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Free PDF E-Booklet
Free PDF E-Booklet
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Retire Cash Flow may be the Best Retirement Plan Available
Judy Arndt
William Hutchings, who is not old enough to retire in the
traditional sense, works two days a week and enjoys spending the other five days
any way he wants to.
Tom and Roberta Standen are in their 70s and continue to
work their cash flow business while enjoying the fruits of their labors. They've
brought their children into the family business and don't have to be there day
after day unless they want to.
Shorty Williams sends postcards to his friends from all
over the world as he takes fascinating journeys, but he will tell you (as he
does in this issue) that at 73, he is not retired and has no intention of
becoming retired.
Jeff Armstrong has been talking about his retirement plan
for years at Cash Flow conventions. He calls it "Terrific Tail Ends: How to Keep
a Piece of the Action," and it is his way of earning a great deal more than
commission from the private mortgage deals he does.
So, do any cash flow professionals retire? Are retirement
and cash flow concepts that simply cannot coexist?
Entrepreneurialism and Retirement
When most people talk about retirement, they are referring
to a time when a person stops working at the nine to five job he's had for years
and starts living the rest of his life. All of the governmental approaches to
retirement work toward providing income and benefits to people whose primary
source of income and benefits no longer exists. Social Security, Medicare, even
the federally sanctioned retirement plans like IRAs and 401(k) programs are
designed to provide people with income and benefits to supplant those no longer
provided by an individual's employer.
Entrepreneurs don't come from that place. They are more
likely to be self-employed and not have their length of employment tied to clock
or calendar. The retirement ages of 55 or 62 or 65 mean nothing to them. If they
choose to scale back their business at the age of 40, they will. If they choose
to continue working well into their 70's, they'll do that, too. One entrepreneur
started his business at the age of 33. At the age of 45, he had three businesses
and a staff of fully commissioned sales people. One day, he suffered a serious
heart attack. Following the attack, he hired a Chief Operating Officer. After
that, he only went to work one or two days a week. Today, at the age of 77, he
is still the CEO of the company, but he meets the COO for lunch one day a week
and spends that afternoon at his office. He is worth many millions of dollars
and continues to bring home a paycheck every week.
Is he retired? Technically, no. Realistically, the COO runs
the company and just keeps the owner informed - and it's been that way for 30
years.
As self-employed, independent contractors, cash flow
professionals are entrepreneurs. Shorty Williams points out in his article that
he doesn't need to be at an office or anywhere else except when closings are
being held on the properties he purchases, manages, or sells. That allows him to
spend a lot of time traveling. He may look retired, but he isn't.
Williams and the Standen's have found that they can leave
the day-to-day operations of their business to employees who may or may not be
family members. That's another benefit of cash flow.
In many cases, cash flow income is residual; if set up
correctly, it will come in on a regular basis without any further involvement
from the cash flow consultant. William Hutchings is a small factor. He manages
his work time by managing the number of clients he has. Hutchings also has
decided that he does not need to make tons of money. He would rather make enough
to live comfortably and enjoy more of his family than work harder and make more.
Does that mean cash flow consultants don't need to think
about IRAs and other retirement plans? Not at all! As we get older, we need more
time to relax. It is not likely that you'll want to maintain the same pace at 65
that you have at 45 or 35. A self-directed IRA affords you an opportunity to
create a pool of investment funds that you control. Self-directed IRAs are a
perfect vehicle for generating income from successfully investing in cash flows
now, but they also create a pool of money that you can use after you are 65 to
continue investing as a funding source. The primary goal of any cash flow
professional considering life after 65 is to develop a business that can keep
going, keep supplying needed income, but with less and less involvement from the
consultant. Your post-65 life is a good time to slow down and enjoy everything
around you, including your adult children and the grandchildren they take home
with them when they leave.
