Buy, Borrow, Die Tax Strategy: How To Never Pay Taxes Again

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  • Опубліковано 3 лип 2024
  • The Buy, Borrow, Die Tax Strategy Is How The Wealthiest Americans Avoid Paying Taxes.
    Some of the wealthiest individuals are able to pay almost 0% of their income towards taxes, while everyone else pays up to 37% of their income towards taxes.
    So how is this possible? It all starts with understanding how your wealth is taxed.
    When you buy assets that grow in value, it is not income.
    When you borrow money against your assets, it is not income.
    When you die, the transfer of your assets is not income.
    On other hand, when you SELL assets, it is considered income.
    OR when you earn wages, it is considered income.
    The Buy, Borrow, Die Tax Strategy allows you to build wealth, get cash when you need it, avoid paying taxes, and pass generational wealth down to your heirs tax-free.
    And as a licensed CPA that helps people save on taxes everyday at mycpacoach.com, I am going to walk you through this entire process for you in 3 easy steps.
    What is Buy, Borrow, Die Strategy: (0:00)
    Step 1: (1:32)
    How The Rich Avoid Tax: (2:13)
    Step 2: (3:30)
    Borrowing Methods: (7:30)
    Step 3: (8:43)
    Subscribe: / @mycpacoach
    Apply to Become a Tax Client: mycpacoach.com/contact/
    Enroll in Tax Savers Course: mycpacoach.com/tax-saver/

КОМЕНТАРІ • 212

  • @EthanMaloney-qp4lh
    @EthanMaloney-qp4lh День тому +49

    I need a way to draw up a plan to set up for retirement while still earning passive income to meet my day to day need and also get charged lesser taxes even while in a higher tax bracket.

    • @WestonScally7614
      @WestonScally7614 День тому +4

      Don't put all your eggs in one basket; instead, diversify into different asset classes to mitigate risk. If you lack extensive knowledge, consult a financial advisor.

    • @FelineAirstrip
      @FelineAirstrip День тому +3

      Accurate asset allocation is crucial with an Experts guidance. I have 850k in equity, 300K cash earning 5.25 interest, 685k in 401k, 250k cash account, 120k in car assets ( paid off cars) Gold and silver bars. age is 48. My advisor helped me realign my portfolio to my risk tolerance and it boomed overtime.

    • @SaintYvess
      @SaintYvess День тому +3

      pls how can I reach this expert, I need someone to help me manage my portfolio

    • @FelineAirstrip
      @FelineAirstrip День тому +3

      *Jennifer Leigh Hickman* is the licensed advisor I use. Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.

    • @EthanMaloney-qp4lh
      @EthanMaloney-qp4lh День тому +1

      Thank you for the lead. I searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.

  • @ericbooth9584
    @ericbooth9584 Місяць тому +10

    Thank you very much! This is extremely valuable information presented in easy to digest bite-sized nuggets!

  • @izgler
    @izgler Місяць тому +42

    This is called leveraging and it is great when times are good and every asset is appreciating. Also if you are rich enough and diversified enough to handle downturns. But this creates a house of cards that will destroy your financial security when value of assets plummet and you are faced with a mountain of leveraged debt, upside down, and zero liquidity. People doing this really need to understand the risks. The “die” part is when they jump off a building because they’ve lost everything and more in a market crash or extended recession. It has happened before. It will happen again. Good times don’t last forever.

    • @JohnDavid-kc9kt
      @JohnDavid-kc9kt Місяць тому +6

      That's exactly what I thought... Great Depression?? People borrowing mo ey to buy stocks because 'they'll just keep going up." That us, until they don't, and you still owe the loan and have no money.
      This practice, if done by enough people, will also cause a bubble, thus increasing the chances of a downturn/recession/depression.

    • @rogergeyer9851
      @rogergeyer9851 Місяць тому +3

      Yes. You can take advantage of owning assets and not selling stock funds with huge unrealized capital gains -- WITHOUT taking on risky leverage.
      At some point leverage is going to get UGLY, like it did during the great recession.

    • @stephaniemartin7332
      @stephaniemartin7332 14 днів тому +2

      With any financial transaction, you have to do the math. You also want to ensure that other areas (reserves, etc are set). You don't go for home runs, you take singles. For example if you have a stock portfolio worth 100,000 then you borrow 10,000 to start, if the numbers work.

    • @djdynieldaniel1395
      @djdynieldaniel1395 10 днів тому

      Before you jump. Cash the gold coins you earned on the side while leveraging.
      Buy a cabin, live free.

