The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Finance Expert: The Truth About Buying a House and How Her 652510 Rule Built $200K in Passive Income!
Episode Date: July 21, 2025Renting is smarter than buying?! Personal Finance Expert Nischa Shah breaks down the 65-20-15 hack to making money, why saving for a house might RUIN your path to financial freedom, and how to build ...REAL wealth through passive income, smart money habits, and beginner-friendly investing strategies. Nischa Shah is a qualified accountant and ex-investment banker who walked away from a 6-figure career to teach millions how to take control of their money. She’s the creator of the fast-growing YouTube channel ‘Nischa’ with over 1 million subscribers, where she breaks down debt, saving, and investing. She explains: ◻️The 65-20-15 money framework that generates passive income without a job. ◻️How to invest in index funds and retire early with compound interest. ◻️Why your job might be making you poorer every day. ◻️The dangerous lie about “saving = security” and what to do instead. ◻️Why the credit card trap is costing you thousands without you realising. 00:00 Intro 02:28 My Mission to Spread Actionable Money Tips 04:28 Trauma and the Link to Money Attachment Styles 08:34 The 4 Steps to Take Control of Your Finances 11:58 Paying Your Debts 13:55 The Emergency Financial Buffer We All Need 15:07 What to Do With Saved Money 17:09 Do These 3 Things Before Investing 20:00 Why You Should Save for Retirement 22:56 Spending Money for External Validation 27:36 What to Invest In 31:09 How to Get a Salary Raise 37:07 Is Buying a House a Good Investment? 44:44 What Is Opportunity Cost? 48:54 Should You Split Your Investments? 53:42 What Does Nisha's Portfolio Look Like? 56:40 Ads 57:31 The Best Book to Learn About Finance 01:01:15 Should I Buy or Lease a Car? 01:04:35 Should We Sacrifice Some of Our Enjoyments? 01:07:30 What's the Best Way to Track Your Numbers? 01:11:12 The Role of Money in Relationships 01:16:18 What Is Passive Income and How to Get It 01:21:59 Ads 01:23:48 Making Millions With YouTube 01:29:41 Doing Your Finances With AI 01:36:28 The Importance of Your Credit Score 01:45:20 What Would You Not Spend Money On? 01:48:52 My Dad's Words Changed Me 01:57:57 I Felt So Much Pain During My Career 02:01:21 Your Hardest Day Follow Nischa: YouTube - https://bit.ly/4kHiVMl Instagram - https://bit.ly/3Ui6eNd 💡You can find out more about Nischa’s ‘Intentional Spending Tracker’, here: https://bit.ly/3GR5gEC The Diary Of A CEO: ⬜️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ⬜️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ⬜️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ⬜️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ⬜️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ⬜️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Stan Store - https://stevenbartlett.stan.store/ Fiverr - https://www.fiverr.com/diary with code DIARY for 10% off your first order Intuit - https://www.intuit.com/expert-careers/?cid=aud_nativly_reach_us_expertnetwork-fy25_aw_hostread-diaryofceo-na-60s_broad_audio_1x1_intuit-gtm_na_na Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We put a lot of pressure on people today that as soon as they start working,
they need to get onto that property ladder.
But there's ways to build wealth that don't require you to be in the real estate game,
including three numbers that everyone should know when it comes to their personal finance.
65, 20, 15.
Just knowing that creates a better life for yourself.
Nisha Shah is the former high-profile investment banker turned financial mentor
whose content has helped millions rethink their relationship with money,
break free from crippling debt debt and take the first steps toward
building lasting wealth everything is trying to pull you away from your money
cost of living going up prices going up fighting against marketing to keep your
money in your pocket you earned this so it's becoming harder and harder and I've
gone through this I followed society's version of money until I realized that
if I continue living this way,
the freedom, the choice, the options I want aren't going to exist.
Um, hold on, give me a second.
And I felt really trapped at times, I didn't know how to escape.
And I know a lot of people are probably hearing this and thinking, I'm also in that place.
And so I really feel like my purpose is to help as many people
to go from feeling trapped to freeing themselves
and using money to do that.
I wasn't expecting that.
OK, so people are hungry for easy money tips.
And these stay the same regardless of how much you earn.
So we can talk about the Peace of Mind Fund.
And doing that puts you ahead of 59% of Americans.
Then there's building your emergency buffer. And this does more for your emotional wellbeing You can talk about the Peace of Mind Fund and doing that puts you ahead of 59% of Americans.
Then there's building your emergency buffer.
And this does more for your emotional wellbeing than earning over 200k.
But the way cost of living is going, you cannot save your way to retirement.
So this is when you want to move on to investing.
That is the easiest way to make money.
And my principle with investing is very, very simple.
And it's just...
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. investing is very, very simple and it's just...
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. The first thing is
a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week. It means the
world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't
have imagined getting to this place. But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only
just getting started. And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to
this podcast regularly and follow us on this app.
Here's a promise I'm going to make to you.
I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can now and
into the future, we're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to.
And we're going to continue to keep doing all of the things you love about the show.
Thank you.
Misha Shah, with your YouTube channel, which has accumulated almost 2 million subscribers
in an incredibly short period of time, what is the goal?
What is the mission that you're on?
What is it you're trying to do?
Money touches almost every part of our life and impacts so many choices from
where we choose to live, what we choose to do for a living, what our weekends even
look like. So my mission is really simple.
It's take the complicated financial jargon and turn it into easy, practical,
actionable money tips that anyone can implement and understand.
And what kinds of people and what kinds of financial situations?
Because obviously we've got millionaires on one end and then we've got people like me at 18 years old
that are struggling to even get a couple of quid together to feed myself.
The principles of money stay the same regardless of how much you earn.
And although my mission is to help make money
more accessible, the principles, the underlying thinking, the mindset can be applied whether
you're making 50,000, 500,000 or more.
And we don't really learn about money.
We don't.
We don't. Nobody in school was teaching me about money. My parents didn't teach me about
money growing up either. So someone like you who can simplify some of these big
complicated words or terms or strategies I think is of the moment but also more needed
now than ever because people are complaining about cost of living crises and prices going
up and inflation and all these kinds of things. Is that what you're seeing?
Absolutely. And at the same time, it's becoming harder and harder to save our hard-earned money.
Because everything, whether it's marketing,
whether it's needs going up, everything
is trying to pull you away from your money.
And who are you?
I'm a qualified accountant.
So I studied finance at university initially.
Then I qualified as a chartered
accountant and then I spent nine years in banking.
And do you think your sort of psychological or emotional or, I don't know, trauma response
to money plays a role in our relationship with money?
Absolutely. We definitely all have a unique relationship with money and a lot of it comes
from our upbringing. It's like an invisible backpack that we carry that we don't even realize that we're carrying
yet.
And it could be fed through us through what we've experienced firsthand or whether we've
just been on a fly on a wall, hearing a conversation between our parents.
And what might feel invisible at the time has such a big impact on the way you see money,
how you use it, how you use it,
how you earn it, grow it, spend it, save it, everything.
But that said, you can understand what to do to start making it and turning it into
your favour.
What was your relationship like with money when you went to university?
I didn't understand what money meant to me, so I followed society's version of money. So I bought all the things to make me look better,
all the things to make my lifestyle look better.
And I did that after graduating for years and years and years.
That was the path that I followed for a very long time
until I realized that if I continue living this way
and spending my money this way,
the freedom, the choice, the options I have or that I want aren't going to exist.
Was there like a catalyst moment where you realised that or was it just an accumulated
feeling?
So for a long time, I believed in this blueprint, go to school, get a job, climb the ladder
and security will follow. And I did that to the T for almost a decade, nine years in banking.
And I'll say I was about halfway into my career where I was, I met this amazing woman, she
was basically my mentor and we were working on multi-billion dollar transactions late
into the nights for weeks in a row at times.
And we were in the middle of one of the largest deals that we've done.
And overnight, she lost her job.
Overnight, she was made redundant.
And the very next day, I was asked to replace her.
And I remember thinking at the time that this person believed in financial security, this
person believed in the blueprint,
and it was taken from her.
And now I'm in her shoes.
What's to say that the same won't happen to me?
And that was the first time I saw a crack in the system and I realized if you give someone
else the power to feed you, you're also giving them the power to starve you.
And that's when I really understood, okay, I need to learn about money.
I need to stop spending it in the way that I'm spending it.
I need to stop having this mindset around money because what it's done right now is
it's kind of trapped me.
So what I did is took the power back in my own hands, did everything I needed to learn
how to save, spend, invest, budget.
And it came very easily to me because I was in banking.
That was financial lingo and I could simplify it very, very easily for me.
And that's really where my mindset or my change in thinking around money changed.
And that's the same moment where I started my YouTube panel.
Oh, okay.
That was it.
Because a lot of people bury their heads in the sand.
I was looking at some stats earlier on that said the vast majority of people just have this sort of avoidant relationship with their financial
situation, with financial literacy, with their bills, with their bank statements. I mean,
there's like long standing jokes on the internet that people just don't open their banking
apps. They just don't look at it.
Yeah, yeah. There's even a terminology for this and it's called the ostrich effect. And
it's a cognitive bias that explains people will avoid looking at negative financial information
because of the fear of how it makes them feel.
It's the same reason why we don't check our bank account after a night out,
or we don't open a pile of bills on our table and we don't check them.
But it's that thing, avoiding it, thinking that,
oh, it's just going to disappear if I don't look at it. It's that thing, avoiding it, thinking that, oh, it's just going to disappear if
I don't look at it.
It's that thing that keeps you stuck.
It's that thing that makes you realize, oh, I don't even know which direction I'm going.
It's the disorganized finances.
Yeah.
So if someone's listening to this right now and they resonate with this idea of they're
slightly avoidant, they don't really have a plan, they're kind of just, they get paid,
they answer their bills, and then they wait till the next payday.
They're not being intentional with their money.
Is there a step one in taking back control?
The very first thing, number one,
that I would say to do is build a peace of mind fund.
A peace of mind fund.
This is not about maths.
It's not the mathematically optimal thing to do,
but it is the psychological, because as we've discussed, money is as much about emotions
as it is about numbers.
So what I'd say is go through the last 30 days of your bank statements and calculate
exactly how much it costs for one month of your living.
exactly how much it costs for one month of your living. So mortgage, rent, utilities, bills,
minimum debt payments, car payments,
whatever that total is,
that's the amount that you want to save up
for your peace of mind fund.
Okay, so I go through my last 30 days of my bills,
I find out that it's cost me, let's say $1,000.
Okay, that's one month of your core living expenses.
Yeah.
So I need to save $1,000.
You don't need to invest it.
You don't need to save it.
You don't need to, it's not for a holiday.
The reason why you want to save this
is because when life does what it does best,
which is throw curve balls,
you want to make sure that you have it handled.
If a boiler broke, breaks,
your car dies on a Monday morning,
the last thing you want on top of the stress of dealing with that thing is the financial
stress of how you're going to pay for it. That's what this thing covers. It tells you,
I've got peace of mind, whatever life throws at me, I can handle it. And saving that one
month of living costs puts you ahead of 59% of Americans and 30% of people living in the UK.
59% of Americans, unfortunately, can't pay for a $1,000 expense, and 30% of people in
the UK can't cover one month's of their living expenses if something happened.
What is step two in that regard?
Step two, this is where we do move into the mathematical optimal thing.
This is you cut the financial bleeding.
Okay.
And what I mean by that is I get so many, so many times people ask me, Nisha, I
have 4,000, 5,000 sitting in my bank account, what should I do with it?
And my first question back to them is, do you have any high interest rate debt?
Because if you have savings of $2,000, earning 4%,
but you also have credit card debt at 20%,
you're leaking money more than you're making it.
It's like pouring water into a bucket with holes in it
and wondering why it's not going to fill up.
So what you want to do is you want
to take all of your debt that you have, rank it from highest
to lowest.
In terms of interest.
In terms of interest rate.
And then everything above 8%, you want to make minimum payments across everything first.
And then everything above 8%, you want to throw your extra savings into the highest
interest rate first, to the debt with the highest interest rate, and then move down
in that order.
And interest rate, is that paid monthly or yearly?
It's paid monthly.
It's paid monthly.
So if I have a thousand pound loan on a credit card and the interest rate is 10%, I'm paying
a hundred pounds.
Paid monthly over the year, they're going to pay a hundred, but that's split out into
monthly payments, assuming that they're not drawing down more on that credit card.
