All Topics / Heads Up! / Peter Spann

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  • Profile photo of kay-witkay-wit
    Member
    @kay-wit
    Join Date: 2004
    Post Count: 20

    Hi Peter
    You seem to be a voracious reader of different kinds of books and you say it helped you immensely in your success. I know knowledge is abundant out there and if you put your time and effort into reading these books and apply that knowledge it will help us in a great way to succeed in whatever we do.

    If you don’t mind me asking can you tell us what approach and strategy do you take when reading a book to get all the important information you need.

    I know this is a silly and basic question, but do you read books over and over again or take notes as you read and read that again and again till it gets stuck in you head or jot down important points? Do you tend to take action immediately (as in applying that knowledge in the real world)? Did you concentrate on one topic at a time when you started or read at random at any book you feel is good.

    Thanks and regards

    kay

    Profile photo of Peter SpannPeter Spann
    Member
    @peter-spann
    Join Date: 2004
    Post Count: 59
    Originally posted by alf:

    Do you feel that with all the wealth you have now you may lose touch with what people are trying to achieve?

    How does one get an invite to your parties…?

    I take your point that $10 million in property seems like a lot to most people but the point of the book is to point out that in reality it isn’t and is achievable by just about anyone. Maybe I didn’t make my point well enough (suffering failure as an author syndrome with you!).

    I do not believe I have lost touch – our clients (who I work with every day) fit your profile exactly – in fact many of my clients seem to be doing far MORE than I ever did at their stages which should lead them to becoming even more successful than me.

    You also have to take my strategies in context that I do not only advocate property. We have our clients invest in a multitude of different asset classes and vehicles to “speed” their wealth creation.

    I understand many of your points but don’t think it’s necessary to respond to them line by line (unless you really want me to). People do a lot of silly things to themselves out of fear but I can only address them by encouraging them to take action. And then if they don’t get it right take more action until they do.

    Continuous forward movement – momentum – is critical to me. Momentum with a good strategy will inevitably lead to success, and at least if you are going to fail momentum will tell you sooner so you are not waiting your time on a loser strategy.

    But if your question is what I think it is, ie how do I create an income stream of $50,000 PA in 20 years time – that’s easy (if a little under ambitious)…

    To do that you need $500,000 in today’s money or about $1.5million in 20 years.

    As you point out most people already have equity in their home and they are determined to pay it off. Personally I don’t know why you’d bother – seems lot of work to me but if they do that’s OK – in 20 years they’ll own their home outright, but that’s not going to get them far.

    The strategy I would use is exactly as I have laid out in my book.

    Use that equity to buy a property or two. Wait until the equity in it grows. Doesn’t matter if that is next week (as it has been over the last few years) or next year or in a few years (as it probably will be over the next few). When the equity goes up draw down again to buy more.

    Subsidise the cash flow negative part (if you are following my strategies) by cash flow positive investments such as Commercial Property Trusts so the servicing costs are zero. If you prefer to follow Steve’s cash flow positive route that’s fine too. I think my strategy would get you there quicker, many would argue that the CF+ route would get you there easier – you choose.

    Property grows at about 8% PA on average but does not grow consistently (that is pointed out in the book) like some people would have you believe.

    Let’s say their house is worth $400,000.

    Most of our clients can afford 3 (negatively geared) $250,000 to $300,000 investment properties straight off. Let’s make that $1,000,000 flat.

    8% PA means a doubling every ten years or so. That’s $2,000,000 after 10 years, $4,000,000 after 20 years for the investment properties.

    Yee Ha! $3,000,000 worth of equity. Sell it all up, pay back the loans (including the $400,000 for the house and you have $2,600,000 to invest. The house is now worth $1,600,000 and you own it outright. Beautiful.

    Take the $2,600,000 and invest it in a diversified portfolio of higher yield investments like shares, managed funds, commercial property trusts and so on through a tax protected vehicle. Let’s say all that averages 9% yield (higher during the share and cash cycles, a bit lower during the property cycles). That’s $234,000 in cash rolling in PA. Tax on that would be 30% in today’s laws, so you’d have $163,800 net, so we are in front of our target.

    Once of the best exercises I get my clients to do is just to sit down and project out into the future what their current assets would be worth in 10, 20 or 30 years, just based on averages. Most of the time it makes them much calmer about their future and less worried.