  • @Zerobar78.
    @Zerobar78. 4 дні тому +1

    Excellent video, clear, concise, right to the point and very easy to understand!

  • @DickonCider
    @DickonCider Місяць тому +19

    Paying property taxes on your home , autos etc is like paying taxes on Unrealized capital gains especially since the inflation that has been stimulated during/after Covid. The PVA says my house jumped ~$200k in the last three years… I now pay taxes on that “Unrealized gain”.

    • @rogergeyer9851
      @rogergeyer9851 Місяць тому +2

      Inflation of roughly 3 percent is NOT hyperinflation to ANY extent.

    • @aldo32787
      @aldo32787 6 днів тому

      @@rogergeyer9851 We had a 9% inflation in 2022, did you lost your memory?

    • @chrisellis1232
      @chrisellis1232 4 дні тому +1

      @@rogergeyer9851inflation works the same way as compound interest, look again, ignore the propaganda, prices have gone up (never to come down) by at least 30% 🤔

  • @brianthacker6926
    @brianthacker6926 Місяць тому +3

    Great video Sherman.

  • @kpop863
    @kpop863 Місяць тому +106

    the one thing they never discuss is how you pay back the borrowed money. guess that part is still a secret.

    • @bdm8960
      @bdm8960 Місяць тому +26

      Use ur income producing assets to pay it back

    • @manveersingh493
      @manveersingh493 Місяць тому +59

      That’s where the die part comes in

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +21

      This is a personal preference. Some people:
      - Never pay it off
      - Use income from assets to pay it off over time
      - Pay it as quickly or slowly as they’d like to
      Also, it is very important to fully understand the 4 benefits of borrowing listed from 3:58 and summarized at 6:45 - let me know your thoughts on this.

    • @stevenalvis137
      @stevenalvis137 Місяць тому

      You don’t. If you avoid over leveraging yourself you’ll never have to sell shares or interrupt your compounding interest.
      Because depending on how wealthy you are you’re going to incur a big tax bill right now and the interest on the loan will take far longer to eat that same amount of money because loans backed by assets are cheap debt compared to a 40% tax bracket.
      While that debt is slowly eating away at your total value your money is locked away snowballing in value… and as the biggest part of compound interest REALLY goes bananas after 30 years… using debt to avoid having to sell can result in millions of dollars of difference every single year depending on your portfolio value.
      The interest is part of the investment, and that expense reduces your taxes now allowing you to keep more money and borrow less.
      If you really think about this, we see a lot of financial philosophy’s at play. The saying “time is money” is sort of the core of this principle. Inflation eats away at the dollar value you owe over time so you’ll pay a larger number on the debts in the future but bought more assets at lower prices with yesterdays dollar strength and stuck Uncle Sam with the bill and you’ve profited the difference.
      In real estate investing you seldom see people pay things off early because you used someone else’s money to buy assets… and you’d leverage those to buy more houses and the renter pays the mortgage… if you think about it this is just doing that on a basket of assets and not just real estate.
      Remember, your dollar is just worthless paper 👍 hopefully this rant makes things clearer.

    • @sailingindependence9927
      @sailingindependence9927 Місяць тому +13

      ​@mycpacoach here's my thoughts - Never pay it off?? Please make a video on that strategy because it seems pretty lucrative.

  • @RichardTomasini
    @RichardTomasini Місяць тому +5

    High leveraged folks are the first to crumble in unpredictable market shifts.

  • @joed8452
    @joed8452 Місяць тому +1

    phenomenal information! thank you for sharing your knowledge

  • @economicdevelopmentplannin8715
    @economicdevelopmentplannin8715 Місяць тому +5

    max out on that 120k in long-term capital gains first with co ownership in a shared residence. Most people don't even have this yet, a shared residence no debt plus 120k income with no capital gains taxes.
    Then once ready to buy a bigger house (in excess of the 120k pull down), then this strategy becomes the move, to continue accessing more tax free money 💰💰💰❤❤❤
    Super great presentation.

  • @averyce2
    @averyce2 Місяць тому +1

    We recently received some inheritance that is being used to purchase property. But you opened my eyes to other appreciable assets... THANKS!

  • @the5as1marchingarts
    @the5as1marchingarts 14 днів тому +1

    thank you for making these videos so straightforward to understand. I'm a medicare sales agent on 1099 and I am projected to hit about 120k a year of income for the 1st time in my life I've been searching left and right on how to avoid taxes lol. Im not trying to give the government my money lmao. I think ill start off with tax exempt accounts and work toward the "Buy,Borrow,Die" method.

