how can you talk about renting you're just throwing money away BS should I just dismantle these arguments once and for all because there's some shocking math behind a mortgage and most people don't know this let's get into it the meet safy the financial expert and entrepreneur is back to teach you how to take control of your money and confront the financial problems that hold us back most people fall into four money types that I've identified number one is avoiders and they'd hate talking about money but if your partner simply will not talk about money that's
a huge red flag because % of the people I talk to do not know their household income 90% who are in debt do not know how much debt they're in and 100% of the people I talk to in credit card debt also have trouble with that is shocking next up Optimizer they can get you to a very good place they'll be investing we love to live in a spreadsheet but it can be taken too far and then the dreamer who believes that success is one deal away and they tend to fall into crypto coin scams
like all this BS finally worriors they love to worry are we going to have enough what if we run out of money typically they picked up worrying from their parents who said stuff like money doesn't grow on trees and the problem is you can take it a little too far and they become cheap and become so obsessed with $3 questions like agonizing over buying a coffee but everybody listen closely cuz I want to break down how you can change any of these types so Remy the only investment most couples make is buying a house what
is the alternative this is where real wealth is created let's simplify the whole thing and I have four numbers that everyone should be talking about the first off is your this has always blown my mind a little bit 53% of you that listen to the show regularly haven't yet subscribe to the show so could I ask you for a favor before we start if you like the show and you like what we do here and you want to support us the free simple way that you can do just that is by hitting the Subscribe button
and my commitment to you is if you do that then I'll do everything in my power me and my team to make sure that this show is better for you every single week we'll listen to your feedback we'll find the guest that you want me to speak to and we'll continue to do what we do thank you so much [Music] much REM if someone's just clicked on this conversation please explain to me exactly why they should stay and listen to what we're about to discuss on the basis that we're about to talk about the things
you've written in this book if you are single and dating if you are engaged or if you have been married for 25 years money is one of the central parts of our lives and most of us think about money as something to be avoided it's something we only talk about when things have gone wrong what a terrible way to live and there is a different way which is we can use money as a source of connection possibility and joy and that is what we're going to talk about today I had a conversation a couple of
days ago actually with um James ston who's the divorce expert he's a divorce lawyer by trade but he knows more about divorce than anybody else and he said to me there's two things which cause people to end up in his office going through a divorce number one is cheating in infidelity and the second thing is money problems in the relationship so I find it especially sort of pertinent to have this conversation with you about couple's relationship with money um because clearly one of the things that is most likely to end my relationship or or I
guess prevent me getting into one is this financial avoidance that most of us engage in you've interviewed hundreds and hundreds of couples about money on your podcast what have you learned about our relationship with money in relationships from that I've learned that 50% of the people I talk to do not know their household income 90% of the people I talk to who are in debt do not know how much debt they're in and 100% of the people I talk to in credit card debt also have trouble saying no to their children isn't that shocking of
those things 50% do not know how much income they make because most of us are simply living by looking at our checking account and that's it the debt part kind of makes sense why would you want to know how much debt you owe you don't really want to think about it so you ignore those emails and envelopes and the credit card debt part that is really interesting the idea that if you can't say no to spending so you've racked up a bunch of credit card debt the same princip principle applies to saying no to kids
for me when I discover these I find them absolutely fascinating but the good news is you can also change these things and what's the difference between men and women in terms of spending habits in a relationship secrecy avoidance arguments well let's start with the roles men always describe themselves as providers always that's what we are taught it's exists in culture the problem is of course what happens when are not the top earner which is happen happening increasingly more now so when I often ask them who are you financially speaking if you're not a provider and
they're just stumped but there's got to be something more than simply being a provider you can be a provider and you can be a nurturer you can be a provider you can be a helper a leader there's so many different ways um often what you'll see with women is discussions about a secret bank account keep a little money aside just in case we have to remember that in the US many grandmothers were not allowed to open up their own bank accounts that happened in two generations ago and so there has been a rightful message that
has been passed down Orly keep a little bit of money aside just in case whether it be physical abuse Financial abuse divorce Etc and I totally respect that message I don't think you should have a secret account I do think you should have an account that is yours only but no secrets in a relationship what about arguments as it relates to money and relationships what are the the cause of the arguments is it someone spending too much is it hiding money is it something else it's usually not hiding money that's very small extreme the biggest
phrase that I get from couples is he or she's a spender and I'm a saver so it's creating this identity that they're a spender I'm a saver or they don't want to talk about money ever why can't I get them to finally sit down with me and get on the same page that's a phrase that's tossed around everywhere when I ask them what is getting on the same page the answer is I don't know I just want to talk about it so when it comes to money yes there are the numbers that we need to
understand of course but what I often tell people the way you feel about money is highly un correlated to the amount in your bank account that is why I speak to so many multi-millionaires who still worry about money they think if I just have 50,000 more 500,000 more $5 million do more well guess what I've had all those folks on my podcasts and they still worry about money that means there's two things you need to do to master your relationship with money one you got to know your numbers this is a language you have to
learn the basics of personal finance two you have to master your money psychology that means you need to change the way that you talk about money and behave with money so that you can ultimately change the way you feel about money you do those two things you're going to have a very healthy relationship with money we'll go into all of those things and how you do them um on this point of gender roles obviously Society has changed in the last couple of decades in terms of equality and more women are in work at higher level
positions in corporations in the SE Suite earning much more money this has caused a shift I should say in the sort of typical gender roles and assumptions of what what each gender is supposed to be doing in couples and I'm wondering now with more women earning more money in many cases they're going to be earning more than their husband in heterosexual relationships have you seen new Dynamics and new issues created because of this in terms of like I don't know insecure men feeling emasculated or the woman not being happy that she's contributing more and I
asked this because I had someone on my podcast a couple of uh months back who said to me that I think it's 70 or 80% of women expect that their romantic partner will earn more than them but that Gap is closing now because women are earning more and more money I'm just wondering if you've seen in those couples scenarios where the woman ears more and it's causing problems I've seen it all the time I've seen it all the time I think that we see different gender Dynamics um I recall one episode where I spoke to
uh a young woman woman and her boyfriend she was around 40 years old she made way more than her boyfriend care to guess how much she makes per month $20,000 $200,000 per month she has a business it's doing very well she's around the age of 40 now her boyfriend was never taught about money when he was growing up most people are not he never learned about investing certainly no one was telling him about a Roth IRA when he was 12 years old and he had started his own business and he was on the upswing he's
making a few thousand dollar a month good for him she's making 200 Grand a month her parents started talking to her about investing when she was 5 years old so here we already see a difference not just in gender but in socioeconomic status okay and over time that progressed so they come to me and she says I want him to pay for dinner occasionally fine super reasonable he even said no problem I want to so he would take his credit card out and he would offer to pay and she would say no I want you
to contribute more to your IRA so in many ways she wanted him to pay she wanted to feel taken care of which is totally reasonable but when he offered she said no so this is the kind of thing that I often see which is I think I want one thing but when I get that thing I don't actually want it it doesn't make me feel the way I thought it would I want to earn 50k more I think that'll make me feel safe oh my God I am earning 50k more it doesn't actually change the
way I feel so I worked with this couple and I helped them understand why they both felt this way about money and you know from the outside it's like this is so irrational if you make more just pay more if I were in that situation etc etc none of that stuff matters when you are in the couple in that relationship you will feel a certain way and we got to work with you individually not what everybody else says in the end the conclusion that they came to was she wanted him to occasionally pay for dinner
but she also wanted him to fill up his Ira so this is what they did every so often before they went out to dinner she would give him her credit card and she would say here I want you to pay for tonight and he said cool he understood it they went out and that's what they did now to us sitting here we're like this dance makes no sense why don't they just do it this way or that way guess what every single one of us has some irrational thing we do with money every single one
of us and I think that we are ready to actually have conversations about how we are irrational money is not just dollars and cents on a page that's why you don't feel good about money even when you have more than you ever thought you would that's why you worry about money but you have never read a single book on Personal Finance we are all irrational including me and when you get into a a relationship you got to acknowledge that and then you got to say hey what is our vision of a rich life together let's
build that if it means we do a little dance about the credit card once every two months fine do we both feel good is it fair then I'm good with it what's going on there with her because it it sounds like there's this battle between her mind and maybe her heart or it's almost like the social expectation is coming in but then her her brain is saying no invest in the IRA and in Ira for anyone that doesn't know in other it's a retirement account a retirement account so she's saying invest in the future but
also buy my dinner well it's the same it's the same we all have these things that Society has told us but then we don't quite agree and we're not sure what to do last time I was here we talked about how you don't necessarily need to buy a house in order to live a rich life and in my case I have rented for the last 20 years by choice and I made more money renting and investing the difference than I would have by buying a house and this is shocking to people like we saw the
comments last time people went berserk how can you talk about renting you're just throwing money away on rent and this is something we have been fed constantly for Generations that in order to be successful you must buy a house so when somebody like me comes around and says actually you should run the numbers because sometimes renting can be better people are shocked same thing with um if you want to be taken care of or you want someone to treat you or you want someone to pay for the first first date same thing when men come
