Why Everything You Know About the Rich Is WRONG!

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The Money Guy Show

The Money Guy Show

17 күн бұрын

Why Everything You Know About the Rich Is WRONG!
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Пікірлер: 181
@GregJSchneider
@GregJSchneider 15 күн бұрын
Bo's excitement has to be at the bowling point right about now
@Nemesisnxt
@Nemesisnxt 15 күн бұрын
The next Billy Mays? Of course, without the premature ending.
@6thManSam
@6thManSam 15 күн бұрын
🤣
@christophercamargo5209
@christophercamargo5209 15 күн бұрын
Boiling*
@Ulandyw
@Ulandyw 15 күн бұрын
@@christophercamargo5209 thatsthejoke.jpg
@PJMeyer-hr4dc
@PJMeyer-hr4dc 15 күн бұрын
​​@@christophercamargo5209 there was a recent episode where "bowling point" was said, I think they were playing on that ;)
@FinanceNik98
@FinanceNik98 15 күн бұрын
I will say there's a bit of confusion and misinterpretation of much of the data here. So I wanted to clarify that. If you go to an Ivy League or you become a doctor/lawyer/engineer/banker, your chance of becoming a millionaire is much much higher. However, most people don't - so that's why even most millionaires are not ivy league graduates.
@josephburton3232
@josephburton3232 15 күн бұрын
While it's interesting that so few people in your survey received little to no inheritance from their family on the way to their first million, I'm curious what other type of support they may have received that isn't direct financial compensation. Were they supported with knowledge that a family member had from a lifetime of experience in a particular field/business? Were they allowed to live at home while they went to college so they had to rely less on student loans? Did their parents have a college fund set up for them so they could skip student loans all together? Was their first job through family/friend connections or at the family business? Were their parents college educated and, therefore, could help them navigate the college admission and financial aid process? Just because someone wasn't given inheritance in the form of a check doesn't mean they didn't have a lot of assistance from family. That assistance can come in many different forms that may not be accounted for by simply asking "Did you receive inheritance?"
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
Including a good example of secure relationships and supportive family
@carterwgtx
@carterwgtx 15 күн бұрын
I’d like to see a show in the difference between a millionaire, a 10 million, 50 million, 100 million, billion net worths…it’s the difference between roller skates vs the Saturn 5 rocket going from 1 million to 100 million.
@Finallegend_
@Finallegend_ 15 күн бұрын
I would guess that from a happiness point of view, you probably get most of the benefit of wealth from the first 1-2 million. More than 10 million seems to cause more problems than it solves.
@dreamchaser5758
@dreamchaser5758 13 күн бұрын
Half of Americans can't afford a $400 emergency without reliance on credit. Most Americans are woefully unprepared for retirement. For the working and middle classes, the psychological hurdle is to get them to understand that having a $1M net worth is doable. People achieve that milestone through discipline every day.
@epbrown01
@epbrown01 13 күн бұрын
@@dreamchaser5758 Yep, I wish there was more focus on single-digit millionaires. All the focus on people with 100s of millions or billions makes a lot of people think wealth is unattainable. People need to see what the entire spectrum looks like.
@carterwgtx
@carterwgtx 12 күн бұрын
@@epbrown01 I agree - so many people think that a millionaire is somebody with a mansion and 2 or 3 luxury sports cars...when in reality most live in modest homes and drive a normal vehicle. I think showing people the difference between reasonably attainable wealth vs rare extraordinary wealth would help avoid people conflating the two and help them get to a point of getting started.
@ryankiel4895
@ryankiel4895 11 күн бұрын
I read an article in Money Magazine that stated that 3.5 million was the sweet spot. After that figure, there was no more level of happiness reported for net worth.
@maoisn
@maoisn 15 күн бұрын
If money doesn't buy you happiness, you're not spending it right. Almost everyone knows how to make money but few know how to spend money properly.
@jiangpkpful
@jiangpkpful 15 күн бұрын
But if you need to spend money to be happy, you've got some thinking to do about life...
@Zorlig
@Zorlig 15 күн бұрын
Absolutly. Not that happyness is a proper end goal, but if you have money and don't it to resolve your problems then you aren't doing it right.
@Zorlig
@Zorlig 15 күн бұрын
@@jiangpkpful Sure, if you are single man no children.
@maoisn
@maoisn 15 күн бұрын
@@jiangpkpful True. I hate having to spend money just to live. I got some thinking to do about life.
@RobertBeedle
@RobertBeedle 14 күн бұрын
Money does not, in itself, make you happy. Doesn't really matter if you spend it right or wrong. If you had enough of it, you may just feel stressed to managr it and fearful of losing it. Family and friends may want their piece of the pie. Stressed because you don't want to work but also feel useless at home doing nothing.
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle 15 күн бұрын
How many went from homeless to financial freedom? I was in a homeless shelter at 25 years old. I became financially free around 60 years old. If I can do it, anyone can do it. Love the channel
@mlsasd6494
@mlsasd6494 15 күн бұрын
„If i can do it anyone can do it“ is a very strong survivor bias. While it might be right, the decisions you have to make if you are less advantaged get incredibly hard and less ans less people are actually able to do it the harder it gets.
