What Dave Ramsey Isn't Telling You

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  • Опубліковано 22 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 388

  • @taylorhanttula2269
    @taylorhanttula2269 Рік тому +98

    George is so humble and relatable for the average American. It's so refreshing how passionate and content he is about keeping the course and doing the right thing by being successful in the most average, standard way.

    • @fxxtickyx
      @fxxtickyx 11 місяців тому +3

      Well he has a solid point, the amount of people that would make it by investing and such is low and it requires a lot of luck, knowledge, confidence, perseverance and probably more characteristics that 90% of people don't have, so his way is more correct in the sense that most people who try it would succeed, but the fact that he's content with his current finances is a good thing, it means that he's happier than someone who's richer and upset because he wants more and feels like he's missing out FOMO

  • @tiffanypan7182
    @tiffanypan7182 Рік тому +56

    George's confidence shines through! This young man has a bright future ahead of him.

  • @alicehansen6905
    @alicehansen6905 Рік тому +36

    I work for a cash positive company. No debt. All real estate is paid for. It was so amazing to see the benefits of this for the entire company during COVID. I wish more people could have the peace of mind knowing their employment isn’t solely contingent on the stock market.

    • @jrey1
      @jrey1 11 місяців тому +1

      I work for a company where whenever they're getting ready to buy land/construct the new building, they write a check. One example a few years ago was a 35 million dollar check, so if it failed, then nobody is owed

  • @gomaze3082
    @gomaze3082 11 місяців тому +59

    I've been following Dave Ramsey's philosophy siince 2001. Been debt free since 2004. I learned to live on half of what I make and invest a good part of the rest. I am retired now at 70 years old and still debt free. I am remodeling my house and enjoying life. I vacation where I want and eat what I want, just enjoying life. Thanks Dave.

    • @lukebancroft9326
      @lukebancroft9326 11 місяців тому

      What was the hardest step after so many years following this principled method?

    • @gomaze3082
      @gomaze3082 11 місяців тому

      @@lukebancroft9326 In the very beginning I was listening to the Dave Ramsey show on conservative radio. I was only making $8.50 an hour and it seemed like it would be impossible to save $1000. I had just bought into vending business as my side hussle. I maxed out 6 credit cards and was paying it back a quarter at a time. It was the hardest thing I ever did. Actually believing that I could do it was the hardest thing. The second hardest thing was adjusting my life style to live on half of what I made. I drove a 98 Saturn wagon until 2015. When I finally traded it, it had 245K miles on it. I still didn't buy a new car. Paid cash for it and still driving it. I hope this bit of info helps you succeed with your journey.

    • @gomaze3082
      @gomaze3082 11 місяців тому

      @@lukebancroft9326 It was number 1. I was so broke saving money seemed impossible. I hope this helps.

    • @michaels3205
      @michaels3205 8 місяців тому +1

      That’s amazing. You should be proud of yourself. There are people who don’t have the proper discipline for credit cards and that’s ok . However there are many that can and that’s great too

    • @gomaze3082
      @gomaze3082 8 місяців тому

      ​@@michaels3205The secret to getting off credit cards is saving the $1K emergency fund and only purchasing needs not wants.

  • @salinaraey5165
    @salinaraey5165 11 місяців тому +11

    I was worried by the title that this was going to be a Ramsey bash but was pleased to be introduced to the three of you. My children have been raised to be debt free and we cash-flowed our daughter’s college education. I wish they would reintroduce home economics in high school and require “financial peace” as a graduation requirement. Thank you for the enjoyable conversation.

  • @scottkolaya2110
    @scottkolaya2110 11 місяців тому +17

    8:17 Where George gets this wrong is he compares the average credit card user (Dave does too) with people that have never carried a balance. If you studied just the brain activity of the people who never carry a balance, I'm sure you'll find they don't care at all about debit or credit. Because they always think it's their money they are spending, not someone else's They're never thinking I'll buy this today and can pay it off in 3 months. I completely agree that the "average" CC user will spend more. But comparing spending habits between someone who pays it off every month with the "average" is nonsense. I'm sure George doesn't understand this at all because he had terrible debt and thinks everyone thinks the same.

    • @bryan_witha_whyy
      @bryan_witha_whyy 10 місяців тому +5

      That’s the problem I have with them. They don’t allow for differences.

    • @michaels3205
      @michaels3205 8 місяців тому +5

      Exactly they are so focused on this ONE stupid study. Does this work for a lot of people yes. However if you have the mentality using your credit card like you would do with a debit card you will find that they are just mind savvy and people using cash. Let’s make this clear ONE study does not make this factual

    • @bryan_witha_whyy
      @bryan_witha_whyy 8 місяців тому

      @@michaels3205 I actually feel more pain using credit than cash. I think a lot of people are like that too.

    • @scottkolaya2110
      @scottkolaya2110 8 місяців тому +3

      @michaels3205 Since then, I actually read the whole study, and it's not credit vs. debit. It's credit vs. cash in your wallet. That even makes it more absurd to compare it to debit cards.

    • @205rider8
      @205rider8 6 місяців тому

      People like you are NOT Dave’s audience!!! You already have deep knowledge of what Dave and Ramsey personalities are preaching. As smart as you are, can’t you see this ?

  • @bridgetnash638
    @bridgetnash638 Рік тому +99

    It’s George sitting criss-cross-apple-sauce on the couch for me. 😂

    • @roxanneldeleon3801
      @roxanneldeleon3801 Рік тому +3

      😂😂😂 right? 😊

    • @stowie7733
      @stowie7733 Рік тому +4

      They are all sitting like that! 😂😂 my body says Nope!

