Articles & Questions
Every week I publish a fun new article on a money topic I think you’ll find interesting. I also answer a handful of reader questions. Subscribers to my newsletter get to see everything first — but you can browse some of my past articles & questions on this page.
My Best Articles
Not sure where to start? Below I’ve handpicked a few of my favourites. And if you like what you see, don’t forget to subscribe to my free newsletter to get new issues before anyone else!
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Tax Rules
Hi Scott, I am returning to work post-children. I recently started looking for a part-time job, during which time my husband asked me to do his books and admin work.
Hi Scott, I am returning to work post-children. I recently started looking for a part-time job, during which time my husband asked me to do his books and admin work. I am legitimately doing two days’ work a week. When we visited an accountant my husband suggested paying me a wage, but the accountant said this is not possible under PSI tax rules (an associate for non-principal work). Is this true?
Danielle
Hi Danielle,
He can pay you … he just can’t claim a tax deduction for it under the PSI taxation rules. (For those of you reading along at home, Danielle is not talking about tyre pressure -- PSI stands for Personal Services Income). Simply put, your husband can’t claim a deduction for the salary he pays you, because you’re not involved in the principal work. Sounds like you have a good accountant!
Scott
Pay Off Your Home in 10 Years
Hello, I read a book about property investing by Konrad Bobilak and there is a chapter on how pay your house off in 10 years with no extra payments. The deal is using a 55-day credit card, keeping all your earnings in an offset home loan account, using your credit card daily, and setting up an automatic transfer before 55 days to pay back from the offset to the credit card.
Hello,
I read a book about property investing by Konrad Bobilak and there is a chapter on how pay your house off in 10 years with no extra payments. The deal is using a 55-day credit card, keeping all your earnings in an offset home loan account, using your credit card daily, and setting up an automatic transfer before 55 days to pay back from the offset to the credit card. But in your book you do not mention this. I am confused -- what should I do to pay off my mortgage quicker?
Des
Hi Des,
What you’re referring to is a ‘sweeper strategy’: parking your salary in your offset account, spending everything on a credit card, and then sweeping your entire credit card balance clean before your credit card repayment is due.
It looks awesome on a spreadsheet, but I’ve seen it harm more people than it helps. Reason being, most people end up spending too much on the credit card and get whacked with a backdated interest bill. Then, instead of saving interest you’re paying it.
Here’s you: “I won’t miss a repayment … ever.”
Here’s me: “You probably will at some stage. The Australian Bureau of Statistics suggests that about two-thirds of credit card holders miss a repayment at least once a year.”
My advice?
Get an ultra-low-cost variable home loan, forget the credit cards, and focus on making extra repayments each month.
Scott
I'm in Love
Scott, I’m in love! I met a guy six months ago, and he’s now moving into my house and wants to put his income into paying down my mortgage while we use my income to live on.
Scott,
I’m in love! I met a guy six months ago, and he’s now moving into my house and wants to put his income into paying down my mortgage while we use my income to live on. I am on $105,000 and he is on a $90,000 base (more with overtime). He has no debt, while I owe $330,000 on my home, $250,000 on an investment property (barely breaking even), and $20,000 on my credit card (from a holiday). We are going to get married eventually, but the plan is to live together and pay down my mortgage for a couple of years until we need more space for kids. The trouble is, I do not want him taking on my debt. So should I sell and start again together?
Melanie
Hi Melanie,
“I feel it in my fingers, I feel it in my toes, when love is all around me” …… you’ll probably make dumb money decisions.
Seriously, I’ve had little lambs last longer than you’ve known this bloke. (And you know what eventually happens to them, don’t you?)
A few things:
First, keep everything separate until he puts a ring on it. If you want to live in sin (as my grandmother calls it), charge him rent, and pay that straight off your mortgage. Easy.
Second, get rid of the credit card debt pronto. (Seriously? On a holiday? WTF?). Do the sums on your investment property and then ask yourself the ultimate question: would I buy this property again today? If not, get rid of it.
Now’s the time to get on top of your debts. But don’t do it for him. Do it for you. Repeat after me: “This man isn’t my financial plan.”
Finally, it sounds like you’ve fallen hard for this bloke. The best way to see if he’s as committed to your future as you are (other than checking his phone) is to sit back and watch what he does over the next 12 months. If he’s serious he’ll be working and saving like a man possessed. “Come on and let it show!”
Scott
Let’s Hear It, Barefoot
How come your book does not come as an audiobook? I am sure there are many visually impaired younger people who would love to learn from you.
How come your book does not come as an audiobook? I am sure there are many visually impaired younger people who would love to learn from you. You have podcasts available on iTunes, so where is your audiobook?
