BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 419: Finance Friday: Barely Breaking Even? Here’s How You Can STILL Invest
Episode Date: June 9, 2023Side income streams are your way out of breaking even every month. If you’re like most Americans and find your savings stagnating, without much room for growth, it might be time to look at oppor...tunities outside your nine-to-five. This is exactly what today’s guest, Liz, did by becoming a real estate agent and growing her seasonal business. But, Liz is in one of the northernmost states, where winters are harsh and home sales halt once the snow falls. Liz wants to grow her real estate agent side income into a full-blown business, but how can she do so when half of the year is too cold to show houses? If you have seasonal income or an infrequent side hustle to help pay your bills, this is an episode for you! Mindy and Scott will walk through how Liz, or any other entrepreneur, can use the sunny season to grow their businesses to new heights, strengthen their savings, and invest the rest so early retirement isn’t just some far-off dream. Liz also needs to know where her money is best put to use. With a serious cash cushion, she’s debating whether or not having a large amount of cash is worth the financial stability or if investing it for passive income is a better option. With her own primary residence coming close to closing, what should Liz do with her hard-earned cash? In This Episode We Cover How to turn a seasonal income stream into a full-time business that pays your yearly salary What to do when you’re breaking even every month (EVEN with low expenses) Becoming a real estate agent and how to find leads in untraditional ways Cash reserves and where to invest your money when you have too much REITs (real estate investment trusts) vs. index funds and which makes more passive income When to pay off debt vs. keeping cash in a high-yield savings account And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Join BiggerPockets for FREE Mindy on BiggerPockets Scott's Instagram 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! Listen to The “On The Market” Podcast: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, BiggerPockets Fire by 45 Investment Plan Grab “6 Steps to 7 Figures” Read More About REITs Click here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-419 Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email us: moneymoment@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, Finance Friday edition, where we interview Liz and talk about variable income, growing your real estate agent business, and long-term portfolio optimization.
Hello, hello, hello. My name is Mindy Jensen, and with me as always is my predictable co-host, Scott Trench.
Thanks, Mindy. Great to be here with my Sees Through It All, co-host, Minnie Jensen.
Scott and I are here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else, to introduce you to every money story because we truly believe financial.
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 in assets like real estate, start your own business, or just get more comfortable
with building a financial foundation. We'll help you reach your financial goals and get money out
of the way so you can launch yourself towards your dreams.
Scott, before we jump in, I'm going to say the contents of this podcast are informational
in nature and are not legal or tax advice and neither you nor I nor bigger pockets are
engaged in the provision of legal tax or any other advice. You should seek your owner
advice from professional advisors, including lawyers and accountants regarding the legal, tax and
financial implications of any financial decision you contemplate. All right, now I'm excited to talk about
Liz. Liz is coming in today. She is a real estate agent in North Dakota. Scott, did you know that
it's cold in North Dakota? I had heard. I have never experienced it for myself. I have never experienced
it for myself firsthand, but I have heard it is very cold in North Dakota, which will make real
estate agenting a little bit more difficult in those winter months. So we are here today to talk to Liz
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Liz is a real estate agent who just bought her very first house with her partner.
Yay! She currently has a nice nest egg in her savings, but is wondering,
where to allocate her money so it works best for her. Liz, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money
podcast. I'm so excited to talk to you today. So excited to talk to both of you as well.
Well, let's jump into it and look at your money snapshot. We have a salary of $2,800 a month
plus additional real estate income. So that's not real estate agent income. That's your
full-time job income. Additional real estate income, which as we all know is completely
variable subject to the whims of other people, which we have at $19,000 for last year and an additional
$500 a year for property management. So that's decent. We have monthly expenses that total $2,400 a month,
but those monthly expenses of $2,400 do not include your student loans at $218. They do not
include your real estate fees, which do need to be paid. But their business expenses, not
personal expenses, and that's $250 a month. And when you add those in, not including your real
estate income, that puts you into the red where you're spending $2,957, but you're only bringing
in $2,800. So if we look at where your money is going, I don't see anything really crazy.
Rent looks within normal 1550, utilities, 173, gas is $213 a month.
Groceries $2.60 a month.
Restaurants, $3.90 a month.
Subscriptions.
You've got like $45, $50 a month in subscriptions.
Jim, $32 a month.
Travel $250 a month.
Merchandise, random, et cetera, 333.
So I'm not seeing any wild expenses.
Investments, we have a Roth of $5,400, CEP IRA of $1100.
Whole Life Insurance at $5,700 is the net value.
you, we have a high yield savings account of $20,000 at 3.75% interest, yay, another cash savings account of $5,000, and another cash savings account of $14,000.
Debtes, we have $13,000 in student loans, $900 in a personal credit card, and $800 in a business credit card.
That seems reasonable.
And Liz, how old are you?
I'm 29.
And do you have kids?
Are you married?
kids and not married. My first question then is why do you have a life insurance policy?
