Mon, 13 January 2020
Most people sell their time for dollars. Were you really meant to do what you’re doing right now? Mark Twain said, “Why not go out on a limb? That’s where the fruit is.” Culture conditions most people to live an average, stale life. Don’t trade away your authenticity for approval. In over 6,000 years of human history, being a conformer is not a success recipe. 40 rental doors x $150 cash flow = $6,000 per month. This buys you time. Don’t fear failure; fear not trying. Powerful assignment: write your own obituary. No one achieves anything extraordinary by playing it safe. People that say, “I want to live frugally.” actually want to say, “I want to live well.” But they don’t know how. Get residual real estate income at: www.GREturnkey.com I update you on asset class prices over the past year. Americans paid $4.5T in rent this past decade. The median homebuyer age is up to 47. Corelogic expects a 5.4% housing price jump in 2020. Housing shortages should continue at the low end of the market. Nearly every news outlet reports a stable housing environment. Why? Demand exceeds supply, appreciation rates are sustainable, stringent loan requirements, inflation-adjusted home prices are often still below 2005 levels. **The entire episode's lyrics are at the bottom.** __________________ Resources mentioned: Turnkey income properties: Americans Paid $4.5T Rent Last Decade: Median Age Of Homebuyers Up To 47: Fannie Boosts 2020 Housing Forecast: Lenders, Builders More Conservative: Home Prices To Rise In 2020: Homes Under $250K Near Extinction: Mortgage Loans: eQRP: Text “QRP” to 72000 or: By texting “QRP” to 72000 and opting in, you will receive periodic marketing messages from eQRP Co. Message & data rates may apply. Reply “STOP” to cancel. JWB New Construction Turnkey: Best Financial Education: Find Properties: Follow us on Instagram: Welcome to Get Rich Education, I’m your host, Keith Weinhold. Mark Twain said,“Why not go out on a limb? That’s where the fruit is!” I tell you how YOU can go out on that limb to get that fruit - that prosperity in your life. And, and update on markets and housing here in the new decade. Today, on Get Rich Education. Welcome to Get Rich Education, I’m your host, Keith Weinhold. This is Episode 275 ... and you know something? It has always fascinated me that people will trade time for dollars. You have traded your time for dollars … and I have sold my time for money in the past, as well. Yeah, amazes me that people will work, often doing something that they don’t EVEN LIKE - and spend that time away from their family or for things that they don’t enjoy doing … just for money. It’s actually even worse than that. The long-term plan - the OUTCOME for this sacrifice - isn’t even satisfying. It’s for you to retire old, and THEN only begin to really live … maybe. Well, ironically, the answer to your potential freedom is something that you actually slept inside last night - a piece of real estate. But you need to invest in real estate in a strategic way. You don’t need to be a landlord and you don’t need to know how to fix things - but few know the way. Here on this show, I simply tell you the things that I would have wanted to know before I started down this road to freedom back in 2002, which is when I bought that seminal four-plex building.
You are where you are today because of you.
Your life isn’t a fluke and it isn’t an accident either. You are where you are because of your choices.
Well, let me ask you - were you meant to be doing what you’re doing now?
Were you put on this earth to do … that?
You probably know definitively without me even having to get specific - you already know - yes or no - if you were MEANT to be doing what you do for money now.
See, the #1 limiting reason that people give for why they can’t do something that they really want to do in their life … is … money.
So, time vs. Money is something that we discuss a lot on the show. It’s something that’s infinitely interesting to me … and what you need to do is “Go Out On A Limb”.
I’m going to discuss that with you a lot more later today.
But first, since we’re a few weeks into this new decade, let’s talk about some more broad and contemporaneous news items - this investor environment that you live inside every day.
Whipping around the asset classes like we do from here time-to-time here - in the year that was, last year, what really happened?
S&P 500 was up nearly 29% - it’s best performance in years. Of course, it’s volatile. In fact, it was just DOWN 6% the previous year.
Year-over-year, many commodities were up. Gold was up 18%, Silver up 15%. Oil - Light Sweet Crude - was up 22%.
Recession fears peaked back in September - four months ago. Columnists and economists and everyday people don’t really talk about recession as much as they did late last year.
Last year, the 10-year Treasury Note yield fell seven-tenths of one percent down to 1.9%. Now, why do you care about what you’ll hear people just shorten and call “the 10-Year T-Note?”
Economists say it that way with their slang.
That is because it’s the rate most closely tied to long-term mortgage interest rates.