and they talk about being a provider but in certain relationships where they actually earn less I'll say to them if we look at the numbers you're not the provider so who are you and they're stumped and that is when we need to start grappling with the idea that maybe what we were told is not exactly true for us in our situation today and that's okay do you think it causes more problems when the in terms of the relationship Dynamics and that sort of masculation and you know that the man not feeling like a provider when
the woman earns more money than the man from what you've seen not necessarily I think that it is a different framework than we're used to yeah when we think about my parents for example my mom stayed home with us my dad went to work single earner simple everybody knew where they stood what the roles were it was very simple it's very difficult to do that today housing is historically expensive healthc care is expensive especially in the US and so you have two people earning in in urban cities you have young women earning more than men
in their 20s a lot of us are trying to figure out what does this role mean for me and for my partner and for our relationship that makes it tricky I wonder if a lot of men are just choosing to remain single until they've kind of worked on themselves because I think actually that's probably the path I would have taken if I'm being completely honest well I kind of did take is I didn't have a relationship until I was able to really provide oh the p word yeah and where did that word come from provide
like watching my father watching movies everything exactly yeah no one ever says like you are a provider but we learn it from a million different uh perspectives and yeah I hear a lot of guys I mean when I uh was living in New York and I had a lot of single friends topic of conversation was I'm not ready to get married I need to get to a certain point in my career first you have all these words for it and deep down there's a feeling that we're often expressing you know maybe I'm not ready maybe
I'm not enough maybe I need to do XYZ before I do the thing that I want and so part of what we talk about when it comes to relationships and money is like let's actually shine a light on that let's not be shy about it if you want someone to pay for your dinner fine that's totally fine let's have that conversation if you want to be the sole earner in your household okay let's see what it would take and too often we don't have those conversations we just dance around them for 50 years who should
pay for the first date then my answer is doesn't matter it would be nice if the person who suggested the date pays but I think we spend way too much time focusing on the first date and way too little time thinking about the next 14,622 days it's like a couple who's obsessed with the wedding fine you want a nice wedding great what about the marriage same thing with money first aid okay we can have that conversation but aren't you more interested in how your partner thinks about money and talks about money are they a cheap
skate are they generous are they abundant did they grow up the same or different than you that is something we don't talk about meanwhile we have five million YouTube videos on who's going to pay on the first date we are missing the real point the point of money in a relationship is not just about the first date that's fun for clicks but it's about do we see money the same way do we connect are we going to be rowing in the same direction or are you going to be doing that and I'm doing this and
we can never get aligned you can only make a first impression once right and if you are a guy this is just how I feel anyway if I go on a date a first date with a woman and we have a wonderful date you know it's a nice restaurant and then it gets to the end of the day and then I turn to her and say should we split the bill I couldn't even say it with a straight face frankly I couldn't I definitely couldn't ask her to play yeah I just I just could never
and if I think if you anonymously pulled 10 of my female friends and said how would you feel if on the first day the guy asked you to pay I think privately they would say that's a bit of a turnoff that's a red flag that's an ick I think probably that's true and again goes to the power of socialization right like culture is very difficult to change we got to admit that we got to acknowledge that and when I was dating I paid for dates so I don't have a problem with it I like to
be generous I think that when you are in a relationship you like to know that your partner is generous too now generous comes in lots of ways it could be paying for dates it could be planning a trip it could be being thoughtful and you know buying extra toothpaste because we're running low there's so many different ways to be generous but generosity for me would be a value paying for a date sure I paid for dates I'm happy to I like to do it but generosity to me is way more important to talk about that
in a relationship versus the date itself because chivalry you know this this idea that the man is to lead um in that regard and to you know open the door yeah and open the car door and pull out the chair yeah but think about it I agree with all that stuff I I'm I support it but think about what message that sends when you tell Men You're supposed to be chalous but there's no real context no real around it and let's say you have a 26-year-old guy now who's earning less than his girlfriend so he
wants to be chivalrous but for him he's like well look at our bank accounts and so what I want to emphasize to people is you can be chivalrous you could be generous money is just a small part of that let's not over fixate on who's paying for top us okay and let's actually think about the important things when it comes to money we are so obsessed with $3 questions people are obsessing over should I buy this coffee can I afford this appetizer on and on and on about $3 questions we totally neglect the $30,000 questions
or the $300,000 questions is this person financially aligned with me how do I even find out am I investing 5 to 10% of take-home pay every month are we doing it together um do we talk about money regularly and proactively and positively those things matter and they're actually worth hundreds of thousands of dollars these $3 questions including who's paying for appetizers or should I buy a latte irrelevant fact get get the big answers in life right and you can buy all the appetizers you ever want what are the financial red flags in a relationship then
number one is they don't want to talk about money if you don't want to talk about money red flag the biggest red flag of all because we could differ on how we see money we can even have different values for a few things but if your partner simply will not talk about money you have a huge problem why if you can't talk about money then you can't even understand where they're coming from and they are not curious about what you want so how are you ever going to get on the same page think about this
a lot of people think we need to have the conversation about money the con as if it's one conversation would you have the conversation about raising kids no you'll will have thousands in your life that's the way it should be money is very much like parenting not like uh should we play pickle ball or tennis today irrelevant so we want to have lots of conversations about money and that means we need to first of all be willing to talk about it and then we need to find a way to have fun doing it why don't
we and who doesn't is it men is it women that don't do it more more or who's not talking about money and why aren't they talking about it it's not about gender couple it has nothing to do with gender terms of who does or doesn't talk about money there are avoiders that's one of four categories uh money types that I've identified avoiders hate talking about money and they will use a series of conscious and unconscious techniques to avoid talking about money they'll say things like um uh why why do you always have to talk about
money can't we just have a nice night out or you're so much better at this you just handle it you're just so much savier at this stuff that's an avoider do they know their own financial situation no so they don't know their own financial situation and they don't want to talk about it correct we and by the way we all have something like this it could be our fitness it could be our relationship with our parents there's something in our life that we know we should deep down but we avoid it yeah and there's no
there's no immediate consequence like if I don't call my college friend it's fine I could probably call him tomorrow and you can go on and on and on like that until one day you can same thing with our fitness it's very easy to procrastinate on Fitness or money because it's not like your house is being taken away or even your cables being shut off it'll probably be fine until one day you hit this brick wall and it's not so that's the avoider that's the first money type yep next up Optimizer I have a soft spot
because I am an Optimizer optimizers we love to live in the spreadsheet it's like let me sit and calculate this and what if I run a compound interest calculation a Monte Carlo calculation and what if we do this but not that I love calculating everything and left alone I would sit there and do that for the rest of my life okay the problem is you can take it a little too far now I don't think I've taken it too far perf I think I'm perfect on my spreadsheets but my wife has taught me enough's enough
we we've won that part of life let's focus on another part connection and fun and experience are these people often thought of as boring yes they are they are deep down they are boring I was boring when I was sitting there thinking money is only about numbers it's not money is about Adventure and possibility and generosity and you will often find optimizers I'll give them a challenge I'll give him a $100 challenge Al you have to take $100 in the next week and spend it on yourself they cannot do it they will spend it on
their dog they'll spend it on their kid they'll spend it on their partner but they will not do it for themselves and I go go why didn't you do it they go R do you know that if you put $100 in the S&P 500 and you compound that for the next 45 years it'll turn into this much I go I don't give a spend the money because money is not simply meant to be hoarded right it's meant to create a rich life and when you have optimizers the thing is they can get you to a
very good place they will probably have your account set up dialed in they'll be investing great they're going to be very proud look at the compound interest returns all that is fantastic but it can be taken too far these are the people that die and then you figure out that they had like $9 million some saving account what a waste they never tasted the caviar but they've got yeah like people send these newspaper articles around like oh local librarian discovered to have $9 million and I go what a tragedy what a tragedy to live a
smaller life than you have to I want you to save I want you to invest but I also want you to try a nice meal or if you don't like nice food or you don't want a nice t-shirt also fine get super generous give that money surprise the people around you tip 50% so those are optimizers the third category is worriors they love to worry typically they picked up worrying from their parents almost always and their entire relationship with money is worry are we going to have enough what if we run out of money what
if we don't have enough to pay at the gas station and often times it's very surprising because I told you that 50% of couples don't know how much they make right so they'll say like we need more we don't have enough right now and I'll ask them how much do you think you make this just happened a couple of weeks ago on a podcast episode they thought they made around $70,000 a year okay we add up all their stuff they make $120,000 a year so I go well here you go you you wanted to make
an extra 40K you actually make 50K more than you thought do you feel any better and she goes no because the way you feel about money is highly uncorrelated to the amount in your bank account so worriers worry that's how they relate they can't imagine any other relationship to money and my job is to help them realize first of all let's actually look at your numbers let me help you understand what it means do you have enough what does it take to have enough and then can you start to develop a new relationship with money
it's almost like a new taste bud I'm never going to tell you to eat tomatoes if you hate Tomatoes but I am going to teach you maybe you like okra and we can develop a new taste for that finally the dreamer the dreamer believes that success is one deal away if we just close this deal if I just get this thing and they tend to fall into get-rich quick schemes lots of scams ml m a lot of crypto shitcoin scams like all this BS but they are extremely resistant to calm lowcost long-term investing in other