But we'll talk about that later. And you are currently under contract or you have purchased this
house? I'm under contract. Okay. And when does the purchase finalize? So we haven't said a closing date
yet. The sellers are moving to Memphis, Tennessee. So they're getting things organized down
there. And then they should have a date to me. I'm hoping in the next week. But sometime in mid-July.
Can you give us a brief overview of your money story?
Yeah.
So I like to think my money story started when I was 16 and started in the workforce.
I was lucky to have family that helped me get a job at when I was 16.
Shout out to my brother Jason, who also loves a podcast.
And I just feel like, you know, some kids are given the opportunity to work for family members
and can take advantage of it.
and I was working eight-hour days in the summer in high school.
And I feel like my work ethic started there.
And I just grew from there.
After high school, I went off to college and was working, doing summer jobs in college.
And I really feel like I learned how to save when I was doing my job in college, which was
BevCarding.
So working for cash tips.
And I do have like a little hack if you don't mind.
me sharing. I would take my tips and like the $20 has like a little number and letter on it. And so every time I'd
get a $20 bill that had an E or a number nine in it, I would put put it in a piggy bank and save those
up for the end of the year. And then I would cash them in at the bank or put them into a savings account.
And I would save like probably $3,000 to $5,000 every summer just doing that. So that's like a little hack that I wanted to
share. That's where I learned how to save. I think watching friends in college blowing their money.
And I'm just like, I do not want to leave college and not have money to pay off student loans. And
yeah. So then I went to work for family. And I wasn't doing what I graduated with, which was marketing.
And so I think that kind of killed me for the marketing industry, taking a year off there. So when I went to
go back to, so I moved away and then went back to where I was going to settle down at and got a job
working for a company and I didn't love the job. I ended up getting let go. And that's when I was like,
you know, I think I want to do real estate. And so my family's like, you know, it's a really hard job.
It's a grind. Like you really have to be invested in it. And I'm just like, you know what, I want to do
it. And when I put my mind to something, I'm going to do it whether somebody tells me,
yes or no. I do try and weigh the pros and cons with everything. And I got my license and I,
it was a slow first year as it is for most people. But by year two, I was, I was doing pretty well.
And I just love it. I love being in that business. But I think that's kind of where like that
entrepreneur mentality comes into play. And I just love being my own boss and in doing real estate.
Awesome. How's it going as a real estate agent? And do you see yourself,
scaling that this year? So right now it's going, okay, I think I think that it will start to pick up
now that it's getting warmer. It's, I kind of took a little bit of a downturn when I moved from,
I was in central Minnesota and then I moved to Fargo, North Dakota. And so the three years of
business I built up in Minnesota, I basically had to start from scratch moving to North Dakota.
I was lucky to have clients right when I moved here. I think that just,
comes from confidence and knowing my my my business now that I've been in long enough
that people trust me. So my first summer here was was pretty good. I had four transactions
for somebody new in them in the market. Yeah, I was pretty proud myself. And then it got really
slow when winter came, but you know, you saw it with everybody. It wasn't just me. So it, it made me
feel okay knowing that I wasn't the only one that was slowing down in real estate? Okay, you move to
North Dakota. Yes. Here's a little fun fact. North Dakota's average annual temperature of the whole
year is 37 degrees in the northern part of the state and 43 degrees in the southern part of the state
because it gets so cold in the wintertime. I have used my real estate crystal ball to see that
you will always have a slowdown in the wintertime because it is not fun to go out and look at
houses when it is a thousand below zero. So I will say that this is something that you should be
planning for. And when you do have the four closings in the summer, you should maybe tuck some of
that money away for a rainy day and plan for very, very slow winter seasons. There's not just
not going to be a lot of activity during those incredibly cold times. So I can understand that.
And has it picked up at all in this spring? I have some people in the pipeline. I don't know if
interest rates are still freaking them out. I think people are still scared of that. Housing prices are
still high. But I'm not sure why it's not picking up. I thought it would pick up a lot faster
now that it's getting, now that we're above 40 degrees.
But I just think it's going to take me following up with some people.
And I've been trying to.
But, you know, I'm hoping that some people.
I love when people just all of a sudden, they're like, oh, we're making a move or we're
looking to buy or sell.
And it's, I swear that's how my business goes.
Like, it's a lot of communication, but it's a lot of people just deciding last minute that
they're ready to do it.
So I'm expecting that to happen, but it's still, it's been pretty cold here. And I still think some people are a little hesitant to the market.
I would agree. And I am going to show you a book called Sold by David Green, the host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast, sold every real estate agent's guide to building a profitable business. This is his first book. I think that skill was the next book. Skill, a top producing agent's guide to earning unlimited.
income and then scale, which is his third book. I don't even actually have it yet. It's all about
scaling your agent business so you turn a real estate agent job into a streamlined business that
gives you the freedom to work when you want. So I want to know if you have these books.
