Thursday, December 16, 2010

Kicking the Invincible Condition

Posted by Steve McLain, the main author of Generational Wealth Tycoon--a man dedicated to the enjoyment of a life well lived.

Bad things happen.  Someone close to you could die and you might just have to pay funeral costs; layoffs  happen; your only transportation could break down; your investments might turn upside down; your home value might drop too low right when you need to sell it.  Preparing for these obstacles is smart.  Why?

Because things like these are inevitable.  It's easy to think that no bad stuff will happen.  This is why it's not uncommon for most people to ignore life insurance, safety nets, and long term investment strategies.

If you're on the road to financial freedom, then congratulations.  If you've set your sights on hitting significant wealth milestones, then you and I have something in common.  It's all great to shoot for these goals, but be mindful that fully investing yourself, leveraging your assets to their full potential, and/or not maintaining a significant savings for inevitable problems along the way is a bad idea.

When financial trouble comes your way, you'll either suddenly realize that you're not invincible or you'll have wisely set aside an emergency fund.

An emergency fund is a store of money that you've set aside and contributed to regularly so that you can respond to difficult financial trials as they come.  The amount differs for everyone, but most say that your ultimate goal should be to put aside enough to cover costs for six months.

Six months of expenses may shock you, but you should only take into account those costs that are necessary. The cable bill, the data plan on your cell phone, and the World of Warcraft subscription are not necessary.  You should exclude those from your six month savings goal.  If you happen to hit hard times, like losing your job, you should quickly cut off all unnecessary expenses and try to minimize any spending that you can.  If you can get that six month savings to last you six months, you're probably going to bridge the gap and get back on your feet.  

Not having an emergency fund can result in terrible repercussions.  For instance, missing your house payment will result in additional fees, setting you further back than before.  Not being able to pay a car payment (if you took out a loan for a car) hurts your credit.  Missing any payment results in late fees.  Additional fees, damaged credit, and falling behind are all contributing ingredients to the recipe for disaster.  That kind of setback really hurts any goal for financial freedom and generational wealth.

Make a goal to build an emergency fund.  Sit down and determine what your fixed expenses are.  List those expenses and then mark off any that can be cancelled if the need arises.  Then, list off all your variable expenses like electricity, water, food, and gas.  Try to arrive at a reasonable average and add those expenses to the fixed expenses.  Now, add in a buffer of around 5% and make that your final goal.

You may find that your goal is ridiculously high.  You might be discouraged that you'll never hit that magic six month total.  If you can't see yourself hitting such a far off goal, then you need to play the psychological game: set a realistic goal so you'll have the satisfaction of achieving it.  Then, once you've achieved that goal, set another, realistic goal.  You can do this with percentages of your total amount.  Instead of six months of savings, go with two months of savings or about 30% of your goal.  Maybe you can only swing 20% of your goal.  Whatever it is, make something that you can obtain that gets you on the right track.

At the moment that your paycheck is deposited into your account, have an automatic transfer set up to move a specified amount of money to a savings account.  Any savings account that gives you easy access when you need it will do.  Just do it and make sure you stick to it.

By transferring money the moment it comes in, it won't sit in your account, asking to be spent, but leaving it somewhere accessible will ensure that you aren't reluctant to use it when an emergency comes along.  Down the line, when something actually does happen, you'll be grateful that you planned to weather the storm.  Storms happen and the sooner you realize that, the better off you'll be.

How do you manage your emergency fund?  Thinking about getting started with your emergency fund?  Have additional thoughts and insights?  Let me know in the comments.

Images provided by Idea go / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Limitations: Why You Shouldn't Jump Into Active Investing

Posted by Steve McLain, the main author of Generational Wealth Tycoon--a man dedicated to the enjoyment of a life well lived.

I was pretty sure that, in order to be financially on top of things, I'd need to be a stock investor.  I believed that I would need to take what money I had in savings and invest in stocks like AAPL (Apple), GOOG (Google), and NAT (Nordic American Tanker).  Doing the "investor thing" always seemed like some distant goal to me though and each time I thought about doing it, I decided that I just couldn't make up even the cost to do a single trade ($7).