@JPEight
@JPEight 12 күн бұрын
I think you mean "If I could do it, then anyone who was also born into the boomer economy and also had an aptitude for a high earning skill could also have done it" Then does not equal now.
@GenghisKahn
@GenghisKahn 10 күн бұрын
​@@JPEightnow, in his defense. We have had some really good benefits. A housing crash that crippled the housing market to affordability followed by massively low interest rates. No doubt when you turn 60 a younger person will make the same lines talking about how easy you had it because of whatever beneficial event that created opportunity that was not taken advantage of by the population as a whole, but yet assumed that everyone had the benefit of it no matter what.
@44andbroke24
@44andbroke24 8 күн бұрын
Much respect to you, I also was sleeping on the railroad tracks at the @ of 24. And it was an incredibly difficult journey. Legal problems, no family and friends and penniless not even a driver's license. Now at 52 been married for 25 years, same union job for 24 years. And we just became nw millionaires. A survival skill has be turned into the willingness to do work most aren't willing to do. Currently saving 30% of our gross pay. And a plan to retire early
@Davecouchsigns
@Davecouchsigns 14 күн бұрын
*If you are not in the financial market space right now, you are making a huge mistake. I understand that it could be due to ignorance, but if you want to make your money work for you...prevent inflation*
@SpartzLoze
@SpartzLoze 14 күн бұрын
Interesting, This is superb! Information, as a noob it gets quite difficult to handle all of this and staying informed is a major cause, how do you go about this are you a pro Investor?
@SpartzLoze
@SpartzLoze 14 күн бұрын
I feel Investors should exercise caution with their exposure and.exercise caution when considering new investments, particularly during periods of inflation. It is advisable to seek guidance from a professional or a licensed expert in order to navigate this recession and achieve potential high yields
@Davecouchsigns
@Davecouchsigns 14 күн бұрын
Prioritizing effective personal finance management holds greater significance than the sheer amount saved, irrespective of income source. Consulting a certified financial advisor can offer tailored strategies to optimize financial results by reducing expenses and enhancing income, regardless of whether it's earned through employment or investments.
@Davecouchsigns
@Davecouchsigns 14 күн бұрын
Mrs Tracy cool services was my hope during the 'bear summer' last year. I did so many mistakes but also learned so much from it, and of course from Tracy.
@Davecouchsigns
@Davecouchsigns 14 күн бұрын
Tracy cool services is known for her impressive career. She has served as the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway-owned Pampered Chef and has been recognimd as one of Warren Buffett's protégés
@hockeyhalod
@hockeyhalod 15 күн бұрын
Mann..... I'm going to hit the 11% on the pie chart. Turning 35 this year and we are a bit off.
@rffinances8567
@rffinances8567 15 күн бұрын
That's awesome, congrats!
@999bmxbandit
@999bmxbandit 15 күн бұрын
I feel like the stats on gifts and inheritance leaves open a lot of room for people to not include parents doing things like paying for college or living expenses when younger.
@Jacovo
@Jacovo 15 күн бұрын
Yeah, this is huge. Also a sense of stability when doing, e.g. internships or trying new things.
@gregshirk6176
@gregshirk6176 15 күн бұрын
I agree but they had a separate statistic that said a majority attended public college and had a breakdown of how college was paid for. Not super clear statistics, but it’s evident parental help was in the majority, just not very descriptive as to how much.
@BossMan_Jerm
@BossMan_Jerm 15 күн бұрын
Pessimists are never satisfied lol @10:30 … watch the full video
@999bmxbandit
@999bmxbandit 6 күн бұрын
@@BossMan_JermI did. The point I’m making is that the magnitude of those contributions is not remotely made clear through this polling methodology. And even the college part doesn’t remotely cover the starting out costs like parents housing you or paying for rent, paying for your bills, etc. And the point I made is also that the polling strategy here doesn’t include college paid for as parents as it’s very reasonable to not classify this as a gift with the way this is presented.
@BeerFoamy
@BeerFoamy 12 күн бұрын
In the Money & Marriage chart, I’d like to see stats on how divorces changes the outcome.
@eddiemalvin
@eddiemalvin 11 күн бұрын
I agree. It would be interesting to see the impact over time. As expected, divorce was an immediate and severe financial setback for me. It briefly put me off track from my financial goals but surprisingly opened the door to a much faster track within a relatively short time.
@ssaini74
@ssaini74 14 күн бұрын
Stats on education are misleading. Reason it shows majority who go to public universities in their survey are millionaires is a numbers game. It is due to most go to public univ likely in their survey. Of the ones that went to public what percentage are millionaires. And of the ones who went to private or Ivy what percentage are millionaires. I would like to see that info.