Pete
Hi Pete
I chose your question because it provides me with an excellent opportunity to shamelessly plug my wares. As luck would have it, I recently recorded the book for Amazon’s Audible service. (They were going to get James Earl Jones to narrate it ... but I put my foot down.) It’ll be available next month.Happy listening.
Scott
Paid Off the House … What Next?
Hi Scott, My partner and I both turn 32 this year, and by January 2018 we will have our home paid off in full, all on a combined $150,000 a year. We are already thinking ‘what next?
Hi Scott,
My partner and I both turn 32 this year, and by January 2018 we will have our home paid off in full, all on a combined $150,000 a year. We are already thinking ‘what next?’ and would appreciate your advice. We think we will both put an extra 10 per cent of our wages into super, build up our Mojo, and save for an overseas trip. We are also considering buying an investment property or getting into the share market. And one more thing: we intend to start a family in the next year or two. Where is the best place to put our money?
Ella
Hi Ella,
O.M.G.
You paid off your home in your early 30s?
If you were standing in front of me, I’d give you both a big bear hug. Better yet, let your family and friends give you one -- plan one hell of a par-tay for January 2018! Seriously, paying off your home is one of life’s great achievements. Celebrate it.
(For anyone keeping score at home, you’ll notice that Ella gave the month she would be debt free. She’s focused on her numbers. This didn’t happen by accident.)
Okay, so what should you do now?
Well, first, avoid the Instagram-envy of thinking you have to trade up to a more expensive home. The ultimate status symbol isn’t a flashy home or car -- it’s having the freedom to travel and spend quality time with your kids (when you have them!).
Being debt-free at such a young age, you can’t help but become incredibly wealthy. I’d suggest you go through the Barefoot Steps: boost your pre-tax super contributions, and build up your Mojo to cover three months of expenses (which will be much less without a mortgage). Then, I’d look at setting up a family trust and investing in low-cost share funds (consider buying an investment property when the market crashes). If you’re able to invest just $30,000 a year, you’ll be looking at a nest-egg worth over $5 million by the time you retire.
Scott
The Gambler
Hi Scott, My situation is complicated and I need your advice. I am in my early 40s and have been with my fiancé for seven years.
Hi Scott,
My situation is complicated and I need your advice. I am in my early 40s and have been with my fiancé for seven years. We do not live together but have bought a block of land (in his name) and are building a house (in his name), and will move into this house together. I have contributed money to this, but my issue is that he has a gambling addiction that he is in denial about, and he lies and deceives me. He believes that it is his money and that I should not say anything. I am fearful I will lose everything.
Hayley
Hi Hayley,
Yes, your situation is complicated, but it has a simple -- though brutal -- answer: don’t marry an addicted gambler.
Your fiancé has a long road ahead of him, but he hasn’t even taken the first step -- admitting his problem. The alarm bells should be ringing in your head: he deceives you, and he believes your money is his, and you have no say over anything. It’s highly likely he’ll gamble the lot.
If I were in your shoes I’d do three things. First, lovingly and supportively explain to your fiancé that he needs to get help with his addiction -- or you’re leaving. Second, sit down with a financial counsellor (1800 007 007) and get their help in removing your name from any joint accounts you may have with him. Third, talk to a solicitor and see if there’s an option for getting a financial settlement … before he blows the lot.
Scott
What Should I Do About My Crazy HECS Debt?
Hi Barefoot, I will get straight to the point. I have a crazy HECS debt to the tune of $70,000.
Hi Barefoot,
I will get straight to the point. I have a crazy HECS debt to the tune of $70,000. I am getting hitched in September to the the most amazing girl on the planet. What should I do?
Tom
Hi Tom,
First, you should definitely marry her.
Second, don’t bother paying any extra off your (admittedly gigantic) HECS-HELP debt.
Not even a dollar.
All the hoo-ha about the Government’s proposed changes to the HECS-HELP rules are focused on the compulsory repayments that come out as a percentage of your salary: they’re proposing to lower the starting income threshold by almost $13,000 (to $42,000).
In doing so the Government has all but given up trying to get people to make voluntary contributions -- the bonus was scrapped from 1 January 2017. So why would you bother rushing to pay off the cheapest loan you’ll ever get -- it simply increases with the general cost of living -- when it’ll come out of your salary anyway?
The answer is you shouldn’t, Tom. Forget about paying any extra and direct your cash into saving up for a deposit on a castle to share with the most amazing woman on the planet.
And one more thing for readers:I’m writing this from a hotel room in the US of A, where the average college student graduates $35,000 in debt to a financial institution that charges commercial interest rates. And it’s one of the few debts that doesn’t get wiped out in bankruptcy. We got it good!
Scott
If you want to buy a cheap inner city apartment … read this
Tick. Tick.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
That’s the sound of the inner-city apartment market.
There are 15,000 brand-spanking-new apartments due to settle before 30 June this year.
