What Schools Will Never Teach You About Money By Robert T. Kiyosaki
Level 4: The I’m-a-Professional Level
Download 5.81 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
UnfairAdvantageDownload
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Assets Business Real Estate Paper Assets Commodities BALANCE SHEET Liabilities Income
Level 4: The I’m-a-Professional Level
This is the do-it-yourselfer investor. When you look at the CASHFLOW Quadrant, they are in the S quadrant as an investor. Many retirees become Level-4 investors once their working days are over. This investor may buy and sell a few stocks, often from a discount broker. After all, why should they pay a stockbroker’s higher commissions when they do their own research and make their own decisions? If they invest in real estate, the do-it-yourselfer will find, fix, and manage their own properties. And if the person is a gold bug, they will buy and store their own gold and silver. Assets Business Real Estate Paper Assets Commodities BALANCE SHEET Liabilities Income Expenses INCOME STATEMENT Five Levels of Investors Unfair Advantage 221 220 6. It is difficult to raise money as an S-quadrant investor. It is easy for a B-quadrant investor to raise capital. Once a person knows how to build a business in the B quadrant, success attracts money. It becomes easy to raise money in the I quadrant if you are successful in the B quadrant. That is the big “if.” The ease of raising capital is one of the biggest differences between being successful in the S quadrant versus being successful in the B quadrant. Once a person is successful in the B quadrant, life is easy. The challenge is becoming successful. The problem with success in the S quadrant is that raising capital is always difficult. For example, it is easy to take a B-quadrant business public via selling shares of the business on the stock market. The story of Facebook is a modern example of how easy it is to raise capital for a B-quadrant business. If Facebook had remained just a small web-consulting firm, it would have been very difficult to raise investor capital. Another example is McDonald’s. If McDonald’s had remained just a single hamburger store, an S-quadrant operation, no one would have invested in it. Once McDonald’s began expanding into the B quadrant via a franchise system and was listed on the stock exchange, money poured in. The reason a business sells “shares” is because the more they share, the richer the entrepreneur becomes. An S-quadrant business has a tough time selling shares because the business is too small to share. In real estate, the same is true. When I was a small real estate investor investing in single-family homes, condos, and small 4- to 30-unit apartment buildings, it was difficult getting loans. The moment Kim and I began investing in apartment buildings with over 100 units, banks were more willing to lend us much more money. The reason: On 100-unit-plus properties priced in the millions, banks do not finance the investor. They finance the investment. In other words, on properties of over 100 units, banks look more closely at the investment than the investor. Download 5.81 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling