 200, 300,000 a year.

various level of white collar jobs or medical professionals. yeah, let’s talk about some of those, the findings from, you know, kind of those, that cohort. Sure. how can we go deeper into that? So Merico w you know, a lot of these people, they, they come to you. What is the first motivation that they’re feeling that kind of triggers them to find somebody like yourself?

Yeah, their finger on exactly what it is. So Merico, so a lot of people are coming to you for help getting unstuck. What are some of the motivations that maybe if somebody is listening right now that they’re feeling that kind of triggers a lot of your clients to find you in the first place? Sure. So most of my clients have a feeling inside.

They can’t put their finger on it, but they just know they’re meant for more. They feel like they have another purpose purpose. Most of my clients, very well financial we’ve done big things in their life. Still fight that or they’re meant to do. And so they, I love working them because that’s something I’m able to help them with is discover exactly what they’re meant to do before they leave this world.

Is there any, some kind of like a trigger, cause I know when people kind of find simple passive cash flow or they start to do that dive late into the evening on Google. How do I quit? My job it’s usually because of some big event. Is, is that some of your findings or is it just a general buildup over time?

I’d say there’s two types of people. So one type is they know they’re meant for more. And they’re really seeking me out to figure out what that is. I do a lot of work by referrals. the other is

they have accomplished so much in their life, but they feel unfulfilled. And so on the outside, when you look at their life, they have made, You know, very good money and they have accomplished things that not a lot of people in the world can say they’ve done. And yet still feel like quote, empty inside or they’ll come to me and say, I kind of fell dead inside and that’s not something they can talk about because on the outside, their life looks really great.

Now, what are some of the barriers for why someone would, you know, not kind of white knuckle it, or keep, keep moving forward? I mean, I think a lot of us have this mindset or at least I do that. Hey, life’s, life’s tough. Suck it up, you know? Yeah. And so a lot of those people have done that. They’ve gone through that part and that’s why they’re so successful is they did get through that.

They do have a really solid mindset around money, but what about the rest of their life? What about their legacy before they leave this world? Because once you have attained a certain amount of money, it’s like, okay, but what’s next? I have all this money. I have these accolades now, what do I do? How do I feel fulfilled?

How do I wake up in the morning and really feel happy with my success? No. I think a lot of barrier is, is for a lot of people, as you know, just time, you know, especially if they have a family, you know, to go spend some time when somebody’s kind of talking these issues out or not, they’re not really issues.

Right. They’re just, they’re kind of more barriers. And like, how would you say, like how, how does this kind of work into someone’s busy schedule? Oh my gosh. So great question. When we’re thinking about abundance. one of the things I learned when I died, well, I usually don’t say that I died because there is no death.

When I left this world, I’ll tell you I never more alive. but when I left this world, it realize there’s a lot that happens when you, when you leave this world. But one of the nuggets that I brought back was that we tend to and specific money cage. Oh, abundance is part of a creative energy. And so we, you know, if you’re really thinking I’m a little bit conscious, you can say, okay, money is created not.

when you think of music, poetry, that’s creative energy. And right now, especially during the pandemic, we’re not worried that we’re going to run out of music. We’re not worried that we’re going to run up, run out of poetry or artists, but we’re worried that we’re going to run out of money. And interesting money in my experience in, in, in death is that money, is it?

Same category? as abundance, abundant creative energy, right? So whether you’re creating music or creating money, it’s the same energy, it’s the same concept and we have access to it. And so just the way that it really has to do with your mind and your beliefs around. And so I would say that most people on the planet have some thinning belief.

Funny and that they either money has, it’s hard to earn. That’s a belief. It’s not a true one. Or money is hard to come by. And those are not true. And when you leave this world, you realize all that, right? And then it’s like, Oh my gosh. I was believing in, in, in, in lack. And so when I came back, I realized that abundance is literally all around us.

And so to answer your question, you really have to be tuned into it. You have to change mindset, you change your conversation about money from the moment you wake up moment and you go to bed. And just to give people a little bit context, you know, you kind of referring to, how you kind of your near death experience, Rica doesn’t really like to get into it, but for the most part, you know, she had, she had Lyme disease and, you know, kind of had this epiphany, kind of in, in, in the low period of that.

So, was that kind of epiphany kind of, came at to you at a certain point? Or was it, you know, did it take days to sort of. come together for you. Okay. Both. So when I came back during my death, I had what I call a download. It felt like I was being, first of all at my death, didn’t feel I’m sure I wasn’t.

So it happened at home. So I wasn’t connected to, you know, machinery at a hospital. but my husband will tell you it wasn’t very long, you know, may have been just a matter of minutes, but on my end it felt like I was there for 800 years. So for me it felt like I lived a whole lifetime there. so when I came back, I had gotten kind of what I call a download.

I’d gotten a lot of information to bring back and they told me it wasn’t my time. I had to go back and help people. So when I came back, I understood it, but I’ll bet it took me a good decade to unpack it and be able to understand it in a way that I was living it. Plus I went through a long term illness and so I understood it on one level, but how do I make it?

How do I live it? Right. That took a decade. Yeah. Would you say it was more, you needed to help people or was it that you needed to make a bigger impact or legacy in the world? Which of the. The two did it skew towards

Hm, legacy, definitely. I know that I’m here to impact a lot of people. I know that when I came back, I knew I was here to, to, to help millions of people around the world. Now that said, when you come back and you can’t even stand up or go to the bathroom on your own, I had to kind of, I had to kind of, I had to understand in a way that I was a time, which I needed to.

People I think because, because the big of what I was here to not moment coming back after the spread. Yeah. And I think, you know, most of the people I’ll have the nice, they’ll do free calls for, you know, new folks that we do a pipeline club. I mean, you guys can send up for that. It’s simple, passive cashflow.com/club.

but I’m talking to a lot of people who are, you know, they’re kind of getting started on this journey and, you know, they’re, they’re kind of thinking about themselves first and I’m not saying that in a bad way. I’m just, they’re just trying to get themselves settled and get them, you know, it’s kind of like just getting back to baseline.

in your circumstance and, you know, I think at, at, at a certain point when money is really not an issue and, and you’re kind of just, you just kind of thinking about what’s bigger, what kind of impact you’re going to make kind of legacy you’re going to make. but it’s a face thing you can’t, you can’t, I don’t think you can just skip right to going to legacy.

I think you have to get yourself up the baseline. And put your own oxygen mask on first, but I mean, what’s your, what’s your opinion on that? Helping folks get, I mean, you’re right. It, yeah, it takes, it takes years to understand what that really is. And, you know, oftentimes people have more than one legacy, right.

So if you’ve been a professional athlete, that’s one legacy, but what’s after that. and so because we are unlimited, that’s the other thing we’re unlimited. So in our human. In this world, we feel very, we feel the limitations of, of this world, but when you leave it, you know, Oh, I was unlimited the entire time and I had no idea.

but what I would say as far as, as far as, how. We tend to be raised from, from children to think, what do you want to do when you grow up? What do you want to be when you grow up? And so I feel like culturally, we planning for middle age planning too. Cause when they say, what do you want to be when you grow up?

They’re really thinking that at least in my opinion, what do you want to be when you’re 30 or 40? Right. And not, who are you when you leave on your last breath? And I have a lot of my clients do this exercise of on your last breath. Who are you? Who were you? Who were you here to serve? You do that, right?

Because when we think of that, we think of the entire life. Then when we go back and we, these are the people that I know that I’m here to help that I know this is what I’m here to do, and it’s easier to go back and do that. Yeah. So I, I have a, Little business and life coach now. And we’ve kind of come to a point or they’ve kind of made me see that my big motivation is I’m a big ego guy.

I want to create big legacy and big impact. And I think about this all the time when I’m, you know, w we’ll we’ll bring on a new client, into the mastermind, they’ve got to pay some money to get into that group. And then I take that money and I. Put it right back into something, you know, I pay a virtual assistant to do something, or I buy some ad Facebook ad, you know, few thousand dollars of Facebook ads.

I’m like, where did all this money go? You know, like I did this to kind of be financially free, but the here I am just burning it up again, putting it right back in the business and then for what? Right. And. It’s kind of like, I kind of created that short circuit where it, well, you know, it’s for legacy it’s for impact it’s for doing something bigger and you know, I’ve got the basis covered today.

And I think the other thing that you’re doing, is you are creating a network of people. So in my world, I call it my tribe. Right. So the cost. Of doing business, the cost of being in your mastermind, the way I see it is that’s the cost of being with, with these greater minds. It’s the cost is the price of admission to get into a mastermind and be with people that are like minded, because the conversation that are going on in, in your mastermind is not what’s going on in the rest of the world.

And so you need to bring those people together to say, how can we talk about money, about abundance, about wealth. About legacy in a way that’s more of an expansive conversation. And so the cost is saying, okay, and the people that, that aren’t willing to pay that cost that entering that entrance fee are going to there they’ll have a different conversation somewhere else.

Right. And so it’s, I think it’s beautiful because people need to be around people who are abundant in order to become abundant. Right. And you know, all I know is like a few years back, I couldn’t stand just talking to regular folks at work about normal financial building stuff. Right, right. You go pass them.

Yeah. nothing wrong with that. I used to do that for a long time. Not at all, but I think if growth is good and we do past relationships, and I think that that’s a really difficult thing for people because they want to hold onto all the relationships. Meanwhile, they also won’t want to grow past it and they want to go into a next level with abundance, with wealth and with their legacy.

And so it’s a matter of how do I navigate that and keep relationships that are really dear to me and also allow myself to grow. And that’s where, you know, masterminds are really. A wonderful place for that to happen. So you’re working with a lot of high end clients. you know, a lot of people work in day jobs.

What are some of the findings of the things you work through with those folks? the Tiffany’s they have guilt big one. So in leaving women, they know, or you need to do a lot of times what stops them up. Could you repeat that? You cut it up. Which part, the whole thing. Yeah.

Guilt. I would say the biggest factors because when somebody says, okay, when we see, okay, this is the bigness, this is what you’re meant to do before this world, but that might involve leaving their job and that right. Like their job, but they feel sometimes guilty. Well, but my company needs me. What would they do without me?

Right. And so actually guilt is a big one and I usually will tell them, well, you know, that company doesn’t care the next day. If you laugh, They wouldn’t care about you, but that’s just me, but how do you kind of work through that? I mean, you know, people, people think that they have, you know, if they left tomorrow, the whole world would crumble.

I think what you do is you have to, into your next four, you get there. Meaning, you have to step into the mindset. You have to step into feeling that next level of who you are before you become it. So, so part of what I do is I help people become the person that they need to be in order to thing they’re meant to do.

Right. So that’s a big mindset shift, and there’s a lot of action around that, but you literally have to feel it before you do it. So you have to like. We really have to believe in. You have to believe in your dream. if it’s not something you’re passionate about, then don’t do it because there has

to be a drive, right? In order, in order to be willing to quit your job, you have to really love what you’re doing. Obviously. So, is it kind of like you have to know what kind of legacy you’re going to create before you kind of get off of this current, your current job or your current path? Is that a key part of it?

So you don’t have to know the specifics, but you kind of have to be able to feel what it is, right. If you have no idea what it is, there’s, there’s no reason to quit your job, but if you are specific about, this is what I’m here to do. and you are in the financial position to quit your job or B both have your job.

And then on the side, You’re working your business, you’re growing your business. It doesn’t all have to happen. and so that really just comes down to time management. What are you doing right now? You know, what are you doing next? What’s up on the possibility list? What could you do? But you don’t need to carry that with you.

And that’s something that also stops people up. We look at all the possibility, okay, this is, this is what I want to do. And it’s, you know, it’s this big thing in the world. You can’t carry that around with you all day. That idea there’s too many working parts in that idea. So you have to really use time management skills and say, what am I doing right now?

What’s what’s on my schedule next week. And then you create like this possibility list of like, okay, and these are all the things that I could do, but I don’t, I’m not doing it right now today. And then you take some of the things that you could do and chunking them down to where you’re getting. You’re sort of chipping away at them.

one conversation that came up a lot during our last, Hawaii mastermind was, you know, a lot of people are already on the path of investing. You know, they pulled all their retirement funds. They’ve got things deployed and good cash flowing assets. but they’re realizing like, wow, I’m gonna need to invest a lot more.

And this is not a get rich quick thing. And I’m like, yeah, man. But then it’s it’s then I’m like, yeah, you better get comfortable, comfortable, buddy. Like, it’s going to take awhile. but they don’t have, maybe they just haven’t spent the time to kind of figure out what is that bigger thing that they’re going to need to create, or maybe they don’t want to create.

Maybe they’re totally happy. You know, they’re happy at their current job and you know what, what’s kind of the advice for those types of folks. Yeah. So. Why you’re doing what you’re doing. Right. So I know, I know why I show up. I do. I know I I’m, I I’m doing this. Cause I don’t want anyone to die with an assignment on their life.

I don’t want any leave this world unfinished. Right. We don’t get to go time, but I don’t want anyone if I can help it to leave this world and go, Oh my gosh, I didn’t finish. I could have done this big thing, but I wasn’t, I didn’t, I just got stuck. No. And cause that’s, that’s a, that happens. And so I think for people that really.

No, you know, they, they really feel like they want to do something bigger. They need to know why is it the right, not going to be instant. And so your why is going to get you to the heart. Your why is going to be, you know, thing you give up and putting forward. And if you don’t know, well, I’ll give up. So you really have to have a strong sense of why am I doing this?

I guess like, you know, one thing I’m, I’m kind of saying here is, you know, and let’s just say you make 80 grand a year and you save a whole bunch of it and you, you, you like you travel the world and you know, you’re good, right. If you’re good, you’re good. And also if you’re making $500,000 a year and that’s really all you really want to do and not really, you know, take up a, a side gig or a business or create a huge legacy.

You know, nothing’s wrong with that too either? Well, I think sometimes the legacy is your family, right? The legacy doesn’t have to be big. The legacy could be literally being the most amazing parent you’ve ever been or friend. So that’s the other thing, right? We, we, we tend to believe that a legacy has to be this big thing.

And sometimes it’s very quiet. Sometimes it’s something that nobody else notices. Right. We have those people in our family that live literally we’re the glue to the entire family. And that’s C I think that’s beautiful. I think that’s a well lit, so it’s not just about making money and being abundant.

It’s well, abundance elevate, right? Abundance is friendships, family relationships. All of it. Right, right. I think a lot of people listen to these podcasts and, you know, they hear about, you know, doing these big things, but that’s not for everybody. I mean, it’s, we don’t want to shame anybody. It just, you know, kind of playing the role kind of, you know, making your own world better place.

Right. That’s I mean that honestly, if you don’t have that nailed down, then the big system is not going to fix it. It’s not going to fix it, right. You really have to be, be, and continue to become a person that you really are happy with. And so that’s some personal development, right? You gotta kind of look at yourself and say, am I a good person?