Are you against credit cards?
Credit cards are good if you're using them in the right way, really good if you're using
them in the right way.
And that means the points that you're using, the rewards that you get for it, the bonuses
that you get from it, all really helpful only if you're paying them off in full every single
month.
If you're not using that or if you're not doing it in that way, which is kind of what
they want you to do because they want you to miss these payments because that's how
credit card companies make money by your missed payments.
If you're not doing that, then the benefits just don't weigh up.
It doesn't make sense.
Use credit cards, but use it in a way that stacks up in your favor,
not in the credit card company's favor.
It's almost paradoxical that you'd use a credit card,
but only if you can afford to use a credit card.
Yeah.
That's insane.
Yeah, you've got to think about it.
Can I pay for this thing outright in cash?
If I can, then I can ship it on my credit card.
And that's the norm, is property, If you're using it to make money, healthcare, education, but
for anything else, unless it's making you money. Yeah. You, that's the way you want
to think about it. Cause it does encourage extra spending otherwise.
Okay. So I'm going to pay off my high interest debts first with any spare cash that I have.
Yeah. What's number three?
Number three is build your emergency buffer.
OK.
So this is your core living expenses
that we've already calculated in step one.
And you want to times that by three.
If you are single, you have predictable income.
Or you want to times that by six.
If you are head of household, you
have a mortgage, you have unpredictable income.
That's your emergency cushion, and it protects you from the bigger life things.
It's the third thing you want to do.
It protects you if you lose your job, if you have a health scare, if there are dependents
that you need to care for.
This kind of buys you that time.
But there's really interesting research from Vanguard
that actually showed saving three to six months
of your living expenses does more
for your emotional wellbeing than earning over 200K.
So just the peace of mind again.
It's that breathing room.
Yeah, three to six months of breathing room
in your bank account.
It just moves the needle.
It's the peace of mind.
It's the security.
It's the stability. One of the core human needs. And it's interesting because we're kind of looking
at making more money and earning more and we're chasing the next number. And actually the thing
that's going to have the biggest impact or move the needle on our financial well-being is
at this stage having that three to six months of living expenses saved up. It's all relative, right, at the end of the day.
So if, and it's incredibly stressful, and I've been there when you don't know if you can pay this month's rent,
if you don't know if you can feed yourself, but also the sort of back of the mind knowledge
that if something were to happen, you'd be screwed.
It's an incredibly stressful way to live.
And you might not even realise the stress consciously, but you might just feel it.
It might just be an angst in your life.
Yeah, and this applies at any income level.
Even people earning six figures
who are living paycheck to paycheck,
who don't have that emergency buffer in place,
they have that anxiety.
And also that same report showed
that having that three to six months
with the people that they surveyed,
their productivity at work was better
just from knowing that they didn't have that financial stress.
I know millionaires, people that have a lot of money, that are in a similar position in the sense of
they are stressed and anxious because their overheads are also in the millions every month,
and there's a lot of money coming in, but there's a lot of money going out.
So they're still sometimes just one or two months away from being at zero.
It's a different type of stress because their subjective experience and lifestyle is better going out. So they're still sometimes just one or two months away from being at zero.
It's a different type of stress because their subjective experience and lifestyle is better
on a day to day. But it's interesting that it's really relative to your outgoing.
Exactly.
What's the fourth point then? So far I've got have a peace of mind fund, which is one
month's expenses. Number two is pay off high interest rate debt. Number three is build
an emergency fund, which is three times your monthly expenses if you're single and six times
if you're in a relationship and there's people depending on you. Yeah. Most people actually stay
here. Okay. A lot of people just save, save, save, save, save. And I just want to, before we move on
to step four, I want to say that if you're saving, you only want to save for one of two things. The
emergency fund and the piece of fund, the mortgage fund
that we spoke about.
And the second thing is for any goals
that you have in the next five years,
whether that's a house deposit, car deposit, other than that,
you don't want to be saving that money.
It's going to be, the value is going
to be eaten away quicker with inflation
if you're just keeping it saved in a bank account
So that's when you want to move on to step four and that is investing
Okay, so you don't want to save you don't want to over save you don't want to over save know when to stop saving and start investing and when does one start investing and stop saving
After they've saved the three to six months of the living expenses, okay
That's the third step at that point once they've done step one, two three
this is the point and the reason why I say this, Stephen, is because if you
start investing before you've got from steps one, two, three, and you don't have your savings
set aside, and the market goes down, and you have an emergency, you're going to have to
pull that money out at a loss. Or you're going to have to go into debt, which is why that
was step two, cut the financial bleeding. So it's really important to have steps one, two, three done before you even think about
investing.
Those three to six months is your core living expenses.
So forget all your spending on the things that you love or the things that might make
life good.
It's just the things that you need to absolutely survive.
Because if you do lose your job, you're not gonna be out partying
and spending loads of money.
You're gonna think, okay, how do I pay my bills
for the next three months?
How do I survive for the next month?
That's the thing that's gonna cover that off.
Okay, great.
So it's not like the season ticket at Manchester United
or the Louvertain jackets.
No, no.
It's just you're heating your bills, your food, survival.
Yeah.
So number four is investing?
Number four is investing. For a while, we've heard of the phrase, save for retirement.
Yeah.
Saving for retirement. You cannot save your way to retirement with the way cost of living is going,
with the way inflation is going, with the price of retirement is going to cost by the time you
get there. Saving is just not enough. You have to be investing your money.
And there are two main ways that you can invest.
But before I even say that, most people know that they should be investing,
but they don't do it.
They say, I'll do it tomorrow or next week or next year.
Or when I'm rich.
Or when I'm rich.
And then by the time they do start, they've missed out on the most powerful lever
that they had going for them, which is time.
That is one of the most important things
when it comes to investing.
Because of the way when you start investing
with small recurring amounts, it just compounds over time.
So early, often, when it comes to investing,
there's two avenues to invest through.
The first is through your employer sponsored
retirement account. And the second is through your own individual tax advantaged account.
What are those two things?
The first is done through your employer. So what they do is they invest on behalf of you.
In the UK, you're automatically enrolled into it. In the US, you'll have to check with your
HR and get yourself enrolled into it.
And what this does is your company,
before it pays you or puts money into your bank account,
it takes a small percentage, you could decide how much,
and it puts it towards investments for you,
on behalf of you, pre-tax.
So you're not paying tax on that amount,
you're putting into an investment account
and then that money is compounding for you pre-tax.
Do all employers do this?
Most employers do it, not all employers do it. And some employers have a match, which
means if you put some money in, they will also match that amount that you're putting
in.
So how do I know if my employee does this?
Check with your HR.
And is there a cap?
There is a cap to how much they will match. So say if they match up to 3%, then you want
to put in the 3%. But then
you could keep going, but at this stage you don't even need to go over the match at this
point of the steps. You just want to put in enough to meet that match because you're getting
the tax benefit and then you're also getting free money from your sponsored plan on top
of that. You don't want to leave that on the table.
And when can I pull that money out?
When you retire,, retirement. So this
is for your retirement. You're looking after your future self. Today's you planting seeds
for future you. That's what this is about. What about people that say, listen, retirement's
a long way away. Yeah. You know, I'm going to be what, 65, 75. It's just a long way
away. I want to live a good, I want to live it up now. Yeah. I don't want to be putting money in a box that I can't open for 50 years. And you want to spend the money now to live a good, I want to live it up now, Misha. I don't want to be putting money in a box that I can't open for 50 years.
And you want to spend the money now to live the good life?
Yeah.
I, the most important thing when it comes to money is understanding what you want and
then making sure your money backs those decisions.
And I say this because when I was in the graduate scheme, there were two very different people
who worked in my team. And the first person who sat opposite me on the bank of seats in the graduate scheme, there were two very different people who worked in my team.
And the first person who sat opposite me on the bank of seats in front of me, he used
to come in in his Ferrari.
And he, on Monday morning, when we talk about what we did over our weekend, what we did
on the weekend, he would talk about the Michelin star restaurants he tried, the last minute
trip to Italy, and his computer screen was the next car that he wanted.
And on my left was Phil, who later became my mentor.
And he came in with his packed lunch.
He wore the same shirt tie combo that I could probably remember
and sketch it from memory.
And he had his holidays, he had his vacations,
but he was a lot more selective about them.
And I didn't see it at the time, but now it's so clear to me
that they were chasing very different things. The person opposite me, he was chasing this
good life, the stories, the status, the memories, and that was important to him. And he went
for it. But Phil, and I visited him just before I came to LA, him, his wife, his two kids, dogs, in their countryside home,
and he was enjoying the retired life.
He was loving life.
He bought what he wanted, which was early retirement, freedom, time, choice.
Neither path is wrong, but both paths, both people required taking a series of trade-offs. Both had to make some sacrifices.
And I think that's the thing that people miss. Sometimes it's so easy to say yes to the thing right in front of you,
because the benefit is there. The benefit is immediate. You don't realise what you're going to miss out on later on in life.
So the guy that was sat opposite you with the Ferrari, what was the trade-offs he was making?
He was probably going to end up working for the,
until he had retirement money to spend.
He was going to spend his life at banking,
but he was going to live it big,
but he wouldn't have the freedom, the choice, the time,
because his spending and his income matched each other.
And so what I want to just say is, for anyone saying,
oh, I just want to live it big, I want to enjoy the money,
find out what is the thing that's most important to you.
And make sure your money choices stack that decision.
Because the wrong choice isn't choosing the wrong path.
It's just not knowing that you even had a choice in this whole thing.
Do you think the guy that sat opposite you with the Ferrari was in any way insecure?
Was there an element of seeking validation?
There might have been. Yeah, there might have been. That might have been what made him happy. But I think it's also not having
the self awareness to if that made him happy, then by all
means, but if it didn't make him happy, and a lot of people do
that do this, me included, I've gone through this, I've done it.
When you don't know what makes you happy, you end up just doing
things that gets you that external validation. And for some people, it might mean, okay, you
know what, I actually do enjoy this new car. It does bring me happiness. But for others,
it might just be a facade. And later on in life, they just realized that actually no
one really cared. The only person who cared was me. And although I did it for other people,
now I realize that all the trade-offs I had to make as a result of it.
Because happiness and external validation, they're like cousins.
Yeah.
But they're not the same guy. Do you know what I mean? They look like they're kind of like of the same family, but one of them's the like dysfunctional sibling.
But they kind of look the same, you know?
Yeah.
You look at that guy in his Ferrari, you go, must be happy.
And he comes in and he's probably got a smile on his face because he's talking about his
Ferrari.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what he's built himself on, I guess.
But I don't know if that's happiness.
The guy without the Ferrari might be...
I think universally, most people, what they want is the freedom and the choice and the
time.
I think more people are after that and
that can make more people happier than any status symbol. Because when you do end up
going down the route of buying something to make you happy, you're on a hedonic treadmill.
You're then buying the next thing and the next thing and the next thing. You get those
spikes of happiness. There never is really long lasting, fulfilling happiness.
So investing strategy number one is asking your employer about their investment scheme?
Finding out if your employer has a retirement plan and making sure that you're invested
into it enough to cover the match that they offer.
What's strategy number two?
The strategy number two is your own individual tax advantaged investment account.
This is ISA in the UK and this is where you put your own money after tax into an investment
account and then the money grows over time tax free.
So when you pull out at the end, you could with the UK, you could pull out in five years
and 10 years or in retirement, then you could
withdraw that money tax free. So both of them have tax advantages. One is when you put the
money in, you're getting the tax advantages, the other ones when you draw the money out,
but they both have tax advantages. And so you're putting the money in and it's growing
tax free. That's really a big deal. That's huge. That's money that's compounding for
you and you're not paying tax on that.
But there's a limit.
There's a limit annually There's a limit.
Annually it's 20,000.
But in the UK and the US?
It changes year on year.
At the moment, I believe at $7,000, but with a quick Google search, you can stay
on top of whatever the current limit is for the account or the taxable
advantage account that you're investing in.
So I get paid, I put it into my, in the UK it's called an ISA and the limit is 20k so if I put 20k in let's
say if it goes to a 100k because the investments go really well is the whole 100k tax free? Yeah
you're not paying capital gains tax you're not paying interest I mean sorry dividends tax. So
pretty much that's the first place everyone should really be investing if they want an alternative
to investing in their pension. Yeah that's the first thing everyone should really be investing if they want an alternative to investing in their pension.
