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The Automatic Millionaire: Canadian Edition: A Powerful One-Step Plan to Live
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The Automatic Millionaire: Canadian Edition: A Powerful One-Step Plan to Live and Finish Rich Paperback - 2006

by David Bach; Manufactured by Doubleday Canada Ltd


Summary

What's the secret to becoming a millionaire?For years people have asked David Bach, the national bestselling author of Smart Women Finish Rich, Smart Couples Finish Rich, and The Finish Rich Workbook, what's the real secret to getting rich? What's the one thing I need to do?Now, in The Automatic Millionaire, David Bach is sharing that secret. The Automatic Millionaire starts with the powerful story of an average American couple--he's a low-level manager, she's a beautician--whose joint income never exceeds $55,000 a year, yet who somehow manage to own two homes debt-free, put two kids through college, and retire at 55 with more than $1 million in savings. Through their story you'll learn the surprising fact that you cannot get rich with a budget! You have to have a plan to pay yourself first that is totally automatic, a plan that will automatically secure your future and pay for your present.What makes The Automatic Millionaire unique:You don't need a budgetYou don't need willpowerYou don't need to make a lot of money You don't need to be that interested in moneyYou can set up the plan in an hourDavid Bach gives you a totally realistic system, based on timeless principles, with everything you need to know, including phone numbers and websites, so you can put the secret to becoming an Automatic Millionaire in place from the comfort of your own home. This one little book has the power to secure your financial future. Do it once--the rest is automatic!

From the publisher

David Bach is the author of Start Late, Finish Rich, which debuted on the New York Times Advice bestseller list, the Wall Street Journal business bestseller list, and the USA Today business bestseller list. He is also the author of the runaway bestseller The Automatic Millionaire, which spent fourteen weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, and was simultaneously number one on the New York Times, USA Today, Business Week, and Wall Street Journal business bestsellers lists. He is also the author of the national bestsellers Smart Women Finish Rich, Smart Couples Finish Rich, and The Finish Rich Workbook. Bach has appeared twice on The Oprah Winfrey Show to share his strategies for living and finishing rich, and he is a regular contributor to CNN’s American Morning. His FinishRich seminars are the leading financial seminars in North American, having been taught by thousands of financial advisors to more than half a million people in more than 2,000 cities. He lives in New York with his wife, Michelle, and his son, Jack.

Details

  • Title The Automatic Millionaire: Canadian Edition: A Powerful One-Step Plan to Live and Finish Rich
  • Author David Bach; Manufactured by Doubleday Canada Ltd
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition 2nd THUS
  • Pages 256
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Doubleday Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada
  • Date 2006-01-03
  • ISBN 9780385660303 / 0385660308
  • Dewey Decimal Code 332.024

Excerpt

The Single Biggest Investment Mistake You Can Make

The single most important investment decision you ever make may well be how much to automatically Pay Yourself First into your retirement plan. With this in mind, it shouldn’t be hard to figure out the single biggest mistake you can make: Not using your pre-tax retirement plans and not maxing them out.

People who aren’t serious about being rich say this:

• “I can’t afford to save more than 4 percent of my income."
• "My spouse is enrolled in his/her plan, so I don’t need to enroll in mine.”
• “Our plan isn’t any good, so it’s not worth using.”
• “ My company doesn’t match retirement contributions, so signing up for the plan isn’t worth it.”
• “Investing in stocks is foolish.”
• “I’ll save more later.”

-- excerpt from page 94 of The Automatic Millionaire

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

I’ll never forget when I met my first Automatic Millionaire. I was in my mid-twenties and was teaching an investment class at a local adult-education program. Jim McIntyre, a middle-aged, middle manager for a local utility company, was one of my students. He and I hadn’t spoken much until one day when he came up after class to ask if he could make an appointment with me to review his and his wife’s financial situation.

The request surprised me. Though I felt strongly (and still do) that just about everyone could benefit from the advice of a qualified financial planner, Jim didn’t strike me as the type who would seek it out.

I told him I’d be happy to set up a meeting, but if he wanted my help, his wife would have to come too, as my group managed money only for couples who worked on their finances together.

Jim smiled. “No problem,” he said. “Sue’s the reason I’m here. She took your ‘Smart Women Finish Rich’ seminar and told me I should sign up for your course. I’ve liked what you’ve had to say, and we both figure it’s time to do some financial planning. You see, I’m planning to retire next month.”

Now I was really surprised. I didn’t say anything, but as I looked Jim up and down, I doubted he could be in a position to retire. From the few comments he had made in class, I knew he was in his early fifties and had worked for the same company for thirty years, never earning much more than $40,000 a year, and didn’t believe in budgets. I also knew that he considered himself to be “ultraconservative,” so I figured he couldn’t have made a fortune in the stock market.