I just told you that the note yield fell SEVEN-TENTHS of one percent last year.
Well, see, the most popular mortgage in America, the fell EIGHT-TENTHS of one percent last year down to 3.7%. That’s the 30-year loan.
So, pretty closely correlated. And of course, that’s the mortgage interest rate for primary residences. For investment property, it’s often nearly one percent higher.
Last year, the Freddie Mac House Price Index was up 3.6%.
I like to look at the Freddie Mac Index because it includes pricing for all 50 states and Washington, D.C.
The Case-Shiller Housing Price Index only measures 10 to 20 large cities.
One news story that we experienced in the past year is one that almost no one talks about.
Now, you generally want there to be higher wages out there. That means your tenants can afford to pay you more rent.
Higher wages mean higher inflation which means higher asset prices and also, faster debasement of debt that you owe.
Now, whether you agree that there should be a minimum wage or not ...
The minimum wage keeps getting higher across the country.
More than 20 states are bumping up pay for minimum wage workers this year, here in 2020, while Seattle’s large employers will now pay a nationwide-high of at least $16.39/hr to employees.
Meanwhile, the FEDERAL minimum wage has remained parked at $7.25. But these higher state wages - are a positive for real estate investors.
Now, I’ve aggregated a number of news stories that matter to you - all that have published over the past few weeks. Just about everything is positive for a stable housing environment.
Zillow report an astonishing figure.
Over the last decade, do you have any idea how much Americans paid in rent - in total?
Americans paid $4.5 TRILLION - with a “T” - dollars in rent in the last decade - the decade that just ended a couple weeks ago - the 2010s.
Well, that’s a gigantic number. It’s so giant, that it’s more of a fun figure to contemplate and hard to put it into context.
What CAN you compare this to? Well, this is greater than the GDP of Germany - which is the world’s 4th-largest economy.
Yes, it’s been a rather lucrative decade for landlords - partly due to the fact that the homeownership rate fell through the decade and - consequently - there are more renters now.
So, yes, you only need a small slice of this $4.5T dollar pie to win a substantial degree of financial freedom yourself.
Housing Wire has reported on what the median age of a homebuyer is in America today. Do you have any idea what that age is?
Well, I’ll tell you, to give you some context here, that in 1981, the year that Ronald Reagan first became President, the median age of a homebuyer then was … 31.
Age 31 back in 1981.
The median age of a homebuyer today is … higher than that. Just dramatically higher. Almost unbelievably higher … it is age 47. 47!
So … how did this happen?
There are VARIOUS reasons for this delay, including a dramatic increase in student loan debt - like we’ve discussed before - and a general shifting of attitudes towards the traditional homebuyer cycle.
People are waiting longer to marry, have kids, and buy houses. Household formation is postponed now.
These are some things that you’ve already realized. But you may be surprised to learn that the RESULT of this is now a 47-year-old median age homebuyer.
That’s like … old enough to be a grandparent perhaps.
Just remarkable - and again, great news if you’re renting property to others. People are renting longer - or just renting forever.
Now understand something else - and look, you can’t discriminate against a tenant based on age or for any other reason.
But just think about what else this means - there’s a renter pool today with more, say, 35 and 40-year-olds in it than there used to be …
… and therefore, a smaller proportion of 25-year-olds.
You have this aging of tenants … and older tenants tend to live more quietly in your property and be more gentle on your housing unit.
Long-term demographic trends exactly like these are why we talk about what we talk about here - how everyday, busy people and working professionals can create residual income with these investment properties.
CoreLogic expects a 5.4% home price jump in 2020. Yes, this would be a greater appreciation rate than that 3.6% we saw last year.
Fannie Mae has significantly boosted ITS 2020 housing forecast.
Overall housing DEMAND, they say, is incredibly high, especially at the lower end of the market, which is exactly the end of the market where builders are least active.
Prices are rising fastest on the low end, sidelining some first-time buyers.
Fannie Mae’s Chief Economist Doug Duncan says: “Housing appears poised to take a leading role in real GDP growth over the forecast horizon for the first time in years, further bolstering our modest-but-solid growth forecasts through 2021.”
