Six secrets wealthy people know

If you want to become seriously rich, then learn these six lessons for life.

After turning 18, I set myself some goals to achieve before I reached 40. These included learning to drive, writing a book, and being worth £1 million.

Although I met most of my life goals, some happened in a roundabout way. For example, I passed my driving test first time in 1996, but stopped driving in 1999. Likewise, I had always intended to write a work of fiction, but my Financial Times book was published nine months after I turned 40.

As for becoming a millionaire, my household wealth first reached £1 million on the day of my 40th birthday, just over two years ago. Given that I was heavily in debt at 30, this was a remarkable turnaround.

Six lessons for life

Somewhat peculiarly, I’ve discovered that I’m much better at making money in ‘bad’ times than ‘good’. For example, the vast majority of my wealth was made in the stock-market crashes of 2000/03 and 2007/09. This may be because, as a ‘contrarian’ investor, I prefer to go against the herd.

Anyway, here are six ‘life secrets’ that I’ve collected along the way. Some come from my own experiences, others from far wiser -- and richer -- individuals:

1.     Be your own boss

Although I’ve spent 23 years investing in the shares of other companies, I sincerely believe that the best business to own is your own. Sure, the red tape, paperwork and general bureaucracy can be stifling, but the benefits more than outweigh the burdens.

Having run my own one-man company since late 2005, I know that when I work twice as hard, I can earn twice as much. Likewise, working at home gives me a level of personal freedom and flexibility that I never had as an employee. In addition, after the taxman’s had his cut, all of the fruits of my labour go to me. When all’s said and done, you can’t beat being your own boss.

2.     Debt can be good or bad

One crucial lesson which rich people learn is that there is ‘good’ debt and ‘bad’ debt. Debt run up from shopping sprees, foreign holidays, flashy cars and high living is bad debt, because it drains your wealth. On the other hand, debt used to further your education, build a business or buy a home is good debt, because it usually builds long-term wealth.

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Likewise, interest-free debt -- such as a 0% credit card -- is infinitely preferable to, say, a store card charging 30% APR. At this sky-high rate of interest, your debt will more than double every three years, thanks to interest alone.

So, treat debt wisely: use it to buy assets which go up in value over time, and don’t spend money you don’t have on depreciating assets, consumer disposables and needless luxuries.

3.     Property is often a good buy

One oft-quoted rule of thumb is that ‘property prices double every seven years’. While this may be the case during house-price booms, it’s simply not true over the long-term. Indeed, I crushed this myth in this article from January 2008. That said, house prices rarely go down over the course of a decade -- the last time this happened was between 1989 and 1999.

So, buying your own home with a Best Buy mortgage usually makes good sense -- unless you overstretch your finances or buy at the top of a bubble, of course. Similarly, buying premises for a business adds up (although commercial property prices plunged 45% from their peak before starting to bounce back in 2009).

4.     Pensions still make sense

On 6 April 2006, known as ‘Pensions A-Day’, the government scrapped a heap of existing pension legislation, replacing it with a simpler, more attractive and more flexible regime. This led to a boom in contributions to personal, stakeholder and self-invested personal pensions.

This tip is absolutely vital to know if you want to make the most of your pension pot at retirement.

Alas, the government couldn’t resist meddling with this simplified regime by introducing complicated limits from April 2010 on how much pension tax relief highly paid workers can claim. For those earning £150,000+ a year, pensions have become far less attractive.

Nevertheless, for most middle-income and well-off workers, pensions still make a lot of sense, thanks to the 40% tax relief added to pension contributions made by higher-rate taxpayers. However, for low-paid workers, pensions sometimes don’t add up, as we explained here at lovemoney.com in Why pensions aren't always worth it.

5.     Diversification sometimes fails

Diversification is a simple concept: in order to avoid losing your shirt when one asset takes a tumble, you spread your money around between different asset classes. For example, using ‘asset allocation’, you choose a mixture of shares, bonds, property, commodities and so on.

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Alas, when asset classes become highly correlated (follow similar patterns), diversification can become ‘diworseification’. Notably, this happened during the credit crunch and economic downturn of 2007/09, when the prices of property, stocks and shares, commodities and credit all plunged steeply, more or less as one.

So, don’t assume that spreading your money around automatically makes it safer. When asset prices become strongly correlated -- for example, during global bubbles -- then diversification can fail. Indeed, the only guaranteed way to diversify is to hold good old-fashioned cash. Only during times of trouble do some investors learn that ‘cash is king’.

6.     Inherited wealth can be a problem

You may have got rich slowly or quickly. You may have found building wealth to be easy or hard. Regardless of how you made it, you’re going to have to part with it someday.

One way to wave goodbye to your wealth is to go SKIing: Spending the Kids’ Inheritance. After all, if you die leaving nothing of value behind, then you don’t have to worry about inheritance tax (which can gobble up 40% of your wealth above £325,000 on death). Alternatively, if you want to pass on a sizeable sum after you pass on, then you’ll need to do some inheritance-tax planning.

Then again, leaving a fortune to your children or other relatives could cause more harm than good. This is particularly the case when dynastic wealth is at stake. It’s worth noting that Warren Buffett -- the world’s greatest investor and the third-richest person on Earth -- will leave almost none of his $47 billion fortune to his offspring.

Instead, Buffett’s great fortune will go to charity. A wise move from a super-smart man!

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