I don't. Okay. Well, you will in about a week. I'm going to have my publishing team send them to
you. David Green is amazing. He is a real estate agent that just
does not stop. And he took a moment to stop his real estate agent business to write these books for us
and share with you how you can go from regular old ho-hum agent to super producer very, very
quickly. Awesome. Thank you. Liz, how much, what are you doing for your day job outside of
the agent activities? So I work for a local promoter and we book comedy and concerts in the area. So I
book the shows for the Fargo-Morhead area. I don't do all of the booking, but our company does,
goes into a lot of the venues around here. Awesome. Is this full-time? What's the nature of this,
of this job? Because it's paying less than $3,000 a month. Is that right? Correct. So when I went in for
my interview, I went in with the intention to let them know, like, I do real estate. Like,
it is a priority in my life. This job, it's super cool. I love,
my, I love my job right now. But it was, it was a lot to accept the fact that I was going to enter back
into a nine to five. So I had that conversation right out of the date with within my interview.
I just said, you know, I want to have some flex here. I don't know what your, if you're butts in seats
seats for eight hours a day in front of your computer. But I just don't want that lifestyle. And so they've been
really flexible. Like if I have showings for the apartment that I do property management for,
they're like, yep, just, you know, work 20 more minutes a day to make up the time. Or they're really
flexible. Like if I have to go show a house, it's not a problem. So I really can work real estate
in really well with this job. I think the only thing is that it's probably taking away from my
marketing time where I could be promoting myself and doing my learning and going to events that would
help my business in real estate, just because it's time consuming working in eight to or nine to
five. Yeah. It's also, so it is essentially full time work. Yes. With flexible time,
flexible hours. Okay. And what's your hourly rate for this? I think. So I'd have to do the math,
but I'm making 42.5s. My salary is 42.5s. And then my, my, my paycheck.
checks every two weeks are somewhere around 1,600, and then after tax I'm at 1410.
Okay, great. And so I think that this is where Mindy was getting at the beginning of the show here
is that we have the salary minus your expenses is not enough to cover them on a recurring basis.
And what's alarming to me is you don't have an allotment for miscellaneous expenses. The big
car insurance payment, the unexpected, you know, health issue or whatever it is in there.
So what, but while that, I can observe that, the reality of your balance sheet, your net worth
statement is that you have 40 grand in cash and 14 and a half in debt.
So clearly you are managing to get ahead.
And this habit, you know, going back to a story of your high school days where you saved
every $20 bill with an IRA, that mindset has been preserved through this period and you are
coming out ahead. But it's saying that the side bets you're making are what's getting
ahead, not your fundamental position. Is that accurate? Yeah, I'd say so. I think I have a hard
time knowing where to put my money to make it work for me. And I do have like health insurance
to work now. So I'm not as worried like benefit wise, but I don't have a 401.
K through work. So that's still on me to figure out how I'm going to plan for retirement and all
that stuff. But yeah. Okay. So our situation is we've got a job that is barely getting us by or
neutral. And we've got the side income from the real estate agent business. And you're high on the
real estate agent business. That's what you want to do. You want to be you want to do that full time
and and invest in addition to that. And the question is how do we bridge that in a healthy way? And
which is jumping to my mind as one potential solution is going back to Mindy's seasonality comment.
I imagine that, yes, all real estate markets are seasonal. I have no trouble believing that Fargo,
North Dakota is particularly seasonal and that all of your business essentially is going to come
in a four to six month window and then transaction volume will drop off a cliff. Is that accurate
in terms of your understanding of the market? Yeah, I believe so. Even back in Minnesota, it just was really
really slow in the winter with people not wanting to move. But I feel like I feel like I'm pretty good
with managing my money and I can I can soul myself down in the winter months. Okay. Well, again,
my my instinct here is you have a seasonal business, go big and make that your full-time focus
potentially or consider making that your full-time focus either this year or next year in the summer
and get another job for the winter, right? Because you don't want to just be idle for for six months. And
there's nothing, like what activity sets are you going to do to grow your agent business
in September through March in Fargo, right?
Like I just, I mean, you can form relationships, all that kind of stuff.
But there's no way, I just don't, I just can't see a path to adding a ton of value to
customers in that time period on a full time basis for six months of the year.
So what are your thoughts on that?
Is there, are there any opportunities for seasonal work or or those jobs where you can earn a
decent but not great living for those six months and then make your hay while the sun shines literally
in summer months. I think there, so the nice thing about like the jobs that I've had in the past
are all summer seasonal. So that, I mean, that doesn't really work here because I'm looking for
supplemental income in the winter months. When I did move up here, I was working on a brewery and
bartending there, which which was nice and kept me, kept me afloat. But then when it got really slow,
I started to, I just don't like pulling out of savings to pay for bills and stuff if I don't have to.