Now, CNBC recently reported that:
U.S. homebuilders and lenders are to blame for the country’s housing shortage, Marcus & Millichap CEO Hessam Nadji said. Home construction companies have reduced speculation and lowered risk-taking in an effort to prevent “the lessons — if you will, the hard lessons — learned in the 2008-2009 Housing Crisis & Great Recession - from happening again,” is what he said. “All of that is frustrating from a consumer perspective, but it’s actually very healthy from an investment and economic perspective for the U.S. as a whole,” he said. Yahoo Finance - really all these news outlets are reporting various sources that home prices are expected to rise modestly and that housing shortages are expected to continue. Rather than reporting on another similar story about this … I’ve been saying for years on this show that if you’re waiting for housing prices to drop substantially … well, anything is possible.
But I don’t see what could possibly make that happen.
And that’s primarily due to three or four reasons that housing stays firm:
So, these 4 reasons to be bullish about housing are all MY takes.
Links to all of the articles that I cited are in the show notes.
Next week, Tom Wheelwright returns to the show with me. Yes, it’s the long-awaited show where it’ll be Weinhold and Wheelwright on 401(k)s and going deep on how you can obtain the desired “RE Professional Designation” and the GREAT tax advantages that that gives you.
Are 401(k)s worth contributing to - even if you get an employer match? We’ll take that one head-on next week. And I think you’re going to get some really surprising answers.
During the holidays a while back, we had all FRESH shows. San Diego-based Get Rich Education listener Andrew Stanton - and his layoff story reminded us of the importance of having multiple income streams.
Should you - as they say “Rent out your backyard” with an ADU - accessory or auxiliary dwelling unit. Well, in places like California where they’re popular ...
Why don’t you instead enjoy your backyard and invest in markets in the Midwest & South where the numbers make better sense anyway.
Two weeks ago, CFP Brent Sutherland & I discussed why conventional financial advisors don’t discuss RE with you.
Last week, we had the “hands-on” perspective with Kevin Cross, asking, “Should you self-manage your rental property and your tenants?”
For him, the answer is “yes” - with some help - and that’s fine.
For me, the answer is “no”.
I want control without having day-to-day responsibility.
Let’s do good in the world and provide people with clean, safe, affordable, functional housing. But I make sure my manager does that.
I want to directly invest in real estate, with property titled in my own name - that way I get paid up to 5 different ways.
But, I don’t want it - I’ll say in my grip - as in - I don’t want to hold real estate right in my hand - otherwise it’s on my plate & on the front burner.
But I do want it within my arm’s reach so that I have CONTROL, and yet a FAIR measure of passivity.
If you want more out of your life, you’ve got to go out on a limb. I’m going to talk about that with you today … next … I’m Keith Weinhold.
This is Get Rich Education. ________________________
Welcome back to Get Rich Education. I’m your host, Keith Weinhold.
When it comes to your day job ... or how you spend most of your waking day, were you meant to be doing what you’re doing now?
I think that a lot of people get culturally conditioned that you have one path that you just MUST take throughout life, and if you deviate from it too much, that’s bad … because now you’re a non-conformer.
Yes, one path.
This narrative through the Industrial Revolution that you should go to school, get this amount of formal education, this amount of college debt, a good job, work for one company, marriage, kids, buy a big house …
… get a new car every 5 years, just 2 or 3 weeks of vacation per year (my goodness - are you kidding me?), work for 40 years, then retire & play golf … or something like that.
That’s what’s supposed to quote-unquote “guarantee” the masses happiness, fulfillment, and meaning. But it often doesn’t.
So why settle for what the masses do?
People are willing to trade away their authenticity for approval. Rather than being authentic, they instead settle for society’s stamp of approval.
Don’t trade away your authenticity for approval.
Parents, community, friends - they all taught you - here’s the one way you have to live.
Why don’t you, instead, custom design your best life.
What does success look like to you?
Is success being a doctor, lawyer, dentist. If you drive “this” nice of a car, or if you live in this neighborhood, or this nice of a house, if your kids go to this school.
Instead, your definition of success may very well be - are you doing the things that you dreamed about? Are you impacting others in a meaningful way?
You can either live a life of safety or a life of creativity.
Go out on a limb - where that tree branch might yield a little, 30 feet above the ground, scaring you.
Go out on a limb … because that’s where the fruit is.
Understand that the consequence might be that fewer people will PERCEIVE you as a success.
How you make your money is more important than how much money you make.
We’re “Get Rich Education - and “Get Rich” means living a rich life - whatever that means to you.
When you’re young & people ask you “What do you want to be?” when you grow up, they’re not REALLY asking what you want to be at all.
They’re asking, “What do you want to do professionally, to earn money?”
