Bankless - Becoming a Crypto Millionaire with Sam Dogen

Episode Date: June 30, 2025

Sam Dogen, founder of Financial Samurai and one of the original F.I.R.E. voices, joins Ryan Sean Adams to break down the path to financial independence, whether you're investing in crypto or other ass...et classes. They unpack 10 milestones to millionaire status, from mindset and momentum to investing, real estate, and entrepreneurship. Sam and Ryan go deep on how to avoid financial landmines, get on the same page with a partner, and define a life where money serves purpose, not the other way around. If you want your net worth to grow without losing your life to the grind, this episode is your roadmap. ------ 📣SPOTIFY PREMIUM RSS FEED | USE CODE: SPOTIFY24 https://bankless.cc/spotify-premium ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🪙FRAX | SELF SUFFICIENT DeFi https://bankless.cc/Frax 🦄UNISWAP | SWAP ON UNICHAIN https://bankless.cc/unichain 🛞MANTLE | MODULAR LAYER 2 NETWORK https://bankless.cc/Mantle 🌐CELO | BUILD TOGETHER AND PROSPER https://bankless.cc/Celo 🟠 BINANCE | THE WORLDS #1 CRYPTO EXCHANGE https://bankless.cc/binance ------ TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 5:56 Millionaire Mindset 9:34 The Probability of Becoming a Millionaire 10:58 Understanding Your Why 12:46 Freedom Through Finance 17:07 Signs You’ve Reached Independence 19:52 How Much Should You Have? 22:20 Saving: Where to Begin 26:48 The 50% Rule 29:21 The Magic of $250.000 32:30 Smart Debt vs Smart Risk 34:44 What Assets Build Wealth? 37:31 Buying Your First Home 43:00 Easy Wins in Property 47:14 Income That Frees You 49:22 Cars That Kill Wealth 52:55 Why Ownership Beats Income 59:56 Location = Opportunity 1:02:38 Design Your Financial Life 1:04:28 Build Wealth as a Team 1:06:43 Redefining Retirement 1:08:41 Lightning Round 1:12:53 Closing ------ RESOURCES Sam Dogen https://x.com/financialsamura/ Financial Samurai https://www.financialsamurai.com/ Millionaire Milestones https://www.amazon.com/Millionaire-Milestones-Simple-Steps-Figures/dp/0593714709 ------ Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures⁠

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 250,000 is the magic number that I think where just compounding really takes off. And it's very noticeable. Once you get to that 250, you stay diligent in your contributions and in your investing. It's only a matter of time before you're going to get to a million dollars. Welcome to bankless, where we explore the frontier of internet money and internet finance. This is Ryan Sean Adams. Just me today. I'm here to help you become more bankless. Guys, it's no secret that part of the bankless program is to help you be.
Starting point is 00:00:32 become crypto wealthy. We talk about this at the beginning of all of our episodes. So why are we doing this episode in particular? I feel like often I run across people in crypto who skip the whole personal finance principles part of investing. They're looking at crypto as kind of a short-term lotto ticket. So this episode is for those people, because becoming a crypto millionaire isn't all that different from becoming a fiat millionaire. The same rules apply. And there's a lot we can learn from personal finance outside of crypto. Sam Dogen was an early pioneer of a movement called Fire. That's F-I-R-E. It stands for Financial Independence, retire early. It started around the 2010 era of personal finance, and I think people in crypto have lots to learn from some of the
Starting point is 00:01:20 fire principles. You don't have to use Sam's asset classes like real estate to achieve your millionaire-style goals. Maybe you swap real estate and bonds and equities for crypto. But still, there's definitely some valuable lessons here for all crypto investors. So please enjoy this conversation with Sam Dogen. In the wild west of Defi, stability and innovation are everything, which is why you should check out Frax Finance. The protocol revolutionizing stable coins, defy, and Rolex. The core of Frax Finance is FRAX USD, which is backed by BlackRock's institutional biddle fund. FRAX designed FRAXUSD for besting class yields across DFI, T-bills, and carry trade returns all in one. Just head to
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Starting point is 00:04:29 Thank you very much. Thanks for having me, Ryan. We're really excited about this. Okay, I got to start with the first question off the bat. It's in everyone's mind, given the title of this episode. Can anyone be a millionaire? Is this a matter of luck, or can anyone do it if they just pull themselves up by their bootstraps? Well, I don't think there's 100% probability, but I think if you read millionaire milestones and you follow personal finance sites and podcasts, you're going to be much more focused than the average person, only about six and a half percent of the U.S. population are millionaires. But I think you can raise that probability to probably 75 percent. Let's do with that. Wow. Okay. What's stopping people from just
Starting point is 00:05:08 becoming millionaires? Why can't everyone just do this? Well, one, there's education. You've got to understand how to save and more importantly how to invest and asset allocate over a period of time. There are many reasons. You just might not have enough money. You might not have enough education, you might not have enough patience or time, and you might not know what to invest in. So, Millionaire Milestone really starts helping create a framework for investing over the long term. You've really got to know what you're doing and be patient along the way. One of the things I've been kind of shocked about is like none of this is taught in schools. I mean, I guess there are like, you know, personal finance classes in some, you know, jurisdictions
Starting point is 00:05:49 in some areas that are being mandated, but they still don't quite teach this. They certainly don't frame it as, like, how to become a millionaire. Are you like, you know, is this the type of thing that most people learn in school or how do people actually learn these lessons? Well, it's interesting. California, I think, passed a law that says there needs to be one course for all high school seniors in 2026 and beyond a personal finance. So it's happening, but it's still a shock to me that there are no required courses on personal finance. And it's not just about becoming a millionaire. It's just being financially literate to handle your finances. And I think you learn so far by doing and by failing and by wondering where all your money went after you pay all your taxes or wondering what happened to your crypto position or stock position after you bought at the right time and then you panic sold.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Most people learn by trial and error. And I'm trying to help people not make too many errors on their path to financial freedom. Yeah, do you agree it's like investing? I think this is Charlie Munger take. Like investing is more like a temperament than it is sort of a, you know, a knowledge set or a specific skill set that you accrue. Well, you definitely need to know the fundamentals of investing. You should learn about, for example, the probability that the S&P 500 will go up in any single year is about 75%. The probability of a bare market happening. The wall the drawdown is about 35%. So you understand these historical figures, and there's no certainty in the future, but you understand this historical framework so you can invest accordingly. And investing definitely is a lot about emotion control. But if you understand the numbers and you can control your emotions with a proper acid allocation according to your own risk tolerance and financial goals, which change over time,
Starting point is 00:07:43 it's a forever going process, you're going to do much better than the average person. Just top-the-line stats, like how many millionaires are there out there, maybe just in the U.S.? So it's about six and a half percent of the 340 million U.S. population. Okay. So there's about 20 million millionaires. That's a lot. That's more than I think a lot of people are expecting. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:05 So it's like if you're walking around and, you know, if each millionaire was actually a zombie or something, you'd be kind of scared walking around. And, you know, so it's actually kind of ubiquitous, but not really, right? six and a half percent, and they're more concentrated in the bigger coastal cities where the income and the income and growth potential is generally higher. And when you say a millionaire, are you, like, is this basically net worth less the household or do you include the house in that as well? The primary residence?
Starting point is 00:08:35 It includes the primary residence. Okay. And so there's two ways to think about this. So in the United States, the median house is about $400,000. And the media net worth is about $200,000. So about 80 to 85% of a typical person's net worth is in their primary residence, which is kind of risky. We saw that in 2008, 2009 during the housing crash. A lot of people lost their homes through foreclosure, short sales.