Yeah. That's the first thing you want to cap out because of the taxable benefits that come
with it.
Is it called a Roth IRA in the US?
Yeah, that's right.
It says max contribution is $7,000 to $8,000 a year if you're 50 or older.
Yeah, the specific amounts depending on who you are.
Where you are, yeah.
Standard employee contribution limit of $23,000. Interesting.
Whereas in UK it's just a flat $20,000 is the current.
And with my ISA, this tax-free ISA that everyone is eligible to invest in,
do I then have to pick the things it invests in?
Yes. This is the next. Oh, we could talk about this now actually. Yeah.
So when you are deciding what to invest in, this is with the employer sponsored account,
the employer sponsored retirement account, you actually just choose what risk profile
you have and it will do that investing for you.
So you'll say, I feel really risky or I'm not very risky at all.
Yeah.
And it does it for you.
And it does, it will invest on behalf of you.
Okay.
So most people don't even realize that they're investing, but they are investing through
their company if they have that employer sponsor plan.
Then the individual account is you doing the investing yourself.
You're picking what to invest in.
And what should I invest in?
My principle with investing is very, very simple.
And it's just keep it, keep it simple and do it for the long term.
So I say index funds and target date retirement funds is what you want to
invest in.
What's that?
An index fund, let's put out an index.
Think of it as a list of companies.
So the S&P 500 is a list of the largest, the top 500 companies to
keep this really simple.
FTSE 100 is the top 100 companies on the London Stock Exchange.
The fund is a pot of money that invests
in the companies on that list.
So by investing in S&P 500, you've invested in a small piece
of the top 500 companies in the US.
That's what an index fund is.
And so even if one company goes down,
you're diversified. And so there'll be another company that will and the other companies
will bring it back up again.
And what kind of performance can I expect from investing in the S&P 500?
Historically speaking, the long term average has been 8 to 10% per year, depending on the
years and the timeframe
that you're looking at.
That is different to a one year holding period.
It could go up, it could go down, you just don't know.
So the longer you invest for, the chances of you getting that 8 to 10% on average increase.
Is 8 to 10% going to make me rich though, Nisha?
How long are you doing it for?
You tell me.
If you have a lump sum amount that you're like,
okay, you know what, I have 2000 that I want to invest.
What should I do with that?
I was taking me five years to invest this.
I would say 1900 of that.
Don't invest it.
100 of it, invest.
I'll say why I'm saying this, 100.
I want you to invest it, for anyone listening,
I want you to listen, I want you to invest that
because I want you to see and feel the emotions
when you see your money go up over time.
Sure, it's gonna be small,
it's not gonna make you rich investing that,
but you're gonna instill that good habit early on
and you're gonna remember that
because the remaining amount, you're going to remember that because the remaining
amount you're going to put that towards increasing your income. That's the first thing you're
going to do. Think of your income as a river and your specific milestones, life milestones
as buckets across the river. So you have retirement, you have your house deposit, you have your
car payment that you're all saving up for.
Those buckets will fill up faster, the quicker and wider that river is.
That is your income that's coming through.
If you don't have much of an income coming through, those buckets are going to take ages
to fill up.
That's why I say if it's taken you a long time to save that amount, I actually would
recommend you putting that money towards increasing your income first before investing it. If however, you have disposable income, you have a reoccurring amount
that you can invest monthly, use that to your advantage, harness the power of long-term
compounding growth because that is the thing that is going to make you rich. Sure, it will take 25,
30 years, but that is leverage that you don't get
through your day job.
It's your money working for you
without you having to be there.
So you would suggest if you're really at that early level
to focus on increasing your income,
investing in increasing your income.
Yeah, that's the first thing.
If you're figuring out, okay, I need to increase my income,
it's taking me a while to earn this amount,
and I only have a lump sum of $2,000, $5,000
focused on increasing your income.
Yeah, that's what I would say.
And how does one focus on increasing their income?
There are a couple of ways to do this.
So the easiest way to increase your income is asking for a pay rise, increasing your
responsibility, the work that you do, your contributions,
and saying to your boss or your manager, this is the value that I've bought, this is the
responsibility that I've taken on, this is what the market is paying for a similar role,
and this is why a pay rise is fair.
The other option...
Did you ever ask for a pay rise?
Multiple times.
Multiple, multiple times.
When you're in investment banking?
Yeah.
It's one of those things where,
if you don't ask, you don't get.
Of course you'll get, but you sitting there
and thinking the hard work is gonna show
without you asking for it, it's unlikely.
You're gonna have to build a case and say,
okay, these are the things that I've done.
This is the things that we said we were gonna do
or I wanted to work on in my performance review,
which is what I had.
Okay, up to the end of the performance review
and these are the things that I actually did
and this is where I went above and beyond.
So if I'm your boss, Nisha,
if we just replay one of those conversations you had,
you were sat in a performance review
and what did you say to me?
I would say, hey, Stephen.
Hey.
Three months ago, or six months ago,
we spoke about the things that I needed to do
to get promoted or to get a pay rise.
And we mentioned XYZ.
And I've done all of those things here.
And here is the feedback that I've got.
Here is where I've gone above and beyond.
And this is some extra things that other people,
or the 360 feedback that I've done,
and that this is what it says.
Yeah, and that's when I say,
do you think that this is the bracket that we discussed?
Do you think that's fair?
Research shows that women are much less likely
to ask for a pay rise. And when they do do they are less likely to get one compared to men.
Is that kind of what you found?
Yeah, I've seen those facts and I think it's really such a shame that when a woman asks for a pay rise it may not be seen in the same way as when a male counterpart asks for the pay rise. And the factors that we can control are the being prepared, having the book of all the
things that you've done.
But I recommend, and this is things that I've done when I was in an organization or when
I felt like even I was being paid less than my male counterpart, is speaking firstly,
if there's a HR team in your department,
speaking to them and asking, am I online or am I aligned to the average for my
department and for what my role is?
They can give you a really good guideline as to whether you are underpaid or whether
you deserve a bump to be more aligned to the general pay in that role.
And the second thing is have an ally or have someone in your workplace that
you'd always speak to, whether it's a mentor, whether it's a colleague, and
it's worth always speaking to other people about money.
It's such a taboo topic.
We hate it.
We hate talking to someone else about their salary, what they're making.
But the more financial transparency that we encourage, the more we can learn from each
other.
Openly ask the person next to you, hey, this is what do you get paid?
As hard as that is, open up that conversation.
But the other way to increase your income is actually through switching jobs, switching
companies.
Because there's so much research that's been done.
And the most popular one is actually one cited by Forbes that says people who stay at the
same company for two years or more on average earn 50% less over their lifetime.
And I've made a video on my salary year by year over the last, over the nine years I
spent in banking.
And the biggest pay jumps that I saw were from switching companies.
So those are the two ways that I would actually say, yeah, increase your income by asking
for more by switching.
I do think one of the most effective ways that I've seen as
well is just looking at the industry as well and presenting
a case from the industry.
And people have done that to me several times.
They've over the last 10 years, they've come to me and said,
the industry pay for my role and my seniority level in this
part of the world, in this city is this, I'm currently on this,
is coming up a conversation about this to rectify it.
And I can't think of an instance where I haven't been receptive to that,
especially if it's justified, you know, because actually sometimes the
employer doesn't know, the employer doesn't know that they might be underpaying you.
That's a genuine possibility.
I know that sounds like crazy talk, but sometimes employees don't know, because
a lot of roles that we're hiring for these days are new roles. They're not roles that existed 10 years ago. Even in podcasting,
it's hard to find benchmarks for what people were paid in podcasting 10 years ago for different
roles that now exist in our industry. So it's worth having an honest conversation. And I
do think from the employer's standpoint, it's worth leading with the value that you've brought,
like you've said, versus blunt demands. Because humans are human beings, and you can turn
someone's nose up or their back up by the way in which you deliver your message, but delivering it
from an evidence-based perspective and saying, these are the accomplishments that I've made,
and these are the responsibilities I've taken on and this is like the industry
Average and I love being here. I don't want to stay here. So I was wondering if it'd be possible to have a conversation about
my salary
I'd receive that very very well and even aligning it to your company's objectives
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, exactly. Here is what I've done aligned to your objectives
that you're looking for.
Exactly.
And you talked about saving for a house as well.
Do you see buying a house as a good investment?
Because it is the first thing most people do, right?
It's like the first thing we're told
as part of the script of life.
When you get some money, save it up, get a mortgage.
A lot of our view about buying or renting or buying a house is actually formed from
what we saw our parents do and what we saw the generation before us do.
And so even looking at my life, formed from the way my parents thought, they came to the
UK as immigrants.
And when they bought their first house, it was like the epitome of success.
They had this thing that they can, that represented wealth for them, that they
could touch, they could see, they could feel.
It represented stability, security.
And then when we moved out of that terrorist home into another home, it was
between two
stations in a catchment area, so me and my sisters got access to better schools.
That was then their happiness.
That was then their goal and the milestone achieved.
And for the previous generation, and still the way people see it today, when people say,
oh, we need to buy a house for
wealth building, it's because a big factor of it is that it was a forced mechanism of
saving.
So when you're buying a house or paying for a mortgage, that's not optional.
You have to pay it.
You then can't then spend that money on anything else.
And so as a result, those monthly payments are going towards building your equity and
building this house's value.
And as a byproduct, it's building wealth for you.
So for someone listening to this, if they're hearing this conversation, they say, okay,
you know what, I have a goal to buy and they run the numbers.
It makes sense for them.
They're doing it for the long term,
then I'll say that's a really good goal to have. Go for it.
But I think we put a lot of pressure on people today that they need to buy a house,
and as soon as they start working, that they need to get onto that property ladder.
So if you're listening to this and thinking that I don't have a goal to buy a house,
then there are also ways to build wealth that don't
require you to be in the real estate game.
I think there's something psychological about paying rent that you never see again that
makes you think that it's a terrible idea.
Yeah.
And sometimes when you look at the mortgage payment versus the rental payment, you go,
well, they're the same and I'll end up owning this chunk of concrete.
So I might as well go for the chunk of concrete.
Yeah. But if you are choosing to rent, and actually there's been studies that's done
on this, almost nine out of 12 regions in the UK, and the same applies for other areas
in the world as well, it's renting is or can be cheaper than buying in that equivalent
neighborhood. And so if you are renting and you're saving money on that difference, then you've got to be disciplined and sensible enough to know that
you need to invest the difference.
What do you mean?
So if your rent is 1500 and to get that mortgage and you've checked the mortgage
payments and you've realised that with the interest that you're going to be
paying on the mortgage, all the other things that come into buying a house,
so the stamp duty that you're paying, the property tax, the repairs, the maintenance,
the insurance.
If you factor in the costs of both and you do run the numbers and you say, okay, renting
is cheaper than getting a home, that difference is what you want to be able to invest.
It's kind of a way for you to say, I'm creating my own forced mechanism of saving.
This is my own version of a mortgage. I'm the man I'm saving. I'm going to set up an
investment account and I'm going to automate it and I'm going to put money into it every
single month. And that's the way you're going to build wealth. That's just as legitimate.
And actually I went onto the property ladder and the money that I put in towards that flat hasn't grown
as near as much as the money that I made through the stock market.
By investing in the S&P 500?
Yeah.
So tell me about that.
So you bought a property in London or somewhere in the world?
Yeah, in North London.
Okay.
To live in.
Okay.
And I bought it in 2017.
Okay. Okay. And I bought it in 2017. Okay.
Yeah.
And it's gone up in value, I'd say about 10%.
Okay.
I've had about eight years.
Then you compare that to the stock market.
So sure, there's a number side of it where people think, okay, I need to buy a house
to build wealth, but that's what I'm trying to explain that actually, if you save that
money and you invest it, you might be better off financially.
But coming back to your point, yes, there's that psychological thing of, okay, do I want
to pay that money on rent or do I want to buy?
The other psychological part of it is also the comfort of knowing that you have somewhere.
And this is a big reason as to why I bought.
The comfort of knowing that no matter what happens, you have this place, it's yours, the landlord can't serve you
notice, you can do whatever you want to the flat within certain restrictions and rules,
and you have this piece of the earth that belongs to you.
And so that's the psychological comfort that came from it.
Sure, we could talk about the numbers and what investing will do and how much you can
make on that, but the bit that often gets forgotten about
is the invisible side, which is the peace of mind, the psychological comfort of just
owning a home.