Many of these apartments won’t settle … because the buyers can’t come up with the balance of their money, after paying a deposit.
A couple of years ago I wrote a click-baity story:
“2018: The Year First Home Buyers Get Their Revenge!” (Not bad eh?)
I was writing about the opportunity for first homebuyers to buy a brand new inner-city apartment — at fire sale prices. Much, much cheaper than they were selling for at the time.
Here’s what I wrote: “In three years’ time there will be an oversupply of inner-city apartments in many parts across the country. It’s actually not hard to forecast today, because we can see what’s coming down the property pipeline in a few years’ time: apartment towers take years of planning and regulations to get approved. When the market is hot, like it is now, lots of developments spring up to feed the demand … but there’s a lag.”
Basically, I argued that too many investors had put down too little a deposit, and when payment was due they’d struggle to come up with the dough — causing them to either default with the developer, or sell at a massive loss.
Today I want to revisit that topic, to see how we’re faring.
Blood in the Streets
The housing boom has been fuelled by property investors, and in inner-city apartment markets it’s been driven by Chinese investors buying up big.
So this week I caught up with Li Ming, a co-director of Aussiehome, who specialises in selling Aussie property to Chinese investors.
Ming: “The Melbourne off-the-plan apartment market is the worst I have seen in the last 10 years.”
Barefoot: “How long have you been in the market?”
Ming: “5 years.”
Ming believes that around 80% of Chinese buyers won’t be able to settle on their Australian apartments.
So what’s happening?
Well, Chinese investors are caught in a ‘pincer grip’.
Here’s a real-life example of one of Ming’s clients:
Three years ago his client bought a yet-to-be-built, off-the-plan, two-bedroom apartment in Melbourne’s Southbank for $750,000.
They put down a $75,000 deposit (10%) and planned to organise a loan for $675,000 (90 per cent) in three years’ time when the apartment was built.
Now, at the time his client was flipping through the glossy apartment brochure Melbourne prices had soared 35% in the three years prior … so there was a chance the investor could turn around and sell the apartment for more than $1 million by the time the apartment finished.
Yeah, Nah.
Let’s get back to the present day.
The Pincer Property Grip
Because of the oversupply of inner-city apartments, the Aussie banks are now being cautious about how much they’ll lend (and they’re also charging investors a higher interest rate for their loans). They told Ming’s client they wouldn’t stump up 90% of the purchase price — only 80%.
Remember, Ming’s client was still contractually bound to pay $750,000 to the developer.
Bottom line: he was $75,000 out of pocket.
So where does he find the extra money?
Well, that’s the second part of the pincer grip: the Chinese Government.
For the past year, the Chinese Government has been clamping down on investors taking money out of this communist country. Investors used to be able to take out $US50,000 per person per year … yet now many state-owned banks are lowering the amount, or outright blocking the money going overseas.
“So what did your clients do?” I asked Ming.
“They had no choice. They walked away … and lost their $75,000 deposit.”
Ming told me he has other clients who flat-out couldn’t get finance from the banks.
“They managed to negotiate to flip their apartment for a 7% loss … but even that is getting harder to do. Everyone is getting desperate”, he said.
60 Minutes Says …
Australia’s ‘flagship’ current affairs program, 60 Minutes, did a story last week on housing affordability. They interviewed two of our biggest inner-city apartment developers about the issue.
However they didn’t press them on the fate of Chinese investors. They didn’t ask what effect the banks repeatedly jacking up interest rates on investors was having on demand. And they certainly didn’t ask why the Reserve Bank has openly stated this week that it’s worried about the inner-city apartment market … along with flat-as-a-pancake wages growth, heavily indebted households, and sluggish growth.
Instead, they simply walked around in hard hats, grinned, and pointed at skyscrapers. And, in turn, the two rich white dudes gave two bits of incredibly condescending advice to young first homebuyers:
“Suck it up” and …
“Let us build more apartments.”
Seriously, that’s what they said.
Angry Millennials took to Twitter to vent their frustration about being labelled unrealistic, coffee-swilling, avocado-eaters.
My advice?
Don’t get angry … get even. Falling prices are coming, and right on cue.
Tread Your Own Path!
We Can’t Sleep at Night
Hello Scott, My husband and I are on the age pension and receive $2,200 per month. We also receive an overseas pension of $700 a month.
Hello Scott,
My husband and I are on the age pension and receive $2,200 per month. We also receive an overseas pension of $700 a month. We have a combined super balance of $32,000 and a home worth $600,000.
We owe $25,000 on our car, $24,000 on our home, and $25,000 on a bank overdraft (we used to have a business but it collapsed). We are considering borrowing $100,000 for debt consolidation, paying off the car and overdraft, putting some into our home loan, and topping up our super with the balance. The payments on such a loan would be $600 per month (based on current interest rates). Please help, as this is leaving me anxious and sleepless at night.