  • @PYTU
    @PYTU Місяць тому +5

    Best video this year!

  • @pearlsofwisdom123
    @pearlsofwisdom123 Місяць тому +1

    Knowledge is power

  • @johnwatlington7525
    @johnwatlington7525 3 дні тому

    Good information

  • @mississippiapple1078
    @mississippiapple1078 Місяць тому +2

    You are so good at explaining!

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому

      Thank you!

    • @SenorJuan2023
      @SenorJuan2023 24 дні тому

      @@mycpacoach What happens to credit card debt when you die?

  • @1rocknroy
    @1rocknroy Місяць тому +2

    I like the way you lay this all out, sir.

  • @MuzixMaker
    @MuzixMaker Місяць тому +3

    Lines of credit have monthly payments paid with taxed income.

  • @ashishahuja8605
    @ashishahuja8605 10 днів тому +3

    one major component is missing, your income, you should only leverage where you can handle the debt comfortably in line with your income.

  • @SSMindSeeKING
    @SSMindSeeKING 2 дні тому

    for the watch. great information. thank you for sharing this.

  • @piehamcake1
    @piehamcake1 Місяць тому +1

    This will help me one I have my 100 million dollar stock portfolio

  • @darkgardenrecords9264
    @darkgardenrecords9264 Місяць тому +2

    Great strategy; in a much better borrowing climate than we have today.

  • @nomadoverlander847
    @nomadoverlander847 Місяць тому +1

    Leverage is good if you already have the amount borrowed. So if the market goes down you can pay back without paying interest.

  • @LifeLongLearner-om8jx
    @LifeLongLearner-om8jx 25 днів тому +1

    The best way for the “regular working person” that isn’t broke or rich to execute this strategy is a whole life insurance policy designed for maximum cash value and minimum premiums.

  • @rogergeyer9851
    @rogergeyer9851 Місяць тому +2

    You can collect dividends or interest on your assets and live on that. It's not zero income, but it's a HELL of a lot less with low dividend stocks, for example, than selling stocks with significant unrealized income (turning ALL the profit into income).

  • @tringalij
    @tringalij Місяць тому +1

    This is why I bought variable universal life insurance. I don’t remember why but we needed cash fast for something and I was able to grab $10k from my policy and pay it back at 4%… or not. It just would have reduced my payoff when I died. I’m also a fan of real estate equity for loans etc but, like you, I also don’t like debt so I pay those off quickly if needed.

  • @vduggir
    @vduggir Місяць тому +11

    Perfect strategy if I have 10 million assets. Problem is I will never watch videos on UA-cam if I am rich 😄

  • @nikhilp2351
    @nikhilp2351 Місяць тому +4

    Great video. I didn't know that the CEOs taking $1 salary was a tax avoidance strategy.

    • @thegzak
      @thegzak Місяць тому

      Yes and no - sure, they’re reducing their tax bill, but they’re also reducing their income. It’s better to earn $100 in income and pay $30 in taxes on it (leaving you with $70) than to get no income at all (leaving you with $0).
      And even if they earned an income, they could _still_ take a loan against their assets to get even more “income”, tax free, so the $1 salary doesn’t really affect that part.
      They do it symbolically, to virtue signal that they’re not just in it for the money.

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому

      @@thegzak Ah, no. These CEO's are not *compensated* a single $1 for their labor. They are instead taking a $1 cash renumeration and the rest in stock options. Executive compensation is its own Byzantine structure specifically to to maximize corporate tax deductions while minimizing taxable income to the executive.
      Usually the CEOs that do this already have cash or an income stream from other sources. They then exercise the options once they vest. They then have the chance of either selling the appreciated stock and pay the capital gains, or follow the Sherman plan and borrow against the stock. When you look at their total compensation, these $1 CEOs can be some of the most highly compensated individuals out there.
      If you want to see an example of this, either look at the former Steve Jobs with Apple Computer, or currently Markus Limonis with Beyond, Inc. as Executive Chairman.

  • @adamjones7497
    @adamjones7497 10 днів тому +2

    You need income to pay off the loans. That income you’d pay tax on.

  • @kokopelli314
    @kokopelli314 Місяць тому +8

    So basically use other people's taxed income to enrich yourself tax-free.
    The American Dream!