So can I ask how much did your apartment cost in London?
Five thirty.
So you spent five30K on it,
presumably on like a mortgage or something at the time?
Yeah, I was on a mortgage.
So 530K, it's gone up 10%?
Yeah, it's gone up about 50K.
About 50K, so it's now worth 580.
But if you'd put that amount of money into the S&P 500?
Well, the thing with the house and a flat
is you could use the mortgage.
You wouldn't put that full amount in it because you had the mortgage.
But if you put that deposit amount into it.
Yeah, the deposit amount.
Yeah, the amount that you would put on the down payment, the stamp duty that I would
have also paid if I saved that amount and then put that amount, whatever it was, and
invested that.
That's the comparison I would have made.
So how much was that in total that you paid into the property?
I put about 50k, I think, down.
There it is, 50k and probably the net return on that, if it's gone up 10%.
Yeah, so 10k.
55k.
Yeah. And the S&P 500 in the same time has delivered roughly 10 to 12% per year on average.
It has more than doubled in value since 2017.
So you would have probably got pretty incredible return on the S&P 500.
Even in the last five years, the S&P 500 has grown 90%.
Yeah, makes sense. So it's almost doubled in the last five years, the S&P 500 has grown 90%. Yeah, makes sense.
So it's almost doubled in the last five years alone, which means you would have basically
doubled your money just investing it in an index fund.
Are you looking at that from the lows of the COVID?
Yeah, it says even with the COVID lows, it says so it's more than doubled in value since
2017, driven by strong growth in technology, despite the COVID crash in 2022 pullback.
Yeah, that's case in point.
That we're looking at building wealth
just through one mechanism that feels like it's urgent
and needs to be done by everyone.
But actually, if you're looking at it purely from a numbers
and building wealth perspective,
there are other ways to do that.
My brother was an investment banker. He now works full time helping with my money and
helping my companies. He went to LSE, he's a very smart guy. He's always been like the
boffin in the family. He always talks to me about this term, opportunity cost. So when
I told him I said I want to buy this house in Cape Town, he was like, you know, this
is going to cost you X millions.
Think about the opportunity cost.
Yeah.
And he always, every time I say I want to do this, he's like, think about the
opportunity cost.
And he basically stands in the way of it.
What is opportunity cost?
And why should people be thinking about this when they're spending their money?
So every pound of dollar that we spend is one less that we could use on something
else.
And that is the opportunity cost in essence.
And we often don't think about life in terms of opportunity costs because we only look
at the thing that is in front of us.
So your brother was telling you about how you can make more money investing somewhere
else.
But what you saw is this one thing in front of you and you thought, no, I don't even know
if I'm going to make this money elsewhere. I don't know
if that's going to happen. This thing is right in front of me. And that's the thing with
opportunity costs is always a trade off of what you can see and what you can't see. But
with every decision you make, there's something else that you're saying no to is coming at
the cost of something else.
I was thinking about that as you were talking and just to give a bit of color to this for
people at home and a good example of opportunity cost.
So, like yesterday, I bought lunch for the team, right?
And the lunch cost $100.
It was like this salad bar in Los Angeles.
Cost me $100. Fine, $100. Who cares?
But then, when I think about the numbers you shared earlier on,
if I'd taken that $100 and put it into the S&P 500,
in 40 years, assuming I got 10% return a year,
which is like the average of the S&P,
that is almost $5,000. So in terms of opportunity cost, buying the team lunch for $100 has effectively
cost me in opportunity $5,000 that I would have had presuming that return in 40 years
from now. So that lunch yesterday actually cost me potentially roughly $5,000.
Yeah.
And I guess for you, it's...
That's the last time the team are getting lunch.
But on the other side, you might have missed out on how the team felt going to that lunch and the invisible benefits that you might have got from that.
Whether it was just the memories at that moment in time, whether it's the motivation, whether it's the
culture that you're bringing in.
That's the thing that you might miss out on if you choose that $5,000 in X years of time.
And I guess it's a balancing act as well. Like, you know, I was thinking about the guy
you mentioned with the Ferrari. And if he were to die today, one could argue that in
fact he played life correctly.
Absolutely.
Because he lived it. He saw it. He saw it. He did it.
And this is, I think, the difference you see in people.
Some people have that long-term view and they think, no, I want my money when I'm 65 or
70, my pension fund.
And other people play a bit more short-term in their life and go, I just want to have
good experiences now.
And so it's hard to understand who's right because we don't know how the story ends,
I guess.
Yeah.
And I think there's a fine line, but there's also a way to balance living in the present with planning for the future by understanding that you are going to allocate a specific
amount of the money that comes in towards the here and now.
And then the rest you are going to look used towards the future you.
Because there's something very rewarding about spending now when you know the future you
has already been looked after. It makes you want to spend
it without thinking, oh, what is this coming at the opportunity cost of?
Do you think people should buy a house if their objective is to make money? Or do you
think there are other opportunities like the S&P 500, like using your tax-free ISA?
A lot of people listening probably don't have or are on their way to building a deposit
or working their way to have the money for a deposit.
If they're putting themselves under pressure and they think that they're just buying a
house to build wealth, I would say actually look into investing through that stocks and
shares ISA as a start.
That is tax-free.
If you have anyone started investing through that stocks and shares ice up, which by the way, 75% roughly of people in the UK aren't investing.
So yeah, I would definitely say open that up first.
And do you think one should split a proportion of their investments into different categories of
risk? Because you've got like crypto on the one side of it, which sometimes feel like being at a
roulette table. And then you've got things that are typically safer like the
S&P 500.
Yeah. I'm going to say with the stocks and shares actually, when you invest in, and a
lot of people also want to invest in crypto, but they also want to invest in individual
stocks as well. Should I go after the next big winning company stock? Should I invest
in the stock? What I want to say is that there's two parts to think about the returns,
but also the behavioral concepts, how you feel when it comes to investing,
because you're one of the biggest impacts on market performance is your
contributions, but also your behavior.
is your contributions, but also your behavior.
So Fidelity did a, found that people who invested in funds
underperformed the fund that they were in.
It sounds impossible, it sounds ridiculous, it sounds impossible, how can you be underperforming a fund that you're in? But then when they looked into
it, they found that when fear and anxiety took over, when the market dropped, these
people bought, sold, bought, sold. They essentially danced in and out of the fund. As a result,
underperforming the fund that they were already holding.
Okay, so when it went down, they sold?
Yeah, when it went down, they sold. When they went up, they bought.
And so what you want to do is you want to invest in something that makes you buy and hold.
Fidelity looked into the groups of people that had invested in their funds to see which group
performed the best. And when they looked into it, they found one group
significantly outperformed all other
groups when it came to investment returns. And that was dead people. Dead people outperformed
the living when it came to investment returns because they didn't touch their investment
account. They just said it, forget it. They didn't chase the next company stock. They
didn't go after the thing that's going to go up really quickly and down really quickly.
And that all ties into the behavior.
You're not letting your emotions drive the investments.
And by the way, they found out the second best performing group were the people who
forgot that they had a fund in the first place.
So when it comes to deciding what allocation you want your portfolio to be, it's understanding,
okay, what is going to give you the returns?
But also, what is the thing that's going to help you stay the course,
even when the market goes and drops?
What will make you feel like, okay, I can still stay and hold my position?
That's how to decide what kind of percentage portfolio you want for yourself.
And I've done that with my portfolio.
There's with crypto, it's less than 2% of my overall portfolio.
I've invested the amount that I feel like it won't make a difference if I lose it.
And if it goes to the moon, great.
And that's how, when I say somewhere here, the last thing I want to do is encourage people
before they've even set up the financial foundations to invest in something that can go up and
go down when 75% of the
population isn't investing.
And the reason why they're not investing is because, and I keep hearing this from time
and time again from the people I speak to, is either they're really scared they're going
to lose money or they don't know where to start.
And so when it comes to losing money, I always say, do the foundations first, set up your
portfolio there, and then move on to speculative assets should you want to go down that path.
I remember the first time I invested and I downloaded this app and I put some money in
there and I watched it and I was watching it so much and it was going up and down and
up and down and like three, four months later, I sold it.
And I didn't really make a, I think I lost a couple of hundred quid or whatever.
And then I watched that same investment over the next five, six, seven years just go to
the moon.
Yeah.
It went up. I remember thinking, fuck, I should have just kept it in there. And then the best
investment I ever made correlates to what you were saying because I lost my password.
I lost the password to log in.
And so I couldn't do anything about it anyway.
And I watched it and went down and up and down and up and down and up.
But over five years, it went really, really high.
And so when I first started investing in crypto and invested in Ethereum and now Bitcoin,
my strategy was the same.
My strategy was get the private keys and give half of them to one person that I trust
and half of them to the person that I trust.
And even if I want to, I can't do anything about it. And that's proven to be one of my greatest
returns in investing because I just, I don't even know what's going on with it. I'm not
paying attention.
Yeah. And that's the thing. You've just taken the motions out of the equation. There's no
fear, greed. There's nothing else that controls your financial decisions other than logic.
I think actually on that first investment I made when I was like, must have been at my early 20s,
I needed the money.
Like I didn't have the emergency fund
or a piece of mind fund.
So when it started to go down a little bit,
naturally you kind of panic.
So I think in that, the second season of life
where I started investing in Ethereum and Bitcoin,
it didn't really matter if I lost the money.
So it made it easier to hold my nerves.
And I think nerves are such a huge part of investing.
It goes to what you said earlier,
like it's worth taking a hundred dollars or a hundred pounds
or whatever you can,
which is a really inconsequential number of money
and putting it into some kind of S&P 500
or even a stock just to feel that,
almost like train your psychology and emotions
of like what the ups feel like and what the down feel like.
Yeah, exactly.
So your investment strategy, your portfolio, you mentioned it there.
Yeah.
What does it look like?
It's 40% funds.
OK, what kind of funds?
Index funds.
The S&P 500.
I also do international markets, the UK, so emerging, developed,
across all sectors, I also do.
And I keep it very, very diversified.
S&P 500, target date retirement funds that automatically rebalance.
So target date retirement fund for anyone who's listening and wondering what it is,
it's essentially a fund that has different types of investments within it.
So you could go onto a platform of your choice that you use to invest and
you could type in target day retirement fund and at the end of every fund will have a year.
And so you want to pick the year that is the closest to the year that you plan to retire.
So if you plan to retire in 2050, that's the year that you'll pick. And what that fund does is it
it rebalances and the percentage of different investments changes to become more conservative as you approach retirement.
So it starts to protect you a little bit more.
Exactly.
So it goes risk off, it kind of goes less risky?
It becomes less risky because you don't want to be investing the same when you don't have
that much time.
If you're investing in your 20s, 30s, you have enough time to ride out the stock market waves.
So that's 40% of your portfolio?
That's 40%. 30% is real estate.
Okay. In all parts of the world?
No, just in the UK.
Just in the UK? Okay.
Then I'll say about 25% I'm putting back into my business at the moment.
Okay. 25% I'm putting back into my business at the moment.
And then the remaining is between crypto and cash, cash and cash reserves.
Okay.
What about investing in yourself?
Because we think about education and skills
and stuff like that.
Should we be investing a small amount of money
into ourselves in some capacity?
100%.
I think you just don't stop investing in
yourself at any point in time it goes down to increasing your income, increasing
your skills, increasing your value which then has a knock-on effect on everything
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You actually, you made a video about 40 books that you've read that improve your own financial
literacy. If there was one book that you recommend people to read that you think is most accessible
and will advance their financial literacy
in the most profound way. That did that for you. What book would you recommend?
Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill. It's not actually about financial literacy, but
it's around money mindset. And the other book to start with when it comes to financial literacy
is also The Richest Man in Babylon. When people don't
learn about money is because they find it quite boring and not very interesting. So
The Richest Man in Babylon does a good job in intertwining a novel into financial literacy
concepts.
I've not read that book. I've heard a lot about it though.
It's the underlying principles when it comes to money don't really change much.
And it really starts at the basics when it comes to saving and spending.
So it's a good starting point.
Are there any other principles of building wealth that we haven't talked about?
I mean, we haven't talked about payday routines.
But I've heard you talk at length about what we should do when we get paid every single month.
Some of the things we've talked about already, like knowing your reference point, which was
point one, right? That was your piece of mind, Fond. I guess knowing your reference point is
essentially just understanding where your finances break down and what buckets they fall into.
