Missed Fortune 101: A Starter Kit to Becoming a Millionaire

Missed Fortune 101: A Starter Kit to Becoming a Millionaire

by Douglas R. Andrew
Missed Fortune 101: A Starter Kit to Becoming a Millionaire

Missed Fortune 101: A Starter Kit to Becoming a Millionaire

by Douglas R. Andrew

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Overview

Isn't it time YOU became wealthy? Bestselling author and expert financial planner presents an extraordinary collection of must-have financial advice.
True or False?
Always prepay your mortgage.
The right 401(k) or IRA will completely cover your retirement.
Defer your taxes and postpone the pain.

True wealth doesn't last forever. They're All False! Missed Fortune 101 ...is like no other money guide you've ever read. Its author, successful financial strategist Douglas R. Andrew, dares to question the conventional wisdom on personal finance that most people accept. He reveals the ways banks, credit unions, and insurance companies amass tremendous wealth-what they do, and what they don't do. He shows you how to seize financial opportunities you never knew existed. With Missed Fortune 101 as your guide, you'll never view your house, your mortgage, your retirement plans, your investments, and your other assets the same way again.

Put the lazy, idle dollars trapped in your home to work safely-and reap as much as an extra million.
Discover hidden and perfectly legal tax breaks-and treat yourself to some surprising windfalls.
Play the bankers' favorite game-borrow at one rate and invest at a higher one.
Explore lesser-known retirement vehicles-and avoid falling into a higher tax bracket when you stop working.
Turn your life insurance policy into an investment-and keep your taxes down and your capital up.
Find out which low-return instruments should be in your portfolio today-and why they'll become high-return stars tomorrow.
Reach your "freedom point"-your financial independence-long before "retirement age"! Learn the real rules of smart investing. Maximize your wealth with Missed Fortune 101.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780446539623
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Publication date: 06/03/2008
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Douglas Andrew is currently the owner and president of Paramount Financial Services, Inc, a comprehensive personal and business financial planning firm. He is the bestselling author of Missed Fortune, Missed Fortune 101, Last Chance Millionaire, and Millionaire by 30.

Read an Excerpt

Missed Fortune 101


By Douglas Andrew

Warner Books

Copyright © 2005 Douglas Andrew
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-446-57657-3


Chapter One

All the Dogs Barking Up the Wrong Tree Doesn't Make It the Right One!

Why socking money away into IRAs and 401(k)s and paying extra principal on your mortgage is counterproductive

HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED if you're on the right path? In my professional travels, I participate in conferences and conventions all over the world. During the past several years, I have traveled to Chicago every three months to meet with a group of fellow entrepreneurs in a program called The Strategic Coach, founded by Dan Sullivan. As anyone who has traveled to the Chicago area knows, O'Hare Airport is one of the busiest airports in the world and can be confusing. On the first few trips, I would retrieve my luggage and walk outside to be picked up at the bus shuttle center. I would follow the crowd from the baggage claim area outside to the ground transportation area, then across eight lanes of traffic to the shuttle center, often in freezing, windy conditions, without a coat.

One blustery cold, wet day, I followed the crowd and arrived at the shuttle center with my hair windblown and my suit sopping wet. To my surprise, I met the gentleman who had sat next to me on my flight.

His hair was in place and his suit was dry. I said, "How did you get here before me and in such great shape?"

He replied, "Oh, didn't you know there's an easier way to get here? And you stay warm and dry!" He told me about a corridor that leads people safely underground to the shuttle center, sheltered from traffic and unpleasant weather.

The next time I flew into O'Hare, I learned that the path leading to the shuttle center had always been there; I just hadn't noticed it. Now it's up to me each trip to choose the path I'm going to take: the way the crowd goes or the safer, more sheltered route.

One day I asked the hotel shuttle service why they didn't instruct people on how to reach the shuttle center by the safer, protected route. They said, "Oh, it's too hard to get people to understand, so we just tell them to follow the crowd."

The ideas presented in this book are not novel; the approaches are. With the insights you are about to gain, I hope you will choose not to always follow the crowd, but to find the best path on your journey toward financial independence.

For the first step on that journey, let's take a look at the two places most Americans accumulate the most money: our home and our retirement plan.

THE FIRST STEP

Following accepted wisdom, we set aside money in qualified retirement accounts, such as IRAs and 401(k)s, enjoying tax-deductible funding and/or tax-deferred accumulation. At the same time, we assume it's best to achieve the goal of outright home ownership and save money on mortgage interest expense by sending extra principal payments against our mortgages.

Unaware, like naïve, inexperienced drivers, we proceed down the highway of life, pursuing financial security with one foot on the brake pedal and the other foot on the gas pedal. We may eventually make it to our destination, but only after a pretty jerky ride. We wonder why a few others arrived at the station of financial independence sooner, achieving more, with a much smoother ride.

"BUT I'M DOING EVERYTHING RIGHT!"

