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  • (upbeat tempo)

  • - So welcome back its Robert Kiyosaki

  • with my dear friends' daughter here Alexa.

  • And we're talking about Millenials and money,

  • and we gone through some lessons.

  • I don't know how many more,

  • but let's continue on with another lesson here.

  • And so we were talking about you know

  • assets and liabilities, right?

  • - Yes.

  • And when you read Rich Dad Poor Dad

  • I said your house is not an asset what did you think?

  • - Well, I think that's a conception

  • that many people believe,

  • but as you demonstrated the last seminar

  • that we went to in Argentina.

  • My mom had her properties and she

  • converted them into assets.

  • Correct.

  • - I think it just depends on what you do with it

  • and it would be great if you could show us

  • how to turn your house into an asset.

  • It's very its really fundamentals.

  • If I could go back I probably covered it earlier,

  • (marker rattling)

  • but it's a crucial question and this is what

  • financial education and financial literacy really is.

  • Again it starts with the financial statement and I would say

  • probably 95 percent of all college graduates don't know what

  • a financial statement is.

  • You took an accounting course right?

  • - Yeah, I did.

  • I know you go through parts of this,

  • but I say to young people like you there's six basic words

  • to financial literacy and financial education.

  • And the six words again are income,

  • expense, asset, liability.

  • See I don't really care about my FICO score

  • a fico score just basically registers

  • are you trustworthy with borrowing money,

  • but a bank will never sel.

  • I borrow in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • (chuckling)

  • A fico score not gonna get me there okay.

  • It's so it's kind of a ruse I mean I don't its,

  • it's important but not for me.

  • So these are the four words income, expense,

  • asset, liability.

  • Then the last two words are the words cash flow.

  • And that's, why the game is called cash flow

  • (marker squeaking)

  • and the secret to being rich is not a college education,

  • but can you control cash flow.

  • And this is what cash flow in looks like.

  • So this here you need this

  • income, expense, asset, liability.

  • (marker squeaking)

  • Again this is you get a job and this is my poor dad,

  • go to school, get a job, get your PHD.

  • And so this here is cash flow so income comes in

  • and it goes out this way.

  • First line of expense is tax,

  • but this is a poor persons cash flow pattern.

  • It's not how much money you make most people

  • you know they.

  • I don't care if you what you have a Ph.D.

  • or no school at all.

  • They can't control the cash flowing out

  • through their expenses so that's,

  • why people like Susie or men say

  • cut up your credit cards, live below your means

  • cause you're a spend-a-holic.

  • So that's a poor person.

  • This is a middle-class persons cash flow patterns

  • and this is where the house comes in.

  • They, first thing you know most kids do

  • when they get pay raise and all that

  • they buy themselves a bigger house,

  • now my house is an asset.

  • Who tells you that?

  • Your real estate agent of course!

  • - Yeah.

  • (Alexandra giggling)

  • Right cause they they want to give you

  • this false sense of security while you're getting screwed.

  • - Exactly.

  • Ya know but when you look at what happens with the house

  • a personal.

  • I mean a personal residence that I live in

  • the money comes in it goes out and this is middle class,

  • but also goes out through a mortgage.

  • Mortgage payments, oh but I don't have a mortgage.

  • You still have taxes you still you know.

  • Hawaii just raised the property taxes on me.

  • Which is probably why I'm gonna sell.

  • I'm gonna get out of Hawaii,

  • but you have taxes and you have upkeep

  • so monies always flowing out.

  • So that's why your house is not an asset it's because

  • its taking money from your pocket.

  • So very simply said assets put money in my pocket,

  • liabilities take money from my pocket.

  • And then this here is,

  • so I'm not saying don't buy a house

  • but here is a house that.

  • And I started when I was 25 bought my first house

  • it was an apartment with an investment property.

  • I didn't live in it, I rented it out

  • and it put money in my pocket.

  • So very simple the definition of asset and liability

  • is not the house or this, its cash flow.