So I started to get a little panicky there. And I'm like, you know, it'd be nice to to have a consistent,
uh, paycheck coming in every month. So that's kind of why I looked into to doing like a more of a
full time position. And it wasn't that I was searching actively for the job. It was, it popped up
and I'm like, wow, this looks super fun. So I ended up applying and it ended up working out for me. And
I figured, you know, I could balance both of the jobs out. But I think it's hard now to find the time
to do things like marketing or ads for myself in my personal life because I'm just burnt out.
I'm burnt out at the end of the day and I want to just relax.
Okay. You just said it's hard right now. In the winter, it's going to be super easy because
you've got nothing to do and nowhere to go. So that is something that I wanted to ask you about.
You studied marketing. What is your brand? What is your personal real estate brand? Have you thought
about that? Have you started marketing yourself? And during the winter months, that's the time to
plaster yourself everywhere. Liz knows Fargo. Liz sells Fargo. Liz is Fargo. However it is that you
are going to market yourself. I haven't thought about it, so don't use my ideas. But you need to
use your downtime to like get ahead of the marketing so that while you are busy, your marketing
is still running and you can preschedule all of your social media and start writing them now
and have blog posts that are going out later and, you know, focus. Who do you want to work with? Do you
want to work with primary, I'm sorry, first-time buyers or investors, or are you going to, like,
you can't be everything to everybody, but you can certainly target different portions of different,
you know, demographics to hit them with your marketing as well. And the wintertime when everybody's
hunkering down and just drinking beer at the brewery is when you can be out there cranking it out.
But also tell everybody that you know that you are a real estate agent. All those people at the
brewery, maybe they don't know that you're a real estate agent.
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So I actually had three of my clients last year come from the brewery.
I like to think that I'm pretty good about talking and like adding it to conversation.
I still do it, even though I'm full time on another job.
I still try and slide it in there into conversation like organically.
As far as like my brand, I'd like to think I'm kind of funny.
So I started trying to make TikToks and Instagram reels probably back before I started this job.
I was a little more consistent at it.
And I made some pretty funny videos if you ever want to check them out.
But I just, I wasn't, and I should have just kept going with it.
It's you don't see results right away.
And I know that.
But trying to think of content all the time.
I need to just be focused on it.
But I was just like not getting results.
And I didn't know if the content was reaching people that wanted to see it.
And so it was kind of hard for me.
But I know I've seen other people do it and it works for them.
So I can't give my, I can't get my hopes up.
I can get your hopes up for you.
I'll get your hopes up for me and say, Scott, what's that Pat Hybin book?
Seven steps to second figures.
Yeah, seven steps to seven figures.
That is a, in bigger pockets, just republish that.
So we'll send you that book too.
Seven Steps to Seven Figures as a real estate agent or something.
One of the tips that he suggests is to copy, like borrow from other people.
Don't borrow from the other Fargo agents, but borrow from somebody in Minnesota who was doing
really great videos and you think they're funny.
Rebrand them in your own face and your own style and your own way of talking.
And somebody in Florida is doing something awesome.
Do it for you too.
Hey, we don't have pools up here in Fargo, but we do have snubes.
Oh, look at what you can do in this house or like whatever it is you're doing.
It's social media, especially like you have a phone, right?
Everybody has a phone.
It's so cheap to do a good video to do your own promotion and people get used to seeing Liz's
beautiful face.
They will look for these videos again.
I'm sorry.
Scott just corrected me.
It was six steps to seven figures.
So that's even better.
You only have to do six things and you'll be making seven figures.
Six steps to seven figures.
That's right. And yeah, I think I got that wrong. But yeah, I think that's a good one.
Look, when I look at you, your situation and I zoom out strategically, it seems like the job is getting us by.
And my challenge to you would be, how do you find a way to get most of that benefit or all of that benefit or as close as you can to the benefit you're getting from your current full-time job in the winter months?
And then go all out so that every single day full-time, you can be focused on the real estate business.
which is the real prize in your financial position during the seasonal high period. And if you can
approach, if you can approach the year in a tail of two halves here, I think that could be the
secret to unlocking at least a chance at really strong income. And you have the savings and the
financial foundation to do that responsibly. You have $40,000 in cash and $15,000 in debt. That's a
good runway for you. So, you know, I just think it comes down to that. And you're, you're,
your problem is I don't have enough time for marketing. Well, this solves that problem. So you're
able to market and build this business in the times when people are thinking about selling their
properties. Yeah. And you guys are going to think I'm crazy because I, at the year before, so
2021, I did. I think I was right at like 43,000 that I made in real estate alone. And I mean,
then I had to pay taxes, but I was right around that 40,000 mark. So I'm like, I can do it. I can do it.
And that was while working a full-time job, right?
No, so I actually did.
I just did part-time when I made the $40,000 that year.
Got it.
Would you like to simultaneously pay no taxes and save for your retirement all at the same time?
Yes.
I would love that.
Okay, so here's what I do.
My real estate agent business does not pay Mindy Jensen.
It pays my LLC.
And then my LLC pays me, except all of my income then goes into my self-time.
directed solo 401k. So my, I think the contribution limit right now is 22,000, for the sake of math,
let's call it 20,000. I put all of that in and then my LLC, my company can match my income up to 25%.