Am I, am I a good friend? Am I a good father? Am I a good mother? That does have to come first. Okay. Yeah, I think, I think I see in like, you know, the real estate, for example, people with like these thousands of units, they’re kind of weird people, in my opinion, they’re kind of kooky. I always tell my, my clients, you know, let’s figure out what your end game is, you know, define your end game and work towards that.

And then when you get it stop, you know, I, and I use the analogy of like, people are on a train or the subway, you know, people always get off before the end of the line. The only people that I won’t get off or the weirdos, the homeless people. And the people that don’t really like, they’re just weird.

They just stay to the end. And that’s kind of like the, you know, the people that keep, keep trying to achieve and do more and more, more, but for what no reason, I mean, I mean, it’s cool. And sometimes people just like to ride the train, ride the subway, but that only happens and you know, some romantic comedies, I guess, but.

Yeah. I mean, I D I S I see the downside with some of the people that keep going and going and going. Yeah. I feel like that’s all they have because they didn’t build a life as well. And that can be weird. Any last thoughts, to kind of part on, the listeners here, if you think we missed. Go for it. I think that that’s really a big message here is just go for it.

You know, big don’t leave anything on decide what playing big means to you. Right? So like we said, playing big could mean, scaling down on work and becoming parents playing big in, you know, launching a business and, and drown the entire. But you decide what big means to you and don’t leave it undone.

Well said, Mariko’s website is so priority.com. You guys want to check her out and any other ways they get ahold of you, we’re gonna put up. Sure. I’m on, I’m on Instagram at spelled M a R I K O. and on Facebook, the Matico Frederick. All right. Well, thanks for listening everybody. We try to throw in one of these, You know, more life building type of less hardcore investing math science podcast once in a while, if you haven’t done.

So please check out the website. I’ve been doing a lot of upgrades there@sevillepassivecashflow.com. Lot of ultimate guides like for taxes, trade lines, legal, all sorts of fun stuff. So, we haven’t connected please. let’s get on the phone. She meant email lane and civil, passive cashflow.com. And we’ll see you guys next time.

How to Hedge Against a Recession w/ Russell Grey (Part 2 of 2)

0:10
Lane. Did you ever get a copy of the report we did called real asset investing? I think I did. I gave that presentation at the New Orleans investment conference in 2013. And I wrote the report shortly thereafter, and I chronicled first three or four years from China from 2009. To the time I wrote the report at the end of 2013, I chronicled all the moves that China had made to supplant the dollar to de dollarized the world to unseat the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. And they’ve solicited a lot of partners. Russia has sold all of its treasuries and bought all gold. There’s a reason we’re upset with China and Russia all the time. They’re anti dollar. So you and when you understand gold oil and the dollar, then you will understand geopolitics and all of this stuff about human rights and nuclear weapons and all that stuff, which doesn’t ever seem to make any sense gets thrown into the car. I’m not saying those things aren’t valid, but I believe that 90% of what we do geopolitically has to do with gold oil and the dollar. And when you look at it through that paradigm, you’ll you’ll see it and so then in 2018, at the future of money and wealth conference, I did a follow up presentation where I kind of updated that real asset investing report and talked about everything that China had done up to 2018 and how vulnerable the United States was becoming to having the dollar unseated. Well, now we’re teed up and so I think that the the challenge is if it was anybody except China, who’s completely vilified right now, and maybe justifiably so I’m not saying that the vilification of China is unjustified. I’m not here to defend China by any stretch of the imagination. But Kiyosaki taught me that there’s always more than one side to the story. And so all I know is that China is the best position to knock the dollar off, but I think right now they’re a bit of a pariah. And I I don’t know that people would be willing to trust China at this stage of the game, but they would be willing to trust gold if somebody, anybody if a coalition of countries came out and were to issue some form of a currency and backed it by gold, I think you would see the dollar collapse almost immediately. And I think any investor who understands what’s going on at the macroeconomic level and understands history, and that this aberration of history we’ve been in since 1971, where gold wasn’t behind paper currency realizes this is an experiment that probably isn’t going to end well. And the rest of the world is already used to navigating around the dollar. But Americans mostly only think of life net worth business, everything in terms of the dollar and they have no plan B and I think now is the time for Americans to start studying and to start really considering a plan B. And the good news is real estate investors are in an excellent position because they’ve got a big part of the equation figured out they know how to do the real estate component. They just need to learn how to add the gold component and now you can hedge against both inflation and deflation and and if nothing happens, you know worse off. And if something horrible happens you’re going to be in better shape than most

3:12
of your body it is is pretty much a fixed is a commodity, it’s packaged. Come on, it’s a lot of different commodities on one hand cash flows.

3:18
Yeah, Real Estate’s great. The challenge with real estate right now, where you have to be careful is that there’s a lot of error in the pricing. So I have a saying that says unrealized gains aren’t really real. They’re not right. I mean, the market gives you equity the market takes away we wrote equity happens, which is all about the price of properties go up denominated in dollars because the purchasing power of dollars fall over time. But if you purchase property with debt, then you actually make a profit over time because you’ve shorted the dollar with debt by bringing dollars from the future into the present and buying an asset and then you get to pay back later with lower dollars. You know, over time the rents go up over time the equity grows so how can I pay my house off fast buy the house now. Next Door using interest only loans on your house and the house next door, wait 10 years and at 7.2 annual appreciation, your house is going to double in price, sell the extra house and pay off your house and you never have to amortize one penny,

4:13
I’ll kind of summarize that in a different way for folks. I mean, people always ask like, well, should I do a 15 year mortgage or a 30? I’m like, well, you take as much debt as you can, because that’s the whole point of why you’re doing this

4:24
with the lowest required payment possible. Because you can always accelerate if you want to, but you just you lose control of the property. If you lose control of the cash flow. And the bigger the payment, the harder the cash flow is and if you know what’s the point in putting any more equity, I love interest only loans when you can get them and I love long term amortizations which mean your amortized loans have lower payments.

4:45
And this is why we’ve been brainwashed that you know that’s bad because the banks want us to pay off the debt. And actually if you want to hedge yourself or something that’s coming in the future, you want to take as much debt now so that when inflation’s happens it’s worth barely nothing.

4:58
Yeah, banks don’t want you to pay off the debt, they want you to roll it over. They want you to stay in debt because that’s how they acquire streams of income right? investing isn’t about buying low and selling high investing is about acquiring streams of income, what I call acquiring the efforts of others, you start a business not so that you have a lot of work to do every day you start a business so that you get a lot of people to go to work for you every day, and you make a profit on their efforts. The more people you have working, the more profits you make. If you have a sound business model, when you go to invest in real estate, I’m not interested in owning a property that goes from 100,000 to 200,000. I’m more interested in having two $100,000 houses that have two tenants instead of one because now I have twice as many people working for me right it’s you accumulating the efforts of others will debt is a way for bankers who don’t want to get their hands dirty to accumulate the efforts of others. So they want to lend but they use amortization schedules where all of the interest is front loaded if you pull up an Excel spreadsheet and do the loan amortization template that they have in Excel, and just Play with the numbers, look at how much what percentage of your monthly payment in the first five years is interest, most of it. So that’s all free money to the bank, it’s all profit. And if they can convince you five years later to refinance, they start that all over again. And so you know, it’s not that they want you to pay it off. They don’t want you to pay it off. They want you to roll it over, they start the loan over again. So interest rates go up and down to entice you to continually roll the debt over and start your amortization schedule over again.

6:30
They can pick up those origination fees for that.

6:33
Well, and then of course, yeah, the origination can mean I was in that business. You know, you make money on the church or the sound money world. You don’t want to be in debt. You want to be a lender, but in the world we operate in because our money itself is dead. If you pull out $1 bill or a $20 bill or $100 bill, it says right across the top Federal Reserve Note, well, we all know what a note is, are you when you buy a property and get a mortgage, you’re signing a promissory note, which is a promise pay a note in financial terms is a promise to pay. A Federal Reserve Note is a debt the Federal Reserve owes you money when you get that they owe you money. That’s why their balance sheet expands with the debt they’ve accumulated. That’s how much money they’ve printed. The problem is there’s no way to pay it off. It’s irredeemable. All you can do is trade it with other people that are locked in the debt aquarium, we all live in an environment of debt, there’s no way to get out of debt. So being debt free doesn’t work in a non sound money environment. I know a lot of people have a hard time getting their mind around it. But really, the key is to use debt strategically to outpace the devaluation or the inflation as the currency loses value because they’re printing it, you have got to be invested in something that is going to increase your purchasing power faster than you’re losing. And that’s why you have to use vehicles like leveraged real estate and for your liquid, you have to incorporate things like precious metals which hedge against that decrease precious metals are not an investment. It’s just an alternative to cash. That puts you outside the dollar and protects you from the dollar falling. But you have a highly liquid investment and you can go back into dollars whenever you want. You can borrow against your gold the same way you would against your property if you want except you don’t have to qualify, you can pivot into any currency you want. I mean if all of a sudden somebody came out as they suggested and say China announced a gold back, you won and all sudden you one way up in value and the Dollar fell. If you’re sitting in gold, you don’t care. You can trade your your gold for you want, but if you have dollars you just lost. It’s like the people in Venezuela that had dollars when the bulevar collapsed, they weren’t hurt. The people that had gold and dollars, which were considered safe forms of money in Venezuela weren’t hurt. But when the bulevar collapsed, those people were destroyed because it took a million bolivars to buy a roll of toilet paper.

8:49
So the way I personally play that is look at my checking account. It looks like them for I don’t have very much liquidity or cash ever. As soon as I get enough money, I put it into real estate right away.

8:58
No, I think I think this is a time To be liquid, I was playing that game running up into 2008. I was on the tail end of of what you’d call a real estate Bull Run. And then when the crap hit the fan, which it’s about to do, I was liquid, what I would be doing right now is looking at your portfolio and looking at everything, looking at your markets critically and asking myself, hey, if we have a severe economic depression, if this thing really is protracted, how is my market positioned? Is it a low cost of living? Is it a low tax? Is it going to be the kind of place that would be attractive for businesses and people who are trying to survive a recession? Are they going to move there and put upward demand pressure on prices? Or is it going to be a place that people are going to be fleeing? Once you’re inside the market? You have to ask yourself, what product niche Am I in? Am I catering to people who are getting weaker economically or my catering to people at the top of the market? And then if you’re at the top of the market or whatever price point you’re at compared to your competition, are you at the very, very top In the market, you always want to have enough people above you in a downturn so that as they become economically weak, they can move down and put upward demand on that spot where you’re at. And then the what happens is when that pressure from above comes down, it pushes the poor people at the bottom right off the bus and into the street. So you know, as those people start to fail, they get angry, they tear up your property. I’m not a big fan of D class for those reasons, especially an environment like this, because I’ve been with respect, but desperate people do crazy things. And when they don’t understand what’s happening, they lash out at people they perceive are victimizing them. And when you’re being evicted from your home, the landlord is the bad guy, and they’re going to destroy the property and pour cement down the toilet and tear out your air conditioning and sell your appliances. I mean, and we’ve had people do some of that stuff, right? So I’m not a fan of that. But if you can be in that spot where in good times people are moving up from below you and in bad times and also in good time. All the new build competition is happening at the top of the market. in bad times that people who are above you are coming down to the middle. So that middle market, middle product, niche, middle price point all the way across the board. And then where you have a great team. So if I’m if I’ve got the right market, the right product niche where I’m serving the right demographic at the right team, then I’m going to really fortify my focus on those properties, make sure that they’re operating really well that I’ve got good long term financing in place. If I have equity, I’m going to extract as much of it as I can get before the market takes it for me. And then I’m not going to roll that right into more real estate, I’m going to be liquid, I’m going to get some dry powder ready, because there’s going to be distress coming in this cycle. And I want to be prepared to take advantage of it. Anything that I have that’s marginal, I’m probably going to try to get rid of marginal markets, things run by marginal team things where I’m in a product niche that I think that group is going to be marginalized and then I’d start you know, looking for you Emerging markets like I talked about at the top of the show, where may or maybe we’re doing this pre mic. But you know, one of the areas that I think is really intriguing is how human behavior changes in the wake of a crisis. So you’ve got people that have just discovered that I don’t need to live in a 3000 or $4,000 a month house or apartment close to the work center, because I don’t need to go to the office anymore. I can actually move out of state from a high tax state to a low tax state, I can go from a high cost of living state to a low cost of living state, and I can go to my employer and they can pay me 10 or 20% less when I can have job security. And yet my my purchasing power, my true living standard goes up. I’ve been reading articles and I’m sure you’ve seen them as well, that demand for properties in rural areas is booming right now. And the cities are struggling. And I think that some of this behavior is temporary, but some of its permanent. People have discovered that they can shop online people that maybe were hesitant Didn’t to do that or didn’t like to do it or the habit of going shopping now haven’t been able to, I think retail is going to change, and it’s going to be a bit of a permanent change. I think a lot of businesses aren’t going to survive, they’re not going to come back. And risk capital is not going to be willing to try it again. So I think, you know, there’s going to be communities that are going to change. I think that manufacturing we just discovered, and I think we talked about this pre recording, you know, we just discovered the United States that we manufacture some critical meds, or we have critical meds and we have critical medical equipment that’s manufactured in a country that wasn’t on our side when we were in a crisis that were hoarding for themselves. And we realized that you know, our critical supply chain items, maybe need to come home. Well, when those factories come home. The question is, where are they going to go because they’re going to bring jobs, they’re going to bring demand for working class real estate. There could be some really affordable markets right now that are being overlooked. You know, when you have plenty of time, but when that starts to manifest the people who are brave and bold Aware and prepared and part of being prepared is being liquid and having boots on the ground teams ready to go, then you’re going to be able to move into those markets ahead of the curve and ride that wave up. So I think there’s going to be lots and lots of opportunity, but I would not be spreading my equity thin across a portfolio with high ltvs, even though I can get great interest rates, because all growth is at the margin, but all recession is at the margin. So if you’ve got an 80% loan to value on a property, you got 20% equity and the market receives it could receive 20%. And now you have no equity. So if you say I’ve got really tight control of the cash flow, and I don’t care that I have negative equity for five years, because I care what the property’s worth in 10 or 15, then then maybe, I mean, if you buy right, but I would think right now would be a time to be thinking about developing some liquidity and I would divide that liquidity up but and of course, I’m not giving anybody investment advice. I’m just a guy with opinions, but I’d be thinking about giving some of that liquidity up Between precious metals and dollars.

15:02
What about what about life insurance? A lot of guys like to do the infinite banking.

