PBD Podcast - Barry Habib | PBD Podcast | EP 71

Episode Date: June 29, 2021

During the episode 71 of the PBD Podcast Patrick Bet-David, Adam Sosnick and guest Barry Habib sit down to talk about Peter Thiel's Roth IRA fortune, real estate, the housing market and more!  Wa...tch the full episode: https://youtu.be/DPLeAwhb04M --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 We're live episode number 71 David yes, sir 71 with Adam sauce and Barry Habbie Barry. This is your first time here. This is my maiden voyage. Yes. Yes. By the way, if you don't know Barry, Barry is a three-time crystal ball winner with Zillow and a former lead producer of Rock of Ages, the movie Rock of Ages, which have spoken about on the podcast multiple times, with Tom Cruise. There was a Broadway show which you led, but you were also in the movie. I was the rocker.
Starting point is 00:00:28 So tell us the whole story. Tell us your background a little bit. So, from my experiences on CNBC, I was on CNBC for a long, long time. And someone liked, I guess either my look or my voice and they said, hey, would you like to be a movie? I'm like, yeah, I would love to be in a movie. So I had no clue that it was going to be dressed up in this pastel outfit as Colonel Kaboom in this kids movie, right?
Starting point is 00:00:49 So, but I networked and you know, that's how things happen and wound up being a few other movies. I wound up being nine movies and one of the movies I was in is a great movie. It's called Barry Monday. I actually play the, I play the doctor and I made the trailer in the movie Barry Monday. It was a really good movie. And so the guy who directed it in a road is Chris Lorenzo. So we became friendly, showed me the script of A.J.'s four other guys of myself. We took a shot, took it off Broadway, people went nuts
Starting point is 00:01:15 for it. We said, that's really get stupid and put it on Broadway. And good thing I was ignorant about how risky it is. But we did, it was a big success. What was bigger? The movie or Broadway? So the movie I wasn't really crazy about. You were in it.
Starting point is 00:01:28 Well, maybe that's the reason. But now that. Let's get some IMDB up here. Kyle, let's get on it. So I wasn't crazy about the movie, because it made a lot of changes. The theatrical experience was absolutely incredible. So we went, we were 27 long as we were on the show on Broadway.
Starting point is 00:01:42 We stopped. And then what happened was we wound up going back on off Broadway because it was a little easier, no unions, easier overhead, and then COVID hit. So we've been shut down since then. Oh, so you were doing it all the way up until COVID? Yeah. The Broadway show.
Starting point is 00:02:01 Some of the movies I was in, yeah. Where should we look at here, Barry? Give us a little tour. I really like Barry Monday. You know, this is not it the movies I was in. Yeah, yeah. Where should we look at here, Barry? Give us a little tour. I really like Barry Monday. You know, this is not it. Look, I'm Barry Monday. I'm trying to see which movie that was Barry Monday. Oh, put the trailer on for Barry.
Starting point is 00:02:12 We cannot, we cannot because it'll flag us. So Barry Monday, the Barry Monday wakes up one and attacks you realize that he's missing his family jewels to make sure he makes a move. I'm the doctor who removed him. Oh, wow. He learns this phasing of paternity lawsuit filed by a woman he can't remember having sex with. I mean, it's a very based on a true story on the same thing,
Starting point is 00:02:34 right? It must be. Yeah, it must be. Okay, so how does that go with real estate? How do you going to become a real estate expert? So you know, it's interesting because if you have a lot of different business interests that are different, like with anything else,
Starting point is 00:02:48 there are certain things that hold true regardless of the industry. You just gotta learn the industry. If you meet somebody and they speak six different languages, like wow, they're really smart, but when it comes to different vocations, people say, wow, no, you can't only pigeonhole you in one, you don't have to.
Starting point is 00:03:00 You can have very many different business expertise. Now, you run businesses, don't you? Because the way we got introduced to each other, I got to call from Greg Shere. Yes. Greg says, there's a guy that wants to talk to you. He says, look up this guy. I look him up because he apparently had investors
Starting point is 00:03:17 or some business dealings he had with you. Things highly of you. Then you and I get on a phone together. Then we had a meeting together, Louis Bosse, with a woman that showed up with us where your three-year-old son floated with. My three-year-old grandson. Three-year-old grandson floated with us.
Starting point is 00:03:31 Yeah, you're a grand pappy? I'm a two-time grand pappy. My daughter Nicole just had baby Korean, and named after my mother just a couple of days ago. Yeah, just a couple of days ago. So you said this is your second grand child? My second grand child. Yeah, cool.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Yes, yes. Well, you know, his last your second- My second grandchild. Yeah, cool. Yes, yes. Well, you know, his last name is Habib. You know, Habibi. You know what Habibi means. I'm sure you get this all the time. Do you know what that means? Habibi.
Starting point is 00:03:53 My dear. My dear. My dear, my love. Love, friend. Habibi. Here you are. Habibi. Here's a song with Habibi.
Starting point is 00:03:59 Yeah. Every Saturday night, I'm out in the club. You live? Habibi. Meeting our meaning girls. Adam meeting our meaning girls. That's actually not out in the club. You live? I saw this evening. Meeting girls. Adam meeting our meeting girls. That's actually not far off on the trip. Our goal today is to get smarter
Starting point is 00:04:10 when it comes on to real estate today. Should I buy a house today? Should I refinance? Does Janet Yellen know what she's talking about? Is she the expert? Is howl the experts? Who's controlling the bubble? Who's influencing the bubble?
Starting point is 00:04:23 You know, maybe I ought to wait for interest rates to come down down because I heard rates went up a little bit. You know, maybe I should wait six more months. Maybe things are going to go back to what he used to be. All of these things, we got the answers. He's going to reveal it throughout the show. We're going to see what Barry has to teach us about that. We got a lot of different topics to get into a ton of different topics to get into. By the way, how does somebody get a crystal ball award with Zilla? How does that happen? Most accurate real estate for they get 150 of the top economists. And I guess I somehow fell into that category.
Starting point is 00:04:52 And you each give your forecast and your predictions. And as it turns out, three times that was the most accurate. And also in the top 10, the last five years, but 17, 19 and 20 was the most accurate. Now how did it come out? How do they judge actors? Yeah, that's a good question. How do you give your forecast and whatever the actual appreciation levels were based upon your, you know, who's closest to getting the correct appreciation?
Starting point is 00:05:15 From a national average? From a national where? Yes, national. And what's your formula? How do you come about? So, you know, so my son Dan really helps out a lot. He's my right hand person. And so we look at this together, but I really have a lot of credit to the people that, so I son Dan really helps out a lot. He's my right hand person and so we look at this together
Starting point is 00:05:25 But I really have a lot of credit to the people that so I'm blessed to be a professional speaker So I go out and I meet with my audience is typically real estate agents and mortgage professionals all around the country and You get feedback from them and so I learn and get a lot of feedback before when data comes out It's old already by the time you see it right? But if you talk to somebody you meet them and, and you press the flash, they're telling you what's going on right now. So we were able to see trends and develop algorithms based upon that.
Starting point is 00:05:51 For casting. So one is going out there and shaking hands. And you hear what people are saying, who are selling out there, they're meeting with clients on a daily basis, and then by the time you get the article that's written, it's already too late, because somebody knew about it 24 hours before they wrote it.
Starting point is 00:06:05 So having said that. Not only that, but the data is old, because a lot of times it's based on closings, which means this is market conditions three months. The data we read in an article, it's already too old. Got it. Well, let's see what you got to say about some of these things here that's going to be written.
Starting point is 00:06:18 And if you've got any lottery predictions of some numbers since you got the crystal ball on your side, we'd all love to know. I highly doubt we're going to know that. Anytime some folks, if you're watching this, you got the crystal ball on your side. We'd all love to know. I highly doubt we're gonna know that. Anytime some folks, if you're watching this, you got questions about real estate. Post your questions on Twitter, hashtag PBD podcast, go on Twitter,
Starting point is 00:06:35 post your questions with hashtag PBD podcast regarding real estate. We'll see what Barry has to do with that. I tracked the questions going on on Twitter and we'll come to some of you guys regarding your questions. But prior to going into the realistic questions, your favorite topic is what Peter Theo recently did. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:51 So let's go to page three. Peter Theo. Before we get started, I feel like we should make an announcement. What's that? I mean, we're going to get right into business. I get it. But you had a pretty big damn weekend. I mean, I just, I skip over what just happened, Pat.
Starting point is 00:07:04 I had a Brooklyn Ivy beddavit that a lot. That's what you did. Well, Jen had a baby over what just happened, Pat. I had a Brooklyn Ivy beddavit. That's what you did. Well, Jen had the baby. On, on, she did. And she, by the way, it's shot out to Jen, man. Here's the thing. So June 26 is our anniversary. It's 12 years we've been married.
Starting point is 00:07:17 At 5.39 in the morning, on your anniversary. Brooklyn is born on, on the anniversary. Yes. And so we go into the hospital eight o'clock at night. She goes into labor, boom, 5.39 a morning. Obviously, the last thing you want is labor to go from midnight, one o'clock to a clock
Starting point is 00:07:33 because you're not going out. And you have no sleep and you go into it and then baby comes and you gotta go to a few more hours. And then finally, she gets some rest. Couple hours after having a baby, Jen gets up and walks around. She's going to the bathroom, coming back. Just an absolute trooper.
Starting point is 00:07:46 Fourth baby that she had natural, no pitosa, no epidural, nothing. None of it. Not a single thing. That's insane. Yeah, that's absolutely insane. She took nothing. Four, she's a G.
Starting point is 00:07:56 She's a G at the highest level. And then 35 hours later, she came home. Yeah. And it was so cool bringing the baby home. She, I put the Brooklyn in the car and Dylan. I saw the pop on Tico. Seeing the kid reacting. It was so cool to see each of their reactions. Tico's reaction was very interesting. When you looked at his eyes, Dylan was ecstatic. Yes. Santa wanted to play with her, you know, and miss mommy so much, but
Starting point is 00:08:21 it was a great experience. Pop on the back seat was like, uh, done this before. On cloud night. But here's the thing that we talked about. Popped on the back seat was like, uh, done this before. On cloud nine. But here's the thing that we talked about. I said, you know, babe, moving forward, wherever we go to dinner, we got to take two cars because it's officially party of eight, minimal. It's the four kids. It's me, Jen, Melva and Papa.
Starting point is 00:08:36 That's eight going to dinner. We have a problem. Table four eight. Everywhere we go, it's a minimum. If you join us, it's nine. If Mario joined us, 10. If you join, he like, he's gonna be there. Mario's gonna be there, but it's a minimum of table of eight. Everywhere we go, it's a minimum. If you join us, it's not. If Mario joined us, 10. If you join, you're going to be there. Mario's going to be there, but it's a minimum of table of eight, but we're excited. We're excited to have four kids here now. And if
Starting point is 00:08:53 we had it our way, we had it my way, you know, if we were 10 years younger, we'd have 10 more kids, but you know, we're limited at four. Well, I remember when you had three and you were guys were kind of talking about a fourth and Jen was like I don't know about Believe it or not the idea of wanting to have a fourth was brought up by Jen Jen eventually not mine was five then we settled on three Okay, we didn't talk about it and Jen a year ago brought it up saying babe I think I want to have four. Yeah, I said why she says I want Santa to have a baby sister So the big god listen to the prayer and we have a baby sister for Santa There you go. So Santa has somebody to play with now. I know I know we don't want to obviously spend too much time on this
Starting point is 00:09:31 But what a world win last six months you've had. I mean can we touch on that for a second? You're living in Dallas. Yeah, you say all right. We're moving to South Florida last minute and a month like literally How much time did we tell you guys that we move moving the Florida? I don't know like 48 hours a time What was it when we said we're moving like how much time did you actually have? I mean from the time I was told that we were moving I was back in Norway I think there was a month and eight days till I was on the way to Florida there you go four weeks and we gave that additional week however like it just kind of making a little bit easier for you
Starting point is 00:10:05 Get a South Florida Jen's pregnant you're moving. Yeah, and you rent that house we rent it's not forget 40 people have COVID Yeah, that's not forget the International yeah, so let's not forget Let's not forget that everybody everything in a move to the office was made by Mario and Mickey and you and I don't know Who was Eric couple people were helping out yet said they move here and to move to the office was made by Mario and Mickey and you and I don't know who it was. Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric,
Starting point is 00:10:27 Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, Eric, to be making an offer on. And in meanwhile, we've hired four new C-suite executives with insurance at PHP. We're up to now 35 employees here full time with value-taming.
Starting point is 00:10:51 So we got a lot of stuff going on. It's been a pretty busy. There's people walking around that I have no, I don't know, they, I don't know, they are. That's the idea of growing a company, though, that's what I love about it. So you got two companies that have grown and we got a lot of good things going on.
Starting point is 00:11:01 So, but even at the same time, right now, I probably have, I've never had a time in my life where we have this many big projects pending at the same time. Ever, we have the Vault Conference coming up, which we're about to announce to new speakers. One of the speakers we just got, this is a guy we've been trying to get for the last three years.
Starting point is 00:11:19 The guy has nothing to do with business, but he has everything to do with business. Everything to do with business, I can't wait to, he's a goat, he's the greatest of all time in his space. We'll announce that in the admiral. I can't tell you who he is, but we'll announce in next week. We have another person that's coming that's gonna have to do with data analytics,
Starting point is 00:11:35 the best in his world when it comes on to data analytics. Both of those guys will be at our event at the vault. I don't have the typical lineup of speakers that people have at their events. I don't go after social media influencers. I like data people. I like business people to be at the event. We're gonna have Vals gonna be absolutely
Starting point is 00:11:50 out of this world type of an event. September 1st. September 1st in my amy. I'm gonna have a yacht event afterwards a party. Maybe even an after party at the house, possibly for like 50 people will do a low key type of a party at the house. And then we got things going out.
Starting point is 00:12:03 Finally, I worked on a fiction book for five years, and eventually I just said it aside. It's a hundred seven thousand words. That's eventually, that's now coming to life. And we're putting some, we're making some big moves with this book when it comes out. I can't wait. People are going to read the book. They're going to think I'm absolutely crazy what's on my mind, but it is what it is. I've been holding off on going up, going live with this book for a while, I think it's time. We got a lot of projects going on. So anyways, long story short, lots moving right now. Two of the biggest announcements will be made at the end of the vault, which people are gonna have to, they'll see what project we got going at. I'm going to Fort Worth tomorrow for a shotgun flight, one day flight that I'm going to come
Starting point is 00:12:44 back, I'm meeting with some of the most powerful investment bankers in Fort Worth for the entire day. It's gonna be big in Fort Worth like Oil County. And then coming back, so we got big things cooking. Big things cooking. So you don't really have much going on right now. Things are pretty chill and BBD's life.