So I would actually say this is really important
for anyone to know and it's the three numbers. It's called the 65 2015 and it's three numbers
that anyone should know when it comes to money and their own personal finance.
Okay, 65 2015. Okay.
And the way it works is you want to, the idea of it is to take your net income.
This is your take-home pay after you pay taxes,
not the number on your job description,
the number after you pay state contribution,
all other taxes, and you want to split that
into three buckets.
The fundamental, which is your core living expenses,
everything that is essential to
your living costs, mortgage or rent, utilities, groceries, minimum debt payments, car payments,
all of that should make up approximately 65% of your net income.
The 20%, that's for your fund spending.
These are for the pottery painting that you booked last minute, the Glastonbury tickets,
the Pilates class.
That should make up about 20% of your take-home pay.
And the remaining 15%, that's for your future you.
That's today's you, planting seeds for tomorrow's you.
And that should go to savings, investments, and extra debt payments.
And those are three good numbers that I think everyone should know and understand as a good
starting point to try and benchmark your numbers or your income against those spending categories.
I would say, however, if you are someone who's living closer to paycheck to paycheck, those numbers might look slightly different. And it might be that
you want to dial down that fund percentage to have enough saved over for the future you
so you can continue contributing to your savings investments. Or if you're finding that your
housing and mortgaging is higher than 18, 90%, start with, when it
comes to future you, start with what you can. Whether it's saving 2%, 3%, start somewhere,
you just want to build that habit.
And in terms of spending, should I, you mentioned cars earlier and we talked about houses briefly,
should I be buying a car or should I be leasing a car? A car is, let me just say, it's one of the two areas that most people overspend.
And it's because we don't just buy the numbers, we buy the emotions of the car.
How the car might make us feel, how we will look like in the car, the family memories
we'll create in the car.
And I know because I did this, when I got my first job, the very first thing
I did was upgrade my car. I went into a car showroom, found a car that I thought I'd look
cool in, walked out with the car an hour later, drove out with the car and didn't run my numbers,
didn't check if I could afford the monthly payments. And for the next couple of months
was figuring out how I was going to make the rest of my finances meet. And car dealerships know this, so they all manipulate
the monthly payments in a way that makes you buy more car than you could afford. And if
you don't understand how the numbers work, this is probably one of the quickest ways
to destroy your chance of building real wealth. The way I recommend buying a car is to buy something that's three to five years old straight.
And I say three to five years old because at that point it's enough, it's depreciated
enough as someone else's expense and won't depreciate as much during the time that you
have it.
But if you are someone who is wealthy and you don't mind taking that hit on the depreciation,
or you want a nice car every couple of years and you want to trade it in, and you don't
mind the fact that it's not the best financial choice, then lease.
That's how I think of the buy and the lease situation.
Then you also want to think about how much can you reasonably afford as a monthly payment
when it comes to the proportion of your income that you're spending towards it.
So do you buy new cars?
No, I actually, at the moment it was more economical for me to get a taxi everywhere
so I don't have a car.
So you've ran the numbers and thought the amount I'm traveling away from home makes
more sense just to Uber?
Get a taxi at Uber every time.
Yeah, I'm saving on the, for me.
And it makes sense for this point in my life.
It might be in five years, 10 years time that I want an ISA car and I don't want to restrain
myself from having it. But for now, with the numbers, I can use that amount somewhere else.
What about other things we spend money on? Where are the big sort of traps in spending
that we haven't mentioned? So we talked about cars, talked about houses. What about iPhones
and iPads and technology?
I think there's traps in spending in almost everything that we do that we don't even see.
Going to a grocery shop, which is a fundamental living cost for everyone, you're fighting
against marketing to keep your money in your pocket. You walk to a shop, a grocery store, they have the eggs, the milk, the bread right at the
back, which makes you walk through the shop to get there.
They have the premium products eye level, the sweets for the kids at the kids eye level.
So these are also areas where you don't even realize that you're overspending because there's
these subliminal marketing messages around you.
So that's one area where people spend where it's just like spending on the necessities
but not even realizing that there's a way to save there.
So what do you suggest?
Going into those supermarkets with a shopping list?
Yeah, I mean that's one way.
Going into the supermarkets with a shopping list.
Also checking if you're shopping at the cheapest supermarket near you.
I mean, shopping at M&S and Waitrose is different to shopping at Audi, if that's where you want
to save your money and you're more to paycheck and you're thinking about where to save your
money.
Other areas where people overspend is everything now can be bought as an impulse buy.
You can buy now, pay later.
There's Apple Pay on your phone.
There's so many debt financing methods that make you pay more.
And so just understanding, running this budget,
running these numbers, understanding
what you actually have available to spend
towards these things is a really good way
of fighting against everything else that is trying
to take your money away from you.
What about like iPhones and iPads and stuff like that? Do you think people should be getting new ones?
The way I think about this is the law of diminishing returns. When you first get something, there's a really big impact on your happiness.
When you first get an iPhone and you don't have an iPhone, that's good, that's big. You're like walking around your iPhone,
this is pretty cool.
Then with every upgrade,
that diminishing return starts to plateau.
It's not as exciting.
So actually thinking about, do I need the next upgrade?
Or is that something I could pass up on?
But always remembering that
the first time you buy something is worth it.
The upgrades after that,
the happiness doesn't increase as much.
And what about hair, nails,
dyeing your hair and all those kinds of things?
Do you think people should be trying to sacrifice
those kinds of things as well?
I'm not in this camp of trying to save money on everything.
I really do believe that you should have a percentage
that you allocate towards the fun things in your life
and not being restrictive about what it is that you should have a percentage that you allocate towards the fun things in your life and not being restrictive about what it is that you love. If it is getting your nails
done, getting your hair done, getting a new bag, go for it. Enjoy it. As long as on the
other side, that's not at the opportunity cost of you in five years or you in 10 years.
Because you talk about this term lifestyle inflation, which I've never heard before.
What is lifestyle inflation?
Lifestyle inflation is when as your income increases, your spending also increases in
a way that you think might be necessary, but actually they are all necessities being hidden away as just upgrades and luxuries.
It's essentially your spending rising at the same place that your income is increasing.
And what you want to do to counteract lifestyle inflation is you want to make sure that your
spending increases. Sure, you want to treat yourself, you want to reward yourself, but not
at the same pace that your income increases. You want to make sure that the gap between your income and your spending is getting wider as you
earn more money, not narrower. What's the best way for someone to track their money?
Because there's lots of figures here. Some people aren't mathematically
literate. Many people don't want to be in Excel documents. Are there simple
tools or an app that I could use to track my spending and saving and income.
So many bank accounts nowadays have categorized spending within them and it
will tell you what you're spending and what you're spending on.
So if you are someone that even me, I don't say every single month and track
every single transaction, but I do have a ballpark figure in my mind based on my
banking apps about what I'm spending and where.
And the key isn't, oh, should I be allocating this much here? But I do have a ballpark figure in my mind based on my banking apps about what I'm spending and where.
And the key isn't, oh, should I be allocating this much here?
I've overspent here.
Oh, I spent a little bit more on my trip than I needed to.
The key is, are you saving 10% minimum of your salary?
Whatever you decide to do with everything else, that's up to you.
And when you think about it that way, you think of this whole budgeting, managing finances, there's a lot more freeing than
something that's restricting you. If you're someone who doesn't want to sit in the spreadsheets,
spit in the numbers, just think, what am I saving and what am I spending? Am I saving
the right percentage? Cool. Doesn't matter how I'm allocating the rest. That's what
I recommend for those people.
Are there like budget trackers that are already built that I can use? Because you know my
bank might tell me how much I'm spending, but it doesn't necessarily inform me in real
time of how much money I have left.
Yeah. I mean I have a budget tracker which actually tells you in real time. It's not
connected to your bank accounts, but when you put your numbers into it, it will tell
you what you have left to spend for the remaining of the month.
And what is that? Is that an Excel document?
It is an Excel document, yeah.
Can I have your Excel document?
Yeah, sure.
I'll link it below so people can use it if they want to use it.
What about money and love and how these two worlds collide?
Because I was speaking to Kevin O'Leary recently on the show and he was telling me that one of
the reasons people end up in divorce is because of financial insecurities and pain and friction and arguments. Do you get a lot of messages
from people about money, love, joint bank accounts, all these kinds of things?
I have a lot of questions about, from people asking firstly how to bring up the conversation
of money and secondly how to manage their finances with a partner in a
way that keeps the autonomy but still makes it feel like you have a shared life.
What are those big questions?
When it comes to how to bring up a conversation, I guess, with your partner, this is really
important because the top two reasons why people argue or why couples argue is money and sex. And when it comes to money, it's lack of transparency, lack of openness, and lack of shared goals
together.
And that's not to say, yeah, you should go on a first date and ask someone what their
credit score or debt utilization is. But it is to say having
those conversations, asking the right questions in a way that can help you understand someone else's
money beliefs in a way that can help you create a financial life together.
So what should I be asking my partner? I'm your partner. What do you say to me and when do you say it?
I think there's levels of the questions that you could ask someone and if you're just getting to know someone
You can ask them something along the lines of if you found
Or if you won 10,000 tomorrow, how would you spend it?
Lamborghini
That will tell you a lot about what they value
So then that that automatically tells you that they probably value status.
If you say, I'll probably save it.
If I said Lamborghini, I'm going to rent a Lamborghini for two months.
What should you then do about that?
You take that information and you understand this is what the person values.
Because money is just a symbol for what the person values.
And if they want to spend it on a Lamborghini,
that's not to say you should then judge the way they're spending,
but you take that information, you understand what you want to do with it.
Is this way of thinking something that you want to have a life with?
Okay.
Is there a good answer to that question?
I think it comes down to understanding,
because even if someone says, I just want to save,
you might think, okay, this is great.
It's stability, security, but you might be someone who wants experiences.
You want to spend on flights to take your friends and family away around the world.
So it's just about understanding how your money values fit in with their money values
and are they completely in conflict with each other?
Or are they actually, do they marry up and can you see yourselves creating financial
life together? Because if someone's like, I'll spend all my money on status symbols
and not save anything and you're a saver, that is going to be a cause for arguments.
Yeah. Especially if you get bad news and things get tight. Yeah.
If someone loses their job and then when things get tight, you're really going to be focused
on the money or you have kids and you know, any sort of pressure on the budget.
Exactly.
And like other questions and those kind of questions come down further, further down
the line actually, I guess as well when it comes to financial goal setting.
But I guess another question you could ask someone is, and it comes back to what we spoke
about at the start of the podcast is, where did your beliefs about money come from? financial goal setting. But I guess there's another question you could ask someone, and it comes back to what we spoke about
at the start of the podcast, is where did your beliefs
about money come from?
Because so much of the way we think about money
is inherited through what we saw our parents do,
what we saw during our upbringings,
and it has an impact on the way we are with money.
It might be that we're an impulse spender
as a result of it.
It might be that we see debt in a certain way. It might be that we're really frugal.
But what that does is it opens up a conversation of empathy and compassion rather than judgment.
And that automatically can lead to more conversations about, okay, how do you view debt?
How can we manage our finances based on your views and my views?
And how can we work together as a whole to
make this sustainable?
And then the next question is when it comes to family and kids and how you're going to
manage your finances there, that's when it comes to the third layer of questions.
Where you ask, asking someone, what does our two-year, five-year, ten-year goal look like?
And if we were to merge our finances together, what would that look like?
Should we merge our finances together, Nisha?
My straight answer to this is no. We have very unique individual money personalities
and habits and we are getting married later in life where these personalities are really
set in stone. And do you know how they say opposites attract in a relationship?
The same goes with money.
Savers typically attract spenders and spenders typically attract savers.
So if you have a saver saving and then a spender who's spending the savings, that's going to
be a cause for arguments regardless of if there's financial shortcomings.
So what I recommend is having a team fund and then a me fund.
Team fund is for the grownup adult stuff, the joint expenses, mortgage rent,
bills, council tax, and this isn't 50-50.
You both pay into that proportionate of your income.
90% of your household income that you're making,
you pay 90% of the expenses.
You're bringing in 30% of the household income,
you're paying for 30% of the expenses.
That's a team fund, and then you have the me fund.
And this is for your own individual personality
to stay alive, your own money habits.
No one else can see the way you're spending here.
