Rich Habits Podcast - 15: How to Build a Crypto Portfolio From Scratch, the Debt Ceiling, Revocable Trusts, and 401(k) Loans
Episode Date: June 6, 2023In this episode of the Rich Habits Podcast, Robert Croak and Austin Hankwitz walk you through how to build a crypto portfolio from scratch, what the debt ceiling headlines mean for you, 401(k) loans, ...revocable trusts, and how to prioritize your wealth building journey. ---Be sure to check out Public's new High Yield Cash Account paying 5.1% APY. This is higher than anything else on the market and is FDIC insured up to $5M. ---Earn 5.1% APY using a Public HYCA, click here!Opt-in and share your email, click here!Learn more about our 4-module video course!Download our FREE Budget Template, click here!To learn more about Robert: https://stan.store/RobertJCroakTo learn more about Austin: https://stan.store/austinhankwitzContact: richhabitspodcast@gmail.com ---Hankwitz Group LLC has an existing business relationship with NEOS Investment Management LLC. The opinions expressed are those of the author, and the author owns several NEOS ETFs.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone and welcome back to the Rich Habits podcast.
My name is Austin Hankwitz, and as always, I'm joined by my co-host, Robert Croke.
Robert is a seasoned entrepreneur in his 50s with more than $200 million in company exits under his belt.
And I'm an entrepreneur in my late 20s with a background in finance and economics.
Since quitting my full-time job in corporate finance a few years ago, I built a seven-figure media business
and actively advised some of the most well-known fintechs around the world.
As the show name might suggest, every episode, we talk about rich habits as they relate to business,
finance, and mindset.
However, we try and bring you two unique perspectives, one from an industry veteran, which is Robert
and the other myself, someone who's young and still in the process of building wealth and
figuring it all out.
So, Robert, are you ready to jump into things?
What are we going to be talking about in today's episode?
Yes.
In this episode, we'll be talking about how the debt ceiling being raised affects you.
how to build a crypto portfolio from scratch, as well as our updated thoughts on artificial intelligence
after the insane momentum of Navidia.
If you want to ask us a question, be sure to follow at Rich Habits podcast on Instagram and shoot
us a DM and let us know what's on your mind.
We are here to answer your questions.
We are here.
We're really excited.
We've got three awesome questions teed up for you guys.
So be sure to stay tuned to the very end of the episode where we have our Q&A session.
So with that being said, let's just quickly breeze through what happened this weekend with the debt ceiling.
So, Robert, what's the debt ceiling?
Why is it important?
Why is it in headlines right now?
Give me the play by play.
What the debt ceiling means is it's what Congress allows the federal government to spend yearly.
And with that said, the debt ceiling had to be raised in order for us to prevent a default.
And so it's very critical that the debt ceiling did get raised.
and it got put in a really good spot, actually, because they curbed what the government can spend, but they did raise it so there was no default.
So to touch on that a little bit, there will be a lot less spending, and that's going to be a little bit sketchy for the market because the government's been giving away so much money for the past few years and printing so much money with all these programs because of COVID.
And so it's going to be interesting to see what happens with the economy, Social Security, and everything else without all of this excess money to print and give away.
I would probably argue that nothing's going to happen to Social Security.
I think that's the golden egg that no Democrat or Republican wants to touch.
But with that being said, we're going to quickly talk about how the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, aka raising of the debt ceiling, is the bill that was passed.
impacts you. So there's two types of people that will be impacted mainly here. The first one are
student loan borrowers. So if you're a student loan borrower, as you might remember, student loan
repayments have been on pause since COVID as a way to kind of keep more money in the pockets of
Americans during these uncertain economic times. COVID was crazy. We needed our liquid cash, so they
paused student loan repayments so people had more money to have in their budget every single month. However,
this bill now reaffirms Biden's plans of payment resuming in August.
So I don't know if you guys remember this, but Biden has said, yep, payments are going to come back in August, blah, blah, blah.
But, you know, we heard a little bit of weird stuff about the forgiveness and being blocked and this and that.
Now this is in writing.
It's a bill now.
They will resume in August.
There's no more like, well, maybe, maybe not.
I'm going to go back and move.
No, no, no.
This is law now.