words the way that most people build real wealth they think it's boring they even have little phrases like uh I don't want to be stuck in a ninetto five like those suckers I'm like that sucker makes 10 times what you make what are you talking about but they have simply been surrounded with the idea one more deal and I'll finally make it they must be hard to be married to it's impossible it's really really difficult they don't not only do they not want to talk about money when they finally do talk about money they're almost
living in a different world often you will find that dreamers can only dream because they are being subsidized by someone in their life usually their partner and if their partner were to leave for example the House of Cards would collapse and actually that's usually the only thing that gets them to truly change so if we've got these four money types um the avoider the optimizer the worrior the dreamer in your view who lives a happier life you can live a happy life with any of these also you can change any of these types but on
average one person's going to probably I mean I I'm the optimizer and I'm pretty happy so is that is that the answer yeah optimizers are great they love their spreadsheet um I think that uh the warrior clearly is not going to live the happiest life the dreamer is actually quite happy yeah the dreamer is quite happy they live in optimism yeah they're living in a world that's not real it's subsidized by somebody else they're always optimistic about what's going to happen next week next month next year never realizing the catastrophe that they are leaving behind
them that's that's the whole issue this the reason I wrote the book is it's one thing to treat money in a certain way on your own when you're single you can be irresponsible you can be an Optimizer but when you're in a relationship it's not about you anymore it's about the two of you as a unit and so you have to deeply understand yourself and then you have to be willing to communicate with your partner and really create a rich life vision for the two of you most couples I talk to have no vision for
their money that's why they fight over who spent $50 at Target I go who gives a about Target financial problems are almost never about overspending at Target the biggest problem with couples and money is they have no Rich Life vision what is money to us what do we want to use money for how do we want to feel about it so they're confronted with a thousand different decisions with their money every week and they have no vision to guide them this is for us this is not for us one of the things I've always wondered
in relationships is how many couples know how much money the other couple has in their savings account and their total sort of Investment Portfolio because I've never been in a relationship where I mean I've only really been in two relationships you could say but I've been with you know dated people over the years and been with my current partner for many many many years but even my current partner has no idea how much money I have zero IDE when will you have that conversation probably never should we bring them out right now let's bring them
out I've just never had the conversation if we if you need something we can get it yeah and it's just always been like that in my life okay so I I made a mistake in my own relationship I was uh dating my now wife for many years and at one point she had asked some question about her 401k or something and I said well there is a book called I will teach you to be rich here's a copy of it and I was joking around with her and so it I ended up learning all about
her finances so I knew about her entire Financial picture it didn't occur to me to talk about my own and a little while later she she very assertively said this doesn't feel fair you know everything about my finances but I don't know about yours and I realized I violated my own rule in chapter n of my first book which is talk about money early on talk about it regularly so we talked about it we talked about is actually one of the most memorable conversations we had because talked about the numbers talked about my pride in
how hard I had worked to build my business and invest for 20 years 25 years and um and then we talked about what it meant for us like what kind of Life do we want to have do we want to live here do we want to live there do we want to have kids do we want to eat this type of food travel like that conversation about possibility is the conversation I want every couple to have because it's about possibility and you can start to dream and that dream is important you can get to the
logistics of course we'll get to that but so few of us still dream with our money but you know that I think for someone like you who is the optimizer and who's probably quite proud of the system you've created love systems but there's going to be so many people listening now that are in a relationship and they are maybe early in the dating process and maybe they've been with a person six months they've taken them out on lots of nice dates and they have $1,000 in their savings account and their partner has no idea and
they're thinking if I tell my partner what's in this bank account she is going to be shocked or he is going to be shocked and they are going to leave me so I'm keeping this a secret because they are living under ill an illusion that I have more than I actually have yeah but remember this just because you don't have as much money as you want doesn't mean that you are less of a person what could be more completely agree I completely agree what could be more appealing than saying you know what would you be
open to talk about our finances we're getting a little bit serious you know I know we're kind of talking about taking the next step I think money is going to be an important part of it I know it is for me and I wonder if we could sit down and talk about it first just being proactive how many people watching and listening are like I wish my partner whether they're dating or my partner of 20 years would come to me and say can we sit down and talk about money but the part of that is
is shameful about financial situation yes if I run it back 10 years just over 10 years ago I was living in an area called um Rush Holm I was in a shared house with living with some um a few people who had come to the UK legally okay um I didn't have a carpet in my room I was in a single bed didn't have duvet or bed sheets or anything and every day I woke up and thought to myself how am I going to eat today so I'd find different ways to find food at the
same time I was dating this girl called Ruby this girl called Ruby had no idea she'd never seen where I lived she wasn't aware that I was looking behind uh Sofas in takeaways for pound coins there is no possibility in the world that I would have ever told Ruby the financial situation I was in yeah I like so I don't know what to do in that situation and I'm sure I'm sure I would assert that maybe 30% of people listening right now don't want to tell their partner their financial situation because they're deeply embarrassed still
shameful to the point that they think their partner might leave like them less be less attracted to them if they really knew the truth I totally agree I totally agree it's crazy how much shame we have around money and it's uh a young guy not having enough it's um a young woman who has $188,000 of credit card debt it's all over the Spectrum that's the second point which is if you want to talk about money talk about money don't wait for your partner to do it bring it up yourself even if you feel embarrassed or
ashamed okay if you're planning to make a life with this partner you got to be able to talk about this because you're going to be talking about a lot of other personal sensitive things over the course of your life the second thing is what could be more attractive than somebody saying you know when I was in my 20s I moved to the city I spent a lot of money going out and I wasn't super responsible I racked up a lot of credit card debt I've paid it down from 18,000 to 6,000 it's going to be
paid off next year and I just know that I'm never going back there again oh my God someone who acknowledges what they did has a good reason for it and then most importantly has a plan huge turn on so what I'm begging all of us to do is to realize just because you have more or less money does not make you a better or worse person I want to take shame away because we all have something that we are ashamed of but not talking about it and putting it in the corner in the darkness that
doesn't solve it that's why I love talking about the most taboo of taboo subjects money gender prenups dating these are things that nobody's talking about so when you hear couples on the podcast and they're talking about being married for 15 years and they've never actually had one conversation about money I want you and everyone watching to be inspired because stuff doesn't have to be shameful and doesn't have to be kept in the dark and what do you think about prenups then do you think they are a good thing for all couples do you think all
couples should initiate a prenup no no not all couples there are some couples who should have one my wife and I have one so we went through this process and um who should get a prup is if one or both partners are bringing substantial premarital assets to the marriage meaning before they get married they have a large Investment Portfolio a business rental property or a house like you should have AE up but most people should not because when most people get married they don't have substantial assets what if your partner turns around if I turn
to my partner say babe ra told me to go get a prenup yeah and she goes absolutely not well that's not a good introduction I wouldn't say that although I don't mind if you throw me under the bus oh this guy raid he said this thing fine how to bring it up is an art so when I was um deciding on a prenup I asked for lots of advice from lots of friends and um some of the advice out there especially online is not great um one of the most common pieces of advice is blame
it on your lawyer I'm like get real you're about to build a life with your partner and you can't be honest about this thing this in the grand scheme is a minor topic so I'll tell you exactly what I said to my wife we sat down and um we I said uh I want to talk to you about something um you know that because of how long I've been in business I've been very lucky I've been fortunate I worked hard I've built this business up and I'm really proud of what I've accomplished and saved and
you also know my lifestyle I don't drive around in a Lamborghini uh I like to travel I like to wear nice clothes and I like to save money and it's important to me that as we are getting closer in our relationship to getting married that we talk about a prenup and my heart was p pounding I had planned it I had thought about it I had talked to so many people what I knew is I wanted to take responsibility it's not some lawyer that wants it it's me it's important to me I wanted to bring
up the topic and I wanted to reassure my wife that I'm not going to change overnight when we get married into someone who's blowing all of our money it's just important because of the business that I built in her response I was like like how is she going to respond because bringing up a prenup is very fraught she's the best she said okay I wasn't expecting that but I'm willing to learn more about it that's as good of a response as I could have hoped so we started the series of conversations we both had lawyers
it was going well at first until it wasn't and we were talking about numbers that to me seemed astronomical I started to feel resentful she didn't feel listened to she didn't feel heard she started to feel resentful and these conversations were were like so difficult I would say they were some of the most difficult conversations of our relationship at one point she said we should go see a therapist because these conversations are not good and I was like you're right so we went to see a therapist we sat in that therapist office I still remember
therapist asked us a bunch of questions including how do you see money and she turned to me I was like how do I see money growth I could literally see numbers floating in front of my eyes the optimizer in me was talking about the rule of 72 it was like so obvious what an obvious question then she turns to my wife how do you see money and she said safety so what sa safety to me that was like saying charcoal like the two words don't relate at all but it started us on A New Path
of realizing that we were seeing money completely differently me and that was exactly when I realized I wish there were other couples talking about money from behind closed doors that exactly was the Genesis of me doing my podcast and my Netflix show to show people not just tell them but to show them how real couples deal with money what was the resistance between you two in sort of more specific terms she she wanted a different arrangement to the one that you wanted yeah the terms are are super technical in prenups it's um so with a
prenup you have a variety of different rules or technicalities which would be like what if you separate in 6 months what if you separate in 25 years but there are children involved who gets the house what if you have a house what if you have two houses what if you have this much in your joint investment but each of you has this much in individual investment and so what happens is it's not even just the numbers themselves it's the fact that the process is set up to be adversarial mhm so they have a lawyer we
