Learn What The Rich Know
Learn What The Rich Know
Learn What The Rich Know
When my wife Kim and I were homeless for almost three weeks in 1985, we could easily have
found jobs as employees, but we had made a choice. We chose to be richrich but homeless. That
sounds like opposites.
We chose to reside on the right side of the CASHFLOW Quadrant. Our plan was financial freedom,
and we knew it was only to be found through the B and I side of the quadrant. To become Bs, we
knew we had to become financially literate and to build businesses so we could become investors.
Middle Class
Rich
We knew that building a business was not the easy path, but we also knew that we could do it. We
chose to build an education company. That company eventually generated the funds that allowed
us to invest in real estate. It was the passive income generated from our real estate that allowed
us to become financially free. Today we are building CASHFLOW Technologies, Inc. Funds from the
success of CASHFLOW Technologies are allowing us to invest in more real estate, other businesses,
and the Foundation for Financial Literacy. Giving back should be an important part of any financial
plan to be rich.
If your plan is to be rich, your reality, or goal, needs to be an income in excess of $100,000 per
month, or $1,200,000 per year. This represents your money working for you, not you working for
money. If this is outside your reality, then concentrate on a financial plan for security, first, up to
$5,000 per month, or $60,000 per year. Income under $2,500 is survival level and therefore not
included in the secure financial plan. Rich Dad would consider it baseline (or redline).
Bear in mind that your reality doesnt have to keep you imprisoned. This is good news. As you start
on your own path to financial freedom, your reality will change. Your financial plan should change
as your reality changes. The important word here is start.
Different Plans, Different Investments
Just as there are different financial plans, there are different investments for each type of plan.
Many people believe I am against investing in 401(k) plans. I am not. They are important vehicles
for a security-oriented financial plan, being one of the few tax-deductible or -deferred vehicles still
available to employees.
Time is Money
Time is moneyits one of the most fundamental of economic concepts, otherwise known as the
discounted present value of money. The idea is simple: Youre better off receiving $100 today than
tomorrow, for if you receive it now you can start earning interest right way. Theres one little
problem, however: Time can erode the value of your money. This process is called inflation. The
$100 you spend today will buy more goods and services than it will later. Some people remember
when a ticket to the movies was just a dollar and a gallon of gasoline was only fifty cents. Inflation
is linked to supply and demand: how many goods and services are available at any given time and
how much consumers are willing to pay for them.
Take Note
If you start saving young, its easy to be rich. Theres a staggering difference between the assets of a person who
starts saving consistently at age twenty and those of a person who starts saving at age thirty.
These are some of the basic principles of economics, the science of observing how people behave
with respect to money, goods, and services. Why should you care about economics? Because youre
one of those people. What you do or dont do with your money matters, and not only to you. Other
people have saving and spending habits similar to yours. Together these habits form a system of
collective behavior. Sometimes the collective behavior stimulates the economy, in which case you
might benefit; at other times the collective behavior causes the economy to stagnate, in which case
you might sufferbut maybe not.
enable you to spot opportunities and take advantage of them, even in the worst of times. At its
core, the Rich Dad philosophy is about how not to suffer during the booms and busts of economic
fortune. Its about how to seize opportunities and create wealth for yourself even in times of
economic stagnation, when others go begging for jobs.
Why Money?
Economies took shape when people started trading things they had for things they wanted.
Imagine a group of our ancestors who possessed a surplus store of animal skins but not enough
nuts to last them through the winter. They could trade with another group who had plenty of nuts
but no skins. While this process, known as bartering, worked well enough, it had some real
limitations. What if a group couldnt find animal skins when the chill winds of winter began
blowing? And how many nuts equaled a skin anyway? Timing and worththese were two critical
problems, and to solve them money was invented.
Take Note
Time is moneyand you have to seize the day.
Money, or currency, is anything used as a means of exchange. Instead of paying for skins with
nuts, people began paying with money. And when they sold their nuts, they were paid with money.
Money meant that buying and selling didnt have to happen at the same time. With money, people
could buy and sell when they wanted or needed to, not just when the opportunity presented itself.
As soon as money made its debut, so did the concept of value. Everything bought and sold had a
value or price affixed to it.
also be exchanged for silver. But then in 1971 the United States went off the gold standard and
abandoned silver exchange. No longer could the dollar be exchanged for something tangible. It had
no intrinsic value.
Money that has no intrinsic value and cant be redeemed for a precious metal is called fiat currency.
Fiat currency is backed by nothing but the stability of the government that issues it and the
confidence of that governments citizenry.
A House of Cards
Fiat currency is not an instrument of equity, but an instrument of debt. Every unit of currency,
instead of being backed by gold or silver as it once was, is now an IOU guaranteed to be paid by
the taxpayers of the issuing country. As long as the public has confidence in the taxpayers ability
to work and pay for this IOU called money, everythings fine. But if that confidence suddenly
disappears, the economy can collapse like a house of cards.
The house of cards has collapsed many times throughout history. Take the era of the Weimar
Republic, when the German mark became utterly worthless. As one apocryphal story has it, an
elderly woman was pushing a wheelbarrow full of marks to the store to buy a loaf of bread. When
she turned her back, someone stole the wheelbarrow and left the money behind.
Fiat currency is only as good as the peoples confidence in the government backing it. Today, much
of the global economy is based on debt backed by confidence. As long as everybody keeps holding
hands and no one breaks ranks, everything will be fine. Wait a minutefine? Couldnt that be
shorthand for Feeling Insecure, Neurotic, and Emotional?
The Fed
In 1913 Congress established a central banking network called the Federal Reserve System, or
simply, the Fed. The Fed, although the central bank of the United States, is not really one bank. It
consists of twelve regional banks, so that no one region of the country can unfairly gain an
economic advantage. The Fed is run by a seven-member team called the Board of Governors,
whose main job is to control the money supply, or the amount of cash circulating through the
economy. The Fed has to keep enough money circulating so that the economy expands, but not too
quickly. Too much money in circulation drives down its value, leading to inflation, while too little
money results in consumers having less to spend, leading to recession. The Fed controls the money
supply, and thus keeps the economy relatively balanced, by buying and selling securities, printing
money, and establishing interest rates.
spent immediately but can be converted easily into cash, such as money in savings and certificates
of deposit. M3 money is M1 and M2 money plus the assets and liabilities of financial institutions
that cant be easily converted into cash. Together, the three Ms are known as the monetary
aggregates.
Interest Rates
Another tool the Fed has at its disposal when it wants to change the direction of the economy is the
interest rate it charges banks. This in turn determines what banks will charge their customers. An
interest rate is nothing more than the price of a loan. Its expressed as a percentage per year of
the amount loaned. For instance, if you borrow $100 at 10 percent interest for one year, youll owe
$110 at the end of the year. The cost of the borrowed money is $10.
Banks, like people, borrow money. They borrow money from the Fed or from each other, depending
on their particular needs and which lender offers more attractive terms. The interest rate banks are
charged when they borrow from the Fed is called the discount rate. The rate theyre charged when
they borrow from each other is called the federal funds rate. When the Fed increases the discount
rate, banks borrow less and have less cash to lend their customers. When the Fed lowers the rate,
banks are encouraged to borrow more freely, from both the Fed and each other, which makes more
cash available for banking customers to borrow and at more attractive rates.
Inflation
By 1990 the value of the dollar had eroded to the point where it was worth many times less than in
1790. Inflation is the increase in prices over time that causes the purchasing power of money to
decline. Inflation is an unavoidable fact of economic life.
One way economists keep tabs on inflation is by a measurement called the gross domestic product
(GDP). The GDP is the total value of all goods and services produced in the United States in a given
period. Whenever prices rise owing to increased costs associated with production but production
itself stays the same, inflation occurs.
Small price increases are considered normal for a growing economy. Employees may receive slight
increases in salary to match inflation, so that purchasing power remains roughly the same and
rising prices arent all that noticeable. But salaries dont always keep pace with inflation, and over
time, when it takes more money to buy the same amount, purchasing power is reduced.
Take Note
The law of supply and demand, one of the fundamental economic principles, is really quite simple. When
demand exceeds supply, prices rise, but when supply exceeds demand, prices fall.
So how does the business cycle work? Lets say more people want to buy cars than there are cars
available. Sellers increase prices, because demand is greater than supply and some people will pay
more to get what they want. Once prices go up, peopleincluding those working in automobile
factorieswill demand higher wages so they can buy cars.