Starting point is 00:12:58 No big deal. I can't see myself with that. No, that's a boring life. You know, you know it. That's a boring life to play small. Nothing, nothing about what we got. And by the way, here's one thing, like, somebody asked me question the other day, they said, Pat,
Starting point is 00:13:11 what is the driver? What is the biggest driver? People don't realize what the driver, we tell him we're making history and all that other stuff. I'll tell you today what the biggest driver is, like what my biggest concern today is. We escaped Iran because in Iran, we didn't have any voice. You couldn't say anything.
Starting point is 00:13:25 You have to, like imagine being quiet your entire life because you're afraid. If you got forbidden, you tell anybody what your faith is, you're going to jail. God forbid you tell anybody what your religion is, your parents are going to get in God. So you have to be just be silenced your entire life. I cannot stand being silenced with opinions and thoughts that we have. I can't stand it. So the next phase, next 20 years is to be able to give a platform to those who have been silenced in a complete different way.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Where do you have some opinions, respectful opinions? You have some thoughts, you have some ideas. There's a little bit of controversy to it. Find, come and tell us what your thoughts are. Let's have some good debate. Let's hash it on. Let's let the audience decide for themselves. So my biggest motivation next 20 years
Starting point is 00:14:04 is going to be to make sure we give voice to the people that have been silenced a little bit. And I wanna have some entertainment. I wanna laugh, I wanna make a lot of unique projects together. So that's the next 20 years. There's a lot of silencing going on right now. I'm not a fan of that. I'm a cancel culture, I'm terrible.
Starting point is 00:14:16 We just had an episode we did a podcast last week. Our short clip, Chanagat Suspena, because I told a tweet that Cole Beasley had, we brought it up. The channel got a strike and it was suspended for a week. The Vietaim is short clips. I just think there's too much of that going on right now where people are worried about different opinions. Listen, just let people hear the opinions and make up your mind for yourself. You know, I'm a guy that's read Atlas Shruck and I'm a guy that's read Communist Manifesto. You read those books. Something's
Starting point is 00:14:43 going to make sense to you on both sides and you're gonna say, you know what? I understand what Carl is talking about because he was upset because one happened with them and here's a guy, let me go find out what he's all about. I understand what I and Rand is talking about. I relate to this. I get it. My argument got stronger,
Starting point is 00:14:56 but to say you can only read one side and you can only do this. That's a little bit of thinking you already have all the answers and I'm not about that. I want my kids to read books and have an opinion for themselves through the debate. So we're going to do our part and I have a feeling the man upstairs is going to be with us because he's been with us for a while.
Starting point is 00:15:13 As long as the vision's real, you're going to be all right. Our vision is very real. It's very sincere to write people are shown up and we're not slowing down. God keeps us healthy. The next 24 years are going to be epic. You're going to read about it. You're going to write about it. You're gonna read a body, you're gonna write a body, you're gonna watch movies about it. Crystal clear, it's not arrogance, it's pure confidence,
Starting point is 00:15:29 and it's just becoming a reality. So that's that part. Can we get into the podcast? Cause I wanna learn from this. I do too, but I mean, I think it was great when you just did for the last few minutes of great. We needed it. We'll be pepin' our step now.
Starting point is 00:15:39 Mary understands the story. We'll go. I think it's necessary. So we're the word to me today's necessary. It's not even about the story. I think it's necessary. So we're the word to me today is necessary. It's not even about the houses. It's not about, I drive a truck today. Like I don't know if people realize, I drive a damn truck.
Starting point is 00:15:53 I drive a fourth truck, pick up truck. It's a nice one. It is a truck though. It's a truck. I know. I've had the nice cars and I love all the nice cars. I live in a nice place. I have a good life.
Starting point is 00:16:03 But the next phase is purely going to a bit of a fight that we're going to have. We're going to have the fun part, but the vision's going to become a reality. I'm very confident about it, very, very confident about it. So we'll see what's going to happen with that again. A media game, you're dealing with heavy weights and to deal with heavy weights, you have to be able to face them off and have fun with them and build a relationship with them. And I think we're going to be able to pull that off. We'll see. We'll see if we have the goodies. The next 20 years is going to tell us if we have the goodies or not.
Starting point is 00:16:30 We will find out the next 20 years. Okay, real estate. Before we get into real estate, I want to go into the Peter Thiel's deal with you. Okay. So Peter Thiel, billionaire, libertarian, a guy who was one of the first investors in Facebook, he put a half a million dollars in Facebook, he has amassed a five billion dollar fortune in tax-free Roth IRA account. Now, if you don't know how Roth IRAs work different than the IRA, you put money into an IRA, it's pre-tax money, you get it right off every year,
Starting point is 00:17:00 but at the end of it, say you're putting $4,500 every year into an IRA, 30 years later you got half a million dollars, you take that half a million dollars out, you will pay taxes on the half a million dollars. The Roth IRA, you put money after taxes into the Roth, and then eventually you're making tax-free money, you decide to take the money after $59.5, great, you don't pay any taxes.
Starting point is 00:17:21 So how has he raised and increased his account to $5 billion? That's the question, this is a business insider story. So how has he raised an increase as a count to $5 billion? That's the question. This is a business insider story. PayPal co-founder Peter Theill has managed to grow a tax-free retirement account worth less than $2,000 and $99 to $5 billion today according to a report from ProPublica.
Starting point is 00:17:38 The Roth IRA was created by Congress in 1997 as a way to, for middle class Americans, he's definitely not middle class, to save for retirement dependent,, he's definitely not middle class to say, for retirement dependent, of their employer retirement account, initially had $2,000 per year contribution limit today, the contribution limit is $6,000 Americans,
Starting point is 00:17:53 that make more than $140,000 per year are unable to contribute to the account. That's because a tax treatment of a Roth IRA is so beneficial to its user that it allows after tax money to compound for decades in the stock market and then be withdrawn tax free as long as the owner is 59 and a half years old. Thiel grew his fortune by using his Roth IRA account to invest in early state startups, which translated to massive windfalls when those successful companies, when public years
Starting point is 00:18:17 later from there, Thiel was able to use that windfall to invest in more early-stage companies within his Roth IRA account, now worth $5 billion. Thoughts. So Harry, go ahead. Well, similar story on one of the other PayPal founders is the same thing. And I think that that's why you're hearing for a lot of calls for it, we should limit the benefit.
Starting point is 00:18:35 Right now, if the numbers are out there, I'd $2 million should be the limit threshold of what you can benefit. And the other aspect of this, that's really interesting is you get the step up basis when you pass it on to your heirs, which is another thing that they're trying to poke. They want the benefit to stop at death. It's just a difficult thing to do because Peter Thales was in a position where he had the ability to invest in real early startups, do it through the Roth IRA, and then the explosive
Starting point is 00:18:59 growth over, I think he started this, you know, over 20 years ago, that explosive growth over time. That's how you reach these enormous numbers. So, you know, I watch CNBC all the time, and this is like the number one story on CNBC right now. Like, how the hell did this happen? So if you're not familiar with the Roth IRA, I'm a huge fan of it, right?
Starting point is 00:19:19 So what I tell people is if you're gonna start investing, start investing long-term buy and hold, if you work for a company, especially a company that has a match with a 401k, that's a great option. Free money, it's a match, IRA, that's another option. But if you wanna kinda do something outside your company, or if you're an independent contractor,
Starting point is 00:19:36 or if your company doesn't have a match or 401k, a Roth IRA is an amazing option. I have been telling our friend Eric Galera to get a Roth IRA for about a year now, and he's like, ah, maybe next week. All right, anyway, get started. That's the best way you know what I say? The best way.
Starting point is 00:19:49 Eric, listen to this. Listen to the guy. Adam Pure. So you know, they said the best data plant to tree is 20 years ago. The next best day is today. So Roth IRA, I started a Roth IRA in 2008 right after the great recession.
Starting point is 00:20:01 I had no clue about investing. I had no clue about a 401k. I can barely spell 401k And I remember I started taking my company match for how to spell pen 15 I do I do I just learned today what pen 15 men I don't know until you and David taught me today. Okay, go ahead keep going So I started a Roth IRA and I started a 401 can I started investing that That way now here's the catch the Roth IRA is so good that they only allow certain people
Starting point is 00:20:27 to contribute, right? So I remember when I was first starting, I wasn't making 120 grand, whatever the number was. 140. So it was amazing. So it was 140 grand. Now I'm making a little bit more than that, so I can't contribute.
Starting point is 00:20:39 So I haven't been able to contribute in whatever it's been, almost 10 years now. But for anyone out there making less than 140 grand, if you don't before one cake, get your ass involved with the Roth IRA. The flip side of that would get back to Peter Thiel here is, this isn't safe. You're talking about how they're maybe capping
Starting point is 00:20:54 what a Roth IRA could possibly be at a couple million bucks. When I read this, I thought he had five million in there. And I was like, oh, damn, how do you do that? It's five million, It's five billion. It can't be five billion. Five billion in a Roth IRA. And when you have a contribution limit of apparently $2,000 when this started in 1999,
Starting point is 00:21:14 now the contribution limit is six grand. You're telling me he's somehow, he's put in, he's maxed out his Roth IRA, and built it up to five billion dollars. There's clearly some tax loophole going on here. Like, I get it. There's one side of the coin, you can do whatever you want.
Starting point is 00:21:30 You know what, you know what, you know what, you know how I would use it. Here's how I would use it. I remember one time, you know, guys would go talking about this kid in our school. It was like, hey, this guy took $10,000 of his dad's money and he turned it to $160,000 by an AOL stock. I was in 10th grade, right?
Starting point is 00:21:48 And I was like, oh my gosh, whatever. You know, I wish my dad would give me 10,000. He's probably, Kerk, he's probably this, he's probably that everybody trashed this guy, right? Years later, I ran into him three years ago, okay? This guy, I don't know this kid, like we're not friends, but I ran into him three years ago. I think he's in merchant service today, like five years ago. I said, are you, are you the guy? I think
Starting point is 00:22:08 you are. He says, yeah, I said, I said, weren't you the kid that your dad gave you 10 grand and you had like $160,000. He says, how do you remember? That was 20,000 years ago. I said, I remember it because I'm like, I'd love to have $160,000. Here's what's crazy. That story fired me up. Like shit, I'd love to have $160,000 versus some people are like, look at this guy. All he cares about is money. Look, this is how I would use this if I was Biden today. If I really cared about people saving their money, I would say, look, here's how big of an upside a Roth IRA can have for you as well.
Starting point is 00:22:40 He didn't do anything different. All he did is the investments he made within the IRA were into stocks. You could do this well. It was within startups. You can do this well. He didn't do anything different. All he did is the investments he made within the IRA were into stocks. You could do this well. It was within startups. You can do this well. It was within IPOs. You can do many of those as well. Just get better and learn about how money works, but definitely start in Roth IRA.
Starting point is 00:22:56 I would drive the hell out of it and use it as a way to motivate other people to start a $200 monthly Roth IRA. Patrick, if you think about it, right? At 9%, which 9.9% is the average of the S&P for the last 50 years. At that level, money is going to double roughly every seven years. So the doubling or compound, it's real like it's the eighth wonder of the world. It's really magic when you think about compounding.
Starting point is 00:23:17 So a question that I would ask people is, would you rather have 100,000 hours or penny that doubles every day for a month? And at the end of a month, it's $5.3 million. Unless there's 31 days of the month, it's $10.7 million. So the key is, it's the last double. The earlier you start, the more you can get. And if money's gonna double every seven years,
Starting point is 00:23:34 how many doubles can you get out of that? I say congratulations Peter Thiel, more power to you buddy. I hope that five billion turns into $50 billion. And I hope more people go start down Roth IRAs as well if they can Yeah, let me tell you this isn't the last we're hearing of this story the tax man come in They're gonna figure out some way. Of course they will. They're gonna figure out some way listen five million congratulations five billion You got some spain in the dough buddy, but no, no, he has no explaining to do no no no no no no this you see
Starting point is 00:24:01 That's the mindset of the majority in America. It's a problem at home. The government has explaining to do that him. He has no way. He didn't break any laws. The government created this loophole. He didn't do it. He simply went and followed the rules and the guidelines that his accountant gave him. And he's got five billion. So the government has a lot of explaining to do.
Starting point is 00:24:20 Not Peter Thiel. Unfortunately, the media is bashing him. He didn't do nothing wrong. They're going to find some ways to come at him. So as an example, unfortunately, as they do, it Peter Thiel. Unfortunately, the media is bashing him. He didn't do nothing wrong. They're going to find some ways to come out. So as an example, unfortunately, as an example, it's a shame if they do that. Back in, back in 1999, and this is the guy that started one of the PayPal mafia founders, and he also started what, Palantir, he was an initial investor on Facebook. He's, he's in early on a lot of monster. Now, here, correct me if I'm wrong. I don't know if you guys heard this barrier pat he got 1.7 million shares of PayPal at 0.001 cents. Okay. 1.7
Starting point is 00:24:53 million shares at less than a tenth of a penny. Now if you can do that to person out there starting a Roth IRA, you can potentially have a billion bucks. Good for you. No one else has that access. Good. No, it's not about no one else has that access. Why don't you go and network amongst the right people, go shake some hands and meet those guys. Now go network at the founders of PayPal. Stop. Pro, stop.
Starting point is 00:25:14 What are you talking about? Yeah, go network with those guys. Forget about him. Okay, he went and hung out with the PayPal mafia, which all those guys came out being billionaires, right? You know what I'm talking about. There's a bunch of. There's a bunch of, it's like 40 names that we're talking about read read
Starting point is 00:25:27 it off men but but here's here's what you could I spoke at Texas a and m university I don't know seven years ago sixty for six years ago sometime like I remember that talk yeah when I want to take you know the drugs you get high off life I get high off life I don't like I remember I think I remember coffee coffee freaks me. I remember I think being high when I was watching that, I was like, oh shit. This is what I'm doing wrong. Exxonem. But you know what I told. Here's what I told them.
Starting point is 00:25:51 I said forget about meeting a Peter Thiel. Go meet the Peter Thiel of your university. If I'm a school, there's a different camps, group of camps that you want to be, you want to get close to. Someone to get with the camps that are partying. And I've all access to all the best of drugs and to women.
Starting point is 00:26:04 That's the camp they want to be a part of. Some go to the camps that are partying and I've all access to all the best drugs into women. That's the camp they want to be a part of. Some go to the camps that are, you know, playing video games. That's a different camp that you go to. Some go to the camps that are, you know, just smoke and weed and just getting high and they're just doing whatever they're doing. Some are the fraternity. Some of the sports guys. Some of the sports guys.
Starting point is 00:26:19 Some of the sports guys. But if there's a group of people that are the idea guys that are saying how about we go take over the world if we would come out with this Go in that camp. Yeah, and then see what happens 10 years later Guess what more power to Peter Thieland those guys that got into that camp Elon Bollywood was 50th birthday yesterday. You know 50s 50 50 years old yesterday Yeah, I think he's gonna be I think he's gonna do some of this life. I think I think resume for the first 50 years I think he wants to know I think he's got do someone with his life. I think he's starting a little late. I think Resume for the first 50 years, I think he owns best resume. I think he's got the best resume for the first 50 years.