15:06
Yeah, so I actually just did a boots on the ground interview yesterday with Patrick Donahoe mutual friend. And we were talking a little bit about that. And what I like about that is that once again, it’s a place where you can have equity equity in these policies in these annuity writers, and you can borrow it back out without having to qualify or being obligated to make a payment. So if I could pull equity out of a property and sequester it from the property, especially properties with non recourse loans, you know, if the crap really hits the fan, then I’ve got the money out, and I may lose the property, but at least I have the equity. So insurance policies are private, I would definitely have assets outside the banking system. I think counterparty risk is another major thing. I asked Patrick to do some work for me and get back to me, I want to really understand counterparty risk, you know, what kind of shape are these insurance companies really in? I know the banking sector. system is in bad shape, but they’re backed by the FDIC insurance companies aren’t but they have stronger balance sheets. Okay, well, anything over $250,000, I would rather go with the insurance company’s balance sheet than the bank’s balance sheet. Because once you exceed the FDIC insurance, I don’t think banks are a very good place at all, to be lending money, because effectively when you deposit money in the bank, you’re lending them money and you’re an unsecured creditor. And I think a lot of people think money in the bank is safe and secure and it isn’t.

16:26
And so that strategy that we’re kind of talking about you guys want to read out more about it simple passive cash flow, calm slash banking, but just to kind of wrap things up here, Russell, just looking at your crystal ball, we’re gonna see some negative rates coming up.

16:39
Well, here, here’s the challenge. They don’t want to go negative. They’ve said they won’t go negative, but what they say in what they two are two different things. I think interest rates are in a black hole and they’ve crossed the event horizon. So if you’re familiar with that black hole is intense gravity. It pulls in everything so much at the event horizon, even light cannot escape. In other words, there’s no No escape. Once you cross the event horizon, you cannot get out

17:03
or in this case, the magnitude is so big your debt payments are just going to engulf itself at some point.

17:08
Yeah, exactly. So if interest rates were to go up, then the system would collapse because of the inability to debt service and the debt would go bad. Now, we’re papering over a lot of that right now with printed money. And so the big challenges we discussed earlier, and something that your listeners, I encourage them to spend some time studying and thinking about and learning to understand is that to save the banks and the credit markets, the Fed appears to be willing to sacrifice the dollar. And if you don’t have a hedge against a failing dollar, you’re vulnerable to one of the more probable outcomes. At some point, it might be a year it might be three years, it might be five years, but this is the path we’re on unless something substantial changes. We’ve reached the end of a 40 year cycle of falling interest rates. Paul Volcker raised rates up you know into 21% Prime in the early 80s, that was the big reset. So we went off the gold standard in 71. The dollar collapsed. Gold went from $35 to 850, hyperinflation and stagflation and sued, people dumped dollars. And in order to save the dollar, we took some extraordinary measures we’re paying the price for right now, one of which was we exported a lot of our jobs to china to take our labor costs out of our products and hide the inflation. But it came at a very, very big cost American prosperity. We replaced productive prosperity with that. That’s the consequence of what we did in the 70s and 80s. We jacked the interest rate up to 80 to reset the system, and then we’ve been systematically lowering interest rates ever since as we’ve been expanding debt. We are at the end of that we were bouncing off the zero bound for seven or eight years before they finally tried to raise them and they were only able to raise them a half a point before they had to abandon and go back to zero rates. We are absolutely 100% on life support and that life support is coming at the expense of the dollar. So I don’t think interest rates can rise, will they go negative, I think we’re probably going to get a system reset. before that happens. I think we’re in the process of setting the table for that right now. And I think that it’s probably going to come a lot sooner than all of us recognize. So if this is your first time hearing all of this and really getting your mind around it, welcome to the club. You have a lot of homework, but you definitely not business as usual. You definitely do not want to listen to the talking heads on mainstream financial news. They don’t understand real estate investors. They don’t understand real estate investing. They never talk about counterparty risk. They seldom talk about the danger of a complete collapse of the dollar. And all of those things are the things that are more likely my opinion and worth exactly what you paid for it, but it’s my opinion than some of the other risks and I definitely would not be feeling safe with any amount of cash in a bank beyond the FDIC limit.

19:59
Do you own Any paper assets stocks, mutual fund, I don’t

20:03
talk a lot about what I own only you can make that a policy. But if I were to own paper stocks probably would be mining shares. In other words, what I’m interested in, when you’re buying stock, you’re buying ownership shares in a company and their asset is usually their brand and their customer list and their goodwill and their productivity. But businesses are being disruptive right now. So I’m interested in businesses whose core business is very insulated from being disrupted. If I go buy shares in a mining company, I’m buying a part of their assets is the metal that they have in the ground. And of course if I buy it when gold is 1700 dollars an ounce and gold goes to $3,000 an ounce like Bank of America thinks it will then all sudden the value of that company goes way up because their inventory just went way up. And I know there will always be a bit on gold agriculture’s and other thing that I like if I found a publicly traded company or even a private company where I believed in the management and I was buying land productive farmland with a good team in place, I think I’d be interested in that I’m not a guy that is like a tech stock guy. I’m not a momentum guy. I don’t believe in buy low sell. Hi, I’d be looking for companies that have proven track records of making profits and paying dividends, kind of the Peter Schiff mo but definitely not a fan of buy low sell high. I think that that is a false strategy that was created to serve not the investor because when you buy low you generate a commission. When you sell high you generate a commission and a capital gain, which means you pay tax and then you create cash temporarily but it creates float in the banking system. So who benefits Well, the brokerage gets the entrance and exit mission. The government gets the capital gain tax and the bank to use and lever the money in the float. What do you get from cash to asset to cash at the end of the day, you didn’t have up with any more cash, which they’re printing so to me by Lowe’s hi is with him and you’re being suckered into feeding the varying that’s that’s robbing you blind accumulate the efforts of other accumulators of income at lawns, buy rental property and keep your liquidity and for convenience sake, most of it outside the banking system for safety sake, and some of it is the dollar to hedge against what could be a collapse. The dollar is the strongest currency in the world right now. But it also has the farthest to fall. If it gets knocked off. It is a long fall and I don’t think I don’t think enough people understand the potential for that risk or how to navigate it.

22:40
All right, well said Russell, appreciate you coming on, check out the real estate guys Radio Podcast. If people want to get a hold of you guys, what’s the best way to find you? Oh,

22:49
well, I mean, you mentioned the newsletter at the top. So if they’re interested in getting on that, it’s easy. Just send an email to newsletter at Real Estate guys. radio.com. I also mentioned the real life asset report if you’re interested in seeing that if you send an email to real asset at Real Estate guys radio.com you’ll get a copy of that otherwise you know where easy to find real estate guys radio.com we put out a weekly podcast we are starting to move into the 21st century get our website updated and or relaunch our YouTube channel with a lot more content but right now primarily the podcast and our website got a big special reports library so love to

23:23
have people check us out All right, guys. Well, it’s not all doom and gloom, just simple passive cash flow pick up deals at cash flow and it’ll be all right yep, make it easy.

23:30
Yep, keep it simple.

Accredited Investor Coaching call w/ Dr Kim

 

0:00

If you get a good tenant, they’ll stay in there for a long time. And that’s really very magical moment when that happens. This

0:08

is a story about a dude named Lane he moved to the mainland and bought one place to stay. And then one day he went try to rent them out. And then he became one real investor Tell me

0:22

a simple passive cash flow listeners. Today we are going to be doing a live coaching call with a physician who is fits in the category of a lower net worth but a high salary. Definitely be on the road to being an accredited investor here in the next few years. Introducing JP Kim who took me up on the offer to record their coaching call, which is still open for folks and if you guys haven’t connected with me, please sign up for the investor club at simple passive cash flow comm slash club and I reach out this cam. Thanks for doing this. I want you to give folks a little bit of quick background on You know, or you have kind of been doing the last 20 years of your life

1:03

for the last 20 years. Okay.

1:06

Well, I, I was a non traditional medical students so I decided to go into medicine enter medical school in my late 20s. And then I graduate from med school after five years and then I did my residency training. I got out of training about five years ago and then I’ve been working as a locum tenens traveling physician, seeing geriatric patients in three states, California, Arizona and Indiana. So I I started my job as a 1099, you know, independent contractor physician, so I’m not I’m not in a hospital. I’m not a hospital employee or clinic employee. I’m considered an independent contractor person. So I I only get paid when I’m working. You know, there’s no like paid time off or anything like that. The company That I work for, luckily pays for my travel likes, if I had to move to a different state, the airfare, the hotel accommodations, and then the rental car expenses are all paid for. So as a single person, it’s been a really exciting journey past five years. The money just keep stacking up,

2:21

right? I mean, no

2:22

expenses. I don’t really have any expenses. So like, I don’t have to pay for my own primary residence mortgage or rent, because it’s all you know, being paid for by my company. Yeah, I know, I don’t have a car payment. I used to have a car that I sold because I don’t use a mic my own car anymore. I always get to use a rental car to drive around. So it’s a very unique situation. But then, in about four years ago, I started noticing that, you know, I’m only making money while I’m working. And even though I like to travel and stuff like what if something happened and I can’t work anymore than My income will stop coming in. So I had read Robert Kiyosaki his book, Rich Dad, Poor Dad and the cashflow quadrant. And it really made sense to me that like I should start, you know, buying income producing assets that bring in positive passive income. So even when I’m not working, I still have enough income to pay for all my expenses so that I can help maintain a good quality of life. So I started taking, like the rich dad education seminar, I started attending some of these conferences, and I hired some mentors, who were really successful in real estate investing and learned that buying and holding cash flowing income properties as a way to is the way to get started. I was initially in California when I was working in 2017. That’s when I was going through all the real estate investment education. And I tried to buy a house there, but it was it was extremely Very expensive and competitive to to get a good deal. So after trying for several months, I kind of gave up there but then I started my fellowship at University of Arizona in Tucson. So I would go to Tucson and I noticed that in Tucson It was so much more affordable to buy houses there in comparison to California. So I thought, I thought okay, maybe I’ll buy my first single family home in Tucson, so I just kind of found a property that was going to cash flow. And I got it under contract in in late 2017. And then I closed on it using a conventional loan with 20%, down in early, early 2018. And then I was able to find a property manager who could manage it for me while I’m traveling. And they found a tenant right away and then so the tenant moved in and then they were paying down the mortgage. So it’s been pretty good and then right after that, I decided that I had since I didn’t have a primary residence, I learned that some people do house hacking. So they can use an FHA loan. So a very low downpayment loan to purchase up to a four Plex. So you can you can purchase your primary residence, that can also be a rental property at the same time. So the rent, you can live in one unit and then rent out the other three units and have that rental income from the other three units cover for all your mortgage, your expenses. So that’s what I pursued for the next few months after I closed on my first property in 2018. And this is all under the guidance you had paid like quite a bit of money right for like, quote this coaching, right? Yeah, yeah. So I spent the entire like 2017 going to all these symposiums How much did

5:49

you spend like for all this stuff? And why?

5:53

That $26,000 plus traveling fee, I would say about like, 30 grand on that.

6:01

Yeah,

6:02

I mean, I mean, I’m actually calling on my mission just kind of destroy these type of companies out there taking this money. I mean, I think you’re fine. Like you you had money to invest. So it kind of made sense. I mean, it’s a starting point, right? What a problem like a lot of these guys, they cater towards people without any money. And you’ve kind of reached the, the limits with them kind of where your net worth, or earning potential is, like a lot of these guys, like the best stuff they have for high paid working professionals is the house hacking thing or quadplex, which I think as you’re seeing as you kind of go through our group, I mean, it’s it’s the tip of the iceberg, what the wealthy people are doing, and they just don’t have any insight into that type of world.

6:44

Right, right. But because I had never bought a house before and I never owned any property before. I think it was a good learning experience, just to know, just to get to know how your qualifying for loan works and how to how to put it off.

6:56

right and i think you know, like that. Just kind of Your profile here we have a lot of folks that are kind of in your category where lower net worth kind of starting out in wealth building, again, net worth of a quarter million dollars. And but very high earning potential. Your current active income is about $20,000 a month. So do the math that’s around, you know, quarter million dollars. I mean, most, most doctors are making over, you know, specialists, especially they’re making over three to 500,000 at least a year. So a lot of this is, you know, I think you found this at the right time, and we’ll get you to where you need. We’ll take you from 25 miles an hour up to 70 pretty quickly here.

7:46

Well, yeah, that’s great. That’s Wait,

7:48

that’s the plan.

7:51

So um, here’s the big question. I asked a lot of people, so we have your net worth here. And then your active income is about Not quarter million a year. But you know, with your expenses right now how much you actually stick in the bank every year? How much of it Do you not spend on like food or your lack of car, you said,

8:12

save a lot of money because I don’t really, I don’t have kids yet I’m not married. And I don’t have to spend money on utilities or car payment, like car registration fees or insurance. So I would say like, maybe like 70 of my 80% of my monthly income, I’m saving in the bank, and I’m using it towards either downpayment for for investing or I’m using it for going to these networking events, conferences for real estate investing. I’m also in the process of learning how to build an online health business as well to build another stream of passive income. So for that, I mean, I’m, I’m pursuing like a mastermind group as well, mastermind education So I basically I spend most of my money on on those things, educational activities and self development, growth books, courses,

9:09

just to get it sounds like it’s, you know, 80% of a quarter million. I mean, you’re able to put away 150, at least a year, which is phenomenal. I mean, I, let’s say most people in our investor club, some of the beginners are at 30,000 a year, some of the ones are a little bit better than most are about 50 a year. But I mean, in theory, you’re able to buy 123 probably five turnkey rentals a year, right, which is phenomenal. Not saying I mean, you wouldn’t want anything to do with rental properties. I mean, it’s just not scalable for your, your, your earning power at this point. But I mean, just it’s just the kind of thing.

9:46

Yeah, so owning the single or

9:52

have a good property management company employees. And I had I had to go through a lot of trials and errors during that because because good ones, they got burnt out easily and they quit after a few, you know, a few months, and then I would get a new property manager on that I never had a rapport with and then they would do something that would just that wouldn’t be in alignment with my my investment goals. And then I’ve had a lot of turnover from with my, with every single one of my properties. And that’s been costing me a lot of money. So I’m noticing it wasn’t, I mean, it’s so much headaches that I don’t really feel like I want to pursue buying more or more of these properties anymore. by attending some of the events where there’s more seasoned real estate investors, I learned that people with high net worth and you know, billionaires, they tend to invest in syndications. They network with people who find a really good deals. So it’s like a totally passive investment so you don’t have to be so involved in managing your property manager so that you You can just do invest your money sign that sign the documents and then you just get your your cash flow and then your your appreciation and then all the tax benefits coming in but without having to deal with those headaches. So right. I just learned about that in October 2019 by going to Hawaii and that’s where I met you lane. Right. And then I learned about your syndication deal. So, in February 2020 right before the covid pandemic hit us I I invested my you know, in my first syndication deal, which has been good so far, right?

11:42

Yeah, yeah, checks are coming out here soon.