But the Rule of 72 doesnt fit the Rich Dad program because it is based on opinions, or
assumptions. It assumes that the economy will always be increasing. The Rich Dad program
encourages you to learn, through financial literacy, how to increase your wealth in a down as well
as in an up market. Rich Dad programs will show your money doubling much faster than in twelve
years, because youll be earning a much higher rate of return than 6 percent. Thus youll be
beating inflation by a significantly wider margin.
As a result of wage increases, production costs will rise and so will selling prices. Eventually, when
prices are more than most people can afford, theyll stop buying. At this point, fewer cars will be
needed, and automobile factories will lay off workers. Since unemployed people buy less of
everything, the economy will slow down or go into recession. Now the manufacturers, desperate to
sell their inventory, will offer cars at reduced prices, sometimes even at a loss, to get enough cash
to meet their expenses. Seeing reduced prices, people will once more be enticed to buy cars, which
will stimulate production. Factory workers will be employed again and will have more money to
spend at the local grocery store, toy store, and movie theater. Those businesses will prosper too.
The economy will enter the expansion part of the cycle.
Tickle Me Elmo
During Christmas season 1996, something happened that well illustrates the law of supply and
demand. A toy company advertised the imminent arrival in stores of a doll based on the Sesame
Street character Elmo. Children all over the United States put Tickle Me Elmo at the top of their
Christmas lists. For some reason or another, however, the supply of Elmos was woefully
inadequate. As demand skyrocketed, panic set in and desperate parents scoured store shelves. By
then, Tickle Me Elmo was worth its weight in gold. The result? Scalpers made a small fortune.
The Index of Leading Economic Indicators. This is the measurement perhaps most widely watched by
economists. Issued monthly by the Conference Board, a business research group, the index is based on
ten different economic factors, among them the jobless rate, the number of new houses under
construction, the M2 money supply, the number of new factory orders for consumer goods, and the
prices of certain stocks. The index allows economists to assess the current state of the economy and to
predict, for example, when there might be higher inflation, an upswing in productivity, higher
unemployment, or a recession.
The Gross Domestic Product. As youve learned, this is a total measure of the goods and services
produced in any given period, usually a year, in the United States. The GDP, measured by surveying
several thousand different goods and services, is a sort of national balance sheet. It reports on
production, distribution, use, and export. The GDP is adjusted for inflation and for seasonal factors such
as increased consumer spending before the winter holidays.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI). Also known as the cost-of-living index, the CPI looks at the economy
from your point of view. Every month the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics records the prices of 80,000
different goods and services typically used by Americans. Among the prices tracked are those for
housing, food, clothing, transportation, health care, education, and recreation. The most widely used
indicator of inflation, the CPI is the basis for calculating increases in such things as Social Security
payments.
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Information Is Power
How do the fundamentals of economics affect your financial future? The answer will gradually
emerge in the chapters that follow. Little by little, youre learning the language of financial literacy.
Like any language, it cant be learned overnight; you have to be patient and keep your mind open.
Its time, however, to let you in on a secret. Youve just read about the economic cycle. Lets say
the economy goes into a nosedive. An economic depression is emotional depression. People lose
money and they get depressed. But if youre armed with financial knowledge, you increase your
chances of riding out a depression. Indeed, you might even make money in a downturn. Heres the
secret: Sophisticated investors make more money in times of bust. They keep their emotions
neutral and enter the market when everyone else is fleeing it in panic. The financially intelligent
buy when others are selling. Great opportunities are seen not with your eyes, but with your mind.
FEAR:No matter how sound my investments, a depression will wipe them out.
FACT:If you talk to experienced investors and other experts, read and listen to financial news,
keep your mind open, and follow the Rich Dad program, youll be equipped to make sound
investments even in a down market.
FREEDOM:Information will free you from the boom-and-bust cycle and help you profit in a down
as well as an up market.
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Assets
To repeat, a financial asset is something that puts money, or income, in your pocket. Assets
include:
Cash
Bank accounts
Stocks
Bonds
Mutual funds
Retirement funds
As you can see, debts owed to you are assets, known as receivables. If you sell a piece of property,
the amount of money the buyer owes you is a receivable. Assets also include the net value of any
businesses and real estate you own. The fair market value of a business or a piece of real estate is
the amount of money you could fairly expect to receive if you sold it. But remember, you must
deduct (and pay off) any money you owe on it, such as a mortgage.
Its important to keep in mind that Rich Dad wouldnt consider your personal property an asset.
Why? Because it doesnt produce income. Your home, car, furniture, clothes, and collectibles might
be things of financial or even sentimental value, but they are not financial assets unless and until
they are sold for a profit. Some, in fact, might even be liabilities. Your banker or your accountant
would encourage you to list these as assets in order to give you a stronger financial statement. Is
the value of this personal property really what you could expect to receive if you had to sell it
quickly? Since personal property produces no income, in this book it is treated as a doodad, not an
asset. The financial statement youll learn to prepare is the financial statement of a sophisticated
investor.
Liabilities
A liability takes money out of your pocket. Liabilities include:
Mortgages
Car loans
School loans
Personal loans
Taxes
The typical amount you pay on each of these liabilities is considered your expense related to that
liability. The term expense here refers to the total payment, including principal payment and
related interest. Expense is calculated as it relates to total cash flow, not technical accounting
principals.
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Take Note
It can be financially smart to carry good debt; it is never financially smart to carry bad debt.
Income
Income is money that goes into your pocket. Income sources are:
Wages or salary
Tips
Interest on investments
Dividends
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Royalties
Capital gains
There are three basic types of income: earned, passive, and portfolio. Earned income, which is
taxed at a higher rate than other forms of income, is the salary or wage you are paid by an
employer for doing a job. Earned income also includes tips and self-employment wages. This is the
form of income that keeps many people on the left side of the CASHFLOW Quadrant. A young
person who heeds advice to get a good job may end up stuck in the E quadrant.
Expenses
An expense is the opposite of income; it is money leaving your pocket. In Rich Dads program your
expenses are all your payments, that is, your total cash outflow, each month. An accountant would
include only the interest portion of your mortgage payment as an expense, not the principal
portion. This program, however, is more concerned about your total cash flow. Later you will
account for total cash in and total cash out.
In Rich Dads program, then, expenses include:
Taxes
Utility payments
Grocery bills
Income pays expenses, and if you dont have enough income you may have to incur additional debt
to pay your expenses.
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A doodad is an unnecessary and sometimes unexpected expense or item you purchase that does
not put money in your pocket. It may be a pleasure boat, a dream vacation, a new pair of
sunglasses, or a meal you ate in a restaurant when a snowstorm kept you from driving home.
Doodads can slowly and inexorably deplete your incomeor serve as incentives to make more. For
example, if youre determined to take a dream vacation but equally determined not to put it on
your credit card, you may figure out a way to purchase a new asset that will generate the cash flow
to pay for your holiday. After you pay for your vacation, you will still have the additional cash flow
generated by the asset. People in the B quadrant quickly learn the value of buying assets because
it earns them the ability to pay for doodads. Certain personal expenses that relate to your business
can become business expenses and thus tax deductions. For instance, if you subscribe to an
Internet service and you use that service to communicate with clients, you can deduct that
expense. Unlike personal expenses, business expenses are paid with pre-tax dollars. Of course, the
expense must have a valid business purpose.
The balance sheet indicates how much money you have and how much money you owe, and the
difference between the two at a point in time.
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In other words, your net worth is how many assets you have left over after paying off all your
liabilities (bills and loans), or the shortfall thereof. It is how much you are worth on the day the
balance sheet is drawn up. In the example of the fictional Max described later in this section, as
well as in the examples given later in Section 3, Rich Dads version of net worth is calculated along
with a bankers version of net worth. The difference between the two is the value of a persons
doodads.
Unlike the balance sheet, which is a snapshot of net worth at a particular point in time, the income
statement catalogs income and expenses over a period of time. Preparing an income statement on
a regular basis, such as every few months, is a good way to measure financial progress.
Income statements and balance sheets have a symbiotic relationship. For example, the income
statement helps in determining whether a balance sheet entry should be listed as an asset or a
doodad.
