Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin - U.S. Tax Code is an "Abomination" - Here's Tips To Navigate It with Former TurboTax CEO Bill Harris
Episode Date: August 15, 2024Nicole talks a lot about how investing can help you grow wealth… but you know how you keep wealth? Smart tax strategy. Sure, tax talk can feel stressful, but the more we can bring ourselves to fac...e it head-on, the more money we can keep in our pockets. Today, Nicole talks taxes with Bill Harris, who has held senior leadership positions at a handful of big fintech companies (PayPal, Intuit and TurboTax, Nirvana Money, One, and now Evergreen Money). In this episode, they talk about the tax tips and tricks the rich use— and you should too. Check out Bill's new fintech company, Evergreen, here: https://www.evergreenmoney.com/ All investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal. Brokerage services for US-listed, registered securities, options and bonds in a self-directed account are offered by Public Investing, Inc., member FINRA & SIPC. Public Investing offers a High-Yield Cash Account where funds from this account are automatically deposited into partner banks where they earn interest and are eligible for FDIC insurance; Public Investing is not a bank. Brokerage services for alternative assets are offered by Dalmore Group, LLC, member FINRA & SIPC. Brokerage services for treasury accounts offering 6-month T-Bills are offered by Jiko Securities, Inc., member FINRA & SIPC. Banking services are offered by Jiko Bank, a division of Mid-Central National Bank. Securities investments: Not FDIC Insured; No Bank Guarantee; May Lose Value. Brokerage services for Regulation A securities are offered through Dalmore Group, LLC, member FINRA & SIPC. Risks at public.com/disclosures/alts-risk-and-conflict-of-interest-disclosure See public.com/#disclosures-main for more information.
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One of the most stressful periods of my life was when I was in credit card debt.
I got to a point where I just knew that I had to get it under control for my financial future
and also for my mental health. We've all hit a point where we've realized it was time to make
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to $200 with no fees. If you're an OG listener, you know about my infamous $35 overdraft fee that
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I love hosting on Airbnb. It's a great way to bring in some extra cash,
but I totally get it that it might sound overwhelming to start or even too
complicated if, say, you want to put your summer home in Maine on Airbnb, but you live full time
in San Francisco and you can't go to Maine every time you need to change sheets for your guests
or something like that. If thoughts like these have been holding you back, I have great news for
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don't need a dictionary to understand. It's time for some money rehab.
I talk a lot about how investing can help you grow your wealth, but do you know how to keep your wealth? Taxes. I know, I'm sorry. We have an aversion to tax talk. Even I do, I'll admit it.
But the more we can bring ourselves to face it head on, the more money we can keep in our pocket.
Today, I'm talking taxes with Bill Harris, who has had senior leadership positions in all the big fintech companies.
Seriously, PayPal, Intuit, TurboTax, Nirvana Money, One, and now Evergreen Money, which you'll hear more about in this episode.
Today, we talk about tax tips and tricks that the rich use and you should too.
Bill Harris, welcome to Money Rehab.
Hey, it's a pleasure to be here. Thank you.
No, thank you. You are like the fintech king.
And I am honored, as always, to have financial royalty on this show.
You have held leadership roles at, count them, 11 major fintech companies.
All of them aim to address some problem with the financial system, which I love. But also,
I have to ask, who hurt you? Did you have some problems, some personal experience with the
financial system that made you feel like it's so broken? Well, I'll tell you what, I will talk
about the problem that is most on my mind, which is taxes. But first, I'll just tell you the secret
to this type of success. Start in the
right place at the right time. And I happen to be lucky enough to do that. And then get old.
Because I've been watching this merry-go-round for so darn long, it's now been, oh gosh,
four decades. And so with enough time, you get enough at-bats that some of them are bound to
work. And you say a merry-goats that some of them are bound to work.
And you say a merry-go-round. Have you seen trends come and go?
From the point of view of the business, running the business, yes. It goes back and forth between growth in the tech business, between growth and profits. And it always goes, the pendulum swings
way too far one way and then way too far the other. But that's in terms of the business of
creating a tech company. In terms of what people need, both investors and families, in terms of what they need,
there has been the yin and yang of some tremendous functionality, some tremendous point products.
PayPal is one that does a specific thing extremely well.