    And a not worried client is not a greedy client. And when they aren’t being greedy they don’t do stupid things.

    Greed to me is simply doing too much, too soon with too little skill in an effort to get too much money.

    Other than that – why not go for it?

    And as for the parties – you either need to be a friend, Platinum client, or very good looking blonde!

    Profile photo of calvin_thirty4calvin_thirty4
    Participant
    @calvin_thirty4
    Join Date: 2004
    Post Count: 556

    Does it metter that I have a red gote? I am after all a very good looking blond!

    Cheers

    C@34

    Profile photo of MiniMogulMiniMogul
    Participant
    @minimogul
    Join Date: 2002
    Post Count: 1,414

    I am loving this discussion which touches on the spiritual ramifications of wealth. If there’s one word that I’ve learned the meaning of since learning to become – and then becoming – an investor, it’s ‘leverage’. Leverage is power.
    I LOVE how there seem to be more enlightened millionaires (meaning that care about living an ethical life and giving back to the community) around the place these days, who have this power, and who are using it for good and to make the world a better place.

    One day I figured out that what I really want to do is help the environment. Now, if I put down my tools and just work some part time job enough to live hand to mouth and do volunteer work for the environment the rest of the time starting now, that’s great but there’s no leverage in it. That’s all I can do. But if I continue to grow my empire into a self-growing cash machine, giving what is hopefully going to be an ever-increasing ten percent to the community, and one day even leave the whole lot to greenpeace or whoever, let’s say I leave them 5 million returning 10 percent and holding it’s value against inflation one day, then that’s 10 people’s full time wages working for the environment forever for the world. Much more than I could have done on my own even if I stop right now and wear sack cloth and ashes forever.

    Ok, that’s a little dream of mine, but there it is. I GEDDIT! I get leverage, I don’t think there is anything wrong with creating wealth, and I think more good people should get on with it. I agree with the one-minute millionaire book which says that 1 million millionaires (which the book aims to create) who each give 10 percent back to the community can collectively change the economic future of the entire world. I geddit!!! This is a very exciting time we are living in, because I can actually *see* things changing which gives me hope. You can totally see it, even here in this online community. I salute my mentors!

    joy to the world

    Profile photo of grega21360grega21360
    Member
    @grega21360
    Join Date: 2003
    Post Count: 38

    Peter,
    I have been following your posts and reading your book with great interest particularly around property trusts to create cashflow from equity and thus enabling more equity to be created and more cashflow and so on.
    You are gradually putting the jigsaw together for me about the cashflow solution.
    This current thread and your last post appear to be arriving at the same point as a thread I started under the getting creative heading called “Cashflow from equity/gurus please”.
    If it is appropriate could you take a look and comment please .
    I think there will be a lot of interested people in this topic.
    Cheers,
    Greg

    Profile photo of redwingredwing
    Participant
    @redwing
    Join Date: 2003
    Post Count: 2,733

    Any Peter Spann graduates out thier??

    REDWING

    “Money is a currency, like electricity and it requires momentum to make it Effective”
    Count The Currency With This Online Positive Cashflow Calculator

    Profile photo of Steve McKnightSteve McKnight
    Keymaster
    @stevemcknight
    Join Date: 2001
    Post Count: 1,763

    Hi again,

    My point about financial burden is more of an accountability to do the most with it that I can rather than squander it.

    Good passages (Matthew 6:19-24):

    19″Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. 20But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

    22″The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are good, your whole body will be full of light. 23But if your eyes are bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!

    24″No one can serve two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and Money.

    The burden I talk of is to remain wealthy and humble before God, at the same time as being accountable for the blessings he has provided (i.e. parable of the talents).

    Cheers,

    Steve McKnight

    **********
    Remember that success comes from doing things differently.
    **********

    Steve McKnight | PropertyInvesting.com Pty Ltd | CEO
    https://www.propertyinvesting.com

    Success comes from doing things differently

    Profile photo of yackyack
    Member
    @yack
    Join Date: 2003
    Post Count: 1,206

    Kids that did Bible studies at my school had no life and got beat up. I had a low pain threshold in those days. Ah and today too.

    Profile photo of wealth4life.comwealth4life.com
    Member
    @wealth4life.com
    Join Date: 2003
    Post Count: 1,248

    Sort of like Amway distributers YACK ?? hey what if this site is a front for … ??????

Viewing 9 posts - 161 through 169 (of 169 total)

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