Money Grows on Trees: the Podcast
Money Grows on Trees Property vs Shares
March 22, 2021
In the 8th episode of the podcast Lloyd discusses the difference between owning property and owning shares. Lloyd breaks down why it is sometimes more important for your wealth creation to forgo buying property to invest in shares, and how it can lead to you ending up buying your dream home. As always Lloyd gives an extra bit near the end to help you get that Money Tree planted so that you can enjoy the fruits for a long time. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In his early 20's Lloyd picked up a book called “The Snowball” a comprehensive biography about Warren Buffet, arguably the world’s greatest investor of all time and one of the wealthiest on the planet.  He bought his first stock at age 25… at age 37, Lloyd is now just a breath away from achieving his first major financial goal of $1 million, without ever using debt. He also bought a book called "Rich Dad Poor Dad" and that helped him, his wife and older sister start a side hustle, and now they teach people how to plant their own Money Tree. Join Lloyd on his journey helping everyday people reach their financial goals. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The material in this publication is of the nature of general comment only, and does not represent professional advice. The author does not hold an Australian Financial Services License and is not licensed to provide financial advice. As such, this material is not intended to provide specific guidance for particular circumstances and it should not be relied on as the basis for any decision to take action or not take action on any matter which it covers. Listeners should obtain professional advice where appropriate, before making any such decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the author and publisher disclaim all responsibility and liability to any person, arising directly or indirectly from any person taking or not taking action based on the information in this publication.   This podcast is produced by: Phil Better Inc.

In the 8th episode of the podcast Lloyd discusses the difference between owning property and owning shares.

Lloyd breaks down why it is sometimes more important for your wealth creation to forgo buying property to invest in shares, and how it can lead to you ending up buying your dream home.

As always Lloyd gives an extra bit near the end to help you get that Money Tree planted so that you can enjoy the fruits for a long time.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In his early 20's Lloyd picked up a book called “The Snowball” a comprehensive biography about Warren Buffet, arguably the world’s greatest investor of all time and one of the wealthiest on the planet. 

He bought his first stock at age 25… at age 37, Lloyd is now just a breath away from achieving his first major financial goal of $1 million, without ever using debt.

He also bought a book called "Rich Dad Poor Dad" and that helped him, his wife and older sister start a side hustle, and now they teach people how to plant their own Money Tree.

Join Lloyd on his journey helping everyday people reach their financial goals.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The material in this publication is of the nature of general comment only, and does not represent professional advice. The author does not hold an Australian Financial Services License and is not licensed to provide financial advice. As such, this material is not intended to provide specific guidance for particular circumstances and it should not be relied on as the basis for any decision to take action or not take action on any matter which it covers. Listeners should obtain professional advice where appropriate, before making any such decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the author and publisher disclaim all responsibility and liability to any person, arising directly or indirectly from any person taking or not taking action based on the information in this publication.

 

This podcast is produced by: Phil Better Inc.