Kathy and Kevin
Hi Kathy and Kevin,
You’re going to struggle to get a $100,000 loan when you’re on the pension, and with good reason:
Pensioners can’t afford to be repaying debts!
If I were in your shoes, I’d downsize your home, pay off all your debts, and keep the money in super as a backstop.
Otherwise you could: withdraw your super as a lump sum and pay off the highest-interest debt. Then both of you could go back to work a day or so a week (combined you can earn $13,000 each before it affects into your Centrelink pension), and possibly rent out a room until you’re debt free.
Good luck.Thanks for reading.
Scott
I Ruined My Husband’s Life
Hi Scott, My husband’s business has taken a massive hit, and I am entirely to blame. He is a part-owner of a successful business for the past eight years.
Hi Scott,
My husband’s business has taken a massive hit, and I am entirely to blame.
He is a part-owner of a successful business for the past eight years. They have finally reached the stage where they are able to expand, and just a few weeks ago were approved for a significant loan.
Today, they received a call informing them the loan has been withdrawn: because years ago when they were setting up the company I was made a director, and I am bankrupt. (My husband and I have totally separate finances. I have nothing to do with the company, and own no shares. I am just a stay at home mum to three young kids).
When the business’s bank sent the paperwork to the seller’s bank, they were flagged my insolvency. The loan was immediately withdrawn. Because of me. Now I have single-handedly destroyed the future (and present) of my husband’s business partners, and the business they have all worked so hard to build. I am at a complete loss as to what I can do, short of divorce.
Ingrid
Ingrid,
Dial down the drama!
You haven’t ruined the business. And you don’t need a divorce, though a competent accountant would be nice.
You can’t be a director of a company if you’re bankrupt (so you should have left before you went bankrupt). But you can fix this; just call your accountant and have them lodge with ASIC and get it cleaned up. Then have your husband explain the situation to the bank -- that you’re basically a patsy director who owns no shares. If the business’s financials stack up (and the directors can offer the appropriate guarantees), they’ll get the loot. If the financials don’t stack up, they won’t.
Now the thing for me that is drama-worthy is that you and your husband still split the bills like you’re flatmates. That’s going to strain your relationship, if it isn’t already (and it sounds like it is). You need to work as a team, split everything down the middle, and make joint decisions. Do it for your kids.
Scott
Reminder: I first wrote about this years ago and highlighted the low fees. Today there are better bank accounts on offer. How do I know? Because my readers constantly email me about them! So before you do anything, google the best accounts on offer now.
Go Wash Yourself, Barefoot
Barefoot, I have no question. I just cannot believe that -- in the paper last week -- you would be pushing a company such as Amazon.
Barefoot,
I have no question. I just cannot believe that -- in the paper last week -- you would be pushing a company such as Amazon.com. Talk about being a hypocrite! Here we are, us plebs who go to work every day, some of us for minimal wages, working 40 hrs a week to pay for our mortgages and living expenses, doing our damndest to make ends meet. And you are telling us how great this overseas company is just because they can deliver washing powder faster than Superman -- and cut back jobs. What about advance Australia fair?
Reg
G’day Reg,
Competition’s a bitch, ain’t it, Reg?
Whether you or I like it or not, Amazon is coming to Australia and it’s going to rock the retail industry. And that’s the point I made to my readers: there are 1.3 million Aussies retail workers, and jobs will go. (They’re called the ‘country killer’ for a reason.)
So what can we do?
Well, we can vote with our feet and buy everything locally from Aussie producers and retailers.But you and I know ... we won’t.
Scott
A Brick to the Head
Hi Barefoot, I have been thinking about what I could do to have my deposit savings keep pace over the next couple of years before I buy my place. One idea I have is to invest my deposit savings into BrickX, which allows you to buy a share in an investment property.
Hi Barefoot,
I have been thinking about what I could do to have my deposit savings keep pace over the next couple of years before I buy my place. One idea I have is to invest my deposit savings into BrickX, which allows you to buy a share in an investment property. I see it as a hedge against rising property prices. What do you think?
James
Hi James,
I wouldn’t do it, even though it is a hedge (less their fees, and less any potential capital gains tax).
Reason being, I don’t advise people to buy an investment property before they purchase their principal place of residence, because in all the years I've been doing this I’ve never seen it work out. (And with a BrickX property, you don’t have the option of eventually living in it.)
ScoMo’s new ‘First Home Super Saver Scheme’ is admittedly a bit of a fizzer (maybe that’s why it’s got the acronym FHSSS)?
But it’s exactly where you should be saving for the last few years of your deposit. That’s because a couple earning $65,000 each will save an additional $12,000 by using the scheme -- guaranteed. And for the average Aussie trying to buy a home in one of the most overvalued patches on earth, every cent counts.