My Grandma Rose Bach had taught me never to judge a book by its cover. But something didn’t add up. Maybe Jim had just inherited a lot of money. For his sake, I hoped so.

“WHAT AM I MISSING HERE?”

When the McIntyres came into my office a few days later, they looked exactly like what they were: hard-working, “average Joe” Canadians. What stuck in my mind about Jim was that he was wearing a short-sleeved dress shirt with a plastic pocket protector in his breast pocket. His wife, Sue, had a little more flair, with some seriously blond highlights. She was a beautician, a couple of years younger than Jim.

The thing was, they didn’t act like middle-aged people. They were holding hands like two high school kids on a first date, literally bubbling with excitement. Before I could ask how I could help them, Jim started talking about his plans and what he would do with his free time. As he did, Sue kept exclaiming, “Isn’t it great he can retire so young! Most people can’t retire until they reach sixty-five, if then, and here’s Jim able to do it at fifty-two!”

“LET’S NOT GET AHEAD OF OURSELVES.”

After ten minutes of this, I had to interrupt. “Guys, your enthusiasm is contagious, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves here. I’ve met with literally hundreds of potential retirees over the last few years and I have to tell you–hardly any of them have been able to retire in their early fifties.” I looked Jim in the eye. “Usually people come to my office to find out if they can retire,” I said. “You already seem to be sure you can. What makes you so certain you can afford to?”

Jim and Sue exchanged a look. Then Jim turned back to me. “You don’t think we’re rich enough,” he said. “Do you?” The way Jim put it, it wasn’t exactly a question.

“Well, that’s not the way I would have phrased it,” I replied, “but yes, it takes a fair amount of money to fund an early retirement, and most people your age aren’t even close to having saved enough. Knowing what I do about your background, I’m truthfully curious about how you could possibly have enough money.” I looked him in the eye. He gazed back at me serenely.

“Jim, you’re only fifty-two,” I said. “Considering that only about one in ten people can barely afford to retire at age sixty-five with a lifestyle equal to what they had when they worked, you have to admit that retiring at your age with your income would be a pretty big feat.”

Jim nodded. “Fair enough,” he said and handed me a sheaf of documents. They included his and Sue’s tax returns as well as financial statements that listed exactly what they owned and owed.
I looked first at their tax returns. The previous year, Jim and Sue had earned a total of $53,946. Not bad. Not rich, to be sure, but a decent income.

Okay, next. How much did they owe?

I scanned their financial statements. I couldn’t find any outstanding debts listed. “Hmm,” I said, raising an eyebrow. “You have no debt?”

“THE MCINTYRES DON’T DO DEBT.”

They exchanged another smile and Sue squeezed Jim’s hand. “The McIntyres don’t do debt,” she said with a chuckle.

“What about your kids?” I asked.

“What about them?” Jim answered. “They’re both out of university, on their own, and God bless ’em.”

“Well, all right then,” I said, “let’s see what you own.”

I turned back to the financial statement. There were two homes listed: the house where they lived (valued at $450,000) and a rental property (a second house valued at $325,000).

“Wow,” I said. “Two houses and no mortgage on either?”

“Nope,” Jim replied. “No mortgage.”

Next came the retirement accounts. Jim’s RRSP and company pension plan combined currently amounted to $610,000. And there was more. Sue had an RRSP of her own that totalled $72,000. In addition, they owned $160,000 in provincial bonds and had $62,500 in cash in a bank savings account.

Talk about a substantial asset base. Add in some personal property (including a boat and three cars -- all fully paid for) and they had a net worth approaching $2 million!

By any standard, the McIntyres were rich. It wasn’t simply that they owned a lot of assets free and clear (though that in itself was pretty impressive), they also had a continuing income stream in the form of interest and dividends from their investments and $26,000 a year in rent generated by their second house. On top of that, Jim qualified for a small pension and Sue liked being a beautician so much that she planned to keep working until she was sixty (even though she didn’t need to). Suddenly, Jim’s plan to retire at fifty-two didn’t seem so crazy. In fact, it was completely realistic. More than realistic -- it was exciting!

“WE INHERITED KNOWLEDGE.”

Normally, I don’t get wide-eyed about people’s wealth. But there was something about the McIntyres that impressed me. They didn’t look rich. And they didn’t seem terribly special. To the contrary, they seemed perfectly ordinary -- your average, nice, hard-working couple. How could they have possibly amassed such wealth at such a relatively young age?

To put it mildly, I was confused. But I was also hooked. I was in my mid-twenties at the time, and even though I was making good money, I was still basically living paycheque to paycheque. Some months I did manage to save a little, but more often then not I’d get busy or spend too much the next month and not save a dime. Many months it seemed that instead of getting ahead, I was falling behind, working harder and harder to make ends meet.