If you have a match addiction, go for it. If you wanna buy see the way you're spending here. If you have a
match addiction, go for it. If you want to buy that nice watch, go for it. You can do
whatever you want, spend this money however you want. If you want to save it, save it.
But that way you're creating that unity, but also having that autonomy. And I think this
is really, really important for both parties, women and men, but specifically for women. You want them to have their independent access to their finances. And I've seen situations,
I've spoken to people who have merged their finances. And it's when the relationship
has turned sour or unsafe, they haven't been able to know what to do because they haven't had the
independent access to their money.
Do you think people should be getting prenups?
You're married aren't you?
I am.
I think everyone has a prenup or you could have what the state is
telling you as what's going to happen if you decide to go your separate ways.
Depending on where you are, the prenup holds different values.
So some areas might not look beyond what the couple agree and they just say, okay, this
is what the couple's agreed.
This is how the finances are going to be split or the assets are going to be split.
In the UK, and I'm not a divorce lawyer or anything, I don't believe that the prenup
is fully legally binding. So it's useful
to have in some circumstances, but it's the courts will still look past it and see what
is fair as a couple.
This term passive income is quite a popular term. What is passive income?
The way I see passive income is money that you do not have to work or to invest time in to make. And
in all honesty, I think the word passive income gets thrown around a lot. And people forget
that the things that you do see that might be passive income streams required a lot of
work upfront to start with.
What are some passive income ideas
that you think some people could pursue?
Like the average person could potentially pursue
on top of their nine to five job?
I would go back to the easiest way
for someone to pursue passive income is through investing.
From like the S&P 500 and stuff like that?
That is the easiest way.
If you wanna, everything else, and this is how I see it,
everything else requires some level of time or energy.
Because you could increase your income
through a couple of avenues, if that's
what you're looking to do.
You can, like we spoke about, ask for a pay rise at work.
You can, if that's not available to you,
set up side businesses to increase your income.
And there's two ways to do that.
There's the tap and go that I like to call it.
And it's ways to increase your income that you could do immediately.
This isn't passive.
This is things like putting a spare room on Airbnb or dog walking or Ubering.
They require your time for money, but they are immediate.
The downside is there is a cap to how much you could earn because it's not leaning into
your unique advantages, your market advantage, your unique selling points.
The other side is value and skill-based income.
And this is where you lean into your individuality,
your unique selling point.
You tap into your skills
and you create businesses around that that can scale.
The downside with that, even if it is passive,
say if you want to create content
and then through that sell products,
which you could then earn passively,
with that kind of income stream,
there's always, it always takes longer to
make that money. And there's a time period where you are putting in more time or even
more money before you start earning that. So when I talk about passive income, that's
when I say, sure, there are avenues for passive income, but the easiest one that's accessible
to everyone is investing. Everything else does require some upfront time or energy.
Yeah. Obviously, we were talking before we started recording about StandStore,
which is a company I've become a co-owner in. And that business allows you to sell
digital products online. And we did this 30 day challenge and I was looking
through the results of how much money people had made and also how much of a
following they had. Because I think digital products are really like
interesting, entrepreneurial opportunity. And there was this one, I was going through all of them yesterday over in the studio
and there was like so many people,
but there's this one that stood in mind
because she had a thousand followers
and she's helping women to get control of binge eating
and other sort of eating disorders
by selling like digital products and information
and really like a community.
She had like a thousand followers or something.
And in the last 30 days,
she's made four or five thousand pounds doing that.
She sold like 40 digital products, basically PDFs and stuff like that.
And she thought this is a massive untapped opportunity for the vast majority of people
who've spent 10 years, 20 years in a career and know something,
have some kind of expertise.
Yeah, using what you're learning through your day job
and turning it into a business on the side
that can be scalable.
Not necessarily through creating content,
which is what I think a lot of people think
that they need to do.
I imagine everybody knows something,
and there's a demand now for people to buy that expertise
that you know, especially if you've been in the working world
for like a couple of years.
Yeah, I'd say if you want to figure out what it is that that expertise is for you, because
sometimes we're sitting on a mountain of knowledge, but we don't even know it until we kind of
take a step back and then look to see what that thing is. Ask your friends, what is it
that you'd come to me for advice on? Because I know I have people in my life who I go to
for advice on specific areas. Or if I want planning for an event,
hey, what should I do?
How should I do this?
If I need help with Excel,
hey, can you help me with this formula?
If I've got back pain,
just a quick message or WhatsApp to someone saying,
hey, what can I do in this situation?
Find out what people are coming to you for advice on.
That kind of will give you a signal as to
what people want to know about you,
what people want to learn from you, and see if there's a way to turn that into an income stream.
I mean, it's very much what you did.
Yeah, it is exactly what I did. It's turning the finance knowledge, which at the time my
tagline was sharing everything I know and I'm learning along the way to create a life
that I love. And it was me kind of doing it as an online diary, sharing, this is what I'm learning,
this is what I'm doing.
And then it ultimately ended up into something
that I do full time.
And that's changed your life in a pretty profound way.
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just head to intuit.com slash expert. I'll put that on the screen. That's intuit.com
slash expert. Talk to me about that journey. Was it faster than you expected? And are you
in a place that is higher than you expected when you started? You've done 151 videos on
YouTube. Yeah. And is it safe to say it's made you millions?
Yeah.
I would never have thought I was in the place that I am now
through sitting in my spare bedroom and creating videos.
Monday to Friday, I'll be going to work, glitz and glamour,
meeting clients.
There was a kind of allure to it.
And then the weekends I'd be spending in my spare bedroom, Googling what's A-Roll, what's
B-Roll, how do I do colour grading.
Which are all terms in terms of editing videos.
It's all terms of editing videos because that's what I was doing on my weekends and evenings.
While you were still at work.
Yeah. I quit my day job just over two years ago.
And so for a very long time, this was just a creative outlet for me.
And I loved it.
I found so much interest in it.
But my purpose for it really grew as the channel grew.
It grew very quickly from 1,000 to 50,000 within a few days and then 100,000 within
a few weeks of that. And as the channel grew, I saw the comments that were coming in, hey,
I've just invested in this for the first time because of what you've said here, or I've
just asked for a pay rise at work because of this conversation. And when you see something like that come through, there is no amount of money that
can be made through a day job that beats that.
There is nothing.
What was previously external fulfillment for me turned into internal fulfillment.
So it has been the best thing I've done hands down and it is the thing that I would continue to do even if I wasn't making money from it.
You made one video seven months ago about things you stopped doing to waste your evenings after work.
The video is titled Five Things I Did to Stop Wasting My Evenings After Work.
Yeah. Because I had to be really disciplined with my time when I was working in banking.
So what is the essence of that video? Is it telling people to use their time as an asset
more effectively?
So often we just are living in autopilot mode. We don't even think about the time that we're
using and how we're using it. We are just coming home after work and turning on the
TV and watching
Netflix and sinking into the couch because we've done that the day before and the day
before and it's comfortable. And the essence of that video is to say there's probably more
out there. If you're sitting there and you're in a place where you're thinking, I don't
really like my job. I don't really like what I'm doing, I'm not really happy,
I wanna meet new people but I'm not doing that.
Then this video is about saying, hey,
come out that autopilot mode that you might be in
and you have hours maybe on the weekend,
maybe in the evening that you can use
to create a
better life for yourself.
It's almost like budgeting your time.
It is budgeting your time. Exactly that. Thinking about how you can spend each hour
in a way that brings you closer to the version of the life that you want.
I think about that a lot because ultimately our time is the centre point of our influence.
It's the thing that's going to determine our long term outcomes pretty much more than anything
else. Whether we spend it reading a book that's going to educate us, we'll learn how to colour
grade for YouTube videos like you did, or whether we spend it, you know, watching Love
Island on the TV or something. Like in the same way that that hundred dollars is going
to compound at 10% a year in the S&P 500, that choice is going to compound?
So let's play that out.
So instead of watching Love Island, I decide to read that book you recommended about money.
And then that means that I make a series of different decisions
which change the trajectory of several areas of my life.
I maybe stop spending as much, I start budgeting a little bit,
I go and educate myself in a new skill.
And if you zoom out on that as a graph over like 10, 20, 30 years, you're in an entirely
different position because you used one hour differently 30 years ago. But you'll
like never see the return because it's so compounding, it's so hard to see.
It's invisible.
In the moment. But I really think about this a lot. I try and remind myself on a frequent
basis that like the actual currency I'm spending is these hours that I have. And how intentional and well-placed and aligned
they are to my long-term goals is maybe the most important thing.
And it's the most powerful thing that you have. Exactly.
What about your happiness? What makes you happy, Nisha?
The way I'm living right now, which is doing what I'm doing for a living, is making me
extremely happy.
And it's the happiest I've been since starting a career in banking.
It comes back to finding a meaning and a purpose in what you're doing.
And to say that I make money from helping people get better with their finances, I don't think
there's stuff, and you can't get much better than that. I don't think there's many jobs
in life that are more rewarding than giving back in some way. However that looks like
for you, through your own skills, your own expertise, your own unique selling points.
I can't imagine a better place for me myself to be in. And it's taken a long time to get to that,
but it's been good. It's been a journey, but it's been a good one.
A.I. is the topic of the moment because it's just impacting everything. It's impacting
people's ability to get jobs. It's impacting how I'm hiring as an employer. It's impacting
how I do my creative work and even me as a podcaster as well. I was wondering what you're
doing, how you're thinking about AI.
I've seen more and more people leaning into AI to get money tips and money advice.
And I think that's great because everything's at the expertise. If you're looking at what was available 20 years ago versus what was available
five years ago versus what was available a year ago to what's available now,
there's so much more information that is vastly available at your fingertips for
you to learn financial literacy and be prepared for it.
The thing that I would always ask people to remember is don't forget the emotional side of money
because greed, fear, that all comes into how you're managing your finances as well.
So use AI, use it to your advantage.
I think it's brilliant and I think you always need to lean into it.
But there's the human component that can never be taken out of the equation, especially when
it comes to money and finance.
Could I not just go on like ChatGBT and ask it to be my personal accountant every month
and tell it my situation, tell it my goals, and then tell it to give me advice every day,
week, month on what I should be doing?
I think that would be a great starting point to understand what do I need to do if I'm
absolutely clueless.
That's not to say that Chachat GPT is always correct.
Um, as you probably know, there's some errors in it.
So take it with a pinch of salt, but if you're starting from scratch, even saying, Hey, this is my income.
This is my spending.
How would you recommend I budget?
Give me three or four ways to consider it.
Yeah.
That would be a, a way for you to Yeah, that would be a way for you to take
if that's a way for you to take that next step, then definitely that's the avenue to
be explored.
Jack, you were telling me the other day that you're now using AI a lot for financial support
and advice. What are you doing?
So I've got like this prompt on chat GPT, where I've asked it to be the world's best financial
advisor for me.
And I screenshot it on my bank statements.
Every time I tell people this, they kind of wince because it's like a lot of window into
your life.
I don't kind of know the GDPR or whatever around it, but it's been so useful.
So I've screenshotted everything on my bank statement.
And then it tells me how much I spend a month, how much I can put into investments and stuff.
And I also screenshotted this investment account I had and it told me that I was overpaying
on my investment account and that I should switch to another one because the fees were
better.
And then it was like you don't have enough in savings so you should stop investing and
put your money into savings.
Gave me advice on a savings account to put it into with a high interest, like 4% interest.
And it's actually been game changing because it's kind of a base knowledge that I wouldn't
have had an understanding towards. And I get very excited when I listen to these podcasts
because I sit here and they tell you like wants to invest in and I think it was a particular guess we
had on. She said you should invest in this kind of stock and I said like, Oh, what do
you think about this stock? And it was just like, don't be silly. You're not this person.
And it's just been really helpful for me to kind of understand it's advice changes and
adjusts.
Oh, was that Cathy Wood? Yeah. Was it Tesla? Yeah. What I told you to behave. I was like
behave yourself. Because I asked it to be brutally honest about all the advice it gave me.
Yeah.
And I was like, Cathy Wood had this advice.
Tell me, should I put all my money into Tesla?
And it was like, look, you're not Cathy Wood.
You don't have enough.
It's kind of what you said about having emergency funds.
So you don't have enough in your emergency funds.
Top that up first.