11:46

We after we read after we closed on the deal, so my goal for the rest of the year is to network with other syndicators and then just learn about these syndication projects and I’m hoping that I can sell these the single family home And for four Plex. Luckily, the Tucson market has been pretty hot. And the the property values have gone up. And I’ve met with the, with a realtor or listing listing agent who who did, who kind of did the comparative marketing market analysis recently. And she says that I will be able to sell those properties at a significant profit. So my goal is to sell those in the next within the next month or so and then use the game to to participate in more syndication deals by the end of this year or early next year.

12:40

Well, and, and a lot of, you know, I would say you’re, you’ve got a lot more time on your hands than the average folk out there. So you’re able to kind of go around and network a lot more travel around the conferences, which is exactly what you need to be doing as a passive investor since your network is your net worth. But for those of you guys listening, you know, that’s why We have the passive investor accelerate mastermind, it’s our online group of it’s kind of a pay to pay program. But you know, it’s the way of building relationships with those, you know, high net worth mostly accredited investors to get deal flow that way and build relationships. jp, let’s you had some, you know, a few questions you had, I think the first one was like about student loans, once you kind of go over, like what you what you are doing in that category for you up to now and then we can kind of talk through the path for it there.

13:30

Yeah, so when I was grad when I graduated from medical school back in 2011, I had about a little bit over $200,000 in student loans. You know, during residency, I was only paying off a little bit like minimum amount and it was only paying off a little bit of interest, so kept on going and growing and growing. So once I, you know, finished, got finished with residency training and started working as a local physicians, you know, making like six figure income was paying off my loans back then the loan payments, the monthly payments were over $3,000 a month, I thought it was kind of high. So by then I had established better credit, my credit score went up. So I checked in with some, like student loan private student loan companies, and they were able to refinance me at a lower interest rates. So it was able, I was able to lower my monthly payments down to 1200 and $48 a month.

14:32

What What did the rate go from? And then now it’s what 5.8 All right. Well, yeah, initially,

14:38

my my student loan rates were like 8.75% when I came out of med school, so now I refinance, to like 5.875%

14:52

were those first loans, the higher rate ones were they like government subsidized or like kind of like a Stafford Loan or anything like that. Or would they just privatize government subsidized loans? Yes.

15:04

Okay. So I think I think that’s, there’s a lot of US companies like so fi that will do it. And we have some of the resources on my website that will do this for folks with a lot of student loans. I’m a little skeptical, though. I mean, I think I mean, everything from the high level looks fine, like the interest rate lowers, and obviously, that lowers the monthly payments. But what I’m concerned with, and I mean, what you’ve done already is done, it’s over. But if you guys are listening to this in the future, I think something to look into, is where you’re going from like a government subsidized loan to a privatized loan. I don’t know. I mean, even if it’s a lower interest rate, you may or may not be worth it. But just something to think about if you guys are doing this in the future, if you guys are listening to this, but did you did you do any kind of research on that? I mean, I mean, you just kind of looked at the interest rate. I mean, you’re gonna pay it off. Anyway, I guess. It’s just more about payment,

16:01

right? So I was debating if I should focus my efforts on, on paying off the student loan first before jumping into real estate investment. But then when I hired the real estate mentor, she mentioned that dumping all that money into trying to pay off the student loan first is actually it’s a sunken cost. And because if you if you find good real estate investments, and you can bring these income producing assets that will bring in more cash flow than the monthly payment, or student loan payment, so even if I were to not work, the income producing assets will pay for my student pay down my student loans, and then when the student loans are all paid off, I’ll still have those assets. Right.

16:48

Right. Exactly. And, you know, kind of, for me to explain it in a different way. A lot of you know, just interest rate arbitrage from a certain extent So, I mean, I have an article at simple passive cash flow calm slash returns, where I kind of just break down the returns that you get from just a typical turnkey rental and you’re looking at 20 plus percent. I mean, 20% is greater than 6% here, so it’s a no brainer, right? But, you know, most people are able to make more than eight to 10% in their, you know, crappy stock investments, right? So you can see why for most people, it would make sense to pay off your your student loans or pay down your mortgage first, but I mean, maybe since I mean, you’ve come to this, this realization, what was for you that kind of tipped the scale in your head that kind of get it? If you think kind of remind remember, sick kind of lot of people are just on the fence, right?

17:48

Well, I mean, there’s always an opportunity cost of doing something so if you spend all your effort on paying off your student loans, your that’s going to delay being able to buy income producing assets. If you Like, like my mentor said, if I if I’m able to buy a income producing asset that not only has good cash flow, but also appreciation, and then the tax benefits, then that really Trumps you know, the interest rate of a student loan. So she was telling me just set you know, refinance my student loans to the lower monthly payment. So you can always pay more if you wanted to pay sooner, but if you but if you keep your student loans at a, you know, higher monthly payment, what if something happens, you lose your job, you get sick, you get into a car accident, then you can’t make your loan payments, and you’re more likely to default on it right? It looks better on your credit. So she was telling me it’s easier if you just kind of refinance it and minimize your monthly payments. And then if you feel like if you’re making good money at certain points in your life through your cash flowing assets, then you can choose to make extra payments to pay down your principal and paid off sooner. But like it just gives you more options to refinance it and minimize your payment obligations as well.

19:00

Well, so good doctor, well said.

19:04

And this kind of carries over also to the whole argument of you do like a 30 year mortgage or a 15 year mortgage mortgage. Right? Like, I mean, like you said, in our camp, we do the longest that we can. And if we choose to, we can pay it off, but debt elimination and is not really correlated with financial freedom. But yeah, I agree. Yeah, delay, you’re paying off your your student loans as long as you can, you know, a lot of people are doing they do this like 10 year, and they work in like a low income area, and they forgive other student loans. Have you kind of looked into that option?

19:40

I looked into that option, but I also heard that if even if you get your loans forgiven, you get taxed on that amount. So you’re gonna have to pay tax during during that time when you get forgiven and it’s really hard to qualify for that too. Yeah, I mean, I’ve heard people you know, spending all that time doing public service and then after After the term, they realized they didn’t qualifier so

20:06

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21:09

Yeah, I,

21:11

I’ve heard of this, this these companies that they’ll put your stuff in like an LLC, and then they create a nonprofit. And then what they’re doing is they’re gonna show it give you a kinetic excuse to write it off for a nonprofit for 10 years, which I think is kind of shady. Or you can create your own nonprofit and kind of do it but that’s like, you know, that’s more more technical, I guess, then what we’re looking to do. But, yeah, I mean, any other questions on the student loan thing or what’s kind of the next issue at hand that you want to tackle?

21:46

So I have different arguments about you know, so my rental properties right now I’m going through some turnovers because one of my tenant died. She was an old lady. She was really good paying tenant and then now that she died unexpectedly. In May, we’re having to find a new tenant we’re dealing with, like, you know, turning over the property. We are, of course, increasing the rents, but it’s going to take, I don’t know, maybe it’s going to take maybe a few days or weeks to return it over. There might be more than maintenance issues. I’m kind of waiting for that call from a company manager about what’s going to happen about maintenance issues. So is it really worth keeping those properties? So I’m right now I’m deciding if I want to just sell them,

22:28

when which which property? Is this or what’s the what’s the monthly rents on this one?

22:34

Or if some people were telling me I should keep those rental properties because I have direct control over it? Because, you know, sometimes if you get involved in syndication deals, sure. It’s passive, but you might lose control over your money.

22:49

Which which rental property are we talking about here? Just the 1200 a month one?

22:53

Well, I was thinking about selling both

22:57

and what are the rents now

23:00

single family home brings in 11 $95 per month of rent, and then the mortgages 860. And then the four Plex the rents are like 30 $100 a month and the mortgage is 1600 and $9.

23:16

So, I mean, just to kind of follow my logic here, like with your net worth and your kind of your, your high value in time as opposed to money. If you had, like $60,000 property pieces of junk, I would say yeah, unload it, like yesterday, near single family home, it’s probably it’s a decent property, right? It’s more of a B class property and then your duplex and that’s probably a lower class asset. But you know, I mean, it’s there’s some decent scale on that thing. I would say you know, right now you’re you’re kind of one foot in the syndication private placement world in the other foot still in direct ownership, right? You a lot of investors in my group They’re kind of been very the same thing. And at some point, and I think we could both agree maybe in the next three, five, certainly before you know, you retire, you’re going to be all in on the private placements and syndications. But, look, I mean, you got to just when you’re comfortable, you know, you sell these assets. But I have no problem. You know, you kind of holding on to it a little bit longer. You know, if you have enough time, right? If your life gets busier, then yeah, you unload them, but I wouldn’t be buying more properties. You know, I mean, like direct ownership. And yeah, if somebody had the same situation, but they had like, lower crop class properties, more headaches. Yeah, I would try to unload them as soon as possible. That kind of makes sense.

24:44

Yeah, so I’m looking into maybe selling the four Plex because the type of tenants that I’ve been attracting were like lower income people and then we had to go I mean, we had to deal with evictions.

24:59

Which is Not so cool.

25:01

Yeah. And I get the feeling like just your personality, you kind of, I mean, you’re not too bad. But you know, you stress out about this stuff a little bit, right? Like you’re kind of a hands on person in a way.

25:12

No, I like to have a little bit of control over my properties. But at the same time, I didn’t like I really did not enjoy it hassle dealing with the eviction, like my property manager. I mean, she was a new new person that I’d never met before. So I had to kind of wait and see to see if we had an a rapport. Sometimes we had some conflicts, and that that caused a lot of stress. So I’m kind of debating if it’s really worth having to deal with that situation anymore. So luckily, I will be making a lot of profit if I if I were to choose to sell this in the next month or so. Because the Tucson market, they weren’t really affected too much by the pandemic. I mean, they’re their business are still operating and people are still working. So The tenants had been paying rent, you know, a lot of people are still paying rent. And they say the rental market is pretty hot these days. So they’re able to find tenants right away good paying tenants. So, if the listing agent turns out that she’s able to market the property really well, that I will be able to sell it at a pretty good price, and then move that money over to doing more syndications in the future, you know,

26:28

yeah, so what I mean, I made this decision that I was going to I was in one foot in syndication one foot and my 11 single family home rentals back in 2015 16. And then, in 2016, I kind of made that defining point. You know, I think your podcast ad I think was that was that point where I just where I kind of made that decision and for you, this could be three to six months from now, right? When you finally make the decision, it could be a year or two but I took it took me all of 2017 the cell actually hurts yet 2018 to sell seven properties 2019 to sell two and 2020 to sell the remaining two. So you don’t really need to sell this right away. But I would say, maybe the best strategy for now I don’t, I don’t, you know, you don’t need to do something out of haste, but maybe put the duplex on the market and just let it sit there for whatever it takes six months to two years and get your price that you want. You know, you can be that unmotivated seller and maybe do that the same thing for that single family home. I mean, with a single family home, what I would do is if the tenant if you have a good paying tenant, those guys are gold. Maybe you haven’t realized that yet. Because people get it they internally understand that after about a few years of rental property landlording if you get a good tenant, they’ll stay in there for a long time. And that’s it. Really very magical moment when that happens. But if you might have that in this property, and if so that’s cool. But as soon as this current tenant moves out, what I would do is I would fix it up to go retail. So you might have to put in 1020 $30,000. But you’re going to sell this to a nice retail buyer who’s an emotional buyer is going to pay, you know, potentially over 200 250,000 for this thing, and that’s your exit strategy. But you know, that Domino could could topple six months from now, three, four years from now, we don’t know. But your destiny is shaped in your decisions, as Tony Robbins says, and yeah, you’ve made the decision, you’re going to move to private placements, but you don’t need to take the action on it now. Just let it let it happen. Okay. But I think that’s the by doing that strategy, you’re able to extract the most amount of dollars out of it. And, look, I mean, there’s still good rental properties or cash flowing for you. I would say the other question I had that maybe it may impact this decision. is how much liquidity Do you have right now? And how much dry powder? Do you have to invest? sure the deal come up, you know, next month in the in the syndication deal. I’m just looking. Yeah, that number kind of at the top of your head, how much liquidity you have to go?

29:18

Well, assuming that I’ll be continuing to work. I mean, luckily, my job. I mean, I didn’t really get impacted so much with the COVID-19. I know a lot of doctors got furloughed and we had to stop working. But for me, I was doing telemedicine, I had consistent income. So I still making money and I’m still going to be working. I’m still working. So I will continue to have $20,000 $20,000 per month.

29:44

Yeah, you’re saving what 80% of that amazing, right? But currently, I’m just I mean, looking at some of these accounts. I’m in it looks like you have not including our self directed Roth which you can take that out context free. Because you’ve already paid the taxes and penalty free on the on the contributions, but, you know, you probably have about 100 grand on liquidity. So that’s enough to go on to two deals at 50 grand. I mean until you burn through that I wouldn’t I see no reason for you to unload these two rentals. I mean, maybe if you had no liquidity then it would be you’d be a little more motivated but yeah, just you know, this is where your your lazy equity is not doing anything. Get that working first before you you get this stuff for me and for the bottom as much money as you’re able to save. You may never run out quiddity

30:43

is a cool place to be.

30:44

Yeah, but it’s assuming that I’m still healthy that I never get coronavirus infection, you know, and I’m still you know, working at my hundred percent capacity. Yeah,

30:52

I mean, you know, you know, you’re you’re kind of amazing because most doctors I come across, they have this false sense of self Security where they think that well they make so much freakin money. Right? And they never think to invest outside of the normal financial planner stocks. I mean, it’s good that you’re investing in this stuff that you’re very unique.

31:13

Right? Well, I made that mistake during residency. So I What, what I did was that I did contribute to my 401 b during residency training. And the residency director had some some GL advisor, like some company who was like a financial manager company for physicians. They came and gave a presentation and they talked about how they can manage the doctors money because the doctors are so busy

31:38

doctors, which is a complete scam. Usually these guys get kickbacks for that. And

31:44

so I actually hired them to manage my money and what happened during those during those several years that I was in residency, they were managing me money, I would maximize my contribution to my Roth IRA, 401 b and everything. And then they were they were invested. That into like mutual funds, but like, the money wasn’t growing, you know, except for me country contributing. And then towards the end, like after like a year after I got out of residency all of a sudden I found out that that company was prosecuted because they were they were caught frauding with the investors money so they totally like went out of business and all of a sudden my my 401 b money and then my Roth IRA account money was left without a manager without a financial manager and I was like, holy crap, what am I supposed to do and I had no knowledge about finances. So that’s when I like started reading, you know, Rich Dad Poor Dad cash flow game, and that’s when I started scrolling through Facebook to look for information about real estate investing. And then when I you know, that’s when I went, Oh, you know, with mutual funds and stocks, you really don’t have any control over your money, right. And then You can’t stick it out until you’re certain age, whereas real estate you can, you can really find the right cash flowing investments and start making money right now start making cash flow right now that’s generating passive income that can cover for my student loan payment. So that’s, that’s the route that I took after I after making that huge mistake. But luckily, during that time, we just kept it at, you know, at the same amount

33:24

when it comes to something. That’s an amazing story.