Starting point is 00:09:03 And this is something where we talk about in the book on how proper asset allocation is very important. And then over time, the average, actually, American is actually a millionaire based on the latest consumer finance survey. It's about $1.06 million is the average net worth for households in America. Oh, wow. That's average. That's not median, right? The median is about $100,000. Let's just call it about $200,000. Okay. And the reason that's skewed is because we have a lot of centa millionaires and a lot of, you know, a fair number of billionaires out there that are definitely, you know, Bezos is in the average numbers. Right, right. So that skews it upwards.
Starting point is 00:09:40 But so I think some people will be surprised with some of those, you know, raw numbers that being a millionaire only puts you in the top 6% or so in the U.S. So what does it take to get in the top 1%? So top 1% cut off is 13 million, 13 to 14 million. Once you got that, that is the threshold for top 1%. Okay. And then top 0.1%, it just really ramps up that way. So it's really skewed on the top 1% to top 0.
Starting point is 00:10:07 When people think about like the really wealthy people, it's really the top 0.1%. Not so much the top 1% anymore. It's interesting. Let's talk about the why question because that's sort of where you start your book and your book goes through a number of milestones that millionaires will need to consider and will want to hit throughout their journey here. But the first is, I think, the most fundamental question of all, because there could be some people listening to this saying, like, maybe not very many.
Starting point is 00:10:33 Maybe most people want to be a millionaire. But others say, look, like, why should I work towards this? What is the point in being a millionaire? What are the benefits? and you begin with your first milestone in this book of you actually have to find your why. So could you talk about that? Why is being a millionaire worth pursuing it all? And how does someone find their why?
Starting point is 00:10:54 Well, I think it's important to understand there's trillions of dollars out there in the world for the taking. You know, the knucklehead you went to high school with might be super wealthy because he or she decided to try and put themselves out there. So one, know that there's a lot of wealth, especially here in America. And if you don't take advantage of that, I think you're kind of wasting your operational. opportunity of being born and to live in America. There's just so much opportunity. I grew up overseas in Malaysia, Taiwan, Philippines, Japan, Zambia. And then when I got here, I was like, wow, this is like a land of the free and the rich. Let's go. Sure. And so you don't really know your why maybe until you kind of get out of school and you get into the real world and it starts beating you down, right? Maybe like a micromanager
Starting point is 00:11:36 starts telling you what to do every single day, even though you know how to do it. Maybe a colleague backstabs you and you thought, you know, you guys were good friends. You won't really discover your why until maybe five years out of high school or college. And then what happens is you might be stuck in the wrong path or you might think this is your why. And then years later, you're like, this is terrible. I don't want to go through the motions over and over again. So you will eventually, I think everybody will eventually get sick and tired of what they're doing. For me, that was about 11 years in banking industry. I was like, after doing the same old conference,
Starting point is 00:12:14 speaking the same old clients, going to the same old country, it was boring and it was a grind. And so it's important to discover your why because it's important to realize that eventually you're going to become miserable, and by that time you're miserable, you need enough money.
Starting point is 00:12:29 You need enough passive income, wealth to give you the options to do something you really want to do for your next step. Yeah, that certainly resonates with me. and I think resonates maybe with a number of bankless listeners here, which is like, and there's a term for this. I know you were kind of one of the early, you know, profits of this movement to the fire movement, you know, financially independent, retire early, right? That's fire. And I think that resonates for me.
Starting point is 00:12:56 When it comes to a why to build your wealth, a lot of that is summed up in the word independence or maybe like another word for that is kind of freedom. So, like, for me, it was always very much about the freedom to work on, like, whatever I want and not be, you know, people use the term wage slave. The freedom to just work where I want for who I want on whatever causes or purposes I want to work on and not to have to just be in the grind of producing a paycheck. It was also like the freedom to help those in my life, like my family, those around me. You know, the idea of having a safety net for people I care about, the ability to, you know, buy a. loved one, something that they need. Maybe it's a car, maybe it's a house, something like that. It's like, it's security.
Starting point is 00:13:42 It's protection for those that you love and those you care about. And it was also the freedom to convert this wealth into other types of wealth. We recently had Sahel Bloom on the podcast who wrote a book called The Five Types of Wealth. I don't know if you've dug into that, Sam, but it's funny because this episode is all about net worth, which is one component of wealth. But the beautiful thing about net worth is you can kind of. kind of convert it into the other types of wealth as well. So if you're not grinding on a, you know, 70-hour work week at a banker job at, you know, Goldman Sachs or something like that,
Starting point is 00:14:16 well, then you have more opportunity and time to spend on your physical fitness or your relationships or just like time in general to get your mental house in order. And so for me, it was all encapsulated in kind of the word freedom. And that's what financial independence, that's been kind of the goal of like what we're doing on bankless and is like one of my personal goals too. Is that a common story? Does that, does that resonate with you? Well, when I started talking about fire, it was July 2009 when I started Financial Samurai and we were going through a global financial crisis. It was really scary. It was really bad. Fred and Suisse at the time when I was there, we had gone through seven rounds of layoffs and I was thinking myself, well,
Starting point is 00:14:59 I'm probably going to be next, but somehow I survived. I was probably, probably too cheap. You know, I didn't call, I wasn't a big cost center. So I was like, okay, let's keep Sam. So I survived, but then I was thinking myself, man, this sucked. Going through the global financial crisis, because if you're in finance and you're not helping your clients make money and you yourself are not making money, then what's the point? I mean, it's kind of like a soulless job. And so, yeah, I escaped in 2012 after negotiating a severance package. And so my why was finding happiness and health again. You know, I was going through a lot of chronic pain, chronic back pain. And I was like, I was just miserable. This, this is no way to live. There's no way I could
Starting point is 00:15:38 do a 40 year career like my parents and the government. And so I wanted to get out by 40. But when I decided and I discovered how to negotiate a severance package, the seas parted. I was like, okay, no more golden handcuffs. I could keep the gold that they were deferring to me over the next five to seven years. And so I said, you know what? I'm 34 years old. I'm out of here. Worst case, I don't like freedom and I don't like doing the things that I want. I'll just go back to a job within the next two, three years. And what happened was I discovered my joy for writing on financial samurai. And then I became a father in 2017, five years after I left.
Starting point is 00:16:15 And I was like, this is the best thing ever in the sense that I had the finances and the freedom, the time to actually raise my child myself and to watch him grow up and protect him. And that was just amazing. When people have children, what happens is the money will come because you're going to get fitter. You're going to be a nicer person, more patience. You're going to work harder. You're going to save asset allocate accordingly. These are the defining moments in your life, a financial crisis, having children, someone dying, right?
Starting point is 00:16:47 These are the wake-up moments that force you, I think, encourage you to get your finances in order. Yeah, I think a lot of people maybe find their why is basically their family and the loved ones in their life. I mean, that was certainly the case for me of why I have been on a grind in a lot of ways, both earlier in my career and now more lately as well. That breaks to mind, though, this question of like when we use the term financial independence, what does that really mean? Is there like a crisp definition of that? Maybe it varies depending on your circumstances or who you are. But, you know, five years after you quit kind of your banking job, would you have considered yourself financially independent? Was that a threshold that you met? And how did you know?
