BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 404: How to Build Wealth in Three Simple Steps

Episode Date: April 24, 2023

The formula to build wealth isn’t complicated. Most American millionaires have figured it out, and you might have as well. It’s safe to say that almost every wealthy American has followed these... three steps that lead to a life of riches. If you follow the same path, you, too, can end up with financial independence, early retirement, and generational wealththat will propel your family forward. But, even though these steps are simple, most Americans can’t or won’t follow them. Joining us in the fight to help every American reach financial freedom are Brian Preston and Bo Hanson from The Money Guy Show. Brian and Bo both boast numerous financial acronyms after their names. As licensed financial professionals (CPAs, CFPs, PFSs, CFAs), it’s fair to say that they know their way around a portfolio. They’ve been helping their clients and podcast listeners build wealth no matter what stage of life they’re in. And their newest study on millionaires has illuminated some surprising takeaways. In today’s show, Brian and Bo break down EXACTLY what millionaires are doing that average Americans aren’t, the three core principles you MUST follow to build wealth, diversification vs. concentration, and whether or not real estate should be a part of your portfolio. So whether you just got your first job, are nearing retirement, or hover somewhere in between, Brian and Bo give actionable advice you can take away to not only build wealth but keep it for generations to come!  In This Episode We Cover The three core principles you MUST follow to build wealth and become a millionaire Self-made riches and the surprising facts about starting from SCRATCH  How to protect your generational wealth after you’ve made it Why those that reach financial independence rarely choose to retire early Diversification and whether your business, home, or stock portfolio owns too much of your wealth The right way to invest in real estate for early retirement (and when it’s TOO risky) Rising interest rates and how this will affect those pursuing financial independence And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Join BiggerPockets for FREE Scott's Instagram Mindy on BiggerPockets Grab Scott’s Book, “Set for Life” Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Apply to Be a Guest on The Money Show Podcast Talent Search! Subscribe to The “On The Market” YouTube Channel Listen to The “On The Market” Podcast: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, BiggerPockets Money Moment Listen to “The Money Guy Show” Download the Financial Order of Operations Work with Brian and Bo Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-404 Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Let us know! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money Podcast, where we interview Brian and Bo from The Money Guys Show and talk about how to build wealth and keep wealth. We also discuss millionaires and we also discuss rising interest rates. Yo, yo, yo, my name is Scott Trench and I am solo today as Mindy is raging and partying and whatever else she's doing on spring break. I am here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else, to introduce you to every money story because I and we and we all truly believe that financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where you're starting. That's right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world, go on to make big-time investments and assets like real estate, start your own business, learn from the habits of millionaires, or anything else related to building wealth will help you reach your financial goals and get money
Starting point is 00:00:48 out of the way so you can launch yourself towards your dreams. We have a new segment of the show called Money Moments, where we share a money hack, tip, or trick to help you on your financial journey. and today's money moment is use a raise to save more. If you're living comfortably with your current salary and receive a raise, put that money towards a 401k, Roth IRA, or savings account. Don't let the goalposts move. The goalposts being your everyday spending. All right, before we bring in Beau and Brian, let's take a quick break. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly, where your money is going, and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and
Starting point is 00:01:42 investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focus on achieving, not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves the needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets. I love Matt, said no one ever. Nobody starts a business thinking, you know what would make this more
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Starting point is 00:04:07 And we're back. Bo Hanson is the co-founder and serves as a CIO and CCO of a bound wealth while helping drive a long-term strategic vision in planning for the firm. He's passionate about all things finance and loves helping people make smart financial decisions. He knows it's extremely fulfilling when solid financial planning clicks for the people he serves. Brian Preston founded Abound Wealth on the foundation of stewardship and family. The firm has flourished under an abundance mindset with over two decades of experience on personal financial planning and taxes. He's driven to help others optimize their lives so they can focus on the things that truly matter to them.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Brian and Boe from The Money Guy's show, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. Hey, Scott, thanks so much for having us on. I'm very excited to have you on today and chat. about a number of things. Before we get started, would you mind just introducing yourselves and telling us a little bit about The Money Guy Show? Yeah, we've been trying to let everyone know they have an opportunity to build wealth no matter where they come from, no matter what income level they're at. We've been creating content since 2006. That's right. We've been one of the early podcasters transitioned into both podcasting and YouTube in 2017. And Bo and I just love
Starting point is 00:05:16 what we get to do every day. Yeah, we're both financial advisors. We're CFP, CPA, CPA, CFAs. And so we want to marry what we get to do in our day-to-day professional life with just educating the masses on how to make a really good sound financial advice. Awesome. And I understand that you have three kind of core principles for this process of building wealth for the everyday American. Would you mind introducing us to those three concepts? Yeah. The big things we talk about is that I think wealth building is incredibly simple. If you can just master the art of being disciplined, of course, live on less than you make, use that discipline to create margin or money.
Starting point is 00:05:54 Money is that second key element. That's your army of dollar bills. They'll start working for you. And if you give them enough of the most important element, Tom, your money can work harder for you than you do with your back, your brains, or your hands. Well, let's dive into each one of these a little bit deeper discipline. Are you talking about discipline on the income side, on the expense side, on both? What is that?
Starting point is 00:06:16 How would you kind of break that down for what it looks like for maybe a, middle-class American worker. Well, Scott, it definitely is the all-the-above because, you know, we assume when you come out of college or wherever you are when you get that first real job, income is not going to be like abundant. So you need to be very disciplined with how every dollar comes in and how you're utilizing it so it actually has a plan. Because remember, you want to save and invest first. You don't want to wait and see what's left over at the end of the month. And that means that expenses are, of course, going to be important. Yeah, and I think another thing we've recognized as it relates to discipline, especially for folks who are like in a situation
Starting point is 00:06:53 right now and they want to move into a better situation is being disciplined with how they spend their time as well. Like are they someone who's constantly being a lifetime learner? Are they continue to better themselves, advance their education, or are they just letting life happen? Are they kind of wasting time? Are they getting lost in all the distractions of life right now? We have found, in our experience, that the folks were able to build wealth and actually move from like where they are now to hitting the millionaire status or even multi-millionaire status. status. It's really just exercising a little bit of discipline in various aspects of their life compounded through time that makes a huge difference.
Starting point is 00:07:26 And I think it's important that, you know, I get people excited about saving and investing, usually through a book recommendation or watching some of our content. I just want to make sure as you get those annual pay raises or you have more successes in your life, that when you reach your 30s, you're not still saving and investing like you're in your 20s. That disciplines go require as you get more responsibilities, you get more success with your financial resources. Let's actually utilize it and put it to work so you get to have that great, big, beautiful tomorrow. But here's what's so frustrating. Some people will say, you know what, I'm just going to wait. I mean, things are tight right now. Maybe I'm in my 30s. I'm in the messy
Starting point is 00:08:01 middle. I've got kids and I've got obligations and mortgage and insurance and all this stuff. And because life is so difficult, there's not a lot of margin for me to save. So I'm just, I'm going to wait until later when my income is higher, when life is a little bit easier. And what happens is, is the further and further out you push exercising that discipline, the harder and harder it becomes. But if you're someone who can figure it out early on, even if you're only starting, you're saving $20 a month, $50 a month, $100 a month, whatever that number is, if you can do that when you have a little bit of income, a little bit of money, a little bit of resources, that habit will build and stack when you actually have more money, more income, more resources. Yeah. One of the things that I was excited to talk to you about today is that you guys, I believe, have made a very deep study of American millionaires.
Starting point is 00:08:44 I see The Millionaire Next Door, which is one of my favorite books right behind you, Bo, on the shelf there. Did you see any themes in your study and do they map to the research that was done 30 years ago in The Millionaire Next Door by Dr. Stanley? Yeah, I think it's pretty amazing because, of course, Millionaire Next Door is fundamental to my own journey towards wealth building. And then I think, you know, Ramsey Solutions has their big study. And then we do an annual study of our own client base because we are field. only financial advisors, so we send out annual surveys to our millionaires. But here's what I find interesting is I know our study size is smaller than some of those other studies that I mentioned, including Dr. Stanley's research and Sarah, his daughter's additional research when she did
Starting point is 00:09:29 the next millionaire next door. But I'm amazed at how much the data lines up. When you look at how many millionaires our first generation, and we even stratified a little further and say, did you receive zero? Did you receive less than $10,000? And that 80% number that you remember that they talked about in the millionaire next door as being first generation, that holds up for us, too. I believe our number came in at 76% had received nothing. And that's the biggest part that gets me excited is that anybody, I mean, absolutely anybody, because we're too humble guys from broke to zero that have built success. You, if you're watching this for the first day, get energized because you can do it as well. And that's what gets me excited. If you're an optimist
Starting point is 00:10:16 and you actually practice the discipline and put your mind to work, you can be successful. What I think is so interesting is we've worked through our study and as we've worked with other millionaires, I think we always expect for there to be something amazing about them, something like super unique where they had some crazy job or crazy opportunity or they were some wicked smart person. What's really, really fascinating is that the things that they do are fairly unremarkable, they just do them for a consistently long period of time. They figure out how not to run up credit card debt, how not to live beyond their means, how to live on less than they make, how to not waste money, how to not keep up with the Joneses. I mean, these things that we
Starting point is 00:10:53 hear over and over and over again, when you actually look at millionaires, it's not like the lifestyles of the rich and famous or the cribs or the keeping up with the Kardashians. It's just people making really sound financial decisions over and over and over for an entire lifetime. And Scott, I find it interesting is that I grew up in a household where I was told rich people are born into it. Well, I just told that it's that about 80% or first generation. So that kind of dispels that. So then that leaves, well, okay, they're either executives, they're professional athletes, their entertainers. Our research shows that the lion's share of these people are just savers and investors. People who used, taking a little bit of today,
Starting point is 00:11:34 through incremental good decisions and building that compounding growth that build something pretty magnificent for the future. On Bigger Pockets, I would say almost every one of us is looking to achieve financial independence early in life in some degree or other. Is that consistent with the goals of the average millionaire, right? Are they working for something else like generational wealth or some other goal that's excluded from financial independence? Or is it an intentional approach to financial freedom early in life, that the clients that you've surveyed, that's their primary goal. I think that they're working towards financial independence. What I think is different in the world in which right now is how people define when they want to do that. What we found is like in the
Starting point is 00:12:19 world of TikTok and Instagram and Twitter, there are all these folks who, hey, I'm 23 years old and I'm ready to be financially independent. And while that's an amazing goal, that may not be like easily attainable for most folks. And what we find is that our folks are able to achieve financial independence earlier than the average, you know, the normal retirement age of 65 or whatever the number may be. But what they're not doing is they're not saying, I want to be financially independent next year. I'm going to go find the thing that I can do right now to do that. They recognize that it's a process. And it takes time to do that. And then what happens, and I'd be curious if you agree with this, is that their goal is financial independence. And they become incredibly
Starting point is 00:12:59 effective at achieving that. And then once they've achieved that, they're right, oh, wow, I now have an abundance. Now I can focus on legacy mindset and leaving something for the other generations and, you know, pouring back into the world that poured into me. Well, Scott, I think it's interesting. I think about my own journey. When I was in my early 20s and I first found these concepts like the millionaire next door, wealthy barber and these things that kind of lit my mind on fire, I immediately was like, I'm going to save enough in my 20s, 30s, and 40 so I can retire when I'm 50 years old. Now, the rest of the story is, is that I'm quickly approaching that 50 year mark. And I know more want to retire than the man on the moon
Starting point is 00:13:41 because I actually wake up every morning and I have pepping my step because I love what we're doing with content creation and our fee-only planning firm and the commercial real estate and all the other stuff we have going on. But here's the reality. If I wouldn't have had that goal in my 20s of starting to save and invest so I could retire 50, I wouldn't own my time now to where I'm purposeful and doing things on my terms. Everything I get to do now is because I own my life. It's not because of the obligation of paying bills or even our ability to move to Nashville. You know, we're both Atlanta boys. You know, we grew up in South Atlanta. But when it came time for some opportunities, but also for family needs because I have a daughter with autism, I was
Starting point is 00:14:26 able to actually move to a whole different state because of some of that sacrifice and some of those other things, the deferred gratification. And that's what, if you can be disciplined early, it opens up flexibility and you owning your life better. And that's what independence is. The reason we use the word independence is because you don't have constraints and obligations and encumbrances to hold you back. You, I think similar to me, discovered the concept of financial independence or wealth building or these items very early on. And you're early 20s, it sounds like. And that allowed me to just pursue this journey without any distractions. I didn't have any bad habits. I didn't have any bad debt or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:15:04 Do you find that that's typical among millionaires that they started right out the gates with this bull in mind? Or is it achievable for folks who maybe are having to make a hard pivot from, you know, kind of the middle class trap, I'll call it, in their 30s or 40s? We have a mix of both. I really do, Scott, because I know that I, and that's why we talk about the term financial mutants is I've always been different. I'm leaving this weekend to go down to spring training with my high school buddies. And if you asked any one of them, they would talk about my $7 date nights in high school. They would talk about I always had coupons. So I've always been off a little bit, you know, trying to hide my crazy that I looked at the world differently.
Starting point is 00:15:45 But there are folks that we have come into that if, you know, they found a concept of they They started off with debt or other things, and they realized they were totally letting life happen to them versus being the active hero of their story of their financial life and took an active role. But for me, yes, I've always been different. Sounds like you too, Scott, where we're the financial mutants that hopefully serve as the tour guides or the hiking, you know, host that's going to let everybody know what's the efficient way so that you can do this better.
Starting point is 00:16:16 And in the beginning, when I started content, I was kind of sad. I didn't have that story of failure that it feels like all of America wants where you have to fail before you succeed before people will buy your story. But I think that people will hopefully recognize somebody who can harness the power of all their clients they work with that have had success, but also have shown that the chicken or egg argument that this actually does bear fruit. The system wasn't designed on top of the system. It was actually, no, let's share you what we've seen work so you can put this to work in your own financial life as well. How about you, Bo? Yeah, you know, I think it's interesting. Me and Brian joke all the time about it.
Starting point is 00:16:56 We think that one day they're going to uncover genetically that there's a savers gene, right? Because you see this case all the time. You'll have two siblings, and you do the marshal. Like, I've got two little girls and a little boy, and I've done the marshmallow test with my two little girls where, you know, you put a marshmallow in front of them. You walk away, say, hey, if you don't eat it, when I come back, I'll give you two marshmallows. My older daughter, she will literally just let it sit there. She'll let us sit there for days, weeks, probably months, because she knows there's a reward on the other end.
Starting point is 00:17:24 So she perfectly has that discipline. My five-year-old, I don't even get the instructions out of my mouth before she's already swallowed the marshmallow. Like, it is gone. So I recognize that when it comes to discipline and saving money, they're going to have a different affinity and natural bent to what comes easy. What's great, though, is through education. If my wife and I can do a good job of teaching them,
Starting point is 00:17:44 they're both going to have the opportunity to build towards financial independence, to start making some of those sound financial decisions, even though it looks like for my older daughter, it's going to be a little bit easier than my younger daughter, just based on her general consumption patterns. But I think that should be encouraging to those folks who you say that are stuck in like this, you said like they're midlife or they're like kind of, they just are now recognizing, man, can I change my circumstance? Absolutely. That's one of the beautiful things about personal finance that when it clicks and when you do figure it out, you really can take hold of your financial future. And I think it's, I think it can happen not just for young folks, but for folks
Starting point is 00:18:21 at any point in their financial journey. By the way, Scott. Well, bigger pockets, we obviously emphasize real estate investing. And I would, I would guess that almost everyone listening to bigger pockets is looking to use real estate at some point in their journey as part of their portfolio. Obviously, many of us invest in stocks and other asset classes as well. How common are you finding real estate as a contributor to wealth in your client's portfolios and the portfolios of folks that are not part of a real estate investing community? How does that skew in the general pool of millionaires? No, I think it's back to that discussion on what's the path to wealth. Now, I always, you know, I was talking, we're both Bo and I are part of an entrepreneur group.