And that's all come as a result of applying technology to the
financial sector. The downside is that we've taken something that was already somewhat fragmented,
and we've fragmented it even more. So most people, the average American family, I think has in
excess of 20 financial accounts. And so their money is scattered all
over the place and you just can't keep track of it all. And if you can't keep track of it,
you won't understand your money. Therefore, you can't plan and make it better.
And you mentioned PayPal. You were co-founding CEO of PayPal. So many entrepreneurial heavyweights
came out of that era at PayPal. It's been called the PayPal mafia, of course, Elon and Peter Thiel.
What was it about PayPal that drew all these smart dudes together?
Well, first of all, let me just say I'm smart, but I'm not as smart as they are. I'm not in their
league. But what it was is a volatile mix. And if you're doing startups, and particularly in the
very early days of the internet, I mean, this was 1999. You have to be willing to take
big risks. Elon is an incredible risk taker, extremely bold. Peter as well, Max as well.
But here we were, this was the first time you could skittle money across the globe instantly
and with a push of a button. But even though we were purchased by eBay
a couple of years after we started,
we actually in some way created eBay
because it was before we started working with eBay,
they were effectively a hobby site
and there was no way you could buy anything
except by sending a paper check by mail.
And with PayPal, all of a sudden they had the instancy that
they could essentially turn themselves into the e-commerce giant that they are today.
But then PayPal spun off again, right? What happened?
Well, there are many pieces to that tale, but I'll just give you one high level thing.
pieces to that tale, but I'll just give you one high level thing. When we were PayPal,
we had 90% of our business with eBay. And we were just about then to go beyond that and try to become the electronic payment mechanism for the entire web. And we could have done that. We could
have gotten there before credit cards really made their way onto the web. When eBay purchased PayPal,
they turned inward and they looked at PayPal as being
the second revenue source when they did a transaction on eBay, as opposed to thinking
about the entire web and say, okay, now I want to be the way people pay online everywhere you go.
And so there was a couple of years of missed opportunity in that way.
Ultimately, a very good job was done.
But at a certain point, the eBay business was such a small portion of the PayPal business that it just made sense to move those two things apart.
And there's so many payments companies now.
I'm sure you guys could not have ever imagined every company
becoming a payment company.
Yes.
But that's another example.
It's another example of the fragmentation that everybody's facing.
So you've got a PayPal account, you've got a Venmo account, you've got a Cash App and
Zelle and who knows what.
And now with BNPL, you've also got an Affirm account and a Klarna account and the list
goes on. So you've got all these Affirm account and a Klarna account and the list goes on.
So you've got all these little pieces of money floating all over the landscape.
And it's, you know, how can anyone keep track?
I think Elon wants to turn X into a payments fintech company.
What do you think about that?
I wouldn't bet against Elon in anything he might really put his energy against.
Elon in anything he might really put his energy against, but that seems to be more like an after the fact rationale for buying X rather than what might have been the original plan.
Would you work with him again?
I don't think there's room enough in any large gymnasium for the two of us.
Oh, okay. Fair enough, fair enough. Another company, Bill,
that you were at the helm of was Intuit, which is, of course, the home of TurboTax,
Credit Karma, QuickBooks, and more. I'd love to talk more about the tax system. You mentioned
that that was a big part of what your passion is and what's broken about the financial system. So
here's a
top level question for you. Why the heck are taxes so complicated?
Well, it's a combination of politics and inertia. So the politics, obviously,
first of all, let's just say the U.S. tax code is an abomination and it is worse than every single
developed country on this planet. Far worse. And so how did that happen? It's a
series of political deals and combined with fiscal deals where individual legislators or groups
are trying to fit something for a special interest. Okay, that's not always bad by itself
because a special interest can be, for instance, people who have a mortgage.
And so now we have a mortgage deduction.
And all right, that's a special interest.
People with children.
Or with children.
So many things done with good intent.
But it ends up being a cripplingly complex system.
And the other thing, so it's first of all politics, but then it's secondly inertia, because once you layer all this stuff in, pulling it back
out is almost impossible. For instance, if we tried to get rid of the mortgage deduction,
there'd be a lot of people who would be pretty angry. When I was originally at TurboTax,
before we merged with Intuit,
we were taking the company public. And this was in the early to mid-90s, mid-90s. And we were
on the road at about the same time that Steve Forbes was running for president. And you may
not remember this, but Steve Forbes, his platform was postcard taxes. All you would do, you could file your taxes on a postcard.
