The Secret Of The Golden Buckets

Creating Wealth
14 min readSep 20, 2016

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By Glenn Fisher, Editor, Creating Wealth

Today I want to share with you one of the most important ideas created by my wealth-building mentor, Mark Ford. It really is core to what Creating Wealth is all about.

When you first read about this idea it seems too simple…

It’s too obvious.

But the more you think about it, the more you realise how important it is and you start to imagine how different your financial situation could be if you followed this idea.

I won’t lie… it took me a while to really take this on board in my own life. We all know it’s much easier to put these things off for another day.

But now having the benefit of hindsight, I would recommend you take this idea to heart as soon as you can.

Indeed, the sooner you start managing your own money in the way that Mark describes, the sooner you’ll be able to move forward towards the wealthier lifestyle you’re looking to achieve.

Like I say, for me this is one of Mark’s best pieces of advice.

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The Secret of the Golden Buckets
By Mark Ford

One is labelled “spending”. The second is labelled “savings”. The third is labelled “investing”. Imagine a well with three golden buckets in front of it…

There’s a sign on the well that challenges you to try your hand at a game. To win, you have to fill all three buckets to the brim.

It seems to be an easy challenge, but there are two problems:

  • The well will give you only so much water within a given time period.
  • If you look closely at the golden bucket marked “spending”, you notice there is a sizable hole in it.

I’m using metaphors here, of course.

The well represents your yearly income. The spending bucket, with the hole in it, represents the money you must spend to enjoy the quality of life you want. The savings bucket represents money you absolutely can’t afford to lose. And the investing bucket represents your future wealth… what you will retire on.

If you manage to fill all three buckets, you win — you’re rich!

So can this game be won?

It can, if you play it smart. And you can win it relatively quickly if you use my system.

Simplicity Trumps Sophistication

The money-management system that I’ve used to generate more than £50 million in wealth is quite simple — very different from the complicated systems I was enamoured with 30 years ago, when I was just beginning to learn about money. Those systems felt exotic, secret, exciting…

But as the years passed, I found they did not work as advertised. Eventually, I realised that sophisticated financial programs are like complicated toys. They look fantastic on the shelf — but when you go to use them, they eventually break… and when they break, you can’t fix them.

As simple as it is, the system I’m going to introduce you to today will provide for all your financial needs. It will allow you to live well now… and live well in retirement.

You see, my first rule for building wealth is “Never, ever lose money.” The primary characteristic of this plan is safety.

My second rule for building wealth is “Grow at least a little bit richer every day.” And the second (and equally important) characteristic of this plan is its dependability. It will give you a regularly escalating net worth without significant setbacks.

I call my system “The Secret of the Golden Buckets”.

The Golden Bucket of Spending

I grew up relatively poor, the second of eight children. My father earned $12,000 per year as a college professor. As a teenager, I was ashamed of our small house, my hand-me-down clothes, and my jam sandwiches.

I dreamed, literally dreamed, of living like a rich man.

And so, when I got my first job at age nine as a paperboy and then at 12 as a lackey at the local carwash, I would spend my money on luxuries — a pair of brand-new Thom McAn shoes.

I worked every chance I got through high school, and then worked two or three jobs during college and graduate school. I spent 80% of my money on necessities: food, clothes, and tuition. But I always spent a bit on little niceties. Even back then, I had the notion that I didn’t need to deprive myself now for some better life later.

I tell you this to emphasize a key part of my system.

I don’t believe in scrimping severely to optimise savings. I believe you can live a rich life while you grow rich, as long as you are willing to work hard and you are smart about your spending.

Think of the typical earning/spending/saving pattern of most wealth seekers…

During their 20s, they spend every penny of their modest income to make ends meet. At that age, it is nearly impossible to put aside money for the future.

During their 30s, their income increases. But this is also when they start a family. Expenses soar. There are more mouths to feed, a “family” car to buy, and the dreaded down payment on a first house. They manage to save a little during these years, but not nearly as much as they thought they would.

If they work hard and make good career decisions, their income climbs much higher in their 40s and early 50s. They have more money to put aside for the future, but they are also tempted into buying newer cars, nicer clothes, more exotic vacations, and that dream house — the biggest wealth stealer of them all.

In their later 50s and 60s, their income plateaus or even dips… and they may have to start shelling out for college tuition. Then, aware that their retirement funds are being depleted rather than enhanced, they invest aggressively to try to make up the difference.

Finally, sometime in their mid to late 60s, they realise that they don’t have enough money to retire. They have spent almost 40 years working hard and chasing wealth, but they never managed to attain it.

It’s sad, but it’s the reality for most people.

And it is just as true for high-income earners (doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc.) as it is for working-class folks.

There are two lessons to be drawn from this:

First, it is very difficult to acquire wealth if you increase your spending every time your income goes up.

Second, setting unrealistic investing goals means taking greater risks. And taking more risks, contrary to what many pundits say, will almost always make you poorer…

Not richer.

