The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Office Hours: Using Real Estate to Build Wealth, How to Use Your Discretionary Income, and Best Practices Around Mentorship
Episode Date: May 17, 2023Scott gives his thoughts on how to use real estate to build wealth, all while being burdened by student debt. He then answers a listener’s question about whether to use discretionary income to visit... other company offices. He wraps up by discussing how he thinks about mentorship. Music: https://www.davidcuttermusic.com / @dcuttermusic Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to the PropG Pod's Office Hours. This is the part of the show where we answer your
questions about business, big tech, entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind. If you'd like
to submit a question, please email a voice recording to officehours
at ProfitingMedia.com. Again, that's officehours at ProfitingMedia.com. I have not heard or seen
these questions. First question. Hi, Scott. I love listening to your pod. Thanks for chiming in
on all these questions. So I've been working a few years. I'm in my late 30s and I'm playing
catch up. So I've been maxing out retirement, bought and sold a home at a profit, reinvested that profit into another home that I hope to make
rental income on. But I'm also encumbered by student loans from a master's degree.
And the interest rate is roughly 9%. I consider the Department of Education a predatory lender.
I could refinance with a private lender at a lower rate, but I'd lose the security of
forbearance options and other forgiveness programs.
So despite some of these aggressive financial moves, I'm finding it really difficult to build
wealth as a single person, especially when my student loans are second mortgage. Right now,
my best asset is my credit score and being able to qualify for buying another rental property.
But if I do that, I'll be extremely leveraged and my job is insecure. It's a year to year contract.
So my question for you is,
leveraging myself to take this type of risk, what separates the wealthy from not? And if not,
should I just be cutting coupons, living well below my means, and just investing in the stock market instead? I know every case is different, but how do you build wealth with the constant
drain of student loans? Most financial advisors say to just keep paying them off slowly over time,
especially now with the uncertainty with the Biden administration about what will or will not get forgiven. Thanks a lot.
Oh, gosh, that's a tough one. It's a very thoughtful question. So first off,
I just want to acknowledge, and I don't mean to make this a blanket statement, like when your
grandparents say, oh, you'll figure it out. You are clearly a really thoughtful young woman.
And I also want, hope you take time to pause and recognize your success.
The fact that you own an investment property that you're renting out puts you probably in the top 10% of quote-unquote shit-together people in our nation.
And you obviously have the discipline to save money.
You invested in yourself.
So to your question, 9% seems like a lot.
So the bottom line is you just need to kind of map it out.
If you could refi at 3% or 4% and you have $50,000 in loans, what's that?
That's a savings of call it 5% on $50,000 or $2,500 in interest a year.
You constantly want to be thinking about figuring out a way to refi down or decrease the interest
rate across every loan you have. 9% is a serious interest rate, even in an economy with inflation.
Our inflation is running at 5%. So that seems especially onerous. Now, in terms of rental
properties, there are few ways to build wealth more consistently and reliably than real estate
and rental properties. And one of the
reasons why is that the real estate industry is some of the most tax-advantaged or one of the
most tax-advantaged asset classes in the world. So your rental property, you can depreciate 3%
a year. So there's very few assets that typically go up in value, which real estate over the medium
and long- term usually does,
and still you can depreciate it. So if I have $100 in the Amazon stock and it goes to $120,
I don't get to take a $3 tax deduction depreciating at 3%. You can on real estate. Also, it sounds like you have taken advantage of a 1031 exchange, which is also unique to the
real estate industry where you bought a rental property, sold it, and you can take, I think as a single person, up to a quarter of a million dollars of that profit tax-free.
Or you can roll it into another property within six months.
You get tax advantages.
Also, if you buy another like property or similar property within six months, I believe, you don't have to pay taxes on it if you roll it.