And that's like, if you want to invest in Tesla, we'll have another pot. So the new
one I've done trading to one too, and you can do pies. So I've got a safe one and a
not so safe one, and then a high interest account.
That's really interesting, Jack, that you've done that. I think that just shows the power
of AI now. And there's two really interesting things that I picked up on then. The first is that it's very tailored based on you, which with AI is probably understood who you are
as a person from the information that you fed to it, your risk profile, your amounts, the bank
statement had your savings. And from that, it derived a profile and gave you the correct information based on your
current situation.
And the second thing that probably doesn't get mentioned in maybe podcasts that you've
done so far, Stephen, is the savings, the putting it into a high interest savings account.
It's a very easy, basic personal finance tips that actually do make a difference when it comes to habits, but also it's easy.
That's passive income for you. They would get missed out on a lot of the advice if you're
watching a specific investing focused YouTube video or a podcast. So it just harnesses the
power of chat GPT. I don't know yet if, or I don't know if we have any information about how much
information we can actually feed into chat GPT and where that goes, but it
sounds like it's just, you've given it the underlying framework or this is my
current situation and it's given you the correct initial guidance at least.
And then you've been able to say, okay, that makes sense for me or no, I'm
not going to listen to this.
Yeah.
I think the, the, I keep asking for me, or no, I'm not going to listen to this.
Yeah. I think the, the, I keep asking it like, am I on track and it changes its advice.
So although it's been really good initially, I think I'm now with that
base knowledge is going to go and sort of, and everything I've learned on these
podcasts as well, just kind of go and run with it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's really important thing.
Cause you know, there's, there's so much information online
when it comes to money that you don't actually know who to listen to and who to get advice
from and who to trust. Because you could be scrolling through TikTok and the first video
you see is put all your money into Tesla or crypto or one asset or you can see another
one that says, I'll stop buying glattes. So otherwise you'll die broke.
And then the next video might be mine and you might think, oh, well, the last two
people just told me BS, why should I listen to this person?
And so finding a person who, whose principles and philosophy aligned with
your way of thinking is a way that will keep you motivated and inspired to want
to keep getting better with finances.
keep you motivated and inspired to want to keep getting better with finances.
And so you've probably got that information from chat GPT and it said to you, Hey, based on your profile, this is what's important.
And you've kind of leaned into that and thought, this is right for me.
Actually, this makes sense.
And you've probably actioned it.
And so it's a fine line between finding someone who you resonate with and also understanding
that their principles align with yours.
I would say to them.
And how much do you think about credit scores?
Because I absolutely butchered my credit score before I even realized it existed.
My credit score was in the bin.
I got two CCJs, which are county court judgments, which is where you really fuck up.
Because I didn't know anything about money when I was 18, 19 years old.
And they gave me these credit cards and I'd overdraft and defaulted and didn't pay them back and went to an ATM, put it in, it didn't come back out.
Yeah.
And then I found out that I had destroyed my credit rating before I knew what it was. And I hear this quite a lot from people. They don't understand the importance of it or, you know.
You don't realize the importance of it until you're looking to buy something big.
Yeah. you're looking to buy something big. Because that's what it impacts, the credit score.
Two people can go into a car showroom and choose the same car and the amount they pay
for it will be completely different based on the history, the credit background.
And so there are, it is something that you need to think about.
It's something that you need to make sure you're paying off in time, in full your credit
card for instance.
And it is definitely one of the main things
or one of the things people should always look at and consider and you can check your
credit rating online for free. There are websites that do that and you can check it just make
sure all of your details are correct. If there's any anomalies correct that but most importantly
just make sure and it really comes down to
are you paying the things that are outstanding on time?
I think most people, especially younger people, don't actually realise that they have a credit
score and that they can check it right now for free. And they also probably don't realise
that things like being registered to vote has an impact on their credit rating. Because
I remember the first time I logged in to check my credit score and it was like 45. And it
said the reason why, one of the reasons why it's low is because you haven't registered to vote.
I was like what the hell?
Yeah, registered to vote that that's one of the things even something like you call up
your credit card company or your the company that you have a debt at and say hey can you
increase the amount that I have available?
What that does is that reduces your utilization when you're using debt. And by just saying, okay, you have, instead of utilizing 50% of your credit available,
you're now using 20%.
What companies now see is, oh, okay, then they're being sensible.
They're not really relying on this debt on their day-to-day living.
So there's a couple of things that you can take into account.
But even if you do, and again, people don't realize this, even if you do have interest rates
because you're not paying your debt,
often time you can negotiate that.
You can call up the company and say,
okay, this is the interest rate I'm paying,
but this is what I have planned.
This is how I plan to pay off my debt.
And I want to do it over the next 12, 18 months.
Can you reduce or can you look at reducing my interest rate?
I have these personas here, there's three of them, and I was wondering, they're three different
people at three different stages of life. When you think about the advice you'd give these people,
does it come back to this framework, this 65, 20, 15 framework, really regardless of what stage
they're at? You know what, most things in finance do come back to that framework. That 65, 2015, or even a variation for it.
With Andy, he's just started his job.
He's early on in his career.
He's making less now than he will in 10 years,
20 years time.
So it may not be that his paycheck allows for 65%
to go towards his rent and his car,
which is what he wants something new of.
It might be that, it might be 70 or 75%. But the key is, especially at this stage, the most important thing that
he has going for him is time. So save, invest early, do it recurringly, which is often,
and harness the power of long-term growth is what I'll say to Andy. When it comes to
the new phone, remember that there is a trade-off for every decision you're making. If it's
not an absolute necessity or an urgency, that can be spent and the value of that, maybe
thousand dollars today, can be worth significantly more in 10 years or 20 years time.
So balance that together.
Again, if there's budget after he's put down the money for his savings and investing, if
he wants to spend that on the fund, then go ahead.
With him though, do you think his risk appetite should be a little bit higher? Because when
I look at Andy here, he looks like he's early 20s, maybe late teens or something. With him,
I think you need to take risk. You need to go work at an AI startup because he wants
to fill that bucket of knowledge with like really high yielding
relevant skill.
Yeah.
So I don't know, I think of him I go bro, roll the dice, you've got nothing to lose,
you ain't got a mortgage yet, ain't got kids.
In your 20s, you can play the long term game.
Absolutely.
Everything feels like it's urgent in your 20s.
You feel like you need the promotion, you feel like you need to invest straight away,
you feel like you need to invest right away, you feel like you need to pay advice immediately. But decades over dopamine, and he's got a long time and the things that he learns now,
the things that he invests in, the skills and the risks that he take, he can bounce back from that.
And even when it comes to investing, actually, when you're in your 20s, you can be more risk
averse because you have the upward trend of the market that will see you through.
because you have the upward trend of the market that will see you through.
So 20s is the time to take the risk, take all the tiny experiments and just be a sponge where you absorb everything.
Yeah.
That's what I'll take that.
What about Lisa in the middle though?
Lisa is, she's got a mortgage, she's got an income and she's got a good amount of
savings and she is keen to start investing, but she doesn't know where to start.
And this is where a lot of people fall into.
They have the savings sitting aside.
Um, and this is, she's doing really well, someone like in Lisa's position.
But if anyone listening to this is similar to Lisa's position, chances are they're not investing
because they are scared and fearful of what to do and they don't know where to start.
So Lisa, I would say have your emergency fund in place, pay off any debt.
It doesn't look like you have any debt.
If your mortgage isn't over 8%, you can make more from, instead of paying down
your debt, you can make more investing.
So you're great to start wanting to invest and I'll say, keep it simple.
Do it for the longterm.
Keep it simple.
You want to, especially if you're just starting out your emotions and the behavior is going
to play a key part in your investing.
So 100% of your portfolio portfolio stick to index funds and target
data retirement funds at the moment. And then if you are ready as you get more
senior, you haven't increased your income, then you can dip into other assets
should you want to. And we've got Matt over there who's a single parent earning
about, so Lisa was earning roughly $140,000 a year.
Yeah. Matt's earning $60,000 a year. Over's earning 60,000 a year.
Over 50% of his income is going towards his rent.
He has credit card debt of 1,500.
So the first thing I would say,
looking at someone in Matt's position,
is if you've already saved for your peace of mind fund,
the first thing you wanna do is pay off
that high interest rate debt.
It is like running with weights on your ankles.
You wanna take them off so you can start moving on to the next path of your
financial journey.
So focus on paying off that credit card debt.
He wants to increase income income sources, but has little time outside of
work and being a dad.
So that says to me that he probably doesn't have time or energy to spend on
trying to see if something's going to work and see what comes out of it.
He wants to make an immediate source of income.
So the easiest way to increase your income
is getting an increase in your current job, getting a pay rise,
and if not, switching companies to see
if you get a pay rise that way.
When I'm looking at my own career,
when I stayed at the same organization,
it was the increase was between 3%, 5%, sometimes a bit higher if I got promoted
to 10%. And then when I switched companies, it was always between 20 and 30% when I moved.
And I know that is, I was in a lucky place where I had the movement to get those pay
jumps and to get that salary increase and not everyone's in that position. Um, but if you have, or if you're in an industry, which there is a, there is
more path to earn more than I would definitely say first and foremost, increase
your income, you don't have to spend any more time towards that given you also
have, uh, children to look after as well.
If you've stopped, if you've already exhausted those two avenues, then the next thing I'll say if you want an
immediate income is picking up income streams that unfortunately might be tied to your time,
but they will have an immediate impact on your income because that's probably what you
might be looking to do because your rent and I'm guessing your other living expenses are
taking up a lot of your take-home pay.
So you want to find out that extra buffer to start paying towards the debt that you
have.
Things like?
So this could be things like selling secondhand stuff online, selling products online, renting
out a spare room if you have that on Airbnb, things that you don't actually need to put
capital in to make money straight away from.
Are there things you never spend money on?
At this point in my life, me specifically, I don't think I've bought a designer item
in two years, which is a lot for me because I was stripped out in the designer way beforehand.
I've found that my validation in life has come through my work and through internally
and it took me on a journey to do that. And I just don't believe in the premium prices that you pay for promoting
another product or a brand.
If it's for utility, if you're buying a branded item or a designer for utility,
i.e. this design or this brand works better, then go for it.
design or this brand works better, then go for it. But if you're doing it purely to show, then for me, at this point in my life, it's just a no-go. I could spend that money in
other ways. That brings me a lot more fulfillment in different ways.
Do you spend on fast fashion instead of the luxury high end stuff?
Oh, that's a good question. No, I don't spend on fast fashion unless it's a really urgent last-minute buy
and I haven't found anything else.
But I tend to have a capsule wardrobe, which means I could play around.
I spend a good amount on quality pieces.
And that's important to me.
Quality pieces that I could use time and time again, and can switch in and out of.
And I think for me, when it comes to clothing, it's more just, okay, with work, it's what
can remove the decision making for me.
What about books?
I think that is one area that I love spending money on.
There's an infinite return.
There really is.
And actually some of the breakthroughs I've had have come from the books I've read.
Even the first book I read, which was The British dad, Poor Dad, they're just that concept of understanding assets versus liabilities.
Just knowing that from an early age can start changing your thinking in a way
that you wouldn't be able to having a normal conversation because the people
you hang around with, the people who you spend time with, they have a massive
impact on where you end up.
time where they have a massive impact on where you end up. And I think it's easy to say, just hang out with another crew or just hang out with a new crowd that pushes you. But
actually for a lot of people, they don't have access to that. And that's where books, podcasts, YouTube videos, it almost has that averaging effect of the five people
around you. It mirrors that effect. So even if you don't have access to the people who
you want to learn from, by reading their book, watching the videos, listening to the podcasts,
you can still gain that knowledge. And it's almost equivalent to you sitting with them
for an hour.
So you're saying people should definitely subscribe?
Always. Subliminal messaging.
You wear black a lot, like me. Is that an intentional choice?
It started off because when I was doing my YouTube channel alongside working in banking,
I had to find every way possible to eliminate any sort of
decision-making that will stop me from doing the thing. And so it was a way
for me to create a system, not rely on motivation. So there was about four
outfits of black that I'd always changed from and it made my life a lot easier.
Now this has carried through, it's been a lot of just, it just makes me think about things less, but no, I do also wear other colors just as much as just happens to be that black is 60% of my wardrobe.
Nisha, we have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next, not knowing who they're leaving it for.
And the question that's been left for you is who is the one person that was slash is responsible for the person that you are today
and the reason why you are sitting here?