Starting point is 00:19:04 So it's kind of like a mastermind group where we share. And I can remember one of the discussions I've had in that. And one of my groups was I try to explain get rich behaviors versus really rich people, folks that you even stack up more wealth on. And that's why we recommend kind of build that foundation of wealth. And you are probably going to do that with traditional like cash reserves, you know, your Roth IRAs and setting up those retirement accounts, getting that employer match. But then once you get to in our financial order of operations system, if you go to money guy.com slash resources. We have a free download. But around step eight, after you built that financial foundation, you have, you know, bigger pockets. You like what I did that, let you go a little further way.
Starting point is 00:19:48 I do love real estate because if you do it right, it is amazing. You're dealing with leverage debt. You're dealing with something that's appreciating that you only have to put a small amount to get the benefit, but you better have the deep enough pockets or bigger pockets to weather it because that that wealth building could actually work against you. But I find it very common because we even, on our clients, Scott, because you don't have to just actively buy into real estate. You can also buy into REITs. You can do ETFs these days. I mean, there's so much access.
Starting point is 00:20:24 And I love real estate as a diversifier. Matter of fact, we did a show this morning. And one of the investment strategies we were reviewing was the three funds. You know, you always hear on Bogleheads, you always got the large cap. got your international, and then, of course, you have your bonds, the refund portfolio. And I always say that's great, maybe it's starting out. But as you build wealth, your goal going to want to add diversifiers like real estate because, man, if you want inflation hedges, if you want some of these ancillary benefits that protect you now that
Starting point is 00:20:55 you have built wealth, real estate's a great opportunity. Plus, there is, they have, real estate has the best lobbying arm for our tax code you've ever seen. If you think about small business exclusions, you think about cost segregation and accelerated depreciation. We love real estate. It's just you have to make sure you don't get caught swimming naked or skinny dipping. Yeah, I think one of the problems is a lot of people understand the positives of real estate. They understand what the brochure says, oh, this is great. I can go borrow money and I'll build equity and I can get a tenant to cover the cost. And then I can do cash out refi and I can buy more and I can multiply, multiply, multiply, and on the surface, on a spreadsheet, that sounds fantastic. And I can do cash out.
Starting point is 00:21:34 like it could work, but in our experience, the people that we've seen get in trouble are the people that didn't have a good contingency plan. They didn't have the appropriate reserves, the appropriate base, or they just got way too risky. They had had some success investing in the broad stock market, and maybe they went and did some rental properties, and maybe they own a commercial real estate, but then they decided they want to get into development. So they take all of their wealth that they've accumulated and they roll it into this big,
Starting point is 00:21:59 aggressive thing that then 2008 happens, and they just got themselves overextended. So we love real estate as a tool and a mechanism for wealth building, but only if you understand the inherent risks and you're attacking it from a prudent approach to make sure that it fits into your unique financial plan. Well, and Scott, I'm familiar enough with your content that I watched you were doing some content on budgeting or spending. And you're like somebody who made $5,000 a month and you ask them what they spend and they say $3,000. But then you bring up, well, wait a minute, you didn't talk about any of your medical expenses. You didn't talk about your annual insurance premium that's due. I mean, I think the same thing applies to real estate. I mean, just make sure you're not skipping steps so that you actually can survive and be an all-weather
Starting point is 00:22:44 vehicle with your real estate portfolio. Yeah, we believe that you should invest in real estate from a position of financial strength and not before here at Bigger Pockets. I think that's kind of what you guys are saying, it sounds like. Yeah, well, it's because people get, I think, because real estate is so sexy and so fun, but people accelerate it too early. And then if you do things, I mean, look, there's some of the analogies I can make them, I'm trying not to get myself in trouble.
Starting point is 00:23:09 But if you do things before you actually have the depth or resources or wisdom, you can just get caught in a bad situation. Because we know real estate has what's called U-shaped recoveries. You know, if you come through the Great Recession, you know, where there was a period from really 2009 all the way through 2011. So it was a two-year period that if you're a year period that if you're, you know, you didn't have things shored up, you might have gotten caught. And that's the biggest thing we want to protect people from.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Let me back a second, though. You know, what percentage, if you had to guess, of the clients you surveyed, use real estate as part of their portfolio, the millionaires in there? What does that look like across the general population of millionaires, if I can use that phrase? When you say real estate, you mean like single family residential type real estate or commercial? Yeah. All of the above, maybe excluding REIT. You know, they directly own some real estate outside of their primary. You know, I would probably say, what, 30, 45% somewhere in that, maybe one out of two folks.
Starting point is 00:24:10 Now, what's interesting is it being a part of their financial plan presently versus having been some part previously. Because it's not uncommon, and we've seen a lot of our clients, especially a lot of our tech mobile clients, that they may live in a really interesting, you know, area where they bought in at a good time, they have a good piece of real estate that they're not. they own. And it's in a tech sector community where there's a lot of people coming in and out. And they may decide when they move on, they're going to keep that primary residence and turn it into a rental property and they're going to go buy somewhere else. Well, they never had the intent to get into real estate, but it has now become very much a real part of their financial plan. And when it works well, it works really, really well. So it can be a huge amplifier. So I'd say it happens often, but not, I don't know how often, at least for our client base,
Starting point is 00:25:01 it happens like intentionally, like day one. That's what they decided they wanted to go into. And Scott, I want to make sure I clarify that, like, I do think there are strategies that let you do real estate earlier, like house hacking? I mean, if you live in a community that lets you, whether it's a duplex, a triplex or quadplex, man, when, if you think about three, you know, in the last two or three years, when interest rates are a little more affordable, right now, you have to be pinching yourself to think that you were able to play that game.