Scott
How to get into your home 30% quicker
When I was a kid, all I wanted for my birthday was a pair of Air Jordans. Mum and Dad got my hopes up.
When I was a kid, all I wanted for my birthday was a pair of Air Jordans.Mum and Dad got my hopes up. Then on the big day, they presented me with … a pair of Dunlop Volleys.
“They’re great sandshoes”, said Dad. “You know, Newk used to play in these. A phenomenal sportsman.”
Uh-huh.I felt the same way last Tuesday, on Budget night.
See, in the lead–up to Tuesday, the Government had been leaking like Clive Palmer, dropping hints that the centrepiece of the Budget would be a plan to tackle housing affordability — once and for all!
What we got was the legislative equivalent of Dunlop Volleys (before hipsters made them cool):
A feeble attempt to get some oldies to downsize, and an air kiss to negative gearing and capital gains tax reform. And … the First Home Saver Account 2.0* (*now with less KRudd!). In fact, the name is eerily similar — the ‘First Home Super Saver Scheme’.
“I was right!” I yelled at ScoMo (who was … talking on the telly).My wife sat there, arms folded, rolling her eyes.
“I predicted months ago in my column that the Government would only let people withdraw their voluntary super contributions to put towards a deposit”, I said, punching the air triumphantly.
“You are turning me on so much right now … my husband, the tax whisperer”, she said (mockingly).
Harsh … but fair. It’s not like I’d just answered the million-dollar question on Hot Seat.
Yet given that I’ve always been a fan of first homebuyers saving up to buy a home, let’s take a look at what’s on offer. Today I’m going to tell you exactly what you should do with the brand-new First Home Super Saver Scheme.
Specifically, who should open one … and who shouldn’t.
How to Get into Your Home 30% Quicker
At least, that’s the line ScoMo used on Budget Night.
So let’s see how it works.From 1 July 2017, you’ll be able to ask your boss to divert extra money into your super fund to save for a deposit, and then draw it out to buy your first home (the earliest time you could withdraw it is 1 July 2018).
The maximum you can save is a piddly $30,000 per person (so a couple can save $60,000).
Why would you do that?
Because you’ll pay less tax … and the less tax you pay, the more money you’ll have to put towards your deposit.
Let’s take the case of Mandy.
Mandy earns $65,000 a year as a professional wrestler, and she’s saving a deposit for her very own wrestling ring.
At her top rate, Mandy pays out 32.5 cents in the dollar in tax, plus the Medicare levy. So she could earn $10,000 and be left with just $6,550. Yet if she salary-sacrificed the same $10,000 into her super fund (with a 15% flat tax rate), she’d be left with $8,500. Even better, the interest she earns on that money in super would also be taxed at the same rate — another tick for her super fund.
No-brainer, right?
Okay, so that’s quite simple.But the cardigans in Canberra love complexity, so let’s go deeper.
Game on!
First, Mandy is limited to putting in a maximum of $25,000 into super per year pre-tax, and that includes her employer contributions. (And if you’re self-employed, or your employer doesn’t offer salary sacrifice, you can still claim a tax deduction on your personal contributions.)
Second, how much interest does she earn?
Well, that’s the thing.
The money isn’t paid into a separate account; it all goes into the one super pot (deposit savings and long-term savings together). The ATO doesn’t want to calculate the interest Mandy will earn on her deposit savings, so they cheat and use a formula for guessing (they call it ‘deeming’). Currently, it’s set at 3 per cent plus the current bank bill rate, making a total of 4.78 per cent.
Again, that’s not how much she’ll actually earn on her deposit savings, just what they deem she’ll earn. If the market crashes, her super balance will take a significant hit — but the ATO will still deem that her deposit savings increased by 4.78%, and she’ll be allowed to take it all out. Trouble is, it hasn’t actually increased, and what she’s taking out is dipping into her long-term super savings — not good. Now I’m not saying this will happen, but it’s possible.
Finally, she’ll be hit with an exit tax (set at 30% below her marginal rate) when she takes her deposit savings out of her super.
Seriously, can you imagine Pauline Hanson trying to work this out?
Please explain?
If your eyes glazed over for the last few lines, that’s okay. Here’s the guts of it:After three years of saving using the First Home Super Saver Scheme, Mandy will have $25,833 available for a deposit, or $6,314 more than if she’d saved via a standard bank account.
So how does this all apply to you? Well, it depends.
Who should open a First Home Super Saver?
If you’re planning on buying a home in the next few years, and you already have a decent deposit saved up, you’d have rocks in your head if you didn’t open one up.