Cash Flow
Cash flow refers to the stream of cash coming in as income and going out as expenses. Cash flow
links balance sheets and income statements, for better or worse. How cash is flowing determines a
persons degree of financial freedom.
The cash flow of an asset travels from the assets column of the balance sheet to the income
section of the income statement:
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The cash flow of a liability goes from the liability column of the balance sheet to the expense
section of the income statement, and then out.
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When preparing a balance sheet, if you have trouble determining whether something is an asset or
a liability, its helpful to sketch the cash flow for that item using these diagrams as models.
The typical cash flow pattern of a poor person can be simplified as follows:
Take Note
In Rich Dads philosophy, your personal property is not an asset because it doesnt put money in your pocket.
The basic cash flow pattern of a middle class person is:
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In this case, income is used to pay expenses instead of buying assets. The middle class person
often buys liabilities he or she thinks are assets, such as a new car or a bigger house, and
therefore the total amount of debt keeps increasing.
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Its true that the rich have expenses, but their income covers their expenses and they continue
buying more assets, which generate more and more income. Hence the saying, The rich get richer
and the poor get poorer.
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A handy way to envision cash flow is to combine the income statement and the balance sheet in a
single financial statement. Later on in Section 3 youll be filling out and analyzing your own
financial statement. For now, its enough just to see what a blank statement looks like.
The financial statement is a critical element of the Rich Dad program, for it shows you how cash is
flowing and therefore determines your degree of financial freedom. In your youth you got a report
card for school. Your financial statement is your report card for life.
To give you an idea of how a financial statement works, lets consider the situation of a fictional
person. Well call him Max E. Max is twenty-seven years old and starting to worry about his
financial future. He has a bachelor of science degree in biology, but after completing it he ran out of
money and went to work as a technician in a biotech firm. The only way Max can advance in his
field is to go back to school and get an advanced degree. Unfortunately, hes discovered that
biology isnt his passion after all. Max is at a crossroads. Before deciding what direction to follow,
he decides to assess his financial situation by filling out a financial statement. Max is about to get
his report card for lifeat least, his life as it currently stands.
Maxs salary is $36,000 a year, or $3,000 a month. His net pay after withholding of $790 for taxes
is $2,210, but that hasnt been covering his expenses. If he reduces his withholding to receive
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$2,610 a month, it will still only give him $100 a month after all his bills are paid. His employer
offers a 401(k) plan that would match every dollar Max saved with fifty cents. But he cant
participate in the plan because he needs every dime to live on.
Determined to find out where hes going wrong, Max gathers all his records and puts together a
blank financial statement. One Saturday morning he sits down and figures out how much hes
spending. Here are his monthly expenses:
Taxes
$790
$650
$400
$510
Car insurance
$100
Gas
$50
Food
$400
Clothing
$150
Credit card
$150
$100
Max fills out the expenses column of his financial statement, then logs in the income, assets, and
liabilities columns. The result is on the following page.
Once his financial statement is filled out, Max can see at a glance that he has the cash flow pattern
of the poor: all income sucked up by expenses, and no assets. Indeed, his dismal report card
shows a net worth of minus $85,000 in Rich Dads book. (A banker would tell Max he has a net
worth of minus $63,000, but thats because the banker would encourage him to list his doodads as
assets. Maxs car is a doodad but not, according to Rich Dad, an asset. Technically, doodads are
only assets when theyre sold for a profithighly unlikely in the case of a car.)
Needless to say, Max is in a tight box with very little room to maneuver. Now that the shadowy
details of his financial situation are expressed in clear numbers, he begins to ask himself some
unsettling questions. What if his car breaks down? What if he has a medical emergency? What
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happens at the end of the year when he has to pay the taxes that havent been withheld? Even
more unsettling, what if he loses his job?
Even before filling out a financial statement of your own, you probably have some vague idea of
where you stand in relation to Max. Is there anything about your financial situation that reminds
you of his? Take heart. Under the Rich Dad program, theres hope for you. Now that you have the
basics of household accounting under your belt, its time to read on and learn the other
fundamentals of financial literacy. In the end, literacy will equip you to analyze your financial
statement and determine your own unique path to financial freedom.
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That the institution of the income tax will tend to silence all boasting about wealth may
... be regarded as one blessing associated with it; we know at present of no others.
The New York Times in 1913, the year income tax was introduced
Income Tax: A Pocket History
Personal income tax is a relatively new phenomenon in American life. It wasnt until 1863 that the
federal government even began collecting income tax to fund the war effort, and nine years later
the tax was repealed. For the next forty-one years the government funded most of its activities by
levying duties on imported goods such as wool and shoes. The system of duties, however,
prevented the United States from gaining a competitive edge in world trade. Thus in 1913
Congress reduced duties on imported goods and, to make up for the loss in revenue, ratified the
16th Amendment to the Constitution legalizing personal income tax.
During World War II, paycheck withholding was introduced. Under this system, taxes were taken
out of a persons paycheck each payday instead of annually, giving the government enough ready
cash to cover the cost of the war. To reduce government borrowing, the tax rate was also raised, in
some cases to a whopping 94 percent of personal income. Since then rates have settled back
down, but notas the tax wars of the last few decades suggestto everyones satisfaction.
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in Washington have repeatedly called for a straightforward proportional tax, that is, a tax that
takes the same percentage of each persons income. It is often called the flat tax.
Instead of overhauling the tax code, Congress is forever tinkering with it, changing this and adding
that. The result resembles a house built without blueprints. Doors give way to walls, and staircases
lead nowhere. Many laws are written to favor investors, others are not. Its important to know the
laws, and it can be very expensive if you dont.
For instance, in 1986 Congress passed the Tax Reform Act which eliminated the tax break for real
estate investors whose expenses on rental properties exceeded the rents they collected. When the
law changed and the government stopped subsidizing people for losing money, some people went
bankrupt and the stock market took a steep dive. Its never a good idea to invest in something just
to avoid paying taxes or in something thats losing money. The idea is to make money, not lose it.
The 1997 Taxpayer Relief Act introduced a whole new set of rules, and it contained some good
news for some. For example, now if youre married and you sell your house, you can avoid paying
capital gains tax on profits up to $500,000. The law is always changing, and the best way to reduce
your tax burden is to keep abreast of developments. How? By watching the financial news on
television, reading the financial section of your newspaper, or consulting your tax attorney or
accountant.
pay taxes
spend
spend
pay taxes
What is the secret of the rich? They take advantage of the tax loopholes that allow individuals to
choose different entities for their businesses. Loopholes, though they may have a negative
connotation for some, are intended to help businesses grow and prosper. The tax law allows a
corporation, for example, to earn, spend everything it can on legitimate business expenses, and
then be taxed only on what remains. How can you get in on this secret? First by learning what
business entities are available to you and what the advantages and disadvantages are of each.
These entities include the sole proprietorship, the partnership, the corporation, and the limitedliability company, which is a hybrid partnership/corporation.
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FACT:There are business entities available that may help counteract your tax burden. By
consulting with your tax and legal advisors, you can structure your business in such a way as to
maximize your tax deductions.
FREEDOM:If you structure your business properly, you can protect more of your profits.
Its a game. We (tax lawyers) teach the rich how to play it so they can stay richand
the IRS keeps changing the rules so we can keep getting rich teaching them.
John Grisham
Sole Proprietorship
This is the oldest and simplest form of business. The owner and the business are one and the
same, enjoying all the benefits but assuming all the debts and tax responsibilities. Only one person
is required to form a sole proprietorship, and since there is legally no difference between the owner
and the business, all income generated by the business is regarded as personal income. The owner
reports all business income and losses on a personal tax return (Schedule C) and is allowed to
deduct business expenses. The owner is also personally liable for the business and can be sued by
an unhappy customer or unpaid creditor. If business assets cannot satisfy such a claim, the owners
house, car, and other personal assets are vulnerable.
Sole Proprietorship
Pros
Cons
Partnership
A partnership is two or more people co-owning a business for profit. The partners agree to
establish and run the business, sharing in profits, assuming responsibility for all losses and
liabilities, and paying all taxes, which are paid at the individual rate. There are two types of
partnerships: general and limited.
In a general partnership, the partners have full rights to control all the day-to-day affairs of the
business. They also share all the liability for the partnerships debts or obligations. If the
partnerships assets are insufficient to meet its obligations to creditors, or if a third party is
damaged or injured, then each partners personal assets can be taken to satisfy the debt.