Starting point is 00:17:29 Yeah. So there's various definitions of financial independence. One of the most common definitions is the 4% rule, taking the inverse of that. So the idea of the 4% rule coined by Bill Bengin is that if you would draw out a 4% rate of return, 4% rate for your investment portfolio, you won't die with nothing. You'll have enough to live for the rest of your life. Okay. If you retire at a traditional age of around 60, 65, I've taken that a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of, a little step further. So the inverse of the 4% rule is 25. So take your annual desired household expenses times 25. This is like a baseline for being financially independent. Okay. So if you're
Starting point is 00:18:09 spending $100,000 in your household, then you have to have $2.5 million in network. In investable assets. Investable assets. Investible assets, excluding your primary residence, which, you know, saves you on rent if you have no mortgage. But it's generally investable assets. So, in general, that's, that's the way to go. That's a baseline. But I've taken it a little bit step further and I have a multiple of gross income. Now, why do I do gross income versus expenses? One, it's harder. It pushes you further. So as you make more money, it focuses, it makes you focus on your savings and investing. So let's say you make $100,000. So it's still $2.5 million, right? But let's say you're only living off $50,000 of it, right? So you
Starting point is 00:18:55 could actually cheat your way to financial freedom by just slashing expenses down to Rob Minutos and just living off 25,000 year, right? And, you know, like, and then times it by 25, you can have a much lower number. But if you focus on income, as your income grows, as most people's income grows over time, that threshold gets higher and it forces you to continue to save and invest. What I see most commonly on the path to fire is undisciplined, undisciplined saving and investing over time. You just kind of get lazy. You just get comfortable and you don't push yourself. And I think that's a real, real dangerous situation to be in.
Starting point is 00:19:31 Okay, so tell me more about this, the net worth guidelines because I noticed some in, you know, one of the earlier chapters of your book. And I think if I'm understanding you correctly, Sam, you like basing some of the net worth targets on multiples of income, right? So let's say, you know, I think you have a 10x salary type rule. If you've been at work for, you know, 10 years, then your net worth should be about 10x your income. So would that mean if my income is $100,000 per year, I'm working like, you know, 10 years, I should have. My goal should be to have about $1 million in net worth and investable assets. Is that
Starting point is 00:20:10 kind of a proxy? It's not so much 10 years. It's not 10 years because that would be pretty quick for the average person. Yeah. But the proxy is once you get to a 10x gross average income multiple, okay. That's when you start feeling financially free. I see. Okay. Okay. And then when you feel financially free, I guess that's kind of a spectrum, is it not? So, I mean, because there's also, it's interesting to use that word feeling as well, because, you know, sometimes the feeling can just continue to be out of reach. You know, even though you hit an earlier target, you still, for whatever reason, don't feel like you're financially independent. Are there other soft aspects of this aside from kind of a net worth number that are key to feeling financially independent? Yeah, so another definition of financial independence.
Starting point is 00:20:59 So 10x is kind of the baseline multiple. And I believe once you get to 20x, 20x, your average gross household income, you are financially independent. And you should feel completely free. Because that's a flywheel at that point. You're just not able to spend fast enough. Well, I guess you could. But at 20 times your average gross annual income, you're set. Okay.
Starting point is 00:21:23 So the other definition I like is called, it's basically can you generate enough pass to semi-passive investment income to cover your desired living expenses. Okay. Right. So if you don't have to really work for your money, all that dividend income, rental income, you know, private investment income or distributions that come in, If it can completely cover your reasonable desired living expenses, you're free. You're financially free. You just have to keep up with inflation probably plus 1 to 3% as a buffer. Let's talk about income then because that's another kind of milestone or key principle in your idea and your book here. And I think you encourage really cranking on income early. So this is
Starting point is 00:22:09 sort of a grind when you're in your 20s type of methodology. And I think you advocate saving a large percentage of the income that you generate. So when it comes to really dialing in that income, that income flywheel, what do you advocate that people do? How do they get started here? Well, I think it's important to know what service minimum wage income is like. So the minimum wage is like, it's actually high now. It's like $15, $16, $17, at least here in California, is to work at a job that's terrible, that doesn't pay well, that you're consumer facing. You've got to help people. Like, think about working at McDonald's
Starting point is 00:22:46 and knowing the pain it is to work those type of jobs at such a little level. And that gives you the motivation to not take whatever job you do have that makes more than minimum wage. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:22:57 So I think the problem is a lot of people just think about their day job income as the 100% source of all their income. But no, if that engine goes down as we see through recessions, stagnation, global financial crisis, your plane goes down,
Starting point is 00:23:11 you're done, right? So you want to try to have, Think about like, maybe like three engines on each wing. So you have like six other income streams. The more, the better. So when that income stream, the main one goes down, you're still flying. And maybe you can still fly and float down to a safe landing where you survive, right? And so the key is to really not only be great at your job and to network and to provide more value than you cost,
Starting point is 00:23:33 but to develop those side income streams after work or before work. You know, whether that is starting your own website or business, whether it's, whether it's a podcast blog, whatever it is, before you go to work for one or two hours or after work for two to three hours. Those are the magic hours. That's when you actually are working on something you really enjoy, where if you make a dollar from there, it feels 10 times better than making a dollar for someone else. In order to do that, you really have to spend a lot of hours at this thing. And I think you advocate doing this earlier in your life in your 20s. What's kind of magic about this period of time? I think we have a lot of younger listeners. And, you know, I don't know that
Starting point is 00:24:12 There's lots of other things that you could do with your time, right, in your 20s and maybe more enjoyable things than being on the grind. What, like, can you advocate that position? Why should people focus on this? I'm telling you, so I'm 40, I'll be 48 soon. And I wish I worked harder in my 20s and 30s. So I was working 60 hours a week. And then I went to business school part time for 20 hours a week. So that's 80 hours a week. And I was thinking I should have gone more. I should have started financial samurai sooner in 2006 when I came up with the idea not two, 2009 once the financial crisis hit. And the reason is when you're in your 20s, you don't know how much energy and freedom you really have in your 20s until you're not in your 20s, right? 30s and 40s. When you have children, you have aging parents to take care of, that time you have
Starting point is 00:24:58 available after about 35, 40, it shrinks tremendously. And when you look back in, you look at how much time you had in your 20s to actually build a business to work harder, to come in earlier, to work longer than your bosses at least. It's kind of a joke, but you don't really know that. So hopefully people can just look at the people who are older, you know, 10 years, 20 years ahead of you and just listen to them because they've already been through where you've gone. And I'm telling you, folks, if you save and invest aggressively in your 20s and 30s, you're going to be so happy in your 40s and 50s when you have less energy and less time. Here's an interesting point. So the personal saving rate in America, the national saving rate in America, the national saving rate in America,
Starting point is 00:25:40 is about 5% right now. So that means you have to work 20 years to save one year of expenses, to cover one year of your expenses. That's crazy. No wonder everybody's like working forever. But here's the shocking thing. During the pandemic, March 2020, when the stock market fell 32%, the personal saving rate actually shot up to over 30% in March, April, and May.
Starting point is 00:26:07 So in other words, we have the ability to save. if we want to. We're just choosing not to because we're not good at forecasting our misery in 10, 20 years and we're not good at forecasting our health and our time. I'm telling you folks, the more you say, the more freedom you'll have later on. Yeah, these are the two sides, right? It's like grinding very early and then also saving the excess of that grind. I want to come back to saving a second, but I want to plus one and agree with you on kind of the virtues of doing this working very hard in your 20s because what I found in my 20s was I was taking time away. from things like, you know, building my World of Warcraft, you know, character to like,
Starting point is 00:26:46 like getting that character to level 20, right? I was taking from my video game time and I was applying that to work. In my 30s, if I were to work equally as hard as in my 20s, it was taking my time away from, like, my kids and my family. And that is like far more valuable time. So you really do have a lot of time wealth in your 20s that can go towards this. Let's talk about the saving side of this equation, right? So you advocate saving as much as a 50% of your income.