    • @MrBrewman95
      @MrBrewman95 Рік тому +5

      You are officially old when you can't sit like that. 😂

    • @TrashyButClassy1776
      @TrashyButClassy1776 Рік тому

      Gotta love him lol he’s the best.

    • @YvonnesVintageVilla
      @YvonnesVintageVilla 11 місяців тому +2

      @@stowie7733 LOL. Mine says it with all capital letters and exclamation points. NOPE!!!

  • @ChrisD1865
    @ChrisD1865 Рік тому +9

    It’s so good to hear a counter-cultural perspective to finances, debt, investing. Nice job George!

  • @alexeatsLV
    @alexeatsLV Рік тому +16

    I've been binging this channel and I love the variety of guests that you have! And of course George is always great to watch!

  • @econadventure5486
    @econadventure5486 11 місяців тому +5

    We did the "manual" underwriting. It was called a "Portfolio Loan" meaning it was kept in house and no plan to sell the loan so it didn't have to meet Fannie Mae / Freddy Mac lending requirements. Plenty of income, i.e. we were "Well Qualified Buyers", with a decent down payment. I can't remember 10-20% They are hard to find. Just pick up the phone and start dialing lenders and ask if they do Portfolio mortgage lending? Not Financial Advise ;)

    • @thadvocates9974
      @thadvocates9974 11 місяців тому

      Why do the random calling? Just use Churchhill mortgage

    • @deplorable-2013
      @deplorable-2013 6 місяців тому

      @@thadvocates9974 A portfolio loan is a deferent loan. Manual underwriting is done on conventional loan as well and still sold to Fannie/Freddie.

  • @rickyc6463
    @rickyc6463 11 місяців тому +3

    George thanks for being so genuine it comes through when you speak…. I admire you and see how far you have come….and see you flying to the moon..continue being you😊

  • @nevea.4621
    @nevea.4621 Рік тому +9

    Giving random bonuses as "thank you" to my employees makes me incredibly happy 😊
    Gratitude on their faces is priceless!
    He is absolutely right when comes to Giving.
    More you give , more you receive in return 🙌

  • @ron9665
    @ron9665 Рік тому +7

    1:04:20 Housing doubling in the past year is great for you... I don't understand why this is great, if you are not planning on selling the house or using it to gain credit towards another purchase, then doesn't an inflated value just amount to a larger amount x levy rate = greater taxes and escalating insurance premiums??
    (Please understand that this in not meant to be jabbing at anything, but probably because I'm short-sighted on the benefit)

    • @oboe23able
      @oboe23able 3 місяці тому

      It’s great for them because they can hit the eject button on everything you just said to suffer the consequence of $xxx,xxx.00 in profit.
      Dont feel like paying the greater taxes or insurance premiums? Sell the property and bank.

  • @sarasounds2389
    @sarasounds2389 Рік тому +6

    Andrei you're so cool I love to see you working on this new project. ❤

  • @tiagoj8020
    @tiagoj8020 Рік тому +20

    9:48 Yes! There are more protections with a credit card vs debit card. Its more difficult to get your money back when the money was taken directly from your checking account!

  • @carolannstevens5814
    @carolannstevens5814 11 місяців тому +1

    George, you are thee BEST!!! Great examples with the weather and everything!

  • @billlandenwich1928
    @billlandenwich1928 Рік тому +13

    George is a great speaker and presenter but ultimately he is one of Dave’s puppets because Dave is looking to retire soonish and he needs personalities to carry the brand forward…and Dave signs his paycheck.
    Tons of people have built tremendous wealth using debt. Dave has built his wealth because he has a great business that generates significant cash flow over a long period of time.

    • @jarvinator94
      @jarvinator94 Рік тому +1

      This is true. When Dave says the greatest wealth building tool is your income, he almost never mentions that if you have a ton of disposable cash flow from a high income you can invest and get rich.

    • @hellocolor101llo5
      @hellocolor101llo5 11 місяців тому

      @@jarvinator94nah these advises work on any income. I am a single mom and went from debt to over 650k networth in a few years with Dave s advises. You just have to go all in. I have seen it happen to many other people in our Ramsey Facebook group. It legit works.

  • @clairemckayhart1109
    @clairemckayhart1109 Рік тому +2

    First time listener. really enjoyed the show.

  • @antoniosantiago9794
    @antoniosantiago9794 Рік тому +6

    GEORGE IS THE BEST. WELL DONE!

  • @rosaleepruett3433
    @rosaleepruett3433 11 місяців тому +4

    That couch looks so comphy love it

  • @mfbikle
    @mfbikle Рік тому +2

    I've been waiting for this episode forever!

  • @fargnbastage
    @fargnbastage 11 місяців тому +4

    The weird thing about Dave Ramsey is if you apply to work there, even before hiring you, they will ask for access to your bank information and your spouses if you have one. THey will also want to do the interview over dinner....with your spouse.
    I noped the hell out of there. Ended up getting a job with another company paying 40k more too.

    • @toddie3910
      @toddie3910 11 місяців тому +1

      Access to your bank information?? Unhealthy boundaries- or lack thereof 😮

    • @fargnbastage
      @fargnbastage 11 місяців тому

      @@briana3544 They didn't want to run a credit check. They wanted me to print out detailed information about my finances.
      I work at Microsoft now, no one asked for my financials and no one asked to have my wife with me for my interview.
      It's weird and crosses waaaaay too many boundaries.
      Essentially, you have to buy into the Ramsay cult. I like my reward cards, I wouldn't ahve gotten hired anyways. I also leverage my wealth...again...they don't like that.