We suddenly realize that during all of those years of earning money, we socked a portion away in investment vehicles that gave us a tax deduction on the front end, just to be hammered with taxes on the back end. At the same time, we were killing our partner, Uncle Sam, by eliminating one of the best tax deductions we have as Americans-our home mortgage interest.

During our "golden years" of retirement, we painfully come to the realization that we increased our tax liability by postponing it to a time when we no longer had significant deductions. In frustration, we complain, "But I did everything right! Everyone concerned about their retirement puts money into IRAs and 401(k)s, and I've always been taught that you should pay off your mortgage by sending extra principal payments to the mortgage company!" There is a valuable lesson a friend and mentor, Marshall Thurber, taught me: All the dogs barking up the wrong tree doesn't make it the right one!

If what you thought to be the best way to save for retirement or to pay off your mortgage turned out not to be the best way, when would you want to know? Now is the time to discover the best way to safely accumulate more money. The sooner you empower yourself with the knowledge to attain financial independence, the greater your net worth will become.

THE LURE OF IRAS AND 401(K)S

Most Americans are lured into saving for retirement with traditional qualified retirement plans, such as IRAs and 401(k)s. They are convinced by financial advisors to contribute pre-tax dollars to 401(k) plans or place tax-deductible contributions into IRAs because of the tax advantages during the contribution and accumulation phases of their retirement planning. They seem to ignore the two most important phases-when you withdraw your money for retirement income, and when you pass away and transfer any remaining funds to your heirs. This book will help you understand how to receive tax-favored benefits during all four phases of retirement planning: the contribution, accumulation, distribution, and transfer phases. Most of us don't want to outlive our money, and no one is getting out of here alive. When people die, they usually leave behind some money in their IRAs and 401(k)s that is transferred to their beneficiaries. Unfortunately, non-spousal heirs far too often end up with only about 28 percent of the money that was left in their parents' IRAs and 401(k)s.

Most people and their advisors feel that tax-deductible or pre-tax contributions to qualified plans such as IRAs and 401(k)s will provide the greatest retirement benefits because of tax-deferred growth. But do they?

If you were a farmer, would you rather save tax on the purchase of your seed in the springtime and pay tax on the sale of your harvest in the fall, or would you rather pay tax on the seed and sell your harvest without any tax on the gain? I would rather purchase the seed with after-tax dollars and later sell my harvest tax-free. In this book, I will teach you how to do the latter.

A Roth IRA is one way to accomplish this, but I believe it still has too many strings attached. The maximum yearly contribution that can be made by an individual was $3,000 for tax years 2002 to 2004; from 2005 to 2008 the limit is $4,000. Distributions may not be taken until at least five years after the first contribution is made. In addition, distributions must be taken when or after the owner reaches the age of 591/2, except in the event of the owner's death or disability, or for "qualified first-time homebuyer expenses."

THE NOT-SO-ADVANTAGED TAX ADVANTAGES

One of the original IRA tenets held that deferring tax until retirement was advantageous because funds would likely be taxed at a lower rate. That is no longer axiomatic. You may well live out your retirement in the same or a higher tax bracket if you accumulate a respectable retirement nest egg. In fact, effective tax rates will likely be higher in the future. So why postpone the inevitable and increase your tax liability?

As a financial strategist and retirement specialist, when I discover how much money my first-time clients have accumulated in yet-to-betaxed IRAs and 401(k)s, I often ask them if they are planning their retirement or Uncle Sam's.

Is postponing tax and thereby increasing the tax you will owe really the best idea? You should be aware that your IRA, pension, and 401(k) benefits will probably be taxable at a higher rate at retirement.

A BETTER RETIREMENT ALTERNATIVE

In my opinion, there is a better alternative to achieve tax-free retirement income, as well as create indirect tax-favored benefits on the contribution amounts without all of the restrictions and rules.

When I contribute money to my retirement fund, there is no restriction on how much I can put in. During good years, I can contribute generously; during not-so-good years, I don't have to contribute anything. Moreover, I can withdraw money if needed without IRS penalties, and I am not obligated to put it back. As a homeowner, I also structure my retirement plan to get indirect tax deductions on my contribution amounts. Most important, my retirement funds accumulate tax-free, and I can access the funds whenever I want on a tax-free basis (including the interest or gain) without having to wait until I'm 59 1/2. If I don't use up my retirement funds before I pass away, they will blossom in value and transfer free of income tax to my heirs.

There is a means by which you can draw out your retirement free of income tax. Not only that, but there is also a means to avoid paying tax on up to 85 percent of your Social Security benefits at retirement. Are you interested in how you can accomplish this?

Through proper planning, a homeowner can utilize home equity retirement planning that may provide tax advantages during the contribution and accumulation years, and more important, you may enjoy tax-free income during your retirement years and transfer any remaining funds to your heirs tax-free. This strategy can increase your net spendable retirement income by as much as 50 percent! How is this possible? Read on.