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Partnership
Pros
Cons
Ease of formation
A limited partnership has both general partners, who run the daily business and make all the
decisions, and limited or silent partners, who generally put up the money in hopes of profit. Limited
partners have limited financial liability, meaning that if a creditor or an injured party sues, limited
partners cant be held responsible for any more than the amount they originally invested. When it
comes to taxes, general partners and limited partners are treated the same way. Any profits from
the business go directly to them, that is, they are passed through to all the partners, who report
their share of the partnership net income on their individual tax returns.
Limited Partnership
Pros
Cons
Corporation
Most people think of a corporation as a business in a big building with lots of employees. A
corporation is really nothing more than a way of doing business. It is a legal entity regarded as
separate from the owner, one that offers distinct tax advantages as well as liability protection from
creditors and others who might sue. The owner controls the corporation and is a shareholder,
possibly the only shareholder. As owner and shareholder, the owner is the boss.
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one of the secrets of the rich: Own nothing, but control everything. This was Rich Dads favorite
form of entity in which to build businesses.
There are two types of corporations: C and S. The C corporation, named for Subchapter C of the
federal tax code, is also known as a regular corporation. It offers all the legal protection just
mentioned but is taxed as a separate entity. In general, income tax rates for a corporation are
lower than rates for individuals. After the C corporation deducts business expenses from its income,
tax is paid on the corporations profits. The owner/shareholder in turn pays tax on any money
received from the corporation, usually in the form of a salary or bonus, and the corporation can
deduct these payments as expenses on its tax return. However, when a corporation pays a dividend
to its shareholders, the dividends are taxable to the shareholders but not deductible by the
corporation. This is often called double taxation, that is, tax is paid on the income by the
corporation when it earns the money, and tax is paid again by the shareholder when the
corporation pays a dividend with that same money.
But theres a way around double taxation, and the rich use it all the time. When the C corporation
deducts legitimate business expenses and pays out profits in the form of compensation to its
shareholders, there may be no taxable income left. In that case, the corporation doesnt have
enough income left to pay dividends. Shareholders must report any compensation (deducted on the
corporations return) on their individual tax returns, but they have no dividend income to report.
Taxation occurs once, not twice. Note: The shareholders must be performing duties for the
compensation they are receiving, and compensation should be reasonable, not excessive.
Another advantage of the C corporation is in the area of fringe benefits. The C corporation usually
gets a deduction for fringe benefits, and the employee does not recognize taxable income. Many of
the fringe benefits available to the C corporation are not available to, or are restricted in, an S
corporation, partnership, or LLC. For example, a C corporation can make contributions towards life,
accident, health, or other insurance deductibles and offer tax-free benefits under a medicalexpense reimbursement plan.
C Corporation
Pros
Cons
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Also named from a chapter in the tax code, S corporations offer the same legal protection as C
corporations but dont pay corporate taxes. Instead, shareholders report the companys income and
losses on their individual tax returns. The tax may be higher at the individual level than it would
have been at the C corporate level, but because the S corporation itself pays no taxes, the income
is only taxed once, not twice as it can be with the C corporation.
Lets say your business isnt yet profitable and youre earning money from another source, such as
a part-time job. The money from this other source is taxable, but if you have an S corporation, you
can reduce the amount of your total tax by deducting your S corporation operating loss from
income being earned from other sources. Reducing the amount of taxable income in this way may
add up to significant tax savings.
S Corporation
Pros
No double taxation
Changing from C to S and from S to C
is possible
Cons
Limited-Liability Company
Pros
Cons
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There are many people with great ideas but few people with great
fortunes. The B-I triangle has
the power to turn ordinary ideas
into great fortunes.
Anyone can start a company, yet how many can start a company that survives and thrives? Anyone
can purchase real estate, yet how many know how to analyze a property or how to structure the
purchase to take advantage of the tax savings available for real estate? The key to business
success in either business development or real estate lies in the so-called business-investor
triangle, or B-I triangle.
Take away any one side of a triangle, and what do you have? An unstable angle. Take away any
one side of the B-I triangle and what do you have? A company doomed to failure. There are three
sides to the B-I triangle: mission, teamwork, and leadership. Each side is critical to the stability
and long-term success of the business.
The Mission
At the base of the triangle is its most important component: the mission. As the world market
becomes ever more glutted with products and competition becomes increasingly fierce, the
businesses that thrive will be those that use their mission as their beacon.
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What does mission mean? In truth, it is an intangible concept that, in the hands of a devoted
entrepreneur, can take on spiritual overtones. The best way to define mission is by example. Henry
Fords missionone he fulfilled with messianic fervorwas to make the automobile available to the
masses. Hence his mission statement, Democratize the automobile. It was Fords ability to
maintain his focus on this mission that helped fuel his financial success. Or consider the case of
Johnson & Johnson. Back in 1890, the brothers Johnson invented a first-aid kit for railroad workers
who were getting cut up as they laid tracks across the United States. For over a century the
company has remained true to its original mission, and today the name Johnson & Johnson
remains synonymous with on-site first aid.
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The Team
The second side of the B-I triangle is the team. In school, students are taught to take tests as
individuals, and they bring home individual report cards. But in business people are measured by
their ability to perform teamwork. If there is no teamworkif every person is an islandthen the
business will fail.
A team is not a group of people with the same skills. Employees and small-business owners often
make less money than they would like because they try to do things on their own. When they grow
frustrated with the powers that be, they form a union. A business team, however, is not like a
union. It is a collection of specialistsaccountants, bankers, attorneys, insurance agents and so
forthwith differing skills. In a team, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. With a solid
team in place the owner or investor gets the broadest education possible. And thats exactly what
an entrepreneur needs, an expansive view of the world, not a single, specialized skill.
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host of others. With a team in place, you can make informed decisions and avoid the pitfalls into
which many a hapless young company falls.
Those in the E and S quadrants tend to be solo players and want to do things on their own. If they
do happen to pay for specialist advice, it may be after much hesitation and out of their own sweat
and blood. Those in the B and I quadrants, however, do not hesitate to hire professionals because
the entire B-I triangle is paying for their services. Those in the B and I quadrants have shed the
common notion that building a business is risky. To these team players, it is riskier not to build a
business. If your business is real estate, your team will include legal and tax advisors as well as a
real estate agent or broker and an insurance agent. You may also want a property manager on
your team.
Of course, specialists are just one of several groups that make up the larger business team. A
successful team-driven business depends on investors, owners, employees, and specialists.
The investors fund the company. The owners work with the employees to make the business grow
and bring a return on the original investment. The employees serve as an extension of the owners
and represent the business to customers. And all the while, the specialists help the owners keep
the business moving in the right direction.
Leadership
To keep the company focused on the mission, and the companys different personnel working as a
team, you need leadershipthe third and final side of the B-I triangle.
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Though leaders come in all different shapes and sizes, they have certain intangible qualities in
common. A true leader is part:
Visionary
Cheerleader
Pit boss
Listener
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To force good ideas to bubble up within [your organization], you must listen to what
your associates are trying to tell you.
Sam Walton, founder of Wal-Mart
Communications Management
Communications management is the next tier up. Much communication is devoted to activities
external to the company, such as raising capital, sales, marketing, customer service, and public
relations. Most entrepreneurs spend too little time improving their external communication skills.
This can be risky, not least because communication is essential to raising capital, the life of any
business. Internal communication is also importantsharing the companys successes with the
entire team, staying in touch with advisors, and having regular meetings with employees.
Investors, advisors, and employees can get away with speaking the language of their specialized
areas, but the entrepreneurleader of the flagshipmust speak the language of all.
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Systems Management
Systems management is the third tier up. A business is a web of interlocking systems. For it to
grow, a general director must be in charge of making sure all systems operate with maximum
efficiency. The director is like a pilot in the cockpit reading gauges from all the planes systems; if
one gauge indicates a malfunction, emergency procedures must be implemented to prevent the
plane from going down. The pilot isnt part of the systemhe or she is merely managing it. Most S
quadrant businesses are weak because the director is the system. In a B-quadrant business, the
director supervises multiple systems without becoming a part of any.