  • @freedomworks3976
    @freedomworks3976 11 місяців тому +15

    Activily managed funds because Ramsey gets payed to sell them through his brokers.

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 11 місяців тому +2

      Bingo.

    • @bryan_witha_whyy
      @bryan_witha_whyy 10 місяців тому +1

      Not one free idea in that whole system.

    • @daytonwintle3893
      @daytonwintle3893 5 місяців тому +2

      They do not get paid to sell funds. They don't promote any single funds at Ramsey. Active funds have a history of our performing index funds because that's HOW they work. You pay 1% of your earnings but the fund beats the index by 2-3% it's kind of a no brainer

    • @shannonzittlow8462
      @shannonzittlow8462 5 місяців тому

      I’m a Dave fan but I do disagree with him about actively managed funds

    • @freedomworks3976
      @freedomworks3976 5 місяців тому

      @@daytonwintle3893 why do they pay Ramsey referal fees then ?

  • @sebastiantoro584
    @sebastiantoro584 Рік тому +77

    I’d be scared to call Dave Ramsey because he might tell me to stop golfing.

    • @justvincenturb
      @justvincenturb Рік тому +15

      First he'd tell you to sell the golf cart 🤣

    • @sebastiantoro584
      @sebastiantoro584 Рік тому +11

      @@justvincenturb he won’t be to happy when I tell him I financed that sucker.

    • @sherlockrobin597
      @sherlockrobin597 Рік тому +5

      He might make you say "playing golf" instead of "golfing"

    • @MercuryRyzen
      @MercuryRyzen Рік тому +9

      Yes, unless you have a fully funded 6 months emergency fund, paying your 15% Gross income into retirement and your mortgage is well on its way to paid off.
      If not, sell the financed golf cart, clubs, your essential vehicle, your bicycle, skateboard, the dog...and maybe a kid.

    • @sebastiantoro584
      @sebastiantoro584 Рік тому +3

      @@sherlockrobin597 when I get better at golf maybe I can say I’m playing.

  • @Reece634
    @Reece634 Рік тому +4

    George is the man

  • @AR-ln7ln
    @AR-ln7ln Рік тому +2

    What? Every small restaurant owner I worked for still owes me and many of us money. One didn't pay at all, just tips. One paid when he felt like paying. One didn't pay me for two years resulting in $0/$0 easily see in my social security statement. He went on to open second restaurant right into economic downturn which went bankrupt in two years.
    All applauded as great business owners taking risks that many don't care to take.

  • @HM-vj5ll
    @HM-vj5ll Рік тому +6

    I wish I could sit like George, I'm physically broke.

  • @hopefilledfinancial
    @hopefilledfinancial Рік тому +10

    1:12:00 - I would agree, but Dave did not learn from the critique on 8% that came flooding in from the whole financial community. Is there a strong counter argument to disprove historical back checks and statistics on sequence of returns risks? 8% seems to largely considered dangerous and unrealistic as a safe withdrawal rate by the whole community of financial professionals.

    • @Corpsecreate
      @Corpsecreate Рік тому +4

      It is very dangerous yes. Dave is completely wrong on this and it's crazy to me that he hasn't publicly reversed his position on it.

    • @hopefilledfinancial
      @hopefilledfinancial Рік тому +1

      @@Corpsecreate I think I finally figured out the two main motivations behind his position.
      1) Dave really thinks that 4% +/- 1% SWRs are hope stealing and that the mathematical reality of them is preventing people from investing at all.
      2) Dave is anti-debt by principle. Conservative SWRs are required due to sequence of returns risks. Sequence of returns risks are conventionally quelled with diversifying into bond heavy assets. Bonds are based on debt, and Dave avoids them on principle. If bonds are to be denied a place, then sequence of returns risk must be denied. Asset allocation must be diminished as only theory in the Ramsey camp. If that is the case, conservative safe withdrawal rates become hope stealing and irrelevant.
      I think this is how he got here. This came to me first when I was on Lane Sebring's show. I have since mentioned it elsewhere.
      To proclaim the 8% to even 10% is provably incompatible with reality. I would have hoped that the danger there in would help Dave restructure his position above.
      I have hope that Dave giving followers false hope that becomes either hope crushing or a financial hazard pressures Ramsey Solutions into pivoting on this dangerous recommendation.

    • @erikrohr4396
      @erikrohr4396 Рік тому +1

      ​@@CorpsecreateDave Ramsey is about consistency, not rationality or honesty.

    • @rossmacintosh5652
      @rossmacintosh5652 Рік тому +3

      I was a bit surprised they didn't directly talk about that 4% vs 8% controversy that you (HopeFF) and George were part of. That it didn't come up makes me think George must have told them it was off limits. It seems George isn't willing to stand behind his 4% advice after being smacked down on air by Ramsey. I'm doubtful he now agrees with Ramsey but he knows not to rock his employer's boat.

    • @hopefilledfinancial
      @hopefilledfinancial Рік тому +1

      @@rossmacintosh5652 ​George did answer some questions directly on The Iced Coffee Hour podcast. Graham and Jack asked George some good questions about the controversy, and George's answers seemed to avoid firmly picking sides while also disregarding healthy arguments against 8% SWR. I would characterize that interaction as very political with good, bad, and ugly parts.
      I ran a poll. Some see George's answer embodies an unwillingness to change from 8% for Ramsey solutions. Others saw it as further straw-manning financial professionals with a poor light. Very few saw George's answer as helpful in clarifying the issue and the concern of danger.
      I came to this interview hoping that George would give further answers on the topic. I had hope that he had something more to say. I also hoped that he wouldn't call my intentions malicious again.