Starting point is 00:27:16 And I guess maybe this varies based on how much income you're actually generating and what your expenses are. But like, okay, 50%, that's a lot more than most people are saving. Justify this. How can you, you'll, where do you come up with this number? So I think it's pretty straightforward. Every year you save at 50% means one year of freedom you save. So if you work 10 years, you'll save at least 10 years of freedom.
Starting point is 00:27:40 And we all know that time is more valuable than money because time is finite and money is endless. And we all die. Median age, life expectancy is 80. But again, people don't really think about that when they're younger. They think they're going to live forever. They don't think about that, right? The other thing is it's really easy to save 50% if you just think about your paychecks, for example. Most people get paid biweekly, so every two weeks.
Starting point is 00:28:04 So all you got to do is save one paycheck, save and invest that one paycheck, and just try to live on the So we know about hedonic adaptation where we get used to living with more wealth, more income, right? But hedonic adaptation goes in reverse as well. The more you save, yeah, you have less free cash flow. But you get used to living off less income as well. So I always have the saying when I tell people on Financial Samurai, I say, if the amount of money you're saving each month doesn't hurt, you're not saving enough. Because you're not forcing to change your habits.
Starting point is 00:28:39 You're just winging it. And too many people, and I've run financial samurai for 16 years now, too many people, 10 years later, they wonder where their money went? They're like, where to go? It's just like going out in San Francisco, New York City. Where did my cash go? Where did my money go? It's because they're not diligently saving and investing.
Starting point is 00:28:55 You have a number here that you advocate in your book. And by the way, when you talk about saving, it's saving and investing is the key. We'll come back to investing and what to invest in later. But you have a number in your book, $250,000. And you say set a goal to hit 250K. Why this number? What's the significance? So I was thinking about this a lot because sometimes people will be like, well, I'm starting at zero.
Starting point is 00:29:22 A million sounds so far away, right? It is far. So you want to think about little baby steps first. Maybe it's the first thousand, then 10,000, then 50, 100. But 250,000 is the magic number that I think where just compounding really takes off. very noticeable because for most people who work, they have potentially a 401k or 403 plan. And in 2025, you can save pre-tax 23,500 into that plan. So step one is to try to max out your 401K, all your tax advantage accounts.
Starting point is 00:29:57 And so at 23,500, that's a lot of money. But if you get to $250,000 portfolio, and we know by history, the stock market returns about 10% on average since 1926, and we know that there's a 75% chance you're going to make money from the stock market any given year, if your $250,000 portfolio has a greater chance of generating more than you can contribute in a year. So in other words, 10% times $250,000, $25,000, right? And if you contribute $23,500, suddenly you're making more from your investments than the amount you can contribute to your 401K, right? And so that is where the compounding magic really starts taking off so that once you get to that 250, you stay diligent in your contributions and in your investing. It's only a matter of time before you're going to get to a million dollars.
Starting point is 00:30:48 So the compounding is active this entire time, but you really start to notice it once you get close for the 250K number because then you're like, wow, I just made in one year the same amount that I actually invested in like my, you know, tax-free accounts. Right. And that's kind of magic. once you see the compounding at work, then you start to compound and you even want to save more. Right. And just look at 2023, 2024. The S&P 500 went up 23% a year. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:31:17 That's crazy. So like if you had 250,000 there at 20%, that's $50,000. Your portfolio return double what you could have contributed to your 401K. And that's a baseline start. I mean, once you get to that 250, and I know everybody can who's listening, the magic really starts compounding. This is one of the things that I think surprises many people on their financial independence journey. You can punch in the numbers in the calculator and you say, well, in 10 years at a 7% compound rate, you'll have this amount. And you look at that number. Most people look at the number
Starting point is 00:31:49 and they're like, wow, that's impossible. That's crazy amount of money. Yeah. Well, what I'm telling you after 16 years is those numbers are real and oftentimes they go even further than you expected. Can you talk about debt for a second here? Because you might also be talking to some folks who actually have some debt. And maybe we'll put aside mortgage debt and talk about that when we talk about, you know, like buying your first home and that sort of decision. But other types of debt, maybe it's student loan debt, maybe it's car loan debt, maybe it's credit card debt. Before you start on this saving and investing track, does it make sense to pay that off? So I've got a great framework for this as well. It's called the debt and investing framework.
Starting point is 00:32:31 Now, debt is not necessarily bad unless it's credit card debt, consumer debt, and you're buying stuff you don't need. That's bad, right? Not even the great Warren Buffett can outperform the average credit card interest rate of about 18%. That's crazy. Please pay off your consumer debt immediately. So that's just first. Just do that first before you start investing. Credit card debt, you've got to focus on getting that down. If you don't crush that credit card debt to zero, you're going to be in a world to hurt. But here's a more important framework that I think people should think about. It's called the debt and investment, debt and investing a ratio. So the idea is you take your debt percentage, your interest rate percentage, let's say you have 8% loan.
Starting point is 00:33:10 Multiply that by 10, and so you get 80%. You take 80% of your savings or your free cash flow to pay down that debt, and the remaining 20% to invest. So this way you're winning generally, you can't lose. You're paying off your debt, so you're winning. It's guaranteed 8% in return. 20%, you have a chance of winning with your investments. Now, once that debt interest rate gets to 10%,
Starting point is 00:33:33 you allocate, so 10% times 10 is 100% of your free cash flow to paying off that debt. Why? Why 10%? Because we know that the historical rate of return on the stock market is about 10%. So you might as well just go all in and pay off that guaranteed 10% rate of return to pay off your debt. Now, if the interest rate was at 3%, very cheap debt, right? Inflation is about 3%. 10-year bond yield is about 4.5%. That's cheap dead. You probably don't want to pay that off. But you still pay off your debt because it's a debt. So you can say, well, 3% times 10% is 30% take 30% of your free cash flow, pay down the debt, 70% to invest and go forward from there. I love that. I love boiling this down to kind of formulas and process and basically like a science because then that does something we were referring to
Starting point is 00:34:19 easier. Like earlier in the episode, which is it creates the habit and the default temperament towards doing this, right? You just, everything's on autopilot. And so when you talk about savings, I imagine you take 50% of savings and you invest that, you're talking about just dollar cost averaging everything in, right? Like from, basically from your paycheck, I would imagine, just making that a regular discipline. Don't touch it. You don't have to make a decision every time you invest. You just dollar cost average into your portfolio assets. Let's talk about what to invest in and some ideas that you have around that. So is the basic methodology here that you advocate. Of course, like this is a crypto podcast, so we have some hot
Starting point is 00:35:02 takes on, you know, crypto as an allocation of this portfolio. But the basic fire type concept, this would be low-cost index funds, I would imagine, real estate, that sort of thing. So bread and butter, stocks, real estate, invest in what you know well. And if that's crypto, great. We know a long, we have a long track worker for both real estate and stocks, right? and so you want to figure out an asset allocation between those two and then within them within those two. So for example, stocks, you could go 100% stocks if you're in your 20s and 30s, but maybe as you get to your 40s and 50s, you want to dial down that asset allocation based on your age, maybe your age into bonds or different allocations. And I talk about this in the book.