Systems managed in a typical B-quadrant business include:
Product development
Office operations
Order processing
Customer service
Accounts payable
Marketing
Human resources
General accounting
General corporate
Physical space
Computer systems
Legal Management
Legal management, one tier from the top of the triangle, is too often neglected. Legal fees may
seem expensive at first, but it is much more expensive to lose the rights to your property or to get
embroiled in litigation down the road. The young Armand Hammer well understood this. He and his
father bought out a partner in their pharmaceutical manufacturing business and renamed it Allied
Drug and Chemical Company. As soon as sales started skyrocketing, the partner resurfaced,
claimed that hed been swindled, and brought a million-dollar suit against the Hammers. So
Armand went to the famed commercial trial lawyer Max Steuer. He paid Steuer a thousand dollars
simply to write a letter showing the ex-partner that he intended to fight. It worked. The man,
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scared stiff, backed downand saved the Hammers many thousands of dollars in potential legal
fees later on.
Lots of businesses go under because they fail to protect their intellectual property. Never
underestimate the power of patents, trademarks, copyrights and contracts. Bill Gates became the
richest man in the world by buying an operating system, protecting his purchase, and selling it to
IBM. Aristotle Onassis became a shipping magnate with a simple legal documenta contract from a
large manufacturing company guaranteeing him exclusive rights to transport its cargo all over the
world. A single legal document can be the seed of a worldwide business.
Here are some areas of the law where attorneys can prevent problems:
Contracts
Intellectual property
General corporate
Shareholders
Labor
Consumers
Product Management
Finally, on the very top tier, rests product management. Product is at the top because it embodies
the businesss mission, and because success in selling product depends on all the tiers below. The
product can be a tangible item like a hamburger or an intangible idea such as consulting services.
Whatever it is, in one sense the product should be viewed as the least important part of the
business. Take away the rest of the B-I triangle and the product has no value. Most of us can cook
a better hamburger than McDonalds, but few of us can build a better business system than
McDonalds.
After reviewing each level of the B-I triangle, consider how each also relates to the business of
owning and investing in real estate. Whether you own a hotdog stand or a multinational business,
whether you own one property or many, all the elements of the B-I triangle must be present and
working in harmony for your business endeavor to succeed.
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Types of Investors
Investors, like investing plans, are not created equal. Average investors buy packaged securities
such as mutual funds, treasury bills, or real-estate-investment trusts. Professional investors are
more aggressivethey create investment opportunities or get in on the ground floor of new
offerings, build businesses and marketing networks, assemble groups of financiers to fund deals
too large for them to undertake alone, and pick the companies with the most promise for initial
public offerings of stock. There are five different types of professional investors:
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The accredited investor. As defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission, this individual
investor earns at least $200,000 in annual income ($300,000 for a couple) and/or has a net worth
of $1 million. An accredited investor has access to many lucrative investments that, because of
their risk may be legally off-limits to people of lesser income. Although usually financially educated,
accredited investors are not necessarily fully literate. They may be content with security and
comfort rather than wealth, and may rely on advisors to develop and implement their financial
plans.
The qualified investor. This investor is well versed in either fundamental or technical investing.
Fundamental investing requires the ability to assess a companys potential by reviewing financial
statements, tracking the industry the company represents, and calculating how changes in interest
rates and the economy as a whole could affect profitability. The fundamental investor uses financial
ratios, which youll learn all about later, to assess the strength of a company he or she is
considering as an investment. Technical investing is differentit is based on knowledge of the sales
history of a companys stock, the mood of the market in general, and techniques such as short
selling and options. Unlike a fundamental investor, a technical investor (often a stock trader) does
not necessarily look for well-run, profitable corporations. If people are rushing to invest in a certain
type of industry, say dot-com companies, the technical investor may jump on the bandwagon,
regardless of whether these companies are showing earnings, let alone profits. Technical investing
is thus more speculative than fundamental, but it can yield greater rewards. Regardless of
investment style, qualified investors know how to make, or at least preserve, money in an up or
down market.
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with the three Eseducation, experience, and excess cashthe sophisticated investor takes
advantage of tax, corporate, and securities laws to protect capital and maximize earnings. When
operating from the B quadrant, the investor can choose the best structure or entity through which
to create assets. This entity provides some degree of control over the investment and also serves
as a firewall between personal and business finances in the event of a lawsuit.
Sophisticated investors exercise control over the timing of taxes and the character of their income.
They know, for example, to defer paying taxes on capital gains from real estate by rolling over
profits to more expensive property. They look at economic downturn as an opportunity to pay
bargain basement prices for quality securities, and they create deals instead of simply waiting for
the right one to come along.
Sophisticated investors take risks but abhor gambling, hate losing but are not afraid to, are
financially intelligent yet rely on experts to teach them more, own little in their names yet
command great wealth. Although they become partners in real-estate ventures and large
shareholders in corporations, they lack one essential strength: management control over their
assets.
The inside investor. Building or owning a profitable business is the primary goal of this investor.
Whether as an officer of a corporation or owner of a majority of its shares of stock, the inside
investor exercises some degree of management control. By running business systems from the
inside, he or she learns how to analyze them from the outside and thereby becomes a sophisticated
investor as well. Although inside investors have financial intelligence, they do not necessarily have
financial resources and thus may not meet the definition of an accredited investor. If inside
investors mind their own business and succeed, however, they can become not only accredited
investors but ultimate investors as well.
The ultimate investor. The goal of the ultimate investor is to own a business that is so successful
that shares are sold to the public. Making an initial public offering (IPO) is expensive and full of
risks, yet it allows business owners to cash in on the equity they have built up in the company,
while also raising money to pay down debt and fund expansions. The ultimate investor is one who
has mastered every rule and enjoys playing the game for its own sake.
Guide to Investments
Unless they choose to turn their money over to professional managers, all levels of investors must
be financially literate if theyre going to preserve their earnings and accumulate assets. They must
be able to comprehend a corporate financial statement or stock-offering prospectus. They must
know when to hire professionals for expert advice and second opinions. And they must be able to
discriminate between good debt and bad debt. Remember, good debt is debt that someone else
pays for you. An example is buying an apartment building. You borrow the money from a bank, but
your tenants pay the debt service. Bad debt is debt you acquire with hard-earned, after-tax wages,
like a credit card loan for a new pleasure boat.
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companies, are speculative, with the potential for enormous gains or total loss of capital.
Investments can be assets or liabilities.
One thing investments are not: savings. When you save a dollar, you keep it safe and liquid; when
you invest a dollar, you assume a certain degree of risk in expectation that the money will grow.
Whether you access savings by cracking open a piggy bank or making a withdrawal at an ATM
machine, you have immediate access to cashbut remember, once its spent, its gone. Everyone
needs a rainy-day reserve. The rule of thumb is to have enough to cover three to six months of
living expenses in case of emergency. Keep more than that liquid, however, and your cash could
run through your fingers. Thats because savings accounts return such low interest that taxes and
inflation erode the moneys purchasing power.
Ways to Save
While savings are not an avenue toward wealth, they are a way of earning low interest on liquid
assets. Passbook or statement savings accounts pay low interest and give you immediate access to
cash, with no limit on withdrawals. NOW accounts are checking accounts that pay interest,
provided you maintain a set minimum balance. Money market deposit accounts pay slightly more
interest than savings or NOW accounts but limit your withdrawals to a few a month. Certificates of
deposit pay more interest and guarantee preservation of principal, yet funds are obligated for
specified terms, and penalties are charged for early withdrawal.
A true investor does not become attached to any one investment option but uses different vehicles
to assemble a financial plan. In general, investments come in one of three forms: paper securities,
such as stocks and bonds; tangible objects, such as gold and real estate; and business ventures,
such as franchises or start-up companies.
Paper Securities
Bonds
When a government agency or private corporation needs to raise money, it offers or issues a bond.
An investment banker determines how much money the agency or corporation needs, what the
interest rate on the loan will be, and when the loan will be repaid. A bond pays interest over a fixed
period. An investor who buys a bond intending to hold it to maturity need not worry about
fluctuations in the interest rate. However, for those who want to sell before maturity, current
interest rates are crucial. In the bond market, lower interest rates in the marketplace raise bond
prices, and higher rates lower them. Thus as interest rates go up and down, a fixed-rate bond
becomes either more or less valuable.