Starting point is 00:26:48 Other than Barry's, about time he was 50, had three crystal balls already right there. So, big, big, big, big. And movies, Broadway, a lot of other things. But let's go, let's go into. By the way, speaking of Peter Thiel and this, Rathar, have you ever read the book, The Power of Zero? Yes.
Starting point is 00:27:02 What a book, man. What a great book. What a book. That was actually a book that changed my mind, so. Yeah. Which part, which part of it, of the book, The Power of Zero? Yes. What a book, man. What a great book. What a book. That was actually a book that changed my mind, so. Yeah. Which part of it of the book, telling you? The whole book. I mean, it's a thin little book.
Starting point is 00:27:11 It's as I, pal. Yeah. I think Ricky and I, my good friend Ricky, Aguilar, and I were talking about the other day, but my story with this real quick is I remember being in Vegas. I was doing the now, the tour, whatever. And they had this guest speaker. I could not tell you his name for the life of me, but I don't know Kai if you pull up the power of zero You can Ignite there he is. I think it's from Utah and he talked about the power of zero and the zero is this tax free retirement
Starting point is 00:27:37 And he talked about how taxes are sure to go up and how the government budget is You know completely overloaded on social security and Medicare and Medicaid. And if you want to have a tax for retirement, a big staple of that is a Roth IRA. And also the, what is it? The LERP life insurance retirement plan. Yep.
Starting point is 00:27:55 But basically, he broke down how you can have a zero, a zero percent tax retirement. And that changed my life. And I remember being in the back of a room, I don't know why they do conferences in Vegas because I was sure as hell hung over and I remember like popping my head I'd be like what huh? The time and it just changed my life in the power of zero and that's a Great example of what you can do with the Roth IRA. When did you start investing by the way?
Starting point is 00:28:18 I was relatively young. I was I was actually about 22 years old when I started investing. Young started me? Yeah. And 23 when I started investing in real estate. How old? 23 in real estate, 22 in the stock market. What's the first thing you ever bought, real estate? I bought the condo that I lived in for $68,000. I was wondering how is ever going to do it.
Starting point is 00:28:39 It's a 60-year-old. Where was this? I bought it in Jersey. I moved from Brooklyn to New Jersey. It was way over my head. I stretched and stretched and stretched. But I would, so when I was a kid, I used to sell stereo equipment out of this trunk of my car, right?
Starting point is 00:28:53 So I got a chance to go all over to different areas. And I said, wow, I would ask questions. I was always curious. So why are values here in New Jersey so much cheaper than they are equidistant from New York in the opposite direction? So I said, maybe I should buy something there. So I bought this little condo there, and two years later, it more than doubled in value.
Starting point is 00:29:11 And by the time I was 25, I had invested in like 20 different properties, because I thought that that was a way to go. Barry, that same place you bought at $68,000. What is it worth today? If I were to guess, I'd probably say probably $400,500,000. $400,500,000. Yeah. Wow. $600,000, $600,000. So long term play would real estate. If you buy and hold, you'd probably say probably 400, 500, 400, 500 thousand dollars. Wow, 68 to 400 thousand dollars. So long term play would real estate.
Starting point is 00:29:27 If you buy and hold, you're going to be all right. Populations going up. So, you know, it's tough to build. We could talk about how tough it is to build right now. How tough it is to build right now? Because you cannot find the guys that are actually doing the work for you. Yeah, well, labor is tough.
Starting point is 00:29:42 That's a big one that people don't really think about. You know, there's problems with that that we can get into with the pandemic unemployment assistance. 9.3 million jobs available. We can't fill them. I mean, really, if you incend people to stay home, they're going to stay home. Now, there's a portion of the population
Starting point is 00:29:55 that have to worry about childcare. So, of course, but there's a lot of people that, hey, look, you can't blame them. If I'm going to make more money, if I'm going to make $18 an hour to stay home, I'll make less than that to work and work has other expenses and stuff. It's going to be hard, but a lot of soft costs, land's expensive. When you think about it, if you construct and the cost of your construction is, let's
Starting point is 00:30:15 just say it's $150 bucks a square foot. You want to build a 2,000 square foot home. You're already at $300,000. Land, soft costs, you're at $500,000 and you have made any profit. And people are wondering why is there no inventory for the demand of first-time home bars? It's because we can't supply the new inventory. People are not able to buy a home below half a million dollars.
Starting point is 00:30:38 Very easily or find a home below half a million dollars. Very easily. Pressure's in Jersey. New York. In many places of the country, though, it has gotten pretty pricey on new construction. So you have to find an older home and existing home, but those aren't coming up on the market
Starting point is 00:30:52 because somebody has to sell that, which means they now have to buy a much more expensive home in a tight inventory environment. Yeah, then they just came out with the average price of home officially is at $350,000. This is as of, I think this article we talked about last week, Kai, $350,000, average price as of a, I think this article we talked about last week, Kai, 350 is average price of home today. So I want to talk about that because it's not the average
Starting point is 00:31:10 actually, it's the median price. And there's a big difference there. And the media oftentimes messes this up because what they'll say is that's an increase of almost 25% year over year. So the same real estate, it's going to bubble because it's up 25%. That's not the case.
Starting point is 00:31:23 Median means that half the sales above it, half the sales below it. No inventory on the lower end, it's down to bubble because it's up 25%. That's not the case. Median means that half the sales above it, half the sales below it. No inventory on the lower end. It's down to 35% in sales because there's no inventory. Homes over a million are up more than 200%. Over a hundred, over 750,000, 180% increase. And how long? And what time?
Starting point is 00:31:38 In the last year? OK. So the median home price has been skewed much higher based upon the mix of sales. I got it. Actually appreciation is 13%. Now we just got new numbers today, which I'm not privy to as of yet, but year over year it's about 13%.
Starting point is 00:31:52 It's still harder than we'd like. Okay, but it's not 25% means a $300,000 house last year's $339 right now. It's exactly right. Yes. Correct. Yeah. I mean, that's calculated. Yeah, so you got a calculator. Yeah. So, so, so you guys. So, okay. So, so if we're looking at that being the price
Starting point is 00:32:07 So it's today a good time the whole thing. Let's stay on what you just talked about which is hard to kind of get the builders Who's taking the biggest hit right now because when I talk to GAs with GCs and I say house business GC general contract House business. Oh, man, we were like we can't even we have even, we have, you got to keep it up. Six months, 12 months, like we got to come, people want our business right now. Who's winning right now? Who's losing right now? Because of what's going on with real estate? Well, if you look at some of the earnings from builders,
Starting point is 00:32:32 they're skyrocketing, right? Linnark just came out with earnings of skyrocketing. So they're certainly in a very strong position. Even though costs are higher, they've put in the contracts, escalation clauses, and things like that that can protect them. So people that are buying homes for X amount on the contract wind up paying more
Starting point is 00:32:47 by the time they go to closing. So I don't know if it's a win because you could also say somebody who purchased a home a year ago, they won, too. And I think if you buy a home today and if you don't do it unwisely, you will continue to be a winner because I see real estate values
Starting point is 00:33:02 continuing to go higher. You find unwisely. So people talk about a housing bubble. There is no housing bubble, but you could put yourself in a housing bubble. If there's a home that's value today, that the real value, if you would get into pre-asil or in water-made evaluation model, and it's 400,000, the seller is going for the moon. They're going to put it up there for $4.50. And if you get emotional in your transaction, you start competing against the couple of people and you pay
Starting point is 00:33:24 $5.25 for a home that's worth $400, you put yourself in your transaction, you start competing against the couple of people, and you pay 525 for a home that's worth 400, you put yourself in your own housing bubble. There's not a housing bubble, but you just bought unwise. What's the alternative, though? There's nothing in a market. Listen, it's not easy. You have to be patient.
Starting point is 00:33:36 Sometimes you may have to move a little bit further from a specific geographic area that you wanted. That's tough to do if I'm tied to a job I'm in there for 12 years. You're 100% right. I am not saying it's easy. I'm saying that there are certainly many challenges here, but you have to be able to. So we created this tool by the way Patrick. We created a tool that will tell you at what point in the future the home that you are purchasing above what
Starting point is 00:33:57 it's purchased. So yeah, that $400,000 valued home that you're purchased. Let's say for 460, okay? Which is pretty heavy above asking price. When in the future, will that home be worth 460? Is it eight months? Is it 24 months? Is it 30? Or is it eight years? If it's eight years, maybe you should think.
Starting point is 00:34:13 That's no sense. But there's certain markets you will catch up within a year or two, you might say, okay, I might be into that. Got it. So I guess the question, like right now, we have a question here, Mark Shock, who asks the question on Twitter.
Starting point is 00:34:25 He said, my wife and I have down payment saved and ready to buy. We live in the DFW Metriplex and homes are selling 30 to $100,000 over asking price. At times all cash and no inspection, should we buy now or wait a year or two? Will the market get better? Better is relative terms.
Starting point is 00:34:42 So will it get more expensive? Yeah, it'll get more expensive. So should you buy the bullet? Yeah, you have to just, you have to really every home is different. There is no blanket result because you cannot duplicate a home. Only one home can pull up his tweet out there. So we can see what is keep going. So what you want to try and do is get the best advice that you can as to what if I pay over, how long will take me to catch up? And of the choices that are out there,
Starting point is 00:35:05 and there may not be very many choices, but try to make the best decisions possible. Be patient over the next 30, 60, 90 days because you'll be okay there, but two years from now, that value's gonna be up significantly. Hi, can you go to go to zilo.com? Matter of fact, just go to zilo.com and go to, I'd love to know what Mark Zipcode is.
Starting point is 00:35:26 Go to DFW. We can pull it up on our side. We have to get in. Go to DFW. Just put Dallas Fort Worth. Okay. This is a site that everybody has access to. So just kind of take a look at this.
Starting point is 00:35:36 For sale. For sale. Mm-hmm. And go, where is the range you run at the top? Go close that X. Go to price. go to price, and go from 300, no, put 300 men to $500,000, okay, to $500,000, yeah, right there.
Starting point is 00:35:54 Let's take a look at what comes up. And then get the list, that the list comes up. You literally put $300, so maybe it changes at 300,000. I don't know what comes up house. There you go. Press done Yeah, okay. All right, so then go on that 450 right there for you. That's it's 450 click on that So this 450,000 out of house Beautiful one bedroom too bad. It's just a gorgeous house
Starting point is 00:36:17 Think about that now go a little lower. What? It's been on the market for 263 days. No, okay, click on that Click on the house you were on and just go lower. Go lower on the right side, right there. Keep going lower, lower, lower. We have that MLS number for a second. Just above it. Go one, four, four, four. I've got a true crystal ball champion. Yeah, one, four, four, four, four, nine, five, six, five.
Starting point is 00:36:38 One, all right, I'm telling, I know that I've got people watching this, so I got my boys in the office. Get that MLS numbers. One, four, four, four, nine, five, six, five. And if you're listening, put that in our system and let's see how long it'll take for this home to get up there and what it's worth today.
Starting point is 00:36:53 Keep going up, keep going up, so Zillolak, keep going up, a little bit higher, keep going, keep going, okay, this was built, check this out. This was built in 1946. I don't even know what house this is. For 450, it's one bedroom, two bathroom, for 450,000. That's gotta be the land.
Starting point is 00:37:09 No, you don't understand. This is not even in a great area. Like this is, this is keep going down. Keep going down. Don't be talking trash about tax. I got a great deal of law for Addison. Yeah. Kai, keep going lower.
Starting point is 00:37:20 Okay, here we go. So 2020 price, price change, 895. Hey, what? 995. 895. Hey, what's over there? 995 listed for sale. Taxes on the property were paid tax assessment. Look at that. It was paid on 170, 176, 180. So it's gone down over the years to tax assessment on it.
Starting point is 00:37:37 Keep going lower. Keep going lower. I mean, at $450, I'm looking at a house like this. This has got to be like a five acre property with a tiny house on it. Type in Dallas, just get back, don't even do DFW, just go to Dallas. Just do Dallas.
Starting point is 00:37:53 And. Here, pull up the one for $4.99, right there. Because that's a single pit. Either one of those. That's four bedroom. Let's take a look at this. So this is $2,256. That's a nice house.
Starting point is 00:38:05 Okay. Four bedroom five bath, 2256. Go a little lower so you can get the MLS number right there. 1460 5521. Okay. 1460 5521. Go lower. Go lower. Just go all the way down. Kai. Keep going and to see the numbers what it looks like. Lower Kai. Okay, right there. 491 just went into the market. No tax history available. You're looking at 499. So this house, assuming this house, does it show what your was built? It looks like a new build. Looks like a new build house. I mean, you got to know like right now if you're in a market, you're middle America, newly built, 2021, 222 per square feet, okay. Thank God it's got AC by the way because you're gonna need it in Texas and Dallas.
Starting point is 00:38:50 You're sitting there at a 499 house, okay. Middle income family, how much down payment am I gonna need for that? 5, 10% or can I do 100% financing? You can do, today's 95, 97% finance. Okay, let's just say 95% financing, 5% on 500 is $25,000.
Starting point is 00:39:08 $25,000 down, which may not seem like a lot of money. It's a lot of money for people that make in 70 grand year. Not a lot of people have $25,000 down payment. Just put it up there. Okay, so you put $25,000 down, your payment on that's gonna be what? What's your payment gonna be on that give or take? Is it fair to say your payment on a $5,500? $5,500?
Starting point is 00:39:26 $25,500 a month. You're doing it at five times. I see what you're doing. So $25,500 a month, which is not bad, and you gotta put $25,000 in. That's the made-of-monthly payment. $27,000. For $500,000 in Dallas, Texas.
Starting point is 00:39:39 Okay. Yeah, so, you know, the challenge becomes, the challenge becomes, some people now on the flip side of it are saying, well, you should buy. Realtors are saying the complete opposite. Buy today because money is so cheap. Don't worry about the price of the house. Buy it because interest rates are so low.
Starting point is 00:39:56 I mean, look what these bigger guys are doing. They're going buying $5 billion of land and properties and they're paying 25% above market price. That's stone and black. Yeah, black so cheap. If they're doing it, why shouldn't we So it's ton and black. Yeah, black is what they're doing. If they're doing it, why shouldn't we do it because money is so cheap? What do you say to that? I say, yeah, money is cheap now, but it's also money is cheap, which has helped boost
Starting point is 00:40:13 prices up. It's like a lever, you know, money goes down in the cost. So that's going to help put prices up and escalate them. The thing is, is that if you put yourself in a position that's over your means, it becomes more problematic for you because you want to make sure you can still make those payments. And if you pay much more for the house, then you're able to handle what happens if you run into trouble, what happens if the price of that, whatever turbulence within that area, there are risks involved.
