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The Secret to Financial Freedom? Monthly Money That Doesn’t Depend on You
Introduction
Let me ask you something simple.
If you stopped working tomorrow…Would money still show up next month? Not from savings. Not from selling something. Not from pulling from retirement.
I mean real income. Money that comes in whether you clock in or not. Because here’s the truth: Financial freedom isn’t about having a big number in the bank. It’s about having monthly money that doesn’t depend on you.

Larry Jones
Mar 43 min read


Why Net Worth Doesn’t Matter—But Cash Flow Does
Introduction
If I asked you what it means to be wealthy, you’d probably say something like: “High net worth.”
Big house. Large investment accounts. Seven-figure portfolio. That’s what we’ve been trained to chase.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Net worth doesn’t pay your bills. Cash flow does.
And confusing the two is one of the biggest financial mistakes people make.

Larry Jones
Mar 23 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Interest
Definition of Interest
Interest is the cost of borrowing money—or the reward for lending or investing money—expressed as a percentage of the principal. In simple terms, interest is the price tag on money.
If you borrow $10,000 at 6% interest, you’re paying for the privilege of using someone else’s capital. If you invest $10,000 and earn 6% interest, you’re getting paid because someone else is using yours.
Same word. Two very different outcomes. And that’s where financial m

Larry Jones
Mar 22 min read


7 Everyday Ways to Build Cash Flow Like a Banker
Introduction to Cash Flow Everyone wants cash flow, but few people build it. Why? Because most people are still thinking like consumers. Banks don’t think like consumers. They think like operators. They think like lenders. They think like systems builders. And the good news? You don’t need a skyscraper, a vault, or a banking license to start building cash flow the same way they do. You just need a shift in strategy. Here are 7 everyday ways to build cash flow like a banker

Larry Jones
Feb 273 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Dividend
Definition of Dividend
A dividend is a payment a company makes to its shareholders, usually from its profits. If you own shares of a company that pays dividends, you receive a portion of the company’s earnings—typically on a quarterly basis—just for being an owner.
In simple terms: A dividend is money your money earns because you own part of something profitable.
Why Dividends Matter
Most people think investing only makes money one way: Buy low. Sell high. That’s growth i

Larry Jones
Feb 272 min read


Your First Step to Passive Income? Be the Bank, Not the Borrower
Introduction to Be the Bank
Everybody wants passive income.
Rental income. Dividend income. Online income. Money that shows up whether you clock in or not.
But here’s the problem: Most people are trying to build passive income while they’re still financially structured like a borrower.
And that’s backwards.
If you want your first real step toward passive income, it’s not buying a rental property. It’s not buying stocks. It’s not launching a side hustle.

Larry Jones
Feb 254 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Cash Flow
Definition of Cash Flow
Cash flow is the movement of money in and out of your life or business. More specifically, it’s the money you have left over each month after all expenses are paid. Positive cash flow means more money is coming in than going out. Negative cash flow means the opposite.
In simple terms: Cash flow is what’s left after the bills stop talking.
Why Cash Flow Matters
Most people obsess over income. Some focus on net worth. Very few truly understand cash f

Larry Jones
Feb 252 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Loss
Definition of Loss
A loss occurs when you lose money on an investment, business activity, or transaction — meaning you receive less than what you originally paid or invested.
In simple terms: Loss = When the value goes down instead of up.
If you buy a stock for $1,000 and later sell it for $800, you’ve taken a $200 loss. If your business spends $10,000 in a month but only brings in $8,000, you’ve operated at a $2,000 loss.

Larry Jones
Feb 242 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Profit
Definition of Profit
Profit is the money you have left over after you subtract all expenses from revenue. In simple terms: Revenue – Expenses = Profit
If revenue is what comes in and expenses are what goes out, profit is what stays. And what stays… is what builds wealth.
Why Profit Matters
A lot of people focus on income.“How much do you make?” “What’s your salary?” “What did your business bring in this year?”
But income is not the same thing as profit.