You'd say, this is how much I earned times this percent.
This is what I owe you.
Send in the postcard.
And of course, it was a little nuts, but that's what everyone was talking about.
And so now here I am representing TurboTax trying to go public.
And I would have all of these meetings with investors. And sure
enough, somebody would raise their hand and they'd say, well, what if Steve is elected president and
we get the postcard taxes? And I would just say, if anyone in this room honestly believes that the
government of these United States is going to take a significant simplification to the United States tax code, please do not invest.
And of course, everyone invested. It's too deeply enmeshed with all the other financial systems
for there to be significant simplification. I know, but I do love the postcard idea,
at least like a greeting card or like I'd go for
a pamphlet or something. And also for a long time, right, Bill TurboTax worked with the IRS to
provide free tax return filings for Americans, which worked out because the IRS didn't even
have its own system. But then the IRS did make its own system, right? So do you think the government
even has time to own this? Well, I think it's a good thing. And the government is not capable of doing sophisticated
software, but there are many people who have very simple returns. And for very simple returns,
the IRS can certainly handle the software in order to make that happen smoothly. I view it
as something that as part of what the IRS needs to
do, which has become more customer centric. I mean, what's the first thing they should do?
Put enough people on the line so they can answer the phones. And then they will be able to service
the people who use the software. But all that's great. And this is an opportunity for public
private partnership. The IRS can do those kinds of simple things that make sense and are good benefits for everyone. But then for sophisticated situations, for even modestly affluent families, they really need something that is a full-blown tax package built by technologists.
Have you ever tried to call the IRS? Yes, I have. And I've been successful
in calling the number. I have not been successful at talking to a human. Same. But I tell you what,
if you, one of the questions you asked earlier on was, what was the problem that motivated much of
what I'm doing today? It was taxes. Because even relatively young, even single, it would take me two weekends
to get my taxes done. And remember, I'm a grumpy old man. And so this was a long time ago. It was
paper. Everything, your taxes, you would get paper forms. And with a pen, if you were bold,
paper forms and with a pen, if you were bold, you'd go do all the math with a little calculator on these forms. And it was tedious, literally two weekends a year. And so this was just about
the time that personal computers were becoming slightly more than a tinker toy. So the question
was, could you use an IBM PC or a Mac or something like that to do the taxes?
Turns out the answer was yes.
And that's when I joined a company called, well, it was called Chipsoft.
We made TurboTax.
And I wasn't the founder, but I was one of the very early employees.
And I ran TurboTax for 10 years, it was fascinating to see it grow because it went from essentially
an overblown calculator that you'd put your numbers in and it would do the math for you.
The big innovation was we went to the interview. And so now all we do is we ask people questions.
We never show them the tax form. We never show them a calculation. We just ask people questions. We never show them the tax form. We never show them a calculation. We just asked people questions and then they would push the button and we would do everything else
and print out a return or electronically file it. But seeing that evolution, seeing the evolution
from the simplest and most and crude mechanism, essentially a calculator approach to doing taxes to something that,
I won't call it AI, but an intelligent question and answer process to get through a relatively
complex financial requirement. It was magic. I have a feeling before then you were a pen guy.
I was. Did you ever make a mistake on your taxes? Did you ever get audited?
I've never been audited. I was audited once, but it was not because of mistake. It was just
my year. I was up for a California audit. It wasn't actually a federal audit. However,
have I made mistakes? Yes. And the typical mistake that I've made is losing track of accounts. And okay, someplace there's a 1099 out
there that I either missed or they didn't send it to me or who knows. And particularly a couple
decades ago when they were not delivered electronically, it was all in the mail.
So then I would under-report income because if I had missed a 1099, and I did that a couple of times and many, many people did, it goes back to the point of trying to decrease the fragmentation and bring people's money together so that they really know what's going on.
Let's continue to nerd out, if you don't mind, for tax nerd after my own heart. I also can't help but notice that you live in Miami. Is that for tax purposes? Actually, no. I came here for sunshine.
It turns out that I don't run on metabolism. I run on photosynthesis, but I love it out here.
It is a fabulous benefit that we have in Florida, no state taxes, as I'm sure you were referring to,
have in Florida, no state taxes, as I'm sure you were referring to. But you shouldn't decide where you're going to live based on taxes. You should live where you really want to live. And then,
you know, there are many ways if you do it right, there are many ways to save on taxes.