Starting point is 00:40:38 I do think overall real estate value is definitely go up, and I'd suggest to people to try and purchase that home. But also one of the things you'll see on there is how many square feet the home on. So that home was going for a little less than $200 a square foot. $222. Okay, so $222 a square foot. That home at that level compared to other homes in your market of similar style and see, am I paying much more per square foot than what the market is bearing?
Starting point is 00:41:03 If you start thinking about homes instead of the price, think about a price per square foot for a comparable. That's a good way to know if you're doing the right. That's very helpful, so let me ask you, Barry. So let's just say, top five, right? Okay, for example, if you're looking for spouse, if you're looking for spouse, number one, you have to be physically attracted
Starting point is 00:41:20 to them, whatever. Let's just say number two is, you gotta be sharing the similar common values and principles. Number three is, families gotta get along because you're marrying the family them, whatever. Let's just say number two is, you got to be sharing the similar common values and principles. Number three is, you know, families got to get along because you're marrying the family, not whatever. Number four, whatever you go down the list. Right, I know you have experience of this. Yeah, many people ask me these questions.
Starting point is 00:41:34 So if I'm asking you, what are the top five markers for me to look at, would you put price per square feet of the house number one, or what would you put at number one? Well, you know, you have to live there, right? So while the economics definitely are going to play a major role, life house. This is your home. So it does it fit for your lifestyle. Let's leave it right on. Let's go through it. Yeah. So so is this very world taking notes? All right. I'll go. Well good. Fit for the top five. There is top five. Is this fit for your home? Is this fit for you? Is this something that you're gonna be comfortable at? Fit for you and your family.
Starting point is 00:42:06 And your family. What a timeline. What timeline? Five years, three years? You know, this is an interesting one. So the average time someone lives in a home if it's a first home. If it's your first home,
Starting point is 00:42:14 your average time is three and a half years. It is a home that you is more, not your first home. Yeah. It's over nine years, nine to 10 years. That is the typical average time you spend. Interesting. So start a home three and a half years. Yeah. Second home to 10 years. That is the typical average time you spend. Interesting. So start at home three and a half years.
Starting point is 00:42:25 Yeah, second home, nine to 10 years. Yeah, so listen, when I was doing mortgages, right, I was originating mortgages. So relationships, your first girlfriend's three years, if the marry somebody's 10 years. That's pretty good for her first girlfriend. So I used to do mortgages not one at a time. What really changed my career as I started doing two at a time,
Starting point is 00:42:44 I would say, okay, we're gonna do this mortgage, but then what are we going to be doing that fits it part of the puzzle in the next mortgage? And anybody who's taking out a mortgage do not think one at a time. Think about intertwining them because timeline is the most important thing. So if you are, if you think that this home will be right for your time horizon, then yeah. The next thing that I would be thinking about is upside potential. So what is this market's forecasted appreciation? Is this market going to make me money?
Starting point is 00:43:11 Because now that we've got this, it fits for me now, let's start making money, right? If I'm buying a stock, it's important what I buy the stock for, but what's really important is what am I going to sell it for? Because if I'm going to, okay, take Peter Dale, right? Do you, does it matter what he, if he paid point, oh, one cents or a point oh, two cents, okay? So he, what we want to make sure is that what we're doing is giving ourselves the ability to make money in the future, not just to pocket the money, but so that we can keep up and we can stay ahead of the market.
Starting point is 00:43:40 So when we purchase the next home, we can at least keep up the market. What should be a reasonable number for me to be happy with? So if I buy half a million dollar house, what should my expectation be five, ten years down the line? For right now, the expectation that we're seeing is approximately six percent per year. So that means that at six percent, this is where people need to understand. Six percent might not sound very exciting, but it is. Because if you take a home, let's take a $100,000 home.
Starting point is 00:44:05 I know you can't get a home for 100, but let's just do the exercise. A $100,000 home you put 10% down. That means you put $10,000 down. That $100,000 home, if it appreciates 8%. That's 6%. Sorry. That means the home made $6,000. $6,000 profit on a $10,000 investment is a 60% rate of return.
Starting point is 00:44:25 Sure. And if you were to take that home and you were to say, OK, at 6% appreciation, if it is not my first home, if I'm going to be there for 12 years or something like that, the home value is doubled. So that home, if it's 500,000, 12 years from now, it should be worth a million at 6%. And what you said at 6% is in five years,
Starting point is 00:44:43 the value of the house should be 676. Give or take. There you go. Sounds good. So upside, I should be looking at making 6% average per year over the next five to 10 years. It depends on the marketplace, but that is a good overall level over time. That's my personal. I did 6% I won.
Starting point is 00:45:00 If I did 3%. And that's going to depend. Sometimes condos will lag if you're looking at a condo. Condos will definitely be something that will typically lag in the preseason. Why they like? Well, they don't appeal to everyone. It's not as broad of an audience. It's a little bit more segmented audience. And there's more restrictions. And you're not going to get a typically. You're not going to get as good appreciation as you would if it was a detached single family home. Okay, so number one, fit for your family timeline, three to five years. Number two is time horizon, which we kind of talked about.
Starting point is 00:45:27 Number three is upside potential. And number four. Number four is going to be making sure you buy it right. Okay, so how does it compare? I want you to compare it cost per square foot. As opposed to looking at price, do cost per square foot for a similar home and see if you're in the ballpark. And then by the way,
Starting point is 00:45:44 is there a template for that? Like it should be around 200 bucks a square foot. No, it has to be very, it's gonna be very, it's gonna be very, location location. Now, by the way, those are all the tools that we create for mortgage professionals to help them do this in a second on their phone. But the thing that I think is very important for individuals who are looking, if they're going to make this purchase and they're going to find something that is at least comparable
Starting point is 00:46:04 and they have to pay over, then you look back at one step and you say, okay, what's my upside potential? Does it pay for me to pay over asking price if in five years it's gonna be worth this and I'm paying that, I still get to make a lot of money. So if you're gonna make an example you said, so it goes to 700,000 from, let's say, 500,000. And five years.
Starting point is 00:46:24 So five years, I make 200,000 dollars. If I pay 20,000 dollars over asking price, that seems like a good gig, okay? That's a reasonable bet. But it's a knowing that you're gonna get that six percent over the next five year period. And nobody knows that number. Nobody knows what's gonna be that.
Starting point is 00:46:36 Nobody knows, but you can make educated guesses and a lot of them are based on demographics. Look, when we accurately called... Audit them are based on demographics. Yes. So when we accurately called the bottom of the housing market, and we also called, so this was really interesting, because when I was on TV talking about there's going to be problems in the housing market, I used to get like a lot of hate mail, what do you mean?
Starting point is 00:46:55 I said, don't take mortgages with negative amortization, don't take interest only. Yeah. Oh, this project, and we didn't like the housing market. I actually sold my company because we did not like the way the housing market was. And one of the main reasons was you looked at demographics. So let's just take the demographics today. The median age of a first time home bar is 33 years old, which means they were born in 1987 or 1988.
Starting point is 00:47:17 If you look at the birth rates from 33 years ago, what you'll discover is that 32, 31, 30, 29 years ago, the birth rates for whatever reason skyrocketed. That tells us that in the next four years, there's going to be an enormous influx of first-time home bars. And that is going to seem similar to what happened to boomers. That's exactly right. Well, it's because these 33-year-olds are millennials that are the kids of the boomers.
Starting point is 00:47:39 They show up. 70s and 80s, really. Hang on. Now, in 2006, we said we don't like the housing market, and remember, it was still pretty good in 2006, so we're a little bit early, right? But we looked at the demographics, and we saw that in 1973, there was a plunge in birth rates. So we knew the amount of first time home bars coming to the market was going to be significantly
Starting point is 00:47:59 depleted. There was a reason for that, because in January of 1973, abortions were legalized. Birth rates plummet. And 33 years later, you don't have people to buy homes. At the same time, builders built the most homes they ever put up nearly 2 million homes that they built. So you had over-supply, not enough demand, prices were crashing, too much liquidity in the market.
Starting point is 00:48:21 People were looking for where to put it. So what do they do? They have to crank up the volume. So they took buyers who really shouldn't have bought a home, fog up a mirror. You can have a mortgage and just come no assets. No, no, no, no assets. No job, no, right.
Starting point is 00:48:34 Exactly. 580 FICO Scorches. That's right. What could go wrong? I mean, really, yeah. So what they did was they cranked up the volume, issued a lot of mortgages. And it wasn't the mortgage lenders.
Starting point is 00:48:44 It was Wall Street putting out this money saying, hey, you got to fill these commitments. So they just allowed the regulations or the compliance for those to be very loose. And what you had was you had a big housing bubble that occurred. That's interesting. Abortion laws affected real estate 30 years later, 32 years later, 33 years later, what, 2006. If you're in any kind of business and you're not looking at demographics, you really need to do that. Okay, so let's go through the yet.
Starting point is 00:49:09 So, no, I asked the question, what should a buyer look at before buying a house, Barry, who's a three times, uh, uh, three time, uh, crystal ball, crystal ball award with Zillow, which is who makes the most accurate prediction of what's going to happen with, uh, uh, uh, uh, value, value. So you got fit your family goals. What is it? If you're buying this house, is it fit your goals that you want with your family time horizon number two? Opside potentials number three, which is a math formula you can use. 6% is victory over 5 to 10. You're going to have that for every
Starting point is 00:49:37 single zip guide we can tell you. And then four is buy it based on square feet. If you're going to use any kind of comps around homes around your area, go based on square feet. What's number five? What's your last one? I think the last one has to be that it has to fit within your budget. So, and listen, I'm not saying that this, just because it's listed as number five, doesn't mean for an individual, it's not as important, but it has to be within your budget. Because do you want to have a home that's got great upside this and that,
Starting point is 00:50:04 but you can never go out to dinner again? You know, do you, what does your, what do you want to have a home that's got great upside this and that, but you can never go out to dinner again. You know, do you, what, what does your, and a lot of people do that? You know, a lot of people there entire everything is about the house that got, but they have no lights outside of that. No, no, exact. So, look, you get, you get to play this game once, you get to live once. You want to balance it. Is there a formula?
Starting point is 00:50:21 There's formulas for what you qualify for, but those formulas affect every single family differently because of their spending. And what I mean by that is, you know, it's like, hey, save 10% of your money. You know, hey, you know, give 10% of that's good. That's the richest man in Babylon book, right? Is there a formula of your monthly income? You make 5,000 after taxes 30% of your income. There is.
Starting point is 00:50:41 Ballpark around 30%. Just keep it simple. Okay. Around 30% but that'll qualify you. However, you also have to qualify for about about 40% including all of your debts. So one thing that people don't realize that the debt that the debt is really important.
Starting point is 00:50:56 That means 30% is the following. If you're making, and by the way, are you saying net income or are you saying gross income? So tax is have to come out too of that. But it's 40% of your gross income handles you mortgage. So check this out. I'm giving you round number, sir. I get that, but if you're saying,
Starting point is 00:51:08 if I'm netting eight grand a month, okay? If I'm netting eight grand a month, 30% of that. So now you've got 2400, but then the bigger number, which really affects most people, is 40% of that or $3,200 has to do the mortgage, the taxes, the insurance, if there's mortgage insurance, you're in maintenance for less than 20% down down, maintenance if you buy in the condo, and in addition to that, all of your debt,
Starting point is 00:51:31 your car payments, your minimums on your car. So this means, Alamoni child support, that $500,000 house we just looked at, the only person that should buy it is somebody that's netting $8,000 a month. Somebody who's, who's, who's, who's, pretty much, maybe, maybe more. But, but, but, it doesn't have to be.
Starting point is 00:51:46 The other way, it could be two incomes too. And of course, but, what's net? Net is 12 a month. So you're making 11 or something like that. Yeah, you're making 150, so that means a $500,000 on houses, live by somebody that's making a household income of 150 per year pre taxes.
Starting point is 00:51:57 But, but Patrick, this is where your personal situation will, but, but, but, but, how do I, the median house is in $100,000? But if somebody's, if somebody likes to eat home every night and they're not gonna do that, they may have more discretionary income. Maybe they're gonna go, maybe? Yeah, 100,000. But if somebody likes to eat home every night and they're not going to do that, they may have more discretionary income. Maybe they're going to go to some three thousand. Right.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Somebody who likes, you know, close shopping and vacations more, that you have to, that's why I said, your means and your lifestyle has the left. How much would you add? I know you get the five points here, which was very helpful. The audience is taking a lot of notes with this and their send a message this year. Number five, for me, what would you put value for your the house was built? Meaning, is it a 2005 built?
Starting point is 00:52:32 So 2005 at $222 per square feet versus 2017, 260, how much value do you put on what your the house was, the home was built? So you can almost estimate that homes are gonna be around for like 60 or 70 years, right? And the average home in the United States today is close to 40 years old. I mean, think about that.
Starting point is 00:52:51 It's 41 to be exactly. I have to say average age is 41. So a 10 year difference probably doesn't mean too much Patrick in your example, so long as it's in good condition. That's why if you're gonna buy a home without an inspection, you can be putting yourself at some risk. Okay, I think that it's challenging. It's nothing to him. Yeah, so if I have a house, one is built in 2016, one is built in 2006,
Starting point is 00:53:19 you're looking at the house. The 2006 is 250 of square foot. The 2016 is 280 of score foot. How do you judge that? It's close enough. It's close enough. You don't care. So you would go 616. It's just we said, do I like the home? That's number one.
Starting point is 00:53:33 Got it. But then after that, how does it compare to similar homes like that on square foot? I got another question that just came up here. Folks, if you got questions, you're posted on Twitter because we're actually going through them. Kai, if you want to go on Twitter and pull up all the hashtag
Starting point is 00:53:43 PBD podcast, hashtag PBD podcast, you can put my handle in there. It's easy to find. Patrick Beade, David, the question is, so, this is from Chilly Children's. What a great name. Chilly Children's. So I'm on the verge of putting my house to Bedroom, One Bath Ranch that was down to Studs Remodel one year ago on the market. I bought it last July here in South Eastern Mass for $2.75,
Starting point is 00:54:09 and it's now an estimated $3.21. So he went from $2.75, $800 to $3.21, should I sell now or hold a little longer? Okay, so a couple of things. So first of all, because it happened to see people are asking about that income ratios. I said 40% remember I said round number. Could you exceed that? Certainly, could go up a little bit. There's going to be compensating. I'm just giving you round number,
Starting point is 00:54:30 so people could do quick. By the way, I like the fact that you're given conservative numbers. Yes. Because a lot of people are saying, go higher. I would much rather go where you're going than go the higher numbers. Yes. Now, with this particular case, here's what you have to think of. So, it appears that you made a profit. And if you're married, the first $500,000 profit is free. If you're single, the first $250,000 profit is free from tax. What is that? A homestead right there? No, that's just the federal income tax.