have a lawyer we're communicating through lawyers when it comes to this topic when normally you're just talking to your fiance or your girlfriend and there's an art to also managing the lawyers see the lawyers want there's nothing bad we had great lawyers I'm happy with them but lawyers job is to look over every freaking contingency and make sure that nothing is left a chance and I think a good reminder for anyone considering a prenup is to remember you manage your lawyers and your job is to come to an agreement with your partner for the rest
of your life so sometimes you can be generous you can be willing to let up on a few things here and there as long as you are looking at the Northstar we're going to be together we want these premarital assets to be protected and in case something goes wrong we both want to feel good about what the arrangement is and there is a 60 odd percent chance that you will break up if you look at the marriage statistics so well those statistics are a little skewed that includes second marriages that also includes all different socioeconomic
all everybody else if you break it down for example just by having a bachelor's degree or certainly an advanced degree that goes way down first marriage goes down and in fact the divorce rate has been decreasing for decades so this 50 60% thing that's kind of tossed around not quite accurate but whatever the statistic is what's more important is if you should always think about how can things go right and also how can they go wrong and I think with money A lot of times uh we only think about one or the other we buy
a house never asking ourselves like what if one of us loses our job and we get married without ever asking like what if we separate so you want to be able to play both what happens if things go right incredibly right and what happens if things go wrong let's make a plan what are the other red flags then we mentioned the first being they don't want to talk about money ah um they have a money guy a money guy is so common everybody talks about I have this money guy your money guy is probably uh
whole life in insurance salesman charging you 1.25% AUM let me explain what that means so many people in America do not want to learn the basics of money and so they hire a financial adviser now I don't have anything against financial advisors in general but a money guy that they're typically referring to is someone who charges them a percentage of their assets so if I have a $100,000 portfolio they'll charge or let's say a million dollar portfolio I might be paying 1% 1% doesn't sound like a lot but if you actually run the math you
will pay about 28% of your lifetime investment returns in fees that's not $10 or $100 that's tens of thousands or sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars so it's a red flag if someone has an advisor that they're paying a percentage based fee to I would much rather you pay an hourly or project or that type of fee too okay um they're cheap I can help a lot of people but I can't help cheap cheap is cost is the first and last thing they always consider so you might come home you're so happy oh my gosh
look at this beautiful thing I got for the kids how much was that and it just sucks the life out of every room cheap people are obsessed with cost cheap people rarely recognize the effect they are having on their loved ones and cheap people find it very very difficult to change they don't want to change they actually reinterpret their behavior and call it a virtue oh I'm not that I don't need that fancy wine I'm perfectly happy with this well what if your partner wants one glass of wine they seem like a miserable group yeah
I don't like cheap people I don't like cheap people I don't like cheap tippers and their Partners don't like them so it's it's one I'm not saying everybody has to go out and spend a million dollars but you got to use money to live your rich life the point of money is not to just hoard it and save it that's why when you create a rich life Vision you ask yourself what do we want to spend extravagantly on not just a little bit but extravagantly and what do we want to cut cost mercilessly on you
have to be able to play different notes like you're in a symphony if your only note is spend less that's a miserable existence are there any more red flags I want to go into why people and where they develop these relationships with money but are there any other sort of standout red flags that we should be looking for well if they if they follow Robert kosaki that's a huge red flag I mean the guy once Robert kosaki wrote this uh well-known personal finance book and the guy has really lost it in the last few years
he literally I'm not joking he literally told people the best investment you can have is a can of tuna I'm not joking and I replied to him Robert I sold everything in my portfolio and bought 3 million cans of tuna um is this a good investment but sadly I never heard back so beware of Beware of charlatans let me put it that way personal finance and money is filled with people who will promise you get rich quick who will tell you that the sky is falling and when it comes to money we want to be
balanced we want to have fun we want to be have a healthy relationship with money it's very similar to Fitness lots of people making promises you want to find the people who are giving you long-term advice you know these cheap people that you mentioned mhm and you know any of them I a couple come to mind tell tell the camera who they are right now so we know who are these cheap people they also fit into the category of the Warriors in my experience so someone who's a bit of a warrior can also be quite
quite cheap and I was just wondering in the hundreds of couples that you've sat down with an interviewed does there tend to be a origin story which links to their Friv their FR frugalness with money and they're penny pinching yes okay always when I talk to people um I asked them what do you remember your parents saying about money when you grew up always and they'll tell me they are very conversant they remember and usually the parents said stuff like we can't afford it and uh money doesn't grow on trees we don't talk about money
in this family these are the type of things that people said but you will often find um usually when kids are teenagers when there's something really tragic that happens and it's of often that um Dad lost his job and that meant that they completely changed socioeconomically often they had a big house they had to really like shift into Grandma's apartment that kind of thing that affects people in a huge way now it affects people in one of two ways and you cannot predict how some people go I'm never going to let that happen to me
therefore I'm going to have a high savings rate I'm going to invest I'm going to start a business and they develop a really healthy relationship with money others go the Direction you're suggesting which is they become incredibly cheap incredibly worried about money anxiety is common and they often do not see the connection at all until I point it out to them and when you talk about making this Rich Life vision together what exactly does that mean we start off in the book just talking about let's have our first positive conversation about money okay you have
to remember most people have never had a positive conversation about money money is the the only way it comes up is why did you spend that much at the gas station last week that's it so we start off by just saying I give him an agenda literally an agenda you can read off these words and start it off it's like why this is going to be awesome here's how I feel about money today how do you feel here's how I want to feel about money how about you high five I love you we're good that's
it part of having conversations about money is this philosophy of declare Victory and go home you don't need to talk about it all at once make it short make it fun and at the end always say I love you that's it over time you're going to associate talking about money with positivity and that's what we want when it comes to a rich life Vision this is where it's really fun so I have some fill in the blanks um where you fill it in like I wish we spent more money on and then you fill it
in I think we could probably cut back on and then you fill it in then you compare your notes my wife and I did this really fun exercise which I would encourage everyone to do and it is the 10-year bucket list so imagine you sit down with your partner and you go let's each take a piece of paper write down what would make the next 10 years incredibly Rich meaningful to to me and to us so you write it down and then you compare notes this is exactly what we did and you get excited you
oh you want to learn Spanish amazing do you want to do it online or do you want to go to Mexico City oh you want to go skydiving ah that one's not for me but I'll meet you at the ground right have fun and you just get excited you encourage the other person and then you find one that you both want to do that's meaningful for both of you so maybe it is we want to um create an art studio in the garage love it maybe it is we want to take a round the world
trip at some point in the next 10 years okay great the difference with this exercise is you're actually going to make it happen so right there on the spot you estimate how much it would cost take five minutes don't take more than that you can estimate it within 80% like that decide when you want to do it maybe if there's kids involved you're going to want to go in summer winter Etc and then all you do is take the rough amount divide it by the number of months and that's how you know how much you
have to save for it we did this and for us what was really meaningful is to have a 10year wedding anniversary so we know where we want to do it we know the exact place we know all the friends and family want to have with us and we knew when it was going to happen so we we had a funny experience because we each sat down and estimated the cost and I think the number I picked was something like three times bigger than hers and in those cases I say go with the bigger number okay
it helps you dream a little bigger if you can't save that much money per month that's okay shrink the dream a little bit right narrow the scope or maybe extend it a little longer until you have to do it but suddenly every single month when you sit down and talk about money it's like a video game you're like oh we're 3% closer to that goal that is how you start to build a vision for money and have fun along the way and do you subscribe to this idea that you should have like a joint bank
account and then separate bank accounts or because right now I just have my bank account and how does it work how does it work for you so do you just you just pay for most things I have to give context on what my partner's like she really doesn't care about material things so she's avoider she just doesn't she doesn't care about whether we fly first class or economy she doesn't care about if we stay in that hotel or this hotel right she doesn't care if we stay in the 70th floor Penthouse we live there or
or if she stays in a studio she doesn't care what does she care about she cares about quality time with me she likes having nice experiences she likes going to places doesn't care how she gets there or where she stays she likes traveling and exploring and she likes her simple thing she's a very simple person if I didn't get her birthday present or Valentine's Day present or Christmas present or if I just made her a scrapbook every year she'll be thrilled okay so I am the one that wants the nicer you want the okay I'm
the same I'm the same to to a large extent but we have a like we you know life it costs money so um I pay for most things okay and you're cool with that it's fine right yeah I've always been cool with it okay cool so I'm particularly cool with it because she doesn't care right right does that make sense yes it makes there's no resentment because she doesn't care I'm the one that's making sure she travels this way yeah I have to intervene and I have to fight to make sure that her plane ticket
is booked here or that the hotel she's staying in isn't going to be dangerous I've got so many stories of her booking it herself and then me having to rescue her because it's super dangerous yeah so so you and I have a similar um Dynamic at least in this way um I think my wife does have her money dials money dials are the things you love to spend money on and you can turn that dial up but when we met she was not into hotels at all I'm a hotel guy I love hotels and so
we had to have some conversations at first I'm just like oh yeah like of course I'm paying and then when we merged our finances which I recommend couples do well suddenly it's not my money it's our money yeah and so now we are forced to talk about that stuff and come up with a way like she's like I don't need to stay there and like personally I don't really think it's worth it for our money and I'm like well like have you seen have you seen the suite at this place and do you know what