Starting point is 00:35:43 In terms of real estate, I think it's very important for most people to get neutral real estate. And what's neutral real estate? that is to own your primary residence. If you own your primary residence, your neutral real estate because you're going up and down with the market, you're not a price taker anymore, you're not at the mercy of your landlord raising rents,
Starting point is 00:36:03 you're largely fixing your living costs. You're only really long real estate if you own more than one property because you have to live somewhere. And so these are the things and decisions and the asset allocation you have to think about that match your financial goals
Starting point is 00:36:17 and target going forward. And in terms of crypto, I consider it as an alternative asset. Seems like it's definitely the train is heading forward and going to go bigger because of the new administration. And so I like to allocate 10 to 20 percent of my investable assets in alternative investments, whether that's crypto, whether that's venture capital. I'm investing aggressively in private AI companies because I think they're going to destroy the future and put us all out of work and our children. So might as well get rich doing that. Sure. Because, and if they don't, if it's all a hype over a bubble blown out of proportion, then our children will have jobs and a future that they can develop financial independence with as well.
Starting point is 00:36:57 Yeah, I guess that's a win either way. Can we talk a bit more about first home kind of real estate? So we're talking about that plan of you're increasing your income. You're saving a large portion of that. How do you know when it's time to kind of buy a first home? And when it comes to a mortgage, like, I mean, how much house should you buy? How large should your mortgage be? How should you think about saving for a down payment? Is it even a good idea relative to just investing in your kind of portfolio of stocks and alternative assets and the rest of it? So I think wealth is something that's tangible that you can enjoy. So real estate is something that is tangible that you can enjoy, make memories, raise your family. So I think it's a very valuable asset. And so I think you have to figure out,
Starting point is 00:37:46 as soon as possible where you want to live and what you want to do with your life. The sooner you figure that out, the easier it is to buy a home. If you're a vagabond who just can't, can't, just don't know what you want to do, it's going to be very tough to buy home. You just can't do it. You shouldn't do it. But if you see yourself living there for five, preferably 10 years, then you should probably buy a home because the history shows that real estate generally
Starting point is 00:38:11 outperforms inflation by about 1 to 3% a year. So if inflation is at 2%, it goes 3 to 5% a year. And then when you have leverage, when you borrow, put down 20%, and you borrow 5x that amount, those returns really start compounding after 10 years. And so for the average person, I think you really need to figure out what you want to do, where you want to live, 5, 10 years, and buy that primary residence. And during that process, before that process, you want to be aggressively saving and investing for that down payment.
Starting point is 00:38:41 And that's where your stocks, stocks come in. and hopefully your stocks do well. But then you have a process where when you know, okay, I want to be buying a home in the next 12 months, definitely six months, you're going to start derisking your down payment. Otherwise, what if you end up with not as much as you hope for? And then it's a competitive bidding situation, and then you're kind of screwed. So you want to de-risk your down payment. But ultimately, you're taking that down payment out of your, you know, assets that you have invested in the market.
Starting point is 00:39:09 Yeah, that kind of thing. Usually. So, yeah, exactly. One of my favorite instruments, actually, that's available to, like, home buyers in the U.S. is the mortgage, and particularly that 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. And the reason I like mortgage, it depends on the rates. There's a certain amount of very fortunate individuals among our U.S. listenership who's kind of locked in, like, nice, 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at like 3%. And, man, that looks really sweet when inflation's raging at, you know, 5, 6, 7, 8%. Because you're effectively, you're making money on the government loan to you as well. What are your thoughts on kind of like a mortgage and how large of a mortgage to get in general and kind of the terms to lock in? Do you have any takes on this? Well, I do have a home buying rule. And it's called the 30-30-3 home buying rule. The three is the most easy to understand. It's the most memorable. It's basically to try to buy a home around three times your annual gross income. Now, it's very conservative. I think most
Starting point is 00:40:11 people have to stretch to about five times. But this is a multiple where you're like, okay, I'm going to buy a home. It's going to be nice. And I'm going to sleep well at night and not worry that I'm going to lose my job and stuff. In terms of the mortgage, it is always important to compare the mortgage rate to what the expected return is of any other asset class you own and also the risk free rate of return, which is the 10-year bond yield at right now about 4.5%. So if you are paying a higher rate than you're paying a real interest rate and if you're paying a lower rate, you're paying a negative real interest rate. Mortgages, I use mortgages aggressively in my 20s and 30s to build wealth. I just, all in, let's go.
Starting point is 00:40:52 And it's backed by real asset. And the funny thing is, it's much easier to leverage up 5x with real estate than to leverage up with stocks. Yeah. And why is that? Because stocks provide no utility. It goes up and then goes down 20% the next day and you have no idea because of a tweet, a random tweet, oh, down 20% in a month. You're screwed. So you have to use mortgages
Starting point is 00:41:15 wisely. And the problem now is obviously at six and a half, seven percent, 30-year fixed rate mortgages, it's very difficult for the average person to buy a home. But here's the thing. This is very important for folks who don't travel out overseas or anything. And that is U.S. real estate, especially compared to the income generating potential, is changed. cheap. We have one of the cheapest real estate in the world. If you go to Paris, Vancouver, Toronto, Hong Kong, Singapore, Beijing, the per capita income is much lower. And the real estate is higher. And so I think there's a big shift here where people need to know that foreigners look at US real estate and the crazy amount of wealth that's being built because of entrepreneurship and all that.
Starting point is 00:42:05 and they see us and like, wow, it's so attractive, and they want to buy. So if you don't want to buy your own piece of America, foreigners will buy it for you. And then once they buy it, then we're going to be even more priced out. So this is a long-term trend people need to be aware of. Yeah, I agree with that. I would plus one that. I would also add that not only is real estate fairly attractively priced, again, I know it's gone up a ton.
Starting point is 00:42:29 So people listening to this might be like, what the hell you guys talking about? Like, real estate has just skyrocketed. It's now more expensive than other. than ever, but like look at it relative to other countries, but also not just that, it's also the lending terms that Americans can lock into are very, like, very favorable. So I have family in Canada. The thought of Canadians getting a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, it just like doesn't exist. You know, they've got like five-year rotating. It's all variable. And the U.S. benefits from this because, of course, treasuries are the global reserve asset, right, the asset that
Starting point is 00:43:05 everyone around the world buys. And so we have much more favorable lending terms as well. We can get mortgages at more attractive rates to actually purchase this property. So for me, as bullish as I am on other asset classes, like crypto, that sort of thing, it totally makes sense to grab the low-hanging fruit of kind of like real estate where it exists. Now, whether you scale and you do more than kind of a first home and the second home, that kind of thing, and that case will vary depending on, you know, what asset class you're investing into, but pick up the low-hanging fruit, guys. And it's also interesting if you look at historical interest rates. Look back to 1982. We've been going down, down, down since. And I believe we're going to revert to trend over
Starting point is 00:43:49 the next three to five years. And so be patient. I don't think we're going to go skyrocket, high inflation rate forever. There's a blips due to trillions of dollars pumping into the economy to come back COVID. It might happen again. But the long. term trend is down, so I would take advantage. It's really, for the average person, one of the best ways to build wealth, because not only does housing tend to go up with inflation plus one to three percent, you are leveraged to that, and you're also enjoying your time there, and you're also having a forced savings account where you're just paying down your mortgage. So it's in the reverse where 10 years from now, you're like, oh, man, I'm way richer than I could have imagined,
Starting point is 00:44:31 versus the person who would just rent, which is fine, but just like how shorting the SFP 500 over the long term is not a good idea. Renting real estate is like shorting the real estate market long term. It's also not a good idea. There are moments in time when you should rent and you need to rent, but when you are settled and you see yourself living here for five, ten years, you should lock down your primary residence.