  • @bryanwittenburg7171
    @bryanwittenburg7171 Рік тому +2

    I thoroughly enjoyed this.

  • @mamari64
    @mamari64 6 місяців тому +4

    I called Dave Ramsey once, asked my question, answered one question from Dave and he immediately put me on hold and went on a long rant… I was HUMILIATED. This was 12+ yrs ago. NEVER AGAIN.

    • @tonymimi9715
      @tonymimi9715 5 місяців тому

      Sadly he's done that to many people. Don't take it personally, take action.

    • @bzlnv8
      @bzlnv8 5 місяців тому

      lol

  • @dessar100
    @dessar100 11 місяців тому

    what a great episode, George is so down to earth and practical. I grabbed an audio copy of the book and it's awesome

  • @furryhippogaming
    @furryhippogaming Рік тому +3

    Always amazing information, I am about 2 years away from the mortgage being paid off and then it's all into investing and living my best life. Within the next 5-6 years retire and just do whatever I want!

  • @curiouscat3384
    @curiouscat3384 Рік тому +2

    I don't know these guys, just popped in to see what george is up to. So who's house are they sitting in? George is talking eschewing granite counter tops and indicates the guy to the right of him is a "financial minimalist" ???? Meanwhile they're sitting on a giant, presumably expensive cushy sofa with a backdrop of wall-to-wall, floor-to-ceiling windows .... That's fine if he can afford it without credit but it is hardly "minimalism"

  • @rickb5275
    @rickb5275 6 місяців тому

    George, Andre,
    One philosophy that exists is ….
    A person is only going to earn a certain amount of income, dividend, royalties, etc etc in life or intake of money in life.
    So how much of that intake do you want to go “out” forever gone in the form of interest.
    Excellent content as always!!!

  • @cvan259
    @cvan259 11 місяців тому +3

    Why the humongous microphones...

  • @Spankmepink
    @Spankmepink Рік тому +1

    Telling someone to sell their pet is f*cking cruel no matter what.

  • @BeeTimesTwo
    @BeeTimesTwo Рік тому +2

    Great discussion!!

  • @anubisgod23
    @anubisgod23 Рік тому +2

    Studies are great for overall trends and I get on average a credit caffeine might make one spend more bit he seems to say it's impossible for someone to genuinely maintain the same habits which just isn't true. With yhe right mindset someone can use CCs properly and have no changes to spending

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 11 місяців тому

      He's just parroting Dave Ramsey's stated beliefs, for obvious reasons, probably. I've used ccs for decades,but make sure to pay them off each month. (Why not get the 2% reward off as an automatic credit? Makes no sense not to!)

  • @kaitlinobrien243
    @kaitlinobrien243 Рік тому +1

    Enjoying the conversation ❤

  • @barnabusdoyle4930
    @barnabusdoyle4930 Рік тому

    Most lenders still do something very similar to manual underwriting. Checking income/debt rstio, verifying income, checking bank accounts. That’s the normal process of getting approved for a loan. It’s not as automated as most people would think.

    • @w8what575
      @w8what575 Рік тому

      When people should be investing in themselves in order to borrow money from…whole life policies that can be drawn from for personal loans…the payments u make back to ur own life insurance policy isn’t going towards making a bank wealthy…it’s investing into urself..

  • @tiagoj8020
    @tiagoj8020 Рік тому +3

    So you need an additional tool to help protect your debit card vs credit card?

    • @stevecrane8102
      @stevecrane8102 Рік тому

      No George said if your debit card says Visa or Master Card you have their protection automatically

    • @rhondab7937
      @rhondab7937 10 місяців тому

      If your on vacation and they take all the money from your debit card your screwed. Credit card money paid back immediately. I will never give up my credit card. I pay it off each month and don't pay interest. People need to change their mindset and I only use my debit card at ATM machine.

  • @Zt3v3
    @Zt3v3 11 місяців тому +3

    You can't convince me that it's safer to use a debit card online or at gas stations. I will not use a debit card. I pay my credit cards off, in full, 3 times a month. I use cash for most in-person transactions.

    • @KR-Diesel12345
      @KR-Diesel12345 10 місяців тому

      Go read the chapter in his book about using debit cards

    • @evr0.904
      @evr0.904 Місяць тому

      What's the point of the comment? You want to show everyone how ignorant you are? You can't be convinced. Cool. Stop talking then.

  • @staroceans8677
    @staroceans8677 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant analogies because SLOW, STEADY, and SIMPLE is not only PRUDENT but it wins the race.
    Nobody needs to race from one point to another, and they waste more opportunity and money than necessary.

  • @soul2reaper
    @soul2reaper Рік тому +5

    my only question, is what about rental cars, hotel, and motels. I've never had luck getting any of those with my debt card, or cash...

    • @maureenviola
      @maureenviola Рік тому

      Definitely much harder and involves deposits

    • @salinaraey5165
      @salinaraey5165 11 місяців тому

      They still hold deposits with credit cards and one of the rental car companies now accepts debit cards. It might be Budget. You can confirm on Ramsey’s website.

    • @KR-Diesel12345
      @KR-Diesel12345 10 місяців тому

      George answers all of these questions in the book. You can still do all of these things with a debit card, just slightly different processes, that are not any worse or inconvenient

    • @hollystiener16
      @hollystiener16 7 місяців тому

      Debit card with a visa or mastercard logo. never a problem.

