Wealth Formula Podcast
If you’re paying a ton in taxes right now… it’s because you’re playing the wrong game. Most people think taxes are about income. They’re not. They’re about behavior—more specifically, incentivizing behavior. The government is constantly telling you what it wants through the tax code, and once you stop looking at it emotionally, it’s actually pretty obvious. It wants businesses. It wants jobs. It wants housing. It wants capital deployed in specific areas like energy and infrastructure. And when you do those things, it rewards you with lower taxes. Now contrast that with the...
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This week, you’re going to start hearing a familiar narrative again… “Inflation is back.” And on the surface, it’s going to look true. The next CPI print is very likely to come in hotter than expected. We’re already seeing it in real-time data like Truflation. Energy prices have surged, and because energy feeds directly into headline CPI, it’s going to push that number up—fast. But here’s the problem… That’s not the whole story. Energy is notoriously volatile, which is why the Fed focuses more on core inflation—stripping out food and energy. But even core isn’t immune...
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Most people assume a high income leads to wealth. Sometimes it does. But more often, it leads to a very comfortable lifestyle that depends on getting paid dollars for hours. There’s nothing wrong with that. For many people, the best path is to keep doing what they do well and invest their income into real estate and other real assets. That alone can create significant wealth over time. But if you look at the people who build outsized wealth, there’s usually another element involved—they own something that scales. The key difference isn’t how hard they work. It’s what they own that...
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If you spend enough time listening to economists, you’ll notice something interesting. They rarely agree. Over the years on the Wealth Formula Podcast, I’ve interviewed economists from across the spectrum—Keynesians, Austrians, monetarists, market practitioners, academics. Some are bullish about the next decade. Others are extremely pessimistic. But there’s one thing that almost all of them have agreed on in private conversations. The entire economic outlook changes if artificial intelligence dramatically boosts productivity. And that possibility is no longer theoretical. The Latest...
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I recently had a long conversation with a very successful professional. He’s 58 years old. Highly educated. Respected in his field. Financially sophisticated — in fact, his job depends on understanding money. If you looked at his résumé, you would assume he was completely set for life. He wasn’t. A couple of bad investments. Some concentration risk. A few decisions that looked reasonable at the time. And suddenly he’s essentially back at ground zero — trying to start a new business at 58. This story is far more common than people realize. The Dangerous Assumption is that many...
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There is one truth that has followed every major technological revolution in human history. Energy demand always rises to meet technological capability. When we industrialized, coal consumption exploded. When we built the modern transportation system, oil demand reshaped global geopolitics. When we entered the digital age, electricity quietly became the backbone of the global economy. And now we are entering the AI era. What most people don’t appreciate is that AI is not just a software revolution. It is an electricity revolution. Training a single advanced AI model can consume as much...
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There’s a moment most high-income professionals remember clearly. It’s when the first real money finally starts coming in. If you’re a doctor, it’s when you finish residency training. And almost immediately, the world starts whispering in your ear: “It’s time to buy a house.” Not just any house. The nicest house the bank says you can afford. And that’s where people unknowingly sabotage one of the most powerful wealth-building windows of their entire lives…by becoming house poor. You see, the bank is not qualifying you based on what will make you wealthy. They’re qualifying...
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At some point in a successful career, taxes quietly become your largest expense. Not housing. Not lifestyle. Not investing losses. Taxes. And unlike most expenses, they grow automatically as your income rises — unless you deliberately structure around them. You know that my favorite means of tax mitigation is through investing in real assets like real estate and operating businesses. That approach has been the backbone of my own strategy for years — taking active income and redirecting it into assets that generate cash flow while providing meaningful tax advantages. I’ve also...
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For most of my career, I’ve been focused on two things: Operating businesses and Multifamily real estate. The strategy has been pretty simple. Take money generated from higher-risk, active businesses… and move it into more stable, long-term assets like apartment buildings. That shift—from risk to stability—is how I’ve tried to build durability over time. Now, to be fair, the sharp rise in interest rates a few years ago put a dent in that model. But zooming out, it’s still worked well for me overall. So I’m sticking with it. That said, there are other ways to think about real...
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This week’s episode of Wealth Formula features an interview with Claudia Sahm, and I want to share a quick takeaway before you listen — because she’s often misunderstood in the headlines. First, a quick explanation of the Sahm Rule, in plain English. The rule looks at unemployment and asks a very simple question: Has the unemployment rate started rising meaningfully from its recent low? Specifically, if the three-month average unemployment rate rises by 0.5% or more above its lowest level over the past year, the Sahm Rule is triggered. Historically, that has happened early in every U.S....
info_outlineMost people assume a high income leads to wealth.
Sometimes it does. But more often, it leads to a very comfortable lifestyle that depends on getting paid dollars for hours.
There’s nothing wrong with that. For many people, the best path is to keep doing what they do well and invest their income into real estate and other real assets. That alone can create significant wealth over time.
But if you look at the people who build outsized wealth, there’s usually another element involved—they own something that scales.
The key difference isn’t how hard they work. It’s what they own that has leverage.
And that leverage typically comes from systems.
If a business runs because you’re there every day, it can be profitable, but it’s still tied closely to your time. When systems are in place, the business can grow beyond you. That’s when it starts to become a true asset—something with enterprise value that could eventually be sold.
For high-income professionals, this creates a bit of a dilemma.
You’re already doing well. Walking away from that to pursue something uncertain doesn’t make much sense, and I don’t recommend it (even though I did it myself).
A more practical approach is to build something alongside what you’re already doing—something that has the potential to become scalable over time.
There are a few ways to approach that.
Starting a business from scratch can work. I’ve done it multiple times. Some turned out very well, others didn’t. Candidly, being a startup entrepreneur requires a certain kind of personality—one that’s comfortable with a lot of risk. You have to have the stomach for it and, if you don’t, it’s better to recognize that early and stay away!
Buying a business is another option, but most businesses in the price range of a typical high-income professional aren’t that large. Smaller acquisitions often come with hidden risks—key personnel, operational quirks, and issues the seller understands far better than you do (and may be part of the reason they’re selling).
Then there are franchises.
What makes franchises interesting is that they provide a structured roadmap. If you were an A student—someone who is good at following a curriculum and executing—this model can fit your wiring well. Franchise ownership is about learning a system and applying it consistently.
You don’t have to invent the model. You’re executing one that has already been proven.
Of course, there are trade-offs.
Franchise fees can be significant.
Upfront capital requirements can be high.
And the advisory landscape isn’t always objective.
So the real challenge is figuring out how to evaluate opportunities in this space with a clear, unbiased perspective.
That’s what we cover in this week’s episode of Wealth Formula Podcast.
My guest breaks down how to think about franchises, where they fit into an overall wealth strategy, and how to approach them in a way that actually makes sense for high-income professionals.
If you’ve been curious about building something beyond your primary career—but want a more structured path—this is a conversation worth listening to.