type of wood they use and that she doesn't care so so how does that work you said you merge your finances when you say you merge your finances do you mean you're paying into the same bank account correct so and this is what I recommend for most for for almost all couples um you take your paychecks or if you're we're both business owners you take whatever money comes in put it in the joint checking account that joint checking account then pays a variety of different accounts it pays our joint expenses like our rent and if
we eat out it pays for our joint credit card bill the money also is paid out from the joint checking to her individual checking and individual savings which she has her money no questions asked if she wants to spend it on something like she loves self-care what am I going to ask it's her money it also sends some money over to me that's no questions asked money that I same money yeah the money that came in from us two together is processed in the joint checking account account and an amount goes to each of us
the same amount goes to both of you good question it could be the same 50/50 I think is actually great but once in a while if you have somebody who's earning like let's say 10 times more okay you may decide to make it proportional right so like one the higher earning partner might get more because imagine just for argument sake imagine you're earning a million dollars a month easy math and um suddenly you're getting like $22,000 a month for guilt fre spending you're like um what the hell this this doesn't make sense usually partners are
totally cool with that but I will tell you this I used to be on the proportionality train meaning everything's proportional Etc my wife and I did this for many years it's really complicated it gets really really complicated and what's more important is you want to set your accounts up so that they drive the right Behavior just like when you hire people you set the right incentives to drive the right Behavior when our moneyy was separate and we were doing all this proportionality calculation all these different accounts we didn't see the money as ours now all
the money goes into that pot it's ours so we sit down every month we look at our numbers and we go what's worth it do we care about this hotel do we care about that etc etc we really love that let's keep spending on that and find a way to do that it's about us and of course we have our own individual money so why didn't you just the money coming in Why didn't it just go to you individually and then you pay into the joint account why did you make that's what we did at
first and it became really complicated so the money came into each of us and then we because we each run businesses that are each variable we wanted it to be proportional well guess what if it changes every single month we had to recalculate the proportionality every single quarter what a mess so we're we're literally calculating every 3 months and then it changes and then at the end of the year we have to reconcile all this stuff we're like what is this marriage or a freaking multi-national conglomerate so part of a philosophy around a rich life
vision is one of our values is fight for Simplicity fight for it because I talk to couples who have more complicated Financial setups than we do shouldn't be the case most people's setups should be very simple all your money comes into a joint checking account from there it is it pays out to individual accounts and it pays all your joint expenses your life is together your rich life is together that's it we're married we're going to be married forever our future is together so let's set our accounts up accordingly so then if you end up
getting a divorce that joint checking account do you just split it in half or yeah so this is a this is a good question when you are married the money that is earned is community property so let's just say we put $100,000 in that checking account and we were to get separated tomorrow 5050 yeah that and that's reasonable right it's community property the prenup is only concerned with what happened before the marriage so you're in the camp of not caring too much about the small expenses the coffee it's a waste of time why is it
a waste of time because the they are $3 questions if you actually add it up how much they actually cost you it's actually not that much it's the simple joy that you enjoy in the morning and you could spend your entire life agonizing over buying a coffee but when I ask people okay so you stopped buying coffee for a month how'd you feel they go oh I felt okay I go what' you do with the money you saved they go I don't know it's in my checking account not only do you have to make the
decision every single day to save on these tiny little things you then have to properly invest that money and you have to do this every single day for the rest of your life what if we just got five critical decisions correct for the rest of our life and didn't have to worry about coffee why are we playing so small oh let's decide do we have enough money to buy this Saran Wrap who cares let's talk about are we investing properly do we have a a Target rate that we are doing watch this I bet you
so many couples watching this right now have had arguments about why did you spend so much at the grocery store why can't you stop spending so much on the kids and on and on but have they ever had conversations like this what is our savings rate is it 4% 6% 7% what is our investment rate is it 6% 8% whatever the number is Let's Make a rule that every December we increase it by 1% if you just did that if you increase your investment rate meaning the percentage of your net income that you invest every
single month I always recommend people start off at 5 to 10% let's say you're at six if you make a rule every December we're going to increase that by 1% it will be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to you more than all the coffee you ever buy in your entire life so why the hell would you focus on coffee when you can make one decision per year and make way more than all those coffees combined most couples when they think about investing or their investment rate the only investment most couples make together is buying
a house yeah well and that that's questionably not even an investment most people think renting is wasting money yeah and the the logic goes well if my rent is $2,000 a month or £2,000 a month my mortgage is only going to be £2,000 a month and we so we might as well buy a house because then we get to keep the asset are you trying to get me mad right now I'm starting to Swit just hearing this because you're right that's what they say should I just dismantle these arguments once and for all right now
sure okay renting is not throwing away money just like going to a sushi restaurant is not throwing money away on Sushi you're paying for something you're getting value you it's fantastic the next argument they use is um you're paying your landlord's mortgage I go okay aren't you paying the sushi owner's mortgage when you go there and get sushi funny we never think about it like that we only think about paying the landlord's mortgage finally we have to understand that buying a house can be a good financial decision it can be but renting and investing the
difference can also be a good decision and right now in the US in the top 50 US Metro cities it is cheaper to rent than to buy so let me give you some math let's say because I lived in New York close by if the rent was let's say 3,000 bucks a month to own the equivalent property right next door would have been 6,600 a month that's $3,600 per month more just to own so most people don't know this they don't factor in Phantom costs like maintenance taxes transaction opportunity cost they simply look at a
number that says uh 3,600 or whatever the number may be and they go great investment we have got to get more sophisticated with the biggest purchase of Our Lives I'm just looking at some of the uh comments on our last conversation oh yeah what did they say it's a balancing act there's there's two groups of people here there's a group of people who attest to the fact that they bought a house and it's the single best thing they did yep um this person said I bought a house it's the best thing I ever did it's
launched my mindset and New Direction remember that having your own space has profound psychological impacts and can change your life that's a good comment okay let's talk about that first I love that comment we have to remember that life is not just about a spreadsheet it's not so when it comes to a major purchase like a house or a car we got to start with the numbers okay we have to start by running a buy versus rent calculation by running an amortization chart I have a whole bunch of stuff on buy versus rent and then
we we need to know can we afford it is this part of our Rich Life vision what if one of us loses our job and on on on but then second we need to say what kind of Lifestyle do we want if we love to decorate that's probably worth something we should maybe we need to buy a house if we want our kids to be in a particular area maybe we need to buy there's so many non-financial reasons to buy or to rent and so we can't just do one or the other but my main
argument is this most of us never run the numbers we will spend a million dollars in toal cost of ownership for a house and we won't run one calculation so we got to play multiple notes doing the financial and non-financial parts I think that's what a lot of people are actually saying a lot of people are saying you know I bought a house and this person is saying I used to be I used to live in a caravan I finally bought a house and I don't care about being rich necessarily but having my own house
means the world to me great great non-financial reason they want stability I totally value that I would all also ask did you run the numbers I think the key thing is most people when they buy the house they see it as an investment and they see it as a good investment I think in part because they don't really know any other way to invest totally right so we we grow up we think okay the minute you get enough money the first thing you have to do is buy a house I mean there's a real sequence
of of events in our lives that are given to us which is go to school go to college or university or something like that there get the degree get the job buy the house get married have the kids and then move to Florida get skin cancer die oh retire okay have your pension die we don't have pensions anymore that was in the 60s but yes and actually that's a pretty good life if you think about it it's actually a very good life especially the way that our parents generation grew up where you know they could
buy a house on a reasonable salary one salary but that doesn't exist right now housing is historically expensive um and not through any fault of young people by the way I there's a lot of this um stuff thrown around the media young people are buying too much avocado toast they're always buying the new iPhone that's not why housing is expensive housing is expensive because people who bought their houses in the 60s 70s and 80s bought a house and then systematically prevented everyone else from building more housing so it is it's called nimbyism not in my
backyard they have allowed almost no housing to be built particularly in the US that's why if you only have a limit Li mited Supply guess what happens to the price it goes way up that's changing slowly housing prices will in certain cities like Austin even Santa Monica have come down in certain areas it's really important to be able to build more housing so that young people middleclass people poor people can afford housing we should not have people unable to afford rent or buying housing it's a big problem so are you saying that the average couple
if they're looking to make a financial return yeah on their joint savings count account they shouldn't invest that money in a house I personally would not consider my primary residents to be a great investment because it has massive costs right massive um maintenance opportunity cost of that down payment let's say you put down 50k or 100K that could have been invested it has all kinds of uh Phantom costs and then you have to stay there for until you pay it off presumably 30 years most people don't stay for 30 years there's some shocking math behind
a mortgage like most people don't realize that they will be paying more towards their uh interest than towards principal for 21 years let me say that again most people when they take a 30-year mortgage right now with interest rates the way they are they will be paying more towards interest than they are towards the mortgage in year 1 2 5 10 year 20 until till finally year 21 when they are finally paying more towards their mortgage their principal rather than interest so you know that phrase I don't want to throw money away on rent we
might more aptly say I don't want to throw money away on interest so if I'm in a couple I'm in a relationship and me and my partner have managed to save I don't know 50k what is a better use of that 50k to drive a financial return okay so let's simplify the whole thing I have a conscious spending plan I have four numbers that couple should be talking about okay the first off is your fixed costs those should be roughly 50 to 60% of your take-home pay and what's the fixed cost fixed cost includes your
