Archive for the ‘streams of income’ Category

Follow Your Dream With Fixer Upper Houses

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.
— Henry David Thoreau

While you pay a price for following your dream, you also pay a price for staying where you are. You lose the opportunity to develop new life-coping skills that help you deal with unexpected crises or joblessness. You may suffer from depression by staying in a debilitating job.

Marsha Sinetar, in To Build the Life You Want, Create the Work You Love, says that excelling at a job that you love could be the best mental health insurance for people who feel depressed or anxious about their work. Americans spend $12.4 billion each year to treat clinical depression.

Do You Have Zest and Gusto?

Science fiction writer Ray Bradbury, in Zen and the Art of Writing, wrote that, “life is short, misery sure, and mortality certain.” Yet, he advocated that as we move along life’s way, and in our work, our lives should be filled with “zest” and “gusto.” With zest and gusto, traveling to the grave, Bradbury vowed to fight injustice, appreciate beauty and encourage children.

Is there enough zest and gusto in your life to fight in-justice, appreciate beauty and encourage children?

What do You Trade Your “Life Energy” For?

We should wisely use the time that we must devote to work. Our working hours constitute at least one-third of our lives during the work week. As Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin point out in Your Money or Your Life, money is what we chose to trade our time, or “life-energy,” for. The authors distinguish between “wants” vs. “needs,” and promote not wasting money on unnecessary consumer goods. Instead, they advocate conscientiously saving money until you reach the point where you can free yourself from the working treadmill.

Fixer Upper Houses was Right for Me

The independence of working with fix-up houses was this type of “right” job for me, and can be for you too. It can be the road to operate a business that develops one’s independence, creativity and imagination. With real estate, you can invest a small amount and gradually accumulate money as both your rental income and equity increase over time.

Video of TV Interview for “Carve Out Your Niche”

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William Nickerson Says “It’s Never Too Late to Start with Rental Houses”

Saturday, February 19th, 2011

You are never too old or too young to start investing in rental properties.

Take it from William Nickerson, author of How I Turned $1,000 into Three Million in Real Estate – In My Spare Time, who said,

“It is never too late to start, although fortune favors early starters. Each day of delay loads the dice against  maximum success. But I know of many successful owners who bought their first income property after retirement at sixty-five. You can always start later in life.”

Age is Relative

To put things into perspective:

Thomas Edison invented the telephone at age 84;

Benjamin Franklin helped in the writing of the United States Constitution when he was 81;

Frank Lloyd Wright designed the Marin County Civic Center in California at age 88, and;

I started buying rental properties as a mere child at age 47.

Too Much Work?

I have a friend who retired when he was 65, but he had to take a job at an Arby’s fast food restaurant to help make ends meet. I asked him, “Why didn’t you just buy a few rental properties before you retired?”

He replied, “It’s too much work.”

Too much work?

Which is more work, being trapped in a restaurant 8 hours a day doing menial labor, or having free time all day, and cashing rental checks once a month? Sure, there is some repair work every once in awhile, but you can hire a handyman to take care of that.

It’s Never Too Early Either

I’ve had young people ask me, “Is it too early to get started?” If you have the motivation and don’t mind learning as you go, there is no better time to build wealth and security than when you are in your 20’s. You don’t have to know everything to start.

I have a friend who got started at age 25. He bought a 4-plex apartment complex. He lived in one unit and rented out the others. He had a sharp learning curve in the beginning, starting off at an Elmer Fudd skill level, but after he had done it a year or so, he had his business operating like a Swiss watch.

Are you too young or too old?

It’s not about age. It’s about just getting started.

Calvin Coolidge said, “We cannot do everything at once, but we can do something at once. “

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When we buy a fixer upper house, “we are what we are”

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

I was watching the movie Australia last night, starring Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman. It was such a classic tale that it sent chills down my back.

A man starts up a small cattle empire in the outback of Australia. He is killed and his inexperienced wife has to take over the operation. She’s in way over her head, but in order to save the ranch she has to drive the herd thousands of miles to the market. She asks her ranch hand to lead to trail drive.

The tough ranch hand assembles a rag tag group, which include of a drunk, two aboriginal women, a young boy, and the wife, to herd the cattle.  Despite stampedes, poisoned watering holes, and other travails, they keep moving on.

We are what we are

Before the trip begins,the ranch hand addresses his team and goes over the “dos and don’ts” of working a cattle drive.