It feels risky to say what you REALLY want to be.
It feels risky to use an online platform to try to crowdfund your kitchen device invention. You’re afraid you’ll be seen as a failure when you share that on Facebook and get ridiculed from your friends.
That’s going out on a limb.
Trying to get your workout app featured on Shark Tank - that’s not being a conformer. But that’s where the great stuff happens.
Or, it’s doing what we focus on here - getting residual income from rental property to buy the time to do what you want to do ... or be who you really want to be.
It’s more generationally-proven than those strict entrepreneurial endeavors.
It’s neither quick nor easy, but real estate is a stronger tree branch - and your fruit IS out there.
If you get 40 rental doors that even cash flow just $150 a month each = That’s $6,000 month in rental income for you. Or double that or 10X that if you need to.
Most people live inside circle of certainty with their job and life. And in that small circle, we’ll call it 100% safety & security.
Now, if you enlarge your circle so that it surrounds the first one, you might be living where you only have 80% certainty in your life’s outcome.
If you make an even larger circle, around the first two, and really go for it, now your sense of certainly might be down to 60%.
But the one thing that you CAN be certain of then, it’s that you won’t have any regrets.
The #1 regret of elderly people that are in a nursing home is that “Gosh, I never tried _____”.
They didn’t go out on that limb and they never tasted that sweet, succulent fruit.
I can help tell you whether you’re going out on a limb or not, right now.
Do you know what the most powerful assignment is - with regard to this - it’s to write your own obituary. Put pen to paper.
If you must write your own obituary, right now … you’re going to have great clarity on if your accomplishments are or your contributions … or your current trajectory … are putting you where you need to be.
I think writing your own obituary can strike some fear into you. It puts some fear into me. What would people say about what you did? What would you write down about yourself?
In over 6000 years of recorded human history, no one has ever achieved anything outstanding by playing it safe. No one. The message is clear. You need to either accept the necessity for calculated risk, or settle for way, way less than you deserve.
Look, I’ve got this friend from childhood from when I lived back in Pennsylvania. Nice guy, nice family.
He became a public school teacher - math teacher. And today, I see his posts on Facebook more often than I see him.
One of the things that he commonly posts about are that he complains about how public school teachers aren’t treated well because he has disappointingly low pay.
And I see a lot of his teacher friends commenting on his posts, lamenting about the fact that they have low incomes, and have to take second jobs in the summer or whatever.
Well, after seeing a lot of these posts, I commented with an actual SOLUTION to the problem one time. My comment was something like - and here’s what I wrote:
“Many teachers that I know make $500K to $1M per year and they have great control of their time.” That’s what I wrote.
You should have seen their reaction. My friend and the other teachers on that thread were asking me how this could be - some of them even direct messaging me.
And I said, these well-paid teachers are online teachers. Yeah, they wake up each morning and see how many video course subscriptions they sold overnight.
You should have seen their reaction to that - they were quickly uninterested.
That sounded scary. That didn’t meet conformity.
Now, I’ve got nothing against public school teachers. In fact, I appreciate what they do.
But you can see how much fear there is … with going out on a limb.
See, when you try to provide a SOLUTION to people’s problems, they’d usually rather stay small, stay secure, and keep settling - staying inside that 100% certainty smaller life circle.
Do you think that a public school teacher would agree that their 12-year-old student should be a lifelong learner? Yeah, they probably would.
But is that public school teacher being a lifelong learner themselves if they won’t provide a better life for themself by learning some new online teaching and internet marketing skills?
Everyone wants change. But no one wants TO change.
This is not about condemning people for being employees. It’s about removing that wall between you and what you want.
Because look, you might be a highly compensated employee that WANTS to teach public school math or English to 12-year-olds.
But you can’t afford to make the, say $55,000 a year that a teacher makes.
Building a second income with something proven like real estate softens that financial blow, and it lubricates that transition to doing what energizes you - teaching English to 12-year-olds.
This way, you’re a teacher, but you’re not dissatisfied that your salary is low - because teaching isn’t where you started - and now you’re probably more valuable to 12-year-old students because you are where you really want to be.
The riskiest thing you can possibly do is stay safe and take zero risks because then, you virtually guarantee that you’ll never get the life that you could have had.
Residual income gives you the ability to leverage time - and also provide some physical possessions. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with some materials stuff.
Even if physical stuff isn’t what life is about, it can help you facilitate your best life. Even a simple hiker would like a nice, comfortable backpack, tent, and a sleeping bag.