Starting point is 00:25:30 So I like that. And then it's not uncommon that successful people will almost become real estate people by accident. I mean, because even in my own life, I've ended up with rental property because, you know, I had a primary residence that wouldn't sell or there was other things that were you inherited a piece of property. It's not uncommon for those things to happen as well. I think our cautionary tale, Scott, that would probably line up very nicely with what you're sharing is there are strategies out there where people will tell you, without passing go, without building up the emergency reserves, go load up your portfolio with eight rental properties, 10 rental properties. You might find that it's not as passive as some of these hype people on social media have made you realize.
Starting point is 00:26:14 Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where your money is going, and more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your
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Starting point is 00:29:34 The healthier you means more moments to cherish. Take control of your well-being and book an assessment today. Medcan, live well for life. Visit medcan.com slash moments to get stuff. Yeah, it's also a path to smaller pockets, so we don't want to go there. Yeah, let's talk about diversification and concentration here, right? So it's one thing to build wealth, and you know, you mentioned a three-part portfolio, which is actually very diversified there with large-cap bonds international. But would you recommend, for example, concentration
Starting point is 00:30:05 in the wealth building phase to a certain degree, and then diversification later? Do you diversify throughout the wealth-building journey? Or how do you think about diversity? and when it starts to really play an important role in wealth building. Remember, coming back, but I really do believe in this resource. I think it's important to people. In the financial order of operations, we always, I'll hold it up. Moneyguy.com slash resource. I feel like it's on our show when we do that, is that if you go through the entire process,
Starting point is 00:30:36 because that's going to require that you are saving and investing 20 to 25%. That's just automatic wealth creation is going on. So beyond that, you know, when you get to steps eight and nine, yeah, concentration can happen because that's happened to us. I mean, during the pandemic, we bought a building for our businesses. And we were able to. So now, if you would think about what's happened with inflation and with other things, without us even meaning to, one of our best performing investment assets has actually been our commercial building in downtown Franklin because it appreciated it through inflation. and it's got a lot of good stuff going on, that has become a concentrated position,
Starting point is 00:31:18 but it didn't distract us because we made it through having that foundation of steps one through seven. Yeah, and it's really interesting. At the beginning of your wealth-building journey, we always tell folks, don't get lost on the things that don't matter. I mean, early on, before your assets, before your net worth, it's a critical mass, we think that your savings rate is exponentially more important than your rate of return. So the thing that you ought to focus on is how much am I saving, not what am I doing with
Starting point is 00:31:42 my assets or how am I diversifying them. There are really easy solutions out there, whether your solution is a total stock market index or one of the things that we advocate for, like target retirement index funds, where it's just really easy. Set it and forget it early on. Focus on your savings rate because you saving an extra 5 to 10% of your income is probably going to do a whole lot more for you than you trying to figure out how to make an extra 5 to 10% on $1,000 or on $10,000. So if you can focus on that early on, then you build your wealth. And once it hits a critical mass, once you start seeing these high six figure type numbers on your network statement, then you can benefit from diversification and not just
Starting point is 00:32:22 asset allocation, but asset location and spreading out your assets and looking at different things. But just the natural state of building wealth. I mean, what's interesting is I think the average first-time home buyer right now is 33 years old. Actually, just got increased at 36. Post-pandemic, it's begun up to 36. And you look at the median home value in this country right now. like $446,000, is not incredibly difficult for someone who's in their mid-30s going to buy their first house, almost out of the gate, the most concentrated asset they're going to have on their balance sheet is going to be their primary residence. So concentration is almost something you can't avoid early on. But when it comes to like your portfolio, don't get lost in the
Starting point is 00:33:04 weeds. Don't get busy doing nothing. Focus on the things that will actually move the needle for you over the long term. I want to go back one second to something you just said, where you bought a property in Franklin, Tennessee, and now that is a much higher concentration of your wealth than you intended it to be. I believe this is very common among, I would imagine, many millionaires who are making some sort of specific investments that are not in the index fund set it and forget it approach. If you make 10 investments, you're unlucky if all of them fail. One of them likely will outperform the other nine, and now you have a very concentrated position at the end of that. So for example, if you bought Tesla stock 10 years ago, that may be a huge percentage of your portfolio. What do you advise clients to do
Starting point is 00:33:51 in situations like that where they have had a really lucky winner, maybe a real estate property in San Francisco or tech stock or something like that that is now a big part of their portfolio, but their philosophy for investing doesn't match with having such a great amount of their wealth concentrated in that. It's a good problem. How do you extract extract yourself from that situation? I'll take it a step, Scott, and the fact that I've, I have some phenomenal clients that have built wealth, tremendous wealth in real estate. But I catch them when they come, realize most of our clients are in their 30s, 40s, and 50s. But the clients, and since I'm one of the older advisors here, I have the older client base. So they're winding down things. I have found that some of
Starting point is 00:34:36 my clients, like I have one client specifically who did, I mean, you think about just like we bought a commercial building right before the inflation, right at the beginning of the pandemic, it's worked out incredibly well for us. I would say we're fortunate in that. I have a client that has a lot of rental property. He bought during the Great Recession right around 2010 and 2011 that when you look at what he paid for these houses, you're like unbelievable that they were selling real estate so cheap. So it's back to real estate can be cyclical. And if you get in at the right time, you're going to absolutely love how it hit. But because some of these residential rentals as well as some of the commercial, they're not passive. And no matter how much everybody says, you're still probably, I mean,
Starting point is 00:35:22 get to a size you can hire somebody. But once again, that's not passive if you're having to have your own management company internally and so forth. But I have found that people as they get older, they want to simplify. So I've had a few that are still keeping because they love it because it's like most things. I told you I wanted to retire at 50, but here I am. I'm loving it. I'm not retiring. I find that with all my real estate investors, if they've had success, they're probably
Starting point is 00:35:47 want to do it. But they are trying to figure out how do we parse it down to a point where I'm not creating something that's a harder thing legacy-wise for my survivors as well as for my time because some of it has gotten hard to manage. see some downsizing or diversifying out of some of the rental when they just don't want to spend as much time on it. Some concentration is diversifiable and some of it's not. I mean, if you were to look at my balance sheet right now, the two largest assets that I have on a balance sheet are the value of the businesses that I own, like the actual businesses that I own and run, and the value of the commercial real estate. So neither one of those are something that I want to diversify out of at this point. So my strategy has to be building wealth outside of those two. factors so that as my other assets increase, the overall percentage that represents a decrease.