Starting point is 00:54:52 Okay. So there's no first homeowner or anybody. Anybody. So what we have to think of here is, okay, how much money did you put into it? How much money did you pay for closing costs getting in? How much are you going to spend if you list it with a real estate agent or whatever to get out? And then where are you going to go?
Starting point is 00:55:08 So before you ask, should I sell? I think you should ask yourself, should I be buying what do I want to buy? I think you need to go right back to that list. Does this home no longer fit my needs? And if it doesn't, then I have to buy something. Can I find something first? And then you can put your house and make that decision. Folks, Barry Habib, if you're enjoying today's podcast,
Starting point is 00:55:26 smash the thumbs up button, as well as subscribe to the channel. If you want to hear more Barry Habib, maybe even bring it back to talk more and talk about real estate, press that thumbs up button. Again, if you got questions, hashtag P.B.D. podcasts on Twitter, great stuff we're learning so far,
Starting point is 00:55:40 five things when you're looking into buying a house. Number one, does it fit your family goals? Number two is time horizon. Number three a potential upside potential of the house number four is Look at the cost per square feet and number five is your budget Typically 30 to 40% of your gross monthly income you can get a little bit more aggressive than that But 30% the number typically to look at so Patrick if we can I want to talk a little bit about something that has to do with Creating some wealth for you with real estate. Sure. And I know we focused a little bit about buying a home, but the home ownership rate in the United States is 66%.
Starting point is 00:56:11 So perhaps 66% of people that are listening are average is that higher is that lower? What's the number? The highest that it ever was was in 2005 when it was at 69.4%. So let's say roughly 70% home ownership rate was the highest. That's when there were a hand in our house for nothing. Yes, exactly. So at 66%, it's healthy. Certain markets like in California, it's typically 55%. That's how they've dealt with the costs going up
Starting point is 00:56:36 as it shaved a little bit of the home ownership rate. However, that 55% still overwhelms the available supply. 40% is 55%. 55%, but that 55% is more than the supply, and that's why prices keep going up. So what I want to talk about is the people that are listening that own a home, you really need to look at your mortgage situation
Starting point is 00:56:52 right now, because this thing that you could do that could set your kids up for college, that could set you up for retirement, and that can create enormous wealth and give you the life that you really deserve. And use your mortgage. People look at a mortgage that's crazy. They look at it like they're buying a flat screen TV and all they care about is the rate.
Starting point is 00:57:08 That's not what the important thing is. The important thing is the strategy. So for example, what we see a lot of and we advise a lot of mortgage professionals to do this. We get hundreds and thousands of stories of people that have changed individuals' life. So let's just say if you have a mortgage right now and you're saying, I shouldn't refinance because my rate is, I don't know, let's say you got in it two and a half percent and you see rates today a little over three.
Starting point is 00:57:31 And let's even go crazy. Say they go up a little bit to three and a quarter or three and a half, people are not thinking about refinancing, but what you're forgetting is like any good coach in football would say it'll take what the defense gives you. So what we've been given here is this appreciation. So two things have happened to your home. It's appreciated and you've been making your mortgage payments so you've amortized the loan.
Starting point is 00:57:49 You've gained equity. In just the past year, anybody who's paying mortgage insurance, you probably can refinance and save that. But the magic really happens with your debt. Because if you were to say, what we see oftentimes is let's just take a typical family, 20,000 in credit card debt.
Starting point is 00:58:04 One car loan, they've got a Chevy,000 in credit card debt. One car loan. They've got a Chevy. It's 29,000 out of car loan. They've got a little bit of best buy. They've got a little bit of Nordstroms or wherever it is. A few things. Nothing crazy. You take that family.
Starting point is 00:58:16 You say, okay, let's take your debt, pay it all off, include it in the mortgage, even if the rates 1% higher, right? So going from 2 1 1 2 3.5, what's this say? You could save about $1800 a month in cash flow, but here's the real key. Don't take that $1800 of found money and go blow it. Take that $1800 and pour it back into the mortgage. So if you bought your home three years ago,
Starting point is 00:58:39 now you got 27 years left. Normally, you change it to 11 years left on your mortgage. No payments. In five years, you gain $110, normally. Yep. You change it to 11 years left on your mortgage. No payments. In five years, you gain $110,000. In 10 years, you gain $270,000. In 11 years, when the things paid off, $320,000 benefit. That'll pay for your kids' college, and you saved 15 years of making your mortgage payment at $4,000 a month.
Starting point is 00:59:00 That's the best retirement plan you can have. There you go. Berry or beef? Kay on how to do. Guys back there taking notes. Did you get that guy? Did you learn? Yes?
Starting point is 00:59:09 Okay, good. Now let me read you something that's going on here. This is a realtor.com story. The housing market shows signs of softening. Has it topped out, right? Over the past few weeks, the rate of price growth has begun to slow. Few buyers are seeking more gauges to purchase homes.
Starting point is 00:59:23 The competition for available homes while still formidable may not be quite as intense as it's been. And this could provide buyers a sorely needed opening. The market's top in outs is Mark Zandy. Chief Economist at Moody's Analytics, it's starting to show cracks. It feels like we've hit the apex and we're moving to the other side of it. That does not mean there's a bubble on the verge of pop in. and the prices are about to plummet and a free fall reminiscent of the last housing bust
Starting point is 00:59:50 that we had according to economists and housing experts. Some of April's rise was due to the comparison to your earlier. April 2020 was the beginning of COVID-19 and was local restrictions, general fear over the virus, hampered real estate markets, but that's not what the whole story is, January of this year,
Starting point is 01:00:04 when prices were up 15.4%, compared to January of 2020, which was well before the pandemic. So then the next story, I'll put them both them together and you tell me your thoughts on this. It's another housing bubble building. This is a street story. Same exact thing, they quoted Mark Zandy as well,
Starting point is 01:00:23 but it says the price has dominated financial news recently for renters. The price of an average apartment takes up and even greater, ever greater share of personal income every year. This is particularly true in big cities where a one bedroom apartment can often cost between $2,500 to $3,000. But the real headlines have been in a market for single family housing in many communities, home prices have increased by 30 to 50% in just the past two years. This has led the median prices, home over $200,000, $8,000 nationwide to nearly $500,000
Starting point is 01:00:55 in the towns and suburbs near major cities, which is kind of what you were talking about. So this so much misconception, there's a lot of bad information about this. Tell us what it is. Okay, so there's a lot. So first of all, I know Mark, Mark's a friend. Okay. Interestingly enough, a John Burns conference three years ago, we debated this. I set the housing market was going up three years ago. He was not in big in favor of the housing market going up the way I was. But burn right there. But so, so I understand where Mark's coming from. But what you're seeing there, what you're seeing there is what you're seeing is
Starting point is 01:01:22 number one, again, the use of median home price. This is a misconception. Meeting home price is not appreciation. Now, somebody said 15.4% appreciation. I have no idea where they pulled that out of because that's just wrong. There's no way it's 15.4%. The latest data that we have, and I said we're going to get new data today from Case Schiller, which is the gold standard.
Starting point is 01:01:41 This is the way you're really supposed to measure it, but the most recent was 13%. Again, which is what you said earlier. to measure it, but the most recent was 13%. Again. Which is what you said earlier. That's really, really hot levels of appreciation. But in order for there to, first of all, when they talk, here's the main concept we have to understand. When you look at the housing market, there's the housing market that's the driver of GDP
Starting point is 01:02:01 that generates economic activity, and then there's the housing market. I'm buying a home for myself and I want to know am I going to make money? Am I going to lose money? I'm going to create wealth. Two different ways to look at it. And what the consumer gets confused on is the media looks at the housing market as the driver of GDP and sales are slowing.
Starting point is 01:02:18 Sales are not slowing because the market's bad. Sales are slowing because there's nothing for sale. There's nothing to buy. So if I have, when the new AirPods came out, the AirPods pros and you wanted them, but you go to Apple and they didn't have in stock, it doesn't mean sales are slowing, there's so much demand that they don't have enough of it. So sales are slowing because you don't have enough supply, same thing in the housing market. The other thing people get confused upon, any person who looks at stocks, we know that it's a stock market, but really it's a market of stocks. You
Starting point is 01:02:48 can go to healthcare, you can go to technology, you can go to whatever. You have many different sectors, biotech, right? So a dozen major sectors. Exactly. In the housing market, you have to divide it into sectors. There's your first time home buyer sector. There's your move up buyer sector. There's your first time home buyer sector. There's your, you know, move up buyer sector. There's your more affluent areas. There's the premium price-tombs. So look at all of those as sectors. Interesting point of view. So if you do it, then the picture gets clearer. Because then you could say, okay, well, sales are slowing, but where are they slowing? They're certainly not slowing on the upper end. They're picking up. They're doubling.
Starting point is 01:03:21 They're slowing on the lower end. Now, the majority of homes do take place on the lower end. Okay. We know that, but there's just not a lot of inventory. Because remember, in any market, if you're going to say there's a bubble, what's the definition of it? The definition of a bubble is that there is too much supply, not enough demand, and therefore prices will come down. We have the exact opposite, and the demand's going to get stronger. Barry, I remember when guys were speaking the way you were speaking. Everybody was saying, oh my God, there's two communities back in 2006. It was the Angelo, what was his name for the country wide?
Starting point is 01:03:53 Angelo went, oh my gosh, he looked like he looked like a, he's got these mafia bosses, right? He's a good looking guy. Very tent. Very tent like you, a good looking guy like you, and he would get up and say, hey, you know, it's going to continue, it's going to do this, it's going to do that countrywide. Ryan Peele, oh my gosh, he's right, and you know, there was a new century, what was it?
Starting point is 01:04:12 There was a bunch of these companies out there that were doing a lot of loans, new century, I believe, new century loans, right? I was killing it. I used to speak on tour for years here. Well, you remember the correspondence that were paying on the back, and that was ridiculous. Gasmer, he can 400 grand a month, like, oh my gosh, this correspondence that were paying on the back and that was ridiculous. Yeah. The gas market in 400 grand a month. Oh my gosh. This was going to continue like this and they were convincing.
Starting point is 01:04:28 They were so convincing. Then there was the Michael Burries of the world. Like, listen guys, this is not going to last like this for a long time. So I think the biggest thing for you is that I was in 2006. I was getting hate mail for saying the market was frothy. Well, here's my question for you. Here's my question for you. Who the hell should the audience believe it everybody's and
Starting point is 01:04:45 Here we go. Okay, hold on. Okay, so should we go? Here we go. Go for it. Number one when you take a look at the comparison to 2007. Yep. Let's do it. Okay. So first of all, there were 3.7 million homes for sale in 2007. Today, there's 1.05 million homes for sale. So the supply That's a big number. So back to the 9. 3.7 million homes for sale in 2007 today 1.05 million and the latest data will show that that number actually has been cut in the third. 3 million less homes. But wait, wait, wait, hold on. Here's more important in 2007. Every one in the United States lived under 116 million groups.
Starting point is 01:05:18 There was 116 million households. The latest data is from 2020. There were 128 million households. 12 more. 12 million more households, 3 million fewer homes, and you wonder why prices are going up. How can that market go down? Now, somebody might say, okay, forbearance, foreclosure, this is not. We should talk about that, because another big misconception. The media gets it completely wrong on this.
Starting point is 01:05:39 So first of all, most of them don't know how to spell forbearance. Forget about understanding it. And by the way, it's kind of hard to spell. So when you take a look at forbearance, what does that mean? Think of it as a pause button on your player. You pause the payments. Now, when they came out with the CARES Act, what they did was they rushed to bring this out there and they made the forbearance so that you didn't have to prove hardship.
Starting point is 01:06:00 So a lot of people say, wait a minute, I don't have to make my payment. There's no penalty. There's no interest for 12 months. How does fourbearance work when it's all over? At the end of the fourbearance period, you don't have to make a payment. Here's all my back payments. It kind of rides along your first mortgage as a second mortgage with no interest, no payments. And you're able to pay that off and satisfy it when you either refinance, pay off your home or sell your home home. So those are going to be very staggered. It's not going to cause any turbulence in the market. And if those properties came on, if they were problem with them, it's like dropping a water can on the desert. We need the inventory. But now think about the resumption of payments.
Starting point is 01:06:39 So a big portion of people who took forbearance, they didn't need it. So many people who took forbearance got their jobs back if they did need it. So they should have no problem because they qualify. There will be a segment of the population that the through forbearance, having for bed, we feel awful for these poor folks, but they now can't make their payment. What the vast, vast, vast majority will be able to do, put their home on the market, probably sell it in a week, pocket a ton of cash from it. So they're not going to let those homes go into the marketplace under foreclosure or under
Starting point is 01:07:12 duress. This is not 2000, listen to this, in 2009, 26% of homes owned more on their mortgage than the value of the home. Today, there is less than 2% where the value of the mortgage is higher than the value of the home. Today, there is less than 2% where the value of the mortgage is higher than the value of the home. This is what they call underwater, yeah? Under what?
Starting point is 01:07:30 It's 26% in 2009. Exactly, it's only 2%? Less than 2%. So it's not even comparable to 2000. And here's the other thing too. Let's talk about loans 90 days to liquid. Loans 90 days to liquid people look at that. And I show there was an article that you have.
Starting point is 01:07:44 So they say, okay, loans 90 days to liquid, 2% of loans 90 days in a normal market, it's 1.5%. So, we're, people forget, they just show the headline and they don't show what the variance is. We just went through a pandemic. So, yes, that has gone up a little bit. Lones actually in foreclosure, it is a quarter of 1%. So, that's one out of 400 homes. You add to that the homes that are owned free and clear, which is 34%.
Starting point is 01:08:10 Now you're talking, if you took a helicopter, you looked over 500, 600 homes, only one of those homes is in foreclosure. That's one too many. But it's not really. Yeah, the number says an estimated 10 million Americans are behind in the mortgage payments and 1.7 million or 90 days pass do.
Starting point is 01:08:22 That's 2% or more times as many as before the pandemic. That's incorrect information. That is not four times past due. That's 2% of all. Four times as many as before the pandemic. That's incorrect information. That is not four times as many. That's from Sun Sentinel. And the Sun Sentinel is wrong, because if you do the math on it, as you probably did in your head, that's 2%. Right? Roughly.
Starting point is 01:08:35 10 million on what? No, not 10 million. Go to the 90 days plus. 1.7 million. OK, so there's 80, 86 million homes. So roughly 2%. OK. So then you got 2% of homes used to be 1.5%.