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U.S. treasuries. By purchasing a treasury, an investor lends money to the U.S. government for a
specified amount of time in exchange for interest payments. Because treasuries have the backing of
Uncle Sam, they are among the safest investments available. Treasury bills, or T-bills, are issued in
thousand-dollar increments and mature within three, six, or twelve months. An investor receives an upfront interest payment called the discount, which runs around 5 percent, lower or higher depending on
the economic climate. When the bill matures, the principal can be returned or reinvested for another
discount. Treasury notes mature in two, five, or ten years, and require a minimum investment of
between $1,000 and $5,000. Treasury bonds mature in ten to thirty years and require a minimum
investment of $1,000. Both notes and bonds pay interest semi-annually.
Savings bonds. These U.S. government bonds are issued in denominations ranging from $50 to
$10,000. Sold at a discount price, they are redeemed at face value at maturity.
Municipal bonds. These are issued by state and local governments. You pay no federal income tax on
the interest earned, and no state or local income tax if the bond is issued by the state in which you live.
Municipal bonds tend to pay less interest than taxable bonds. While the interest payment may remain
steady, the price of the bond may rise and fall with changes in the markets.
Corporate bonds. These are issued by companies that need to borrow money. The minimum
investment in corporate bonds is $1,000. The interest is taxable, so to induce investors, rates are
typically higher than for municipal bonds. Here, too, the interest rate may remain steady, but the price of
the bond may rise and fall with changes in the markets. Corporate bonds may be riskier than
government bonds because businesses can go bankrupt.
High-yield (junk) bonds. These are issued by corporations without solid sales and earnings records,
or with a dubious credit rating. The chance that the investor will not be repaid is higher with a junk bond
because of the issuers instability. To attract investors, the issuer offers a relatively high interest rate.
The price of a junk bond is more likely to fluctuate than that of any other type of bond.
Bond ratings. A bond rating is a method of evaluating the possibility of default by a bond issuer.
Bonds are graded periodically by analysts at companies that do evaluations, such as Standard and
Poors Ratings Services and Moodys Investors Service. U.S. government bonds are not rated,
because there is very little chance that the U.S. government will default on a bond.
Pros and cons of investing in bonds. Many bonds, especially government bonds, represent a
safe, secure investmentthe very sort of investment that people on the left side of the CASHFLOW
Quadrant seek for their hard-earned dollars. If held for more than twelve months, profits on sales
are capital gains and taxed at a maximum of 20 percent. Municipal bonds are exempt from federal
taxes, though they may be subject to local and state taxes. U.S. Treasury income is taxed by the
federal government but is free from local and state taxes.
With the tax advantages, why wouldnt people on the right side of the quadrant rush to the bond
market? For one, changes in the tax law could affect the investors tax liability.
Furthermore, over time, inflation can cause the fixed-rate interest payment as well as the principal
to erode. Then theres the reality of interest rate fluctuation: When interest rates rise, it makes the
fixed interest rate of a bond worth less. And of course not all bonds are as safe as Uncle Sams U.S.
government bonds. With junk bonds and other high-risk securities, there is always the danger that
the issuer might default on repayment.
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Individuals on the right side of the quadrant often invest in bonds as part of their overall plan for
security and comfort. Tax-free bonds can be very attractive vehicles for the rich when they see the
market about to change. They often park their funds in tax-free bond funds until they see the
opportunity to move back into the market (generally when everyone else is exiting).
Stocks
A stock is a share of ownership in a company. When a private business needs money to operate,
develop new products, or expand, its management may decide to issue stock for individual public
investors to buy. This could be called a private placement or going public. A company goes public in
an initial public offering (IPO). How many shares a company issues depends on the amount of
capital needed; what shares should sell for, given current market prices; and the cost of paying
experts to prepare, or underwrite, the offering. As part of an IPO, a prospectus or financial profile
of the company is published to promote interest.
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American Stock Exchange, the New York Stock Exchange, NASDAQ (National Association of
Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System), and various regional exchanges. Except for
NASDAQ, which is a telecommunications system, all are actual marketplaces where trading occurs,
and all are regulated by the SEC. There are also exchanges in major cities throughout the world,
such as London and Tokyo.
Types of stock. All stock can be categorized as common or preferred. Preferred stock is given
preference over common stock if a company liquidates its assets. Income to shareholders is based
on fixed dividends and redemption dates rather than corporate earnings. Convertible preferred
stock gives the owner the option to convert preferred into common stock.
Common stock is the choice of most investors. Owners are entitled to vote on the selection of
directors and other important corporate concerns. If a company is forced to liquidate, owners also
have a right to a share in the assets after all debts and prior claims have been satisfied. Here are
just a few of the categories of stock:
Blue chip. Stocks of large companies with established records of profitability and dividend payment.
Blue chips tend to be more expensive than other stocks, but their value is also considered more stable.
Small cap. Stocks of smaller companies. Cap refers to capitalization, which is the price of a share
multiplied by the total number of shares on the market. While these stocks may fluctuate significantly in
the short term, over the long term small caps as a whole have outperformed every other type of stock.
Growth. Stocks of companies with earnings that have risen faster than average. These companies
tend to reinvest profits in the business to maintain a competitive edge. Investors hope that, over the
long term, prices will rise as the company grows. In the short term, though, price swings can be more
dramatic than with stocks that pay dividends.
Income. Stocks that pay fairly reliable quarterly dividends. Utilities, such as power companies, are the
most commonly held income stocks. Income stocks tend to be relatively stable because of the high level
of income they produce, yet a more competitive climate or overall market decline can cause drops in
prices.
Speculative. Stocks in companies that have no proven track record or dividend history. Often called
penny stocks, they sell for $5 or less and come with a high risk.
Foreign. The price of foreign stock, which is affected by all the market concerns that drive the prices
of domestic stock, is also vulnerable to currency exchange rates, political turmoil, different laws and
regulatory oversights, and any number of other issues arising in individual countries.
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market. For investors who are uncomfortable selecting stocks themselves, a reputable broker can
be a great advisor.
Historically, the market has proven to be a sound vehicle for long-term investment, but highlight
long term (the buy-and-hold strategy). When you invest in a stock, your money is tied up in that
stock and only provides cash flow if the company pays dividends. On a positive note, stocks may
be less likely than savings or bonds to decline in purchasing power, and they can be bought and
sold quickly, at prices easily determined. Moreover, for a stock with no dividends, taxes on gains
can be deferred until the stock is sold. When gain is recognized on a sale or other disposition of
stock held by an individual for over twelve months, it is taxed at the favorable capital gains rate of
20 percent.
For the average investor, knowing which stocks to buy is a fine art, one that few people master. It
takes an enormous amount of time and knowledge to outguess the market. Every time investors
buy stock they invite the risk that it will not perform as expected. To top off these disadvantages,
brokerage fees for trading shares can be expensive, and accurate records of every transaction must
be kept for the IRS.
Mutual Funds
A mutual fund is a portfolio of securities purchased by a professional manager with the pooled
resources of many private investors. Each mutual fund share represents a partial share of every
stock or bond in the portfolio. By joining financial forces, investors with limited funds are able to
benefit from the knowledge of experts, diversify their holdings, and gain from lower prices and fees
that come from buying in quantity. Certain funds are required to buy back shares whenever owners
want to sell. As with stocks, the redemption price depends on the value of the securities in the
portfolio at any given point in time.
In addition to the cost of mutual fund shares, investors also have to pay fees. Load funds are sold
mostly through brokers, who charge a commission when the fund is either bought (front-end load)
or sold (back-end load). No-load funds are sold directly to the public at no additional charge. Both
load and no-load funds charge management fees of anywhere from 1 to 5 percent, and some
include marketing fees. All together, fees can add up to a significant reduction in capital gains.
Types of mutual funds. Two fundamental types of mutual fund are closed end and open end.
Closed-end funds issue a fixed number of shares, which trade on exchanges like stocks. The price
of shares depends not only on the value of the assets held, but also on the demand for the shares
themselves. Shares in open-end funds are bought directly from the fund and trade according to
customer demand.
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Balanced funds. These are a conglomeration of stocks and bonds, usually in a set proportion. They
are suitable for investors who are willing to accept modest growth in exchange for stability.
Equity income funds. These invest in the stocks (equities) of well established companies that pay
dividends. The safest of the stock funds, they are an alternative to bond funds for those who want steady
income.
Income funds. These have the same goal as equity income funds, but they rely on more than just
stock dividends to attain it. For example, they may deliver interest on bonds and treasuries.