Starting point is 00:36:38 That's a strategy for diversifying over the long term. In your example, and we have clients all over the country that do this, we might work with an executive who gets a bunch of RSUs and a bunch of options and all these ESPP programs, and they might have a lot of concentration in their employer stock, or maybe they bought Tesla 10 years ago. It's a big piece of their financial life, those I would argue are diversifiable risk. It's just a matter of what's the strategy through which you're going to diversify. Someone comes into windfall. We love for them to dollar cost average that cash, right? You sell a property or you sell a business or you get an inheritance. We like for you to ease that money into the market over the long term because it helps behaviorally.
Starting point is 00:37:21 The same thing is true when you find yourself in a really concentrated risk position. Maybe you bought Tesla 10 years ago and it's done incredible for you, but you recognize now you're at that financial independence point, perhaps you ought to start dollar cost averaging out of that holding. Or if you have a large real estate portfolio with a bunch of different residential properties, maybe you systematically start diversifying. So the first thing you have to define is, is the concentration that exists in my life right now a diversifiable one that I actually can step away from? Or is it not? And if it's not, what's my strategy so that that that single thing cannot completely derail me? I think that's a fantastic answer. Well, and it's also tied into
Starting point is 00:37:57 entrepreneurs have the exact same thing because you said it. Your business is one of the biggest things. But that's also a risk. All concentration is a form of risk. There will come a point with your rental portfolio that you will figure out, okay, I could keep going in this path, but it might make sense to diversify into something that, because real estate, even though, and we made the point when we were talking pre-show, Scott, that we just did recently did a housing show and a real estate show.
Starting point is 00:38:25 And I think a lot of these pundits that are trying to pick is the market going up, is the market going down, or missing it that so much of real estate is location and it can vary that I think that you will get to a point to where you will say, okay, I'm not going to buy another rental property. But this thing is cash flowing so good. Why don't know? Just like with a small business, you want to start investing outside of it so that you cannot be an either or that you're an and that you're going to be wealthy with your passive investments like index funds. you're going to be wealthy with your real estate portfolio. You're going to be successful and wealthy with your small businesses. That's what I have found is that a lot of people, when you see all the people on YouTube and social media talking about having multiple passive incomes, I'm amazed how it happens
Starting point is 00:39:11 naturally just through success. Look, I think that's a great answer. I've been noodling on this, and I think this is really clarifying. If your strategy, if your philosophy, your investment approach calls for you to be diversified and you're heavily concentrated, then you boil down to two very simple things. Dollar cost average out of that, if that is a reasonable activity, or if it's not, because it's in your business, for example, just start investing all of your cash flows in the next asset class to diversify away from it. I think it's as simple as that, but I think it's such
Starting point is 00:39:43 a consuming question for folks that have had that happen to them. For example, the guy with a million five net worth a million in Tesla, how do you do it? I think you're all the tax consequences. So I think that's fantastic, guys. There's getting wealthy and then they're staying wealthy because unfortunately, staying wealthy is a pretty fleeting thing. Just like I gave that stat at the beginning of our interview, the 80% of millionaires are first generation. And our research shows that too. The other side of that coin is 70% of that wealth disappears by the kids. 90% disintegrates by the time the grandkids. So you do at some point, even if you're successful, you will need to change your mindset to, okay, I'm navigating a big enterprise here. I've conquered the get wealthy part. How do I now
Starting point is 00:40:29 actually risk a justice to stay wealthy because it's not assured? So how do you do it? I mean, that's back to, I think you become a jack of multiple trades. You have independence and wealth and liquid investments. That's where we're talking about the index funds and the steps, the financial order of operations. But then there's nothing wrong with your business and your real estate. You know, If you look at the Simon Seneca book, The Eternal Game, the Infinite Game, that's it. You know, a lot of small business owners think that they're going to build something. I think real estate investors fall prey to this too, is that they think they go build it up and sell it. But if you do this right, you can just keep playing forever.