@rffinances8567
@rffinances8567 15 күн бұрын
I recently got into your show, and there are a few things that really impress me. One is that you go into detail. This is the most in-depth exploration of millionaires I've seen, which is really fascinating. I also like how you're good at meeting people where they are. Like you should pay cash for your car if you can, but that's not realistic for many people. So instead, you have the 20/3/8 rule, which gives people more practical guidelines that by following it, they can build wealth. Or, in this episode, acknowledging that most millionaires didn't follow the 20% downpayment rule for their first home. Loved the stories about how they see money as a tool and what that tool allows them to do.
@Austin-fc5gs
@Austin-fc5gs 15 күн бұрын
Problem with the analysis for college tuition is you're selecting for people who are already millionaires so are older, so havent been affected as much by the insane inflation of schooling
@explorecreativity1622
@explorecreativity1622 15 күн бұрын
Hopefully we can eventually see stats for people in the next tier of wealth. Say net worth of 10million or greater. How did they get there?
@SF-fb6lv
@SF-fb6lv 15 күн бұрын
I think you are right. Unfortunately $1M is just not enough, at least not in the Bay Area, CA.
@fnamelname7296
@fnamelname7296 14 күн бұрын
The same way you made your first million. I am 50, my wife is 47 and we have networth close to $8M. I try to get a return of 10% return on my assets every year. I am semi retired. Plan to fully retire by 65.
@SF-fb6lv
@SF-fb6lv 11 күн бұрын
@@fnamelname7296 Awesome! Is it enough (serious question)? Seems like it would be unless: 1) You gotta have a really really nice house, 2) you like to charter yachts, or 3) you like to fly private. If you don't do any of those, I would think $800k/yr is fine. Right? I calculated if you do #2 or #3 you should have like $17M.
@fnamelname7296
@fnamelname7296 11 күн бұрын
@@SF-fb6lv it was enough since we reached 3M… that’s because we live in SF Bay Area, else I would say a million is enough. We tried to retire early and quickly discovered it is boring. While we do live in a very nice house, everything else is fairly modest. I am still driving my 2008 Camry, we shop at Costco/Target and only recently started flying business. I have been able to help my parents and my siblings and even some cousins… we will probably end up lot higher than 17M because we have fairly high incomes which we plough right back into investments which grows our networth even higher. We donate to charity and plan to leave significant portion our networth to charity. Obviously, we plan to leave a decent portion for our boys too but not so high that it will leave them with no ambition. Life is good!
@andycastro9697
@andycastro9697 15 күн бұрын
As an exercise science major who switched careers (at age 28) - the statement that health is wealth is absolutely true.
@danielnelson2820
@danielnelson2820 12 күн бұрын
Finished the book...great read! Already have passed it on to educate more people.
@jayholiday256
@jayholiday256 15 күн бұрын
I did myself by my mid fifties. Second generation millionaire. Will inherit an additional million at some point in time. I agree with most of this stuff, paid cash for a new $50k Lexus that will be fine for 15 years
@servalous
@servalous 14 күн бұрын
To be married brings different kind of risk to your personal and "teams" wealth. It can be a good oppertunity to build up wealth, but also it can destroy two generation of wealth build up also. Seen it all to often.
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
Yeah, one of the biggest impediments to wealth is divorce, but a misaligned partnership will also make it impossible. If one of the partners has no care about the future or saving, kiss retirement goodbye
@cedarman6790
@cedarman6790 15 күн бұрын
Can you cover something about finance that Bo is not excited about? I need a basis to measure the levels for a comparison.
@caseyrichards3212
@caseyrichards3212 15 күн бұрын
🤣
@chrislayman538
@chrislayman538 15 күн бұрын
No, they wouldn't make a video about something Bo isn't excited about.
@WallaceDunn
@WallaceDunn 13 күн бұрын
I’ve seen exactly ONE video where Bo did not start off with his “I’m so excited” comment. It was remarkable so I left a comment.
@johnchappell1261
@johnchappell1261 15 күн бұрын
Y’all are so enthusiastic about boring wealth building slowly. I love it!!!! So inspiring for me!!!!! Thank you so much!!!!!
@chrishayes4166
@chrishayes4166 15 күн бұрын
This was a really great episode, love the stats/charts and the conversation surrounding it all. Very insightful! Automating savings early (as possible) is such a key point. Even if it's relatively small to start, and take advantage of the +1% automatic yearly contribution increases, made so much of difference from being a 22 year old starting out through my early 30s and now looking at the significant the accumulations that have built up as someone in their late 30s now. Its kind of amazing how that all kind of happened in the background as I went about living my life.
@Stil1_loading
@Stil1_loading 14 күн бұрын
Is tuition taken into account?
@stephendrylie8189
@stephendrylie8189 15 күн бұрын
I got there in my late 30s with the help of a 2-year expat assignment where I continued to be careful with money allowing us to invest consistently before and through the COVID trough.