  • @videofrat3115
    @videofrat3115 День тому

    And how do you pay the loans without selling your assets? Sooner or later you have to pay during your lifetime

  • @FlyingFun.
    @FlyingFun. 8 днів тому

    And in the UK inheritance tax kicks in at around 250k lol..
    Passing on a mountain of debt and a huge tax burden to my kids would be great if I hated my kicks lol.
    Seriously though it's an eye opener to me how using debt to get richer and not pay tax works.
    I was brought up with the attitude that debt is bad " if you can't buy it in cash you can't have it " mentality ....
    So I learned to save for what I wanted from a very early age and it's stuck with me but I have seen others around me use debt to get rich and feel annoyed but I've also seen others lose everything when crashes come along..
    Gotta good whatever lets you sleep at night.

  • @MeMe-mv6us
    @MeMe-mv6us 5 днів тому +1

    What if you can't obtain a loan based on your credit score? Or what if you have good credit but too many hard inquiries? (ex. I have good credit but a stupid car dealership did 17 hard inquiries when I bought a vehicle.)

  • @HarmonyHannah77
    @HarmonyHannah77 Місяць тому

    Any gain I made from loan proceeds - do I need to pay tax on them? My understanding is no right?

  • @jz5005
    @jz5005 Місяць тому

    I don't see how this could work in Kanadistan.
    - There will be interest and likely principal repayments on the debt. The only way to finance thes are through a hamster wheel of more and more debt.
    - Using cash flow from the asset itself to pay off personal debt is either income itself first, or a taxable benefit if paid directly by an asset that is a seperate legal entity.
    - If debt was borrowed from such an entity in the first place, rather than arms-length lender, it will either have to report & pay extra high tax on the interest income, or the debt will be treated as dividend income to the individual and taxed.

  • @smokenojoke8182
    @smokenojoke8182 Місяць тому +3

    Borrowing money against your own assets, reinvesting it, and paying it back with earned income is a much better scenario than borrowing from a bank.

  • @LordDeadSpider
    @LordDeadSpider Місяць тому

    The loans against our assets: Is there interest and fees?

  • @maritzaromero-kathalynas9493
    @maritzaromero-kathalynas9493 Місяць тому +1

    id be scared of a market crash. So i would not take a loan on stocks but i like the ideal of portafolios that can be passed to heirs wihtout taxes... will try to work that onto my plan

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому

      I agree. Certainly a risk to consider.

  • @Calendyr
    @Calendyr Місяць тому +2

    Ok, I am not sure I understand how this works. Say I incorporate my business and use your strategy. I would use the profits the company makes to purchase assets, say for simplicity's sake I buy ETFs in S&O, DOW, GOLD, SILVER and other markets such as food, tech and pharma. Now, who borrows the money? Me or my company? If it's me, how do I repay the loan if I have no income? If it's the company, how do I take the money out for my own use without it being considered a salary? The plan sounds very interesting but the details are missing.

    • @chrisj699
      @chrisj699 28 днів тому +1

      You don't repay the loan. That's the whole idea of this strategy. You just keep paying the interest payments from the original loan amount. You borrow more once you're low on cash. Wash rinse and repeat. Works great as long as you have enough assets to survive market downturns and your assets go up in value over time.

  • @thewisdomchannel2361
    @thewisdomchannel2361 Місяць тому

    Sherman, you are brilliant. Thank you for explaining this so simply. Now I get it. Now it's time to Apply it to my own life. I've subscribed to your channel and will contact one of your coaches.

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому

      Thank you! I’m glad you found this helpful. Welcome to the channel and I look forward to interacting with you more.

  • @dydhcyshdj
    @dydhcyshdj 3 дні тому

    You should look up the tax on inheritance here in The Netherlands just for a laugh. (Or a tear…)

  • @getinthespace7715
    @getinthespace7715 Місяць тому +3

    I just model my income to be tax free...
    1. Build myself a house.
    2. Live in it as my primary residence for 2 years.
    3. Build another house while living in the first 1.
    4. Sell the first house. Leverage the section 121 cap gains tax exclusion (250k single, 500k married) to avoid paying taxes on the profits.
    $500k tax free every 2 years is the equivalent of $390k a year as a w2 employee.
    If I make a profit over $500k it is taxed as capital gains at 15-20% depending on my wife's income that year.
    No taxes. No debt. Building wealth like crazy.

    • @priestesslucy3299
      @priestesslucy3299 Місяць тому

      If the wife can offload enough of her income out of taxable income status, there is a pretty sizeable threshold of taxable income a couple can earn and pay 0% on capital gains.
      Including the standard deduction I think the total is over 50,000 for the year iirc
      That's ordinary income+ nonexempt capital Gains of course.