Truth is: there’s only a marginal relationship between how much you spend on housing, transportation, vacations, and toys and the enjoyment you can derive from them.

My golden bucket spending strategy is simply this:

Discover your own, less expensive way to live a rich life. By a “rich life”, I mean a life free from financial stress, but also filled with things that give you pleasure.

Your family can be just as happy in a house that costs £200,000 or £300,000 as one that costs £1,000,000. Likewise, a £10,000 car will get you where you want to go just as well as a car that costs 10 times that amount.

In fact, there are dozens of ways to live like a millionaire on a modest budget. If you learn those ways, you will have a tremendous advantage over everyone else at your income level. (In the Wealth Builders Club, I give lots of ideas for “living rich” without spending more. But for the moment, I am just going to assume that you agree this makes sense.)

Make smart spending decisions. Remember, the spending bucket has a hole in it. As you make more money, you might feel tempted to spend more of it. But if you’re spending more of this money, that’s the same thing as ripping a much bigger hole in your bucket.

All that extra money you’re making is leaking out of the bucket at a faster rate. And that means you’re not filling your savings or investing bucket any faster.

So stop thinking that because you’re earning more money you should be spending more. Your future wealth is determined by how much you save and invest, not by how much you spend.

Here’s what I’d like you to do: Figure out how much you need to spend every year to live your own personal version of a “rich” life.

It might help to spend a few minutes thinking about all the things you truly enjoyed last year. If you are like me, you’ll find that almost all of the things you enjoy require very little in the way of money. (Those are the true luxuries.)

Keep the biggest wealth-stealing expenses — such as your house, your cars, and entertainment — to a necessary minimum. And eschew any expenditure that has a brand name attached to it. Brand names are parasites that gobble up wealth.

What you are doing is determining the size of the hole in your spending bucket. It should be smaller than the hole you had last year, but big enough to contain inexpensive luxuries that will make your life truly rich.

Don’t nod your head and promise to get to it sometime in the future.

Do it today.

Estimate, as well as you can, what you need to spend each year to have the life you want. I call this your LBR (lifestyle burn rate) and I’ll be talking more about it in an upcoming essay. This is a number that you must have firmly in your mind, if you intend to be a serious wealth builder.

The Golden Bucket of Savings

Once you have dealt with your spending bucket, you can start to figure out how much you can put in your saving and investment buckets.

You may be wondering what the difference is between saving and investing. To most people, they are the same. But I like to distinguish between them because it will help you acquire wealth safely.

Saving and investing are the same in the sense that you are setting aside some portion of your current earnings for the future. The difference is the purpose of saving is to safeguard that set-aside money, whereas the purpose of investing is to grow it.

The money in the savings bucket should comprise two things, really. The first is anything you are saving for that you will be paying for in less than seven years (more on that in a minute). Any type of big-ticket item.

That could be short-term things such as saving for a new car, upcoming vacation, or home renovation project.

Saving should also include long-term expenses such as a down payment on a house.

The second part of your savings bucket is what I refer to as your SOA (start-over-again) fund — the money you put aside in case of a financial disaster.

To start, your SOA fund should have a minimum of three months’ living expenses. That would cover a couple of big, unexpected bills. Maybe a blown transmission. Or some expensive dental work.

But what if you have a bigger financial disaster?

What if, for example, you woke up one day to find the company that has employed you for the last 20 years has shut its doors, and the pension plan it was holding for you is suddenly worthless?

You would have to start over, right?

You’d need money to pay for your expenses while finding a new job and you’d need money to start investing again. In a case like this, you might want a larger SOA fund. Maybe one year of living expenses.

How much you put in your SOA fund is a personal preference. At a minimum, set aside three months of expenses. If you can afford to, set aside more.

But where should you put your savings bucket money?

This money has to be absolutely safe.

For example, you know you’re going to need to replace your roof in two years. That money better be there when you need it. In other words: Don’t invest that money in penny shares or the latest tech shares.

Or let me put it to you this way…

Imagine how you would feel if you called up your broker to let him know that you needed to cash in your start-over-again fund and he told you its value had suddenly crashed and was now worth 40 pence on the pound?

Well, that’s exactly what happened to millions of baby boomers during the financial crisis in 2008 and 2009.

The reason it happened is because these people did not distinguish between saving and investing. They had their wealth — including their savings — in investments that were advertised as safe but were actually quite risky.

You don’t want to take any risk with your start-over-again money. Or money saved for upcoming big-ticket purchases within seven years. The primary purpose of that money is to preserve, not increase, the capital you set aside. Putting it at risk, even average market risk, is too dangerous.

Why seven years?

It’s somewhat arbitrary, but it is considered by some to be an average business cycle.

The idea is this: You can put money away for retirement and your kids’ college into investment vehicles, but when they get close — seven years or closer — move them into safer instruments so that you can be extra sure you will have enough.