@adam872
@adam872 13 күн бұрын
Gents, this could be one of your most important videos. There is all sorts of misinformed commentary about millionaires and how they got there in the media. I particularly liked the questions on where your clients started out in terms of inheritance and their relationship with debt. This survey is where the theory intersects with the lived reality and I think it's important that people understand the lessons. It's OK to take on a bit of debt and maybe not be so serious about your finances early on, but the sooner you are the better off you'll be. I'm living proof of this. Like most people I made some non-optimal choices (mainly with cars) in my 20's, but by the end of that decade my then partner (now wife) decided to knuckle down and do things properly. A couple of decades later and we're reaping the rewards, just like a lot of your clients. We'll be able to afford to retire early and take control of our time (truly the most precious resource any person has IMHO).
@drticktock4011
@drticktock4011 14 күн бұрын
The inheritance pie chart seems biased: I'm guessing (multi) millionaires are too busy or don't care to fill out data responses to build this chart. I can imagine those who are self made millionaires are proud (and should be!) and are happy to share their data...especially when coming from nothing.
@michaelc8179
@michaelc8179 14 күн бұрын
Yeah it blows me away how many ppl don't even look at the scholarships offered at college/university. So many and hardly anyone applies. 🤷
@kylewynja3031
@kylewynja3031 12 күн бұрын
When I toured a university with my daughter all the tour guide wanted to talk about was the scholarships and aid that was available. Not once did he ask if that was important to her or us. In fact, it wasn’t as we started a college savings plan when she was born. So, it may seem crazy to you but it seems crazy to me that people need it.
@Moist._Robot
@Moist._Robot 15 күн бұрын
I didn’t figure it out until 50. Better late than never.
@bluetick67
@bluetick67 15 күн бұрын
Please do a show like this strictly on decamillionaires, 25, 50, or 100+
@da2ndtolastdon1
@da2ndtolastdon1 15 күн бұрын
I bet those stats would be WILDLY different for $100 millionaires
@kylewynja3031
@kylewynja3031 12 күн бұрын
Agree. Like mark Cuban says, no one becomes a billionaire solely by working hard. Some “luck” is involved. Prob if you get to north of 30million (ultra high net worth) you were a combination of high income earner and disciplined saver.
@rellsimon
@rellsimon 15 күн бұрын
DC Native here! Cant wait to attend the Live Event tomorrow!
@MileHighMopar
@MileHighMopar 15 күн бұрын
The sub counter on the shelf behind Bo needs to be updated... No longer 445k!
@BitsOfInterest
@BitsOfInterest 15 күн бұрын
They probably recorded this a few weeks ago. That counter should update automatically.
@angelachapman4415
@angelachapman4415 12 күн бұрын
Something that I'm wondering about with this is many people don't necessarily receive inheritance until their parents pass away, so they may still receive this inheritance in their 50s or later. Perhaps what allowed them to be "self made" per the terminology used here, is parents that paid for their college education, bought their first car, gave them a leg up in many ways, taught them how to invest, gave them connections to a good job. I'm actually really not trying to say first generation millionaires aren't a thing, but I do wonder if the question of inheritance, when you are asking people while their parents are still living, is an accurate way to capture that. Do the surveys also include the question in a straight forward way- were your parents millionaires? Maybe it was, I am just curious.
@GregHartmann-ux7eh
@GregHartmann-ux7eh 15 күн бұрын
Fantastic video! This is going to be my all time favorite that I will even show my kids.
@torchy187
@torchy187 14 күн бұрын
I guess I don’t understand why pay cash for a car when you can still get low interest rates…sub 4% with solid credit. S&P 500 averages about 10% a year. Seems like a large opportunity cost to pay cash.
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
4% on used cars?
@torchy187
@torchy187 13 күн бұрын
@@randombandit362 Good point. I was only thinking about new cars.
@kylewynja3031
@kylewynja3031 12 күн бұрын
I think the argument would be that consumers spend MORE when financing vs cash and it also leads to lifestyle creep. I’m one of their statistics though. Financed short term when I was in 20’s. By the time I reached 40 started paying cash for cars.
@lucasdagamalobo8118
@lucasdagamalobo8118 7 күн бұрын
Great content. Keep up the amazing work!!
@anniealexander9616
@anniealexander9616 13 күн бұрын
I think people use "time" as an excuse to be lazy. Tuesday, my pay hit my bank account. I balanced my checkbook and paid bills before I got out of bed. Then i went and mowed the lawn. After a shower, I cut my hair. Then i made some lunch. I have friends who can't mow, cook their own food, or cut hair. They aren't earning more money than I am. They are sitting on the sofa while someone else mows their lawn. They aren't picking up an extra shift at the hospital lol. But the money I save, is working for me and earning money. What's most important about Tuesday is the exercise i got while making my yard look good. Im not taking high blood pressure pills, cholesterol pills, diabetic weight loss shots, and vitamin D shots.....like my buddy who can't mow his lawn. I have a friend who is out of the country once a month at a resort.... except for January. January is always Disney world. A certain amount of "experiences" is just over kill. When you think about it, we are 4 hours from a beautiful beach and only minutes away from great restaurants. Too much "luxury" packs on the pounds. I'm cooking at home not because I can't afford to dine out but because my waistline can't afford it. Last night, I wanted onion rings. I was too lazy to make them. My body thanks me for not adding those calories.