Starting point is 00:44:56 Not a good idea to short scarce assets, everybody. That's something that, It's not going to work out. Not going to work out. Short term, it could definitely work out. But after, yeah. Let's talk about more advanced real estate, because I know you've allocated a lot of your portfolio, kind of your investable asset portfolio in real estate. Maybe this is beyond the kind of the first home, but a lot of wealthy people like real estate. Can you explain why? Oh, yeah. It's because it's a tangible asset that you can enjoy that's less volatile. And there's no daily ticker symbols telling you how much you've made or lost. And so I think for people who build a lot of wealth, they focus on
Starting point is 00:45:33 what they're good at in building wealth. And a lot of that is entrepreneurship and focusing on the business, building something that has nothing specifically to do with investing. And so when you can focus better, you're less distracted and you can probably make more money. So real estate is something that every single wealthy person I know who's worth over 10 million, 20 million, 100 million, they have huge real estate portfolios, not only their primary residence, but vacation properties, and they just spread it around. It's almost like it's just asset allocation where they know that if the worst comes to happen, there's at least going to have their properties. And it's interesting also real estate because it's kind of a hedge against a recession in a way. Because when people are
Starting point is 00:46:16 freaking out about stocks, they tend to buy bonds, treasury bonds. And then when you buy bonds, the yields tend to go down. Yields going down means buying real estate becomes more affordable. And so wealthy people like to park their money in real estate for these reasons. Let's talk about active and passive income again because real estate, of course, for some people, can be a source of passive income. Although, you know, sometimes it's hard to tell how passive it is. I guess it depends how much you're doing as a landlord if that's how you choose to do it. Although you can buy things like REITs and that can be a source of, you know, passive income, I guess, dividend income, that sort of thing. Anyway, when you think about active versus passive income, you're like, which is better? And I feel like the obvious answer to that is passive, but maybe not always, in which cases is passive better? And how do you build passive income? Yeah, passive is better if you don't want to do anything, right? Truly passive income, CD income, treasury bond income, truly passive. And then there's risk-free passive income versus risk-required passive income, stocks, real estate. As a, you
Starting point is 00:47:22 you know, when you're a younger person, 20s, 30s, you can afford to take more risk required and more activity associated passive income. So in other words, rental properties, for example, you know, sweat equity, you're dealing with tenants, burst pipes, whatever it is. But as you get older and wealthier, you want to really transition more to passive income. And passive income is all about figuring out what that yield is, that interest rate is, that income level is compared to a risk-free rate of return. So nobody would ever invest in any risk-investment if you didn't think it was going to return greater than the risk-free rate of return. So the risk-free rate of return right now is the 10-year bond yield. It's always been about 10-year bond yield, and it's about
Starting point is 00:48:06 4.5%. So you wouldn't invest in stocks, real estate, anything. If you didn't have a strong certainty, you're going to earn more than 4.5%. And the idea is you want to build a large enough capital base to have the option, the optionality of converting that capital into generating more passive income. You don't need to generate passive income to be financially independent. You should have the optionality to do so because you can always sell stocks or real estate or crypto to pay for your life, but you need to have that optionality. Say a word about cars, if you will, Sam. I feel like you've got an axe to grind on cars here because this is a,
Starting point is 00:48:44 common mistake investors make earlier in their financial progress, but they overspend on cars. Talk about this. Oh, I think cars is probably the number one personal finance killer in America. We have a love affair with cars. It's like 95% of us own cars. And my rule is the 110th rule for car buying. I introduced this back in, I think, 2009, 2010. And I think it is a very popular rule. And that is spend no more than one-tenth of your annual gross income on the purchase price of a car. So if you make $100,000, buy a $10,000 second-hand Toyota Corolla. Amazing. Reliable car won't break the bank, nothing.
Starting point is 00:49:24 If you want a $60,000 car, don't buy it if you don't have at least $600,000 in household income. And if you want that, try to get that $600,000. You'll be amazed at how motivated you can be by tethering your wants. With your activity, you got to earn it. Try to earn it. And that's kind of a mindset in the financial Samurai community. Don't buy things you haven't earned yet. Earn it. I like that. I really like that. I guess, I mean, does this preclude leasing? Is it never a good idea to lease a car? Oh, no. So it would be like, if you want to lease $50,000 car. Yeah, you got to get that $500.00. You can lease or cash. Leasing, there's obviously benefits as well. I like to just buy my cars with cash and then just hold them for 10 years.
Starting point is 00:50:09 There's a lot of people who live in urban environments where maybe they can defer a car purchase, like, for a long time, maybe indefinitely. Uber, you know, ride trail around. Yeah, New York City, I wouldn't own a car in Manhattan. I would just take the subway, take the Uber, and hit your ride with friends who want to go out of town. Finance is the world's number one crypto exchange. Over 275 million users already trust their world-class security. Finance makes starting crypto as simple as it should be, whether it's learning about crypto on Binance Academy or browsing hundreds of assets and view. your newly created portfolio in a clear, easy-to-track dashboard.
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Starting point is 00:52:07 Let's talk a little bit about the entrepreneurship side of things. In particular, you have this line, which is equity is what will make you rich, not your salary. I think specifically you're talking about kind of your own business equity, some sweat equity here. When we say a business, we're not necessarily talking about a Silicon Valley funded, you know, startup. We're talking about any small business, a side hustle even can qualify on this. Can you explain, you've got another 333 rule, I think, for entrepreneurship and, businesses here and like just starting something. Maybe this is something that you followed in your life. What is this? How does someone get started on the entrepreneurship track and start building their
Starting point is 00:52:47 own thing? I think if you look at the U.S. economy, it's made up majority of small businesses. But obviously the big businesses get all the headlines and CNBC and so forth. You have to think about why you're employed. You're employed because supposedly you generate more value than your cost. Otherwise, you wouldn't be employed. And if you are employed and you're not doing that, you're going to soon be unemployed or eventually. And so as a business owner, it's you're building equity in the business, which trades at a multiple when you finally sell it if you sell it or if you never want to sell it. And so if you own a business, you can generate income for your salary,
Starting point is 00:53:25 but every single dollar you bring into the business, let's say your business in your field sells for 10 times earnings, right? Every dollar you bring in, you actually bring in $10 of equity. The S&P 500 is trading a 22 times forward earnings. These are obviously best in class companies at America. You're not best in class company, so you probably traded less. But you could be, like, if you're a hot AI company, you could trade it 100 times earning. The idea is you want to build a business and build your own equity.
Starting point is 00:53:53 So not only are you building equity that trades at a multiple, you're also building income. And that's the win-win scenario that everybody needs to think about. And so for me, I decided to start financial ceremony in 2009, not so much as a business, but as a way, a cathartic way out of the global financial crisis. And then when I left in 2012, I was like, oh, I could actually try to grow financial samurai into a web property that generates regular supplemental income. And so I spend about 15 to 20 hours doing that. And it is a business.
Starting point is 00:54:23 It's valued at a multiple of earnings or revenue or operating profits. And I've had many people over the years say, I would like to buy financial samurai. And I always say no, because I don't really care about that exit. because, you know, if you have a baby, you never sell your baby or what kind of father or mother are you, right? I want to do this because I enjoy doing it. Is there a rule for this? Like three years moonlighting, trying to cover 30% of your expenses. Yeah, what's the rule here? There's not a rule, but there's a guide. So everybody should start some type of business. You don't even have to know exactly what you're doing. The key is to just start. Start your own website. Come up with that
Starting point is 00:55:00 idea and then you can pivot and brand, you can pivot accordingly. But you know what? After three years, after three years of not generating a livable income stream, you should probably not focus on that business so much. You got to face the music. And everybody should start a business while they have a secure day job. Remember, you only need to work 40 hours a week. That's crazy. I don't know a single person who's worth over 10 million, 100 million, who's working less than 40 hours a week. They're working way more and they don't have to. So I would say the rules of business, start a business while you have a day job, check it out, try it out, build your brand online, try to do it for three years, and try to make, yeah, try to replicate at least 30% of your day job income before you consider taking that leap of faith and leaving your day job behind. Sam, when you were talking about like kind of businesses being worth a multiple of revenue, multiple of earnings, something like that, does this imply that you should think about businesses that, you know, that you can sell? Because it strikes me, there could be some businesses that are harder to sell than others, right? So, you know, in the case of a business that's just like, you're the sole person in the business, you're the brand, you're the operator, that might be a bit more difficult to sell without some sort of handcuffs than a business where you've got kind of a fleet of workers.