It goes back to the person who when I started my YouTube videos and I got a lot of noise
and a lot of people saying oh like what is she doing? Does this make sense?
The person who really kept me going was my dad.
Yeah, he saw my videos and he said to me,
what you're doing is so good for the world.
Your education is gonna help so many people.
Don't stop.
And I didn't.
So, thanks dad for believing me when there was like nine or ten views of
my videos. Wasn't expecting that. It's crazy how someone just saying a few words at the right moment can be so sort of
pivotal to your trajectory. Does he know how much he inspired all of this?
I don't think he knows the extent to it. I sent him like a message maybe a few months ago telling him like, hey, remember that day
when I showed you my YouTube video and it was just me in my dining room and I couldn't
even speak properly and it was set up in a weird lighting and it was getting nine or
10 views and you said, don't stop, keep passing this education down.
And I said to him, I didn't send that message to him
and said, I'm so glad you did that
because I've continued because of that.
And we're not really worthy with each other,
but I think he heard it.
I don't know if he knows the extent,
but I think he'll be happy to know the extent of it now.
You got the tissue strip
Who is the one person that was is responsible for the person that you are today and the reason why you're sitting here now And that is dad
He must be pretty shocked to some degree.
No one could have imagined your channel would be this big and you'd be reaching this many
people.
He didn't expect it.
I didn't expect it.
I think he believed that.
For him, he believed that a job was security for us. I'm one of three girls
I'm the middle sister and all he wanted was for us to get a good job and be
secure. So whilst this is beyond I could ever expect when I quit and I quit
taking a big pay cut that was hard for him. How big was the pay cut? 84%. So you were on...
£220.
£220?
Yeah.
Which is about $300,000.
Yeah.
And I was just about to get a six-figure bonus, so I left before a six-figure bonus, just
before the biggest bonus of my career.
I negotiated it.
I spent months negotiating it, and two months before that six-figure bonus landed, I resigned.
Why didn't you just wait?
There's always going to be a carrot waved in front of your face.
And that carrot's going to come in different shapes, sizes, forms.
And it's going to be a distraction to keep you on the default path.
And it's going to be a distraction to keep you on the default path.
The carrot for me was that bonus telling me, hey, just wait, just wait another two months and then wait another year and another year and five years and 10 years
and just wait till you're 60.
And I had this once in a lifetime opportunity that was just exploding on the side.
And with it came all these people saying, hey, I'm so thankful for all of this.
And I was getting DMs from people just pouring their life story to me.
And there is no monetary value that beats that.
There really isn't.
And so I like took a step back.
Around my numbers, there was an 84% pay cut.
I thought it still covers my mortgage.
It covers my like basic living expenses.
The biggest risk isn't quitting my job.
The biggest risk is letting this once
in a lifetime opportunity pass me by
and never knowing where that path could have taken me. That was the biggest risk. And the hardest part was actually just letting go of the
identity that I wrapped myself in. Yeah. What was identity?
I, my title was my identity. I'd worked in banking for nine years and I could set a dinner table, cling onto my title, say I worked in finance and feel externally validated. And
so that move to quit at the time that I did from a career, a corporate career, which I've worked so hard for, it's like, it's what I wanted for so long.
And then just just let go of that and say, I'm letting go of that identity.
It took so much reframing in my mind and so much mind work and so many things I had to
do to make myself feel comfortable to say, okay, I'm not letting anything else dictate
the way my life goes from here.
It was a lot of work.
And I would say if anyone else is listening to this thinking, I'm in a place where I'm
unhappy.
I really want to do something new, but I'm scared and I don't know what
other people are going to say and what society is going to say if I quit or take this other
path. I could say the path that you want to go down
than around the people that are telling you otherwise.
Because so often we're half in half out.
We're interested in something,
but we're not obsessed with it.
And when you're interested,
you just kind of just do whatever needs to be done.
But when you're obsessed, you just kind of just do whatever needs to be done. But when you're obsessed, you want to do whatever it takes.
And this applies to anything to changing your career, to being a parent,
to being an entrepreneur.
Become obsessed with that thing that you want to do, because that will give you
the courage to make the hard decisions when they come.
The second thing, and I think I made a video on this
too, I wrote down on my phone, on an Apple Notes, and I wrote down all the things people
were saying to me, the external noise, and underneath it I had what my inner voice was
saying. And it's really easy when your inner voice isn't loud for it to be diluted
by what everyone else around you is saying. That at that point if anyone said anything
or if anyone is saying anything to plant seeds of doubt in your head, look at what your inner
voice is saying. Read it, repeat it, let that be louder than anything else that is happening
around you.
And what was the external voices saying?
When my channel started picking up, it was being shared into WhatsApp groups of people
I know and friends of friends and friends of friends and it was just, you know, when
you're starting something new and someone is breaking barriers,
it's just trying to pull them back, pull them back a little bit. This isn't you.
Mocking them subtly.
Yeah. Why are you saying your numbers online? What are you doing? LOL. And you've just got to
remember the reason why I'm saying my numbers online, that is hard to do. It's hard to sit
there and say, this is my salary over nine years.
It's hard to do that, but I remind myself it should be transparent.
It's to help people make the decisions
that help them with money.
It's the same reason why I came back
and said I wanna say this,
because it's the transparency.
And I think the third thing I think everyone should like kind of take into account when they're making, um,
hold on give me a second.
Where's this emotion coming from? It's very deep inside you.
There was a lot of pain during my career.
And I felt really trapped at times, but I don't know how to escape.
But also because I know a lot of people
are probably hearing this and thinking,
I'm also in that place.
And so I really feel like my purpose is to help as many people to go from feeling
trapped to freeing themselves and using money to do that.
And so I guess that's why I'm feeling like it's bringing it all up because this
is just alignment for me.
And it's just like bringing back the memories of where I was at that time
and what I had to do to like just take that cut.
Because at the end of the day, no one else has to deal with your,
with the decisions you make in life more than you.
They have to deal with maybe the consequence of a moment, but only you have to deal with the consequences of all the decisions you make in life more than you. They have to deal with maybe the consequence of a moment,
but only you have to deal with the consequences
of all the decisions that you make in life.
Only you have to go to a job
and work for a company that you don't want to work in.
Only you have to live that day.
Only you have to be with a partner
if that's the reason you chose,
if you chose because everyone else is saying it,
only you have to do that.
Only you have to grow old with the memories
of what could have, should have, would have been.
And live with the what if.
And that's why I guess there's so many people that I know
and that are probably listening to this, that I know deep down there's something more out there.
And I just want to, if anything, give them the courage to say, take that risk.
It's usually a calculated risk.
And if it's to do with your money and finances, spend some time.
Make sure you have your emergency fund or whatever it is that's
needed but align your money to match your life decisions because it could really be
freeing.
Have you spoken much about the pain? Why?
My content is personal finance so it's not really about me. It's about personal finance.
I'm just trying to educate people.
Yeah.
I didn't, I probably wouldn't have spoken about it here if you didn't ask me the question
about where it's come from.
It's just taken me back to the start.
And sometimes you go into a journey and you get tunnel vision and you forget why you did
it and you forget why you started.
And...
You forget all the people that helped you on that journey.
And there was a lot of people that helped me at different points.
My partner, my mom, my dad, my sisters, like they've all helped me at different
points and the people I learned from, my mentors, like it's just all a reminder as to how it started
and how different things have lined up.
What was the hardest day when you look back through that transition that you've been
on? Was there a hardest day, a hardest moment? The hardest day was that morning when I
emailed my manager to get on a Zoom call and I said I'm turning down that bonus.
I'm leaving banking. That was the hardest. If I was a flower on the wall,
what would I have seen that day?
You'd see a girl in her late 20s
taking or saying no to a path that could make money
and that was very certain
and that followed the default path
to go to a path where she wasn't sure if she
was going to make money.
She didn't know how it would turn out, but she did it because it meant so much to her.
And she did it because she saw the impact she was having.
And in her 10 years or nine years in banking, she's never felt like she's had that impact
on individuals.
It's been for corporates or for sovereigns.
It's never been for specific people or day-to-day people who need it. And she did it and she
didn't know where it was going to lead her.
Is there an element of being a first or second generation immigrant that ties into this?
Because I hear so often
when people come up to me in the gym and you know their mother's African, like my mother's
African and I was born in Africa and so my mother's Nigerian and put tremendous weight
on you know going to university and becoming a success in the eyes of the public and then
I hear a lot from sort of more Asian first generation immigrants or second generation
immigrants that they feel like you know the doctor lawyer, I can't remember what the third one
was, doctor lawyer something.
Accountant, I don't know.
Maybe finance. Do you think that plays a role?
Into why you go down a sad path?
Yeah, in terms of like, if you're at home and you have first generation immigrant parents
and they see successes, like one of three jobs, it becomes harder to break out.
Breaking out basically makes you a failure at home.
I think there's two things. I think it's definitely that's a big part of it.
But also seeing what your parents did and how hard they worked to get you onto a path of security,
which is a job and then saying, yeah, you worked really hard and I'm throwing that away.
There's a lot of guilt that comes with that.
So I think it's both.
I think it's-
Did you feel that guilt?
I did at the time.
Massive guilt.
Massive guilt.
I couldn't tell anyone that I was quitting
until after I quit.
The only person who knew was my then boyfriend,
now husband.
Your parents didn't know? They didn't know until after I quit. The only person who knew was my then boyfriend, now husband. Your parents didn't know?
They didn't know until after I quit. I couldn't tell them.
Why?
Because I knew that if they said something,
I might have just changed my decision.
And you think they would have said something?
I don't know, but when I told them, they supported it,
because they knew it was also too late.
I think they might have just said, hey, this is secure.
Well, maybe there's something in that.
Maybe in those big decisions where, as you say, you're going to deal with the consequences yourself,
both the upside and the regret.
Maybe consensus and focus groups aren't needed in such a moment when we should be tuning into the voice inside.
Because, yeah, external voices will just complicate those things but I also think you know I say this to people a lot when they come up to me and they say
I'm in this situation I'm in finance I'm working in the city I've got this dream
of being a violin player in Peru the first question I often ask them is like
could you go back if you're wrong because if you could go back if you're
wrong then that's what we call a,
I think it's a type one decision in business,
which is a door that is reversible.
And so many people spend one year, three years,
five years, 10 years, 20 years of their life
stood in front of a type one decision,
a door that they could walk back through if they're wrong.
And actually it's just like such a crazy shame
not to make those type one decisions at speed. If it's reversible. And it's so crazy because like 95% of the
time when I ask someone that question, they respond, they said, yeah, I could go back
to investment banking if I was wrong. I'm like, go do the violin thing then. Go fuck
up fail. It might work out whatever, but come back here if you're, if you can. So yeah,
you won't have that pain of what if. The what if, yeah. And I remember reading that study from Bronnie Ware, palliative nurse who interviewed people
on their deathbeds and it was, I think the number one regret is not living the life that
I think I could have lived.
And I've always remembered that.
I thought, okay, so if it's reversible, then maybe go through that door as fast as
you can.
Nisha, thank you so much for doing what you do.
It's really incredibly important. I think the very fact that your channel has been so resonant and so far
reaching speaks to an unmet demand in people's understanding of finance, but also having a voice
that they can very much relate to, that simplifies, makes complicated things accessible, but also just
a human being that is relatable in many forms. Your intentions of why you're doing what you're doing are so abundantly clear.
And I could see that in the emotion. I could see that you really, really do care about other people.
And actually your decision to take a leap from the world of investment banking,
which was much more secure and high status in many people's eyes at that moment in time,
was one also inspired by the fact that you want to do good for the world
and that is exactly what you're doing. So I highly recommend everybody goes and checks
out your channel. I'm going to link it below if they want to continue this conversation
because you make very actionable, concise, clear videos on all the subjects we've talked
about but many more. And also to go follow you on social media which I'll also link
everywhere else. But I just want to thank you for your time and hopefully we can talk
again soon when you've written a book and the book comes out.
Thank you so much Stephen, it's been a pleasure.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. The first thing is
a huge thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after week. It means the
world to all of us and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had and couldn't
have imagined getting to this place. But secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we're only
just getting started. And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people
that listen to this podcast regularly and follow us on this app. Here's a promise I'm
going to make to you. I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I
can now and into the future. We're going gonna deliver the guests that you want me to speak to and we're gonna continue to keep doing all of the things
You love about this show
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