@circrna
@circrna 13 күн бұрын
I hear you. I cut my lawn. Fresh air, relaxing. Takes 45 minutes. Some prefer to run on their treadmill in their basement (I have one) or watch TV. I prefer cutting my own lawn. I feel good and know I also save money.
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 11 күн бұрын
You will go to exotics vacations in your future, and your peers will still give you excuses on why they can't go wiht you.
@Bailey1879
@Bailey1879 14 күн бұрын
Did I miss the statistic on what percentage of millionaires are high income earners? I know not all high income earners are millionaires and there are some middle class and lower income folks who achieved the millionaire milestone. Still, I would be interested what the breakdown is.
@tracyfitzgerald-ni6gb
@tracyfitzgerald-ni6gb 15 күн бұрын
Guys, most of us millionaires didn't have to pay anywhere near what the current kids have to pay.
@asandrik3124
@asandrik3124 13 күн бұрын
Agreed. My daughter attending my Alma Mater is paying about 4-5x what I paid for school. I put myself through the University I really don’t see how she could do it without debt like I did.
@kylen6430
@kylen6430 12 күн бұрын
Before we were married, and just living together, we had one joint account where we direct deposited just enough to pay for joint bills like rent and utilities. The rest went into our individual accounts. Once we were married, all went into the joint account, but we still transferred an equal amount to each of our joint accounts. This allowed us to maintain our individuality when it came to financial decisions. Want to buy something for yourself? We had an account for that. Want to buy a gift for someone? There’s an account for that still. Etc
@heidiortiz9352
@heidiortiz9352 13 күн бұрын
I think of inheritance as a small part of generational wealth. Statistically, the zip code you grow up in is the biggest predictor of your lifetime earnings/ wealth🧐
@Lolatyou332
@Lolatyou332 15 күн бұрын
4% under the age of 35, 11% under 40, 11% got over 100k inheritance... Think we know how the younger people got their wealth at that age lol
@ZuNiBao
@ZuNiBao 15 күн бұрын
I think of first generation millionaire as having being raised in a sub-millionaire household. You receive plenty of benefits (good education, healthcare, etc) that’s not enumerated among the inheritance/gift column. My guess is that number is lower than 80% General point stands though that the majority of millionaires probably got there by themselves. However, the odds of reaching millionaire status given that you were raised in a sub millionaire household is likely much lower than the odds for those raised in millionaire households. It’s just that the base rate of millionaires is low, so logically most millionaires come from non millionaires
@josephburton3232
@josephburton3232 15 күн бұрын
Is it really getting there by themselves if they were raised in a stable household that provided them with a good education, healthcare, good nutrition, access to opportunities and the ability to take risks at trying new things knowing if they fail they will have a safety net to fall back on?
@ZuNiBao
@ZuNiBao 15 күн бұрын
The first part of my comment is getting at your point. The ‘getting there by yourself’ part I wrote was about just literally reaching $1 million without direct inheritance. And I think that’s true for the most part. But as you mentioned, it’s a disservice to not consider all the other benefits of being raised in a high income household. It’s easy to forget those things because people take their upbringing for granted. I’m also sure most of these people worked hard and were patient. Many things can be true at once
@rffinances8567
@rffinances8567 15 күн бұрын
I think this is key. The research has shown that most millionaires are first-generation, but even if they didn't receive a lot of financial help from their parents, there are still so many less direct ways parents help their kids become healthy. Like in my case, there's a very good chance I'll become a millionaire, and while my parents were never rich, they still helped. They provided a stable home in an area with good public schools, they valued education and hard work, and while they didn't pay for college, they helped cover other expenses, so I didn't have to take out as many loans. My home was like Brian's in that there was more love than money, and that love really did make a difference. I'd be very curious if there was a study that looked at the life these first generation millionaires had growing up.
@mlsasd6494
@mlsasd6494 15 күн бұрын
I have to vehemently disagree with the statement about „being born into money“. Inheretance is the last factor which should be considered when talking about „first-genrration wealth builders“. Literally just googling shows that socioeconomic mobility in the US is poor. On a societal level its not about inheriting much or having a paid for college. Its about having your parent not working 60-80hrs a week so that they can read to you in the evenings. Its about having proper nutrition to support physical and mental development. Its about having opportunities outside of school to learn useful social skills. Its about getting access to study support if needed. Its about not having to pick up a job at 16 to help mom with the bills and not having to raid your retirement savings so that your parents dont die on the street because they didnt have savings. Or just about your parents being financially educated enough so you dont make the same mistakes everyone around you is making to get a better start. Or being financially supported a little bit so that you can take more risk earlier because you have a fallback. All these points are personal and yes, socioeconomic status and education are not the same, but these things are heavily correlated. Showing a graph about inheritance for such a complex and nuanced question is imo ignorant. On an individual level you CAN beat all of that. You CAN become wealthy while your parents were not, you CAN learn all the skills necessary to do it and in some regards you will probably have an advantage (e.g. learning discipline, hard work etc.) but on average the cards ARE stacked against you if you start in the lower half of the population and you will have to work harder than people who were born „into money“ aka „not poor“. Inheritance has nothing to do with that.