housing or uh that could be rent mortgage your utilities your car payment any debt payment anything that is consistent even groceries that you need to live every single month so 50% of my monthly income go straight to those fixed costs monthly take-home post tax post tax okay 50 to 60% is the number you want to be targeting right there is um is the Crux of why couples are stressed out about money it's because they are spending too much on fixed costs and within that there's two areas they spend too much on you know what they
are housing is number one because it's so expensive and they don't calculate number two is cars usually trucks we love trucks trucks and SUVs in America the cultural script is oh we're having a kid we need to get a big house and a big SUV uh because we do so that right there is where people get stressed out about money next number is your savings this should be 5 to 10% minimum this includes your emergency fund this includes saving for a down payment anything you're saving for money you don't need for between 1 to five
years basically okay next up is Investments this would be 5 to 10% minimum this is where real wealth is created and this is where couples neglect they they talk about saving and they'll say oh we try to save I don't try to brush my teeth I don't try to save I make it automatic that's what I want couples to do that's what I cover in the book and then finally my favorite category of all guilt-free spending this is going out for drinks concerts travel 20 to 35% of take-home pay that's a lot that's a lot
if you look at it people go wow yes and when you get down to that number and you're out and you're having drinks with your friends or you're out to a beautiful experience you don't have to worry about anything else you don't have to feel guilty or anxious because you're already handling all these other three numbers you know you're set and you have this money set aside and you can enjoy it guilt free so this 10 this sort of 10% that is automatically invested would you set up some kind of system that automatically invests it
always always you should not be doing any of this manually so your investment should be happening automatically and for a couple you actually get to celebrate it every month you have a monthly money meeting where you talk about money every month most couples don't do this you will now after watching this and you talk about it you look at how your Investments are doing you give each other a high five a big hug congratulations and once you do this for six months a year you really start to see how it adds up fast what if
your partner wants to buy a house and you don't o that's tricky how would you handle it um it depends on my level of conviction about the decision I think you got to pick your battles and relationships but um I am probably more financially aware than my partner because my brother is he's been an investment banker for 13 years he works for me full-time he's my money guy yeah okay he's my older brother where does he charge you 1.5% uh he doesn't charge me a percentage on my P so happy no he works full-time in
the business so he he manages much of my money but he would make the case to me of pretty much the case you've made yeah so based on an opportunity cost basis I a lot of people don't even know what opportunity cost is I'm going to Hazard a guess I'm going try and explain it which is essentially all the things you could have done with this money instead yes so based on all the opportunities you have available to you Steve is buying this house a good use of that money and the answer was actually no
when I bought my first house it was no unless this is a emotional decision because you and your partner want a psychological feeling of safety to bring up the kids whatever it might be just a then if it is Steve if that's why you want to buy it and you think you're going to stay there for a considerable amount of years then go ahead we're going to kind of section this as a different rationale than the rest of your Investments what you do I did exactly what he said you bought it knowing it was an
emotional decision yeah I bought it knowing it was a bad decision I love this yeah okay this is amazing everybody listen closely cuz I want to break down what you just said in in a different term first off you got to run the numbers yeah always for the biggest purchases in your life you need to calculate carefully what's my buy versus rent what's my opportunity cost what's it going to amortise at all these things that most people are not familiar with learn it it's not that complicated second you need to factor in the non-financial hey
why am I doing this do I just feel this certain way there's nothing wrong with feeling irrational about money nothing you want to buy this thing and it's a bad financial decision okay first can I afford it if so we can continue the conversation and then you buy it Eyes Wide Open saying I know it's not an investment I know it's not even a good Financial DEC fact it's a terrible financial and I'm still going to do it when I when my wife and I go to buy a house one day it will be the
worst financial decision of Our Lives we already know that but we will probably still do it anyway same as you because there's more to life than just what's in a spreadsheet but you have to know know all the pieces on the board before you make these big decisions and you have to be able to do it with your partner you know it'd be very easy for you to do things unilaterally it'd be very easy for me to do it as well what I've learned and what I emphasize on my podcast every episode is just because
you may be the higher earner or have more money it's actually your obligation to bring your partner in and to get them involved and they may not be as Savvy or even as interested but you have to find a way to bring them into this world and get them connected with you with my wife and me of course I know more about Investments so I'm doing our investments but we're still talking about them we're saying like hey here's the numbers we chose are we still good with that let's take a look at it high five
you know here's what we're thinking for next year that's the level we're talking about these are these are exactly the kind of conversations you want to have and I I'm actually really thrilled you shared that example because I celebrate that you made a bad financial investment because it wasn't an investment it was just something you wanted and you could afford it yeah and we're both aware me and my partner we had the conversation we're both aware that um this is one of the worst things we could have spent the money on if our objective if
our kpi our key performance indicator was to make more money this was a terrible decision to make yes but we're also aware we just didn't care we thought you know it's there's a lot of non-monetary things that are going to be beneficial about this decision and I think that's what most people don't realize actually and I just think about my friends I think most of my friends believe that when they buy their house they're doing so because they don't know they don't know any other way to invest Society hasn't given us an alternative so what
is the alternative simple lowcost long-term index funds are fantastic ways to invest I'll explain what they are the myth about investing is that you have to sit there and look at PE ratios and things like that no you pick often one One Fund there's a simple example called a Target date fund you pick the year you're going to retire in like if I'm going to retire in 2050 I pick a Vanguard 2050 fund or Fidelity or Schwab 2050 fund all I do is literally send money every single month I set it up so it happens
automatically it could be $50 a month 500 500,000 per month and that's all I do I just send it there it automatically buys the stock market it automatically diversifies and gets more conservative over time and that's it so you know the Fitness World you've I've seen you training you you've learned about Fitness when you first start off so much information and so many different people giving you different pieces of advice right it's like oh my God how am I supposed to know what about my genetics and this and that and then over time you realize
oh it's actually pretty simple once you cut through the noise that's the same thing with money that's the same thing with investing you have to cut through the noise and it actually becomes shockingly simple oh my God this is the way that real wealth is created it's about consistent investing it's about time it's about low fees that's it and you start to wonder what's all this stuff that they publish all the time in these magazines and newspapers and on Tik Tok it's just noise do you know when you sat down with those 180 odd couples
you've spoken to about money in their in their relationship have you not had moments where one of the partners was shocked always for better in F us yeah yeah actually yes um sometimes they are shocked before they meet me because I have them prepare their document with their financials and one of them has never actually looked at their financials sometimes both and they realize it's much worse than they thought or it's much better sometimes we're talking and a one of the partners will actually talk about how they feel for the first time ever and the
other partner will be crying give me some examples of the moments that you remember that shocked you the most I think about one of the most shocking examples was a woman who was around the age of mid-40s maybe 50 and she had had a double lung transplant and um she had successfully had the transplant and she was alive um she was healthy but she knew that she would live five or 10 more years that's what the doctors told her and she said I want to share this time with my daughters they were around 11 and
12 her husband and um I want to do that I said okay what's stopping you and she said um well I still have a job and I looked at her financials they were multi-millionaires they had saved consistently doing index funds over time nothing fancy just consistent investing they she could stop working tomorrow and they would have enough money forever she couldn't stop she said I like to work I like knowing that I have a job I like the consistent income so most people are used to getting an income and that's why they find it so
difficult to retire among other reasons because the income will stop even though I can point out to them the Investment Portfolio you've built and Social Security and all these things will actually pay you people are terrified of not seeing that money come into their checking account in this case she had a ticking clock we all have a clock but she knew how long hers would go for she found it incredibly difficult to quit her job and spend time with her daughters now if we're listening to this it's like just quit it's so obvious to all
of us but we're not the ones making the decision that was quite shocking to hear how difficult it can be even in cases of life or death wanting to have a stable income can affect us and what about earning like what role does earning play like just earning more money playing all of this stuff because I think I did I'm gonna be honest I had a bias when I was 18 19 years old um I was fairly Reckless with money and I had these four credit cards I maxed out the credit cards I blew the
money I got two ccjs which is a county court judgment in the UK okay had huge debts of thousands of thousands of pounds and and in my head I thought it will be fine if I just earn more no because I'm G to earn so much money that I'll just outpace this problem and that was like my bias my bias was like I'll just earn loads of money and when I figured out what a credit score was and that mine was destroyed I thought that won't matter because I'll always pay in cash yeah classic um
every couple I speak to who has a spending problem they always say the same thing they go we just need to earn more and these are the very same couples when we crunch their numbers they'll often realize they were earning way more than they thought and you can see their faces cuz I have the whole thing on YouTube and it's this realization that oh my God the story I've been telling myself if we just earn $25,000 more and then they realize we actually are earning 25k more and they don't know what to do with it
what I tell them is you could be making $300,000 more right now and it would not make one bit of difference because you're you have a hole in your bucket and all the money is going out the next thing I ask over Spenders is um do you want to make no change small change or big changes 100% of them say big changes I go all right I take them at their word and then we start going down the list and they find it incredibly difficult to strip out even the most minor of spending so we