Starting point is 01:08:47 The variance is, that's not four times as much. They may be talking about the 10 million our paths do, but if they're counting people that went into four of their parents, yeah. Okay. But they had a free pass. They had a whole pass not to make their parents. The biggest difference is when you're saying
Starting point is 01:08:59 3.7 million to 1 million. 1 million. That's just ridiculous. I mean, so if you look at the market, you see what happened in O6 versus today. I remember all the homes that builders were building like crazy. Riverside County had a 64% foreclosure rate at one point. You'd go the literally or walk in the streets,
Starting point is 01:09:17 six out of 10 homes. It's trash. No one's living there. Somebody just walked away from it. Because Patrick was thinking, this is an O708. It was foggly. Riverside was ugly. People were gaming the housing market to try and make profit because it was going up and people were flipping homes. So one person was buying five homes.
Starting point is 01:09:35 They didn't qualify for any of the five. They could fog up five mirrors, but they got more each zone five homes. Yeah. Today, that one person's buying a home for the home they need to live in. That's like a movie. The big short, Michael Burry was like talking to another girl on Steve Carell. Well, what was he saying? He's saying it. It had five. That was a part. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:49 Yeah. Matter of fact, that stripper was in Rock of Ages, just so I know that. Good girl, by the way. Yeah. So go back to the investor. Good investor. Yeah. Question guy, pull up Twitter.
Starting point is 01:09:57 Pull up Twitter. Pull up Twitter. Katarina Kavar. OK. Katarina Kavar asks a question saying longer loan and smaller payments or shorter loans higher payments. Katarina, you got to go with what fits your lifestyle the best and if you have a way to take the difference.
Starting point is 01:10:16 So let's just say longer term and smaller payments, right? So let's just use some numbers. Let's say it's a thousand dollar payment versus a $1,500 payment. My question to you, Caterina, is what are you going to do? If you could afford the $1,500 payment, so now you have both options. So what are you going to do with the $500 and where are you going to invest it? Because if you do invest it into your mortgage into a shorter term, that's going to give you a quicker payoff.
Starting point is 01:10:41 It's going to put you in a position where you're going to be building equity over time. You don't have to wait till the loans pay paid off. You're building much more equity. It's got an amazing effect. People don't realize it. So what happens is that when you make additional payments on your mortgage, you get the benefit because then every single subsequent payment is based on the lower remaining principal balance. So a greater portion of every single payment after that more goes towards principle. So it builds on itself. Look, if you have another investment. For 80% of America, that's good.
Starting point is 01:11:09 It's really good. Yeah, it is really good. Of course. But if you have a business opportunity, if you could put that $500 a month in something that's going to generate, you know, $8, 9, 10 or less. Or less than 5%. It's not good.
Starting point is 01:11:21 Because where are you going to put it safely? In the back, you know, the definition of the risk-free rate of the answer by the way it's very good answer because you're given the audience perspective to know that it may make sense for some and it may not make sense for others but let me let me go to a different route here you know there's two names that keep coming up okay and these two names we've talked to Daniel the Martino booth which you guys have a friends you guys have a lot of good things to say about you, by the way. She had very good things to say about you.
Starting point is 01:11:46 When you and I were meeting, she said Patrick, I know you and Barry are considering doing something, you're considering doing something with Barry. Just want to let you know, I vouch for him. He's a good guy, so Daniel, a lot of good things to say about you. And we, you know, how we feel about Daniel. Daniel's wife is a homey. She's a family. And she's been with us now for a while, creating content down the middle with Daniel.
Starting point is 01:12:02 She's crushing it. Question for you, when it comes on to two names, we got Powell, which is obviously the Fed. Chairman of the Fed. And then we have Yellen, OK? Which she sometimes forgets, and she thinks she still has Powell's job, right? She still thinks that's her job, right?
Starting point is 01:12:21 Which of those two is creating the biggest havoc, and which of those two has the most influence on what direction rates could go to and what direction real estate could go to the next 12, 24, 36 months? Okay, so we should also mention Janet Yellen used to be the Fed chair. I didn't use it very good. Yes, of course. I didn't think she was a Fed chair, but she used to be the Fed chair. And what Janet Yellen's job now is Treasury Secretary besides signing the money that comes out, you know, the Treasury Secretary signs the cash that you get, is Janet Yellen sells the president's agenda.
Starting point is 01:12:50 So what's her job to do is not what's good for you, what's good for me, what's good for people listening, it is to sell the president's agenda. Let's understand that, right? So she's a salesperson right now. She had different responsibilities as a Fed chair, but it is crazy and maddening to hear this woman talk about the wealth gap that's out there and wealth inequality when her and Ben
Starting point is 01:13:12 Bernanke created it. Because what they decided to do was now who knows what the motivation was. It might have been pure motivation, but what they decided to do was they took rates to these unbelievably low levels,
Starting point is 01:13:24 begin quantitative easing. And by taking rates to these unbelievably low levels, begin quantitative easing, and by taking rates to where you were punished for savings, they gave us, as we all know, Tina, TINA, which stands for, there is no alternative. And Bernanke used to call this the wealth effect. And what he said was, if we stop people from saving and force them to all put their money collectively, it's the same thing that the Reddit boards are doing, okay? It's just on a grander scale. It's no different than the Reddit meme stocks,
Starting point is 01:13:49 except they did it with the overbets. Wall Street bets. It's the exact same thing, except now, they've got the whole country doing it because I'm gonna punish you for saving. I'm gonna let you earn less than 1% in your savings. And the only place you could put your money is in the stock market. And by doing so, everybody did that. The stock market has been on what kind of a ride since then. We all know, okay?
Starting point is 01:14:11 So when you see that occur, by the way, folks, I want you to hear it. Can you say that one more time? Say the last 30 seconds, one more time, what they've done. This is very important. They punished you to save your money to put into market markets. Say that one more time. So by taking the benefit of saving money, people used to say, I could plan for my retirement because I could put my money in the bank, safely get 4%, 5%, 6% money. Money markets, CD, saving account. You have many options. That's safe. I can plan for my retirement.
Starting point is 01:14:37 Now, I can never retire like that. Okay. I can't do that. And what would happen to those people is that they were forced. People that shouldn't be taking risk grandma was now taking risks and putting them in the stock market. Fortunately, because everybody did it, it created growth in the stock market as we have seen for the last 12 years, right? However, here's the big point is that not everybody's in the stock market. So this is what created the haves and the have-nots
Starting point is 01:15:05 to a much more exacerbated way. Because now people, 50% of families were able to go in the stock market, 50% of families benefited. Those 50% that were left behind were left way behind. And it is sickening to hear her talk about it as if she had nothing to do with it. Because her and Ben Bernanke created this. It's the Wall Street versus Main Street approach, right there.
Starting point is 01:15:26 Wall Street versus Main Street approach, exactly right. So you're not a fan of yelling. I think she's implemented. I think she was implemented. I don't think she, you know, well, currently again, she's a salesperson. So, you know, you always have to be a little leery of salespeople because they all have their agenda, right?
Starting point is 01:15:40 What would you say to somebody that says, well, bear is a salesperson. He's got an agenda, He's in real estate. Well, every individual has their own agenda, right? Where you stand depends on where you sit, right? So you have your point of view and everybody's trying to do that. I'm offering an opinion, which is just that.
Starting point is 01:15:56 It's an opinion. That's the way it should be taken, right? There's some things that are factual. The some of the data we spoke about is factual. But in this case, it's an opinion. I don't think she did a very good job as the Fed chair as well. I think that she had chances where she could have raised rates and did not do so. I think that the Fed gets frightened because who wants to be named as the Fed chair who
Starting point is 01:16:18 let the economy tank? And that's the problem, Jay Powell, who you mentioned has right now. Because when he tried in 2013 to taper, the market went into a tantrum and he backed off. Now that was taking the Fed's balance sheet from $4.3 trillion to $3.8 trillion. And then he said, I can't do it. Now the Fed's balance sheet is $8 trillion. That's a scary thought when you think about that. So let's see the $8 trillion balance.
Starting point is 01:16:42 Let's do this. This is fun because everybody is listening. They're hearing trillion, trillion, trillion. So listen, if I said to you. Hey, let's do a business deal cash deal And I said Patrick I'm gonna pay you cash a hundred thousand dollars cash I bring a brief big suitcase in I open up the suitcase and it's hundred dollar bills It's very anticlimactic. It's a four inch stack A million dollars is a 40 inch stack of hundred dollar bills. If you could stack hundred dollar bills this high, it's a million bucks. A billion takes you to the Empire State Building twice.
Starting point is 01:17:14 Eight trillion, if I stack them up one on top of each other and then tilted it on its side, it go from here to California and back 5,400 miles. That's what $8 trillion is in $100 bills. It is an enormous sum of money, and we get blind to it because we constantly hear it and we become immune. Yeah. So then the question becomes, then the question becomes when you were talking about interest rates, how likely in a, how soon do you predict
Starting point is 01:17:44 the rates could go up to 6%. Can it happen if yes, how likely in a how soon do you predict the rates could go up to 6 percent? Can it happen if yes, how soon can that happen? Okay, so let's understand. There's a few things occurring right now. So I'm going to answer that question, but let's give some background. So I do think there might be some policy change coming in August. So it's we think I think that when we get the Jackson Hole meeting by the Fed, that has in the past been where they change policy. Now we heard from the St. Louis Fed President, Bullard, we also just heard from another Fed president who was talking about the fact that the housing market might be overheating. And when we hear, oh, this was the Boston Fed president,
Starting point is 01:18:27 I'll get it a minute. The Boston Fed president talked about the housing market overheating. So what they're saying is that the Fed should stop buying mortgage-backed securities. Eric Rosengren? Eric Rosengren is who it was. Yes. So the two of them now have been talking about the market
Starting point is 01:18:41 overheating. So I think come the 26th, 27th, 28th of August, at that meeting, they may say that the Fed's going to begin to taper their purchases of mortgage-backed securities. How much are they buying? Well, they lie. They said they were buying $40 billion.
Starting point is 01:18:55 We started calling them out on it. So what do they do? They remove the data from the New York Fed.org. So you couldn't find it that easily. Recently, they purchased about $80 billion in a month. So now they changed their language to $40 billion to at least 80 billion in a month. So now they changed their language to 40 billion to at least 40 billion dollars a month, but it's closer to 100 billion dollars a month that they're buying. So they're buying the market.
Starting point is 01:19:13 It's called yield curve control. We haven't really done it since the 1940s, but they pegged yields, and they said we want to keep it here. Think about how crazy it is. Inflation erodes the buying power. The inflation rate right now, let's call it 3.5% as the core rate stripping out food and energy. The 10-year treasury yield is 1.5%.
Starting point is 01:19:33 So I'm getting 1.5%, but my money's eroding at 3.5%. That should never happen. How long can that be sustainable? It shouldn't be sustainable, but when the Fed is buying so much in treasuries to keep and suppress that yield down artificially. If inflation is three and a half, you've got to make a spread on that.
Starting point is 01:19:48 It's got to be four and a half. That's where the 10-year treasury should be with three and a half percent inflation. Now, I think inflation will abate. I think inflation will come to, I know the Fed loves transitory. There are certain things that will stick, but look, Patrick, if you take a look at some of the reasons why the numbers in CPI went up and the numbers in the PC, personal consumption expenditures, a different inflation report that the Fed loves, numbers in CPI went up and the numbers in the PC, personal consumption expenditures, a different inflation report that Fed loves. The reason why they went up is the reopening because what really went up is sporting event sales, one up 10%, hotels,
Starting point is 01:20:13 one up 9%, airlines, one up 10%, and then you have the chip shortage issue. So it made vehicles go up 5%, and compute, I'm sorry, 10% of computers go up 5% because of that it made a big jump in CPI But those sectors combined only represent 7% of the economy the other 93% only one up 3 tens of percent So we have some inflation. It's not as high as being stated. It will calm down But rates will never go to 6% never go to 6% no at least not while I'm around I don't think because what has to cause that is you need enormous inflation, technology is advancing so much. It is keeping costs lower, artificial intelligence, robotics, technology in general will continue to make things cheaper and cheaper and cheaper and cheaper.
Starting point is 01:20:56 In addition to that, the supply of labor that we have is pretty strong. We're in a position that if jobs become eliminated,'re gonna see costs continue to be pressured lower and also global globalization has kept so So Arthur Laffer whom love him. You know who he is I spoke to him was it last week kind last week we had him on or something two weeks ago I said that what's your biggest concern? What do you stand with inflation? He says I'm not at all worried about inflation Because he said the leading indicator of inflation to me is Gold prices and gold gold prices and gold prices and gold prices haven't moved.
Starting point is 01:21:27 Then I ask Danielle and Danielle's like, no, inflation is here. There's nothing we can do about it. It's going to continue to go up. What do you stand with inflation? Love art, Danielle's right. Inflation will be, some inflation's going to be sticky. Especially on the wages.
Starting point is 01:21:40 That's the stickiest. Are we going to go into hyperinflation mode? No, no, no. We're not going to do that. Although there's a lot of money sloshing around, but no hyperinflation. And you can't just go by gold anymore, because the boomerawks of gold used to be a good indicator. And since the beginning of time, they say one ounce of gold should buy one fine man suit, right?
Starting point is 01:21:58 And that's probably still true today. So with gold that a little over $1,700 an ounce, I think that that still holds true, but gold isn't the only indicator because of the rise of cryptocurrencies. So, if you don't believe in fiat money because of the printing press, you had the alternative gold before, but now you also have the alternative crypto. So, gold, if it were not for crypto, gold would be at a much higher level. All right, so you're not too worried about inflation. You don't think rates are going to get to 6% anytime soon. Concerned about inflation, but I do think it will abate, and I think some of it was going to be sticky and stay.
Starting point is 01:22:32 All right, but here's the thing that we have to understand, is that debt, and I know most people don't get this, and this I'm going to give a hat tip to one of my mentors, Lacey Hunt, who's one of those brilliant minds out there. So he taught me this and showed me this, but debt, we know this every time in history and everywhere in the world, the higher the debt, the lower the rates. Because what debt does is it drives economic activity slower, which prevents inflation. If you have a family that wants to buy a car, when we were kids, you used to have a piggy bank, you used to have a piggy bank. You'd save up, you break the piggy bank, you go buy it. As adults, who wants to do that? We want instant gratification. We want it now.
Starting point is 01:23:07 So we use credit to take a future purchase and make it today. If a family wants to buy a car, they go out and they buy that car today using credit, using debt, and it creates economic activity. Economic activity, what that will do is the dealership, the manufacturer, the salesperson, they all make money, the spend money, but it has a short life. What sticks is now that family has a thousand dollar a month debt for the next 60 months, which means they could buy less. And it's the same thing with our economy. CARES Act one and two was $2.8 trillion.
Starting point is 01:23:36 That was in March and April of 2020, back to October, the economy was already slowing. The GDP for the United States was 4.3% in 2020, and the fourth quarter was 0.4%. It was all front-loaded, and the reason why there's such panic to generate these additional stimulus plans right now is because they know that the sugar rush will begin to slow. Okay, all right, so we'll see what'll happen. I mean, obviously it's great to hear different perspectives, but the audience has to make up their minds.
