8. Use assets to buy luxuries: the power of focus
A friend’s child has been developing a nasty habit of burning a hole in
his pocket. Just 16, he wanted his own car. The excuse: “All his friends’
parents gave their kids cars.” The child wanted to go into his savings and
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use it for a down payment. That was when his father called me and then
came to see me.
“Do you think I should let him do it, or should I just buy him a car?”
I answered, “It might relieve the pressure in the short term, but what
have you taught him in the long term? Can you use this desire to own a car
and inspire your son to learn something?” Suddenly the lights went on, and
he hurried home.
Two months later I ran into my friend again. “Does your son have his
new car?” I asked.
“No, he doesn’t. But I gave him $3,000 for the car. I told him to use my
money instead of his college money.”
“Well, that’s generous of you,” I said.
“Not really. The money came with a hitch.”
“So what was the hitch?” I asked.
“Well, first we played your CASHFLOW game. We then had a long
discussion about the wise use of money. After that, I gave him a
subscription to the Wall Street Journal and a few books on the stock
market.”
“Then what?” I asked. “What was the catch?”
“I told him the $3,000 was his, but he could not directly buy a car with
it. He could use it to find a stockbroker and buy and sell stocks. Once he
had made $6,000 with the $3,000, the money would be his for the car, and
the $3,000 would go into his college fund.”
“And what are the results?” I asked.
“Well, he got lucky early in his trading, but lost everything a few days
later. Then he really got interested. Today, I would say he is down $2,000,
but his interest is up. He has read all the books I bought him, and he’s gone
to the library to get more. He reads the Wall Street Journal voraciously,
watching for indicators. He’s got only $1,000 left, but his interest and
learning are sky-high. He knows that if he loses that money, he walks for
two more years. But he does not seem to care. He even seems uninterested
in getting a car, because he’s found a game that is more fun.”
“What happens if he loses all the money?” I asked.
“We’ll cross that bridge when we get to it. I’d rather have him lose
everything now than wait till he’s our age to risk losing everything. And
besides, that is the best $3,000 I’ve ever spent on his education. What he is
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learning will serve him for life, and he seems to have gained a new respect
for the power of money.”
As I said earlier, if a person cannot master the power of self-discipline,
it is best not to try to get rich. I say this because, although the process of
developing cash flow from an asset column is easy in theory, what’s hard is
the mental fortitude to direct money to the correct use. Due to external
temptations, it is much easier in today’s consumer world to simply blow
money out the expense column. With weak mental fortitude, that money
flows into the paths of least resistance. That is the cause of poverty and
financial struggle.
The following example illustrates the financial intelligence needed to
direct money to make more money.
If we give 100 people $10,000 at the start of the year, I believe that at
the end of the year:
• 80 would have nothing left. In fact, many would have created greater
debt by making a down payment on a new car, refrigerator,
electronics, or a holiday.
• 16 would have increased that $10,000 by 5-10 percent.
• Four would have increased it to $20,000 or into the millions.
We go to school to learn a profession so we can work for money. It is
my opinion that it’s just as important to learn how to have money work for
you.
I love my luxuries as much as anyone else. The difference is I don’t buy
them on credit. It’s the keep-up-with-the-Joneses trap. When I wanted to
buy a Porsche, the easy road would have been to call my banker and get a
loan. Instead of choosing to focus in the liability column, I chose to focus in
the asset column.
As a habit, I use my desire to consume to inspire and motivate my
financial genius to invest.
Too often today, we focus on borrowing money to get the things we
want instead of focusing on creating money. One is easier in the short term,
but harder in the long term. It’s a bad habit that we as individuals, and as a
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nation, have gotten into. Remember, the easy road often becomes hard, and
the hard road often becomes easy.
The earlier you can train yourself and those you love to be masters of
money, the better. Money is a powerful force. Unfortunately, people use the
power of money against themselves. If your financial intelligence is low,
money will run all over you. It will be smarter than you. If money is smarter
than you, you will work for it all your life.
To be the master of money, you need to be smarter than it. Then money
will do as it is told. It will obey you. Instead of being a slave to it, you will
be the master of it. That is financial intelligence.
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