I'm really glad you mentioned that we did a full deep dive episode on this. And there are a lot of
states that get you in other ways.
So they're going to get money from you somehow. It might not be in the state taxes,
might be in the sales taxes, or might be in property or something else.
Yeah, it's called the tax burden. And in my book, there's a little section on tax burden by state,
and it is the combination of property tax, of sales tax, of income tax, etc.
And typically, when you look at one of the tax, of income tax, et cetera. And typically when you
look at one of the states where the income tax is zero, they get you in other ways.
Yes. And so I would love to double click on the tax planning that you think people
are missing out on that they should do, but they don't because they don't need to do. It's not a
necessity. Tax loss harvesting. Can we talk a little bit more about that?
We've alluded to it on the show, but it's a complicated idea.
So let's review.
How does tax loss harvesting work?
The concept is straightforward.
The concept is if you've got a lot of equities, a lot of stocks as an example, some of them
will be up and some of them will be down and hopefully more up than down.
But there will
always be losers. The great thing about stocks, capital gain stocks, is that you don't have to
realize the gain until you sell the stock and you have control over that. So if all you do is not
sell, you're not going to pay taxes this year or next year or the next year after that until you
sell. And that's particularly valuable for someone who has a buy and hold type of investment
philosophy. Okay, but sometimes you need to sell or you want to sell for whatever reason,
and you'd prefer not to have to pay tax on those gains today. Well, if you sell a winner, but also sell a loser,
then they offset each other and there's no tax. It's a fabulous thing. Capital gain stocks
are a fabulous vehicle because all of the gain, the timing of the gain is under your control. And you can do three things. You can
offset the gain so you can take it this year, offset it with losses. You can simply defer the
gain, don't sell this year, sell next year or whenever. Or if you play your cards right,
there are numerous strategies where eventually you can dispose of the asset with paying no
tax at all.
Oh, there are a number of ways.
Some of them are charitable.
If you set up a donor advised fund, which is another great thing to do, you can move
money into the donor advised funds.
You never pay a tax on the appreciation in the securities, and you also will get a charitable
deduction.
There's also stepped stepped-up basis at
death. There is also generational giving and a series of trusts, different types of strategies
that you could do there. But even if all you do is defer the gain for a year or more,
that's a great benefit in terms of your cash flow. But what if somebody says,
I am such a fabulous investor, I don't have any net losses to carry over to the next year. I only
have gains. Well, show me that investor. Yeah, fair. You make a really good point because if
you think about how the two different modalities for people to invest, one is I'm going to pick my stocks, I can beat
the market. And whether you're doing it yourself or whether you're hiring a stockbroker or a money
manager or a mutual fund that is actively trying to beat the market, that's one modality. The other
modality is an indexed approach where really what you're trying to do is get full diversification, low fees,
and that's very much the camp that I am in. If you go to something like Robinhood or one of the other retail trading apps, what you're going to do is, first of all, have more volatility.
You're increasing the volatility without increasing the expected return. And that's
called uncompensated risk. That means you're gambling a whole bunch, which you're going to
add on average at the end of the day, you're going to end up at about the same place you would have
had with a more diversified set of stocks, but you're going to have higher volatility,
which is the definition of risk. So first of all, you're taking unnecessary risk.
Second, if you're trading a lot, it's all short-term and short-term capital gain from
a tax point of view. And now all of a sudden, rather than being in the lower capital gain
tax brackets, which top out at 20% federal. You are now in ordinary income tax
brackets, which top out at 37% federal. And in addition, you not only pay higher tax on any gains
realized today, but you also cannot defer and you cannot eliminate. And so really what you take,
even if you are lucky enough to beat the market and academic studies say nobody can on a statistically
reliable basis, even if you happen to beat the market, you're probably going to suffer in the
tax side. So it doesn't make any many difference anyway. So you're alluding to something that you educate investors on, which I appreciate,
the reality that ETFs are usually more tax savvy than mutual funds.
Can you explain that?
I mean, mutual funds are basically trying to outperform their index.
So they're getting into a bunch of trades that give you short term cap gains problems.
If somebody is using a robo advisor, you mentioned Robinhood.