I was talking to my friends Tim and Sam today over lunch about investing.  We started by talking about index funds and ETFs, which are solid investments that automatically result in diversification as well as get you the lowest maintenance fees available for your broker-managed accounts, i.e. retirement accounts.  Tim was diving into an argument that was centered around smart investing and how choosing the right buys and sells has put him at 50% gains for the year.  He told me that index funds and ETFs could never come close with their puny 11-12% annual gains.

I had to admit that his reasoning and results seemed compelling, but the conversation morphed because I was trying to identify how I could make similar gains by investing.  The light went on for me in the conversation: if a trade is $7, a $700 trade would automatically put me down 2%.  This means that, since I'd have to pay $7 to buy and then $7 to sell, that I'd have to make a minimum of $14.01 to make a profit.  I've already lost significantly by the time I've bought those stocks.

See, I have just a little money that I'm investing.  To become diversified, I need tens of thousands of dollars.  If I make an investment in one stock at $10,000, a $14 trading fee doesn't amount to as much, but then all my eggs are in one basket.  Diversifying by investing in ten different stocks puts me at $140 for trading.  I've already lost about 1.4%, so I'm hoping to make up the difference across my portfolio.  Now, imagine that I buy and sell pretty frequently.  Each time I do this, I'm chipping away at my percentage gain and each percentage point that I steal is one that I have to make up.  If I buy and sell 20 times with my $10,000 and my gains are 15% (just barely above the passive index funds), that means that I've spent $280 and I've actually had to make closer to 18% to cover those fees.  I'm cutting myself down with fees.  My best bet is to be a passive investor with such a little sum of money.

So, this led me to the understanding that, when you have less than $10,000 to invest you ought to just put your money into a savings account that bears a tidy little bit of interest.  That interest is guaranteed and it keeps your money liquid.  The worst thing about stock investing is having to sell because you need your money.

Save up that money and pay down high interest debt.  The math shows that, to be an active trader, the fees add up to several percentage points and, therefore, even medium interest debt becomes a more viable target for your financial attention.

Contribute to your 401k, to your IRA, and to your Roth IRA while you build your wealth for the eventual investing endeavor.  Those accounts are not a waste (unless your 401k does not have matching by your employer in which case contributing to a 401k is not better than paying off debt many times).

You can contribute up to $5,000 a year to your IRA.  Depending on your income, 100% of that $5,000 is a tax write off.  Some employers will allow pre-tax dollars to go to an IRA, but if that's not an option, you can write it off when you pay your taxes.  Check out what the IRS has to say about IRAs.

All this to say that I've decided against investing actively until I've maxed my retirement contributions, paid off all the higher interest debt I owe (no credit cards for me--just a car loan and some student loans), and have a solid safety net of funds that are liquid.  Active investing, while a fun topic of study, is not yet obtainable for me.

Are you an investor?  Do you disagree with my conclusions?  Provide me with some feedback in the comments section!

Images provided by Idea go / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Some of My Story

Posted by Steve McLain, the main author of Generational Wealth Tycoon--a man dedicated to the enjoyment of a life well lived.

I've been married since 2002 to the love of my life, Maggie.  She and I started out with a small inheritance, money in the savings account that we had stored up, and a wedding paid for by her parents.  All that is to say that when we were first married, we started out with several thousand dollars as a safety net and no credit card debt.

My first home away from my parents was with my wife, in a one bedroom apartment for something like $650 per month.  I was making under $13 an hour, but with a fair amount of overtime, employed by the City.  She was attending school full time and had just gotten a job as a teacher at a nearby private school that paid $18k per year.  We were nineteen.  This was the beginning for us.

We bought two couches, a coffee table, and two end tables for five hundred dollars, a dining room table for a couple hundred, and the rest was all hand-me-downs.  Maggie drove the Acura Integra that she'd been given by her parents and I drove a little Mazda pickup truck that I'd bought for $1,500 several months before.

Water was paid for, air conditioning a little 700 square foot apartment was nothing, and we enjoyed our dial-up internet through the use of a free Juno account.

