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Money Mail 258 - How To Stay In ’Push Mode’ Like A F1 Driver
Apparently, in Formula 1, 'Push mode' refers to a temporary engine or battery setting that allows a driver to maximise performance for a short period, typically to overtake a rival, defend a position, or set a fast lap. We can activate push mode when we need to, but a lot of the time we don't even know we are capable of it. What if we challened ourselves to activate it and use it to get furhter ahead?
Hey thanks for listening! Please take some form of action from this content, don’t just be a consumer, become a producer! Make sure you’re subscribed to Money Mail via Keepthechange.co.nz to receive our weekly lesson on money and financial literacy. Stay close to us on social media and share this with someone that you think this content will help. Together we can collectively improve the financial literacy of New Zealand - let’s get on with it.
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The Simple Way To Build Wealth with James Blair of Lighthouse Financial
55:16|Most Kiwis are overthinking wealth building. They're waiting for the perfect election result, the right market timing, or the ideal economic conditions. Meanwhile, they're missing the simple fundamentals that actually work.James Blair from Lighthouse Financial breaks down why money is actually straightforward: earn as much as you can, don't spend it all, pay down debt, buy shares, buy property. That's it. We cover why waiting for political changes is pointless, why timing the market fails, and why victim mindset keeps people poor.Stop waiting for perfect conditions. Start taking imperfect action. The fundamentals work if you work them.Find James:https://www.instagram.com/lighthousefinancialnz/Amy from http://Levridge.co.nz has come on as a sponsor of Keep The Change to help people with their financial planning. Stuck? Find Amy : amy@levridge.co.nz Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amy.levridgeWebsite: https://www.levridge.co.nzGenerate are supporting my vision to improve the financial literacy of 100,000 kiwis by sponsoring Keep The Change. Cheers Generate. Head to https://www.generatewealth.co.nz/change/ to find out more.
5 Non Financial Habits That I Used To Go From Debt To Millionaire
10:59|Sign up to Money Mail for free weekly emails to improve your finances: https://www.keepthechange.co.nz/moneymail
MM 305 - Always Reason To Feel Nervous About Investing
38:03|Well here we are again. More volatility + vulnerability and a sense of not knowing how long this could go on. I am not going to explore that too deeply, but I do want you to reflect on 2025. Because if you want to invest, you have to accept risk and therefore understand that risk is not a bug in investing, it’s part of the process. Markets are constantly reacting to something.Hey thanks for listening! Please take some form of action from this content, don’t just be a consumer, become a producer! Make sure you’re subscribed to Money Mail via Keepthechange.co.nz to receive our weekly lesson on money and financial literacy. Stay close to us on social media and share this with someone that you think this content will help. Together we can collectively improve the financial literacy of New Zealand - let’s get on with it. Find us here:@keepthechange_nzhttps://www.keepthechange.co.nz/
New Zealanders Are Wasting Their Time & Money
01:05:18|Most people misallocate their time worrying about share platform fees when they should be asking their boss for a raise. They're trying to optimise $3 in fees instead of increasing their income by $10,000.Luke and Mikey break down the hierarchy: time allocation first, income allocation second, capital allocation third. We cover why when you're young, time is your capital, and when you're older, capital buys your time back. You can get more money, but you can't get more time. Yet most people waste hours researching investments instead of spending that hour asking for a pay rise.We cover why misallocating time is worse than misallocating money, the needle-moving activities that actually matter, and why successful people do boring things consistently. Stop looking for magic solutions in chapter 8 when you haven't finished chapter 1.Time is your most valuable asset. Are you treating it that way?Find Mikey:https://guardiansmith.co.nz/https://instagram.com/officialmikeysmithAmy from http://Levridge.co.nz has come on as a sponsor of Keep The Change to help people with their financial planning. Stuck? Find Amy : amy@levridge.co.nz Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amy.levridgeWebsite: https://www.levridge.co.nzGenerate are supporting my vision to improve the financial literacy of 100,000 kiwis by sponsoring Keep The Change. Cheers Generate. Head to https://www.generatewealth.co.nz/change/ to find out more.
Is $35 An Hour In NZ Good Money? How Much Can You Save? Or Hello Aussie?