It was embarrassing, really, and frustrating. Here I was, a financial advisor teaching others how to invest, and I was often struggling myself. Even worse, here were the McIntyres, who probably in their best year barely made half of what I was making, and yet they were millionaires, while I was falling further and further into debt.

Clearly, they knew something about taking action with their money that I needed to learn. And I was determined to find out what it was. How could such regular people have amassed such wealth? Eager to know their secret but not knowing where to begin, I finally asked them, “Did you
inherit any of this?”

Jim broke out in a deep belly laugh. “Inherit?” he repeated, shaking his head. “The only thing we inherited was knowledge. Our parents taught us a few common-sense rules about handling money. We just did what they said and, sure enough, it worked. The same is true for a lot of people we know. In fact, in our neighbourhood, about half our friends are going to retire this year, and many of them are even better off then we are.”

At this point, I was hooked. The McIntyres had come to interview me about how I could help them, but now I wanted to interview them.

LOOKING RICH VS. BEING RICH

“You know,” I said, “every week I meet people who take my classes like you did but who are exactly the opposite of you. I mean, they look rich but when you get into the details of what they really have, it often turns out that they are not only not rich but broke. Just this morning, I met with a man who drove up in a brand new Porsche, wearing a gold Rolex watch. He looked loaded, but when I went through his statements I found he was actually leveraged to the hilt. A guy in his mid-fifties, living in a million-dollar home with an $800,000 mortgage. Less than $100,000 in savings, more than $75,000 in credit card debt, and he was leasing the Porsche! Plus he was paying alimony to two ex-wives.”

At this point, none of us could help ourselves. We all began to laugh. “I know it’s not funny,” I said, “but here was this guy, looking rich and successful, and actually he’s a financial and emotional wreck. He handled his finances just like he drove his Porsche: red-lining all the way. Then you guys come in. You drive up in a Ford Taurus. Jim here is wearing a ten-year-old Timex -- ”

“Nope,” Jim interrupted with a smile. “It’s an eighteen-year-old Timex.”

“Exactly!” I said. “An eighteen-year-old Timex. And you’re rich. You guys are happy as clams, still married, two great kids you put through college, and you’re retiring in your mid-fifties. So please tell me -- what was your secret? You must have one, right?”

Sue looked me straight in the eye. “You really want to know?” she asked.

I nodded wordlessly. Sue looked at Jim. “You think we can spare an extra fifteen minutes to explain it to him?”

“Sure,” Jim said. “What’s fifteen minutes?” He turned to me. “You know, David, you already know this stuff. You teach it every day. We just lived it.”

JIM AND SUE SHARE THEIR STORY

Sue took a deep breath, then launched into their story. “Well, first, we got married young. Jimmy was twenty-one when we started dating, and I was nineteen. We were married three years later. After our honeymoon, both of our parents sat us down and told us together that we needed to get serious with our lives. They said we had a choice. We could work all our lives for money and live month to month, paycheque to paycheque, like most people. Or we could learn to make our money work for us and really enjoy our lives. The trick, they said, was simple. Every time you earn a dollar, you should make sure to pay yourself first.”

“WE DECIDED TO PAY OURSELVES FIRST.”

Jim nodded in agreement. “You know,” he said, “most people think that when they get their paycheque, the first thing they should do is pay all their bills -- and then if there is anything left over, they can save a few dollars. In other words, pay everyone else first and yourself last. Our parents taught us that to really get ahead of the game, you have to turn this around. Put aside a few dollars for yourself, THEN pay all your other bills.”

He sat back in his chair and shrugged, as if to say, “No big deal.”

Sue smiled and shook her head. “Jim makes it sounds easy,” she said, “but the truth is we had to learn how to save our money. In the beginning, we tried to put ourselves on a budget but somehow the numbers never added up and we started fighting a lot. One day I called my mom upset because of a money fight we had and she told me that budgeting didn’t work. She said she and my dad had tried it and all it had led to was endless arguments. So they decided to toss the budget and instead take 10 percent of their pay out of their paycheques and put it in a savings account before they ever saw it or had a chance to spend it on anything. ‘You’d be surprised how quickly you get used to doing without that 10 percent,’ she told me. ‘And meanwhile it’s piling up in the bank.’ The secret, she explained, is that you can’t spend what you don’t see.

“So that’s what we did. We originally started putting aside just 4 percent of our income and slowly increased the amount. Today, we save 15 percent. But on average we always saved about 10 percent, just like Mom said.”

“And what did you do with your savings?” I asked.

“Well,” Sue said, “the first thing we started saving for was our retirement.”

“Each of us opened a Registered Retirement Savings Plan,” Jim broke in. “My company had a pension plan, but any extra money we contributed to our RRSPs. Most of our friends didn’t bother. But we did.”