Life was good.  We had everything we needed.  It was enough to think about--even overwhelming at times--when I took in our finances.  Keeping track of our expenses quickly proved tedious as we both would make purchases and find it difficult to balance a check book between two people.  Neither of us really spent that much, so we just relied on the transaction history online as a means of tracking expenses.

During our first year, my dad urged me to buy a house.  Granted, it would have been difficult to do because we had no credit history.  As it was, when we finally bought our house a year after getting married, we had to take out an FHA loan and suffer a slightly higher interest rate because of a lack of depth.  My dad's urging was based on his knowledge of the benefit of owning instead of renting.  The market was low; it was more of a buyer's market.  We waited to buy a house because we just wanted to get into a better financial situation, build our credit history, and give ourselves a better feeling of security.

The deciding factor was the lease renewal.  The monthly rent was going up to $750 per month and it seemed ridiculous to pay that much when we could easily own a house for not much more.  Having just changed jobs and gone up to nearly $15 an hour, we took the plunge and began searching for a house.

After realizing that our first real estate agent was not meeting our needs, we went with a close friend who helped us find a nice place.  It was a 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1,440 square foot house built in 1972, but it was beautiful.  It was just above what we were pre-qualified for.  We went back to the loan broker and he said that we could do it, so we committed to filling out more paperwork than a human being should ever have to fill out.

In May of 2003, we had our first house.  I was suddenly introduced to the joys of home ownership, in which fixing broken things is a common occurrence, mowing the lawn was now my responsibility, and whatever was wrong was now my problem--not the landlord's.

We replaced plumbing, we replaced our furnace which had not been sized properly for the house, we fixed the ceiling where leaks had ravaged it, and we found and fixed lots more as we found it or it found us.

After several years in the house, the property value had gone up ridiculously high.  Following the advice of a good friend, I opened a home equity line of credit to the tune of almost twice my mortgage balance.  We used some of that to pay for improvements on the house--like tile in the kitchen and new siding on the outside of the house.  However, that same friend had convinced me that the true path to success was to buy a second house and to begin renting the old one.

I'll take a moment to describe my friend.  He was what could be considered a high-rolling, on-fire investor.  He and his nephew had made several property investments in the San Francisco area and were regularly dealing with huge sums of money.  The monthly costs to maintenance their loans were over $10,000.  Both of these guys seemed like gods to me.  I marveled at them and admired them.  Maggie and I went up to San Francisco and saw the kind of work they were doing--buying ancient buildings, renovating them, and then selling them for huge profits.  They'd had some success, but immediately dumped it all back in to generate more wealth.  They had everything leveraged so that they could maximize their gains on the house's dime.  It seemed ludicrous at the time, but brilliant anyway.  I was young, mesmerized, and excited.  I needed to get in on this.

Around the same time, I was reading a book entitled The Millionaire Real Estate Investor by Gary Keller.  I still recommend this book after having learned the lessons I have.  His method is right on and he doesn't hide the ugly truths about this particular path to wealth.  Even after reading the wisdom of this book, though, I was still caught up in the dream that my friend and his nephew were living.

We eventually found a house that we liked and decided to buy it.  The plan was to use our HELOC for the down payment and then to move out of our old house, rent it, and move into the new one.  Everything was moving along at a quick pace, the inspection had gone well, and Escrow was underway.

I had a bad feeling though.  For one thing, the Realtor we'd been dealing with had applied too much pressure and I couldn't shake the feeling that I was caving to his urging more than making a smart decision.  He'd come to us based on a recommendation from a big investor, so I didn't know what I was getting into.  I also had an inkling that the overinflated market wasn't right.  To top it all off, there was a high Mello-Rroose Tax that sent me over the edge.  Forsaking the money we'd used for the inspection and opening of Escrow, we backed out of the deal.  I had a difficult conversation with my Realtor in which he tried very hard to bully me back into the deal, but I nervously stood my ground and won the fight.

Literally a month later we started seeing the housing boom implode.  The market crashed and the house we'd been looking at was suddenly worth a fraction of what we would have paid.  We had signed an exclusivity contract with the stupid Realtor, so we waited until it had expired and then went with a friend to capitalize on the now falling market.