14:26|Let’s run the numbers on someone earning $35 an hour trying to “get ahead” in NZ.Full-time is roughly $72,800. After tax, ACC, KiwiSaver (3%), you’re left with roughly $55k take-home.Here are the real costs one person shared (good starting point: 29, single, no kids, flatting):Rent: $350/weekFood: $150/weekFuel: $45/weekInsurance (car, contents, health): $60/weekGym (CrossFit): $50/weekPower: $60/weekThat totals about $715/week, or $37,200/year.So on paper: Take-home: $55,000Core living costs: -$37,200Leftover: $17,800/yearThat suggests they could be lucky to save around $15k per year. I think there are some missing costs from this budget:Dentist / medical. Car repairs + servicing + tyres. Registration + WOF. Clothing, gifts, travel, weddings. Subscriptions, eating out, entertainment.That $17.8k surplus becomes something like: $12k–$15k per year saved.That’s still solid! BUT let’s be honest about NZ.ISSUE 1: You can’t afford emergencies… and you really can’t afford house prices running away If you’re saving $12k–$15k a year,A major car problem can wipe out a big chunk of your progress or a job interruption hurts. AND you definitely don’t want house prices rising quickly while you’re trying to stack a deposit.If a $600,000 house increases by 5%, that’s $30,000 of price movement in a year. (You will get blasted by multiple media articles monthly about how possible this is and how predicted it is).So while someone is proudly saving $15k, the goalposts could move by $30k.With the cost of living increasing and tax rates not being indexed to inflation, keeping your saving rate in line with house increases becomes very hard. Fortunately house prices have been flat in SOME regions.ISSUE 2: People WITH $$$$ are experiencing the oppositeThe sharemarket returned a solid 15% in 2025 for many S&P500 investors. $100k invested and you have $115k at the end of the year (loose math). You didn’t have to work a year to gain $15k. You had to risk $100k.(The market doesn’t always act like this but it did in 2025, and in 2024 and in 2023).Even “Risk-averse Randy” with $400,000 in a term deposit at 6% received roughly $16,080 after tax in interest for risking his $400k.So of course younger people (or anyone without capital) get frustrated watching others make money “easily” like this, while they grind for the same result.When the math looks like this, it’s not hard to see why so many are choosing to try their luck somewhere else.We all know deep down that our income earning ability is our single biggest asset.If you were 25–30 right now, what would you do?SOLUTIONS??Bluntly, people in this position face a choice:- Earn more (overtime, upskilling, better industry, commission-based roles, side income)- Change housing structure (flatting vs living alone)- Stay home with parents (if it’s viable)- Reduce big recurring costs (or just do less for a season)- Invest in assets where possible (even small, consistent amounts)- Speculate (high risk, usually punished)- Move to Australia (which has been very popular)The importance of KiwiSaver to get the employer match. When saving for the first home not many financial advisors would suggest exposing the deposit to too much risk so some may not have seen the gains of those investing for different purposes (more long term).
MM 304 - ‘How I Made $20k In One Night'
31:03|In accounting, one of the most important reports is a ‘profit and loss’. This report shows you the total sales, less the expenses, which equates to profit. In a world of ‘I do a million a year’ they typically mean they have sold $1million worth of something. ‘How I made $1million in 2025’ was probably $1mil of sales. There are always expenses to create the sales. Sales - expenses = profit. Hey thanks for listening! Please take some form of action from this content, don’t just be a consumer, become a producer! Make sure you’re subscribed to Money Mail via Keepthechange.co.nz to receive our weekly lesson on money and financial literacy. Stay close to us on social media and share this with someone that you think this content will help. Together we can collectively improve the financial literacy of New Zealand - let’s get on with it. Find us here:@keepthechange_nzhttps://www.keepthechange.co.nz/
The CEO Of New Zealand's Largest Gym Franchise (60,000+ customers) Cameron Ward
57:25|Cameron Ward runs 62 Anytime Fitness gyms across New Zealand and has seen what separates successful franchises from failures. The stats are brutal: 1 in 20 gym franchises fail within 2 years, but 1 in 5 independent gyms don't make it.Cam breaks down what it really takes to succeed in franchising: follow the systems religiously, have proper capital (not just for setup, but working capital too), and understand you're investing in proven processes, not buying passive income. The most successful franchises follow the systems. The ones that struggle think they know better than the proven model.We cover the journey from employee to franchise owner, why some people own multiple sites, and the reality check every potential franchisee needs: if you think franchising is easy money, you're going to come unstuck pretty quick.Franchising isn't plug and play, it's investing in a system that works if you work it.More information on Anytime Fitness: https://www.anytimefitness.co.nz/Amy from http://Levridge.co.nz has come on as a sponsor of Keep The Change to help people with their financial planning. Stuck? Find Amy : amy@levridge.co.nz Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amy.levridgeWebsite: https://www.levridge.co.nzGenerate are supporting my vision to improve the financial literacy of 100,000 kiwis by sponsoring Keep The Change. Cheers Generate. Head to https://www.generatewealth.co.nz/change/ to find out more.
6 Expensive Headwinds Of New Zealand 🇳🇿 (Young People MUST Know!)
11:59|6 expensive headwinds of New Zealand 🇳🇿 1. New Zealand has an ageing population.Cost = super + healthcare.2. Health issues rising. I.e. Obesity and point 1.Cost = system strain.3. Infrastructure deficit.Cost = rebuild or maintenance bill.4. Brain/worker drain.Cost = lost taxpayers to fund the above.5. Capital stuck in property.Cost = low productivity and low risk tolerance.6. Education slipping.Cost = weaker future economy.Many have been watching these come at us for years, perhaps decades. But they aren’t going away anytime soon!⚠️ As an individual you will need to plan accordingly.- Build income outside PAYE only- Own productive assets- Own / Grow businesses- Investing globally- Increasing your earning capacity- Look at medical insurances- Discuss financial situations with parents (rest home costs can wipe out wealth fast)- Have the “inheritance isn’t guaranteed” conversation- Prepare for more tax and more inflationWhat else
MM 303 - "Writing Off A Business Expense’"
39:18|“It’s a write-off that’s why businesses do it”. You’ve seen it online where non-business owners and non-accountants suddenly educate you with 100% confidence on business ‘write-offs’ and how business owners pay no tax. So let’s clear this up. Because a tax write-off is not free money. It’s not a refund. And it’s definitely not the IRD wiring you back the full amount.Hey thanks for listening! Please take some form of action from this content, don’t just be a consumer, become a producer! Make sure you’re subscribed to Money Mail via Keepthechange.co.nz to receive our weekly lesson on money and financial literacy. Stay close to us on social media and share this with someone that you think this content will help. Together we can collectively improve the financial literacy of New Zealand - let’s get on with it. Find us here:@keepthechange_nzhttps://www.keepthechange.co.nz/