The Business of Retirement Plans
If you are already investing in debt instruments and feel
comfortable enough with your understanding of the cash flow business, you could
offer your services as a consultant to people who are looking for investments
with a better return. Keep this in mind, however. You may not offer advice to
your clients concerning the quality of any investment nor can you tell them that
your investments are better than someone else's. You can tell them what cash
flows are and that people invest in them and that anyone who wanted to invest in
them could use you as a finder of these investments. The beneficiary of a
self-directed IRA will have to do his own due diligence or seek the advice of a
licensed financial advisor before deciding whether to invest in any deal you
would bring to him at his request. Of course, you can help gather information,
but you cannot express an opinion regarding the viability of the deal. The
investor, the beneficiary of the self-directed IRA, has to decide for himself.
Even if he or she asks you if you think it is a good investment, you can only
remind him or her that your responsibility is to find prospective investments,
not determine their quality.
This is a licensing issue. Michael Scott of Pensco says
that even the term you use in describing your responsibility, whether it is
broker or consultant, is significant. Scott thinks the term "broker" may be more
descriptive of what your role is and, therefore, safer, but if there is concern
that you might be mistaken by state regulators for a stock broker, consultant
would be a better term. Definitely do not use the term "advisor." To call
yourself an investment advisor, you will need a license.
You must approach your client in the same way as you
approach your funding sources - only don't try to convince the client that
purchasing a particular investment is a good deal. He has to figure that out for
himself.
Real estate is a popular investment alternative when using
funds from a self-directed IRA; however, just as notes are less of a hassle than
real estate for the owner of an income-producing property, they create fewer
problems for investors who like the security of real estate but don't want to be
landlords.
All collateral-based debt instruments are suitable for
investment, but so are what you might consider non-collateralized deals. So says
Rich Desich of Equity Trust. For instance, an IRA holder could purchase accounts
receivable. The receivables become the collateral for the investment. Keep in
mind, however, that factoring is a complicated process that may require chasing
after payors who don't pay their bills. Investors might feel more comfortable
providing funds to a small factor for the factor to use to purchase receivables.
Desich says that is allowed. Let the factor manage the invoices (for a fee)
while the investor collects the profits in his IRA. Again, the investor must
make the ultimate investment decision. Factors have to be wary of offering
advice as well.
Some small factors accept private investment dollars and
pay a percentage interest. However, these funds are considered unsecured.
Federal law does not allow IRA funds to be used in unsecured investments.
Of interest to cash flow consultants exploring the
possibility of assisting a client who wants to invest in debt instruments are
the fees you will charge for your services. Again, you must be careful about how
you characterize what you do. If finding something for someone to invest in is
what you do, you may want to charge a finder's fee. Don't call it a referral
fee. Again, you must avoid any type of terminology or activity that suggests you
are offering your client investment advice. Determine what services you are
charging for and how much you will charge. Develop a fee structure.
Be careful about violating securities laws as well as other
laws that pertain to licensing. That's the key to staying safe. Rely on the
companies you are working with who administer the self-directed IRAs. They know
what is safe and what is not safe. At least until you are comfortable working
with clients who are using their self-directed IRAs to invest in cash flow, rely
heavily on the administrators of the accounts to let you know what you can and
cannot do legally. As an alternative, seek advice from a lawyer who understands
the legal complexities of legislated retirement funds.
Retirement in the cash flow industry means two things.
First, the industry and your work in it can provide you with a source of income
for the rest of your life. If you want to continue working, you can do it. If
you want to hire others to run your business, you can do that, too. And, the
promise of residual income makes cash flow very attractive as an investment for
retirement. Second, you can work with clients who want to invest in cash flows
through a self-directed IRA but need your expertise at finding cash flows to do
that. Just be careful to stay within the law.
You can now look forward to a happy, healthy, and hopefully
profitable retirement
Judy Arndt has been editor of
the American Cash Flow Journal, and is presently working with Cash Flow Exclusive Magazine. If you interested in receiving a copy of the magazine, send your name and email address to distribution@cashflowexclusive.com
"Reprinted and used with Permission of Author 11-2010"
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