There are others. Should they be nervous about running into the same short term cap gains problems. If somebody is using a robo-advisor, you mentioned Robinhood, there are others. Should they be nervous about running into the same short-term cap gains problem?
Yeah, let's take one at a time, mutual fund, ETF, robo, and somebody like a trading app like
Robinhood. Hold on to your wallets. Money Rehab will be right back.
One of the most stressful periods of my life was when I was in credit card debt. I got
to a point where I just knew that I had to get it under control for my financial future and also for
my mental health. We've all hit a point where we've realized it was time to make some serious
money moves. So take control of your finances by using a Chime checking account with features like
no maintenance fees, fee-free overdraft up to $200, or getting paid up to two
days early with direct deposit. Learn more at Chime.com slash MNN. When you check out Chime,
you'll see that you can overdraft up to $200 with no fees. If you're an OG listener, you know about
my infamous $35 overdraft fee that I got from buying a $7 latte and how I am still very fired
up about it. If I had Chime back then, that wouldn't even be a
story. Make your fall finances a little greener by working toward your financial goals with Chime.
Open your account in just two minutes at Chime.com slash MNN. That's Chime.com slash MNN.
Chime. Feels like progress.
Banking services and debit card provided by the Bancorp Bank N.A. or Stride Bank N.A.
Members FDIC.
SpotMe eligibility requirements and overdraft limits apply.
Boosts are available to eligible Chime members enrolled in SpotMe and are subject to monthly limits.
Terms and conditions apply.
Go to Chime.com slash disclosures for details.
I love hosting on Airbnb.
It's a great way to bring in some extra cash.
But I totally get it that it might sound
overwhelming to start or even too complicated if, say, you want to put your summer home in Maine
on Airbnb, but you live full time in San Francisco and you can't go to Maine every time you need to
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Yeah, let's take one time mutual fund ETF robo and somebody like a
trading app like Robinhood mutual funds. Yes, they trade frequently, not as frequently as people on
Robinhood, but they trade frequently and therefore they're generating short term capital gains.
They don't care because they are not measured on their after tax performance. They are only
measured on their pre-tax performance. And are only measured on their pre-tax performance.
And there are all sorts of reasons they'll trade.
But what they're doing is passing to their investors a significant amount of short-term
gain, and short-term gain that the investor has no ability to time.
So yes, it's tax inefficient. ETFs are better. I wouldn't say
they're tax advantaged because you're not doing tax loss harvesting and other techniques
with a simple ETF, but they're at least tax neutral. Ultimately, what you'd want to be doing,
although it's complicated to actually implement, ultimately, you want to take a full
diversified portfolio of stocks that would perhaps mimic an ETF, but own the stocks individually so
that then you could tax loss harvest, defer, offset, and eliminate. So buy 500 of the S&P 500 individual stocks? Well, obviously that's impractical for anyone but an institutional investor today.
But that is actually what I'm building at Evergreen, an automated ability for anyone
to take, for instance, the S&P 500 and buy all of those stocks instead of a single ETF and then have
significant tax advantages, the same pre-tax return, but a significantly better after-tax return.
I want to dig more into Evergreen in a moment, but you mentioned this hot take that you have
that investors should focus almost exclusively on after-tax returns
and not pre-tax returns. Can you explain why this is an issue and also define what after-tax
returns would be comparatively? Sure. Well, first of all, it's easy. Pre-tax returns means what you
make before the government takes their share. After-tax returns is how much is left
after you pay your taxes. And so why should people care about after-tax returns? Because that's the
only thing that goes into their pocket. And so that's the objective. I mean, you don't really
care about anything else. We care about net at the end of the day, how much money do I have to
live my life? The financial services world does not ever talk about that. All they talk about
is pre-tax return. First of all, they don't have the products. They don't have the technology or
the products to really address each individual person's tax situation. And it is idiosyncratic.
each individual person's tax situation, and it is idiosyncratic, and they don't have the knowledge of how to operate a tax-aware portfolio. So nobody out there is talking about tax. That's
why I think it's so important. In fact, I would argue that tax is the single most important driver
of investment performance outside of the market itself. So if you're an investor and you're
looking at mutual fund ticker symbol, let's say MNN, and MNN trades 50 times a year, but you
are in the top tax bracket and you don't sell for 50 more years compared to another person who might sell the very
next year and might be in a different tax bracket.