Starting point is 01:24:03 The one part that was very eye-opening was to say in 0708, when the whole Michael Burry Big Short happened, there was 3.7 million inventory today. It's a million. That's a very big difference in indicator because you got almost way too much and in 12 million increase in family households, you're talking about 12 million from what? From 160 million to 128 million. That was a number giver take. So, and Patrick, remember birth rates stay low from 1973 to 1979, which means you did
Starting point is 01:24:35 not have the influx of people coming. Yeah. Yeah. And now things have turned a little bit because of what's the generation they're saying that's big and boomers as a Gen X or is it millennials? Millennials. Millennials are bigger than boomers? Is it Gen X or is it Maloney? Maloney is. Maloney is a bigger than boomers now, 80 million versus 76 million. So if that's the case, you're saying real estate is going to continue rise over the next
Starting point is 01:24:52 few years. Let's hope it doesn't get too far ahead of itself, but let's say it this way, it should be well supported. Okay. All right. Sounds good. Let's take a little bit of a different kind of a story. So imagine if I make a salary of $174,400, okay, give
Starting point is 01:25:06 a take. In the last one, I've had a job, this job pays me $174,400 today. It was a lot less 25 years ago, but today pays me $174,000. Should I be able to afford to have a $41 million dollar house on Lake Tahoe? Let me ask the question one more time. I make a salary of 174. I've been doing it for about 25 years. Should I be able to afford a 41 million dollar house on Lake Tau and it wasn't a pass down, you know, house from family to me. Should I be able to have a house 41 million dollars on Lake Tau? Only if you're Senator Diane fine. That's what I pull up the picture guy. So Diane Feinstein lists her 4141 million Lake Tahoe estate. Check this out.
Starting point is 01:25:47 $41 million, if anybody's watching, is they wanna make an offer? It's right there, it's beautiful. Okay, it's three properties, contains 11 bedrooms, nine bathrooms, the compound sits on nearly five acres of land, the 172 foot pier extending into the water, check that out, look how beautiful that is. This can be yours for simply a $41 million offer.
Starting point is 01:26:11 I pulled up looking up the richest senators we have in America, richest senators we have in America. Number one was Romney. Number two was, and Romney, you know, he made his money as an entrepreneur for longest time, he's done well for himself. And it's Senator Mark Warner, which has got a net worth of $215 million. And at fourth place, we have Diane Feinstein, $88 million net worth as of 2018.
Starting point is 01:26:35 Blum Capital, private equity firm founded in 1975 by her husband, Richard Blum, is a source of most of the wealth. There you have it, $41 million home. And the hotel chain that they made their money in too. The husband and wife. Yes. Hotel chain is how they made their money. I mean, listen, more power to them.
Starting point is 01:26:50 The reality of it is, there are 40 million dollar homes in the market right now and people are buying them, okay? You know, right here, another house, just some guy, some Saudi oil guy just put his penthouse for sale in New York for $174 million. After he bought it, seven, eight years ago for $86 million. Drew, what I just said, $86 million penthouse he bought. He's got in a market right now for $174 million.
Starting point is 01:27:14 In where, New York? In New York, $174 million townhouse. And not townhouse, what do you call it? Penthouse he's got for sale. So it's not a bad time to be in the real estate market, especially the high end because they're selling for more than ever. But again, congratulations to Diane.
Starting point is 01:27:30 We hope you get in the offer you're expecting to get a bunch of cash offers. We're rooting for you, Diane. It is what it is. Somebody's got to do it. Okay. Did you see the game yesterday, Clippers against a you basketball guy
Starting point is 01:27:40 or not really? Clips played the suns last night. More baseball football. More baseball. A bunch of guys were wearing masks. Apparently this mask thing is coming back to LA. LA urges everyone to start wearing masks again indoors as Delta variant spreads. This is an LA time story, which is not in there.
Starting point is 01:27:58 This just came out. More than three in five Californians have gotten at least one vaccine dose to date, but fewer than half are truly vaccinated fully vaccinated according to the data from US sensor Centers for disease and control and prevention California has won the nation's highest vaccination rates and that has many experts confident that the Delta strain won't cause the kind of COVID-19 Surges seen over the last year. I was watching a clippers game, and I'm seeing who's the center for the clips,
Starting point is 01:28:27 who's the big guy, who's got a bit of an injury, he's got this mask on on the sidelines. That was the biggest mask I've ever seen. And I'm looking at all the fans, fans don't have any masks on. The Clippers have masks on, and players are not putting masks on. I get a message on Instagram saying,
Starting point is 01:28:41 you know, California is back on putting masks on. Well, what do you think about this mask situation right now in California? It's just a California to be specific. They've obviously overreacted to some of this. I mean, you have a state like Florida, which did not have mask mandates and you come here and kind of do what you want to do. California and certain. No difference in rates, by the way, of disease.
Starting point is 01:29:00 Right. Well, yeah, that's true. And then, well, New York is obviously a way worse than California from what I understand. They don't even put masks on. They put like scarfs on masks on, you know, it's just, you know, different strokes for different folks at the end of the day. It's so weird because you go to the games that people in the crowd don't wear a mask, but then when you're playing, you don't have to wear a mask, when you go to the bench, you put on the mask, and then some people do the old, I just put it over my mouth, but not over my nose, and some people keep it under their neck. And then some people do the old, I just put it over my mouth, but not over my nose,
Starting point is 01:29:25 and some people keep it under their neck. And then some people like, I've worn the same mask for the last 12 months, they haven't replaced the mask, so the mask clearly is like old and rotten and dirty. There's just no uniformity to the mask thing. There's only one visual that makes sense to me. It's only one visual. And it's the same or was a year and a half ago
Starting point is 01:29:40 as it is today. Okay, when I see Tyrone Lou wearing a mask while he's doing an interview with ESPN, on Zoom by himself, that's like I'm telling you, that's like wearing a condom going to sleep with no one to have sex with. Like you just have a condom on for no reason.
Starting point is 01:29:53 What do you have to say? I mean, what are you doing with that? There's no, it makes no, these are smart people like, okay, I'm looking at the zoom, how the hell can I get the virus from you on the zoom? Or the people driving in their car with a mask on? That's a classic one. That's some good technology.
Starting point is 01:30:10 Those I take pictures of. I mean, I like to take pictures with those guys in selfies because it's a league of their own. It's what they got going on for the world. That's like we're in a seatbelt when you're walking. Yeah, it makes no sense. No, you got your part on a phone call. You're making a phone call with two somebody,
Starting point is 01:30:25 and you put your seatbelt on. Like, let me put my seatbelt on before we talk on the phone. There's certain logic that just makes zero sense. These are people you would hope. These are people you would make fun of, but today it's seen as responsible. You both made points that maybe think about a story that you were talking about too,
Starting point is 01:30:43 and that's what's going on with teaching the FAA individual, TSA individuals rather, more self-defense. And I think this is a result of since January 1st has been 3,000 incidents of unruly passengers when you look into it, it's all mass compliance. And it's frustrating because I fly a lot. There's no uniformity, as you said. Some flat attendance are pretty reasonable about it. Some it's like,
Starting point is 01:31:05 boy, it is like really super straight. Big dictatorship. It's like they finally got this power and they could be mean and nasty and whatever. And, look, I don't, I don't it's not an easy job for them. Okay, so I respect that. But why don't you just make it so that if you're vaccinated, get a vaccine, right? If you're vaccinated, why do you need to wear a mask? Why do you need to prove it? You want to take a risk on your own, take a risk on your own. Some people, as you said, have sex without protection, right?
Starting point is 01:31:29 So they take their risks. They know what they're doing. That's fine. If you're going to have to take the risk of having sex without protection, my worry is people that don't have a sex partner who are wearing condoms. That's my worry.
Starting point is 01:31:41 I'm not worried about those guys. That's to each his own. That's a libertarian mindset. That's practicing safe sex. That's very safe. Very safe. Understand that part. That's really the. I'm not worried about those guys. That's to each of us own. That's a libertarian mindset. That's practicing safe sex. That's very safe. Very safe. Understand that part. That's really the key word practicing.
Starting point is 01:31:49 Yeah. So, I think that when you look at it and you would say, look, if you have a concern, wear a mask. Yeah. Well, I think that's what people are doing. They keep moving the goalposts. You wear a mask, you don't wear a mask, if it's up to you, individual liberties,
Starting point is 01:32:04 you're on a plane, you don't, you have to wear a mask, but when you take a sip of the water, you get to take the mask off, and if you're eating a snack, you can take the mask off. How many times have people have went to eat something and then boom, your mask is on, boom, now I got pasta on my face. Why do I, am I mad?
Starting point is 01:32:18 Did you hear what, what's his name? What, what's the place we always talk about, Kai? To look at the country. Know the country that is low regulation entrepreneurs are living there. Singapore. You know what Singapore say with COVID? Moving, have you seen this data or no?
Starting point is 01:32:36 Pull up Singapore, COVID, flu. Just type in Singapore, COVID, flu. Just put COVID, flu. Okay, let me see if it shows up. Kai, I was just about to give you credit for spelling things right. Okay, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, go back to the Zoom role, looks to live virus.
Starting point is 01:32:49 Okay, right there, go to the South China Morning Post. Yeah, right, click on that. Singapore preparing a live with endemic COVID-19 as residents grow battle wary of pandemic, that's what I'm saying. So what Singapore is now doing is the following. Singapore is officially treating the COVID, okay, as flu, meaning it's no longer as a big deal.
Starting point is 01:33:08 Look, go back to your life, do what you were doing, no longer the over regulatory stuff that they're going to. Anyways, I mean, you see what's going on in Florida. We ended up in Florida. You see what's going on in Texas. Texas was a great place to be while you were doing COVID. The business didn't take a massive hit. You saw what happened a couple of these days
Starting point is 01:33:25 in California, it's apparently still going back to what it was before. Even after all the people got the vaccinations. It's also easy to do the Monday morning quarterback thing with COVID. When this first happened, and I'm not trying to be political or anything like that, no one ever seen anything like this in the last hundred years.
Starting point is 01:33:40 So you don't know the severity of it. Should we wear a mask? Should we show you a distance? Should we not? We didn't have a vaccine a year ago. The vaccine came out towards the severity of it. Should we wear a mask? Should we show social distance? Should we not? We didn't have a vaccine a year ago. The vaccine came out towards the beginning of the year. Now people are getting vaccinated. So the story keeps evolving, the story keeps changing.
Starting point is 01:33:53 Fauci said, you don't need to wear a mask, and you need to wear a mask. I think the problem here in America is that it got so politicized. That if you're a social distancing fan and you believe in mass, that means you're a Democrat, but if you're not, then you're a Republican and then Republican, you don't wear the mask.
Starting point is 01:34:10 And it's just such a moving situation. There's moving targets that this is where it just comes out to individual living. That consistency, man. Patrick, by the way, just to go back for a second, my son, Jake, who's a really big fan of yours and he ran the numbers for me. He said that home we were looking at for 500, the little less than $500,000. If you paid 60,000 over asking
Starting point is 01:34:29 price, it would take you 25 months to break even. So that might be a bet you might want to take. You know, it would take you 25 months to break even if you would. If you would say, five 64 out 490 in 25 months, that home would be worth 560. Now, I mean, maybe you can go either way on it, but if you say I'm going to be there for 10 years, it's not a bad gig. And remember, it might take you two or three months to close, so you reduce that a little bit. It's two months, two months, two months.
Starting point is 01:34:51 Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can do the math. But that's how people should be thinking. By the way, by the way, how many, the question becomes, how many realtors are selling the way you just sold right now? Because you, by the way, you don't benefit from anything. You don't sell loans, you don't do, you don't sell homes.
Starting point is 01:35:03 So it's not like we provide the tools like this for realtors or different story, but you're not selling. No, I'm not selling. So you're not selling a house, you don't have a house on a market. You say come and look at this 10 million out of house. Maybe you're representing Diane Feinstein's house in Lake Tahoe. By what? You're not though, right?
Starting point is 01:35:16 So the point is, today's realtor, imagine a realtor today saying, Adam, how long are you going to live in this house? 10 years, then don't worry about it. This 500,000 out of house is going to be 5 this house? 10 years. Then don't worry about it. This 500,000 on house is going to be 5, 16, 2 years. You're fine. Buy the house. Make an offer, $60,000 more.
Starting point is 01:35:29 Think about the way the realtor has to sell the clients today. Patrick, it's a different sale. I think in life, what we want to try and do is, if you think linearly, right, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, yeah, and we grow that way versus exponentially, what we need to do is, if you can find points of friction all over, if you remove a point of friction like this, you will grow exponentially. It's not just in this problem like this all over. This is a big point of friction. You come up with a solution, your business grows.
Starting point is 01:35:55 Let's talk about what happened in Miami, the travesty, the catastrophic event that took place where found 9.152 unaccountaccounted for Florida condo tower collapse. Go to page four it is on what happened here. It was all over the news and obviously we're down here so we're hearing about it constantly. Search and Rescue Operations continued Sunday evening, nearly for full, full days after Champlain tower south partially collapsed
Starting point is 01:36:24 in Surfside florida nine people are confirmed that 150 to 100 counted for as search and rescue operations continue Sunday evening almost four days after a 12-story condominium building collapse in florida chaplain south towers tower south partially collapsed on the first time Miami Beach the families of missing were allowed to privately visit the site for the first time Sunday according to Miami date. Mayor Lavine Kava on Saturday, Lavine Kava on Saturday ordered a 30-day audit of all residential properties, five stories or higher that are 40 years or older and fall under the county's jurisdiction, the mayor encouraged cities to do their own building reviews as well.
Starting point is 01:37:01 Okay, Adam, you had a chance to go visit this. What's it looking like there right now? Well, Kai, can you pull it up so people can see the side? Of course, because this story I think broke on Thursday. Yep, and this story literally and figuratively hits close to home for me. Surfside is just north of the way. People send me to video, a friend from years ago, sent me to video, I looked at the video,
Starting point is 01:37:21 I thought it was one of those proper hotels that's coming down. You know how they, exactly. Like yeah, it's dead things. So no'm not sure of USA the graphic that they have Click on that right there click on that video right there three days ago. Yeah, there you go click on that We show this yeah, we can show this okay No, that's definitely not a shack then but go ahead keep saying and then we'll go after this Yeah, so people just to put it in perspective this is just
Starting point is 01:38:01 keep sending and we'll go after this week. Yeah, so people just to put it in perspective, this is just basically a mile north of what Miami Beach proper is, right? So this is surfside is in basically the 80s and 90s, just north and the 90s is what's called Bell Harbor. We were at the Bell Harbor a couple months ago. Yeah, same region. Exactly, all that.