So if you have student loans, be prepared to begin paying them back.
back in August. Yeah, that's a great point, Austin, and I'm glad you covered it because a lot of people
are just not prepared for these payments to start back up again. And something that I want to be
very clear about, I get asked all the time, should I pay off my student loans early? And I generally
tell people, no, you shouldn't because we're hopeful that government's going to create more programs
to help people with massive student loan debt. But since that hasn't occurred, and there are
payments resuming in August, a few very important things on this point that I want to make sure
everyone understands. If you're late, you default and you stop making these payments because you're
not prepared financially to start making them again. They can come after your paychecks. They can
come after your tax returns. So just keep in mind, you have to be ready in August to make these
monthly payments and start them up again because you will get yourself in trouble if you don't
and you default. So this is a great point that everyone needs to understand. And just want to make sure
everyone's on the same page. Robert's talking about federally guaranteed student loans. So if you
were like me where I got my student loans through a local credit union, they're not going to do
anything. That'll just hurt your credit score and you're going to be a bad person for not paying
off your debt, right? But for the federally guaranteed student loans, which is the vast majority
of people, be prepared. So the second people now, group of folks that get impacted by this
bill being passed the fiscal responsibility act of 2023 are food stamp recipients. So some adults
without dependent children will be subject to tougher work requirements if they want to qualify
for SNAP or EBT. These tougher requirements usually stop after the age of 49, but now they're
going to gradually extend them up to the age of 54 by 2025. So if you are that or if you know someone
who might be impacted by that, make sure that they are aware of this to do some research,
to look into it, and do everything they can to continue to qualify and receive the great
benefits that are afforded to them through this awesome program.
Yeah, and this is another one that's really interesting because it's really building up
to what's going to happen when the Fed now is introduced in July.
And if it rolls out in its full regalia, it'll be interesting to see how that affects food
stamp recipients and the SNAP programs because, you know, that is going to be one of the things
that's going to lead up to the government introducing a base pay model for all citizens.
And I think that's something that we have to look forward to in the next three to five years,
where we will just not have the food stamp and the SNAP programs anymore.
And every person in America is just going to have this base pay, this minimum wage the
the government's going to provide. And that's going to really change the game of how all of this
works. And I think the Fed Now program opens the doors to that being introduced in the next few years.
So it's a very interesting tactic and something that people need to be aware of.
Wait, are you saying that universal basic income is coming in like three to five years?
Yeah, I just think with where we're headed with artificial intelligence. I read something recently.
I don't fact.
I'd have to fact check, but I think it was Goldman Sachs.
So there'd be 84 million jobs lost in the next five years due to artificial intelligence.
So I could see universal basic income definitely being needed sooner than later.
Some people think it might be 10 or 20, 30 years out.
But my guess would be five to seven years maximum.
We're going to need to initiate it because there's just going to be too much of a breakdown between the haves and the have-nots.
Okay, that's a take. That's a hot take. I'm going to replayed this in five years and we'll see what's up.
Hey, that's okay. Well, speaking now of universal basic income and Fed Now and payment systems and all this
fun stuff, let's now talk about the root and the meat and potatoes of this episode, how to
build a crypto portfolio from scratch. Right now that we know everything that happened over the
weekend, let's talk about what really matters, investing, building wealth, making new rich
habits. So, Robert, why don't you walk us through? One, what is cryptocurrency? Why should someone
invest in cryptocurrency? What's the point of it all? For someone who really has no idea, maybe they've
heard a little bit here and there, like, why would they want to take their hard-earned cash and
invest it into a internet coin? Yes, thank you for that lead in. And of course, I always believe that
all adults, anyone investing, should have a portion of their portfolio in cryptocurrency. I know
Uncle Bill around the corner and John, someone's cousin said it's a scam because they bought high
and sold low. But at the end of the day, cryptocurrency, the coins and the underlying blockchain
is just, it's here to stay. All the biggest companies, all the biggest hedge funds, all the biggest
countries and banks are all getting behind cryptocurrency in the blockchain and is just disrupting
so many archaic industries that is just a foregone conclusion that,
cryptocurrency is here to stay. Now, just like the internet and the dot com boom, yes, 80% of the
cryptos that you see today are going to be gone in three to five years, but the ones that are
building real actionable projects with use cases that are getting these huge contracts with
governments and countries and banks, they're here to stay and there's just going to be so much
wealth change over the next few years because of it. If you look at starting out for those of you
that haven't delved into crypto just yet.
I would say start out by getting an account open.
I would say start out with either a public.com or a Coinbase account.
These are super easy to open up.
Great platforms.
We love them.
We use them.
And it's just a really good way for you to get started in cryptocurrency.
And then from there and starting your portfolio, let's say it's your first investment in
crypto.