Some people say they want to “live frugally” but, they only say that because they’ve been conditioned and they don’t know HOW to live better.
When people say, “I want to live frugally”, often, what they really want to say is: “I’d like to live well”.
Like I’ve said elsewhere, the great conundrum of modern society is that …
… people spend all this time learning about how work works … and zero time learning about how money works.
Yet money is the main reason that they even go to work. Hmm. Can you believe that.
Even if you’re one of the fortunate few that doesn’t want a substantial life change, adding a monthly stream of real estate income on top of your current situation sure won’t hurt you.
Investing in real estate myself - ihelped ease my transition from a day job - to doing things like this show - creating value for people in the way that I want to do it.
I invest in - especially this WORKFORCE type of housing - myself.
Earlier today, I talked about some of the economic and demographic “whys” about these modest but decent rental single-family rental homes and small apartment buildings that we so often favor here.
As the American family size continues to shrink and birth rates fall, people want smaller SFHs.
Think about how people live. Smaller family sizes are a trend away from McMansions.
Millennials and Gen Zers are also environmentally conscious. That’s the future, where there’s been this spurning of extravagance.
That’s why these low-cost rental single-family homes are in such demand. In fact, a recent report by economic research consultancy Capital Economics shared a stunning statistic: The number of vacant single-family homes … for sale … priced under $250,000 has halved since 2012. Yes, there are only half as many available now as then. In fact, according to the report, there are only 550,000 vacant homes on the market priced under $250,000. That’s half as many as there were just eight years ago. That’s astounding. When there’s a downturn, people will move from the $2K-$3K rent homes into yours where they pay $1,000-$1,500.
In fact, I just bought two more of these single-family rental homes last month myself. One was $150K and the other about $130K.
And I bought them from GREturnkey.
And you know, if you’re on the edge with your next move, and you don’t know if you should invest in a property or more education … and you’re trying to decide between the two ...
As long as you’ve got a little education, I’d err toward you putting another “property” in your portfolio - or your first property.
Why is that?
That’s because when you buy a property, you get a substantial education about it from the inside.
Buying and owning is the REAL world education that any classroom simulation can’t replicate.
Owning property gives you education …
… but more education alone doesn’t give you more property.
So here, we both teach a man - or woman - to fish AND give you a fish. We do both.
GREturnkey.com is where I’ve done my own property buying for years - including where I purchased these most recent two.
Go there, read a couple reports in some markets that interest you, and get some property under contract.
Over there, right now, I can tell you that:
In Alabama - Birmingham and Huntsville has been furnishing income property pretty actively.
In Ohio, Dayton has been bringing inventory to the market that exceeds a 1% rent-to-value ratio, meaning that you get more rent income per invested dollar there than nearly anywhere else.
Further south, Memphis and Little Rock have similar profitability to Dayton - and there are some really low price points in Memphis if you’re just looking to get started.
Then, Jacksonville has brand NEW construction turnkey property and actually have investor houses available now. Lower cash flow there but brand new.
Then, in Tampa, Florida, you can get a little cash flow and the Tampa-St. Pete metro was the 2nd-highest appreciation market in the nation at 5%.
Yes, year-over-year, Tampa was 2nd … and you can get cash flow in the submarkets north of there.
Tampa has been furnishing, oh, maybe 4 or 5 turnkey properties onto the market each month.
And, see, as noted, inventory is tight nearly everywhere.
In Tampa, you’re looking at something like $1,200 of rent income for a $150,000 property.
At GREturnkey, Chicagoland has an interesting dynamic. Where you’re investing in Chicago’s suburbs of northwestern Indiana.
That way, you get the proximity and economic diversification of a world-class city like Chicago, yet being on the Indiana-side of the state line gives you property taxes that are less than half of that than if you were on the Illinois-side.
Everything I’m discussing here is designed for OUT-of-the-area investors … like me and probably like you too.
It’s turnkey … meaning that the property is fully renovated, under a property manager’s management, and often even occupied with a tenant on the day that you buy…
… so that you’re enjoying that mailbox money … or ACH bank draft money as it might be.
You can find all those providers and more at GREturnkey.com
A big thanks to, well Mark Twain for some inspiration today.
“Why not go out on a limb? That’s where the fruit is.”
I’m back next week with Tom Wheelwright.
Until next week, get started at GREturnkey.com
I’m your host, Keith Weinhold. Don’t Quit Your Daydream!
|