At the end of his speech he says, “Well, we are what we are.”

He said it with some degree of exasperation at having to use vastly unqualified people on the drive.

But, I also thought that he said it with a sense optimistic determination. As if he is saying, “This is all I have to work with. Its not as good as it could be, but I’m going to make it work and we’ll get these cattle to market.”

I am what I am

When you buy your first fixer upper house, it also requires that you take the attitude that “Well, I am what I am.”

You don’t have all the experience that you might want to begin, but you don’t let that stop you. There’s a lot to learn and you learn as you go. Your determination gets you over a lot of obstacles.

Upcoming Radio Interviews

August 20, 8:30 am, I will be on David Sutton’s show, KSRN 1490 am, Los Alamos, New Mexico.

August 25 at 8:08 am,  I will be on Jeff Anderson’s show, KSDR 1480 am, Watertown, South Dakota.

Watch this space for further developments!

Owning a rental house is better than having a pension

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Owning rental houses far exceeds the benefit of the pension that you may receive from your job. I worked for the state of Arizona for 13 years, and I will one day receive a pension of around $1,000 a month.

But, does that really provide security?

Each year the value of my pension will go down because it is not tied to inflation. So, after 10 years I’ll still receive $1,000 a month but because of inflation, it may be actually only worth $100 dollars a month because the cost of my groceries, my clothes, health care, and other costs have all gone up each year.

Rental houses provide a better pension. If I get $1,000 a month in rent profits, it not only keeps up with inflation, but it exceeds inflation.

Which pension program would your rather have? One that increases in value with the passing years, or one that decreases in value?

Should I refinance my house to buy a rental house?

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

I recently received the following email from a student who is taking my free 7-week course.

It addresses the very topical issue of refinancing your existing  home, and taking out equity to purchase a rental property. Below is the question and my response.

From: Janet
Sent: Friday, June 18, 2010 12:12 PM
To: ‘Terry Sprouse
Subject: Re:7-Week Fixer-Upper/Rental House Course: Lesson 7

How does the refinancing work in this underwater market? i just bought a house in Jan, do i have to wait 10 years to do this? i am 50 now, should i wait till i am 60 to start doing this? sincerely, Janet

Hi Janet,

That’s a good question.

Everything depends on how long it takes to generate some equity in your house. And, of course, that depends on the situation that the market is in. Right now, as I’m sure you know, housing values are not going up very quickly. In fact, in many areas of the country, housing prices are going down.

So, in your case, all you can do is wait and see what happens. If the housing market improves again, you may be able to refinance sooner rather than later. But, until the equity in your house increases, you would not be able to refinance and buy an investment house.

Best regards,

Terry

———

Usually you need to live in a house several years before you have enough equity to refinance and purchase another house. I lived in my house ten years before I took out the equity to buy my first fixer-upper rental house.

Another possibility it to find a partner with more equity in their house, or who has some cash, and to jointly buy an investment property.

***Warning! Shameless Book Promo Coming Up***

If you are new to investing, make sure you have a good inspection done of your investment property, and follow the safe steps for investing, as I discuss in my new, easy-to-follow guide for beginning investors, “Never Sell Your Home! How to Turn Your Home into a Rental House.”

Buying an investment rental house with the equity from your home is one of the safest and easiest ways to start a reliable new income stream.  But, timing and planning are everything.

I wish I had remembered that before I spilled spot remover on my dog, and he disappeared.

But in real estate investing, one of the most basic principals, like the law of gravity,  is that you must  have some equity in your house before you can take it out and use it.

You can’t rush things, or you’ll wind up with your dreams broken faster than a movie star wannabe, just off the bus from Kansas.

Streams of Income

Saturday, December 1st, 2007

After reading Connie’s post the other day on conniebrz.com about “tackling issues by creating lists,” it reminded me of a list that I had been thinking about making to post on Amazon.com under their “So you’d like to …” guides. I composed my list and posted it on Amazon.com. Here is a link for “So you’d like to create multiple perpetual streams of income.”

Like the old saw goes, “As you walk through the cow pasture of life, you’re bound to step into the truth once in awhile.” Multiple streams of income is a truth worth stepping into.

In the old days, people could rely on one job throughout life to see them through until retirement, but these days we need several streams of income to achieve that same level of security. Job security is not what it used to be, but with several streams of income, one can dry up, but we can still keep our financial ship floating with the other streams.

Info on Terry’s Book

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