I would say start with the blue chips like Bitcoin.
and Ethereum. These two have the best use cases. They've been around forever, and there's just so much
money and everything behind them that these are really good ones to start with. But one of the
key takeaways that I'd like to discuss in this beginning phase of building your portfolio
in crypto is to really keep an eye on the ISO 22 coins. And what that means is right now,
the federal government is switching from the SWIFT payment system that we have used for years and
years over to the ISO 22 payment system.
That migration is happening right now.
And some of the key coins, there's five key coins in the ISO 22 packed.
And these are the layers of the blockchain that support the ISO 22 system.
And those five coins, I think, are something everyone should keep their eye on for the next few
years and be dollar cost averaging in.
And those coins are XRP QNT, which is quote.
want, X-L-M, H-Barr, and Iota, I-O-T-A, five coins, read up on them. I think it's a mistake for
anyone that does not have those five coins in their portfolio. So I think it's just really
important that everyone has a portion of their overall portfolio, their investable income
in cryptocurrency. It could be 5%, it could be 3%, it can be 10%, whatever you feel comfortable
with, but I just think it is a mistake if you do not have some of your investable money in the
crypto space. That's the very fundamental side. Let's get more tactical as it relates to someone
now building that portfolio. Here's what I would do, right? Starting from scratch,
let's rewind back to me building my portfolio from scratch for the first time. I'm downloading
Coinbase Pro because on Coinbase Pro, I believe there, I think it's the transaction fees are like
a third of what they are on normal cornbase. So it's a pro tip. Download coinbase pro. I would then
begin, I'd fund my account. So whenever you think about funding your account, what you should
be thinking about is when you get your paycheck from your employer, just as you begin investing
into a 401k or some sort of ETF or building an actual investment portfolio somewhere else, carve out
however much money that might be for you every month, $10, $50, $100, and put that now into this new
Coinbase Pro account. So you would fund that account. And then with that money, you begin to say,
okay, as a percentage of, let's call it $100 now that I, you know, invest every single two weeks,
every time I get my paycheck toward cryptocurrency, how much of that money do I want to be in Bitcoin?
Is it 20%, 30%, 40%, how much do I want to be in Ethereum? Or these ISO 22 tokens or these AI tokens
or personally, I like ChainLink a lot. So, right, like how much do I want in these? It could be a good
idea to perhaps get out a piece of paper, draw a circle like a pie, and then begin to kind of
divvy up the pie into the percentages so you can begin to understand, okay, if I have $100 every two
weeks, I'll have $28 into Bitcoin, $14 into Ethereum, $6 here, $8 here, whatever that might
look like. And you can put that on, I believe, like an auto-invest, sort of an auto-repeat kind of
function inside of Coinbase Pro. I think public.com does it as well. And just rinse and repeat.
Same strategy every two weeks. I buy this much of this, this much of this.
Dollar cost average. We all know cryptocurrency is going up and down. It's going left and right.
It's going in circles. But generally speaking, if you rewind, you can see it goes up and to the right.
It's got its cycles. It's boom and bust and it's bubbles. We get that. But Bitcoin's been here for a while.
Ethereum has been here for a while. And we can say the same about a lot of other great projects, a ton that Robert has highlighted here.
So whenever you think about also now investing in a cryptocurrency for the first time,
I want you to be thinking about it as a percentage of your net worth.
Robert alluded to that.
He said five.
Is it three?
Is it 15?
Personally, I'm around the 15% range, but that's because I'm young.
I'm aggressive investor.
I want to build wealth.
Fingers crossed.
The coins I chose are great.
But I want to be more aggressive with my crypto investments.
But for you maybe that's listening right now, that could be 8% of your net worth or, you know,
2% or whatever that looks like.
So think about your investable assets and what kind of a percentage of that do you want.
Now, you have the playbook.
It's very simple.
You just put it on auto, repeat, auto invest, and just ride the wave.
I know you're going to feel, oh, my gosh, euphoric.
I'm up 40% today or this week or, oh, my gosh, I'm down 32% this week.
Oh, what do I do now what's going on?
Just ride the wave.
Have some fun.
Do a lot of research.
And don't forget, we're just two guys on the internet.
So this is not financial advice.
Yeah, that's a great excerpt, Austin.
You nailed that.