It's really hard to quantify that because of all of those individual circumstances.
So how should somebody think about taxes when there's not the mechanism to tell you exactly
how much you're going to get based on after-tax returns because you're only seeing pre-tax
stats to account for what you'll only seeing pre-tax stats
to account for what you'll actually get net-net? Yeah. Well, it's a very good question. And once
again, I'll say that's a question that I'm attempting to solve at Evergreen. However,
what could you do today? I think it's not a bad strategy today to go in highly diversified, low-cost ETFs. At least that keeps
you diversified and safe with low fees. In terms of tax optimization, you'd end up perhaps taking
a look at the end of the year in December and seeing whether there are any losses to be harvested
at that point. That's not a terribly thorough approach, but at least it would get you a couple
of big chunks at the end of the year. But even if all you've got is ETFs, you can be
relatively smart in terms of what funds you put in your taxable accounts and what you put in your
tax deferred accounts. That's what I also want to ask you about because you have this other hot
take bill. You say that many people think that because retirement accounts have a long time horizon,
they should put their longer term stocks in 401ks or IRAs and their shorter term savings like CDs
or bonds in taxable accounts. You say that this whole thing is backward. Why?
Yes. Well, for tax reasons. Because first of all, things like cash or bonds, anything fixed income,
they generate interest. Interest is taxed at the highest ordinary income rates. Dividends and
long-term capital gains are at capital gains rates. So that's the starting point. And then
in addition, with the capital gain, you can decide when to sell it and when to realize the gain.
What does that mean? Those which have the smaller taxes, those assets should go in the taxable
account because that's where you have to pay the tax. On the fixed income side, and this applies
to any kind of cash or interest bearing assets you've got,
including your bank account, those are going to be taxed at the highest rate. So put that into
your tax deferred or tax exempt accounts. So when somebody is signing up for a 401k
and the options are through their employer, they should look for more fixed income heavy
options or if they have an IRA that they're doing self-directed.
Yes. And I would say that if they have their own investment someplace else,
if the 401k is the only thing you've got, then by all means, have a balanced portfolio of stocks and bonds in the 401k.
However, if you've got significant assets in a taxable brokerage account and you have the 401k,
yes, put the fixed income in the 401k and the capital gain assets in the brokerage account.
That makes sense, except for the idea that CDs are typically
bank products. So these would be like brokered CDs or something?
This would be in a 401k. It's going to typically be a money market fund or a bond ETF.
Okay. Makes sense. So after all of this, all these major, major fintechs, Bill,
why did you decide to start your own new venture, Evergreen?
It's an opportunity for me to pull together things that I've done over the course of my
career, starting with taxes at TurboTax and other places, also personal capital.
I started a digital wealth management firm that we went from zero to $23 billion of assets.
We were the ninth largest RIA, registered investment advisor in the country. So I've got the investment piece,
the tax piece. I also started a neobank, something along the lines of Chime,
which we eventually sold to Walmart and it now has millions of customers.
So the banking side, the investing side, and the tax side,
at Evergreen, we're trying to merge them all together. So it's one place you can keep all of your money and then optimize it automatically. Your short-term money, mid-term money, long-term
money, optimized across all of those, the banking and the investment landscape and everything optimized from a tax point of view.
And I can tell you about the initial product. The initial product is something I'm pretty
excited about. What we're doing is building a thing called Liquid Treasuries. And what is
Liquid Treasuries? It's just a checking account. And there has been zero innovation in checking
accounts for decades. All we do is we take the balance every day and we invest it in treasury
bills. Now, all of a sudden, what you have is a checking account that is now not earning 0.01%, which is what you'll get at Chase or Wells Fargo, 0.01%.
Now, all of a sudden, you're getting treasury bill yields, which currently are about 5.3%.
So a huge increase in the interest income.
In addition, because they are treasury bills, if you are a high-income taxpayer in a high-tax state, like California, where the top rate is 13.3%.
Don't remind me.
Well, all right.
Sorry.
We feel for you.
Thanks.
Because treasury bills are exempt from state and local taxes, in this case that we just talked about, your tax equivalent yield on 5.3%, you would be earning more like 6.5% to the equivalent of 6.5% in a regular bank account. And so it's just a huge, the combination of being able to get the higher
rate and then get the tax savings and put that all in a checking account with a debit card and
with ACH and wires and the whole thing. It's a huge thing we're doing for people. And let me just tell you how big the problem is. Americans today are losing $283 million a day in their checking accounts.