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
Another huge factor is partner selection. Many people with divorced parents were raised with dysfunctional attachment patterns which most likely means they probably didn’t pick great partners and that will also undercut wealth building in a meaningful way
@anniealexander9616
@anniealexander9616 13 күн бұрын
I think it mostly has to do with self control. My brother is 18 months older than I am. We were raised by the same parents. He buys liabilities and I buy assets. I like cars too but I know they are a wealth killer. Our dad had a heart attack when I was 6 and died when I was 11. I went to work at 15. That job was one of the best things to happen to me. I learned so much more at work, than I was learning at school. I was lucky to have a mother that took me to the bank when I received my first check. I put $100 into savings and kept $7 to spend. I paid my car insurance, gas, tires, prom gown, class ring etc. But mostly, I was focused on buying a house vs my friends who were buying cars. Im a millionaire because I was a teenage home owner who continues to choose assets over Liabilities.
@lalyssasyoung2822
@lalyssasyoung2822 10 күн бұрын
I agree that people who grew up in lower socioeconomic households will have to work HARDER to reach financial independence for all the reasons that you've mentioned but that is what makes everyone's journey unique. I believe that the hardships that we faced, can be a strength in that it can be a motivator to help us achieve financial stability. For example, I came to the U.S as a refugee at the age of 3. My parents didn't speak any English and was dependent on government and charitable organizations for the majority of my youth. At the age of 13, I started working part-time after school and would help my parents make ends meet. On top of that, I also had to co-parent my younger brother by helping him with his homework, going to doctor's appointments, sport events, etc since my parents were still not able fully speak/understand English. Fast forward to college, instead of going to the state university that I was accepted to with full scholarship, I decided to go to the community college for the first 2 years then transferred. I worked throughout my undergrad and did not take out any student loans. Obviously, I did not get any financial support from family. I graduated in the worst possible time and no one was hiring (2008). So I decided to go to graduate school but came out with a 6 figure studen loan since it was a private university. I stayed disciplined and paid off the student loan in 5 years. Currently 36, married with 2 little ones and on track to hit millionaire status by 40, not including our primary residence. This is all to say, yes, it would be nice if we were all given the same start at life, but since we are not, let's make our own reality!
@definingecology6623
@definingecology6623 2 сағат бұрын
There is a difference between the everyday person who is barely a millionaire and billionaires and multi tens to hundreds millionaires. I’d love to see the stats on them.
@coya8coy175
@coya8coy175 13 күн бұрын
Woah-Brian’s excited too?? 😱 😂
@kimberlylefkof3070
@kimberlylefkof3070 15 күн бұрын
It might not be the best metaphor to refer to your book as "kindling."
@ryanu.4953
@ryanu.4953 15 күн бұрын
This can be skewed by lies. How many millionaires want to admit they were handed the reigns of the kingdom? How many millionaires are there and don’t even realize the gifts they’ve been given? Where does the line of raising a child and gifts end? Also age matters, a millionaire below the age of 30 is very different than one at the age of 60. A professional athlete would say they were never given gifts to become millionaires, completely ignorant of all the money their community and family put into their training.
@LawrenceTimme
@LawrenceTimme 14 күн бұрын
Lol.
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
Yeah, the 6’8” basketball player would say they did it alone, no help from anyone, not even their thyroid
@User-pu3lc
@User-pu3lc 11 күн бұрын
It is notoriously difficult to get wealthy individuals to participate in surveys. Also, the average household net worth in the US is above $1M.
@pacienciapaga287
@pacienciapaga287 6 күн бұрын
very interesting matters. thanks. But, about the statistics yo you... we do not know how many is the total of folks or repondents were questionend. If here we talk about numbers... there is a missing important data ¿?? ¡!!!!
@ryanra44
@ryanra44 12 күн бұрын
I’m 41, my wife is 32. We are both chemical analyst and we will hit millionaire status in the next 4 years. Neither one of us has inherited anything. We have completely separate accounts. My wife paid for her own schooling through student loans. I went to a private college. I had $84k in scholarships, my parents paid $12,000 and I took out $16,000 in student loans. We both work in the field that we got our degrees in. The only debt we have is our home at 2.7% interest /15 year mortgage that we will pay off early.
@Jbridge621
@Jbridge621 12 күн бұрын
The ones I know Drive used cars only, went to Catholic or Christian school. They worked their way through State colleges, are very renaissance people. They know how to do things like hunt, fish cook gourmet food can smoke dry food garden farm, sewing, knitting crochet they understand the basics of machinery they like travel for its own sake, not necessarily vacations, they are minimalist in what they own. They live well below their means. for housing. They tend to buy a fixer-upper and pay the mortgage off aggressively. They are married they have joint accounts. They have kids. They have very good family relationships in general and they are people of faith. They automatically invest 25% + of their income
@HP-dm8gi
@HP-dm8gi 15 күн бұрын
Do you count a married couple as individuals?