  • Where is the cash flowing?

  • So as a young person

  • (Robert coughing)

  • and to all millennials or if you're old

  • financial intelligence is the ability to control cash flow.

  • And that's what they don't teach you at school.

  • They tell you to go to school,

  • get a job.

  • First thing is tax you know,

  • you'll pay most of your money will go out through taxes,

  • in your lifetime.

  • Then they tell you to buy a house, a car.

  • Cars an asset, no cars a liability.

  • You got insurance, gas, upkeep, and all this.

  • Now if you buy a, a taxi car it could be an asset,

  • its cash flow.

  • And that's very simply it,

  • so this is a poor person.

  • Money goes out there's a lot we,

  • we just interviewed some national football league players

  • who make millions of dollars in their 20s.

  • And most of them are broke in two years

  • because they can't control cash flow.

  • Intelligence IQ is can you control cash flow

  • not your college degree.

  • College degrees are important,

  • but they're not gonna teach you this.

  • So the cash flow game,

  • trains you over and over and over again

  • to get your money in here to get the cash flow this way.

  • So I started with this, cost me 18,000 dollars.

  • I paid for the credit card and I put 25 dollars in my pocket

  • okay.

  • It's an infinite return because the cash flow paid

  • for the mortgage, it paid the expenses, pays the operating

  • costs and I still made 25 dollars.

  • Kim's first year was the same,

  • hers wasn't 18,000

  • it was 50,000, 45,000 and it put 25 dollars in her pocket,

  • but Kim now owns 6,500 rental properties.

  • And she pays no tax because the income comes from here.

  • - Mm-hmm

  • If you have a job you pay tax,

  • but income the rich get richer

  • because when you have asset income

  • taxes are less.

  • You can get it down to zero if you want.

  • But that's financial intelligence,

  • but can you control cash flow.

  • Okay, so say that again.

  • Assets what?

  • - Assets put money into your pocket,

  • liabilities take money out of your pocket.

  • And so as a young person you just focus on that

  • so when you buying a new house,

  • you're gonna say is this gonna take money or put money?

  • You buy an apartment house is it gonna take money

  • or put money that's it, its cash flow.

  • Six most important words for financial intelligence and IQ

  • is income, expense, asset, liability,

  • but its really cash flow.

  • Now if I could bring up a more horrible subject is,

  • do you think people can be assets or liabilities?

  • - I think they could be both, to be honest.

  • So for most young people they fall in love,

  • they get married, they have kids.

  • Is a child an asset or liability?

  • - A child is definitely a liability.

  • I'm not saying don't have kids,

  • but you gotta think the kid is expensive

  • and they don't get cheaper.

  • They get more expensive every year,

  • you know then they go to college

  • and then it gets even more expensive.

  • So a human being now this sounds horrible to all those

  • socialists and communists out there,

  • but the fact is kids cost money.

  • But as an old guy, I want you to think about this

  • as I get older as people get older

  • family members become liabilities.

  • So I have a friend whose mother thank god she had

  • long term I don't know what they call it,

  • but they just canceled it on her.

  • She can go to a old age home and I think

  • the price is 18,000 a month.

  • Most so that as a young person as your parents get older

  • the question is can I afford to spend 20,000 dollars a month

  • on my mom or my dads' long term healthcare, yes or no?

  • - No, not right now.

  • No so.

  • - No.

  • And this is gonna happen to my generation

  • many people don't realize,

  • but there brothers or sisters or sisters kids

  • and all this become liabilities to them.

  • So as a person whose fairly well off,

  • I'm and Kim and my friends are thinking about

  • two legged liabilities.

  • So I know today that if my sisters become ill

  • I'm the one with the money and it's my responsibility

  • to pay for them.

  • Same as my brothers and their kids.

  • So these are things that people don't think about a lot of

  • times is what happens not only as they grow up,

  • but what happens as they age.

  • Statistics show the average person in my generation

  • lets say have a million dollars.