And that's because they're currently getting next to nothing.
Rates today are about 5%, give or take.
If all the money in a checking account, in every checking account in the country, was making 5%, that would be $283 million a day, or $1.03 billion a year of additional income for people just in their checking account, just in their bank account.
So there's nearly a $300 million opportunity cost daily.
Every day. Every day. And the average checking account has about $16,000 in it.
People who are more affluent, they typically have higher balances. And so what you're talking about is
potentially thousands of dollars of additional income just in your checking account alone.
And how the advantage compared to a high yield savings account would be the tax component?
Well, no more than that. So first of all, yes, if you're smart today,
what you've got is you've got your money at Wells and in checking, and then you're putting some of
it into online high yield savings at, let's say, Marcus. All right. Well, first of all,
Marcus is giving you 4.4%. Treasury bills are at 5.3. Marcus is 100% taxable. Treasury bills are at 5.3. Marcus is 100% taxable.
Treasury bills are tax exempt at the state level.
And then in addition, and the thing that people don't think about, I've got my money sitting
in a high yield savings account, Marcus, whatever it is.
I'm making 4.4%.
That's great.
Oops, you've got half your money still sitting over in the checking
account and you need it over there in order to pay the bills. And so you're not really making
4.4, you're making 2.2 on your cash. So here's a way to make not 2.2, but rather 5.3 and depending upon your tax situation, as much as 6.5.
Very cool. And why do you think all of these fintech companies, some that you've worked with,
others that you haven't, have not been as tax optimized as you're now making evergreen?
Is it because it's, as we started, too complicated?
Well, it's first of all, conceptualization. And it's very hard to take,
reconceptualize a commodity product that has been around for a long time.
And then secondly, yes, this is some complex technology to build.
But we've got the team and we built it.
And just to be clear, like stepping back, you don't suggest for people to make,
you alluded to it with the state you live in, to make decisions based on what's most tax
advantageous. Like I often say, you know, when people are thinking about buying a house and they're like, oh, you can get a deduction. And I say, don't let the tax tail wag the house dog or whatever the
metaphor is. Right. I mean, I think a lot of people don't think about taxes on one end of
the spectrum. And on the other end, they make huge decisions, capital intensive decisions
because of a tax advantage. That makes no sense either.
I agree absolutely and in both ends of the spectrum. What you want to make, and most people
don't, you want to make your financial decisions fully informed by the tax impact. You want to make
your life decisions based on how you want to live.
And don't let money get in the way of deciding that.
Do you want a family?
Do you want to live in a city or in the country?
Those kinds of things.
Do you want to live with your family?
Do you want to be away from your family?
Those kinds of things should drive how you live your life.
And then get a really smart tax person.
Yes. And then I volunteer to help you with the taxes.
Listen, don't make promises you can't keep, Bill, because we're going to have a lot of listeners giving you a call.
Bill, to close, we ask all of our guests for one tip listeners can take straight to the bank. It could be anything, a tip on budgeting, saving, investing, tax management,
anything we didn't talk about yet today.
What's yours?
Well, I'll go back to what I said before.
If you want a tip that you can take straight to the bank, why don't you start at the bank?
Take a look at the cash sitting in your bank account.
You are paying, if you are a high income taxpayer in a high tax state,
you are paying 50% or more in taxes.
And nobody gets that.
They don't think they're paying taxes on the money they're earning in the bank account because rates have been so low for so long that you just, you never see it.
But in fact, now that rates are high and you've got a bunch of cash sitting in a bank account, pay attention to that one.
You're making nothing today and you could walk away with $1,000, $2,000, $3,000 of, in fact, free money.
Money Rehab is a production of Money News Network.
I'm your host, Nicole Lappin.
Money Rehab's executive producer is Morgan Lavoie. Our researcher is Emily Holmes.
Do you need some money rehab? And let's be honest, we all do. So email us your money questions,
moneyrehab at moneynewsnetwork.com to potentially have your questions answered on the show or even have a one-on-one intervention with me. And follow us on Instagram at Money News and TikTok
at Money News Network
for exclusive video content. And lastly, thank you. No, seriously, thank you. Thank you for
listening and for investing in yourself, which is the most important investment you can make. Thank you.