It was during this time that my friend and his nephew sold off one of their properties.  They immediately rolled over most of their money but had tens of thousands of dollars left over that needed a shelter before capital gains taxes hit.  We talked about it and decided that we'd all go into a one-third-each partnership on a house. We'd put renters into it instead of having one of us live in it since it was a three-way financial arrangement.

We quickly found a property we liked and made the deal.  We bought a 2,400 square foot, 3 bedroom, 3 bath house that had dropped in value by about 30%.  Before Escrow closed, we had a renter lined up.  When Escrow closed, we cleaned, fixed a few things, and let the renters come in.

Unfortunately, the payment, without taxes and insurance impounded, was high and the rent we were getting only covered about 90% of it.  I'd violated a basic tenet of The Millionaire Real Estate Investor rulebook.  I had done a deal that resulted in the math being wrong.  I had not determined what rent we would be able to get for the house and so we were left with negative cash flow.

Split into thirds, the payment wasn't that bad and to have a long term investment being mostly paid for by renters was cool.  It was the property taxes and insurance, though, that hit us hard.  It also didn't help that the hot investments my friends had in San Francisco had started to cool--the stuff they had for sale wasn't moving.  This led to their continued requirement to pay massive maintenance fees on their interest-only loans.  I started to see the wisdom of putting twenty percent down and of buying into something that you can reasonably maintain on your own.  These guys had purchased ticking time bombs and time was running out.

The market continued to drop after this and the value on the house finally bottomed out to around $100,000 less than what we paid for it.  That's terrible, but it doesn't bother me too much.  As long as renters are paying the lion's share of it, I'm not overly concerned.  What did concern me was when our renters left.  This began the period of several months without somebody else to bear the burden of the payment.  Luckily, we had savings--as is always the case--and we were able to pay for the costs.  My friends too eventually paid their share, though it hurt them immensely to do so.

Finally, we had gone around three months without renters, but we had made our fixes to the house, cleaned it up, and put a rent sign in the yard.  It wasn't more than a couple of weeks before I showed the house to a family that loved it.  They were renting the following month and have been for the past year and a half or two. Still, the rent is the same as before, but that was about all I could get.

Until very recently, that was the only thing I could look at as an investment for my family.  It wasn't a very good investment, but it was something.  I'd learned lessons, I will eventually pay it off, and I will eventually recover from the mistakes I made.  I was wrong, though, about that house being the only investment I had made.  We'd also bought our house.  That was an investment too, and it's value hadn't dropped too dramatically below what we owed.  We were happy in our home and even added a new member to the family on October 5, 2009.  My son Caleb was born and we had medical bills up the wazoo, but he was worth it.  We brought him home to our first house where we had so many memories and so much love.

Tragedy hit our family the day after Christmas of 2009.  My wife's parents were hit head on by a driver trying to pass recklessly on a two lane highway while on their way to church.  My father-in-law was killed and my mother-in-law was hospitalized and almost died as well.  We spent the next several weeks nearly living at the hospital.  After a long time, my mother-in-law regained consciousness, moved on to a rehabilitation facility, and was finally released to go home.

In April, my mother-in-law had finally begun walking again and was released to start driving again.  Her first time back on the same highway, on her way to our house, she and my niece were t-boned by a negligent driver in a big truck.  My niece was okay, but my mother-in-law was again air lifted to the nearest trauma center.

After this accident, we all jointly made the decision that we would purchase a new house with the life insurance money she had received from my father-in-law's policy.  The house title would have her name, Maggie's name, and my name on it.  We would then enter into an agreement with my mother-in-law to pay her back a loan in the amount of two-thirds of the price of the home.

In August, we bought our new home for a steal.  It was a short sale and it is now worth slightly more than we paid for it according to Zillow.com.  We moved to a nice, convenient area that is about fifteen minutes closer to my work.  That helps a little with gas.

This left us with the other investment I just mentioned: our first house.  It was sad to leave it behind.  There were great memories there and we definitely weren't ready to leave it behind, but life changes and necessity pushes you into new adventures.  So, we were left with a vacant house.