33:28

I mean, I don’t know where’s your Where’s your headspace on it. I mean, in in hindsight, I was probably the best thing to happen at the time. Right. So you know, you live and learn, right? Yeah, I mean, so many doctors out there that are just totally still believing in the Easter Bunny and the tooth fairy is going to give them money. 401k is going to work right. You know

33:48

what, like a lot of doctors, you know, when they were hit by COVID. They’re realizing

33:54

everyone’s just kind of in a panic mode. Right now. We’re like learning how to invest in generate other You know, multiple students with passive income so a lot of doctors are getting into the investing world right now, like outside of stocks and mutual funds. Realize like our job is no longer secure anymore and like, the way like the hospital ministration cheated a lot of doctors like rolling doctors and cutting, arbitrarily cutting their salaries to like, you know, if I have a lot of private practice doctors, you know, the doctors, orthopedic surgeons or neurosurgeons or, you know, plastic surgeons, they a lot of they make all their money through elective cases and they’re not able to operate their business and they, they still have to pay their employees, you know, you know, fixed salaries, but they don’t have any revenue coming in because the COVID-19 and now they’re all realizing, oh, you know, we’re not no longer high income earners anymore, you know, during this pandemic, so, I think a lot of doctors are scrambling right now to learn about other other passive income generating opportunities.

34:56

Yeah, I mean, we have like a lot of guys in our kuih that work. You know, general dentists and they were all out of the job. And yet they were the ones gone through life in residence or all their training, thinking that everybody’s going to need their teeth clean come hell or high water, but well, boy, were they wrong. But I mean, at the end of the day, it’s

35:17

like, multiple streams of income is what reigns supreme.

35:22

Right? And there’s no guarantee in anything, right? Yeah.

35:29

But um, let’s say you have one last thing here. I wanted to get to you have you you’re in a place in life where you’re not, you know, you’re not accredited yet in terms of network. But you’re going to be there very quickly. And I like how you kind of like you have some bigger goals, right, that are kind of bigger than yourself, where you want to build enough wealth to build a new medical school at your alma mater, maybe talk to us about how that idea came about. And how, how kind of you’re pulling yourself to that goal,

36:01

well like for me, like personal experience, I went to college on a full scholarship. So when I graduated from college, I didn’t have any debt. But when I went to med school, I had to take out like significant amount of student loans like more than $200,000 even though I went to a public school in California, and it just really it’s been, you know, weighing down heavily on my chest like I always feel like I have an elephant sitting on my chest and a lot of doctors come out there to like he said, You know, my my medical school, going going to medical school, I had to take out a lot of student loans and coming out of training, I always felt this heaviness in my chest with that debt, burden of debt, and, and then the lack of financial education. So I really want to contribute to the society by utilizing my knowledge of business investment. To starting a medical school that focus on integrative medicine but also like on business and investing education so that the future doctors can come You know, they’re not only good clinicians but also really savvy business investors too.

37:16

So what’s um, how much money are you going to need for that? Or what’s the what’s the plan timeline like that.

37:24

In the next 10 years I you know, want to build wealth through doing real estate. It’s mostly like passive syndications and also network with other high net worth people and collaborate so it’ll be about at least 100 million dollars to do that project of building a new medical school and also want to make it very tuition free for all the students who get accepted. So I’ll have to have like a scholarship foundation as well which is like a nonprofit. So once I have a you know, a nice vehicle of money making money More money every year, that can be a lasting legacy that, you know, continues on and on even after I die, you know, I can hire people who can carry on the legacy. I mean, if I have a goal like that, that will keep me motivated to keep pushing through all the hardships and challenges in life. Right?

38:18

Right. Right. And you know, kind of very similar, just different, you know, different end goal. I don’t want to make a medical facility but I would rather I’m trying to create like a financial education program that’s more free and affordable for networking professionals. The LLC is called f5 for the worthy you will find that financial independence is not for everyone, but I kind of want to bring it to the working financially responsible for masses. So yeah, I mean, exactly what you’re doing, you know, trying to put my own oxygen mask on for for now, pretty much there. But um, you know, you need capital to make these big dreams happen, right? So, so for me maybe would be a few more years, maybe 510 more years to get myself up to that point where I’m set up personally and then maybe even the next year or two, I start the nonprofit LLC. I know you’re a little familiar with that. But um, yeah, I’ll let you know how it goes. I mean, the that’s really how big things happen and how money can grow tax free. There’s so many benefits of being a nonprofit. And it’s all predicated, of course, you using that money for good, right? Not just personally benefiting from it. But if you have some bigger dream, that nonprofit is the way to go. But of course, um, you know, there’s definitely going to be some learning lessons down the road, but I’ll let you know how it goes.

39:44

Yeah, yeah. I mean, we’re both. I mean, we have

39:49

tax advisors and CPAs who were really

39:54

they specialize in, you know, real estate investing and then setting up these business entities and nonprofit organizations to protect you from having to pay too much income taxes, right? So I think that helps to, you know, legally minimize income taxes and you can generate more profit and then use that money towards investing in more income producing assets and go from there. So, I think we’re all learning,

40:19

right? And if you guys want to, um, I have a little working page on this whole concept of a nonprofit and simple passive cash flow, calm slash legacy has a whole list of things on there that the benefits to having a nonprofit, you know, like, just kind of reading some of them real quick. I just looked it up. Actually, I don’t have it up. But like things like you until you look forward. Like you don’t realize how many like tax benefits nonprofits have and that really helps you grow your money on restricted to kind of do these bigger, bigger things. But um, Miss Kim, anything else you want to talk about or think for now?

40:59

Oh, Do you have any recommended resources to, for me to keep expanding my network? You know, I need to I mean, in order to get to where I want to be quicker and faster, I need to leverage, you know, good people, right good network and people with the knowledge, the skills and then people who have already have good networks.

41:21

Yeah, I mean, like the, like, the best thing that my guidance for that is like, you got to start with the right people, right. So people with money, and going to the local Ria, and, you know, a lot of free internet forums out there, we all know those websites are some of the worst places to go, because they’re just the cheapskates that are trying to get rich get rich quick. I mean, I’ve I’ve been fortunate to do this podcast where I just attracted you know, all these passive and high net worth passive accredited investors and I find the ones that are kind of thinking the same way as us and, you know, they join my passive investor accelerator mastermind, you know, maybe we can move Work out something I mean, as a current investor in the week club, you know, we can talk offline about that. But for other people listening in you know, that’s that’s kind of the option, right? Like you can either fly I mean, I did it for years, right? You go to all these silly like real estate conferences and you just find it’s a big pitch fest with people on the stage. They’re really not that proven. It’s just like there’s all these Internet’s and ships and stations overnight in real estate and you start to realize that you go there and you meet you meet a lot of cool people, you have some cool drinks but like you, you you go home with like a dozen business cards, and never never formulates to anything and you wasted like $1,000 in the conference and other thousand dollars on the hotel and food and all your time you spent you wasted that you only have so many vacation days. I mean, you really have to be selective. I mean, you know, I would I would invite you out to like the hooey mastermind that we have once a year in January. Last Yeah, last time we did was you can check out the video at simple passive cash flow calm slash QE three. Sure the next one will be called hooey for. But yeah, I mean, just I try and cultivate a group of like high quality genuine people, you know, that have, you know, bigger goals outside themselves. So it’s a good community. And, you know, we kind of kind of play watchdog out for each other, but that’d be my suggestion. Yeah, I mean, other than that, you know, you have the other options are going to the country club, or I know some guys they go to like the cigar room, and they kind of rub shoulders with high net worth people. But the problem there is you’re meeting with a lot of second third generation wealth, right? Like you and I are first generation wealth. We’re kind of building this legacy now. We didn’t nothing really got given to us. So it’s a different mindset. They’re the very narrow band of people you’re trying to find. Yeah, thanks for doing that. So we can do do a little check in next year to you probably get a lot different place, I mean, you’ll probably be very well fit the next three years. If you kind of keep hitting on this trajectory,

44:12

we’ll see how it goes like I will I do want to attempt to sell these rental properties that I have so that I have more cash and more liquidity to kind of jump into the good syndication deals in the next few months or so. So keep me in the loop please. Okay, okay.

44:31

This website offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes, every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers and inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal adviser before relying on any information contained here and information is not guaranteed, as in every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change. I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best

45:07

interests.

Investing in Fine Wine🍷


Try Wine Spies – Get $10 Credit

https://youtu.be/Nmj5Hc7MJ6I

https://www.vinovest.co/

 

Unknown Speaker 0:00
Introducing the new remote investor, incubator and ecourse we had the mastermind and we are going to break off from that being mostly an accredited investor group. And I wanted to create something that was helping out the little guy get started guys getting their first properties. And we’re calling this the incubator group. Get More details at simple passive cash flow, comm slash incubator, but basically what we’re doing here is we’re getting a group of professionals looking to build your network with others starting this journey to financial freedom, the ecourse that’s going to accompany this group is going to have eight modules in a closed membership site plus two bonus modules and download kit all geared toward educating the remote investor in this group. We’re going to have biweekly zoom video calls and if you join up, you’re going to get all past turnkey rental recordings. Now these calls are designed to ask whatever questions you have and hear the other questions from other investors in your shoes. And we’re going to run this like a bootcamp style. This is going to be five month program, we’re going to walk you through the best practices for tax and legal as you acquire your first remote rental. We’re even walk you through the due diligence and offer process we’re going to have staff membership coordinators for extra support to get you over the sticking points and to connect you with the right people in the group. Even if you’re shy. One of the biggest reasons for join is access to our ever changing Rolodex of top turnkey companies, brokers, property managers, insurance companies. Hey guys, we’re basically spoon feeding this to you if you’ve been on the fence and it’s time to get your first rental property go to simple passive cash flow calm slash incubator and by the way, for those accredited investors, we are looking for new members go to simple passive cash flow calm slash journey and join the flagship simple passive cash flow mastermind there. After the pandemic to new world out there having a network around you is so much more important. shoot me an email Lane at simple passive cash flow if you’re unsure if the incubator or if the credited mastermind group is for you, but let’s get you connected with other people and don’t go it alone Hey simple passive cash flow listeners. Today we are going to talk about investing in wine now not the securitized crowdfunding way, but the actual owning the actual bottles, the real assets. So today I have Anthony’s on. Thanks for Thanks for joining us, man. Thanks for having me. We’re happy to be on beyond here. So you guys want to Google this at the same time, you guys can Google their company, venal vest, but this is something that I’m personally interested in. I like that kms wine the cab, it’s like 100 bucks.

Unknown Speaker 2:35
That’s a good one a go to you know, it’s a good with a nice barbecue or steak.

Unknown Speaker 2:40
Yeah, but you guys are buying a lot more better ones and your guys system,

Unknown Speaker 2:45
I would say better from an investment potential, you know, tastes objective, but, you know, we’re looking for wines that are going to be bringing, you know, a solid double digit annual return over the next few years.

Unknown Speaker 2:57
Cool. So yeah, let’s get into this. I also have this displayed on the YouTube channel if you guys want to get access to that and I have a big menu of all kinds of things in the world you can invest in I’ll put the section probably at simple passive cash flow calm slash wine, you guys want to check this out in the future and and you can the root folder for this is simple passive cash flow comm slash menu which has all the different things out there that you can invest in now once you kind of take away anthon will kind of go through this deck.

Unknown Speaker 3:27
Yeah. So I’m Anthony, I’m one of the cofounders and CEO Urbino best. And you know, I first learned about investing in wine a few years ago, I sold I sold my first company so I was looking to invest and didn’t want to put it on the stock market. So I had some in real estate and actually stumbled upon a report talking about the historical returns of fine wine which you can see here. You know, 12% annualized returns actually has beaten out the s&p and relatively low volatility too. So that really just piqued my interest. I really dove into this space. And, you know, I had the general concept that wine gets better with age probably more expensive as well. And as I dove into it, I realized that even though it’s getting good returns, it was pretty tough to manage. There’s not too much info out there about which wines to invest in. I didn’t have a massive wine cellar. So handling third party storage, shipping all around the world was pretty cumbersome. And then finally, real liquidity standpoint, there’s a ton of places where you can buy and sell wine today, but how do you know that you’re interacting with someone who’s trusted? How do you know you’re not getting ripped off with a price there’s really no you know, index for wine that is globally recognized. So those are kind of all the problems I saw on the space that I thought could really be improved and that’s why I started this company.

Unknown Speaker 4:46
I bought a four pack of key messes in from eBay that were like some normally that’s what 100 bucks 90 bucks he I bought it for like 70 bucks, but when I got it I it seemed a little fishy to me.

Unknown Speaker 5:01
Tastes wasn’t exactly what I thought it was.

Unknown Speaker 5:03
It was a lot of fake wine out there.

Unknown Speaker 5:06
Yeah, maybe I bought that. But what, you know, as we’re talking earlier, what from your background kind of brought you into this? Because you’re the co founder of this company. What was I mean, everybody’s interested in wine. Right. But what what from your background and kind of gave you the ins to kind of start this?

Unknown Speaker 5:23
Yeah, so I really just grew up with it. I have some extended family in the wine importing industry. I grew up in Beijing. So during the entire craze in the mid mid 2000s, of lot of Chinese people just kind of getting to know about French wine, Bordeaux, burgundy. You know, part of that kind of being a part of a wine importing family. Just really, I think piqued my interest in it. I always thought owning wine was really really cool. And was just was a pretty dormant passion of mine, I’d say until I read that report and kind of just ignited everything again. Cool. Cool. So,

Unknown Speaker 6:00
you know, like you guys are able to get connections from the suppliers that a big kind of leg up as a group from your network.

Unknown Speaker 6:08
Yeah, I think something about, especially like, the high end like top, you know, top couple percent of wine is that it’s very, very hard to get, you know, it’s always in globe, you know, globally, demand is always going to be outstripping the supply. And it’s very hard to get to so access to the big thing, you know, even if you can get it, it’s probably marked up hundred 200%. And you’re not actually getting it for its true value. So, you know, we, with our connections, and, you know, with our team, which has, you know, members who are masters, Somalis, writers, directors at three Michelin starred restaurants, been in the industry, they have great relationships with some of the top wineries in the world, we’re able to get that insider access, that traditionally is not available to the public wanted to kind of look at some of the factors so as I mentioned, with having knowledge to once again Pick out, being able to store the wine properly and make sure that it’s actually aging in the right conditions. And then finding liquidity when you actually want to exit your investment. It’s a big issue. So, you know, we can go on to the next slide, and I can talk about what we do at the end of last.