Growth funds. These invest in fairly established companies whose stocks offer long-term growth of
equity rather than income, for all dividends are reinvested. There can be a fine line between growth
and aggressive growth funds, the latter of which seek maximum capital gains by investing in new but
promising companies or down-on-their-luck firms that may rebound.
Index funds. Index funds invest in the same securities tracked by stock indexes such as Dow Jones
and Standard & Poors, the logic being that few managers can beat their performance. These funds
usually have lower management fees.
Bond funds. These are primarily for generating income and offer little or no long-term growth. They
are relatively stable, with price fluctuations based mainly on changes in interest rates, and may include
corporate bonds, U.S. government and municipal bonds, and mortgage-backed bonds issued by the
Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae).
Sector funds. Also called single-industry funds, these invest in specific market sectors such as health
care, energy, or telecommunications. They tend to be riskier than average because there is nothing to
buffer them from a downward trend in their particular sector.
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A lot of important information about a fund can be found in its prospectus. By law, all mutual funds
must provide customers with a document that outlines the funds objectives, procedures for buying
and selling shares, loads and fees, and annual operating expenses. As a rule, bond funds should
have total operating costs of no more than 1 percent of assets; stock funds, 1.5 percent. Numerous
publications and web sites such as Morningstars also rate funds on a regular basis.
Pros and cons of investing in mutual funds. Mutual funds are often attractive to people who
are so preoccupied with their work on the left side of the CASHFLOW Quadrant that they have no
time to oversee their investments. Fund managers have the expertise that people stuck in the E
and S quadrants lack, and depending on its degree of diversification, a funds collective stocks may
buffer investors from the sharp losses often incurred by individual stocks. Shares, moreover, are
liquid and can be purchased for relatively little money.
But mutual funds are not always ideal investments. Because funds are overseen by managers who
have more knowledge and experience than investors, investors can be lulled into complacency and
neglect to track the performance of their fund. Like stocks and bonds, funds can experience
dramatic drops in value, particularly during a general market decline. In a good market, the very
buffers that protect against loss can also limit gains. In a down market, investors can actually find
themselves with taxable capital gains even though the value of their holding has dropped
dramatically. This occurs when the fund is forced to sell its holdings (with built-in capital gains) to
meet the demands of selling shareholders. Furthermore, loads, management fees, and marketing
fees can be sizeable.
What Is Vesting?
Vest means to grant possession or control of something. While you are always in control of money
that you contribute to a pension fund, your employers deposit is another matter. You are fully
vested, or entitled to all of the companys contributions no matter what, after a maximum of either
five or seven years of service, depending on the schedule your employer adopts.
Types of retirement plans and accounts. Traditionally, employers rewarded years of loyal
service by providing employees with a guaranteed pension for life. So-called defined-benefit plans
were fully funded by the company, with the level of benefit determined by the employees salary
and years of service at the time of retirement. Defined-benefit contributions were free money that
the employer planted and grew for employees.
Not surprisingly, defined-benefit plans are rapidly disappearing in favor of various types of
employee-contribution plans, including the following:
Defined-contribution plans. These define the amount of contribution an employee can make to a
retirement fund, usually as a percentage of salary. Although the plans are company sponsored,
employers do not have to contribute. Benefits depend on how much has been deposited and how well the
investments have done. Earnings are not taxed until withdrawn. A 401(k) is an example of a definedcontribution plan.
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Individual retirement accounts (IRAs). An IRA allows the investor who either has no retirement
plan at work or falls below a certain salary level to make annual contributions to a tax-favored account.
Money cannot be withdrawn until age 591 2, but there are exceptions to the rule. IRA funds can be
invested in any number of vehicles, including money-market accounts, certificates of deposit, individual
stocks and bonds, mutual funds, and government-issued coins. Self-directed IRAs may allow for
additional investment opportunities such as real estate and gold. In addition to traditional IRAs, there are
ROTH IRAs (unlike the former, not tax deductible) and for the self-employed, SEP and SIMPLE IRAs.
Keogh plans. Keoghs cover small business owners and the self-employed. They are similar to IRAs
but allow more pre-tax earnings to be invested in a tax-deferred account.
Pros and cons of retirement plans and accounts. Determining which plans are best for you is a
personal decision. Much depends on whether you are an employee, self-employed, or living off
passive income, whether you are just beginning your career or nearing retirement, whether your
income is high or low, and whether you want to retire early or work forever.
Annuities
Annuities are contracts that guarantee a steady income in retirement. They are purchased with a
lump-sum payment or a series of payments, usually to a life insurance company, which invests the
money. Although contributions are not tax deductible, as with IRAs and 401(k)s, annuities allow
greater flexibility in establishing the starting date and duration of distributions.
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Types of annuities. The investor must decide between annuities with fixed or variable returns,
and must choose how and when benefits are paid. Here are the possibilities:
Fixed annuities. These earn interest at rates established by the annuity company. The rates are
comparable to those for savings accounts or treasuries. Fixed annuities are not good hedges against
inflation, let alone vehicles for growth.
Variable annuities. These offer a number of different securities to invest inprimarily mutual funds
and thus have earnings in league with stock indexes.
Immediate annuities. These begin distributions within a year of a lump-sum payment. For those who
have ready cash from an inheritance or the sale of a property, an immediate annuity guarantees income
for life without the responsibility of managing investments. Immediate annuities are usually fixed.
Deferred annuities. These begin distributions at a future date specified by the owner. They can be
either fixed or variablemost are the latterand offer the same benefits as immediate annuities.
Pros and cons of investing in an annuity. The great attraction of annuities is that they
guarantee investors income for life and remove the headaches associated with investment
management. Unlike IRAs, annuities do not limit contributions, contributions can come from
sources other than just wages, and distributions can be delayed at the owners discretion.
The tax advantages of annuities, however, are minimal. Contributions are not tax deductible, and
distributions are taxed. Only the earnings are tax deferred. Furthermore, when the annuitant dies,
assets are subject to income and estate taxes. Last but not least, variable-annuity fees are high, as
are penalty fees for premature withdrawal.
Should you invest in stocks, mutual funds, and annuities? It depends. If your investment plan is to
be secure and/or comfortable, these investment vehicles should be components of your overall
plan. But if your investment plan is to be rich, these vehicles should only be used to realize the
secure and/or comfortable portion of your plan. If your plan is to be rich, you also need to consider
investing in tangible things such as real estate, and you need to consider building businesses.
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Property. An investor can choose from four different types of property: residential (single- and multifamily homes, condominiums, townhouses, and apartment buildings), industrial (manufacturing plants,
storage units, warehouses, industrial parks, and research-and-development parks), commercial (hotels,
offices, and retail- or wholesale-sales space), and undeveloped land. When choosing one of these
investment vehicles, the investor should be knowledgeable about the local real-estate market, general
economic forecasts, and tax realities. For example, raw land might need nothing more than an
improvement in grading, but it is also the most speculative investment and cannot be depreciated for tax
purposes. A recession can reduce the demand for every type of property except apartments. In general,
commercial property is more difficult to manage than residential, for new business tenants may require
costly improvements. However, these expenses can be deducted from pre-tax income, so the tax savings
may be significant.
Real-estate investment trusts (REITs). REITs are business entities that invest in income-producing
real estate. For a fee, the trust managers provide a broad range of services from locating and buying
properties to contracting with tenants. Shares in REITs, traded on the major stock exchanges, are easy
to buy and sell. They can also be purchased through tax-deferred retirement accounts. REITs are good
for investors who want headache-free real estate.
Real estate mutual funds. These are funds that invest in different REITs, thus providing the investor
with real estate diversification.
How to analyze a real estate investment. A sophisticated real estate investor knows
how to find diamonds in the rough. The bleak remains of an urban gas station can become
a trendy restaurant with the right facelift and zoning variance. For investors who are still
learning the tricks of the trade, however, it is best to look not for possible diamonds but for
solid real estate investmentsthose that dont cost too much and that can be easily rented
or resold.
The formula for winning at real-estate investing is the same as for winning at Monopoly:
Buy four green houses, then trade them for a red hotel. Beginning investors should start
small while they acquire education and experience. Later, they will have the financial
intelligence and assets to trade up to more lucrative investments.