@wendypounds
@wendypounds 14 күн бұрын
that is the difference I want to see. Household vs individual
@EdgarVerona
@EdgarVerona 15 күн бұрын
I want to see the same stats for your customers, but for people who have more than 10 million in net worth. A million these days is relatively easy to build up over decades of 401k contributions, but I would be really interested to see if the stats hold up as you get to 10 million plus.
@josephburton3232
@josephburton3232 15 күн бұрын
I'd imagine those people in the deca millionaire category are going to be people with extremely high incomes (doctors and lawyers with certain specialties, successful business owners, wall street financial folks, etc) and people taking over family businesses.
@dreamchaser5758
@dreamchaser5758 13 күн бұрын
If it's so easy, why has it been widely reported that six figure earners/households are living paycheck-to-paycheck, a third of Americans don't have any retirement savings and half of Americans can't cover a $400 emergency without relying on credit. Forays into Deca millionaires and above feels like financial voyeurism. Discipline is never easy.
@EdgarVerona
@EdgarVerona 13 күн бұрын
@@dreamchaser5758 my point isn't that discipline is easy: but that if a person can consistently contribute to a 401k over their career, becoming a millionaire by retirement is basically guaranteed. So all the statements about millionaires being slow savers rather than entrepreneurs or having inherited wealth just makes common sense. What I am wondering is if all these "myths" about millionaires are actually truths for deca millionaires, and we are simply looking at the wrong group because a million is not the level of wealth that people think it is anymore.
@raiden031
@raiden031 14 күн бұрын
Is there anything Bo is not excited about?
@Azel247
@Azel247 13 күн бұрын
When parents want to set their kids up for success: "Wow! You are amazing parents! Your kids are so lucky!" When kids get help from parents: "Omg those kids are spoiled. They are only rich because of their parents. They don't deserve wealth!" Y'all gotta pick a side and stay on it
@kylewynja3031
@kylewynja3031 13 күн бұрын
Ha! Very true. It’s an interesting cycle. My wife and I came from middle income families and are nearing ultra high net worth and the dynamic that causes for our children is a challenge also. Different type of challenge but a challenge nonetheless.
@davila0893
@davila0893 12 күн бұрын
First generation, self achieved millionaire. Raised by single mom with 6 kids, she taught us to work hard. Married, 31 years, lovely wife who opted to stay at home with kids, raised 3 beautiful daughters (two are done with graduate school, married and working; one still at home). I attended community college and received Associates Degree at 28 years old. Have worked in petrochemical since 2000, worked OT, saved and invested. God willing, will retire at 57 in 2027 with 2 million. Definitely doable, even with a single income.
@vickig6080
@vickig6080 15 күн бұрын
I have been very fortunate to have used my education and developed my 35 year career which I love.
@resterAnonyme
@resterAnonyme 15 күн бұрын
Please compare to the regular public (non millionaires). I was surprised that so many went to a private school 12% and 27% in private universities. It seems higher than the general public.
@tracyfitzgerald-ni6gb
@tracyfitzgerald-ni6gb 15 күн бұрын
Why would that be the case? If you have options you are more likely to take risks and do things that those with no safety nets would take or do.
@beelee1394
@beelee1394 15 күн бұрын
Do taxes count as prepaid future expenses? FOOO #8?
@robbielundine1569
@robbielundine1569 15 күн бұрын
“Stains from sloppy tears of happiness” BP
@RobWilliams007
@RobWilliams007 15 күн бұрын
And, how many of those that inherited over $100,000 are keeping their money, i.e., how many that received an inheritance over $1 mill are still millionaires?
@Stormcoaster101
@Stormcoaster101 13 күн бұрын
Since 1 million dollars of net worth is considered a “millionaire” (which is not rich and solidly middle class), it makes sense that many of them are self made. They’re home equity and 401k millionaire. Let’s look at the percentage of self made 8 and 9 figure millionaires.
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 11 күн бұрын
Really should be considered upper middle class, thy have the resources that often middle class people do not have a clue.
@nerdobject5351
@nerdobject5351 13 күн бұрын
When I talk to aspiring software engineers, they find endless excuses as to why they can’t go to college. None of them want to start at a community college and then go to a state school to get their B.S.
@michaelbroadwell1264
@michaelbroadwell1264 15 күн бұрын
I learn so much from Bob and Ryan every time I tune the dial in!
@hairyrope1912
@hairyrope1912 11 күн бұрын
Can Bo for once just not be excited, Thanks
@SF-fb6lv
@SF-fb6lv 15 күн бұрын
Based on 2000, 2008, and 2020 I don't think a few months emergency savings is enough.
@WallaceDunn
@WallaceDunn 13 күн бұрын
6-9 months of expenses is the recommended amount.