That’s because it’s worth $12,628 extra to an average earning couple (based on Mandy shacking up with the Hulk), compared to saving in a basic bank account. Sure, that’ll buy you the equivalent of half a dunny in a capital city, but it’s twelve bloody grand for filling out a few forms! I’d bend down and pick up twelve grand if I saw it on the footpath. Wouldn’t you?
Who should not open a First Home Super Saver?
Anyone with a longer timeframe — who isn’t planning on buying for up to five years. Parents, grandparents — don’t open one up for young kids. Conscientious kids, that goes for you too.
Huh? Isn’t the Barefoot Investor all about the long term?
Sure, but there’s one more risk with this scheme that I haven’t mentioned yet — and it’s a doozy. What happens if you meet and settle down with a good-looking young rooster (or hen) who just happens to own their own home already?
Under the current rules, the money you’ve saved up can only be used as a deposit for your first home. So, because your partner has already bought a home, you’ll be forced to keep that money locked up inside your super and won’t be able to access it until you’re in sandals and socks.
Or Air Jordans.
Tread Your Own Path!
What a 90-year-old gardener taught me about real wealth
Photograph: Chris Crerar Today I’ve got a real treat for you. I’m going to paint you a picture of what real wealth looks like.
Today I’ve got a real treat for you.
I’m going to paint you a picture of what real wealth looks like.
I’ve spoken to a lot of amazing people over the 12 years I’ve written this column, but the two hours I spent with legendary ABC broadcaster and garden guru Peter Cundall proved to be one of the most thought-provoking discussions of my life.
And it began terribly.
“I don’t like economists … and I hate financial writers … ”, the 90-year-old told me gruffly.
“Oh…kay”
“… but I love the Barefoot Investor!”
“Okay!”
At this point, dear reader, you’re probably thinking to yourself, “what can an old gardener teach me about achieving real wealth?”
Trust me, keep reading.
Our tale of riches begins in the working-class town of Manchester, England, on the 1st of April 1927. Cundall was born in a room that his parents rented for a shilling a week.
They were dirt-poor, but at least Peter was born healthy. Tragically, two of his baby brothers died — one almost immediately after being born, the second when just two years old. “That was quite common in the 1920s … my brothers basically died of malnutrition”, he says.
This was at the height of the (not so) Great Depression.
Of the one hundred homes in his street, only five had a job: “We really were the poorest of the poor … though I didn’t know it at the time. After all, there was no television for us to compare ourselves to anyone else.”
His father was a violent alcoholic who repeatedly bashed his mother. And so it fell to young Peter to step up. Despite his love of learning, he quit school at age 12 and began working seven days a week, from sun-up to sundown, to support his mother.
And it didn’t get any easier as he got older — fighting not only in World War Two but also in Korea.
The avowed pacifist tells me the Korean War was non-stop slaughter: “We were surrounded by rotting corpses all around us. These were your mates. The smell of death never left us for a year.”
The Power of Perspective
Here’s the thing: right now my inbox is chock-full of people worrying about the ‘crises’ they face in their lives: “I can’t afford repayments on my Audi — should I sell it (sad emoji)? I have to pay tax on super over $1.6 million … it’s not fair! The housing market is …. brutal.”
Uh-huh.Cundall — by contrast — has lived through genuinely tough times.
In fact, looking back on his life after nine decades, you wouldn’t blame him for being a bitter old bugger.
But he’s not.
Cundall’s genius is his sense of perspective.
“I had a magnificent childhood … I was extraordinarily happy”, he tells me, without a hint of irony.
His fondest memory is of his mother encouraging him to grow veggies in the next-door council block, to feed his family. “I remember when I was three years old, sowing some peas, pushing them into the soil. I started growing organic food way before it was trendy. The streets were strewn with horse manure … that was the food for the veggies!”
And here’s how he describes the time in World War Two when he was locked in solitary confinement (for six months): “When I heard the cell door clink behind me I thought … ‘Aaaah, finally a room to myself.”
The fact is, no one could go through the devastation he’s seen without being changed. For Cundall (and many of his generation) it instilled a steely sense of resolve, self-determination and inner self-reliance that he could handle whatever life threw at him.
Case in point, here’s what he says about debt:
“I’ve never had debts … never! If I didn’t have money, I didn’t buy it. And if I still wanted it, I’d make it.”
And about government handouts:“I have never, ever taken anything from the government”, he says (despite being entitled to a military pension after years of service). “I have no interest on being on the public teat.”
Now Cundall may be 90 years old, but he’s still as sharp as an axe.
Throughout the interview he punctuates his stories with hook-lines with the skill of an old-school advertising man: “And let me tell you another thing … and this will shock you …”
I’d find myself leaning in to find out what will shock me …“I like paying tax … because of what it provides! We need to pay more taxes in this country!”