Sue took up the story again. “After that, our next priority was to put aside enough so we could buy a home. Both our parents told us that their homes had been the best investments they had ever made -- that nothing gives you freedom and security like owning a home. But the key, they said, was owning it free and clear. In other words, you pay off that mortgage as quickly as you can.

“They said that, while our friends were busy splurging on decorating their apartments and eating lunch out every day, we should be watching our spending and saving as much as we could. They made a big point about how so many people waste big money on small things.”

She looked at Jim. “You remember that, honey?” she asked.

“I sure do,” Jim replied. He turned to me. “You know, the trick to getting ahead financially isn’t being cheap and boring. It’s watching the small stuff -- little spending habits you have that you’d probably be better off without. In our case, we realized that one of the main ‘small stuff’ things we were spending too much money on were cigarettes. We both smoked about a pack a day and our parents hated it. Back then, the health risks were just beginning to be publicized and they pointed out that if we stopped wasting money on cigarettes, we could probably save enough in two years to make a down payment on a home. And we’d be saving our health in the process.”


From the Hardcover edition.

Media reviews

The Automatic Millionaire is an automatic winner. David Bach really cares about you: on every page you can hear him cheering you on to financial fitness. No matter who you are or what your income is, you can benefit from this easy-to-apply program. Do it now. You and your loved ones deserve big bucks!”
—Ken Blanchard, co-author of The One Minute Manager

The Automatic Millionaire gives you, step by step, everything you need to secure your financial future. When you do it David Bach’s way, failure is not an option.”
—Jean Chatzky, Financial Editor, NBC’s Today

“David Bach's no spin financial advice is beautiful because it's so simple. If becoming self-sufficient is important to you then this book is a must.”
—Bill O'Reilly, anchor, Fox News, and author of The O’Reilly Factor and The No Spin Zone
 
“Finally, a book that helps you stop sweating it when it comes to your money! The Automatic Millionaire is a fast, easy read that gets you to take action. David Bach is the money coach to trust year in and year out to motivate you financially.”
—Richard Carlson, author of Don't Sweat the Small Stuff and Don’t Sweat the Small Stuff About Money

“David Bach’s The Automatic Millionaire proves that you don’t have to make a lot of money or have a complicated financial plan to get started — you can literally start towards your financial dreams today, in a matter of hours, with just one life changing secret: Pay yourself first and make it automatic! Equally important, this book shows you how to simplify and automate your entire financial life.”
—Harry S. Dent, Jr., investment strategist and author of The Roaring 2000s

The Automatic Millionaire is, simply put…a great little book!  You can read it in a matter of hours and take action immediately on a powerful, simple, totally AUTOMATIC plan to become a millionaire.”
—Robert G. Allen, coauthor of The One Minute Millionaire

The Automatic Millionaire is brilliant in its simplicity and thoroughly enjoyable to read. If you want to create financial security and still sleep at night, you've just got to get this book! Thank you, David...your advice will change people's lives.”
—Barbara Stanny, author of Secrets of Six-Figure Women and Prince Charming Isn't Coming

“David Bach lets you in on the secret to finishing rich, and it’s so simple anyone can do it. Read this book, follow his advice, and it will change your life.”
—Candace Bahr and Ginita Wall, co-founders of the Women’s Institute for Financial Education (WIFE.org)

“Pay yourself first. It’s simple ideas like this that can make all the difference in your financial future. Ignore David Bach's new book at your own peril.”
—Al Ries, author of Focus, The Future of Your Company Depends on It

“David Bach makes understanding your finances easy, fun and exciting. The Automatic Millionaire is a practical and smart guide to mastering your relationship with money.”
—Barbara De Angelis, Ph.D. author of What Women Want Men to Know

“More people will become millionaires in the years ahead than in all the previous years of human history. It has never been more possible for you to get out of debt, achieve financial independence and build a financial fortress around yourself than it is today. This fast-moving book by David Bach gives you the practical strategies and techniques you need to take complete control of your financial life and become the millionaire you want to be.”
—Brian Tracy, author of Goals!

About the author

David Bach is the author of Start Late, Finish Rich, which debuted on the "New York Times" Advice bestseller list, the "Wall Street Journal" business bestseller list, and the "USA Today" business bestseller list. He is also the author of the runaway bestseller The Automatic Millionaire, which spent fourteen weeks on the "New York Times" bestseller list, and was simultaneously number one on the "New York Times," "USA Today," "Business Week," and "Wall Street Journal "business bestsellers lists. He is also the author of the national bestsellers Smart Women Finish Rich, Smart Couples Finish Rich, and The Finish Rich Workbook. Bach has appeared twice on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" to share his strategies for living and finishing rich, and he is a regular contributor to CNN s American Morning. His FinishRich seminars are the leading financial seminars in North American, having been taught by thousands of financial advisors to more than half a million people in more than 2,000 cities. He lives in New York with his wife, Michelle, and his son, Jack."
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