have a couple here that will be in literally hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt okay it's like I'm having a heart attack watching them and they're very calm it's because I understand interest rates and I know what situation they're in and so they go big changes suddenly 10 minutes later we're debating whether they can keep their Netflix subscription or not and I go guys I'm not here to berate you I'm not the teacher who's telling the kid you've been a bad kid which deep down a lot of them want a lot of us want
an authority figure to tell you you've been bad now we got to be good and that's just not what I do I help them realize it themselves and it goes slower it takes a long time but if they realize it themselves they're able to make the change every couple says they want to make big changes when it gets down to the spending is really difficult that's why you have to be incredibly careful which lifestyle purchases you make that are tied to your identity so if you are a car person and you're driving a Rolls-Royce really
fancy car it will be incredibly difficult for you to downgrade that car because it's part of your identity right meanwhile like if you have to get cheaper paper towels whatever nobody cares but you have to be very careful about what you allow to become part of your identity I'm not saying don't buy nice things and couples you should buy nice things but do it when you know that you can afford to do it forever don't just do it because oh we want to buy private school this year but we don't know how to pay for
it next year so do you think that couple should make a budget uh I don't like budgets I don't think they work I think they look backwards whereas a conscious spending plan looks forward but most couples think deep down we just need to create a budget isn't a budget the thing you gave me like the 50% 60% different a budget is couples tracking every last line item they're tracking how much they spent on corn they're tracking how much they spent on diapers someone has to create and track this laborious spreadsheet and then at the end
of the month they look at it and they go uh I guess we spent that much what are you supposed to do with that most couples have no idea does this budget tell you when you're going to be a millionaire does it tell you what your net worth is does it tell you if you have enough no it doesn't stack up to anything it's just a bunch of numbers tracking budgets Look Backwards a conscious spending plan looks forward so a conscious spending plan allows you to zoom out and say what is the vision for our
RIS rich life how do we pick the things we want to spend extravagantly on and cut cost mercilessly on the things we don't so I give you these numbers 50 to 60% for fixed costs it's up to you how you want to hit the number if you love your house you want to spend more on your house do it maybe it means you spend less on your car payment if you want to um go to concerts but you don't care about eating out fantastic take the trip go see Taylor Swift so it's up to you
to make the tetris pieces fit but you decide and all your money flows for those four numbers how do we go about teaching our kids about money my my older brother and the one that works in our company he has three kids under the age of six and I'm wondering because he's such an Optimizer are they going to end up being optimizers is there a relationship between our parents and our kids and if I want to when I do have my kids how do I make sure that they aren't worriors or avoid is the number
one thing that the couples in financial trouble say is when they were growing up their parents never talked about money never there was an episode on our podcast with this uh couple living in Kansas in a low cost of living area and um they were making $130,000 a year that's a very good income especially for their area they should have had tons of money tons of savings but their daughter came home one day with um food from the school because she had told her school we don't have have enough money to eat now they had
plenty of money why because her mom and dad were always saying we don't have enough we can't afford it daughter took that message to school and was given free food this was horrifying to the dad horrifying and what he realized at that moment was the way that I'm communicating about money is not working see most parents deep down believe that money is something to protect kids from they think it's bad deep down most Americans we we have a LoveHate relationship with money but parents think their kids let them be kids but you would never teach
a kid how to ride a bike by saying we don't talk about bikes in this family you would get them a bike you would get them on you would show them how to do it you would let them fall and then you would help them get up again so imagine this with your kids imagine that they are three years old young you pull them up sit them you say look can you help me push this button we're gonna pay for the rent this is for our beautiful house help me push that button yay give them
five okay getting them involved right from the get-go and this is if they're living with two parents this is Mom and Dad you want them to see both because too often people only see um Mom worrying about the bills and so they come to associate mom with worrying and therefore if it's their daughter they think they are supposed to worry as well now imagine the kid is uh 8 10 years old you say hey we have to go to the grocery store here's $100 we need to get all these things how should we do it
let them let them make mistakes they're going to forget about taxes let them learn right they get a little older they're planning uh pizza or a restaurant for the family here's $100 for dinner problem is they're going to pick some place like Chili's it's horrible but you got to go let them learn their lesson by the time they are 16 years old they have planned a family vacation they are aware of tradeoffs taxes tips all kinds of stuff they have helped the family buy its new car this is how you prepare kids you don't simply
say we don't talk about money in this family you let them learn about money and you tell them what you've learned about money that's how you teach them I'm somewhat scared of my kids being sport brats and I say to my partner sometimes I'm like if when we have kids should we be putting the kids in like the back of the l oh yeah you know what I mean or should we should they be upfront with us like what's the deal well I'll tell you what I I um I went to Public School uh my
entire childhood and then I got a bunch of scholarships and went to a private school and for college and at that college I remember in the first week so many of the beliefs I had about money and kids were shattered I had always assumed that if you went to a private school you were spoiled and you didn't really like to to work within 3 days I realized that was totally untrue like some kids are spoiled some are not the correlation with private school not really there it's about parents it's about how they were taught and
it's also about some element of luck as well but can you teach kids not to be spoiled yes there are so many wealthy kids who grew up not entitled appreciating what they have and the parents were still like hey I want to go to a nice hotel how how do you raise kids that AR spoil what you think so what start at the very beginning when you're teaching them about let's do this together money is something that we all do together now imagine that when you're talking to your family just the same way we talk
about creating a healthy relationship with food right how do you teach your kids to have a healthy relationship with food you talk about it all the time you go to the grocery store together you cut carrots together and potatoes and you say this is why we're putting potatoes in this thing but we never do that with money so you have a healthy relationship with money by shining a light on it by talking and asking them questions do you know how we afford this house um what's a good thing to do with credit cards and what's
a bad thing to do with credit cards hey what do you think that we have 200 bucks and we want to give it to a worthy cause how should we do it how should we pick these are the kind of conversations that families should be having and when kids start to engage with money and they see parents doing it and they realize it's not something to be ashamed of or hidden from they go oh my gosh like I have some agency over this some control that's how you prevent them from being spoiled have you got
kids yet no when you have kids if your kids come to you and they say Dad um I want to be rich mother love it I would say what does rich mean to you it means being able to have Financial Freedom so not having to look at Price tags when I go into restaurants or shops or when I'm browsing Amazon I can just take care of myself I can live somewhere nice drive a nice car go on a holiday when I want it's freedom and what is the most important thing that I should be thinking
about to create that wealth and preserve it so that I can be rich well you'll first noticed that when this hypothetical kid said I want to be rich what was my response what you mean by Rich yeah amazing what do you mean by Rich so excitement and curiosity the opposite would be why do you want to be rich you don't need to be rich that's not for People Like Us squashing those dreams so when um like my nephew um a few thanksgivings ago he was young and he said um I want to buy a Rolex
amazing where'd you get that tell me what kind of Rolex how you going to do it how much is it going to cost how much do you have to save to put that aside that's encouraging kids now they can figure out these trade-offs later but just encouraging them first off is the first thing we do with kids when they talk about money kids are smart they notice by age three four or five how their parents feel about money I talk to parents all the time and I speak to my own family and their parents of
younger kids they will tell me my four-year-old is already worried about money every time she gets a little bit of money she puts it in an envelope and saves it because she's always worried about having enough I go wow that's tough um where do you think she got that from and then Mom starts crying always I can have a very um difficult financial situation uh two parents they'll be in $150,000 of credit card debt they're stoic about it they ignore it we talk about it they engage but the minute I bring up the kids tears
and the reason for that is that you can take on a lot of Burden yourself but when you realize that your behavior is being passed on to your kids that is really difficult and that's why couples can get on the same page and build a healthy relationship for their kids as well so what would you say then to your kid says Dad I want to be rich you said amazing great love it y tell me what it means and they say what are the principles for wealth creation dad in keeping that money so that I
can be financially free it would be number one you have to find something you love to do work hard you have to love to work okay in your own way whatever it is two automatically invest every single month right that's great and number three you have to enjoy money enjoy it not just making it not just managing it but also spending it and if they said Dad should I get credit cards I said sure of course when the time is right you should get a credit card you should always pay it off every month but
you should get a credit card and when you start to spend enough probably get a rewards card you can get some free trips or cash back out of it notice that I'm not being restrictive if they say I want to buy coffee every day I would say fantastic let's talk about how you can earn enough so you never have to worry about coffee if they even said to me I want to buy a Lamborghini I'm not a Lamborghini guy I couldn't care less I would say amazing how do you think you could do that and
what if they said oh um you know I want to be a school teacher I would say okay you know have you talked to any school teachers and asked them how much they make then calculate how long it would take you to buy a Lamborghini kids are smart they can do these things we just have to challenge them they say Dad I've only got my pocket money so how am I going to become an investor I don't have enough M money yet how much do you need to invest I assume you need like, of pounds
what if I told you you only need to start with $100 I don't have $100 I have S pound pocket money have you asked anyone else how you could make an extra $93 no okay what could you do to ask them to make $93 what could you do clean the cars in the street keep going I paper around and on and on and on so here I'm not giving them the answer I'm challenging them to learn how to think for themselves and to make $93 for a kid you could do it it won't happen in
one day but you could do it very very quickly how much money do you think you need to start investing you should start investing as soon as you can you could start investing with 50 bucks a month my my dad helped me open up a custodial account when I was 14 years old so I started investing then and my dad immigrated from India so I was very lucky that he pushed me um but if you're a parent you should definitely be getting your kids to invest early even 50 bucks a month makes a huge difference