    • @yellowknight97
      @yellowknight97 2 місяці тому

      In the end, do whatever you feel comfortable with. Work to stay out of debt, develop discipline, but by Gosh the need to get Dave's approval that I see in so many people is unhealthy. At the end of the day, it's your life. Life it the best way you can. Getting rid of social media as these guys dream includes the myriad of "you're doing it all wrong" and "feel guilty all the time" podcasts...

  • @mitchellbarnow1709
    @mitchellbarnow1709 11 місяців тому +1

    I enjoy having a paid off home myself, but I believe that you have had a guest on that thinks that he can always invest his money and get a better return than property can. I would rather have the piece of mind even though I don’t have immediate liquidity.

  • @MoltenArmour
    @MoltenArmour Рік тому +2

    Best joke of the thing "that pikachu doesn't even know your name".

  • @Sincrow
    @Sincrow Рік тому +3

    "That Pikachu doesn't even know your name" 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @simplybeef8232
    @simplybeef8232 3 місяці тому +1

    I honestly incorporate what Dave Ramsey and the money guy show says to do...with trying to strive to money guy show 100%

    • @Kevintendo
      @Kevintendo 2 місяці тому

      Throw in Ramit Sethi to complete the trifecta! All amazing advice :)

  • @Yogi-Bajogie
    @Yogi-Bajogie Рік тому

    Thank you...this was wonderful:)

  • @Ithumpify
    @Ithumpify 11 місяців тому +2

    I have paid off my house and follow some of his advice but I'd like to hear what George has got to say when the market crashes later this year.

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 11 місяців тому

      In Dave Ramseyland, the market never crashes, and "good mutual funds" always make 10% per year.

  • @RyanConradConradinspire
    @RyanConradConradinspire Рік тому +7

    The one thing I don't like is how he reacts about the mutual fund vs index fund. Anyone as money tuned in as we are knows exactly what the fees are. And it saddens me that the partnership with Smartvestor pros and the financial gains of them recommending them is still more important to them. The studies show that Financial pros rarely out perform the S&P500. It doesn't say that it's worth paying financial advisors because many out perform the market by even 1%. We've been debt free since 2015 thanks to Dave and his team, but you can tell George's speech pattern changed slightly during that small portion of the convo. In my opinion, It makes him feel uncomfortable talking about it. Just my opinion. Still tons of love for George, Dave and all the personalities. Fun interview. #indexfundandchill

    • @traciedavis4575
      @traciedavis4575 Рік тому +1

      I got the body language change as well as the tone of his voice. Very uncomfortable.

    • @justinjackman2234
      @justinjackman2234 11 місяців тому +1

      Yes totally shut down and was embarrassed. He can’t act like an expert in every category and then all of a sudden I don’t know anything about investments and just let the pro do it for me and he will beat the market for me. All of us including him know better. Money talks and he is being paid for his terrible response and he knows it.

    • @kendrickpatrick
      @kendrickpatrick 7 місяців тому

      It’s because he recently got publicly chided by his boss for recommending index funds

  • @SethKing
    @SethKing Рік тому +13

    If you're rich or poor or middle class, it's your decisions that have gotten you there. If you don't like where you're at, make better choices.

  • @Popeline0702
    @Popeline0702 11 місяців тому +1

    I had to laugh out loud when he said the horse lady did not sell the horse but got another one. That would be me too 😂

  • @barnabusdoyle4930
    @barnabusdoyle4930 Рік тому +2

    It’s weird that having no credit debt makes an indeterminable credit score especially with how they calculate the score. Debt utilization is a large part of your score. Having no debt means you have 0% utilization which should give you max points for that category.

    • @stevenbeach748
      @stevenbeach748 11 місяців тому

      yeah, but zero times 100 is still zero.

    • @evr0.904
      @evr0.904 Місяць тому

      It's almost like a credit score is a useless measure of one's finances... wow.

    • @barnabusdoyle4930
      @barnabusdoyle4930 Місяць тому

      @ In some ways it’s very useful. It’s a quick number for someone like a landlord to look at to see if the potential tenants pay bills on time or leave bills unpaid for long periods of time. It’s definitely flawed in that, without an income to go with it, it’s only a small percentage of the picture

    • @evr0.904
      @evr0.904 Місяць тому

      @@barnabusdoyle4930 So, again, its a useless measure of one's finances. Thanks.

  • @jarvinator94
    @jarvinator94 Рік тому +2

    Nobody talks about the expenses with a 401(k) versus just doing your own retirement funding. I am like 35% or 40% total in funds with expense ratios of .4% the other two funds have expense ratios below .06%, yet my total expenses were .76% of my portfolio! Someone explain that!

    • @evr0.904
      @evr0.904 Місяць тому

      Just do your own? Elaborate.

  • @Metaphysics-for-life
    @Metaphysics-for-life 11 місяців тому +1

    The only card I use is my Costco card. I pay it off every month, it's convenient, and I get hundreds back every February. There's just no downside to it.

  • @freedomring3022
    @freedomring3022 Рік тому +1

    a nice fun interview to watch

  • @roxannestaton6258
    @roxannestaton6258 Рік тому

    Great interview, thanks for the entertainment and info

  • @Irene1208Lano
    @Irene1208Lano 8 місяців тому

    Andre thank you for this interview with George Kamel!! Truly a success story I can relate to!!!

  • @kahrhoshe
    @kahrhoshe Рік тому +2

    for me i use 1 cc for the cash back but also some ppl cant afford to wait 60 days for the stolen money to return.

    • @stevenbeach748
      @stevenbeach748 11 місяців тому

      It's like three days. Thats what mine was.