So all of that money then gets matched, 25%. So that's an additional 5,000 plus change.
I'm not doing the math quickly enough. So now I've got 25,000 in there. The first 25,000,
of my commission is automatically no taxes because it's going into my 401k. I'm not doing a Roth.
I'm doing a regular. And the first 25,000, I'm not paying taxes on. So that's all of your income right now.
So as you start cranking it up more, 25% can go into their additional up to $54,000 that you're not
paying taxes on because it is matched through your LLC. And of course, you're going to want to talk to
your self-directed solo 401k provider just to make sure that I am giving you the right information,
but that is a homework assignment for you to look into the self-directed solo 401K.
I think they're fantastic, and I've been doing this for several years.
And I pay, I do pay taxes, but I live at a higher cost of living state where the properties
cost more.
I think that's a great tip for retirement accounts.
If you're going to work for yourself, you need to set up a system if you would like to
contribute to retirement accounts and take advantage of that, perhaps beyond the Roth. You might be
able to just use the Roth for the time being because you're still in relatively low income tax
bracket. And then when your real estate business takes off, you do exactly what Mindy just described
there and take advantage of the powerful retirement account options available to small business owners
or the self-employed. I do want to talk about, though, asset allocation overall because right now,
again, we talked about accumulation, which is the most important part in your journey. How do you
set up a system where you're generating a lot more income. So there's a bigger spread between
income and expenses. And you can actually get ahead on a consistent formulaic basis here. And I love the
approach of potentially thinking about marrying the two seasons here and figuring out a way to earn
a stable income in the winter and sky high income in the summers as an agent. Now, when we get to asset
allocation, right now you've chosen to allocate essentially all to cash, right? You have 40, you have what?
$50,000, $50, $50,000 to $55,000 in total assets.
And 40 of that is in cash alone.
Some of that's about to go into a house.
What are you thinking here?
And what's the strategy for asset allocation?
So I'm open to suggestions here.
That's why it's sitting in, that's why it's all sitting there as cash.
Because I, and I hate that it is because I know it can be doing more.
for me. I just am not sure where I can put it to, in the most logical way to, to keep,
keep building on it. I, it's, I, I am worried that now that I'm buying my personal home,
that I'm going to have a hard time trying to figure out how to, um, do a money or a house hack.
Um, I do have help with the down payments or we're doing 15% down and, uh, family's helping
with that. So my, my partner and I are doing 15% down and we are having family members help with
the down payment for that. So our cash reserves won't dry up completely, which is nice.
I think I'm coming, I'm going to try and come up with like 15K. But I've looked at my,
I've looked at doing like a, have you guys heard of the real estate investment trusts?
I hadn't heard of them. So I was I was kind of interested to get your input on that or an
ETF like a Vanguard account, stuff like that, like where I can be putting that cash to maybe
start growing for me, but I don't have to maybe do a lot with it. Where do you want to be in five
years? What do you want your portfolio to look like? It's a really good question. I want to be
on the right track to not having myself be in the red for sure. Like I want to I want to be
moving away to where I can like I can I want to be moving towards where I can be my own boss
and have the flexible schedule again and because we're going to you know I plan to hopefully
get married and have kids someday so having that flexible schedule and being around at home again
would be great so as my I would like to get my portfolio to have I'd like my money to be
working for me in like seven different locations, but I'm not afraid of like the market fluctuations.
I just want to know that I've put them in the right spots. And I don't have to touch them.
I don't want to touch any of my savings or investments, which I'm getting worried that I'm getting
to that point where I might have to be pulling from areas that I don't want to take from.
But yeah. When you say don't want to touch, do you mean you don't want to actively manage your investments
or you don't want to have to withdraw those investments?
I don't want to have to withdraw them.
Okay.
So real estate's not out of the picture.
You're willing to manage a property.
You just don't want to have to sell the property, right?
So you don't want to be forced to sell it and extract the equity.
Is that right?
Yeah.
I think also like I would like to put money, like invest money into something that can work for
me instead of like buying a property and managing it.
I don't have a problem doing that.
I just, I'm kind of at the.
the point where I'm worried that I'm not going to be able to do something like that now
that we're buying this house.
Okay.
So let's zoom out three to five years.
And I'm going to construct two portfolios and ask you which one feels better, right?
So one is you accumulate $15,000 to $25,000 per year.
That would be aggressive.
That would be a step up from where you are now.
It would be your agent business doing well and you finding a way to cover costs with the full-time
work or other job. Let's say $15,000 to $25,000 a year. Let's be generous and say, let's call,
$20,000 a year you're accumulating. So in five years, that's $100,000. Which would you prefer?