  • 80 percent of that million dollars

  • will be gone the last two years of life.

  • Because medical expenses go through the roof and today

  • insurance companies are canceling.

  • I forgot the name of it,

  • but my friends' mother it was just canceled.

  • So he doesn't have 18,000 a month

  • so he had to bring his mother into his house

  • and you know create another room and all this.

  • Well, I love her which he does but shes a big liability

  • and all he had was savings.

  • So the savings are being depleted going out this way, okay?

  • So with your question about houses and people,

  • but people are also assets and liabilities.

  • For most people with our favorite subject,

  • a 401K is it asset or liability?

  • - From what I've learned from you

  • its definitely a liability.

  • Or an IRA or a pension cause it's always going out this way.

  • There's no guarantee it'll be there.

  • So this is the basic of financial intelligence,

  • financial literacy stuff like this.

  • Another thing about people is you have a bad advisor,

  • like a bad financial planner, or a crook,

  • or a business partner that's a crook,

  • a wife that's a crook and all of that.

  • They can be human liabilities.

  • I have two friends right now who just joined

  • a million-dollar club.

  • They married beautiful women, got divorced

  • and the women is now costing a million dollars a year

  • in alimony.

  • So their beautiful wife and the child support it's a million

  • dollars going and she's only 40 years old.

  • So she has a whole pile of boyfriends,

  • but it's costing him a million dollars a year

  • for her boyfriends.

  • I said I wanna be her boyfriend.

  • (both laughing)

  • not really you know.

  • That make sense to you?

  • - Yeah, it makes sense.

  • Financial IQ is can you control cash flow.

  • IQ means how big a problem can you solve

  • so if like my friend whose mother is now costing him 18,000

  • dollars a month. Well, thank God he has about 100,000 in

  • savings but in one year its gone.

  • - Yeah.

  • That's not high IQ,

  • but for myself 18,000 dollars a month

  • I ain't gonna make that much cash flow pretty easily.

  • - yeah.

  • okay. So when you're like in your 20s per,

  • well how am I going to make.

  • Let's say by the time probably a 100,000 a month

  • to take care of my parents,

  • because like it or not its cash flow

  • and they become liabilities.

  • And the problem is getting worse or because the bond markets

  • are not providing income.

  • So many insurance companies have to renege on their promises

  • to provide the cash flow to take care of our loved ones

  • the same as medical.

  • - Wow.

  • And so that's why when people say I'm gonna go out on my own

  • and do all these things they're kinda doing what they love.

  • Which is good, but they've really gotta think about

  • how many liabilities do they have.

  • It's not just your rent you know,

  • it's your family and so for me

  • (marker tapping)

  • and for Kim.

  • We have family members,

  • but they're liabilities so that's why we stay over here.

  • Hopefully, nothing will go wrong,

  • but if one of my sisters got ill

  • and she needs 100,000 a month at least can provide it.

  • - Yeah.

  • otherwise she they go they go indigent

  • whatever they call it kay.

  • - Yeah.

  • Any other comments or questions?

  • - No thank you for sharing so much about

  • this content and all this information.

  • That's gonna be super valuable for all my friends

  • and all the Millenials out there just like me.

  • So I have two friends that are in the million-dollar

  • a year club, it doesn't mean they're making a million

  • dollars it's their wives are taking a million dollars

  • a year out of their pockets and their kids and all this.

  • And I go you should of thought about that 20 years ago.

  • - Yeah.

  • But you don't cause your in love and you're gonna have kids

  • and gonna make it together.

  • - mm-hmm.

  • But your parents offer great role models.

  • So once again the six words you have to know

  • and be masters at income, expense, asset,

  • liability, cash flow.

  • You can control cash flow that's financial intelligence,

  • financial IQ and financial literacy, okay?

  • - Okay.

  • Thank you.

(upbeat tempo)

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HOW TO CONVERT A LIABILITY INTO AN ASSET - ROBERT KIYOSAKI, Rich Dad Poor Dad

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