THE TRUE COST OF EXTRA PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS

Another common misconception about the path to financial independence is that the best way to pay off a house is to make extra principal payments on your mortgage. There are various methods that people use to do this. Some homeowners use the biweekly payment plan to accelerate their mortgage payoff. Others use fifteen-year mortgages rather than thirty-year mortgages to accomplish their goal of outright home ownership. I will prove in this book that no method of paying extra principal on your mortgage is the wisest or quickest method of accomplishing financial independence.

A homeowner can accumulate the amount of cash needed to pay off a home just as soon or sooner by using a conservative, tax-deferred mortgage acceleration plan. The most important elements of home equity management are maintaining liquidity and safety of principal and creating the opportunity for home equity to grow in a separate side fund, where it is accessible in the event of an emergency.

It is essential to maintain control of your home equity to allow it to earn a rate of return. Home equity has no rate of return when it is trapped in the house, as I will explain. I'll also explain why your home may likely sell much more quickly and for a higher price with a high mortgage balance rather than a low mortgage balance.

Learning to manage the equity in your home wisely will allow you to utilize one of the few tax deductions that we Americans have left: our mortgage interest. You can actually pay off a home using a thirty-year mortgage in thirteen and a half years with the same cash outlay required to pay off a fifteen-year mortgage. And you can accomplish this by using some of Uncle Sam's money instead of your own! This book will teach you how to dramatically enhance your net worth and generate an extra million dollars or more by safely using lazy, idle dollars that are trapped in the equity of your home.

Let me reiterate and clarify why many Americans are remiss in arriving at the degree of financial independence they could otherwise obtain. While we do everything in our power to get tax deductions on our retirement contributions and investments, we simultaneously eliminate one of the few and best deductions we have: our home mortgage interest.

Hence, most Americans prepare for the future by postponing tax while getting rid of their tax deductions.

P.L.A.N. FOR TRUE WEALTH

To get where you want to go, you have to know how to get there. I've discovered that the secret to wealth accumulation is to use the best P.L.A.N.-an acronym for "Perpetual Life of Asset Nurturance."? When we learn to nurture all of our assets properly, we create a new life for them that will live on into perpetuity. To understand how, we must first define "true wealth." So let's shift gears in order to view your future from a loftier perspective.

Wealth is usually associated with the accumulation of assets. When asked what their assets are, most people usually think of their house, cash, stocks, bonds, real estate, and insurance. These things constitute our financial assets and represent our material possessions.

But, if I were to ask what their most important assets are, most people would list their family, health, relationships, virtues, values, morals, character, unique abilities, heritage, and the future. This category represents human assets-that is, people rather than things. Another category of assets represents the wisdom we gain in life: our intellectual assets. Wisdom is a product of knowledge multiplied by experiences-both good and bad. Intellectual assets also include our formal education, reputation, systems, methods, skills, ideas, alliances, and traditions.

ASSETS THAT MATTER

Imagine these three categories-financial, human, and intellectual assets-on a "family balance sheet." Say you had to leave one category behind, but you could keep and transfer the others to future generations.

I have asked this question of a wide variety of individuals who have had financial net worths ranging from $10,000 to $2,500,000,000, and the answer is the same. They would choose to give up their financial assets.

Why? Because we can rebuild the financial assets with our human and intellectual assets. Most religions of the world believe that we come into the world possessing the human and intellectual assets to one degree or another. While we live our life, we enhance these assets.

Then when we leave this mortal existence, we take the enhanced human and intellectual assets with us to the next life.

Most people would not trade their human and intellectual assets for more money. When people spend their health trying to create more financial wealth, they usually end up spending their wealth trying to regain their health. If we trade our morals and ethics for more money, we soon become bankrupt in the human asset category. George Bernard Shaw said, "There are two sources of unhappiness in life. One is not getting what you want; the other is getting it." Money does not cause happiness or misery; but your relationship with money can.

It's unfortunate that traditional estate planning focuses on the least important category on the family balance sheet: the financial assets. Regardless of its complexity, traditional estate planning has become a process of four Ds: divide up the estate, defer the distribution, dump the financial assets on ill-prepared heirs, and eventually it dissipates.

Continues...


Excerpted from Missed Fortune 101 by Douglas Andrew Copyright © 2005 by Douglas Andrew. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Foreword xi

Preface xiii

Chapter 1 All the Dogs Barking Up the Wrong Tree Doesn't Make It the Right One! 1

Chapter 2 Taxes Are Actually an Asset! 18

Chapter 3 Plan Your Retirement-Not Uncle Sam's 37

Chapter 4 Solve Your IRA/401 (k) Dilemma 57

Chapter 5 Free Yourself from the IRA and 401 (k) Trap 81

Chapter 6 Learn to Manage Home Equity Successfully 100

Chapter 7 Manage Your Mortgage to Create Wealth 120

Chapter 8 Homemade Wealth 144

Chapter 9 Choose the Right Investments 170

Chapter 10 Structure Your Life Insurance to Perform as a Superior Investment 192

Chapter 11 Access Your Money Tax-Free at Retirement 216

Chapter 12 Give New Life to Your Assets-Develop the Proper P.L.A.N. 244

Index 273

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