Starting point is 00:56:20 and it's very process oriented. There's like kind of a liquid market for it. Does that factor into the analysis at all in terms of like the type of business that's able to be sold? I think it's important to figure out what you would like to do first, what you like and want to do. So for financial seminar, I love to write. I love to connect. And I love to learn from people from all over the world with different perspectives. Now, if I wanted to focus on the money aspect, right, then I would hire a lot of writers.
Starting point is 00:56:48 I'd leverage the brand and I'd have different people and all that. But I just like to write. But I know I have the optionality to leverage up the brand and the business. And when that time comes, maybe I'll do it. Maybe I'll hire someone for the Financial Samurai podcast or have this column or whatever. I can do it. It's very easy and obvious to do it. But the key thing for me is I just want to write.
Starting point is 00:57:09 Just let me not manage people. Let me just write. Lifestyle business. Lifestyle business. So you want to focus on your lifestyle. business or you want to focus on the money. I feel a lot of people who take that, you know, maybe the venture money and try to really blow it up are maybe a little thinking too much about the money. Whereas ultimately, I just want to have the freedom to do what I like, earns some extra
Starting point is 00:57:33 income and just be free and happy. Yeah, this is one thing I realized about, you know, startups and taking funding is that can be another form of boss. Your VCs become your boss. Your investors become your boss. There are cases where your customers, if they're large enough, even become your boss. And so there are some benefits to keeping kind of a leaner lifestyle business that you just thrown off cash, you enjoy doing it. It's a small team, small operation. Yeah. So that's a, that's a road less traveled, but certainly a valuable one if people are thinking about freedom. You know, back in 2010 or 11, maybe it was 12 when I left, I was, I had a crossroads. I was sitting at the poker table with my buddies. And I asked them, would you be willing to be willing to
Starting point is 00:58:15 to do 15 to 20 hours a week for a lifestyle business. Maybe you make 250 grand a year enough to live a decent, happy lifestyle, or work 80 hours a week for two years with a 20% chance of making 100 million. Yeah. Or maybe the windfall is like 50 million. But then if you don't make it, then you're left with nothing, except for your memory is an experience. And so every single one of the people at the poker table said, oh, I would definitely go for glory, you know? I'm this is San Francisco after a while, and we're betting big bucks. And then that's the night. wore on and the one who was most adamant about going for glory, 100 million, 50 million, whatever it was, and he lost a huge pot. It was like six, seven hundred bucks. He just lost all his
Starting point is 00:58:55 money. And then he looked at me and said, you know what, maybe the lifestyle business wouldn't be so bad after all. That's definitely a good question to ask around the poker table. Let's talk about this. You encourage people to be where the money is. And I think you're talking in this chapter about being in a proximity to a high growth network in particular urban areas. that are growing and this can be a network that people plug into. And I think your advice is, hey, don't be afraid to move to these locations. Can you talk about this? Oh, yeah. So look at the S&P 500 historical growth chart since, I don't know, 2005. If you look at the Mag 7, which, Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Tesla, I mean, it's like this. It's like straight up and to the right. And if
Starting point is 00:59:40 you look at the rest of the S&P 500, the 493, it's almost like a flat line. It's kind of sad. It's been growing at the rate of inflation. So in other words, what's an easier way to make money to be where the $493 are or be where the Mag 7 are? And I think it's obvious that you want to go where the growth is. I think a lot of people misinterpret high cost of living areas, San Francisco, New York, as too expensive. It's just unaffordable. It's a bubble. It's going to crash. But the reason why these cities are expensive is fundamentally because the income opportunities and the wealth-building opportunities are greater. They're higher.
Starting point is 01:00:19 Yeah. Right. So it doesn't matter if you are like in a small town and the most, the most valuable company there is worth $10 million, let's say, or $100 million. It's very hard to get rich. The odds are against you. But if companies are worth trillion of dollars in your city and they're hiring people and you network with all these people who are making millions and they go off to start their own companies and they might be successful, that network really grows and just being there, just being there,
Starting point is 01:00:49 will dramatically increase your chances of building wealth and opportunity. A lot of people ask me, Sam, why are you still in San Francisco when you could save so much money and move to Des Moines, Iowa? And I love Des Moines, Iowa for the stake and it's pretty good and it's good for like four months a year. The weather is okay. But man, here in San Francisco, yeah, it's expensive. Yeah, the median home price is like $1.8 million. And if you want a decent home, it's like $3 million. Oh, sorry, two and a half million, whatever it is.
Starting point is 01:01:15 Sure. But the ability to, oh, invest in another venture capital fund that invest in the next hot startup or to speak to just take a muni ride down 15 minutes downtown to meet with a VC guy or a startup guy or a consult is endless. It's actually overwhelming. And so I'm actually thinking about leaving, but maybe another in five to ten years, not now because there's so much opportunity, especially with the AI boom. Yeah, so be where the money is. And you talk about moving to kind of a metro area and looking
Starting point is 01:01:45 up different metro areas based on kind of their growth, the companies that are in them and not just the cost of living, right? That would be a one-sided bet there. I also wonder if you think this applies to kind of the industry that you're in as well, kind of being where the money is. So I used to be in the healthcare industry and healthcare technology specifically. And, you know, after working five, ten years in the space, I realized, man, you know what, the next year is pretty much going to look the exact same as the previous four or five years, right? Healthcare growth is, you know, something like three, four percent, you know, annual per year. And you compare that to something like AI, right, which is growing at, you know, 50 percent, 100 percent per year. It's literally 10x the growth of healthcare. And when I looked at health care, I saw a whole bunch of people who had decades of experience. And if I wanted to rise in the upper echelons of health care, I would need decades. of experience as well. And then when I compared that to something on the tech frontier like crypto,
Starting point is 01:02:45 everybody in crypto only had like, you know, two, three, four years of experience. Everyone was new, and I could easily catch up. And that's the way AI really is now. I think so your be where the money is principle applies not just to where you live, but also the industry and the skill set that you develop as well. Absolutely. And it depends. Absolutely right. Be intentional with what you want to do. if you want to grow your wealth. Don't just go to college and just whatever. You've got to be intentional. Very intentional. There are clear winners in the space and technology will likely continue to be a winner over the next 10, 20, maybe forever. Everybody's trying to innovate. And when there's innovation, there's growth. And when there's growth, there's tremendous amount of wealth
Starting point is 01:03:26 accumulation and building. Okay, Sam, so everything we've talked about, let's talk about another person that can be essential in terms of a plan, a financial plan to get to millionaire status. And that is a significant other. So the other important person in your life, do you have any, like, takes on this? How do you include a spouse, a significant other in kind of your long-term financial planning? Is it important to be like, do you have to be on the exact same page? What does this look like? Wow, it's interesting because here in San Francisco, one of the greatest short paths to wealth is to just marry someone who is already wealthy, you know? And you see these generational wealth that happen in all the time. People, you know, they'll make decent money, but then suddenly they pop up and say, hey,
Starting point is 01:04:12 we've got a house warming in our $7 million home. You know, what? How did that happen? So it's easier to build wealth with two people on the same page than two people not on the same page and also as an individual. And so when you think about, you know, you meet your spouse at Meta, who also makes 300 to 800 grand. Well, I mean, life is pretty easy in terms of building wealth. But yes, absolutely. Be on the same page. When I left in 2012, I met my wife in college at the college of William and Mary. I was a senior and she was a freshman, so she was three years younger than me. And so when I left in 2012, I said, okay, this is crazy. I'm leaving a well-paying job behind, but I want to write. I want to make no money. You okay with that. I'm okay with that. You know, you got the severance package. Okay,
Starting point is 01:04:58 we'll be good. So I told her, look, if things are okay in three years and we're not lying on the street and starving, you too at age 35 can leave your job and I'm going to help you negotiate a severance package. As she said, okay, deal. And so we had a game plan. We said, we're going to save and invest most of your income. We're going to live frugally for two and a half, three years and let's make this happen. And we made it happen in 2015 at the age of 35.