    • @smithwill5849
      @smithwill5849 Місяць тому +3

      there is a flaw in this. Any appreciation you gained in your primary residence, you will end up using it purchase the next house since that would also have increased in price

    • @priestesslucy3299
      @priestesslucy3299 Місяць тому

      @@smithwill5849 you missed the fact that he isn't buying houses.
      He is buying land and building houses.
      He might have bought land once and subdivided it into buildable lots before he ever started.

    • @SurferRC
      @SurferRC Місяць тому +1

      So start off with 250k-400k to build multiple houses! Simple

    • @getinthespace7715
      @getinthespace7715 Місяць тому

      @SurferRC , you don't need to start with a big house. $250k will get you a huge house doing the work yourself.
      I can build for 30-40% the cost to buy in my market... that's only 2x a 15-20% deposit.
      Want to start cheap. Build a post frame garage with an apartment in the front for less than $100k.
      Sell it for more than 2x what you put into it. Slowly scale up.

  • @scottgauer7299
    @scottgauer7299 7 днів тому

    Who's left holding the debt bill when you die though from all the leveraged loans? I understand debt doesn't pass on, but seems immoral to borrow against assets and then die without selling to pay that back

  • @anthonynardella8907
    @anthonynardella8907 Місяць тому +6

    That's great, you can borrow against your assets but how do you pay those loans back? do you take out and pay the loans with long-term capital gains? I don't understand eventually you have income somewhere to pay the loans back

    • @sailingindependence9927
      @sailingindependence9927 Місяць тому +3

      That's the secret. You have to join the paid members section to find out.

    • @Barnstable11
      @Barnstable11 Місяць тому +1

      If your assets are income-producing, like rental real estate, the rent pays for your loans.

    • @SurferRC
      @SurferRC Місяць тому +2

      @@Barnstable11unless your tenants dont pay. All the while you pay property tax, rental income tax, maintenance, insurance, hoa dues and more!

    • @chrisj699
      @chrisj699 28 днів тому +1

      You don't repay the loan. That's the whole idea of this strategy. You just keep paying the interest payments from the original loan amount. You borrow more once you're low on cash. Wash rinse and repeat. Works great as long as you have enough assets to survive market downturns and your assets go up in value over time.

    • @sailingindependence9927
      @sailingindependence9927 28 днів тому +1

      ​@@chrisj699 could you please let me know who your lender is? You know.. the one that doesn't expect the principal to ever be paid back? Don't worry, I'll wait.

  • @oldporkchops
    @oldporkchops Місяць тому +2

    Could you please elaborate on how we can use cash value life insurance to implement your Buy, Borrow, Die strategy? You mentioned it at the beginning but did not go into detail. Thanks for doing these videos for us, Sherman. I'm benefitting from them a lot.

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +2

      Normally, a portion of your life insurance premium is allocated to a "cash value" component. Once you build your cash value to a certain level, some policies will allow you take a loan against it. In that event, the proceeds are not taxable.

    • @PYTU
      @PYTU Місяць тому

      @@mycpacoach do you pay back at the interest rate of the year you borrowed or the rate of when you pay it back? I'm thinking this a question for the insurance company.

    • @oldporkchops
      @oldporkchops Місяць тому

      @@mycpacoach Thanks for this response. Would you be able to to please consider doing a video going in depth into this?
      In particular, could you please let us know if the gains from using a whole life insurance policy loan will be taxed? Can an individual deduct interest paid to the insurance company?

    • @Zulu345
      @Zulu345 Місяць тому +1

      I have been telling black folk to do this for years. We have 2 CPAs in the family. You appear to be well-versed. How can I reach out to you for a consultation?

  • @danielrichards2246
    @danielrichards2246 10 днів тому +1

    Im not sure if i missed something, just overthinking, or you went over it in another video but how do you get a loan, even if using a Heloc if you are showing minimal income due to deducting as much expenses as possible.
    Even with equity wouldnt a poan be harder to obtain with minimal net income?
    Thanks!!

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому +1

      The securities are pledged as collateral for a collateralized loan. With a stock brokerage account approved for margin, it's automatic. The borrowing can be 50% - 90% of the security's value, depending on the type.

  • @rlabarbe
    @rlabarbe Місяць тому +11

    this is the second video i've seen on this topic and i still don't understand where the money comes from to service the loan payment. what am i missing?

    • @MuzixMaker
      @MuzixMaker Місяць тому +3

      Nothing. It’s BS.