    • @kahrhoshe
      @kahrhoshe 11 місяців тому

      @@stevenbeach748 but it “can” take up to that long and I’m sure wells Fargo would take longer since they can’t even post most of my transactions for like a week. Lol but yeah I’m sure a lot of banks do better.

  • @Corpsecreate
    @Corpsecreate Рік тому +16

    Really wish you asked about the 8% withdrawal rate! Such a missed opportunity!

    • @saulmarquez8989
      @saulmarquez8989 Рік тому +3

      They’ve addressed this on multiple podcast that have interviewed George recently ….I want to say the iced coffee podcast that has George on addressed this recent video of Dave’s 8% withdrawal

    • @hopefilledfinancial
      @hopefilledfinancial Рік тому +3

      @@saulmarquez8989 Correct. George was asked about the 8% controversy point blank on The Iced Coffee Hour Podcast. IMO, George's answer was politically structured to neither disagree with Dave nor address the concerns behind 8% logically. George at least was able to recognize elements of arguments against the 8% SWR by name. I think that means the logic has at least reached the personalities and they can be truly aware of how dangerous an 8% SWR recommendation is. George also called my intentions malicious in that interview, and I am seeking mutual forgiveness so potential future defamation of myself is not continued. I take the accusation of malice very seriously when it is on such a popular podcast.

    • @extremecarpetcleaning-wvwi86
      @extremecarpetcleaning-wvwi86 Рік тому

      If everyone actually gets 12% per year you could definitely take 8 percent but nobody just owns voo or sp 500 to get that they usually have bonds and other funds that don't get that. Most people only get 8 percent if they are lucky. So 4 percent rule is good.

    • @kevinlue4756
      @kevinlue4756 Рік тому

      ​@@extremecarpetcleaning-wvwi86s&p500 doesn't return 12% every year. That's an average. That's why you can't withdraw 8% or you could go broke when there is a bad year in the market.

  • @dhenzar
    @dhenzar Рік тому +1

    Doesn't it mean also that if American dollar will increase its value then you can get more materials which can be cheaper or u can manufacture with lower cost because ur money has higher value? So if u have lower cost, then you can lower the price of the product making it easier to market abroad? Im not an expert but I think it is more logical to have lesser debt for a country than having weaker dollar...so it will make sense to make a dollar the reserve once you have no debt at all. But hey, what do I know, I just want to view other persepective. I am with George that being debt free is an advantage.

  • @gailbolin8513
    @gailbolin8513 3 місяці тому +1

    Tell me how it’s easy to give when warehouses, any retail, pays 40K a year.
    I’d be a CEO and give my employees a wage so they can buy a car that runs without trouble, get medical problems tended to.
    COO and CEO make 600x more than their employees so greed is evil.
    When you are already rich you can brag about giving away 10,000 at three restaurants.

  • @userofsharingan
    @userofsharingan Рік тому +9

    I doubt that the brain of the person who pays their cards in full every billing cycle lights up with dopamine the same way as someone who swipes and doesn’t know when he will pay his card.
    Not a convincing argument in my opinion. Especially for the financially literate people, $200-300 sign up bonus plus 12-18 months interest free is basically free money.

    • @zachjones2346
      @zachjones2346 Рік тому

      If you think that "free money" is worth it, then it means you are broke. $300 is pocket change.

  • @glockman9c
    @glockman9c 11 місяців тому +1

    4:00 - why not just have 3 credit cards that have 0 balances and a real credit score? No FICO score is just ridiculous. REDICULOUS.

  • @teresateresa8933
    @teresateresa8933 Рік тому +5

    Renting an apartment is easier to those with a credit score.
    As a landlord I go strictly according to credit score, 100%

    • @bradzeigler
      @bradzeigler Рік тому +1

      Really, so you would turn down an applicant because they had absolutely no other outstanding debts to pay?

    • @teresateresa8933
      @teresateresa8933 Рік тому +3

      @@bradzeigler Yes I would. I want proof that they have been responsible paying bills on time. Credit score gives me the proof I need.
      My rental, my decision.

    • @williamjackson4922
      @williamjackson4922 Рік тому +5

      Not owning anyone any money should be proof enough.

    • @teresateresa8933
      @teresateresa8933 Рік тому

      @@williamjackson4922 no, that just makes me wonder if they are too irresponsible to own and properly manage a credit card.
      I would not rent to them, and I’m not alone.

    • @Milktube
      @Milktube 11 місяців тому +1

      Renting an apartment isn't so much about trying to find the right person to give this limited amazing gift to (like selling a house to someone). Renting an apartment is more about avoiding getting involved with the wrong person who can cause huge amount of damages that you will be liable for some of no matter what, and they could literally have no income to garnish even if a court demands they pay for some of the damages.

  • @michaelstk2817
    @michaelstk2817 Рік тому +8

    The first thing I'd do is sell that oversized couch.

    • @jefdby
      @jefdby 11 місяців тому

      Exactly. If you're going to sit criss-cross legged anyway, you might as well sit on the floor!!!

    • @RosarioBillingsley
      @RosarioBillingsley 11 місяців тому +1

      Not me. I love that couch.

  • @HPMatthew
    @HPMatthew Рік тому +1

    Woah midnight upload, so cool!!!

    • @nibekus
      @nibekus Рік тому

      Midnight for you 😉

  • @chadbailey7038
    @chadbailey7038 Рік тому

    Great convo!

  • @JJ-zr6fu
    @JJ-zr6fu Рік тому

    The problems with social study’s is they’re rarely repeatable.