Starting point is 01:05:23 She also negotiated a severance package worth a low six figures. But that was the send-off, the catalyst for us to be both early retired or are both unemployed and living this strange new life. So yes, you absolutely have to highlight your goals, talk about your goals, talk about how are you going to get to your goals, and stick with it. Communicate, stay in sync. I guess these are the keys. And since you used the retirement word, we've been talking about it as well, right? And you know, financial independent, retire early. This also gets to, like, what's the definition of retirement? And I'm not sure that I figured this out for myself. Like, sometimes I wonder if I'm retired right now. Like, I'm doing what,
Starting point is 01:06:03 I want to be doing. I am my own boss. I'm not kind of, you know, working for someone else or schlepping an hour, although I do work really hard so it doesn't feel like I'm retired. What does retirement even mean to you? Yeah. So for me, I retired from finance, the grind of 60 hour weeks and stressful clients and deadlines and quotas and all that stuff. And I actually truly did retire in the traditional sense for the first six to 12 months after 2012. I just played golf. I walked in the park. I traveled to 20 countries. It was great. And then the problem is after you've seen one Gothic church in Europe, they all start looking to save over and over again, right? And I had this dream of writing on my laptop, on a balcony, on a cruise ship, around the Mediterranean for months and on end. But then I did that for two weeks.
Starting point is 01:06:57 and then after a couple weeks, it all starts looking at the same. It starts looking a little boring, and you want to have a renewed purpose. And so I think retirement has changed. People in the past couldn't work from home or travel and work and do all that. So I think to me,
Starting point is 01:07:13 I would say I'm semi-retired or a fake retiree, let's be frank here. You know, I, you know, these articles, the podcast on financials, they don't write themselves. But I do it because I really enjoy doing it. And if you read any of my work, It's personal, there's storytelling.
Starting point is 01:07:28 It's not like some SEO optimized article, right? And so retirement, now the definition is being free to do whatever you want because you have enough money to cover your living expenses. And that's really it. All right. Are you ready, Sam, as we end this for a quick lightning round, a few quick questions? Sure. Let's go. All right.
Starting point is 01:07:46 Question number one, the lightning round, how much money should you die with? What's the right number to die with? The right number to die with is enough money that covers all. all your funeral and burial expenses and all the financial loose ends. I think the right money is enough where you have no debt left to your heirs. And the right amount of money is an amount that is enough to keep your children safe from being homeless, but not enough where they're demotivated to do nothing with their lives. Okay.
Starting point is 01:08:17 How about AI job risk? Should people be worried about their income potential with, you know, AI rising up? Absolutely. think it's really dire, unfortunately, for younger people and currently employed people. I think AI in the next five, ten years is going to wipe out millions and millions of jobs. So you've either got to learn how to use AI to be more productive and you need to build a brand for yourself. You've got to stand out somehow. Or I think you're going to get disintermediated away and lose your job or lose a lot of income. And so the way to I'm doing that is, well, obviously I know the tools of trying
Starting point is 01:08:54 to learn the tools to make financial samurai more productive. But I'm really aggressively investing in private AI and public AI companies. Because if they do well and crush the labor market, the investments are going to make a great return. And so my kids, 15, 20 years from now, they're not going to say, why didn't you invest or work in AI near the beginning? I'm going to say, you know, actually I invested a lot near the beginning. Here's your millions right here. I'm not going to say, here's your millions. But I'm saying, you tried your best. You got it, You got rejected like that kid Stanley Jong with a 1590 SAT and a 4.0 GPA from every 90% of the schools you applied to. You can't get a traditional well-paying job. It's okay. Everything will
Starting point is 01:09:34 be okay because your dad invested consistently and aggressively in AI for your future. And I think that's what everybody needs to do. You're hedged. You're either going to make a lot of money or you're not, but at least you'll have a job if you don't make a lot of money. What's the best asset class and Why? I think for the average person, the best asset class is real estate. It's my favorite asset class to build long-term wealth. You're paying down your debt, so you're building home equity. There's a discipline involved there. Real estate grows one to three percent higher than the rate of inflation. And in 10, 20 years, you're going to be much wealthier with real estate than if you weren't. And it's hard to sell real estate, which is actually a good thing. Unlike stocks, you just get
Starting point is 01:10:13 all emotional. With real estate, you just ride through the ups and downs and hopefully I'm pretty sure in 10, 20 years are going to be much wealthier as a result. Favorite finance book besides your own? Favorite finance book? Oh, I like The Millionaire Next Door. It was definitely an inspiration for me to write the modern version of the millionaire next door. And the premise of the book is to say, look, there are a lot of millionaires out there
Starting point is 01:10:37 who you just can't tell are wealthy. They live humbly. They invest wisely. They just stick the course. It's not some mythical status to have financially. So the idea is to say you too can be a millionaire, but you got to follow these steps and stick with it long enough. Last question for you. What's the best bull case you've heard for crypto? Like what's the thing? I know you're not deep in the weeds in crypto, but what's a thing that you've heard that kind of makes sense to you about this asset class?
Starting point is 01:11:03 I think the biggest bull case for crypto is that the administration is behind crypto. So when you have a government entity that finally comes around to say, okay, we're going to recognize it as a legitimate asset class and then build framework, regulatory framework around it. I think that's when you know it's here to stay for the long term because the government is the richest entity in the world and it is the most powerful entity. So if you have the government on your side, generally good things happen. It's like real estate. The government is on the side of the homeowner. 65% of Americans own home. You've got tax deduction. $250,000 is tax free if you're single.
Starting point is 01:11:41 If you sell, $500,000 is tax free. If you sell if you're a married couple, right? So if you have the government on your side, nobody can beat the government. It's a great point. Cryptos come a long way since internet drug money, you know, 10 years ago. Sam, this has been a pleasure. Thank you so much for joining us today. Guys, the book is called Millionaire Milestones, Fantastic Book.
Starting point is 01:12:00 Highly recommend it will include a link to the show notes. Also to Sam's Twitter, Twitter profile, and to Financial Sammarai.com, where you can find all of his work and writing. Sam, thank you so much for joining us. Hey, Rand. Thanks so much for having me. It's been a pleasure. And if you want to know anything or ask me a question, just comment on one of the 2,300 plus articles I've written since 2009. And I'll see it. And I'll respond. Impressive. All right, guys, got to end with this. Of course, none of this has been financial advice. Crypto is risky. You could lose what you put in. But we are headed west. This is the frontier. It's not for everyone. But we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey. Thanks a lot.

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