    • @primetimeedgetwitch3274
      @primetimeedgetwitch3274 Місяць тому +6

      That’s the mystery. Apparently you’re supposed to buy assets with the loans and those assets provide money that you use to pay back the loans. Sounds like a house of cards waiting to fall.

    • @sidra_games4551
      @sidra_games4551 Місяць тому +9

      I have a margin account that holds stocks. You can keep a negative cash balance basically indefinitely while just paying interest only monthly payments. For a normal dude like me I pay that with W2 wages and I try to not keep it negative. But in the terms of these billionares...they have plenty of revenue streams to pick up such a relatively small payment. They can even borrow more than they need to spend if they wanted so they have excess cash to make payments. Or they can just never pay it - the interest accrues so their cash balance gets more negative but if you have the underlying assets where you are nowhere near your borowing limits it really doesn't matter.

    • @tringalij
      @tringalij Місяць тому +1

      @@primetimeedgetwitch3274it is. For example you could buy $50k in metal, like silver, but only pay $20k and keep $30k in cash. So you put in 20 and got 30 out, you’re up $10k. If the asset’s interest and storage fees are, say, 4% but its value climbs at 6%, you’re golden. Never pay that $10k back. However as that debt grows if the value falls when the value equals your debt the account will be liquidated and you lose it all. That happened to me during Covid because the market tanked so fast overnight I couldn’t inject enough to cover the margin call and poof… $50k vaporized.

    • @deserialized
      @deserialized Місяць тому +1

      Either you use loan money to service the loan. But as he says you should tax plan. Live from interest, dividends, company dividends or rental income.

  • @thevibe7415
    @thevibe7415 Місяць тому +1

    This guy is a goldmine

  • @mike73ng
    @mike73ng Місяць тому

    I like the part where the interest is tax deductible but isn’t that only true if the funds are used for investment purposes?

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому

      Yes, that's the point. Margin interest is a good example.

  • @mikieemiike3979
    @mikieemiike3979 Місяць тому +2

    If you buy a house and live in it for 2 years then sell it you didn't have to pay capital gains.

    • @rogergeyer9851
      @rogergeyer9851 Місяць тому

      Muni bonds are tax free. Exceptions don't make the concepts of income and income taxes go away.

  • @Saved9491
    @Saved9491 11 днів тому

    I have a reverse mortgage on our home. Is this similar to what you’re describing. Does it fit with this strategy

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому +1

      Yes. Except the house goes to mortgage company on death to extinguish the debt. The house doesn't get passed on to heirs with a stepped up basis.

  • @TravelsoFun
    @TravelsoFun Місяць тому +1

    I do have one question that I still cannot figure out. For client A at the video section 4:33 how did 7 million turn into $483,000? Which math contributed to that amount?

    • @thewisdomchannel2361
      @thewisdomchannel2361 Місяць тому

      Great Question. I asked my self the same thing

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +1

      This example was pulled from JP Morgan. I’d assume there is a standard rate of return in both scenarios. You can view it here: privatebank.jpmorgan.com/nam/en/services/lending/securities-based-lending

  • @moonbot-en-007
    @moonbot-en-007 Місяць тому

    and for the little guy holding crypto, less then $100,000 ?

  • @rabbit892004
    @rabbit892004 6 днів тому

    What’s up fam; thanks for the information;
    I was actually looking for a loan for my brokerage account I barely have 12k invested with the stocks events app saying that I have 1650.58 usd dividends for 2024 and 2252.44 usd annually
    But hey my question is my church is non profit organization; can I give my donations to them and how will that help with taxes? Is it a good idea?
    Where can I get approved for my portfolio loan?

  • @eldouble_u4361
    @eldouble_u4361 23 дні тому

    How about work, save and invest

  • @guilhermemb9213
    @guilhermemb9213 Місяць тому +2

    Easy way to lose everything too

  • @adjust.clinic
    @adjust.clinic Місяць тому +1

    How do I find a CPA who uses strategies like this?

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому

      Just complete this form and you'll be directed to one who can help you. mycpacoach.com/contact/

  • @SAKAICHEWY
    @SAKAICHEWY Місяць тому +4

    Rental income from assets counts as income

    • @anthonynardella8907
      @anthonynardella8907 28 днів тому

      I would think only if it is reported. There is no W2 for the IRS to know you have it.