Starting point is 01:38:18 My sister, my sister's family lives right there in Bell Harbor. That's where I go and stay on the weekends and stay with my family. And I grew up just up the street in North Miami Beach. So this is literally close to home. And the mayor of Bell Harbor, which is the town, basically the next block, over is one of my closest friends,
Starting point is 01:38:35 Gabe Grossman, and he's 40 years old. He's got five daughters, talk about a girl dad. He's a lawyer, he's an attorney, he's a pro-Israel, very vocal person like that. But he's also the mayor of Bel Harbor, okay? He was walking around with Governor DeSantis and just seeing what the hell is going on here.
Starting point is 01:38:51 Here's a video, just for the audience to see. Look at that. Yeah, just the scary thought to see that just. There's this. And then this tower comes down, watch this. Yeah. So the problem that I have with this, I mean, this is a sad situation,
Starting point is 01:39:08 I don't know anybody directly that lived there, but a lot of good friends of mine had family there. Like, I've won my buddy, Jared. He was posting, you know, please pray for these families. I text him. I said, do you know these people? He said, these are my five cousins who moved here from Puerto Rico.
Starting point is 01:39:24 They're all dead. The problem that I have with the media is when this story came out. I said, do you know these people? He said, these are my five cousins who moved here from Puerto Rico. They're all dead. The problem that I have with the media is when this story came out, and I get that there's a sensitive story, they said, building collapses, one person dead. Do you remember that story? I do.
Starting point is 01:39:35 Okay, so one person dead. Now they're out there saying nine people are dead, and 150 something are people are unaccounted for. What the hell do you mean unaccounted for? These people aren't traveling Europe right now, not responding to their cell phone. They're dead. They're full on dead.
Starting point is 01:39:51 And the problem that I had is, emotionally, you hear this story, there's so much in the news right now. Oh, one person, oh thank God, only one person. No, every single person in that building just got panicked at that. Yeah, because if it was unaccounted for three hours, get it, maybe they're coming back from somewhere. What, six single person in that building just got a panic. If it was unaccounted for three hours, get it. Maybe they're coming back from somewhere. What's six hours
Starting point is 01:40:08 get it? A week later? No. Unaccounted for? Yes. Come on, man. That's a scary thought by the way. Yeah. So it was really scary. Is that Thomas Morbito in 2018, the engineer who gave the warning about this and that was done. Yes. So the, a crazy interview. How often that happens, would they give it and nobody goes and looks at what? Is that a common thing? But here's the problem I have, whether it is that you can, you can make the excuse and say, okay, during 2020,
Starting point is 01:40:35 maybe they couldn't really do anything, they had to cope, but you had two years before that. Why was nothing done? And you talked about this earlier about the majority of houses are 40 years old, 1980, 1981. Now apparently you're the real estate expert you've taught us a lot today. Apparently there's a 40 year recertification of buildings.
Starting point is 01:40:56 This building was built in 1981. So something was up with this building. Something, I don't know how it passed its code. I don't know what kind of fraud was going on here. I think number one, you know, focusing on the moment, focusing on the now, cleaning this up. But bigger picture, like we're talking about real estate, we're talking about South Florida, we're here,
Starting point is 01:41:17 is they need to go at every single building, that's 35%. Yeah. And figure this the hell out, because you also talk about New Yorkers who are moving here in flux. We were touching on that earlier. A lot of people are looking at saying, you know, I was considering maybe buying a condo and sell Florida. Oh, maybe I was moving to sell Florida. I'm not so sure about that now. And because, you know, climate change is real. It's happening, whether it's man made or not. I think that's a debate.
Starting point is 01:41:41 But, you know, there's a rising tides here. Imagine living in that building. Go back to the picture. Imagine you're living in the building right next to her. Hey, come on, baby. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Hey, I'll see you tonight. Like imagine you're the one that's standing. What are you doing if you're still? Are you going bad? Let me go get my stuff upstairs. I'm not doing it. You go get it. How the hell do you sleep at night? That's the point. Like if you got kids, you're going to be able to sleep. You're not sleeping there. You're not sleeping there. When you do with all your stuff, it's up there. All your, well, thank God you're alive. Number one, thank God you're alive. You just got, now,
Starting point is 01:42:08 now try reselling that. I don't know. That's condos. Try selling that condo. And Adam is point about people being a little skittish. I mean, you have to look at age because this was a little bit older. Number one, and number two, if it's right on the water, you get that corrosive nature of it. You know, so maybe it's a little bit further back, a little less to worry about, but this is all water. It's going to that's gonna make people think twice about. Well, they were basically saying that they went into the garage and they were showing what the hell was going on down there and there were cracks
Starting point is 01:42:31 and it's obviously the pool right there. So you look at this and look, we've never seen anything like this, it's insane. It starts falling from the top and then crap. But basically what I understand here is the bottom implodes and then the floor above that falls and then the floor above that it's like a pancake effect. So visually it looks like it's falling from the top but no the bottom is crumbling and
Starting point is 01:42:54 then each floor boom, boom, boom, so imagine a floor falling on top of you and then the floor on top of that falling on top of you, you're not surviving that. I mean, it's insane here. One 52. I wonder how long it's going to, by the way, the whole thing with your saying is they're fraught. I don't think it's fraught. There's a lot of buildings you go to where the elevator inspection is supposed to be done once every 12 months and you see the inspection. Some buildings have them in the for three or four years. It's just a lack of a paying attention to details,
Starting point is 01:43:21 right? That's really all it is. You got a lot, how many elevators in America haven't been inspected on time today? Think about it, a lot of them. And how many buildings like this you think they haven't been inspected? I bet there's a lot in America that haven't been inspected. So think about how many others are sitting there thinking about this and what, what about my building?
Starting point is 01:43:38 Like how many people went and knocked on their property managers door and saying, hey, when is the last time we inspected this in the last week? Every single one of those buildings. Every single one of those buildings. Oh, not just in Miami. I tell you, there's a lot of old buildings in America today.
Starting point is 01:43:53 Tenants are going to say, hey, Johnny, just out of curiosity, when do we last inspect this building? When do we last inspect it? It's something to be thinking about. And by the way, then the story comes out. The tweet, can you pull up John McAfee's tweet, which was going viral everywhere people are sharing it? And John McAfee tweets about the building. There you go, about his building. So go to images, go to images, and then we'll go to USA Today. So there's a tweet that comes out that reads the following. Okay.
Starting point is 01:44:22 Kai, click on one of those so we can see it. That's bigger. He says, if anything ever happens to me, please know that the 31 terabytes of files I have are located on hard drives in my condo near 88th Street and Collins Avenue just north of Miami Beach. Now that's June 8th, 2021, right? I went and looked it up on Twitter,
Starting point is 01:44:45 there is no tweet with him saying that. So now go to the USA Today Story, go back and click on that story, says fact check, no evidence John McAfee ever owned unit and partially collapsed Florida, Kondo, which who cares whether he owned it or rented it? I'm not worried about that. What I'm worried about is, did he ever tweet that out?
Starting point is 01:45:03 The Clean John McAfee owned the Union and partially collapsed the condominium building on Florida conspiracy theorists are attempting to connect the death of Antivirus entrepreneur John McAfee to Florida high-rise building that partial collapse on June 24th. McAfee found that on June 20th on the outside of the execution. He was 75 years of next to the condominiums and surfside Florida collapse resulting in at least four deaths and at least 150 people missing. The two events are unrelated about social media users are there's a nefarious connection.
Starting point is 01:45:26 John McAfee owned a unit at the building that collapsed the address of building 8777 Collins Avenue South, reads a text message. So that leads to AP doing a story on it. Associate of press doing a story to respond to this. If AP does a story on this, which let me see which one it is, it's page four at the bottom. Here's what AP says Claim the late John McAfee the creator John McAfee anti-virus software on the Union the condo building
Starting point is 01:45:50 Partially collapsed Thursday outside my room. I was looking inside. That's a claim AP's assessment false McAfee was found dead in his jail cell near Barcelona on Wednesday Didn't own the property at the beachfront Champlain Tower soft condo and floor according to the Associated Press Review of Public Records, an image of the tweet in which Maccuffee claims to own such a property is fabricated at the close of a week, that includes a prison death
Starting point is 01:46:12 of an eccentric security software pioneer in the collapse of a 12-story oceanfront condominium tower near Miami, social media users hatched false conspiracy theories that bound the two unrelated events together. And then they found out that they found out a note in his pocket and his jail cell. Yeah. That read, what did he read? It said, there was a note in it.
Starting point is 01:46:34 You know what I'm talking about where you swacked and his suicide all the Epstein. Yeah. So apparently they found a note and his wife said, there's no way in the world my husband would commit suicide. His last words were, I love you babe, I'll talk to you later. So she's like, there's no way this happens. So Pat, there's that word again. That we're starting to touch on a little bit more and more and more conspiracy theories.
Starting point is 01:46:53 Yeah. We're starting to touch on this a little bit more and something tells me with this guy McAfee, eccentric dude and all this stuff. You interviewed the guy and we spent an hour talking about this guy last night. If you've not watched the interview. The interview in the last few days has taken off. Of course. It's been everywhere.
Starting point is 01:47:09 Everyone's messaging us. What was your thoughts about meeting this guy? Look, if the tweet is not up there, you know, June of a, oh, eight, June of June 8th of this year, easily you can make a fake tweet and put it out there, right? Now, some people are saying, well, what if somebody on Twitter went and deleted it? I don't know about that. If it did, there'd be plenty of people with screenshots who had it because to say, you know,
Starting point is 01:47:31 then there's some people are there saying that 31 terabytes, you should have seen what's in it, because if that reveals itself, then Kai said something very interesting yesterday, saying, look, if Macafuse who I think it is, and there's really a lot of credibility behind what was in that 31 terabytes Do you really think he would only have one copy of it in one place? No no one the way he would be he'd probably have five ten of them
Starting point is 01:47:52 And would have him tell everybody where it is I Don't know if you would tell everybody where it is the point is he had some information that people They don't want to have seen what that is in there Some of us will know some of us will never know some of us will never know. Some of us are never going to know what was in Hillary Clinton's, Clinton's emails that was, you know, some of us are not going to know what was in Biden's laptop because you have bad FBI,
Starting point is 01:48:12 that's what one investigated. But there's definitely a little bit of thought of what was really in that 31 terabytes that this guy had. I'd be so curious to know what was in it. And I'm willing to bet there are millions of others that want to know, was it just a picture, it's a bunch of random crazy files that he had, or is there anything there that the world
Starting point is 01:48:32 would want to know about? And if it's yes, maybe there is somebody who's a hacker trying to really figure out what was in there. There's plenty of professional hackers today that could find a lot of different things. Maybe someone's working on something right in the middle. Let me tell you, this isn't the end of the John McAfee conspiracy theories that are going to run ramp. I don't think there's going to be a lot of different things. Maybe someone's working on something right to the level. Let me tell you, this isn't the end of the John McAfee conspiracy theories that are gonna run ramp.
Starting point is 01:48:47 I don't think there's gonna be a lot more. I heard this, I saw this, but just to be clear, there's no credibility to this story. No, no, the tweet is not as good. I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just, I just as well. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I don't even look at snopes because snopes to me also has made a lot of mistakes themselves
Starting point is 01:49:08 of saying it's false, but it was true. If AP's coming out and saying something about it, AP is typically, you know, they got, not, not, I mean, look, we're customer of them. We like doing business with AP, but if AP's saying something about it, AP's not even saying, the only thing that AP said is the fact that he didn't own it.
Starting point is 01:49:25 So they want to look at the record. But they're not saying that that's a false claim. They're just saying conspiracy theories. So who knows what's going to come out. I can tell you, next like you said, next week, two weeks, three weeks, I'm sure there's going to be more stuff that's going to come out about this year. FYI, we have some of the logos. Kai, if you want to pull it up, I just want to show the logos. We still haven't finalized any one of them. Couple of them I like. I'm Cucin or your thoughts. We put numbers right next to them. So if you take a look at these logos, whichever one you like,
Starting point is 01:49:50 we have to pick a logo for the podcast here, Kai. Can you pull that up so we can show it to the audience? And FYI, if you are a graphic designer and you see any designs you want to put for PBD podcast, this is what we currently have right now. There's numbers next to it. Take a look. See which one you like. Put a number next to it.
Starting point is 01:50:11 We're definitely taken as many feedback as possible. But these are some of the ones that people have sent us here for the podcast. PVD podcast, the top right, one number 10. It's kind of Florida. Number nine is kind of cool with the line. Number seven is the different look. Number nine is kind of cool with the line. Number seven's the different look number six is the lion again 25 is the mic. If there's any of these you like put the number below. We're gonna go back and look at them and we're gonna narrow it down. And again if you got, if you're somebody that's watching this and you know graphic designers,
Starting point is 01:50:40 we're gonna give the winner $500 for whoever comes up with a podcast logo that we end up using, submitted to us. Kai, what's the email to send it to? It's actually send it on Twitter and hashtag pbdpodcast because it's the easiest way to track them. If you got logos. Is there any one or two that kind of stands out? I like, I like seven.
Starting point is 01:50:59 Seven colors interesting. Yeah, that's kind of interesting. Old school. 20 is kind of unique, the way 20 is doing it. Is that the 20 car my eyes? That's your face in the mic. Is that what it is? I just noticed it right now. First time whoever did the 20's kind of obviously 11,
Starting point is 01:51:12 they're doing the same identical thing as our body roggin did, which that's his image, but 20's kind of cool. Yeah, I mean, look again, if you got any other send it our way we're paying attention to. And thank you to everyone who's actually been submitting these. We're reviewing them. We're looking at them. We appreciate it. 100%. And one of you guys is going to get 500 bucks. Last question for you. If you would like to see our friend Barry, the real estate expert,
Starting point is 01:51:37 if you learned a lot today, you would like to see him have a show with us, potentially, like Daniel de Martino, like Adam, like General Spalding, like Tom Ellsworth, like some of the folks that we have. If you'd like to see him have a show on value-timmed economics, reacting to current events that take him place with real estate rates, any of that, click the thumbs up, subscribe to the channel, and let us know why we're watching all the commentary
Starting point is 01:52:01 because we're having conversations right about potentially doing that. When we do that, we'll launch it to everybody. You'll be the first to know it when that comes about. Having said that, Barry, thank you so much. We're coming out. Thank you, Barry. We learned a lot.
Starting point is 01:52:11 We got this book right here. Kyle, let's put the link to his book, lots of people want to order his book. They can do that as well. Money in the streets. With that being said, once again, take everybody. Have a great week. We'll do this again Thursday.
Starting point is 01:52:20 We have a special guest. I believe this Thursday. This Thursday, cannot tell you who, but I think you're gonna like it. We have a special guest I believe this Thursday. This Thursday cannot tell you who, but I think you're gonna like it. We have a potential California person that's running for governor with us here this Thursday. Do not miss this Thursday's podcast. It will be fired.
Starting point is 01:52:35 Take care everybody. Bye bye bye bye bye.

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