Right and while he can certainly pursue that strategy, I think it's also valuable to list out the drawbacks/risks to said strategy. I mean there IS a chance that you can get over-leveraged, changes occur in the market, and you end up in a losing environment with BeTheChange's plan.
- With every investment (no matter if it's active or passive) there are risks.
- I think BeTheChange said earlier that my "path" had very low risks, well that can't be further from the truth? Since when is investing in Index Funds risk-free? Since when does running a consulting office come risk-free?
- There are risks to everything, the key here is investing in what you know and UNDERSTAND, so you can properly mitigate the risks and acquire the rewards.
Everybody does not understand day trading nor all of the nuisances of flipping real estate, those are two very complex investment strategies and there's no way in hell I would promote them to ANYBODY as being something that's "easy" to setup/manage, to where you can just work 2 hours a week making 1,200% - 3,000% returns. I mean give me a break.
Don't even bother with it bro. BeTheChange just admitted his strategy is "betting it all on red and becoming a millionaire by age 35". Well apparently this silly man has not heard of the house advantage, and I'm not just talking about roulette tables. The vast majority of people who invest in real estate and ESPECIALLY the market fail miserably. It is not for the weak at heart.
BeTheChange is just like my friend who is "
finna be the greatest rapper who ever lived wit a 500 mil net worth". He swears he's going to be on Forbes 30 Under 30. Except it's all bloated rhetoric and there is no concrete plan. Becoming a millionaire by age 35 requires either:
A. An inheritance
B. A LOT of luck (winning the lotto or timing the right stock at the right time)
C. Once in a lifetime talent (physical, music, anything that will catapult you to celebrity status)
Let's say there's a 5% chance you come from a very rich family and may inherit the money, a 1% chance of ever winning a big pot of cash in one shot, and an 1% chance that your talent in one area is so great it'll make you rich. That's a 7% chance of making it big at a very young age, and that's ASSUMING you have the initial capitol to take that chance.
Now, only a FOOL would "bet the entire house on red" on the 1% chance of making a 10,000% ROI.
This kind of mindset makes poor people go broke at casinos. "All I need to do is get the three fiery 7's one time and I'll be rich!"
The vast, vast, vast majority of people do it your way. And having a $1 million net worth by 45-50 is
not mediocre. There are a million millionaires in the country, and 330 total people.
That means only 1/330 Ameircans will become a millionaire in their lifetime, and it is an accomplishment. By definition, this cannot be mediocre. No one is saying to stop at a million, but that is a checkpoint very few people will ever see, so don't let these two cartoon characters say otherwise.
Of course, to a billionaire, even those at the low end of the 1% are "mediocre". To Bill Gates, an athlete with a $100 million net worth is mediocre. But Ponzi/legend/guru is no Bill Gates. He's playing a cartoon character on the internet.
These two clowns are get rich quick pedalers who are probably just a month away from dropping their own online course with the "proven steps", and are trying to convince their first potential clients (the readers of this thread) of their next "sales funnel" scheme.