    • @constitutionalright827
      @constitutionalright827 25 днів тому +1

      Rental income from assets should be run through a business LLC - LLC Corp structure to minimize the tax. If you are creating this kind of leverage to acquire property there is no reason to do all that as just a person, you need entity structures to move to more beneficial tax/deduction structures. It absolutely works. Just because you start from a non-entity personal perspective, doesn't mean everything has to stay there. Use your leverage move to "start a business" which protects the assets and creates a favorable tax structure.

    • @constitutionalright827
      @constitutionalright827 25 днів тому

      @@anthonynardella8907 Well I mean that would be illegal but even then, it could only really work with a cash tenant. Otherwise, if you're pulling in 36k a year in checks from a tenant... Hope you don't get flagged, because you'll have to explain that one and one there is a pattern over years of the same... Enjoy the jumpsuit.

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому +1

      @@constitutionalright827 Rentals are all reported as passive income on either the personal or business return. There is nothing sketchy about it. The cash flow is usually tax advantaged due to the nature of depreciation.

  • @InternetStuff2
    @InternetStuff2 22 дні тому +2

    Okay, you take out a loan against your assets, but you now have to pay back that loan, which means you need an income stream. Once you get the income stream you're back to paying taxes. Any questions? Class dismissed.🤨🤨🤨🤨

  • @kortyEdna825
    @kortyEdna825 12 годин тому +2

    I agree that many people are considering NVDA as the "Stock of the year." However, I'm curious about which stocks could potentially become the next META in terms of growth over the next decade. I've allocated $200k for investment, aiming to retire comfortably.

    • @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl
      @NicholasHarmon-ow3jl 12 годин тому +1

      I think the next big thing will be A.I. For enduring growth akin to META, it's vital to avoid impulsive decisions driven by short-term fluctuations. Prioritize patience and a long-term perspective consider financial advisory for informed buying and selling decisions.

    • @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io
      @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io 12 годин тому

      Facing a similar situation, I sought advice from an invęstment advisęr. Through portfolio restructuring and diversification with good ETFs, S&P 500 and growth stocks, I've turned my portfolio around from $200k to over $800k in a few years.

    • @carssimplified2195
      @carssimplified2195 12 годин тому

      It appears that your investment advisor is highly skilled. Could you please let me know if you are still in contact with this advisor and, if so, how?

    • @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io
      @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io 12 годин тому

      She goes by ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finance, but so glad I did.

    • @carssimplified2195
      @carssimplified2195 12 годин тому

      Thank you for sharing, I must say, Aileen’’ appears to be quite knowledgeable. After coming across her web page, I went through her resume and it was quite impressive. I reached out and scheduled a call

  • @PYTU
    @PYTU Місяць тому +1

    Do you have to pay back from borrowing and or interest too?

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +3

      Eventually, but the idea is that the benefits of borrowing can greatly outweigh the cost of taxes and interruption of your investment returns.

  • @samsonoluwatayo9231
    @samsonoluwatayo9231 Місяць тому +1

    I do not understand this logic, I need more explanation and clarity. If you are not paying tax, are you not going to pay interest on the money borrowed? Depending on the interest rate and the return from your investment that would determine whether it is a worthwhile venture. Moreover how do you return the borrowed money without selling the investment at some point.

    • @Victoria-jh9uf
      @Victoria-jh9uf Місяць тому

      You don't pay taxes because loans are not taxable, but they still have interest. You would pay the interest and the loan principal down with the assets you own, assuming they are gaining in value over time. Since billionaires have such high stock and company share values, banks are more than happy to lend to them to pay for cheaper mortgage rates, other business investment, cars even, etc.

  • @staygreat3611
    @staygreat3611 12 днів тому

    They would seek a recovery. Recovery teams are obsessed they would be your best friend until they get it back

  • @sailingindependence9927
    @sailingindependence9927 Місяць тому +1

    How to avoid tax?? It's easy - just be rich from the start.

  • @ScreamingEagleFTW
    @ScreamingEagleFTW Місяць тому +3

    if you borrow then you dont pay taxes but you pay interest. so are you really ahead?

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +1

      What do you think about what I mentioned at 6:45?