so you invested at 14 yeah and I've been investing ever since and how did that do for you fantastic you know why because I sold I never sold almost anything it just stayed every single investment every single month no magic no random like amazing stock picks except for a couple lucky ones it's just basically almost all index funds just every single month what about crypto I mean if you want to have it as one to 5% of your portfolio as speculation fantastic the problem is that crypto investors I talk to don't believe in diversification they
will often have all their money in it and they don't really they don't follow classic principles of investing and the worst part is it's hard to argue when it's done so well so people go like what the do you know 7% that sucks Grandpa and I go all right fine it has performed incredibly well at least in certain parts of crypto but you do not want to have the majority of your assets in one thing and it's the problem with crypto as well is you only hear when it's doing well exactly so whenever the the
bare Market comes in everybody goes quite quiet they get very quiet where'd you go guys sometimes I follow with them on Twitter half the time their account is deleted that's called survivorship bias you only hear about things when they're good the minute it's bad account deleted never heard from them again what about gambling you must see some gambling in relationships I'm not sure how legal gambling is in every state over here in the USA but in the UK gambling is legal so yeah it's often an issue in relationships a quiet issue yeah it is a
quiet issue I think um I don't hear about it too often I suspect that um gamblers simply don't want to talk about it yeah which is actually the worst of all maybe I need to find a way to reach some gamblers I mean we do hear some really tragic stuff we hear about um folks who have lost money on bad Investments late in life we hear about parents whose kids are bleeding them dry but we also hear about some really positive things you know couples who who have quietly accumulated money over time and they just
don't realize we made it and sometimes I get to do the very pleasant thing of saying like hey you two clearly love each other you've done this together you made it have have you ever seen marriages fall apart because of these issues we've had couples break up directly after our podcast marriages of course I get emails all the time the reason that we broke up was money but you know what's interesting research shows which I cite in the book that um when couples fight they don't fight about money you know what they fight about kids
chores and communication money is rarely talked about it's only talked about when there's a fight but it's the least of what people are typically arguing about kids chores communication that's what gets fought about unromantic though isn't it seen as being you know there's a stigma don't talk about money and yeah which is crazy I I encourage couples to have a monthly money meeting I even give them an exact agenda here's the Google Doc work it out adapt it for your own needs start off with a compliment you know I really appreciated that you planned that
trip for us to the grandparents like the you did such a great job with flights start off like that people look at me like I'm speaking cling on to them an agenda for my wife or my husband I go what they go that's weird I go I think it's weird for you to go 40 years fighting about money never talking about it never creating a vision instead of using an agenda it's so interesting because you know much of the issues in my household growing up were money related so between my my mother and father and
there is no way that my mother had any idea how much money my dad had or how much money the household had wow and I really as you were saying it now I thought God if they just sat down once and had that conversation like how much money do we actually have here God our childhood would have been so drastically different let's pause for a minute to talk about today's sponsor which is whoop I often think how lucky we are to live in a time where we can so easily access information on how our body
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CEO to start your free trial today and if you're already a whoop member taking part in this challenge do me a favor send me a DM a message and let me know how you're getting on do you know you said you are at a point where you now think you have enough yeah but you're still striving for more and still investing and still earning and still waking up every day and driving then why I like it I love what I do I love working I um the more that I make the more that it is
a sign I'm creating value that's it but I systematically earn more like I have my rules so for example unexpected income that comes in 70 to 90% of that will be invested right meaning like I'll take 10% and have a good time but I'm primarily investing unexpected income question then if you got a$ 100 million windfall yeah how would your life change it's hard to say I have a very good life i100 million comes in what you going to do with it I mean it's going to change almost nothing I would I would it would
accelerate some of my plans for charity um for a house because I would have the house drawn up even though I don't even want to buy a house anytime soon I would probably have the house drawn up and then I would say call me when it's ready to move in and don't call me before then I I want nothing to do with building it I don't want to see a piece of wood go over there why would you buy a house purely because what else are you going to do with the money of course giveaway
you got to spend the money somehow but a why house what else you going to do with it just save it I already saved it I already invested it see what happens is when you start to as you know you start to hit your numbers and exceed them bigger than you ever thought possible you start to realize that so much of our life is spent playing defense with money that's the relationship that most of us have with money will we have enough at the grocery store will we have enough to fix the window will we
have enough to get a car and most people live that way but if you start to save automatically and you start to invest and you really make it a focus to earn and understand how money works at a certain point you go oh my gosh objectively speaking looking at our numbers we don't ever have to worry about the price of a chicken bowl again so then what then what is the point of it all give it away I guess this is where I think um this is the real Challenge and you know a lot of
retirees they get to the point where they have accumulated money and but they never really thought about the point of it all what is the point of it all I tell sometimes people um surprise me by how uncreative they are with money I'll give you an example I ask people what is your money dial what do you love to spend money on and um people they usually have a pretty good answer the most common answer is um food the next common answer is uh travel then health and wellness and there's a bunch of other money
dials so one guy once told me um I like coffee that that's his money dial coffee I go what do you mean he goes I order different beans from whatever I go can I be honest with you I'm bored I'm bored by your answer cuz he he was doing very well I like okay you buy a $20 bag of coffee beans all right you have way more money and he's just like he was a little insulted that I said it but I was trying to shake him because I was bored some person with that much
money should not be telling me that the thing they love to spend money on only is coffee so I go listen you like making your own coffee he goes yeah I have my Aro press and this and that I go what if if you considered hiring the Barista from your local place to come to your house and show you how to fine-tune that coffee what if you really learn how to spend money on that experience and deepen the experience it's not about buying 10 more coffee bags it's about going deeper a year later or two
years later we talked he had done that and he got really into coffee he was now traveling to go to different locations Colombia Rwanda all these places where he had started to appreciate the coffee so sometimes we need to get more creative you don't have to spend thousands of dollars but if you and your partner love this thing think about how you can spend money to appreciate it even more and your strategy is to then stop spending money on the things that you don't appreciate yeah so this why your Rich Life vision comes in what
do we care about what do we want to spend extravagantly on and then what do we want to cut cost mercilessly on we always start with what do we want to spend more on so when I people I have a variety of exercises I walk them through like what's your perfect week I'll tell you that uh I've done this with many many people not one person has ever said my perfect week involves doing laundry cool could we pay that out and if you can't afford to do that today that's okay put it on your vision
and say when we get to this number we're never going to do laundry again fantastic but it also gives you something to look forward to you know it's thrown around that once household income equals x number then people are happy or at least that there diminishing returns is it yeah that $75,000 number first of all that was already like 10 years ago so we have to factor in inflation but second more recent research has show uh shown that actually happiness continues increasing there's also self-satisfaction so there's a variety of different variables basically don't believe that
$75,000 number that's tossed around it doesn't make any sense what's more important is you create a vision together and you go what would make this week this year this next 10 years amazing for us let's just put it all out there it doesn't even matter if we know how we can afford it or not then let's talk about it do we know our numbers do we have enough can we pay for our kids college or not can we buy an extra iPhone charger so we don't have to run to the bedroom every day and you
start to create and design your rich life together that's the way you do it very interesting topic and it's particularly pertinent to me because you know as I said I spoke to a divorce ly the other week and he told me that it's the one of the top two reasons couples get divorced is because of money problems and I really didn't know what he meant I thought maybe it's one of the partners loses all of their money and it causes arguments or maybe it's just that there's a lot of resentment and frustration built up because
there's opaqueness surrounding the subject of money and it's kind of like the elephant in the room that has never been addressed and this is exactly what you try and do in this book and you do it so masterfully your first book is sold you know seven figures worth of copies and I understand why and I have a sneaking suspicion that this book is going to be equally successful because it is the elephant in the room in most relationships the fact that you know when I saw that you'd written a book about money for couples it
immediately made me realize I go Chris we've never talked about that in our relationship and why not and it's a whole complex Myriad of reasons and Trauma and uh emotions and insecurities and shame but like all things in my relationship the more talking I did about it the better it became and the less of a an issue it became and you know there's almost a correlation in relationships isn't there between the amount you talk about an issue and how big the issue is um and that relates to all things whether it's sex or if it's
the in-laws or it's friendships or whatever it might be so it's a really well-timed book and I've really not discovered one quite like it so I highly recommend everybody goes and checks it out it's out in December um the link is below so if you're listening to this now you should be able to pre-order this book right now and hopefully this can form the Foundation of a conversation that you very much need to have in your relationship one that might just save your relationship such a pleasure we have a closing tradition on the podcast where
the last guest leaves a question to the next in the diary of the CEO and the question that's been left for you is what can you do to improve humanity and the life of people I think in my world the best thing I can do is uh set an example of someone who publicly speaks about the things that are important to them who wakes up every day and has a great time teaching loves what I do and models having a loving relationship with the people around me yeah leading by example in every sense of the
word thank you so much such a pleasure to speak to you and you've open my eyes to so many things and every time I have these conversations I hope that uh I walk away with some kind of actionable insight into something that matters in my life and that's certainly the case in this conversation so thank thank you so much for coming coming back today thank [Music] you every single time you eat you have an opportunity to improve your health and that's why I love Zoe because Zoe helps me to make the smartest food choices for
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