  • @karalove3470
    @karalove3470 Рік тому

    My teens like to play VR for about an hour at a time... The goggles are heavy enough to hurt your neck and shoulders after a while. And they like the games... But still play more hours on PCs and Steamdeck than on VR.

  • @Mazyrose44
    @Mazyrose44 Рік тому +2

    George !!!!!!

  • @DwarFStrider
    @DwarFStrider Рік тому +3

    Funny… in Belgium, manual underwriting is the standard for mortgages. That credit score might just be the source of all evil and why consumer debt is skyrocketing so much in the US. I feel that the trend is coming to the EU too (you can finance just about anything these days), but there’s still some common sense here that you should only be in debt for houses and cars… However, we’re also slowly slipping down the slope of mounting consumer debt.

  • @Gwendly
    @Gwendly Рік тому +4

    165k paid off in 26 months means roughly 7.3k monthly payments if interest is 5%.
    Even if you make 125k gross annually this would be quite tight and represent nearly 80% of take home going to living.
    I think it's pretty safe to say that for the majority of families this is not a realistic time line.
    The message is great but people should be focusing on cutting down their time by several years instead of these extreme outliers.

    • @TheCbone1979
      @TheCbone1979 Рік тому +1

      I certainly agree, I think extremes are fun for entertainment purposes but the reality is it's just not feasible for most.

    • @MrBrewman95
      @MrBrewman95 Рік тому +2

      A lot couples can make that amount and they sacrificed temporarily for just over two years. That is definitely possible and since they put down 45%, a lot of their payments went right to the principle.

    • @adrianhoverter7198
      @adrianhoverter7198 Рік тому

      Paid ours off in 33 months.
      The man who said he can and the man who said he can't are both correct.

  • @user-dv8bs7tb5c
    @user-dv8bs7tb5c Рік тому +2

    I would wager successful people are generally curious people who keep learning and do not subscribe not the victim mentality.

  • @davidmilhouscarter8198
    @davidmilhouscarter8198 Рік тому +1

    26:44 I park in the garage. I have a two-car garage and I park two paid-for cars in it.

  • @karenmooberry6719
    @karenmooberry6719 Місяць тому

    Love George, smart young guy and so down to earth!

  • @russellpalmer2112
    @russellpalmer2112 Рік тому +1

    Conveniently enough, Andrei looks like a combination of George and Graham

  • @bryan_witha_whyy
    @bryan_witha_whyy 11 місяців тому +1

    (No debt) …”is part of my values”. Or (hear me out) he works for a company that touts no debt. Cmon, guys. Don’t let the cow convince you milk is the best beverage.

  • @Letgo_letlive
    @Letgo_letlive 3 дні тому

    Honestly love to admit I’ve watch so much Dave Ramsey that I’ve listened to all the stories on the show before

  • @light0000
    @light0000 Рік тому +1

    prognosticate
    verb
    foretell or prophesy a future event.

  • @mattcoorey2580
    @mattcoorey2580 Рік тому +5

    I don’t care if your house is worth 10 million.
    In my eyes you’re not a true millionaire unless it’s in your checking /saving account

    • @drewo6388
      @drewo6388 Рік тому +3

      What about retirement accounts or brokerage accounts? I'd hate to have millions just sitting in checking or savings. But I agree otherwise...I prefer "liquid" net worth over total net worth to include hard assets or primary real estate.

  • @Ilene-forward
    @Ilene-forward Рік тому +1

    Fun show!

  • @tarantulapaul
    @tarantulapaul 11 місяців тому

    Credit card companies originally sold it to merchants saying people send 10-15% more than cash so their fees actually made the company money

  • @davidmilhouscarter8198
    @davidmilhouscarter8198 Рік тому

    1:06:10 Is that “coin” with a “kay”?

  • @katconnor6422
    @katconnor6422 3 місяці тому

    Wouldn't a good comprise be to put fixed costs like your water bill, netflix, insurance etc on a credit card and keep a good credit score without overspending on variable costs which are paid in cash?

  • @tiagoj8020
    @tiagoj8020 Рік тому +2

    Churchill mortgage still prefers a credit score. They even said so on Georges channel.

  • @kris_7304
    @kris_7304 Рік тому +1

    All of these guys are amazing and great role models but the first statement that george became a networth millionaire without debt and how rare that was is not true. He litterally explained that he had student loan debt and then took out a mortgage. Those are debts. Still, he doesnt have debt now which is great! Good job George!

    • @dorotheaanderson9482
      @dorotheaanderson9482 11 місяців тому

      Without Debt (Clarify after paying off debt)
      George Became a Network Millionaire AFTER paying off his Student Loan and home

    • @kris_7304
      @kris_7304 11 місяців тому +1

      @dorotheaanderson9482 It makes sense to become a millionaire after paying off debts. Then, there are no liabilities to offset the assets. In fact, that is how most millionaires are made. The less debt you have, the less payments you have, and the faster you are able to accumulate wealth.

  • @georgeromey4971
    @georgeromey4971 Рік тому +2

    Credit cards are fine if you pay off the balance each month. But some people don't have the financial discipline, particularly if they're making less than $75K a year.

    • @fightinthesystem
      @fightinthesystem Рік тому

      It isn't some people it is most people. That is why the Dave Ramsey model is sound. His plan provides a successful model for the majority.

    • @Newtrail100
      @Newtrail100 Рік тому

      Using a credit card releases the brakes on spending, even accelerates it. If you had a $100 in your pocket, you feel the sting of spending it. That's not the case with a credit card. It feels like you are spending other people's money.

    • @commonsense6967
      @commonsense6967 11 місяців тому

      @@Newtrail100Not true at all for me, and I've been using credit cards since the 1970's.