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A good real estate investment also generates positive cash flow, that is, a good cash-oncash return. Cash-on-cash return can be expressed as net cash flow divided by cash
invested in the property:
cash-on-cash return =
For example, a $100,000 down payment on a building that generates $20,000 in annual
income after mortgage and expenses are paid yields a cash-on-cash return of 20 percent
($20,000 divided by $100,000). In general, the cash-on-cash return should be comparable
to the returns of other good investments, preferably 10 percent or more. The lower the
return, the riskier the investment. A more detailed explanation of this calculation is covered
in Section Three.
Pros and cons of investing in real estate. An informed real estate purchase is a classic
investment from the right side of the CASHFLOW Quadrant. For a relatively small amount
of money, the real estate investor may well gain substantial returns. If you have $10,000
you can choose to buy $10,000 of stock, or you can choose to use the $10,000 as a down
payment for a $100,000 rental property. In the first case you have a $10,000 asset, and in
the second you have an asset of $100,000, albeit offset by a $90,000 liability (mortgage).
Which one do you think will appreciate faster, $10,000 or $100,000?
Your banker might loan you money to buy a piece of rental real estate, but he wont lend you money
to buy stock.
The person who buys rental property is gaining a source of ongoing passive income as well
as a hedge against inflation, since rents can be raised. Rental losses, including phantom
losses from depreciation, may be deductible as long as certain conditions are met. Earnings
from the appreciation of property are tax deferred, and capital gains can be rolled over into
a like kind investment.
Like any investment, however, a real estate purchase must be carefully considered before it
is made. Real estate is not liquid, and there are many built-in risks. These include loss of
income from tenant turnover and a low occupancy rate, the costs of property maintenance
and management, increases in annual property taxes, heavy losses inflicted by natural
disasters, and payment of taxes on capital gains if profit is not rolled over within six
months.
Most real estate investors hire professional property managers to minimize their day-to-day
involvement with the enterprise. The best plan is to start small and carefully review
possible real estate purchases, working with a realtor in the community, looking at many
properties, and analyzing each for its cash flow potential. This is the way to gain intimate
knowledge of a community. But remember, unless the would-be landlord ultimately takes
action, he or she will never gain riches through real estate.
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Investing in Businesses
Investing in businesses, like investing in real estate, is an activity on the right side of the
CASHFLOW Quadrant. Owning or buying a business creates tax advantages that employees do not
have, for operating costs can be deducted from pre-tax income, thus lowering the businesss
taxable income. By contrast, employees have income taxes withheld from their paychecks before
they have the opportunity to invest. Businesses can generate positive cash flow, be taken public
with an IPO, or sold.
Franchising. When a corporation sells a franchise, it typically grants the buyer the exclusive right to
sell its goods or services in a specified area. In exchange for a fee and usually a share of the profits, the
company or franchisor provides the buyer or franchisee with its product or service, the use of its name, a
business system, and sometimes training as well as advertising and marketing services. McDonalds and
KFC are examples of franchises. Franchises are tailor-made for people who dont want to build a business
from the ground up or who want hands-on training in all aspects of operating an enterprise before
starting their own. The initial investment can be steepleaders of the pack charge a million dollars or
more for rightsbut banks more readily fund franchises than small start-up businesses, because the
former have proven track records.
Network marketing. Also called direct-distribution systems, network marketing companies provide
the investor or distributor with proven business systems. As with a franchise, the distributor buys the
rights to distribute an existing product line but for a much lower fee, often around $200. Because
network marketing relies on techniques such as personal demonstrations, Internet marketing, and
sometimes direct mail or telemarketing rather than the usual retail sales outlets, overhead costs are
much lower than in the retail trade. This saves the distributor large fees and the headaches of managing
a storefront operation. In fact, distributors can work from home, using company software systems to
process sales. The best network marketing companies offer not only quality products but also long-term
educational programs that hone leadership, salesmanship and communication skills, helping gung-ho
investors build a strong enough revenue base to generate passive income.
Buying a business. Businesses are always coming on the market. For the investor who is financially
literate, buying a pre-existing business that has positive cash flow, sound operating systems, and good
name recognition can save the time and worry associated with starting a business from scratch.
Starting a business. For those who have the drive and the start-up capital, or the connections to
raise it, developing a business can be the ultimate investing experience. A business can take any number
of forms offering different levels of investor/owner control and varying potential for gain. A sole
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proprietorship, for example, carries the highest risk and is seldom used by the professional investor.
More than any other investment, starting a business requires an expert team of advisors.
How to analyze a business investment. To evaluate whether to buy, or buy into, a business, an
investor must learn how to calculate the economic indicators below or hire an expert to do so, for
they are windows into the financial strength or weakness of a firm. Even the investor who never
makes it into the B quadrant can use these indicators to assess companies being considered for a
portfolio of paper securities.
Gross margin percentage. This indicates the percentage of sales left after deducting the cost of
goods soldin other words, how much income remains to cover fixed costs (overhead) and to return
cash to the owner/investor. Companies with low overhead can remain profitable with low gross margin
percentages, but in general, the higher the percentage, the better for a companys financial health.
Net operating margin percentage. This reflects the net profitability of a business before taxes and
interest on debt are deducted. The higher the net operating margin, the stronger the company.
Operating leverage. This tells whether a business has enough revenue to pay fixed costs.
Contribution is the same as gross margin, which is sales minus cost of goods sold. The higher the
operating leverage the better.
operating leverage =
contribution
fixed costs
Financial leverage. Together with operating leverage, this figure helps determine the total risk a
company carries. Total capital employed is the amount of interest-bearing debt added to the owners
equity as a shareholder.
financial leverage =
Total leverage. This is the companys level of risk and indicates what effect a given change will have
on equity owners. If you are the business owner, and therefore on the inside, your companys total
leverage is at least partly under your control.
Debt-to-equity ratio. This measures the portion of the business financed by outsiders and the
portion financed by insiders. Most companies maintain a ratio of one-to-one or less.
debt-to-equity ratio =
Quick or current ratios. This indicates whether the company has enough liquid assets to pay its
liabilities in the coming year. If a ratio is less than one-to-one, the company could be in trouble. Two-toone is a rule of thumb for a healthy company.
quick ratio =
liquid assets
current liabilities
current ratio =
current assets
current liabilities
Return on equity. Perhaps the most important ratio, this indicates the return a company is making
on a shareholders investment. Investors should compare the figure to the return on other options, such
as stocks, to determine if the business is their best investment vehicle.
return on equity =
net income
average shareholders equity
As a rule of thumb, the wise investor uses the above ratios to evaluate a minimum of three years
of performance for a company. The overall direction of the numbers should be considered in
conjunction with industry trends. Even a sound company can be a poor investment if its product or
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service is becoming outmoded. The more you know from these ratios about the company, its
management, and its products and related industry, the more informed you will be for a potential
investment in the related company. As Rich Dad said, Business is a team sport. Consult your
advisors and go over these calculations with them when you are considering an investment. If you
try to analyze them on your own, you are still operating from the left side of the Quadrant. Your
advisors may know additional information about the company or its industry. The more you know,
and the more advice you receive from your advisors, the better prepared you will be for making an
investment decision.
Health. In this country, medical bills are the leading cause of personal bankruptcy. No one can
anticipate a major illness or surgery, yet the wise investor plans for it.
Disability. This replaces wages lost when someone becomes too disabled to work. Anyone who relies
on earned income to meet expenses should have coverage of at least 60 to 70 percent of monthly pay.
Unlike workmans compensation, disability insurance covers a person on and off the job.
Life. There are three basic forms of life insurance. Term is bought for a set period, from one to thirty
years, and renewed periodically. It is the most affordable insurance for those starting out, yet it has no
cash value and premiums increase at the end of each term, so it can get costly. Whole-life insurance
charges a fixed premium for guaranteed lifetime protection and a death benefit. It builds cash value,
which the insured can borrow against, and usually pays dividends, which are used to pay premiums or
buy extra insurance. Variable universal life is part life insurance, part investment vehicle. Policyholders,
rather than insurance managers, choose the size and frequency of premiums as well as the mutual funds
in which they are invested. With this control the investor assumes some risk: If premiums are too low
and investments do poorly, the death benefit may be reduced.
www.ambest.com
(908) 439-2200
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(212) 553-0377
www.standardandpoors.com
(212) 438-2000
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