The Power of Contribution
After surviving two wars, Cundall began his career in the media.In fact, he was the pioneer gardening guru, starting the world’s first gardening radio talkback show, in the late 60s. And a couple of years later he began presenting on television, which became Gardening Australia, where he stayed until retiring in 2008. (“I am totally unqualified for anything”, he says. “When I got on telly, I just bullshitted my way through.”)
Key point: he didn’t do it because he wanted to be famous. He didn’t do it because he wanted to become rich. And he certainly didn’t do it to fluff his ego. He did it because he wanted to help people and show them how to grow healthy, nutritious food.
Or as he puts it: “I don’t have ambitions for myself … I’m ambitious about what I can contribute.”
And after 60 years, he’s still contributing. Most nights he works until 3 am in his study, writing for the Weekly Times and the Organic Gardener, and he does a weekend talkback show on the ABC.
He also volunteers his time helping soldiers who’ve returned from combat. “These are veterans who are suffering. And when you’re stressed out, you should go to the garden and push the shovel in. As you turn the earth, it releases something back to you. It’s like an all-natural anti-depressant.”
You can learn a lot from listening to the wisdom of people who’ve lived through genuinely tough times. When it comes to Peter Cundall, you can learn just by watching what he does. My hope is that when I’m 90 years old I’ll still be furiously bashing away on my keyboard and helping families manage their money better.
That, for me, would be true wealth.
Tread Your Own Path!
The Professional Poor
Hi Scott, We are in our early 40s and, despite a combined income of $185,000, are feeling like the ‘professional poor’. Working long hours, drowning in our mortgage, two young kids (with two depressed parents), no support to even have a Barefoot Date Night.
Hi Scott,
We are in our early 40s and, despite a combined income of $185,000, are feeling like the ‘professional poor’. Working long hours, drowning in our mortgage, two young kids (with two depressed parents), no support to even have a Barefoot Date Night. Our last holiday was four years ago and we were all vomiting with a virus. We are sick and tired of life and need help. I would rather live in a tent, but can’t even afford one. We are a sinking ship.
Amanda
Hi Amanda,
Boo-freaking-hoo.
Let me hit you with the reality stick: according to globalrichlist.com, you are in the top 0.07 per cent richest people in the world, based on your income. That makes you the 4,262,959th richest person on earth by income. In other words, around 7.1 billion people would love to have your First World problems. You sound like what I call a ‘postcode povvo’: you’ve over-borrowed so you can live in a fancy house in a fancy suburb, and all it’s doing is making you miserable. Now, all jokes aside, I totally understand the depression that financial stress brings. It’s horrible and it’s no way to live. Thankfully there’s a simple solution: sell and buy something you can afford. On your income, and working as a team, you can do this. Then you -- and the kids -- can start enjoying life.
Scott
Aggressive Wealth-Builders Go for Broke
Dear Barefoot, My husband and I are in our early 30s and we earn $175,000 combined. We are aggressive wealth-builders.
Dear Barefoot,
My husband and I are in our early 30s and we earn $175,000 combined. We are aggressive wealth-builders. However, one of our investment properties is in negative equity by $75,000 (we had a loan to value ratio of 97 per cent). We have no way of refinancing or selling as we cannot cover the shortfall currently. We have three other investment properties (one that we will move into in five years) and thought to sell them to cover the shortfall. However, we have just had independent valuations done and this would only cover $20,000 -- a huge mess! Do we direct our ‘fire extinguisher’ money to this and pay it down to where we can sell it? I say yes, partner says no. HELP!
Stacey
Hi Stacey,
Aggressive is one word for your situation. Borrowing 97 per cent of the value of the property doesn’t leave you with any wriggle room (negative equity simply means you owe more on your mortgage than the house is worth, in your case to the tune of $75,000).
I understand the concept of aggressively using the equity to ‘leapfrog’ and buy more investment properties. There are entire books devoted to the strategy, and they all end with the landlord becoming filthy rich. In the book, that is.
The ‘only’ thing you need to watch out for is going broke in the process! To avoid that, you need a buffer.
So let’s talk about your buffer. You need to make sure that you have enough money to cover the impact of higher interest rates, prolonged vacancies, and maintenance costs. That’s just for the investments. You also need Mojo (and income protection) in case one of you can’t work.
Either way, I’d be aggressively saving -- and then potentially looking at unwinding the strategy.
Scott
Our Friends Almost Ruined Us
Hi Scott, My husband and I lost $300,000+ in the GFC -- bad property, tax schemes (‘woodlots’), loans for shares, etc, all sold by a dodgy financial adviser and all of which collapsed! We have slowly shed the debts.