And just one thing that I would like to reiterate is always,
remember, guys, it's time in the market, not timing the market. So many people think that they're
going to wait till it comes down and they're going to time the market and guess what? The best and
brightest in the world can't time the market. That's why we always preached you guys to dollar
cost average and be in the market and be consistent. It's just so important. Absolutely. Now with that
being said, let's round off our third point here of artificial intelligence. We saw
Nvidia raise their revenue guidance for Q2 from like $7 billion up to like $11 billion,
now, $4 billion, I believe that just came out of nowhere with the demand for their
processors and their chips. Robert, you've been a big guy now on artificial intelligence for,
I'd say, several months. You've been very vocal about Nvidia and other AI stocks. So I just
want to quickly highlight and give you the opportunity here to remind our listeners, one, why they
should care about artificial intelligence, and two, a couple investment ideas in the space if they've not
yet invested. I just think it's so important that everyone in their daily lives and in their
businesses are learning artificial intelligence, the chat GPTs of the world, but just research.
You could literally Google what are the best artificial intelligence platforms to use and figure out
how this artificial intelligence craze can benefit your daily life, your business, and your
productivity. It's something that is here to stay. It is taking the world by storm, as you might
think, and so I just think everyone needs to make it part of their daily thought process and
their learning habits. That's what we're here for, rich habits. What can artificial intelligence
do for you, your companies, and your workflow? And so there's just so many opportunities in it,
as a job or creating a new company, but also for investing in the space.
I've been very vocal about it because, you know, I try to be an early adopter on everything
like crypto and AI and all these other things.
And it just has led me to a lot of great investments over the past few decades.
And that's why I preach about it a lot, you know, several people that are financial educators
like Austin and I, you know, reached out and kind of called me out about, you know,
um,
in video and AMD and Microsoft and I was just like,
look,
you can say whatever you want to say about PE ratios or what the charts say
or what economic conditions are.
But at the end of the day,
I just think that artificial intelligence is so strong right now.
And it,
the growth is there.
And that's why I'm focusing a lot on those investment strategies.
And a few of the ones I like are really simple.
AIQ,
I think everyone should take a look at.
LR and Z.
I think is another great one.
And then as far as individual stocks across the board,
we love Nvidia, AMD, Microsoft,
Broadcom, and Google.
These are all big, big players
in the artificial intelligence boom.
And so I think it's just something
everyone needs to have on their watch list
and be dollar cost averaging in.
100%.
I couldn't have said it better myself.
And just want to reiterate their AIQ,
great ETF.
There's a ton of good names.
LRN.
Z is more of a deep learning
ETF, but it's definitely up the same alley
as AI, and then also in the
Nvidia, the AMD, the Microsoft,
Broadcom, and Google that you mentioned.
Awesome. Cool. Well, with that
being said, Robert, I think
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now pays more than 6% which is awesome. So with that being said, let's jump into this episode's
question and answer session. Don't forget, shoot us a DM on Instagram. Let us know your thoughts.
Your questions were here to answer them. So our first question comes from Curry M. Curry asks,
how do you feel about leveraging your money through a 401k loan? I'll be paying myself the
interest on the loan and then can take the money to reinvest it somewhere else. Robert, I saw you
put the thumbs down. Give me your thoughts. Yeah, I just think this is a huge no-no. It's never a good
idea to be taking money and loans out from your 401k or your retirement savings.
You know, and I don't know the current interest rates right now, but I believe they're about
2% over prime. So you're just really, it's just a big no-no. And any financial advisor
educator is going to tell you that. I think there's just better ways to find money to progress
your investing strategy. So for me, that's a big thumbs down. I totally agree. I'm
never advocating for anyone to borrow against their future to do whatever with now reinvest it somewhere
else what if that investment goes south and i have to pay back this loan like it just does not make
sense if you need the money and you want to be investing or doing something actually productive with it
like paying off high interest debt for example just go get a personal loan or a debt consolidation loan right
there's a lot of alternatives to borrowing from your own 401k so two thumbs down for me i'm not going
to tell anyone that's a good idea our next question is
is really interesting to me, Robert, because I think it will resonate with a couple things that
you've done in your past here. So Maggie L asks, I own multiple investment properties. I have
several investment portfolios, and I'm starting to angel invest. I'm thinking about setting up a trust
to secure all of my assets inside of. What are your thoughts here? And do you have any recommendations
for companies that could help? Maggie L, good for you, love it. And yes, you should have a trust.
here's the structure.
You're going to take every property in an individual LLC,
and then those LLCs that own each property and each investment are going to be owned by a holding company.
That holding company is going to fully own all of the shares, all of the equity in each LLC.
Then above the holding company, you're going to have a revocable trust, not irrevocable, revocable trust at the top.
So the revocable trust owns 100% of the holding company, and the holding company owns 100% of every LLC, and you are the beneficiary.
Because remember, you always want to control everything and own nothing.
So Maggie, you're definitely on the right track.
Add in that revocable trust on top of the holding company that owns all of your LLCs, and you will be bulletproof and in a great place structurally.
So I heard you make a point to call out revocable and not irrevocable.
What's the difference there? Why does that matter?
Just it's a better overall structure for this type of setup when you're dealing with businesses and real estate and various assets.
There's just a lot of long-term not only tax, but protective mechanisms in the revocable trust.
Great question, Maggie. That's amazing.
Yeah, major shout out to Maggie. She's making some money moves. She's been listening to the Rich Habits podcast.
She's there. She's there for sure.
Our next question comes from Grace G.
Grace asks, should I be building my portfolio while I save for my emergency fund?
I'm also trying to pay off high interest debt.
What should I be focused on?
Grace, such a good question.
And Robert and I need to get this tattooed on our faces for how much we say it.
You cannot out-invest high-interest debt.
So no, you should not be building a portfolio while also paying off debt while also building
emergency fund while also while also while also take a deep breath.
and focus on one thing.
For me, what I would focus on,
that's cute, Robert, the little, I like that.
Usa,
Usa.
And by the way, y'all need to watch us on Spotify.
This is all a video podcast,
and you can see all of our funny facial expressions
and all the thumbs up and thumbs down that we're doing.
So watch the episodes on Spotify.
Anyway, here's what I would do.
I would focus on one thing at a time.
Right now, that big focus for you
should be paying off that high interest debt.
Now, if that high interest debt is a credit card,
or multiple credit cards, perhaps consider getting a debt consolidation loan and pulling all those
credit cards together and paying off that with a lower interest rate. That would be maybe a good idea.
But you want to get rid of this high interest debt. You don't want that hanging over your shoulder.
The interest is going to eat you alive. And once you've paid all that off and now you have what is
called good debt, think your mortgage, perhaps your student loans if they're favorable,
perhaps your car if it's pretty favorable. But I'm talking about no credit card debt.
Then take a step back and say, okay, three to six,
six months of expenses in my emergency fund, park that inside a public.com's treasuries, so you're
earning 5.4% on that money. So your emergency fund's going to grow while you put money into it,
which is a really good idea. And then finally, once you've got your bases covered, there's no
high interest debt and you've got your emergency fund figured out, that's when I want you to say,
all right, I'm going to start investing in building a portfolio. Think about this, right? You can't
out invest high interest debt. So if you're also trying to invest while you have this debt hanging around
you're going to be making 10% in the market, but the debt's going to be taking 26% of the balance.
And that's a net negative of 16%.
So you want to get rid of that.
There's no reason to have that.
Only after you've done that, start investing.
These great ETFs and index funds we talk about, V-O-O, VTI, VGT, all the above.
Yeah, I love it.
And it just really starts with once you get to a cash flow positive situation where you're not, where you've got all
of these high interest debts paid off. You really want to look at get your Roth IRA set up through an
individual brokerage account. Like Austin said, gets started in the VLOs and these ETFs and index funds that
we love and just really get on your way to wealth building because at the end of the day, we say it
all the time you can't out invest bad debt. So a lot of people will have a ton of credit card debt
or hospital bill debt or even tax debt, but then they're over here investing in mutual funds
or ETFs and it just doesn't work.
So it's just really, really important to make sure you guys understand what to get rid of first
and where to start on your wealth building journey.
That is episode 15 of the Rich Habits podcast in the books.
And with that being said, we're actually now 13 on the charts on Spotify.
Thanks to you all, we have now more than 10,000 weekly listeners that listen to this podcast
every Monday morning.
We're super grateful.
We cannot be happier.
and if you have any feedback, be sure to leave it.
And I say this every episode.
If you have nothing nice to say, don't say it at all.
So the only feedback we want are those five stars.
They'll leave us a rating review.
And be sure to share this podcast with someone that you think needs to begin building rich habits.
If it's maybe they've already begun to, maybe they're Maggie L.
Right.
And they've got the investments and they should learn about trust, something I'm still learning about.
Or maybe they're like Grace G over here who's trying to build the emergency fund and pay off the debt.
Or maybe there's someone who is, uh, you know, trying to make them.
stake of borrowing a 401k loan whoever it might be if you think this podcast will resonate with them
please share it with them yeah i'm just super grateful of all of you guys for listening over 10,000 of you
weekly is just incredible and we are just so excited for the future of this podcast and we appreciate
all of you who listen see you all next monday all right let's go