Would you rather, would you like to have a home with, you know, that's $300, $350,000 with
$75,000 in equity, a retirement account with $50,000 to $75,000, $10,000, $15,000 in an emergency fund,
and be in that position? Or would you rather have $100,000 to $150,000 in stocks, real estate investment
trust, REITs, which are also called REITs, and maybe a rental property? Which one of those sound,
you know, maybe, again, $10,000, $20,000 in cash. Which of those portfolios sounds better to you?
Right now at the second, the second one does, because I'm not afraid of like a little risk.
I don't have a lot to, I don't have a lot of obligation right now.
Like I'm not married.
I don't have kids.
I am going to be a homeowner.
So that's something to take into consideration.
But I think the other option just sounds more safe.
And I'm hoping in four to five years that I'm, that I have more, you know,
like I'm, my goals have been met like with having kids or being married and stuff like that.
Okay.
So then walk us.
So then the big, the big.
question here that's going to make the biggest difference in terms of the asset allocation decision
after the accumulation piece. It's how much income and how much money you make and how much you
spend is the biggest variable. The second biggest thing, though, is this housing decision.
What's the how much is the house going to be purchased for? What's it look like? What's its
potential from an exit standpoint? So it's a five-year-old home. It's, we got it at three,
343,000. That's pretty standard around here. Three bed, three bath. It's on probably 0.17 acre lot size.
It's they kept it in great shape. It's got, you know, newer appliances, stuff like that. But I did think a lot about like resale standpoint, looking at this as like a three to five year investment versus like a long term home for us. I feel like, I, I, I, I, I,
want it, I would love to rent it out when we move, if I'll have the cash to put down for another
home at that time and not have to use the equity from that home to buy a new one. I'm not sure.
But I would love to use that as a rental someday because it's a great area for it, you know,
for families that maybe can't buy a home and they want to rent something. So I looked at it strategically.
I just, if it was just me, I would have probably tried to do a house hack and bought like a duplex or something like that.
But I think with my partner taken into consideration, we were leaning more towards a single family home versus a duplex.
I didn't do much convincing on that part. And I don't know if he would have maybe been interested in doing something like that.
But yeah, so we ended up getting this house.
but what would it rent for oh man i could probably i could probably rent it for like
28 to 3 000 2800 to 3 000 a month okay that that's that's that's much better than i was
thinking um what what's the payment going to be on it we're going to be probably somewhere around
$2,400 okay so you actually have a uh you're pretty close it's not a great rental um with that
but it and it would probably be slightly negative but it's not way under it's not it's not right
at the same lines there even with today's interest rates. So I think you, I don't think this is going
to, I was setting up for this being a real, a real blow to your financial position. And it's still not
as good as a house hack. It's not as good as renting someplace that's cheaper. But, you know,
if you could get a place for 1,500 or 1,250, for example, and stashing that away. But you also got to
live your life and enjoy your life for the next five years, why you're doing this. So, but yes,
this will be the biggest hurdle to overcome.
You'll need to cover the expenses associated with your living costs with your income
and in conjunction with your partner and then apply those to another investment.
That could be a down payment on the next rental.
It could be to your stock portfolio.
It could be to something else.
So I think this, you know, my instinct is, okay, this is not helping you.
It's probably slowing you down a little bit,
but it's not a, it's not going to set you back, you know, two decades like, like most home purchases do for most people.
When they're, if they're attempting to get moved toward financial freedom.
What's your instinct on this, Mindy?
Well, I'm wondering if there's any opportunity to rent it out short term, either on an ongoing basis, like maybe once one weekend a month or when there's a big thing, a big event happening nearby.
you said it was a good area to rent long term. Is it a good area to rent short term? Could you rent it for
Christmas? If you're going to go back and visit your family for Christmas, could you rent it out at
Christmas time and maybe take a whole month of mortgage payment in, you know, off of your year of
expenses just by renting it out for, you know, over a specific time. I don't know a ton about Fargo
outside of the fact that it's really cold in the winter.
So maybe there's like seasonal festivals or something that would make it advantageous to leave
and rent it out on a short-term basis.
Is there you've got a two-car garage?
Could you rent storage to somebody in the two-car garage?
Could you park an RV on the side?
Could you use it to generate any income to kind of offset that mortgage payment?
And another thing that I was thinking of when I saw this,
your mortgage payment is going to be $2,400 at the current interest rates.
Yes, they keep talking about raising interest rates,
but I also hear them talking about them, the ethereal them,
talking about interest rates will eventually come back down.
If you are able to refinance, that'll make this an even better property.
One thing to note is that if you do refinance and do like a cash out
refinance, or even just refinance as an owner-occupant, you would have to live in the house
for another year to satisfy the terms of the loan. So just like tuck that in the back of your mind.
But one thing that gives me a little bit of pause is that your current living situation has your
rent payment at like $750. And this is going to increase that by about $500 a month if you're
going to be splitting it with your partner. So we talked about that because he makes more,
he makes a bigger consistent income than I do. So he's told me that he's willing to take on more of
the, like a 65, 45, basically. So I would pay about 45%. And then we could, we could talk about
like bills and if we want to split him down the middle. Right now he's paying for groceries.