Hi Scott,
My husband and I lost $300,000+ in the GFC -- bad property, tax schemes (‘woodlots’), loans for shares, etc, all sold by a dodgy financial adviser and all of which collapsed! We have slowly shed the debts. We now follow Barefoot, are ‘hosing down’ our home loan ($185,000), have $65,000 invested, are building up our Mojo account, and have started giving Kiva loans. Despite all this, I cannot shed the resentment I have for our friends who promoted the financial adviser to us. In your experience, do people like us eventually forgive themselves for listening to bad advice?
May
Hi May,
You’ve managed to pull yourself out of a financial hole; now you need to let it go emotionally, for a few reasons:
First, the money ain’t coming back.
Second, it’s not your friends’ fault. Truth is, most people have no idea how to judge a financial planner: Did he have a nice smile? Nice suit? Salon-styled hair? More likely, he made your friends some money (well, before the GFC hit) and they were just trying to help you do the same.
Third, if you’re going to get angry at anyone, direct it at the financial advisor, not your friends. He was the one who broke your trust and did the wrong thing by you.
You know what? It’s highly likely your friends lost a lot of dough with this douchebag too. Why not have a chat to them and explain what you went through -- and how you pulled yourself back up again. Just sharing that story with them will make you feel better. Promise.
Scott
Worried Grandad
Hi Scott, My granddaughter’s father (my son-in-law) died when she was 10 years old, and left her a legacy. She is now 19 and has a share portfolio worth $105,000 earning (around $7,000 fully franked) and cash investments of $30,000.
Hi Scott,
My granddaughter’s father (my son-in-law) died when she was 10 years old, and left her a legacy. She is now 19 and has a share portfolio worth $105,000 earning (around $7,000 fully franked) and cash investments of $30,000. She attends uni and has part-time work earning $20,000 p.a. All good. But for the past year she has been seeing a boy who only works part time and lives with his mother. I think they may be planning to move in together. How can she protect her assets if this relationship fails?
Doug
G’day Doug,
You could encourage them both to sign a cohabitation agreement, which is a legal document between a couple who choose to live together. Honestly, though, it’s not ironclad and it doesn’t necessarily stop things from getting messy if he’s got dollar signs in his eyes. You could choose to transfer the shares into a trust, or invest via an investment bond for another layer of asset protection, though you’d need to consider the capital gains tax implications of doing so.
For my money, the best way to protect your granddaughter is to explain, in as many ways as you can, what the money represents, namely her father’s dying wish that his daughter be financially secure. It’s her job (with your loving guidance) to honour him, and the way to do that is by learning to become a good money manager. She may need to hear it 30 times before it really sinks in: it’s not just shares and cash in a bank, it’s a bond she shares with her father. No one else.
Scott
Divine Intervention
Scott, Could this be divine intervention? I have just read your recent article in which you saved a single mum from a property ‘guru’.
Scott,
Could this be divine intervention? I have just read your recent article in which you saved a single mum from a property ‘guru’. It hit home for me because my husband and I are considering signing up for one of these programs -- a ‘step-by-step guide’ to investing in commercial property. It is not the $17,000 your article mentioned, but it is still $3,000 that we do not have and which we are considering paying for on our credit card.
My husband is excited and wants to go ahead, but I am sceptical. We follow your blogs, have read your book, and religiously read your articles in the paper. In the past you have advised that commercial property is a good investment, though you were referring to shares in commercial companies. We know a little about investing in property (having bought a property through our SMSF which seems to be going well), but we are scared to take the plunge. What would be your advice?
Natalie
Hi Natalie,
Tell your husband to pull his head in. You should both have an equal vote on where you spend your money. You’ve voted ‘no’ for what I think are intelligent reasons -- the biggest of which is that you don’t actually have the money to buy the course. Anyone who buys a $3,000 course on credit card should not be investing in commercial property!
Scott
Mojo or Offset?
Hi Scott, We are absolutely loving your book -- we are on Date Night Three and already feel more in control than we’ve ever been. But the one thing we can’t get our head around is your advice on Mojo -- you say that people shouldn’t put their Mojo money in an offset account.
Hi Scott,
We are absolutely loving your book -- we are on Date Night Three and already feel more in control than we’ve ever been. But the one thing we can’t get our head around is your advice on Mojo -- you say that people shouldn’t put their Mojo money in an offset account. We make $170,000 combined and have $342,000 on the mortgage, which has an offset account. Wouldn’t it be the best of both worlds to use our offset account as our Mojo account?
Kelly
Hi Kelly,
Great work on the Date Nights! As far as parking your Mojo money goes, I strongly favour keeping it in a totally separate account with another bank. It just gives another layer of separation from your day-to-day banking (and spending). Yes, I know more tax effective to park your Mojo in an offset account than a savings account, but the real return you get from Mojo is being able to draw on it when life hits the fan. And I’ve met a lot of people who’ve ‘borrowed’ from their Mojo money and never replaced it. Ultimately, though, I suppose it doesn’t matter where you keep it, so long as you have it!
Scott