Unknown Speaker 7:15
So is there was your family kind of, are you like the Asian Gary Vaynerchuk, then or is that similar? What

Unknown Speaker 7:20
was on that level? Yeah, much, much smaller time. But he’s, you know, I was he he really popularized, I think people just becoming more educated about

Unknown Speaker 7:30
wine. So that’s something that’s a question that came up right when I saw this as like, Alright, where’s this wine stored? It’s not like in your house that you get to impress all your buddies.

Unknown Speaker 7:39
Yeah, so we have six storage facilities globally, strategically located in and near to the biggest wine growing region in the world. So we want to know that in California, we got one in the UK, a couple in France, one in Italy, one in Denmark, and we want to make sure that the wind moves the minimal distance as possible. to not disturb it and make sure that we’re able to make sure its condition is as like kind of pristine as possible. So after we buy it for you, we’re able to have a temperature controlled humidity controlled, actually one of our warehouses, the British Royal Family stores, they’re one in the same spot as us. So it’s really just kind of top notch storage facilities. And with the V Nova solution, you don’t need to know anything about wine investing, to get started, the inputs that we take are like, you know, how long are you looking to hold this asset? Or how much are you looking to invest? What’s your risk appetite like, and we’ve developed an algorithm and also portfolio advisors that can then automatically construct a portfolio for you based on those practices, deploy your capital for you, and also actively manage that portfolio of lines on your behalf. And for the, for the end client. It’s a fully digital experience, you know, like you see in that screenshot. It’s a dashboard that you can track your wind price over time. There are updated in real time, and you can see exactly what you own kind of like a, you know, like a robin hood or like a Schwab brokerage account.

Unknown Speaker 9:07
So when they when you buy a bottle you’re not like buying like a half a bottle you got to buy in increments of the bottle than that.

Unknown Speaker 9:14
Yeah, so usually buy it in cases of six or 12 because that’s what the most kind of liquid unit of measurement is, you know, it’s it’s tough to just buy and sell individual bottles because you don’t really know what condition they are but when they’re in the case, they’re kind of packaged the right way. It’s like kind of the industry standard in terms of what people like to buy in and the quantities that they buy it as well.

Unknown Speaker 9:38
So the normally if you’re buying at a case at 12 at 100 bucks per you’re looking at least a grand

Unknown Speaker 9:45
Yeah, so it’s a grand to get started on our platform.

Unknown Speaker 9:48
And then what what are what is kind of the average is like we see like on here they commence I’ve never heard of that 500 bucks a bottle is I mean, what’s the kind of the median and what’s kind of the higher end price per bottle

Unknown Speaker 10:00
I think it really depends on how much you put in. Because, you know, there’s bottles that can range up to thousands, even 10s of thousands. And some of our higher level clients, you know that the bigger portfolio sizes, it opens you up to more of the wine universe available to purchase. But our average consumer goes around like six $7,000 worth of wine, you know, that’s 5060 bottles, you know, things you know, things that are ranging from 100 something bucks to up to 500 bucks a bottle.

Unknown Speaker 10:28
So when you’re starting this company in the early stages, were you like walking around with like, 10 bucks 10 grand bottles of wine? I mean, what was

Unknown Speaker 10:38
in your hands?

Unknown Speaker 10:39
I mean, I mean, some of these bottles are Yeah, they’re 10 grand, they’re 2020 grand, you know, it’s uh, it’s pretty surreal, but just so treated as an investment, right? Like you hold you hold the bar gold, it’s gonna be pretty, pretty pricey as well.

Unknown Speaker 10:53
Yeah. Do you drink your own supply? Or what’s the average

Unknown Speaker 10:57
of my I think that’s also a good thing about having the storage out of sight out of mind is you know you have some friends over and you have a couple bottles have a good time. It’s really easy to just like reach into the back of your cellar and accidentally pop something back could be thousands to thousands of dollars. So what I drink is much cheaper than that. Okay, what do you drink by the way? I mean I love I love serraj so either from like northern road or from like Santa Barbara I think that’s like my my go to bridal. Yeah, that’s that’s kind of what I’ve been drinking now.

Unknown Speaker 11:34
You want to find deals on real estate before they’re on anyone else’s radar. I recently came across pre aureo a new opportunity from one of my mentors George Newbery founder at HP. On this new platform, real estate investors can partner with pre reo on the purchase of delinquent first mortgages secured by vacant properties directly from lenders. This is huge because normally mom and pop investors like us only have access to REO properties. Usually investors are not able to access these pre foreclosed properties and have to wait until they are foreclosed. But with the help of pre reo investors can easily search and bid on pre Oreos offered at a sizable discount. Connect with experts that are familiar with the P reo process and generate financial returns while making positive impact in their communities. Take advantage of this unique opportunity to expand your real estate portfolio. You can learn more about fi reo by going to simple passive cash flow calm slash pre reo. Cool so so kind of getting back into the storage correct me if I’m wrong, but my my assumption is like that’s like a commodity, right? There’s a lot of storage facilities out there. It’s a totally legit operation very secure is just you guys have built a contract to kind of support your whole operation.

Unknown Speaker 12:55
Exactly. Because you know why people have been storing wine for decades, even centuries. The biggest thing Like, you can’t really do it profitably unless you get economies of scale. So by working with a platform like Coronavirus, we’re able to pass along those savings at scale so that it actually becomes profitable for you to store and manage and invest in wine.

Unknown Speaker 13:14
So if you have like a 500 Well, I guess it wouldn’t be a $500 bottle, but it’d be a $5,000 case, how much would it be per year? Or how do they charge you to store that

Unknown Speaker 13:25
in the so cars like an annual annual management fee based on the value, so with our fees on vino bus, we charge consumers 2.85% annually to manage the asset. So that includes everything from sourcing to fraud detection, to storage insurance, as well as the active managers, all that’s kind of included in ours in our fee structure.

Unknown Speaker 13:49
So these are the questions as an investor you guys want to ask, you know first, like the fraud detection, that’s like when you buy a piece of real estate, you have the title, search and you make sure that the title Clean, you know, I’m assuming if you want to talk to that at the end, like what’s the what is the procedure for the wind to get legitimized? Yeah, cuz like,

Unknown Speaker 14:07
like you mentioned, like there’s a lot of fake wine out there, right? There’s a lot of fake everything. First we have our team be able to inspect that a, it’s authentic, it actually came from the winery, not some, not some person who have remodeled it, and that it is in excellent condition, because, you know, wine is a living thing, right? If you leave in the sun, it’s going to be turning into vinegar and be worthless. So we inspect the condition inspect that it’s authentic. And then when we put in our, in our storage, we actually have an insurance policy that then covers it against all sort of future damage breakage, and it’s insured at its full market value. So you know, we don’t have FDIC in the wine industry, but this is like pretty much, you know, the next best thing

Unknown Speaker 14:48
Yeah, and that and that insurance thing, just like you insure real estate or your cars, that’s a big thing for investors. You know, there was an investment going around last year was like buying some kind of citrus fruit. In different country or you know, any kind of crops, right, you want to, you want to be able to know that if there’s a fire Well, no big deal, you know, it’s insurance not for you’re not gonna be a total loss.

Unknown Speaker 15:11
Exactly. Exactly. Awesome. So, you know, wanted to kind of talk about portfolio construction, right? Because if you’re more on the aggressive side, just like stocks, there’s going to be emerging markets, there’s going to be newer wineries that have potential to outperform the index. And if you’re more on the conservative side, there’s more like your equivalent of blue chips, right. So in this case, it’d be usually wines from from France and from Europe. So Bordeaux, Burgundy, champagne, those are definitely like wine growing regions that have been growing wine for centuries. So we have hundreds of years of historical pricing data we can predict with our AI model with a very high degree of confidence what future returns will be and then there are kind of emerging markets you know, whether it be Australia ci, lay some newer parts of California in Italy or the road and So that’s kind of how we look at portfolio construction making sure that people stay within their risk ranges and that we can give them the right sort of expected returns when you’re looking at this holistically as an alternative asset within their entire portfolio.

Unknown Speaker 16:15
So we had another similar investment on the podcasts of art, I think the the URL was masterclass.io. But you know, the blue chips are like the I mean, if you can get your hands on like the Picasso’s or like all the classical guys but the the new up and comers are like the Andy Warhol I didn’t know who that is apparently, he’s pretty famous, but what are what are some of the like the new I mean, do people even know I mean, I mean, you’re you probably like land you dude, you don’t even know these, these kind of why? Even why even tell you? But I mean, what are some like names or brands that are examples of the two

Unknown Speaker 16:51
so I can give you a good example. So there’s someone called Erickson so he came from one of the most famous wineries in America called screaming Eagle, those bottles retail thousands of dollars, and he loves to go start his own winery. So that’s an example of an emerging kind of winery to look at because it’s someone coming from, you know, a top top winery leaving to start his own brands even though there’s no historical track record per se. You know, it’s someone who’s very very well regarded like say, if you know, the CEO of Apple loves to go start his own new company, people are gonna think it’s hot. Yeah,

Unknown Speaker 17:28
I was thinking like David Beckham coming to the LA Galaxy.

Unknown Speaker 17:32
Yeah, that’s, that’s exactly like that, right, like newer, smaller market unestablished. But, you know, there’s gonna be a following

Unknown Speaker 17:38
so what is like what is the the typical returns that people can kind of expect from you know, doing like more of a blue chip kind of a classical portfolio or more up and coming a little more riskier? What’s

Unknown Speaker 17:51
Yeah, so I’d say with like, our kind of, like, if you’re just tracking the index, you’re gonna get 12% annualized returns, you know, that’s, that’s over the course of decades. That’s what we are. been seeing over the past few years, more aggressive portfolio is going to be ranging up, you know, 16 18% annualized returns. And then if you want to go like super, super conservative, I think our conservative investors have averaged closer to like 8% annual returns.

Unknown Speaker 18:14
And that’s all inclusive of like what you said at 2.8%. About that’s, that’s how you guys make your money. Yeah, so those numbers I’m quoting are before your fees, you take off the fees on top of those returns. Okay, so if you’re if you’re saying 12% analyze returns, they’re sitting at what a nine point something percent per year. Exactly. Okay. I mean, it’s, it’s a hard asset. It doesn’t cash flow, but it’s really cool. So I think I mean, I think that’s the appeal. Right? You say you own these these bottles somewhere? I mean, are what are clients doing? Like they want to show it off? Right? Do they get to see hold the bottle or get to visit it at the safe?

Unknown Speaker 18:57
Yeah. So if they want to visit it, they can can do it anytime they want to take it out, drink it, they can do that anytime. So I think that’s one of the benefits of not securitizing or not owning fractional shares that represent an asset, actually owning the asset is that at the end of the day, you have the direct benefit of owning that physical asset and you can do whatever you want with it at the end of the day. So a lot of our investors like maybe they want to know more about wine or maybe they want to get something for like their, their kids birth year to share on their wedding day, right? So they’ll buy 10 cases and you know, 10 years later they’ll sell off five and then use the profits generated from that five to basically drink nice wine for free with the other five

Unknown Speaker 19:40
Yeah, I’ve thought of like you know, a lot of the deals that we’ll do are like five to seven years, you know, go and buy a bottle case right now and then have it just sit in your safe for five years without turning into vinegar at my house. So guys, um, you know, a couple takeaways that are very similar. Are these the reason why I kind of bring these kind of off the wall investments is it kind of it helps us as passive investors kind of understand and value these type of investments. So for example, Anthony was talking about, you know, legitimising the wine and and I don’t know if it’s some kind of barcode or you know some certified inspection process but you know, like I was looking at life settlements which is you know, you’re you’re kind of buying the asset is a piece of paper a contract with the individual so on their passing but the when I was looking into this one particular one I wasn’t able to get it verified yet so the Emeritus or Northwest feature on the top but I didn’t know if it was just like a fraudulent piece of paper and that’s what made me uncomfortable, but in this case, anti right like these things are some some third party is backing them. Is that how it’s done?

Unknown Speaker 20:54
Exactly. So you can independently audit your ownership every single investor when They come onto a platform and they buy a bottle, you know, there is a paper trail so you can see, and you can visit and you can actually touch your actual asset, you know, we try to make it as as direct as possible in terms of adding you have the kind of confidence you need to invest in something new that you may not be familiar with.

Unknown Speaker 21:17
And another thing that Anthony mentioned was, you know, I forgot who was that that guy that had the wiring that was moving wineries?

Unknown Speaker 21:25
Well,

Unknown Speaker 21:26
yeah, and Eric’s and he’s kind of like the, I would call them the brains of the operation. So I was looking at oil and gas investment and I actually went down there and I met the in the oil and gas investment, it’s, you know, just putting holes in the ground, but the geologists is kind of the the guru, the brains of the operation. So I met him and his dog down there in Texas, and that person is the person that you kind of bet your money on. And in this case, that’s the brains and I guess you could call it similar with you know, apartment vesting, which would be like the owner operator. In that case, but, you know, when you’re investing, you need to figure out where’s that, where’s the brains of the operation, the intellectual firepower of the investment, because that’s, you know, you’re trying to pick the winners here. And, you know, a lot of times you have very little, you may not know too much about the investment. But in some cases, it’s better to go with the proven folks even though past performance does not indicate future success. But in this case, it’s just what sugar and water I don’t know what makes wine grapes or something like that, just grapes. And anything else that you know, that kind of takeaways that investors can take from this or anything else we missed?

Unknown Speaker 22:38
Um, I think the interesting about wine is that it’s, it’s pretty uncorrelated to the market. In good times and bad times people can be drinking wine. And what really drives wine value is that it needs time to age and get better than the bottle. And as it gets better in the bottle, people are drinking from that annual supply, right? So supply dwindles crops up demand. And you know, we’ve seen it even this year with the stock market volatility. In the first quarter when the s&p was down, I think like 20 something percent. You know, our investors are up, and they’re up on this year too. So, you know, it’s not going to be something that’s like Bitcoin or hot tech stock where you’re getting, you know, 50% in a year, although there are some like that, but it is something that’s steady. It is something that is new that, you know, hasn’t really been available unless you’re ultra, ultra wealthy or ultra well connected. And we’re just looking to give this access to more people.

Unknown Speaker 23:35
Now. I’m actually happy I’m in the opposite seat because most times I’m in your seat people are pegging me with hard questions. So here’s a card question these days with the whole rise of of craft beer, because people are cheap, don’t have much money. You know, people are moving more towards that as an also marijuana. You know, eating brownies is probably a lot Well, I don’t know I don’t want to say if it’s healthy or not, but healthier than drinking alcohol, I mean has is that impacting wine prices as a whole,

Unknown Speaker 24:09
I think on the lower level, so like, you know, grocery store wines, definitely, I think as technology has gotten better, they’ve been able to create wine more cheaply and sell it for more cheaply. But this segment that we’re looking at is like, you know, pretty much the top top like 5%, and that is going to be still very, very much so untouched, you know, it’s a luxury segment, people are still going to be wanting these brands, you know, like the equivalent of like, the Ferraris and blue buttons in the wine world. And I don’t think, you know, something that is happening on kind of the lower segments will really affect what we’re doing here.