    • @ScreamingEagleFTW
      @ScreamingEagleFTW Місяць тому

      @@mycpacoach I know you dont have to pay tax on interest, assets should never be sold anyway as you said, so the only benefit I see is if you are using the loan to invest in something that pays more return than the interest you have to pay on the loan and I would think that anything that is not risky is not going to pay more than the interest you have to pay to lenders. Also, you said when you have assets you can borrow against them to fund your lifestyle. But is making interest payments on a large sum over time going to be cheaper than just paying the tax one time on the money you are using to make those payments? This is all new to me but you practically have to have software to compare over time if you are ahead or not. I have a friend who bought a lot of crypto early and he does what you said, he borrows against it and then uses the money for living his lifestyle. Im not sure if his bucket is staying full, or slowly leaking out. He may just be trying to run out the clock and live tax free before he dies. I guess if you have enough money you could do that strategy. Just go deeper in debt by borrowing against assets and just die deep in debt but all the while living a life of luxury and never have paid taxes while alive. Interesting things to think about. You are making me think. Thanks.

  • @paifu888
    @paifu888 Місяць тому

    Never paid off your debt

  • @mmaranta785
    @mmaranta785 Місяць тому +1

    What about the interest you pay on the loans?

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +1

      Did you see 5:51 and 6:45?

    • @MuzixMaker
      @MuzixMaker Місяць тому

      @@mycpacoachthis is only true for ultra wealthy that own businesses.

  • @thevibe7415
    @thevibe7415 Місяць тому

    I have a question.I have a LLC that has made no money.
    How do I file taxes on it?

  • @REALMALE2024
    @REALMALE2024 Місяць тому +1

    >>>>>>WATCH>>>> RICHARD FAIN> 25 YEARS STOCKS

  • @dogegamer3288
    @dogegamer3288 Місяць тому +1

    Never try this strategy with under 5 million. It won't work with small asset holders. This works best with 20 million or more.

  • @FinancialConsultdotcodotza
    @FinancialConsultdotcodotza 11 днів тому

    Interest on borrowed money...tax😅

  • @thevibe7415
    @thevibe7415 Місяць тому

    I Have a question. If I trade options on my Robin-hood Acct and make 50K in a year.
    What is that taxed at?
    It’s not really owning a stock,yet it is more so owning the contract for a set period of time.

  • @rudy6814
    @rudy6814 Місяць тому

    How about we dont leave our kid nothing confused on where this comes from another bullshit idea like american dream😂😂

  • @doomslayerforever2858
    @doomslayerforever2858 Місяць тому +2

    Step one .become a billionaire

  • @JC-du6sn
    @JC-du6sn 6 днів тому

    Look up Within Heaven's Gates by Rebecca Springer. Page 64 😇

  • @christopherm1475
    @christopherm1475 Місяць тому

    Ok, so when you die you lose 100% of everything. Screw that, I want to enjoy at least a big part of my hard earned savings before I lose it all by death or retirement home

  • @iand654456
    @iand654456 3 дні тому +1

    The first problem with your math is that those billionaires paying less than 1% of their money in taxes still accounts for over 50% of federal income taxes yearly. The second problem is that this strategy is extremely high risk. It's easy to make these decisions if you have a large portfolio. If not it could easily backfire if your assets don't appreciate enough to pay back then loan you took against them. and real estate is not anywhere near as appreciative as stocks are.

  • @davidoswald5749
    @davidoswald5749 4 дні тому

    Why does this feel like cheating the system lol (maybe because it is) 😋

  • @alphaomegaforce
    @alphaomegaforce 11 днів тому

    😂everything in the uk is about tax

  • @madmaxxmiami
    @madmaxxmiami 28 днів тому

    Bet you can't avoid interest though. ;) When you can avoid that, please let us know.

  • @freespeech5330
    @freespeech5330 Місяць тому

    You lost me immediately when you say life insurance is an appreciated asset...😅

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому

      Apart from term life, insurance products include a death benefit componant *and* a savings component.

  • @MuzixMaker
    @MuzixMaker Місяць тому +5

    Brandon wants to tax your unrealized gains.

    • @theodorehaskins3756
      @theodorehaskins3756 Місяць тому +1

      So how would that work?

    • @MuzixMaker
      @MuzixMaker Місяць тому

      @@theodorehaskins3756 easy. Brokerage reports gain to IRS, you get a bill.

    • @mycpacoach
      @mycpacoach  Місяць тому +3

      No way that's going to get passed.

    • @MuzixMaker
      @MuzixMaker Місяць тому +1

      @@mycpacoach there was no way trump was going to lose reelection either.

    • @jscotthamilton5809
      @jscotthamilton5809 8 днів тому

      It will likely fail the Constitutional test, in a way that he cannot ignore the Supreme Court. The case law is stacked against Joey B.

  • @hedgefund996
    @hedgefund996 4 дні тому

    Awesome Educational Content Salute 🫡, By The Way You Have A New Subscriber