Starting point is 00:41:09 There's not a goal or end point where you're trying to say, I'm just going to save the $3 million, sell it all and then go sit on an island somewhere. You can actually create a play to where your income as well as the value of your asset, are good enough that they fulfill your goals that you don't have to just drop out. You just get to live your best life and own your time. How important do you feel that keeping the goalposts from moving is in the context of keeping your wealth? It's wildly important. I was going to say one of the things that has to shift when you go from getting wealthy to staying wealthy is the strategy that you employ, the mindset that you have. This is like a very, this is like a ridiculous example. But when you're
Starting point is 00:41:48 dating, you have to have a certain skill set, right? Like you have to have to. to have a thing that allows you to do that well to be able to attract a partner, to be able to attract someone else, right? But the skill set that you employ to be a good spouse is different than the dating skill set, right? Like it's no longer about putting yourself out there and being attractive. It's more about figuring out how to do that thing well. Building wealth and keeping wealth is very similar. To get wealthy, you may have to be comfortable with risk and go out there and take calculated risks and be willing to take chances and be willing to take risks. Once you've built up, wealth, then it is more about preservation. It's more about making sure that you are stewarding
Starting point is 00:42:26 what you have built, what you have created really, really well. And so one of the places where we see people fail is they don't actually even know what the goalpost is, or they have a very empty goal post. You know, if I just get to a million dollars, then I've made it. Well, they get to a million. Well, okay, but what if I got to two million? Okay, well, five, ten. If the only goal that you have is a number, I'm nervous that you're going to get there and recognize that it is incredibly, incredibly empty. You need to figure out what is associated with that number? What's the thing that that number allows you to do that's the actual goalpost? Hey, I want to be able to travel the world as much as I want, or I want to be able to only work three days a week, or I want to be
Starting point is 00:43:06 able to spend more time with family, or I want to volunteer. I want to, whatever the answer to those things are, those should be your goalpost. And if they really are what makes you fulfilled and what really is truly meaningful for you, those won't move. Numbers will move, data will move, the things that you actually care about, those will stay solid, and those are the ones you want to worry about continue to push out. I think on the expense side or the consumption side, goalposts, you have to be careful of them moving, because that's where you're getting hurt because you get to be my age and you have a house that's pretty much paid for, and then you start going, man, I could,
Starting point is 00:43:44 you know, I still got free cash flow, I could go buy a house. And let's just say, like, a million dollars, I mean, because houses have gone up in value, yes, you go spend a million dollars, but that million dollars might make you $40, $50,000 a year. And if you can change your mindset to rethinking about what it costs you from a cash flow, you'll think about consumption differently. So that's what goalposts control that on the expenses in consumption. However, I do want to tell you, on the goal setting, I think it's okay to let some
Starting point is 00:44:16 adjustment occur because us humans, we think linear. We think one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. And I know exponentially is what happens. And Bo, you've been good at that for me. I mean, when we and I started working together, I was trying to add like two clients a quarter or something. You're like, what are you doing? We could add so many more clients than that.
Starting point is 00:44:36 And I was like, we can. And then, you know, so I have found that as I've had success, that you do need to prepare to think exponentially, that your goals and your desires will change. It's back to the discipline, but also understanding, like I was talking about earlier. I thought I was retiring at 50, but now my goal is completely different, but I don't think that's unhealthy. Sure. I think it's just that my perspective has changed because I did control the goalpost moving on the expense and consumption side. So I've been able on the healthy side, the ability to build wealth, that's okay to be fluid on that.
Starting point is 00:45:12 I mean, because I think it will help you really be the controller of where you want to be in life. life. Transishing a little bit here, we're seeing a lot of rising inflation, interest rates are soaring. Do you think, a two-part question here, first, do you think that's going to result in a lot less millionaires in the next few years? I think there's going to be a destruction of wealth going on that's going to be detectable in any big way. And second, does this change the dynamic for investment advice that you're giving to some clients? For example, are bonds because of higher interest rates becoming a little bit more prominent in the portfolios of folks that you're advising. Well, I think it's interesting. We've done some data looking at, you know,
Starting point is 00:45:51 how did equity asset classes performed in our last, like, hyperinflationary environment? Like, what did it look like in the late 70s and early 80s? And I think a lot of people are amazed, you know, they heard CDs back then or cash holdings would pay, you know, 10, 11, 12 percent. But then you go look at what the equity markets performed. They're like, holy cow, that's very, very different. So to your first question, will it erode millionaires? I don't think that it will erode millionaires.
Starting point is 00:46:18 What it may erode is what a million dollars will allow you to accomplish. I think there will, you know, if inflation continues to increase and interest rates rise, I think we'll see more people who hit the million dollar mark, but millionaire might not be the thing that allows you to have financial independence. And so what people are going to have to really hone in on is knowing what is their number, you know, as being a millionaire the goal or is getting to X dollars so that I can live X lifestyle, really the thing that you're working towards. And while I think that inflation can be a headwin
Starting point is 00:46:48 because all the things that we buy become more expensive and it makes it harder, if you understand the way that the economic system works, okay, yeah, if a can of Coca-Cola is going to cost more next year than it costs this year for me to buy it, and I recognize I'm going to have to pay more for it, then I want to be an owner of Coca-Cola. I want to be in the other side of the equation
Starting point is 00:47:07 so that I can own things that as inflation takes place as it happens, it keeps me protected. Real estate's another great example of something that can be a solid inflation fighter. So I don't know that it's going to erode millionaires, but I do think people are going to have to be wise in the types of assets that they're holding to make sure they can keep their purchasing power growing. Yeah, I think that because we do have all these headwinds, as both said, working against, it's easy to become a pessimist and think that the system's working against you. But I believe strongly, and there's going to be equity risk premiums that you're going to get rewarded for investing, whether it's, It's stock invest, you know, index investing or real estate, that you're still going to be rewarded for putting your money to work.
