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| The Last Chance Millionaire Excerpt reprinted
from: The Last Chance Millionaire:
It's Not Too Late to Become Wealthy
Submitted to MyShelf.Com The following
is an excerpt from the book The Last Chance Millionaire: It's Not
Too Late to Become Wealthy
The Pitcher of
Water Versus the Empty Glass When I give seminars, this is the
moment that I introduce the most memorable visual aids I have ever used.
Picture yourself holding an empty drinking glass in one hand and a pitcher
containing water in the other. The glass represents your house. For simplicity's
sake, let's say it is worth $100,000. It's an asset. Let's say you have
$100,000 of cash in the bank (the pitcher) -- that's liquid wealth. The
glass is empty because you have not put a penny into your house, but on
paper, on a balance sheet, you would still list it as a $100,000 asset.
Meanwhile the pitcher of water represents another asset -- $100,000 in
cash. What's the total amount of your
assets? $200,000. What happens if you pour the water into the glass? You
have reduced your assets by $100,000. You've combined $100,000 in cash
to a glass already listed as an asset worth $100,000, and all you have
to show for it is $100,000. You have cut your assets in half! On the other hand, when you separate
the liquid cash from the glass-sized house that is free and clear, you
double your assets. That's what happens when you separate equity from
your house and put it in a liquid investment. But you're not finished.
Assume the empty glass-house appreciates at an average of 5 percent a
year. After one year, what's the value of the empty glass? $105,000. If
you pay off the mortgage on the glass (pour the water -- or money -- back
into the house) what is it worth? The same $105,000 -- whether it is mortgaged
or it is free and clear -- because equity has no rate of return when it
is trapped in a house. Next, pour the water from the glass
back into the big pitcher. You've just removed $100,000 from your house
and put it into an investment earning -- let's say -- 10 percent. At the
end of the year, how much money will you have in that pitcher? Look at
that! It's grown to $110,000! In your other hand is your house, worth
$105,000 at the end of the same year, thanks to appreciation. Leave the water in the pitcher. How much have you earned by separating
your equity from your house in the course of just a single year? $15,000.
How much would you have earned if you had left the water in the glass?
Only $5,000 -- one-third as much. "But, but, but -- the mortgage wasn't
free! I had to pay some interest." That's right, you did. Let's say the
mortgage was at 7.5 percent. That's $7,500 subtracted from $15,000 for
a net gain of $7,500, instead of just $5,000. You are still 50 percent
ahead than if you had not removed the equity from your house. If the mortgage
interest is deductible, then the net cost of the mortgage is really not
$7,500, but $5,000 in a 33.3 percent marginal tax bracket. So the net
profit is $10,000 ($15,000 minus a net, after-tax mortgage expense of
$5,000) -- or twice as much as you made if the house was paid off! Here's another quick analogy: Would
you rather have one horse working for you or two? Can two horses work
for you, even if you owe money on one of the horses? The object of this demonstration
is that no matter what else you do, when
you separate your equity from your house, you increase your assets.
Even though there is a charge for doing that -- the simple interest you
pay on a mortgage -- it makes a whole lot of sense to take out a mortgage
and use it to make your assets grow. Do you recall the president of the
bank I mentioned at the start of this chapter? What you've just done --
taken out a mortgage and used the money to make more money -- is what
he did. You didn't make billions, but you made a profit in the same exact
manner. By separating equity from your house, you give it the ability
to earn a rate of return. Employ this strategy each year, and the profits
will compound. Copyright © 2007
Douglas R. Andrew Author
Douglas Andrew
is the owner and president of Paramount Financial Services, Inc., a comprehensive
personal and business financial planning firm. His previous two books,
Missed Fortune and Missed Fortune 101, are national bestsellers.
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