So he's he's a great partner. He's he's really understanding of the situation. Do I want him to
have to do that forever? No, I think a partnership is a partnership and we shouldn't have to
be, you know, paying. We shouldn't, I like to think of it as a 50-50 thing, but it's nice to
have somebody who's understanding of the situation and willing to accommodate that. So the split
down the middle is probably not going to be 50-50. It's going to be more of like that 45-65 on our
mortgage payment. How long have you been with your partner? Two and a half years now.
Okay. I do think it would be best practice to just put this in writing and how that's going to
just shake out from the ownership perspective. And if you're having any trouble broaching that
conversation, which can be a little uncomfortable, at least to talk about it first, one way to put it
is, you're not really, we're not negotiating each other, but like, what if I get hit by a bus?
And now you got to deal with, you know, everyone's got that annoying family member that the other
person would then have to deal with. You know, you'd want this in writing to make sure that there
weren't any issues or whatever with that. So I would certainly, you know, and you need to work that out
and what that looks like and ask some questions about how does.
ownership and equity look in this property if there's not an even split payment. And again,
this doesn't have to be super complicated, but it would be good to get that in writing somewhere.
So there is an agreement in place. Yeah. Do you suggest like just doing it ourselves or is there
somewhere where you'd go to get something like that done? I would do some research on this online
and figure out some starting points about where you want to go. And then I'd call an attorney to
validate some of those. And this shouldn't be a thousand or $1,500 engagement. This should be
a few hundred dollars at most to make sure your eyes are dotted and T's are crossed.
Sweet. Yeah, I can do that. Yeah, I think that's a really good point. And Scott,
that was great advice about, you know, that annoying family member. That is a great point.
If something should happen, people are going to fight about money. And oh, this is this is a 50-50
split. Well, actually, we said 65-35.
Well, that's not what I understand it to be.
So having that document will protect you both.
You know, cousin Barb who you hate, well, she's in my will.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think that, you know, whatever, you don't have to go that far.
But I think that would be good.
And then one tip I'll just kind of give you, you should talk to your attorney about this,
but something I've used in the past is called the shotgun clause, which means that if for some reason, parties want to break up,
either you guys or someone, you know, in the, in the, um, one of the errors, someone who inherits
the estate. Um, the shotgun clause basically allows you to break the, break the, uh, agreement with a
very simple, uh, out. You just say, I'd like to, I'd like to end this. I will buy you out at
$343,000 dollar valuation, right? And then the person can either accept or they can, they can say,
nope, I'll buy you out at $343,000. Right.
So that means that parties are going to come to the table with a single good offer, single counter, accept or pull the trigger the shotgun and you're out.
And it's just a very, it can be a simple tool for something like this where you just know the rules of engagement going in.
So you might want to ask your attorney about that if that's something that you guys decide to pursue.
And you get, it may work in your situation.
Awesome.
And yeah, I noticed I was saying 45, 65.
My mouth is off there.
So thanks.
35, 60.
All right.
no worries on the math also the reet person that scott really likes is a i don't know how to pronounce
this jussi ascola j-u-s-s-s-sk-o-l-a from seeking alpha yeah i think that guy and i've read a few
of his pieces but i think that's so far from when i read he's he's got an interesting beat on the
market he's very bullish on on certain reits i'm i'm probably a little bit more skeptical
on commercial real estate right now um but that's a temporary thing over a long
period of time, REITs, real estate investment trusts, tend to perform worse than the stock market.
So, you know, an index fund of the stock market, for example. So I personally own no REITs.
I own no in real estate investment trusts. It doesn't mean that they're a bad investment
and that the future could be different. I just haven't liked what I've seen from historical
return perspective and instead prefer to put my money if I'm going to put it into public
securities into like a Vanguard index fund personally, but to each their own. So that would be a good
resource. He, again, I think that guy does a good job of analyzing a lot of real estate investment
trusts over at Seeking Alpha. Liz, what else can we help you with today? So I just have some
cash on hand and I am wondering where I can be putting that cash to be working for me or if I
shouldn't have it sitting around for a rainy day.
My personal preference here, I think your position is very strong from a balance sheet
perspective.
So what do we do with cash?
We put it to the highest and best use.
So first, what are the interest rates on your student loans?
They're in deferment, right?
Yeah, they're deferred right now.
Okay.
Let's say that they were above six or seven percent interest.