Starting point is 00:47:49 And you just need to keep that mentality and that discipline so that some of the darkest of times can actually create the maximum best opportunities to take advantage of in the long term. And that's the whole Warren Buffett, you know, be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy because that's the part where I think we. live in the greatest time to be alive? I talk about the law of accelerating returns all the time on our show is that if you looked at how much your life changed from the 70s through the 90s, you know, it's going to look a lot slower than we looked from really the 90s to the 2020s because, you know, it's just amazing. My childhood was like the big improvement was when the
Starting point is 00:48:35 color TV got a remote control, so I didn't have to sit in the sleep, you know, the beam bag down and they're in turn with my big toe for my father to now, you know, we've got the computing power in our pockets with our phones and our watches that landed stuff on the moon. I mean, it is truly amazing. And now we have this disruptive technology like artificial intelligence and other things. These disruptions, as scary as they are to what it means to capital and other things, you will be able to profit off of it if you are paying attention and just always be buying and taking advantage of this ever-expanding economy.
Starting point is 00:49:11 And then your second question was, okay, well, does rising interest rates change the investment landscape? Like, do you, are fixed income investments becoming more attractive? And the answer may be, maybe. We think that when it comes to portfolio construction for an individual, first you start with the individual, not the economy, right? Like what sort of risk on, risk off portfolio do they need? And once you determine that mix of assets, then you say, okay, given this current economic environment, what's the appropriate way to approach that risk-off or risk-reduced side. You know, we've been for the last decade in this, like, super-low interest rate environment where navigating fixed income was pretty hard. You had to
Starting point is 00:49:50 make some decisions from an allocation standpoint like shortening maturities, decreasing duration, maybe kicking it out on the risk spectrum a little bit, or you had to look at different alternatives, alternative-type asset classes that have yield components in them. I think as interest rate tries, truly it probably makes it a little bit easier, right? I think it's been more complicated for the last decade to navigate that side of a portfolio. I think for this next decade, if we were in a higher interest rate environment, it probably will make it a little bit easier to navigate. I mean, you saw that stat where it was from like 1980 all the way until 2010, because we're in this like declining interest rate environment, the average total bond fund return like 8% per year. I mean,
Starting point is 00:50:31 that's amazing. When the bonds are making 8% per year, it's not really hard to have a really solid capital allocation. It's been this last decade or so where I think it's been pretty difficult pretty unique. Yeah, I can put a punctuation on that with just, I like the fact that as people get older and retire, you actually can get yield without going too far out on the risk spectrum. And that's a healthy thing. Yeah, I've just been noodling, you know, we go for, what does the stock market going to return? Everyone has a different opinion on what the right long-term number is. Usually, it's between 7 and 11%. Well, if you want to earn 7% right, right now, my buddy are making $200,000 a year is getting a mortgage for 30 years, 800 credit score, paying 7% interest. You buy the
Starting point is 00:51:10 mortgage. And so that's what I'm thinking at a very simple level is that back and is that a part of portfolios. So open question, I guess, for folks to consider, because you got to start, to your point, bow with the person and not the markets about what you want. Well, guys, this has been really fun. We are so grateful that you came on the show today. Any parting thoughts before we sign off? We've had a blast, Scott, and I love, actually, I love that we've gotten to go a little deeper on some of this because that's exactly, I know that hopefully a lot of your audience has seen us, YouTube shorts, we're on TikTok and other things, but with our React videos. But our true passion is those shows we're doing that are in the long form that let's go deep dives. And I would
Starting point is 00:51:50 encourage anybody who hasn't checked out our content, because like I said, we've been at this since 2006. Go to MoneyGyad.com. If you're looking for a better way to maximize and build wealth, the financial order of operations can tell you exactly what to do with your next dollar. And that's what we're trying to do. We just want to pay it forward so people can see that they can learn you know, implement this, grow, and then reach a level of success that they'll just be in a place that they never could have imagined was possible. Wonderful. We will link to the money guy.com, to that resource and to your podcast and the show notes here for the Bigger Pockets Money Podcast. Thank you so much, guys. Really appreciate having you on and hope you for wonderful rest of your week.
Starting point is 00:52:31 Thanks, Scott. All right. That was Brian and Bo from The Money Guys show. I love saying that. I don't think that's how they introduced themselves, but I had fun with it. They were fascinating. I had a really good time listening to them, and I thought they had some really good nuggets of advice. And I love the fact that The Millionaire Next Door, which is one of my favorite books, was sitting behind them on that shelf. From the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, I'm Scott Trench. See you, see you soon, Raccoon. If you enjoyed today's episode, please give us a five-star review on Spotify or Apple. And if you're looking for even more money content, feel free to visit our YouTube channel at YouTube.com slash Bigger Pockets Money. Bigger Pockets Money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench, produced by Kaylin Bennett, editing by Exodus Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub. Lastly, a big thank you to the Bigger Pockets team for making this show possible.

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