Unknown Speaker 24:47
And then, you know, as an investor, you know, you always want to be looking at the exit strategy. You know, don’t buy anything that you can unload at any point, even though you know, you got to assume these things are illiquid for the most part, but what’s the what’s the Like if somebody wanted to unload their their case, is that really easy? Is there like a steady supply of buyers? And then, you know, do you guys, do you guys make money off of the commission off that sale? Or is it all encompassing the asset management fee?

Unknown Speaker 25:15
Yeah, good question. So we don’t charge anything extra to liquidate. We don’t have any sort of like minimum lockup periods or anything like that. Because we’re working with wine. And you know, it is a consumable. So if you want to exit, we’re not only selling to other wine investors on our platform, but think about all the retailers distributors, hotel restaurant chains that are all looking to buy wine and consume it. So because of that the liquidity is a lot better the way we’re the way that we’re doing it than a lot of other alternatives. Well,

Unknown Speaker 25:46
so Anthony, once you get your contact information for people to get ahold of you, if not, I can put it at simple passive cash flow calm slash wine Are you guys should know.

Unknown Speaker 25:57
Just feel free to email me directly. If you have any questions. It’s Anthony vino best CO and you know you can browse our website and make an investment directly on there. Cool.

Unknown Speaker 26:08
Well, yeah, thanks everybody for joining us again check out all different types of investments it’s simple passive cash flow.com slash menu you know, I think there were like musicals and all kinds of things you can invest in. Maybe one day I’ll buy like the Backstreet Boys I wanted that way royalties, and a bottle of 12 pack of one of these fancy wines. But if you guys haven’t done so check out our investor clubs both passive cash flow calm slash club, and you’ll get access to the first three trial ecourse sections there.

Unknown Speaker 26:46
This website

Unknown Speaker 26:47
offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment and or legal advisor before relying on any information contained here and information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.

July 2020 Market Update Investor – Investor Letter #15

https://youtu.be/n7sYoIqPjjI

 

Unknown Speaker 0:00
Introducing the new remote investor, incubator and ecourse we had the mastermind and we are going to break off from that being mostly an accredited investor group. And I wanted to create something that was helping out the little guy get started guys getting their first properties. And we’re calling this the incubator group. Get More details at simple passive cash flow, comm slash incubator, but basically what we’re doing here is we’re getting a group of professionals looking to build your network with others starting this journey to financial freedom, the ecourse that’s going to company this group is going to have eight modules in a closed membership site plus two bonus modules and download kit all geared toward educating the remote investor in this group. We’re going to have biweekly zoom video calls and if you join up, you’re going to get all past turnkey rental recordings. Now these calls are designed to ask whatever questions you have and hear the other questions from other investors in your shoes. And we’re going to run this like a bootcamp style. This is going to be five month program, we’re going to walk you through the best practices for tax and legal as you acquire your first remote rental. We’re even walk you through the due diligence and offer process we’re going to have staff membership coordinators for extra support to get you over the sticking points and to connect you with the right people in the group. Even if you’re shy. One of the biggest reasons for join is access to our ever changing Rolodex of top turnkey companies, brokers, property managers, insurance companies. Hey guys, we’re basically spoon feeding this to you if you’ve been on the fence and it’s time to get your first rental property go to simple passive cash flow calm slash incubator and by the way, for those accredited investors, we are looking for new members go to simple passive cash flow comm slash journey

Unknown Speaker 1:43
and join the flagship simple passive cash flow mastermind there. After the pandemic to new world out there having a network around you is so much more important. shoot me an email Lane at simple passive cash flow if you’re unsure if the incubator or if the credited mastermind group is for you, but let’s get you connected Other people and don’t go it alone. Hey everybody, this is the July 2020 monthly market update, where we go over the latest headlines and I add in my commentary on what’s been going on in the world of real estate and the macro markets. You guys can check out past episodes at simple passive cash flow calm slash investor letter. But let’s start with the giveaway real quick for everybody. I call these the easter egg. You guys can get access to the COVID-19 response folder and I’ve been kind of adding things to this over the past few months in there you’ll get the Small Business Administration loan docs, sample landlord repayment agreements so that you can make deals with your tenants small business owner guidelines and great medical paper done by University of Hawaii while on COVID-19. Get all that and more by texting the world symbol 23146651767 and also Introducing the new incubator group for newer investors looking to get their first few remote rental properties or turnkey properties, we pretty much guide you through the process. And we put the group around you that’s doing the same thing so you can build your peer group network. Learn more about that at simple passive cash flow, comm slash incubator, and we are also doing an August 1 full day workshop. We’re doing it virtually since you know, we’re kind of coming out of the pandemic here. Some people are still afraid of going out in public so you guys can join in. It’s about from 9:30am to 3:30pm Pacific. You could check this out by going to all our events section at simple passive cash flow calm slash events. If you guys haven’t met me before, my name is Lane Kawaoka prefer still got my professional engineering license, and I have a podcast it’s simple passive cash flow calm and on Spotify, Google Play YouTube, all of the such if you’re not part of our community Check us out on Facebook, great group on there. And I also have a local group here in Hawaii. But let’s start with a couple teaching points. So here’s a little table that I found outlining why all we do passive investing and not wholesaling or flipping. And this is why I love house slippers because they all pay my taxes for me, they definitely pay their fair share of the taxes here. So on the left side, you see some of the the taxes that are put forth for rental buy and hold investors, how you can get around the self employment tax which is can be up to 15%. And how you don’t have any depreciation with wholesaling flipping, no bonus depreciation there, you know, we’re writing off almost a third of the building in year one, which can be huge tax write off negative k ones. You learn more about that it’s simple passive cash flow, calm slash cost, say CLS t SDG and second teaching point here. This is the difference between the idle and the PPP loan, I am currently applying for this, see what I’m getting, I think I’m gonna be able to get a 3.75 fixed interest rate with a 30 year term, but I don’t think I need it, you know, I mean if there’s no really sense of taking on that if you don’t need it, so I just kind of did it for the process and kind of let you guys know all about it. And so here’s a little table. Again, if you guys are catching this up on the podcast version, we also put this on the YouTube channel. As you can probably just google simple passive cash flow on YouTube and you can find our channel a lot of cool stuff on there a lot of things that aren’t don’t find the way to the podcasts or the website or put up on the YouTube channel. Because apparently that’s how people find things to say the least that’s how I learned a lot of my stuff these past few years just googling it and YouTube in here, we get into it. I’m going to kind of go through this pretty rapidly. A lot of news, but yeah, let’s kind of start off with the big elephant in the room which is still Coronavirus. This is a article about been checking that’s done by the New York Times, which is the Coronavirus vaccine tracker. And they update this pretty frequently. And they actually have one approved vaccine approved for limited use now before the last time I checked this last month, they had a bunch in phase three and phase two, but nothing approved. So, you know, good news moving forward. I think Fauci was kind of alluding to something like this coming on the way I I kind of looked at it the way his commentary went, but a good news. I mean, we’re getting there. And I think it’s happening a lot faster. And I hear of all all, all kinds of investing, and venture capital, this government funding going to folks expediting this tech scene, one of the big news for those still picking up single family home rentals, or loans in their own name. You know, I think a lot of us are kind of getting on the bandwagon of being more of a passive LP investor, where the nice thing is you don’t need to get the bone in your own name. That’s sponsors are for to kind of Get the net debt in their name and to run the deal. But if you’re still, you know, picking up deals on your own and getting those Fannie Mae Freddie Mac loans which you get 10 years in your name 10 in your spouse’s name, it looks like they’re saying that the debt to income requirements are going away as a qualification criteria. So if you have been falling out lately, debt to income ratio, I mean, there’s a few ways to get there. I really don’t know how to calculate exactly but it’s taking a ratio between how much your debt payments are every month and then how much you’re able to income you’re having. This is going away and I know some guys who have large mortgages because they live in places like Hawaii or California where you really shouldn’t be buying a primary residence in my opinion, you guys can check out my commentary on that at simple passive cash flow, calm slash home, very controversial topic. So I’ll let that go for now, especially for the younger folks out there trying to build their net worth over a million dollars, I would say stay away from home ownership. Use your money to invest your debt to income ratios was really bad because you have this large house that has a big debt payment but very doesn’t bring any income. I mean, that there should tell you right there that it’s not a good thing for your balance sheet. But apparently this dti requirement is going away. And of course, the comments that happen on our Facebook pages are different places or you know, the world is ending, you know that it’s the return of the Ninja loans. I don’t think that that’s the case, these lending standards loosen up very slowly. And this has been happening over the past five years. I’ve been tracking it very closely. And I’m not getting too excited about this, but it’s just a general movement towards opening things up. And this is just a different way of stimulating the economy as opposed to lowering rates. A little report for you, those of you guys living in Southern California, Los Angeles multifamily market is not doing too well. Listen. And a month after California Shelter in Place Order went into effect. La multifamily data started showing early signs of headwinds, the average rent collected by 10 basis points or contracted by 10 basis points on a three month basis as of March. So if you guys are looking on the YouTube, you guys are seeing the charts up there. Yeah, not looking good. And this is why I don’t invest in primary markets like California in first place, invest for cash flow. The next headline we’re talking about the stimulus for is here, the House of Representatives passed the moving Florida act. I don’t know how they keep coming up with these cool names. So it’s an infrastructure we’re building plan. More than 2300 pages if you guys would like to read it all this explaining exact detail how the $1.2 trillion is being spent. Wedding encompasses all types of infrastructures such as air, air, rail highways, bridges, transit systems, alternatives. Your automobiles, broad, broad brand and all types of energy schools housing, water. Now, when I was still in corporate America, I was spending the 2008 stimulus funds, which seems very similar to this. That was the High Speed Rail back then. And I’ll tell you the money doesn’t really find its way into the system into many, many years later. I’ll be as far as 2012 to 2014. So what is that three, four years later? So, but it’s still saying should that act pass the Senate, which is unlikely based on the comments from the Senate leadership, and those of you guys who are not aware the house controls is controlled by the Democrats, that senate is controlled by the republicans and a lot of heavy spending acts just don’t make it through the Republicans. But some of the highlights, I mean, not saying that it’s going to it’s going to be like this exactly, but this is the trend right and this is how you can kind of see where the puck is moving towards like Wayne Gretzky says. So The same new markets tax credit, national funding would increase to 7 billion from 5 billion the rehabilitation tax credit application percentage, which increased to 30%. This is the one I’m excited about the renewable energy production credit will be extended through 2026 instead of 2021. We don’t know if that means your solar panel cells will be still getting you that credit. But um, you know, that’s the way they’re pushing and think how this impacts a lot of us especially in the mass, right, we talk about, you know, how to mitigate our taxes a lot. You know, one of the big ways obviously is you know, bonus depreciation by going into good deals that do cost segues, that’s number one. But for those with a active w two income, and don’t have the real estate professional status, their only options are land conservation easements, and oil and gas deals to also active w two income now, you know, I don’t really want to go into details on that. But you know, like the land conservation easement rents are becoming much, much more controversial and oil and gas kind of sucks these days, right? I mean, if you’ve been watching the news, well, you went like negative on the futures or something like that. So the only third waves, you know, these solar energy credits and but 510 years ago, there was this big thing where you could spend money frivolously why I don’t want to see that word. But people were basically using this as a loophole to get write off on taxes. And this looks like potentially one coming so I would be on the lookout for this to Procter and Gamble sells their headquarters in San Francisco and moves across the beta Oakland, which is a trend towards moving to less priced areas. On CBR. He came out with a great Report. Here are some of their findings turnover, which is defined as the percentage of total rented units not renewed each year. I repeat that again because it took me a few times to really grasp it. So turnover is The percentage of total rented units not renewed each year fell from 47.5% in 2009 to 42.1%. April, the lowest level in 20 years, the decline in turnover has has accelerated due to fewer tenants moving because of COVID-19 economic downturn, turnover up rises each spring, but declined this year due to lockout mandates and economic concerns. So the way this really plays out, I can say like, you know, through our across our 3500 unit portfolio, right as landlords you’re kind of I was a little stressed out, you know, April May collections. Obviously, they turned out fine. I’m more than impressed what happened and I’m even more like bullish on multifamily workforce housing, right, because I think we saw the strength through a pandemic, but what they’re saying is, you know, people weren’t moving out because people were shocked at literally sheltering in place and they weren’t looking for a new place to say and landlords and in US included you know, we’re very accommodating towards people you know, but I think turnover should probably pick up here is south and west regions typically typically have higher turnover rates by and by property type Class A assets typically have higher turnover rates. So people have been asking, you know, after the pandemic, what are some changes that are going to be designed into houses and apartment? Now I don’t know if this is the case. I think this is just an article made to satisfy a consumer reader need but this article is design changes for life changes created by john burns group, first thing that they’re citing is you know, people are going to work from home so flex spaces that can accommodate the home officer for like Nokes are going to be kind of popping up or they they won’t I don’t you know, I don’t know, who knows in like six months, maybe everybody’s forgotten about this endemic thing. I can tell you maybe like six months ago everybody was sort of freaking out about, you know, workplace or school shootings and they’re saying things like, oh, they’re gonna they’re gonna design all these buildings with curved hallways and bullets. It’s hard to kind of shoot people if you have curved hallways and obviously now nobody cares about that stuff. It’s just times of change and you will have forgotten people forget very quickly. But anyway, getting back to the article here so there’ll be also changes in the kitchen design, the fewer people are going to want the great big open rooms that the to include the kitchen with more now one in the kitchen to return to having some separation to hide the smells, mess and noise, grow garage configurations. Now that families will not be able to have fewer cars per person opening up the garage to multiple configurations. Front Entry, the public entry will still need great street appeal and allow for secure package drop off and I guess, you know, Uber Eats or Postmates But the festival also need better drops on air for shoes, packages, leashes, etc. These are called mud rooms will migrate from colder climates to provide a buffer between the outside and inside. Another thing that’s emerging is home management centers. So this is where all the technology is stored, like the Wi Fi and all the other appliance tech items. You know, think of like your your battery for your your Tesla home battery system, you have solar power cells, some people will say the laundry room will kind of hold this type of stuff. And then as far as bedrooms for space efficiency of the guests back bedroom and their home office will likely be the same space for many families. For more other families. They would prefer a small bedroom for sleeping only with the square footage devoted to other spaces, so others will want a larger bedroom that will accommodate even more uses, including TV and watching and this has been happening the last 2030 years where previous Yes, the larger bedrooms but now the bedrooms are smaller and then the square footage is being transferred to living areas.