    • @bryan_witha_whyy
      @bryan_witha_whyy 10 місяців тому

      @@Newtrail100 Not everyone thinks that way. Once it’s out of the ATM it’s spent in my mind. When I use credit I definitely feel the pinch more because I see the balance daily.

    • @evr0.904
      @evr0.904 Місяць тому

      This comment makes 0 sense...

  • @vigilantezack
    @vigilantezack 5 місяців тому

    Maybe somebody has the answer to this, but I've always had a problem with the baby steps to pay off the mortgage. Especially with today's home prices. If you need to buckle down and pay off a mortgage, depending on income of course, this could take years and years and years of your life while waiting to get to step 7 on more wealth building.
    Sure they are doing a 15% rule into retirement, but retirement is not wealth building for more near use (save for car, vacation, real estate, xmas).
    In other words, you will have a retirement fund, even a college fund for kids, and an emergency fund. But where is your normal savings accounts for various goals, brokerage, investing?
    If it's going to take someone 10 years to pay off a mortgage, they could have been building at least *some* portfolio that whole time, and now the opportunity cost is wasted. You took a decade dumping cash into a 3 or 4 or 5% loan balance instead of dumping that cash into the market giving you 8 or 10 or 12% or more for the same decade compounding over time.
    Sure, you would pay less on mortgage interest, so that factors in. But no matter how much cash you dump into your mortgage, your home is still worth the SAME amount. If you have $100,000 in the bank and a $100,000 balance left on the mortgage and the house is worth $300,000, then you have $300,000 in assets with $100k liquid. If you take the $100k cash and pay off the house, you still only have $300k in assets and no liquid cash! You just "bought equity" which pays a 0% dividend. Paying off the mortgage does not change how much it's worth, nor does it change how it appreciates over time. If your $300k house becomes $320k next year, it isn't because you paid down the balance. You just "invested" $100k into a 0% deal (or some small percent in interest saving).
    That $100k dump into equity could have cost you 2x had you put it in the market for a decade instead. At 8% annual compound for 10 years it would be $215,000, but at least you saved $20 or $30k interest?
    Obviously there is a "peace of mind" argument here, and that is fine. But are you ok with your peace of mind potentially costing you over $100k to get? There is peace of mind in doubling that $100k balance in the market too.
    The only people to shove all the cash they have at getting rid of mortgage payment are those who don't seem to know how much better those extra payments would be if invested instead. And heck, if you still want to pay off the balance at some point, you could do it with the investment profit and didn't even have to touch the original $100k cash.
    Your details will vary. Do the math!

  • @ben65168
    @ben65168 Рік тому

    Man, just wait til someone like George figures out that all of the principles from
    Ramsey’s philosophies about personal accountability and responsibility go hand in hand with the first-principles of absolute scarcity that comes from Bitcoin. I don’t expect Dave to ever figure it out, his ego is such that his early hot takes have cemented into an inability to see how it works. That’s fine, but I’ll choose to be hopeful that those who carry his torch after he’s not running the ship will be able to figure it out.

  • @removalente980
    @removalente980 Рік тому +5

    Always loved your content, but can I politely ask a question? I do understand that the purpose of a title is to attract clicks, but I also think that, by definition, it should summarise what the actual content of the video is...
    will there ever be a point where you guys (content creators are all in the same boat 😊) will decide that "ok, this thing of putting a bull#@it title that does NOT align to the actual content has gone a bit too far"?
    Again, I am saying this with all the possible respect and politeness 😊

    • @jefdby
      @jefdby 11 місяців тому

      So they never actually talk about what the title says???

  • @Bradley38
    @Bradley38 Рік тому +4

    1:12:05 "Dave learns from his mistakes, and if you make a mistake twice, you're an idiot". I recall something about a 8% withdrawal rate being recently repeated on the Ramsey show... just sayin.

    • @hopefilledfinancial
      @hopefilledfinancial Рік тому

      I think George is wrong on this - we all make mistakes and some of us have to learn the hard way. Needing to learn the hard way with making the same mistake more than once doesn't mean we are an idiot per say. Dave very clearly needs to learn the hard way given the 8% failure.

  • @amirk.2148
    @amirk.2148 9 місяців тому

    What is the name of the new book?

  • @HLTrds
    @HLTrds 11 місяців тому +1

    Look at the politicians, spending our $$, side jobs and etc.
    Govt SHOULD NOT GET INVOLIVED, have you not seen what the govt does with our $$

  • @ironprice
    @ironprice 3 місяці тому

    9:43 did he answer the question? I know someone that got screwed by the bank because the fraud was on a debit card and not credit card.

  • @o.c.2470
    @o.c.2470 5 місяців тому

    What is wrong with mutual funds on brokerage accounts

  • @Kornheiser10
    @Kornheiser10 Рік тому +3

    Hey, does George understand what you sign when you rent space for a business...a lease...and no one is going to lease to someone without credit, or you can pay in cash for the length of the lease...but don't borrow that $$
    No guys, the issue with Dave is that he talks averages, which are basically irrelevant, and never talks about sequence of returns.
    Dave is the guy who's 6ft tall but drowns in the river that's an average of 5 ft deep.

  • @ZBCJ2001
    @ZBCJ2001 Рік тому +1

    I don’t follow Dave Ramsay’s advice but I’m technically on baby step 6 at 22 lol. the only reason why I’m paying my house yearly is because my rate is 7.8% because I bought recently in these high rates.

  • @katkat5420
    @katkat5420 6 місяців тому

    So good. Love George!