@SF-fb6lv
@SF-fb6lv 11 күн бұрын
@@WallaceDunn Based on what though? I understand that's what 'they' recommend, but on what basis?
@zzz_steve
@zzz_steve 14 күн бұрын
I've watched this episode each year. Today it really got to me. Everything you're talking about is historical possibility and historical ability to be wealthy. When people complain about the current system setting people up to fail, they're talking about today, not how people born in the 70s made their money. Perfect example is how Brian talks about paying for his daughter to game the ACT system- this is normal and accepted if you're in the know. You're claiming anyone can do this and it's worth it- the whole problem is that generational wealth is also built on knowledge like this. Not to mention the cost. The entire episode came across hypocritical and clueless. From a long time fan, (and a book buyer!), not a fan of today's episode.
@devenmurray3580
@devenmurray3580 6 күн бұрын
How many of them got a car. 60% got education help. Counting the time value of money, that help alone can easily be hundreds of thousands, over a million even.
@vaderwashere365
@vaderwashere365 15 күн бұрын
This is a great and very accurate video in my opinion and my experience on our path to be at a combined $3.5M net worth currently. I think the only place we deviate from this video is how much our homes are worth (over $1.5M primary, $600K rental - total equity is $1.1M) and buying nice cars (like 1-3 years used ~$40K, but would be ~$60K+ new). We plan to up that to $60K for a new SUV in the next year or two and $100K for a sports car in 4 years. We buy in cash most times, but we will totally do APR's below CD rates and just invest in the stock market. Even our kids will be sharing a $25K+ car themselves with the money they have saved plus us matching their money (again, we will buy in cash or consider low APRs). We were also serious about money in our early 20's (we bought our 1st home together when we were 23). I am also a bit confused by emergency reserve %'s though... if we are talking liquid assets (like stocks), then I am surprised millionaires aren't more like us and have at least a 3 year reserve in stock (not in retirement or restricted accounts). I think we could cut some spending if we really had to and that reserve would be much longer (even after LT capital gains taxes). I mean that grew fairly automatically (quarterly stock buys, private stock offering, RSU's and ESPP), so I am just surprised so many have under 18 months... that is scary to me... and makes me think they are just barely millionaires, have spending problems, or are not telling the truth.
@jasondavidpratt
@jasondavidpratt 13 күн бұрын
Mr T was wrong. Respect the FOO
@asandrik3124
@asandrik3124 13 күн бұрын
A millionaire isn’t rich! Not even close. To me to be “rich” maybe about $10M.
@DanaSalminen
@DanaSalminen 15 күн бұрын
BeautiFOO
@servalous
@servalous 14 күн бұрын
"how they paid for School" sums to 200%. A bit unlucky data framing.
@randombandit362
@randombandit362 13 күн бұрын
Because it was a multiple choice question. Many had two or more of the options
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 11 күн бұрын
Yes, I had GI bill, work and grants
@Bacciagalupe
@Bacciagalupe 15 күн бұрын
: )
@yhckelly
@yhckelly 15 күн бұрын
If you don't know what you want to do, for goodness sake, don't go to college. Talk to Mom and Dad. Get a job, any decent FT job. Hit the OT hard. Open a brokerage account-Vanguard, whoever. Shovel cash into any index fund- pile it in for 4 years (equivalent time to a degree). Smile. Be $ free in your 40's. Live and give like no one else.
@johnristheanswer
@johnristheanswer 15 күн бұрын
If you know something , how can it be wrong ? A fact is a fact.
@cyberwapx
@cyberwapx 11 күн бұрын
Soooo eexcciited , then she came
@FinancesOnBitcoin
@FinancesOnBitcoin 15 күн бұрын
Have you guys researched Bitcoin? Since 2020 when I got in it’s a way to annually gain waayyyy more than 7-10% return/year closer to 100% return/year. You don’t need as much in your portfolio if you add 5% allocation to Bitcoin. My net worth is currently over 50% liquid in Bitcoin. Started with 10k in 2020 now over $150k. It’s easy if you hold over a 4-8 year time frame.
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 11 күн бұрын
Only the top 1 per cent of your net worth should be done for investments(?) of this type.
@FinancesOnBitcoin
@FinancesOnBitcoin 4 күн бұрын
@@mrjuvy49 not when it’s the best preforming asset that ever existed…stats don’t lie man.
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 4 күн бұрын
When it crashes, just like ENRON you will learn your lesson, do not build build your wealth pyramid on speculation, you need a base of proven assets on the bottom. The best way to wealth is the DOW Jones (market) , it has been proven by the test of time.
@Rew123
@Rew123 15 күн бұрын
The rich use IBC!!
@justthebrttrk
@justthebrttrk 15 күн бұрын
They do not.
@chrissawyer1484
@chrissawyer1484 15 күн бұрын
Inflammatory Breast Cancer? (Goes to Google) Oh, infinite banking concept.
@mrjuvy49
@mrjuvy49 11 күн бұрын
They don't buy whole life ins , term only.
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