- Joined
- Mar 24, 2014
- Messages
- 5,745
- Reaction score
- 7,096
Bought the houses as a private individual or maybe a separate llc and then had the treatment program that he owned lease then from him or his other company. That way when he sold the treatment program, he still owns the properties and is still getting paid monthly leases.He bought rental homes then he leased them to himself? I don’t understand what you mean by that
Again, appreciate the great info. I like the way you put that part about following your gut and the numbers. I do the numbers in my head a bit too much so should use spreadsheets a bit more to improve that aspect of my planning.Right, that's very different from reinvesting the excess capital into the practice itself. Again, whether you own the business which then owns real estate vs. whether you own the real estate in a separate business by drawing out the profit is a legal/accounting issue, not an overall financial strategy issue. The main financial strategy is your big picture asset allocation: do you believe that your own business has a higher growth potential/return on capital than some other instrument you might invest?
Tread carefully is different from being slow. You need to be careful yet decisive. Write out the projections on Excel. In a separate column, model out capital return if you invested in the alternative (ETF, real estate). What is the alpha and what is the beta. Then make a decision. Then execute. A lot of physicians don't do any of that work, and just go with their gut, and then realized that they made all kinds of errors years later.
This is not to say that you shouldn't ultimately go with your gut. Your gut helps you evaluate non-financial aspects of decisions, but you need that Excel in front of you THEN you incorporate these aspects. If you don't know how to make that Excel then you should hire someone to go through it with you.
As I am sure you will agree, I want to clarify the gut thing, people confuse that with following your emotions, but it is actually more about utilizing the intuitive aspects of cognitive functioning that tend to be more of an aspect of right hemisphere functioning. Left hemisphere is going to gather the data and crunch the numbers and the right can see the big picture and not get lost in the details. Good integration between these two aspects of cognitive function are essential. The limbic system should not have much of a role on business decisions. Had a good talk with a patient who is a very successful businessman along those lines the other day, except I told him that his limbic system needed to be part of the picture when understanding his relationships and how to enjoy life.