So one way, a decent way, a decent, reliable way to get wealthy
is to wash, rinse, and repeat. And that is buy a new property, fix it up, hold it. You got to buy
smart. You got to understand the area. You got to be disciplined. You can't fall in love. You can't
become emotionally involved in a property because that means you overpay. And then you add value
yourself. And it sounds like you know how to do that. You fix it up. You understand the right
questions to ask about a property, and then you rent it out. But the thing about a house,
you know, is you buy it and it can be an anchor around your neck. Assume the worst. Say you can't
make the rental property on it or you give it back to the bank. And I know no one ever wants to do
that. But real estate on the whole is the one place I would argue you can justify levering up.
There's few asset classes where you can get five to one leverage on your money at that pretty reasonable interest rate typically.
And so what it comes right down to is I would assemble a kitchen cabinet of people who understand real estate, understand your situation, and really lay out everything.
Your job, how much you make, how much disposable income, realistically, how much rent you think
you can get, how much time do you need to fix the place up, and decide if, with some other people,
if this type of leverage and risk makes sense. The highest paid people in the world have one
thing in common, leverage. Private equity is all about borrowing money at a very low rate and
levering up and going and buying businesses. And hopefully those businesses increase in value as you pay down debt.
And that is the best type of debt.
I buy a rental income place.
I can meet my payments with the rent, right?
And I have the equity to put into it.
Ideally, my rent covers, my expected rent covers the cost there.
So even if I lose my job, I'm not up a creek without a paddle.
And the value over time,
especially if you can hold in real estate,
goes up as the debt goes down.
And the delta between the two
is where I get real leverage and can make real money.
Because if I buy $100 in stock,
I don't get any leverage on it unless I use margin.
But even margin's more like, you know,
one and a half to one or two to one.
But if I buy $100 with a real estate, I only have to come up with 20 bucks.
So if it goes up 3% a year, the value of the property, I'm actually getting a 15% return on
my equity, not a 3%. So that type of leverage is unique for an individual in your situation.
I'm not going to tell you to do one thing or the other. What I'm going to tell you to do is one,
I have a gut reaction that 9% is pretty extraordinary, and you should think about
refinancing that. Two, you need to put together a kitchen cabinet of really thoughtful people
who understand you, be very honest about your cash flow, your job, and then look at the specific
property. The one place I would encourage people to take some amount of uncomfortable leverage is in real estate,
the most tax-advantaged asset class in America. And let me finish where I started. You obviously
have your shit together. Take some pride, pat yourself on the back that you are behaving so
responsibly and building wealth. Anyways, thanks for the question and best of luck to you.
Question number two. Hi, Prof G. I'm Rebecca and I'm currently working in a bank in Hong Kong.
I'm a huge fan of your show
and I really truly listen to your advice.
Come to the office, set aside some money in ETS every month
and work out three to five times a week.
My question to you is,
should I travel to connect with people
or more importantly, stakeholders in other office locations?
I'm too junior to be flown
out for business travel. I only have less than five years of experience and most of it was as
a reporter. So I wasn't even working in a bank before, but I can somewhat afford to occasionally
get a plane ticket and crash at a friend's couch to quote unquote, show my face to stakeholders in
other offices. Singapore, London, New York.
You mentioned that personal connection matters a lot in being promoted. In Asia, the dynamics are
slightly more distributed. A lot of companies have different team heads located in both Singapore and
Hong Kong, which is why I'm considering this option. Should I save up to fly for these trips,
perhaps like once every half year?
Or does this send a message to the company or my managers that Rebecca will fly at her own expense and we don't have to arrange anything for her?
Looking forward to your advice and rock on.
So first off, Rebecca, you're thinking the right way.
And that is promotions are a function of relationships.
And that is when there's a promotion or a spot available.
There's always more than one person who's usually qualified for the job, but that's what I've found.
Say there's three people qualified for the job or three people in their mind are qualified for the job.
The person who gets promoted will be the person that the decider has the best relationship with.
When you have an invested interest in someone emotionally, you like them personally, you want good things to happen for them and you want to use your sway to help them excel in the world.
So, and relationships are a function of proximity.