The payment on that house, with impounded taxes and insurance and PMI, is still pretty cheap.  We rented it for about $70 a month more than what we pay.  This is positive cash flow!  A positive cash flow of $70 monthly isn't much, but it's significantly more than we've ever gotten before.  Now we're in a position that I can look at with some pride.  I am upholding the rules I wanted to abide by in the first place and I'm not losing anything.  The best thing about it?  We are the only ones entitled to the equity in that house.  We don't have partners there!

Our income has gone way up and come way down (Maggie now works half time as a public school teacher teaching second grade).  That income, though, is much higher than it was way back when we first started our life together in that little apartment.  Higher income leads to more options and freedom to carry out financial goals, so I can't say I'm displeased at all.  I can, however, look back at when I felt overwhelmed by my simple financial situation during those first days and have a little laugh at what I would have thought about my current finances.  If I thought things were confusing then, I wouldn't have believed what I have to deal with now!

That is some about me.  I didn't handle my investments perfectly, but I made them and I'm seeing them through.  I plan to someday tip the scales and make our net worth go positive.  Each successive house we buy is another chance to get the math right and to build our wealth.  With luck, we'll eventually break into multi-unit properties and diversify a little.  The goal is to get to the point where we've paid our properties off and we have monthly, residual income that is consistent and reliable.  That income level needs to be significant.  We need to hit something in the million dollar a year range for residual income to be able to pass on generational wealth that matters.

As I continue with this blog, I'll post more about how to get to these goals.  I'll share strategies that others have shared with me, concepts that I've applied, and any other specific elements that can contribute to success in wealth building that I come by.  Stay tuned for more.

Thanks for reading my financial thoughts.

Images provided by Idea go / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Introduction to the Tycoon

Posted as the first blog post at Generational Wealth Tycoon by Steve McLain, the main author of the blog--a man dedicated to the enjoyment of a life well lived.

My mom and dad weren't rich people to start with and, even though they've had wealth at different times during their life, they still aren't rich today.  My parents are "rich in life" or view money as "a means to provide happiness, not the source of happiness".  I can grasp that kind of thinking and admire and respect it.  I look at my parents and think back on all the good times we had because they weren't reluctant to use their money to do things where others would have stored it away and deprived themselves of the immediate satisfaction that they could have had.

Time steals away opportunities.  With three kids that were each growing up faster than they could have imagined, the chance to do meaningful things in life was fleeting. So my parents took the money they had made and, instead of buying stocks, real estate, or some other investment, they invested in us kids to form lasting, meaningful memories.  My dad truly held this philosophy and knew exactly what he was doing.  It was no mistake that he didn't value money as much as what joy it could bring.

In my dad's mind, he worked enough that he could make ends meet.  The rest of the time was spent enjoying life.  He could have worked more, brought in more money, and tried to grow his small business into a large business, but he instead stopped when his cup was full and didn't go on to try for more.

I had a good childhood.  My dad and mom taught me a lot of things about what's truly important in this world.  If you can't enjoy life because of something you're doing, then reevaluate whatever it is you're doing and change it to enjoy life.  Life, with all its complexity, purposes, and meaning is inevitably short.  

Now, I'm almost thirty, I have started my own family and now recognize how fast life travels when you're watching your children grow up before your eyes, and I'm doing some serious evaluation about finances.  I'm still watching and learning from my parents.  I read about money constantly, I converse with friends about investments, and I sit and listen to my pastor tell me that Jesus spoke about money more than any other subject during his ministry.  I'm impressed with the message that money is continually important to making this life enjoyable.

Besides feeling the ticking clock of my own life, I see that my parents' life has not gone quite as they might have hoped.  They recently hit hard times, like most people in America, and have lost their house.  My dad's business shriveled until he couldn't stand sitting idly anymore. He finally took his chances without it and it blew away the moment the next breeze came.  He bought an RV, fixed it up, sold as many personal possessions as he could, threw the rest in storage, and left to travel the country with my mom.  Right now, they're doing whatever work they can find easily to generate some survival money.

As I said, I'm still learning from my parents.  My observation is that they've hit difficult times and must somehow find a financial answer to their uncertain future.  I'm not naive--I know for a fact that this life always turns in unexpected directions and that many of those surprises are not welcome.  For instance, my mom and dad started working a seasonal job to generate income to sustain their standard of living.  In the midst of working, my dad twisted his knee and couldn't go on working for several days.  This took him out of action and stopped a planned chunk of money from flowing.