In that case, I would take once the deferment period ends, I might consider taking some of the cash
out of your position and paying those off, right? Why put them into your savings account,
earning 3% when you could just pay off the student loans at a higher interest rate? That seems
like a good use of cash. After that, there's a number that you will be comfortable with in terms
of the amount of cash you want sitting in your bank account and not being put to work. If you have a very
stable job that earns, that you've been at for 10 years and it's clearly not going anywhere,
you might have a very low savings balance, three months of cash on hand and put everything else
into investments and expect that to continue. If you're a real estate agent with very variable
interest rate, very variable income, you might want to have six months to a year of cash
accumulated. And that might be a good business decision, allowing you to focus on it on growing
your income rather than having to worry about cash flow management. That might provide really
good returns for you in a subtle way you can't see. If you wrote a book called Set for Life,
and would be very embarrassed to go broke, you might have a year and a half to two years of cash
on hand because you couldn't handle the jokes if that were to ever happen. So it just depends
on your personal preference, but I'd pick a number and then say everything above that number,
I'm then going to invest. And you may find that after this down payment on the house,
you're not there yet. And the best use of cash is either paying off these student loans
or just building up to what I would ballpark to be $25, $30,000 in cash, again, after the down payment
and maybe after the student loans are paid off.
I will tell you what I'm doing with my extra cash.
I am putting it into Vanguard.
I'm sorry, VTSAX and VTI when it comes up.
My husband really likes QQQQ, which is a super fancy ETF.
I don't pay attention when he talks about that.
And of course, he's always looking for more Tesla stock to buy.
So what is it that you like?
Are you comfortable with the Vanguard total stock market index fund?
Do you want to be?
My husband was a computer programmer.
He reads every tech report ever about everything.
We invest more on the tech side.
If that's not you, then maybe the total stock market.
index fund is better. That's the, like, the darling of the personal finance community is just
the total stock market index fund, set it and forget it. And there are other options available.
If you really like tech, maybe go for a tech fund. If you really like insurance or, you know,
maybe a REIT is the best. I would say do some research into, you know, what feels good to you.
there are some sectors that I don't invest in just because I either don't have any interest
or I don't want to support it. So just look at what you want to support and what you like.
But I was typing the like waiting for Scott to finish so I could say, oh yeah. And I would say,
you know, what does it feel comfortable having, how much feels comfortable having in your emergency
fund? You don't have to get rid of it all just because you're like, well, I have too much money in
cash. No, you have to be able to sleep at night. So how?
how much feels good being able to sleep at night.
I really relate to Alex's episode.
I don't know what episode number it is, but it's the fire by 45.
I feel like I'm in a somewhat similar position other than the fact that I don't have $120,000 of cash sitting around to like do like an assumable mortgage, which I wish I could have done.
But I liked that episode for relevance to kind of how I am right now.
Your position is very stable, very, very strong balance sheet.
It's just a matter of now setting up a grind, a several year accumulation process with this and having a plan for where you want to put those assets.
You have time to figure out the asset accumulation piece.
And this summer is about making it rain with the real estate business.
Yep.
And we're going to send you those books.
So you have a lot of reading to do.
Let us know what you think.
Awesome.
Sounds great.
Okay, Liz, thank you so much for your time today and we will talk to you soon.
Thank you guys for having me.
It was awesome chatting with you.
All right, Scott.
That was Liz.
And she has some interesting circumstances.
She's actually doing really well, despite her expenses being slightly more than her monthly income right now, which is due to her super fun tip of saving money and just her mental state of I'm not going to.
going to spend all the money that comes in. I still save, and that's, she's saving her real estate
agent income. Yeah, I think Liz is doing just fine here. And getting ahead involves thinking through
how do I solve this problem of wanting to be full time in real estate, which I, we imagine,
we could be wrong on this assumption, but we imagine there is no real full time for a real estate
agent in that particular area because transaction volume, we believe, is going to be so seasonal
in that region that she'll need to find other income.
So once she stabilizes that and gets a path to accumulation that is predictable
and or has big upside, then it's about having a plan for where she wants to go.
And that needs to be thought through a little bit more.
We can always, if you ask me for the answer, how should I build my portfolio?
I'm going to give you what I would want, which is not what you might want, right?
What I want is flexibility.
I want a financially flexible position with a big cash cushion, stable, spendable, passive cash flow,
and I'm willing to forego investments in retirement accounts, HSAs, a nice primary residence equity,
those types of things, a nice car, whatever, in order to get that, that may not be aligned with your values.
And that's where we always have to come back.
If you let me ground the situation, I'm going to give you what I want, which I think Liz needs
to do some more searching and thinking about what it is that she wants fundamentally,
her portfolio in what amount of time and the tradeoffs necessary to achieve that.
Scott, you missed the Fargo pun.
You would be willing to Fargo this.
Oh, oh, it was set up for me.
It was set up for you.
You get an F minus.
Also, that's right.
If you ask me what you should be investing in, I'm going to tell you what I'm investing in.
This is specific to my circumstances.
I'm not investing in bonds, even though I'm 50 years old. I'm investing in aggressive growth because
I'm looking for aggressive growth. All right, Scott, should we get out of here? Let's do it.
That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He is Scott Trench and I am Mindy Jensen
saying cheerio dingo. 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 Kaelin
Bennett, editing by Exodus Media, copywriting by Nate Weintraub. Lastly, a big thank you to
the Bigger Pockets team for making this show possible.