There's a lot of studies that show you make more money when you spend more time at headquarters.
If you're good and you're at headquarters, you're more likely to get promoted than if you're great and you're in a regional office.
And companies try to adjust for this.
They try to recognize that, okay, if Lisa is running the European office, we got to keep in mind she's doing a great job there, but there's just no getting around it. Proximity is hugely important. So you're thinking the right way. Having said that, having said that, with your finite personal income, your discretionary income, and more importantly, your discretionary time, I wouldn't travel to other offices.
I think you just need a break.
What you want to do is establish relationships at other offices, take opportunities
if they present themselves to go spend time
in another office, maybe at some point,
transfer to another office if your company offers that.
I think young people, before they collect dogs and kids,
should absolutely take any opportunity
to move to another country.
That not only looks good on your resume,
it's just a great life experience. It forces you to meet other people. You are kind of a novelty
when you're Rebecca from Hong Kong. That's an interesting rap when you're in the Singapore
office or the Seoul office or the Los Angeles office. But Rebecca, my guess is you're working
hard and I want you to take that discretionary income and that discretionary time
off. And I want you just to have a wonderful time. If the company is not willing to pay for you to go
to another office and don't go to another office, go sit on the beach somewhere, go party with
friends in Tulum, go check out, you know, Angerwad, whatever it is, right? Get, you know, travel for
God's sakes, go do something great in Europe. You're living in
such a great part of the world. You know, go to Tokyo. What a fucking incredible city. I was just
there. And try and find another friend who'll go with you. But no, don't pour your discretionary
income and time back to going to another office. Use the platform. Make an effort to meet other
people in other offices. If you make friends, then great.
The two of you should take a vacation somewhere where there isn't an office. You deserve to chill.
You deserve to recharge. Again, take that thing. Take that finite capital as a young person.
Explore the world. Do cool things with cool friends. At the end of the day, your time off
is your time off. Your discretionary
income is your discretionary income. Thanks for the question, Rebecca.
We have one quick break before our final question. Stay with us.
The Capital Ideas Podcast now features a series hosted by Capital Group CEO,
Mike Gitlin. Through the words and experiences of investment professionals,
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ConstantContact.ca. Welcome back. Question number three.
Hey, Prof G. This is Josh from Austin, Texas. I'm 36 years old, married, father to three,
and working in a career in the industry that I love. First, let me just say thank you. My father
passed away when I was 20, and it was pretty much right around the time that I was beginning to appreciate his wisdom and ask his advice.
I've sorely missed his presence over the years, and I've had to beg, borrow, and steal advice and wisdom from whatever mentors and father figures happen to enter my atmosphere.
Thanks for all that you do.
Now here's my question, and it's about mentorship.
Given my situation coming out of college, I don't think I would have made it as far as I have without key people taking an interest in me. In my career, I've
generally benefited from varying forms of mentorship over the course of my work life.
Some relationships have been great. Others may be disappointed. Some felt incredibly structured
while others happened organically. They all felt important, informative. How would you coach people and
professionals to think about mentorship? When and why to seek it out? Who we should ask if we're
seeking mentorship? How official versus organic the arrangement should be? How to know if you're
in a place to provide mentorship to someone else? I'm convinced these relationships are
critical to my success, yet I still don't feel like I fully understand them. I'd love for you to shed some light. Thanks again. It's a great question. And I'm wondering if there's, I'm immediately
thinking, I wish I'd done some research on best practices around mentorship. I think that it's
especially important for young men to make an effort around mentorship. I have found, generally speaking,
that because women were so disadvantaged in the labor force for so long, the corporations have
been doing better about trying to create structure around female-to-female mentorship programs.
A lot of companies have them more structured, more formal, but they usually don't have them
for men, recognizing that we've needed to catch women up,
if you will, professionally. And also men have a more difficult time expressing anything
resembling affection or being proactive around a relationship that it kind of insults or deflects
our sense of masculinity. So there's two sides of this as a mentor and the mentee. As a mentee
looking for mentors, I think obviously obviously, if it happens organically,
that's great, but I wouldn't be afraid
to ask somebody out for coffee
and then ask them for advice.