Larry Jones
Feb 232 min read


Stop Saving. Start Multiplying: What Banks Do Differently
Let’s be honest. You were taught to save money.
Work hard. Put a little aside. Build a cushion. Hope it grows.
And on the surface, that sounds responsible. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: Saving alone will never make you wealthy.
Banks know this. That’s why they don’t operate like savers. They operate like multipliers.
And once you understand the difference, you’ll never look at your money the same way again.
The Saver’s Trap
Saving feels productive. It feels discip

Larry Jones
Feb 203 min read


The Dangerous Lie of “Debt-Free” That Keeps You Broke
Introduction
Let me say something that might make some financial gurus uncomfortable: Being debt-free is not the same thing as being wealthy.
In fact, if you misunderstand debt, the obsession with being “debt-free” can actually keep you broke.
Now before you close this tab and accuse me of promoting reckless borrowing, hear me out.
There’s a massive difference between consumer debt and productive debt. And confusing the two is costing people decades of financial momentum.

Larry Jones
Feb 163 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Protective Put
Let’s say you own a stock that’s done well for you.
You believe in the company. You think it has long-term upside. But you also know the market can turn on a dime.
Welcome to the tension every investor feels: “How do I protect what I’ve built without selling everything and sitting in cash?”
That’s where today’s term comes in.
What Is a Protective Put?
A protective put is an options strategy where you buy a put option on a stock you already own to protect yourself from a

Larry Jones
Feb 132 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Collar Strategy
Definition of Collar Strategy
A Collar Strategy is an options strategy used to protect gains (or limit losses) on a stock you already own. It involves three parts:
1. Owning the stock.
2. Buying a protective put (insurance against a drop).
3. Selling a covered call (which helps pay for the put).
In simple terms, a collar puts a “floor” under your stock price and a “ceiling” above it. Your downside is limited. Your upside is also capped. It’s protection with trade-offs.

Larry Jones
Feb 122 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Butterfly Spread
If you’ve spent any time around options traders, you’ve probably heard someone casually say, “I’m running a butterfly on that stock.” Sounds fancy. Maybe even risky.
But here’s the truth: a butterfly spread is actually one of the more defined, disciplined, and risk-controlled option strategies out there—when it’s used correctly.
Let’s break it down.
What Is a Butterfly Spread?
A butterfly spread is an options strategy that uses three different strike prices on the same st

Larry Jones
Feb 112 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Iron Condor
Let’s talk about a strategy that sounds intimidating at first—but is actually built for calm, steady thinkers.
Today’s financial word of the day is Iron Condor.
No, it has nothing to do with birds or comic books. An Iron Condor is an options trading strategy designed to generate income when the market doesn’t do much at all.
And that’s exactly why it matters.

Larry Jones
Feb 102 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Covered Call
What Is a Covered Call?
A covered call is an options strategy where you own a stock and then sell a call option on that same stock.
The word covered is key. You already own the shares, so if the option gets exercised, you can deliver the stock without scrambling to buy it at a higher price.
When you sell the call option, you get paid a premium upfront. That cash is yours to keep no matter what happens next.

Larry Jones
Feb 93 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Strangle
Introduction
If you hang around options traders long enough, you’ll hear some terms that sound more like wrestling moves than financial strategies. Strangle is one of them. Despite the dramatic name, a strangle is actually a very logical options strategy—especially if you think something big is about to happen in the market, but you’re not sure which direction it will go.
Let’s break it down.
What Is a Strangle?
A strangle is an options strategy where an investor buys bot

Larry Jones
Feb 62 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Straddle
If you’ve ever said, “I’m not sure which way this is going, but I know something big is about to happen,” then you already understand the basic idea behind today’s financial word of the day: Straddle.
A straddle is an options trading strategy designed for moments of uncertainty—when an investor expects a big move in price but doesn’t know whether that move will be up or down.
What Is a Straddle?
In its simplest form, a straddle involves buying two options at the same time.

Larry Jones
Feb 52 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Greeks (Delta, Gamma, Theta, Vega, Rho)
What Are the Greeks?
The Greeks are a set of measurements used in options trading to explain how an option’s price is expected to change when different factors change.
Each Greek answers a simple question:
- What happens if the stock price moves?
- What happens as time passes?
- What happens if volatility changes?
Think of the Greeks as the dashboard gauges for an options position. You don’t drive by staring at the engine—you watch the gauges. Same idea here.

Larry Jones
Feb 42 min read


Financial Word of the Day: Binomial Option Pricing Model
What Is the Binomial Option Pricing Model?
At its core, the Binomial Option Pricing Model assumes something very simple: Over a short period of time, a stock price can do one of two things:
- Go up
- Go down
That’s it. Two possibilities. Hence the word binomial.
The model breaks the life of an option into multiple time steps. At each step, the price moves either up or down by a certain amount...

Larry Jones
Feb 32 min read
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