I can anticipate that my dad will get better and he'll eventually be back in action.  However, as he and my mom get older, we can all expect them to start slowing down--to begin having health problems as they approach the end of their lives.  Yes, it's sad and terrible to think of, but it's the one thing that every human being has in common: we all die.  Therefore, it's terrible, but realistic and essential to think about.

If my mom or dad has a health problem that requires hospitalization, their plan for minimalist existence and small expenses is out the window.  Now, there are medical bills that will damn them fiscally for the foreseeable future. How can a person expect to lift themselves out of debt incurred by a failing body when he cannot rely on that body to make him money any longer?  It is grasping at wind.  Futile, in the end.

It is then that my parents will need to turn to others for help--no matter how ashamed they may feel, it is a part of life to once again descend into being dependent--only this time, it's without the promise of future independence and exciting freedom (in this life anyway).  Some are gifted with a quick and sweet release from this life, but many are not so lucky--many must cope with the reality of relying on others for financial needs and even physical needs.  

My dad used to tell me that his retirement plan was his kids.  His kids would grow up, get good educations, become successful, and then support him.  He was always saying it as a joke, but there was truth in what he said.  My dad invested by taking care of his kids.  He wanted the best life he could give us.  He took great pains to make sure we had all the opportunities he didn't, he made sure we were provided with whatever cool stuff he could give us in exchange for pulling good grades, and he always bragged on our achievements.  He did this because he was proud of us and loved us--not because he actually was planning on losing his independence someday and being forced to rely on his kids for his care.

My dad didn't spare anything for himself in the end.  He doesn't have a 401k, he never contributed to a pension, and he never made his money work for him.  He always worked for his money and his money evaporated like some immaterial substance.  Now, even though he hasn't truly met with it yet, he is heading down a path that will take him to a financial vacuum in his final years.  Unless something occurs to fill that vacuum, he and my mom will be left with nothing when the need comes.

As I mentioned, my dad's investment was made in his kids.  Out of the three of us, the odds were good that one of us would become successful enough to support him and my mom in their old age.  I'm fairly sure he never dreamed of making this bet, but it exists nonetheless.  We kids are my dad's diversified retirement plan--whether he knows it or not.

This is all to say that I have a personal goal, set in place by my own will, to generate enough wealth that I can not only sustain a high standard of living for my family and me, but also to generate enough that I can support my parents.  My financial goal is to become a multi-millionaire at as young an age as possible.

In generation to generation, I believe there should be advancement.  I believe that my dad's generation provided its kids with a foundation that began where they left off.  Their kids could then go on to build a foundation for their kids and so on.  Each successive foundation of advancement should progressively elevate the successive generation to new heights and achievements.  This is not the case in reality.  Most people fail to provide a foundation for their kids or the kids who were provided a foundation reject it and start over.  But for me, I believe I am standing on a firm foundation from my parents and that I can make a better foundation for my kids.

Generational wealth is my goal, in which each generation is provided with the tools and foundation to build greater wealth.  My parents gave me a set of priorities, an ethic for education and work, and a foundation to spring from.  My goal is to envelop them in my success, to build a great and enjoyable life for me and my family, and to put in place a solid foundation for my children to continue building what I and my parents began.

I will be chronicling my progress toward these goals here.  I'll meet with difficulties, I will find success, and I'll share the challenges I've already encountered.  The road is rocky and difficult when rising to meet obstacles and enforcing self-discipline.  Generating long-lasting wealth is not easy (if it were, everyone would do it).  And making a difference in this tiny vapor of a life is particularly skill intensive.  However, with all that I have learned, all that I will learn, and all the help of friends, family, and my God, I can do these things.  Heck, if God wills it, I can do all things.

This is the Generational Wealth Tycoon blog.  This is where I will confide in you and share with you whatever wisdom I can glean about financial wealth building and maybe even a little about life's lessons.  Join me and we'll help each other to achieve great things in this life.  Thanks for reading my financial thoughts.