I don't think you ask them to be your mentor
right off the bat.
What I think you do is you ask them out for coffee
and you say, you know, I respect you.
I'd love to just get your thoughts
and some advice from you.
People, generally speaking, are really receptive to that.
You know, a lot of us, especially men, we have these very paternal and fraternal feelings,
and we don't oftentimes have the confidence or the context to share and coach people.
I love coaching young men. I love having boys, and I feel as if I can add value. And I enjoy, I've basically been giving advice for a living for 30 years, but mostly to old white dudes who are the CMO or the CEO. And I found what's really rewarding now quite frankly, I just relate to young men more. Also,
I think young men probably need mentors even more than young women. Why? Because young men,
and I'm not saying this is true of you, I'm saying you're kind of beyond this and clearly sound like a very responsible man, but young men are just fucking idiots. Our prefrontal cortex
doesn't develop as quickly. We have poor judgment. We're actually more sensitive and more vulnerable. There's more single family
homes in the US and any Western country with the exception of Sweden. And the outcomes for
boys are much worse in single parent homes than in dual parent homes. What's interesting is they're
not that much different for girls. It ends up that boys are physically much stronger, but emotionally and mentally much weaker
than girls. They don't recover as quickly. They're more vulnerable to changes in the household or
changes in the situation. And we have an entire generation of young men that quite frankly are
just failing. So I think some sort of mentorship or more acceptance around getting involved in a young man's life.
You know what really bummed me out?
I was on the Bill Maher show, and I said or I suggested that he should get involved in a young man's life.
And he said, there's no way I can get involved in a young man's life.
While, while, this is the hard part, while making them feel safe, they've been taught that it's toxic to express that interest.
Even if I wanted to help you with this, it's too risky.
You know, they would just say I was a pervert.
It was, oh, boy, Bill Maher suddenly took an interest in a 15-year-old boy.
I don't know.
Yeah, they would.
I'm sorry.
Anyway, speaking of this.
The most underutilized, the biggest waste in the world is good intentions.
And that is if you have the intention to help somebody or get involved in someone's life, you should absolutely do it. Anyways,
back to the professional mentee thing. I think it's absolutely fine for you to say to someone,
can we grab coffee? I'd love to just ask you some questions or get some advice. Approaching someone,
and this has happened to me a lot, saying, will you be my mentor is intimidating because it's
like you're signing up or you're committing to a long-term relationship,
and sometimes you're not comfortable to committing to that. But if someone asks you out for coffee and then starts throwing questions at you and wants your advice, that's enjoyable and rewarding.
So young men, don't be afraid to ask people out, both men and women, and ask for their advice
and get them emotionally invested in your success. And two, if you're a little bit older
or feel like you have something to add,
you know, don't be afraid or be very open
to helping people or coaching them,
especially in a management role.
But also if you know someone down the block,
you have friends,
you have a nephew that's a little bit younger than you,
you have friends whose younger brother or son is struggling.
I just have been shocked
how many people are receptive to saying, you know, I'm around this weekend.
Does your son wanna grab coffee?
Does your brother wanna come over and talk to me
about what's going on with him at work or whatever?
Just putting it out there.
There's a lot of people who need,
especially young men who need help.
Long-winded way of saying the real men,
the real men protect and advocate for people
they will never meet.
That's all for this episode.
If you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to officehoursatprofitingmedia.com.
Again, that's officehoursatprofitingmedia.com.
This episode was produced by Caroline Shager and Jennifer Sanchez is our associate producer. Thank you. Weekly Markets show. Hello, I'm Esther Perel, psychotherapist and host of the podcast,
Where Should We Begin?, which delves into the multiple layers of relationships, mostly romantic.
But in this special series, I focus on our relationships with our colleagues,
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