If, say, your retirement is still 20 or 30 years away, you can afford to invest money set-aside for that purpose in vehicles that are safe, but not super-safe. However, if you will be retiring in less than seven years, you can’t take the chance of seeing your retirement fund drop by 20–30%, because you won’t have time to let the market correct itself.

So if you plan to retire in five years and will be drawing on your retirement savings, you want to transfer at least five years’ worth of your retirement fund from your investing bucket to your savings bucket. This ensures that you will be able to pay for the retirement life you want — you can’t afford to have that money at risk.

To plan for this you will have to assume that the interest you’ll be getting for those seven years will be small, because you’ll be using the only the safest vehicles.

So that means you will have to put more money into them than you would otherwise. This will take more work but it will provide more safety.

Debt Obligations

You need to be equally as careful with the money you set aside to repay debt. Because when the bill comes due, you must pay it.

Keep that money safe. In other words, put your debt obligations in your savings bucket, never into the market, even if the market looks safe.

Are you with me?

For your savings bucket, your money should only be in super-safe investments — investments that are highly unlikely to go down in value in the next 10 years. These include bank savings accounts, money market accounts, and safe bonds with short-term durations.

I will write about what vehicles work best for your savings bucket in future issues. For now, it is enough for you to understand the distinction between saving and investing… and segregate your set-aside money accordingly.

The Golden Bucket of Investing

As I said, the purpose of your investing bucket is to grow your wealth. This is the bucket you will use to fund all future, long-term expenditures. By “long- term,” I mean more than seven years.

If you are young, you may use this bucket to put aside money for your children’s college expenses. But for the most part, the money in this bucket will be for your retirement.

And when you look at investment returns from a long-range perspective like that, even a few percentage points can make a huge difference.

I won’t spend any time here talking about how you should manage your investing, Agora here in the UK have several services that will be able to help you with that.

But I will say this:

You want to find strategies that are designed to give you an average, long-term return of 10–15%. This might seem paltry to people who dream of doubling and tripling their money in the market every year, but those kinds of investors almost always end up broke. And making 10–15% on your money over the long term will give you terrific results.

I hope you can see that the investing bucket is the most important bucket of the three. It’s what can give you the retirement lifestyle you so desperately want.

But — and this is a very big but — you won’t get wealthy unless you invest enough money.

In other words, investing alone can’t make you rich. So if you can afford to invest only a few thousand pounds per year, you will not get rich, even if you make 15% per year for 40 years.

To fill your investing bucket, you need to invest more than that — and if you can’t invest more than that right now, you need to generate more income so you can.

That brings us back to the metaphorical well that represents your yearly income — the well you’re going to use to fill all three of your buckets.

Your Golden Well

If your income isn’t sufficient to fill all three buckets, you have only two options: You must increase the flow from the well you have, and/or you must dig some new wells.

You can increase the income from your primary well — your job — by becoming a more valuable employee. I have written on this subject in several of the books I published under the pen name Michael Masterson. The one I recommend is Automatic Wealth for Grads… and Anyone Else Just Starting Out.

If you can become a more valuable employee, you should. But you may also want to create other streams of income.

One possibility would be to invest in rental real estate. If you decide to do that, it will become — after you have paid down the mortgages — its own well, pumping liquid gold to you every year thereafter.

Another option would be to start a side business and let your spouse or a relative run it. If you are interested in doing that, I recommend Ready, Fire, Aim, another book I wrote as Michael Masterson.

Here’s the point:

If the income you are earning is insufficient to achieve your wealth-building goals, you should NOT try to get there by taking on more risk with your stocks.

Instead, work hard to create more income.

The Only Strategy You Need

This simple system for managing money and building wealth can work for you if you commit yourself to it. As I said, it’s the system I used to build a net worth of more than $50 million — and it’s still working for me and everyone else I know who has tried it.

So today, spend the time it takes to establish your own approach to “living rich” now… and in the future. Make the hole in your spending bucket big enough to allow you to enjoy your life now, but small enough to enable you to fill up your saving and investing buckets quickly.

You don’t need to try any other wealth-building strategy. This one is infallible. The day you have your saving and investing buckets filled… you will have no reason to worry about money ever again.

You already know that it will work. You know it will work because it is so simple. It is based on our two fundamental rules for building wealth: Never, ever lose money… and become richer every day.

If you are over 40, you have no doubt experienced how wrong 99% of the investment schemes out there are. You tried them and discovered they made you poorer, not richer. You are ready for something simple and true, a strategy you know will work.

When we started Wealth Builders Club (which I’ll tell you more about another day), we made a solemn promise. We vowed to tell the truth about building wealth, rather than exciting our readers with the myths and lies that dominate the investment media.

We are proud of what we are doing and confident that it will help you become wealthier. Our goal is not — and never will be — to make you a “clever” investor. We simply want to teach you how to become wealthy. If that’s what you want, you are in good company.

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