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If you’ve been following my

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journey I’ve been selling my initial real property and transitioning into syndication deals lately for more purely passive investment strategy. One critical part of my portfolio is the American Home preservation fund, or what folks in the we call HP for short. George Newbery once apartment owner, operator and mentor to me, is now sponsoring the podcast is private fun, which by the way, also accepts non accredited investors cuts the middlemen out and allows you to invest directly with him to fight the mortgage crisis in America. join him by purchasing distressed mortgages while getting a double digit annual return paid monthly. Find something else better out there. Well, let me know. Feel good knowing that you’re helping families stay in their home after buying their underwater note at a huge discount. Invest as low as $100 by going to HP servicing comm slash investors and if you want the free bernsen book, please send me an email Lane at simple passive cash flow calm.

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Well, that’s like

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this article came from Wall Street calm sort of alternative news source but very great, great insight. So they have on the left side here the cities with the biggest percent increases in one bedroom rents. Number one was Cleveland, Ohio of a year over year change of 16%. Indianapolis was next, Columbus, Ohio, Rochester, New York, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Cincinnati, Ohio, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and St. Louis, Missouri, rounded out the top eight, a lot of Ohio this there. And then on the right side here the 17 most expensive us rental markets, who you don’t want to live in to San Francisco, California, New York and Boston, San Jose, Oakland are the top five in there also la Seattle, San Diego, Santa Ana, Honolulu, Hawaii and number 12. And then but the important thing is important things that I want to point out are the big movers are San Francisco number one cent San Jose number four, the most expensive ones. They almost drop off San Francisco drop 11.8% median asking rents from a year ago in San Jose dropped 8%. Now this is something I’ve been hearing just from my buddy’s living in the Bay Area that rents are dropping and this supports that entirely. You can see number five there Oakland, California went up four and a half percent even though it’s in the Bay Area, but it looks like there’s a lot of people are just running away from the San Jose’s and San Francisco to go to Oakland and you know, that was the last article we just talked about right Procter and Gamble moving headquarters from San Francisco to Oakland. I get to go wanna stay wars are pretty feeling pretty dumb right now moving from Oakland to San Francisco, but I’m sure they have the money. I think that’s all that’s all been syndicated and their model building the equity for that Golden State Warriors with all syndicated by big, passive investors. So that was interesting. I found that out when you know, I think there’s like that one guy who kind of pushed one of the players during the Toronto Raptors game and then they said he was like one of the passive investors in the deal. But john burns comes out with this summary image for the U haul report. And the U haul report is something we we love to watch this because the U haul report captures where the trucks are moving in one way trips. We like the U haul report over the fan line report because the U haul report is sort of the budget way of moving and as workforce housing Class B and C no regular blue collar folks or folks like myself who are cheap. This is how you Move your butt over to the next place you’re going to live. And then you hopefully have some beer and pizza for your buddies to help you. So the places that they’re moving towards the places all in red are in the Bay Area in Southern California. And the green dots are Seattle, Portland, all pretty much all Texas, a lot of Florida a lot in the south southeast. And they are moving away from getting the California’s and I think believe that Chicago and all the Northeast, it’s all right up there. Thumper came up with a lot of great data here on where bedroom rents for tracking some of the big takeaways here when we kind of talked about this, but again, yeah, I mean, declines in your your kind of more big city areas. Of course, as an investor, you’re always looking at the sub market. You know, for example, if you’re investing in, you know, like Dallas, right, I mean, Dallas is made up of a couple of dozen sub markets, so you can’t just frankly Look at Dallas for data. Great place to start, but you got to dig in. That is if you’re more sophisticated investor. If you’re not well, you should probably just passively invest because this probably ain’t the game for you. I’ve caught on got screenshots of all the data here. So if you guys want to check this out on the YouTube channel, you guys can check it out there. But I also put this all my our Facebook group and then if you guys want to find me on Instagram, I’ll usually post it on there. If you guys are first time homebuyers and rental property owners, don’t do it alone. Make sure you join us on August 1 for the full day workshop, you there’s a URL to register. It’s a little bit hard to remember but you can find it by just going to simple passive cash flow comm slash events. Also having a afterparty in Honolulu, if you guys can make that and, you know, people are always asking, you know, like they’re getting confused by all these masterminds and groups. We have kind of two programs that we the flagship Group is the mastermind and accelerator which is you guys can find information at simple passive cash flow calm slash journey. Now, this one’s sort of becoming the accredited investor Group, a lot of people are, you know, they they’ve had a little bit experience with single family homes but they just want to invest as a passive investor and want to build their network with other credit investors and learn how to get syndication deals, whereas the incubator group is more of a way to get your first rental property get your feet wet, especially if you’re a non accredited investor. And there’s gonna be probably a lot more hand holding and granular level tactics and steps to follow in this group that will help people and this is kind of my my way to kind of help people get started. I mean, when I got started, there was really nothing I had to kind of fumble through it myself and I got lucky I work with the right people. The moving on on the monthly report or real page reports as apartment demand rebounds, rent cuts disappear in most market. So there’s a nice little chart kind of showing the actions From March, April, May June, on new lease volume has changed and the executing new lease Oh, this is kind of funny slide. Well, it’s not it’s a bunch of bankruptcies but so chapter 11 bankruptcy for 24 Hour Fitness you know you I think you’ve been hearing that these guys weren’t doing too well and I think the COVID-19 and all the negative laws against you know, do you need to wear a face mask or disinfect and they just couldn’t stand business. So they’re closing 132 locations 41 in California and 26 in Texas, and then about a week later GNC files for chapter 11 bankruptcy plans to close 1200 stores. Now I don’t know that those two are related. Probably not. That’s just a kind of a bad joke, but also at&t to close 250 at&t mobility and Cricket Wireless stores, too. That’s pretty much the end of the monthly report. Usually we try and end with something I guess that was the joke. That was the joke guys, you know, 24 Hour Fitness closes, therefore people can’t get their supplements. Well, they don’t need their supplements anymore, apparently. But now I’m going to roll into my personal report what I’ve been kind of up to this last month and I split them up into six sections based on the Tony Robbins six needs. And this is the way I check myself every month that I am scoring points where it counts, because if not, what is the point? The first category here is kind of how did I get growth? How am I working on something getting better? So we closed 140 unit Class A apartment in Lake Dallas. It took forever to close this deal because it was a HUD loan. So HUD loans are probably a higher level on the Fannie and Freddie loans. There. We had a 35 and a half year amortization period. When you add it up with the other loans. It was like a 2.9% interest rate. So pretty amazing. And this was a class asset. So something I don’t really have to worry about and through pandemic, yeah, this thing cash flows. Number two contribution. How did I leave the world a little better place? Well, this is the incubator group. And this is the group for those looking to pick up their first few rental properties. I wanted to find a way to fight back against the evil real estate empires out there that will trick people to come to these conferences, teach them how to raise their lines on their credit cards, and kind of swindle them into crappy real estate education that really everything can be found there on the internet, including my own and charges guys like 20, Grand 30, Grand 40, some even 50 or $100,000. With after it’s all said and done with all the upsells. Now financial freedom is not for everybody, but you know, for those willing to put in the work. I think that You know, it can be attainable by everybody, especially for those, you know, hard working guys and gals in, you know, corporate America. You know, a lot of our folks are hard working doctors, lawyers, engineers, I see no reason why you can’t get financially free in less than 10 years if you’re able to save at least $30,000 from your day job. So, if you guys are new to the group, check out the incubator group. We are starting the next group on August 18 or August 15. So if you haven’t, this is an application only. So check that out simple passive cash flow comm slash incubator number three significant so I found this little meme out here says little Wolf, leading the pack and this is the way I’ve kind of found significance for the stuff I do. This is why I work 12 hours a day even though I don’t need to. It’s because a lot of people out there they read, listen to a podcast or to read a few books and get this idea There’s something better than just going to their work every day. And Little do they know well most people don’t realize how much they’re getting screwed over by mutual funds were taking about a third of their profits whether or not the price of the stock goes up or down. And for those who do realize this, they start to come into this world of real estate investing but you need the people and you need the insight and and the stuff that I do is not really that hard is at least what I think. I mean, it’s just stuff I picked up along the way and it’s not too hard to kind of just help people along the way give back and know that’s what the incubator group is and this is why I feel special, I guess. The hot it I have a little uncertainty in this time. So of course the whole Corona virus thing has been a stressful thing for myself and everybody. I, you know, oh, here’s the Coronavirus tracker and I had a screenshot of last month’s where they were at you can see how much things have changed over the past month in terms of where the vaccines Are you know will it be a V shaped checkbox U shaped L shape? correction? Well, nobody knows. Um, but you know, I, from my perspective, I don’t really care because

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here’s everybody’s most for the most part paying at places I I’m investing in and, you know, I know a lot of times this is just a storm if you can get out, he can survive through it will be stronger at the end. And it’s the people who are investing in things like hotel investments or short term rentals, Airbnb stuff, or Yep, you know, those, those kind of sexy boutique, the luxury type of developments, you know, those are people getting killed right now. And this is just a fat cutting time. For my opinion. This is where the workforce housing shines the best. How do I get some certainty this month? Yeah, I’ve been the trade lines have been chugging along. I mean, I think I make I make probably like 100 or 200 bucks every week or two by two In this, I know I’m up to like $11,000 total doing this, if you guys haven’t heard of trade, what the heck trade lines are. So you can add somebody to your credit card as an authorized user. It sounds a little crazy. But look, I mean, I’ve done my risk analysis. And to me, I think it’s a good amount of risk, I have found ways to safeguard myself by putting alerts on the credit cards, actually not even activating the credit cards. And then making a nice little side change on the side. And I think a lot of people like this because you just get a notification on your phone that you sold a trade line that might be 100 or $300. And it’s like, it’s easy money. And, you know, I’ve heard somebody said that, you know, when that $200 trade line gets sold, they take 100 bucks and they give 50 bucks each to their kids. And everybody’s having an awesome day that day. So you guys can read more about that simple passive cash flow calm, straight line. And last but not least, how did I get a little love and connection this month? Well, I went on a trip, I actually left Hawaii amongst the pandemic and I went to Huntsville. There we are on the left filming some apartment tours, some of the assets we own down there. And we went to Dallas met a lot of you guys out there. I think there are like 25 folks that came out. Unfortunately, we all couldn’t take a tour because there were some restrictions on how many people could visit but we all got to meet a lot of you guys in person. That was cool. And then you know, went up to Cleveland checked out the the Rockefeller and all these cool places got to spend time with the wife and that’s it’s all about go and travel Onix business expenses to some new podcasts and articles I put out this past month people really liked the David McElhaney Cast they were recorded before the pandemic all happen. But a great commentary from a different perspective. I’ve been kind of falling more family office, and more industry type of influencers. To me a lot of podcasts these days are just done by guys who, you know, want to syndicate stuff or really have no experience doing what they’re doing. So I’ve kind of frankly stopped listening to podcasts you pay for what you get. And it doesn’t take much to do podcasts. I can do on number two legacy. So this is a cool, there’s a little download with this one. So if you go to simple passive cash flow, calm slash legacy, there’s a net worth tracker on there, but a whole bunch of ideas, especially for those of you guys building your estate trusts, which, you know, we try and help folks in our passive investor accelerator for the accredited guys, or a lot of that is you know, just little ideas. You have that you have From your network number three, the cons of the birds, I’m really not a fan of the birds. You know, it’s all the kids doing it, which is great. If you don’t have a net worth of at least half a million dollars, you got to take some risks. Number four, why would you do a bridge loan and apartment syndication? There was a I did a video on bridge loans. Number five, I had Benjamin hardy who wrote willpower doesn’t work. And then he has his personality isn’t permanent, which he actually sent to me a couple of weeks ago. So that was kind of cool. Great. I think that was a pretty good podcast. I mean, I’ve been doing a little bit more like, like a donor lifestyle podcast here and there. Because let’s face it, like you know, once you’ve listened to 100, something podcasts a simple passive cash flow. There’s not much to this passive investing thing. And I mean, it’s more about enriching your life.

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And then, you know, same thing, the workplace culture and the young professional advice from Peter YAHWAH. It’s the reason I’m brought him on board was because a lot of investors that listen to this podcast are, you know, older and they have kids. So I was trying to bridge the gap between, you know their kids, and at least I was trying to. And then last but not least, it’s self directed IRAs to invest your retirement funds. If you guys need a referral to like a QRP, solo 401k or self directed IRA, let me know. Um, you know, there’s a myriad of these guys. And everybody kind of uses the same few ones. For the most part, there’s really no real reason to kind of waste time betting stuff down from a list of 100 you know, stick start with this top three and just go from there as my opinion, some of the barriers that I’ve been working through so I came home and the State of Hawaii wants to quarantine me 14 days. So I think I’m on currently day four. I’m in high spirits. I have lots of fresh juices and pre made meals. My unfortunately my co2 tank that I make gobs and gobs of soda water, every day is is down. I might have to sneak out of the house and refill my co2 contain this slide I usually put what I bought, which are doodads things that you burn your cash on. But I don’t know about you guys, but this pandemic, I haven’t been buying too much stuff from Amazon. I don’t know, let me know if that’s the same thing with you guys. And some of the lessons learned. So I read this book, everything is F by Mark Madson. It’s a kind of a philosophical book, that he uses the F word a lot. And it’s kind of comedic In my opinion, if you like that type of stuff. He’s low on the word, raw and rebellious type, kind of the message of the book. It’s a book about hope, by the way, despite the name, everything is F. I think a lot of us realize like there’s a lot of media out there and it’s designed to kind of put you in a tailspin. span and keep you glued to the screen. And it’s a book that kind of keeps things in perspective. And ultimately, we’re all here to find the truth. Right. So we are doing another book club, I think on October 31 is the next one and we are reading what would the Rockefellers do? And you guys can sign up for that at simple passive cash flow calm slash lane hack. And what we do is we just hop on a call once a quarter and talk about the book and one last easter egg for you guys, if you guys want to download and I just revised the 2020 buy and hold analyzer for single family homes in Excel or Google Sheet format. You were the people the reason why people like it is like I put down all the expenses you should have for your rental property. And there’s some footnotes and some guidelines what it should be. So that’s a $1,553 value all for you for free. Just have to text simple to the word simple 2314 6651767 check out the other too much good stuff on the website and remember, this is just a infotainment podcasts. And we’ll appreciate you guys kind of supporting the show for this long and if you guys have any other questions shoot me an email at Lane at simple passive cash flow calm and if you haven’t gotten on the phone yet, let’s set up a call and let’s get to know each other better. And I will see you guys next time bye.

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This website

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offers very general information concerning real estate for investment purposes every investor situation is unique. Always seek the services of licensed third party appraisers inspectors to verify the value and condition of any property you intend to purchase. Use the services of professional title and escrow companies and licensed tax investment or legal advisor before relying on any information contained here in it. Information is not guaranteed as an every investment there is risk. The content found here is just my opinion and things change and I reserve the right to change my mind. Above all else, do your own analysis and think for yourself because in the end, you’re the only person who is going to look out for your best interests.