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ratings:
Length:
8 minutes
Released:
Dec 24, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Merry Christmas, my friends! Today is light-hearted… let’s consider the popular Christmas movie “It’s A Wonderful Life” because, curiously, it reflects multiple sides of the Self-Directed Investor… and reveals a path to the merger of happiness and wealth that’s not actually achieved by any of the characters in the movie. I’m Bryan Ellis. This is a special CHRISTMAS EDITION… Episode #175.----Hello, SDI Nation! Welcome to the podcast of record for savvy self-directed investors like you!Merry Christmas, my friends! And Happy Holidays to you folks who celebrate something else.My lovely wife Carole has long loved the classic Christmas movie “It’s a Wonderful Life”, in which the good-hearted George Bailey finds himself in serious trouble on account of some financial carelessness at the Bailey Brothers Building & Loan. This gives an opening to Potter, the very wealthy and very evil villain, to swoop in and take over the Building & Loan and thus own absolutely everything in the little town of Bedford Falls, New York.I’d never seen the movie before I met Carole, so that’s just another wonderful thing she’s added to my life. But I enjoy that movie from a different perspective: Whereas nearly everybody who has ever seen it seems to think that the hero George Bailey is just a great guy and the villain Potter is a terrible menace, I see things very differently… and this distinction could be useful for all of us as self-directed investors.Potter is the bad guy in the movie. The first mention of him describes him as “the richest and meanest man in the county”. His demeanor is very gruff and matter of fact. He’s focused on the bottom line. He’s represented as, essentially, a slum lord. He is certainly not perfectly ethical, having chosen to take advantage of a huge mistake by one “Uncle Billy”, George’s Uncle – who, despite his undeniable problem with memory and with keeping appointments, is routinely entrusted with handling large amounts of money and in managing relations with the auditor of the Building & Loan. In fact, the whole conflict of the story comes down to Uncle Billy’s failure to make a very large deposit at Potter’s bank because he instead gloats to Potter and ends up misplacing the money… which Potter finds… and causes substantial legal trouble for the Building and Loan, and more specifically for George Bailey.So it’s a nice story because George Bailey – who runs the Building & Loan more as a charity than as an actual bank, and makes home mortgage loans on the basis of relationships rather than credit worthiness – well, George gets a chance, on account of a celestial intervention, to see what life would be like had he never been in picture to begin with.But here’s the part that’s curious to me: Potter, while certainly taking advantage of a very foolish error by Uncle Billy, espouses almost exclusively WISE business principles. For example: He is not in favor of granting loans based solely on personal relationships. He is not in favor of allowing non-paying borrowers to continue non-payment without facing foreclosure. He makes a very obvious… and not at all irrational… attempt at overtaking the Bailey Brothers Building & Loan when there is a mysterious run on the bank on the day of George’s wedding to Mary, and the planned departure day for their honeymoon. He is very brusk and very focused on the bottom line.All of this earns him the reputation of being EVIL, not wise. Now who knows… maybe his rental properties actually are slums. That’s never clarified… but there’s a clear mob mentality at work against him from some of his tenants.And then there’s George Bailey. George shows some discipline as a young man, getting a job very early in life, planning his life and career very, very carefully, and saving the money he earns in order to accomplish the specific objectives he’s set out. And along the way, he becomes friends with everybody in town, but his dreams are crushed when he’s forced to use the money he’s saved to provide liquid
Released:
Dec 24, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Do you INSTINCTIVELY KNOW that Wall Street doesn't have your best interests at heart, and that there's a better way to grow and protect your money to build wealth for generations? Then this is the alternative investments show for you. Self Directed Investor Talk is America's ONLY Podcast exclusively for Self Directed Investors (whether using a Self Directed IRA, Solo 401k, or non-retirement accounts) who trust themselves more than they trust Wall Street. You'll get innovative investment strategies, deadly accurate market analysis, and uniquely vetted profitable investment opportunities that conventional financial advisers don't even know about. You'll receive a powerful new episode every day of the week... and each episode is 10 minutes or less! Check it out right now! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.