https://www.linkedin.com/in/clayton-morris-3850b16/ (Clayton Morris) is a former Fox News anchor who left the No.1 cable news show in its timeslot, Fox & Friends, after achieving financial freedom. Through his Financial Freedom Academy, Clayton now devotes himself to helping others build passive income and achieve financial freedom like he did using methods he had to learn the hard way. After some epic failures, he’s learned how to build a meaningful life, and shares these lessons on his top-rated podcast, https://morrisinvest.com/podcast (Investing in Real Estate with Clayton Morris).
At age 13, Clayton saw his dad unexpectedly lose his job. Ever since then he had a fear about money, and always knew there had to be a more entrepreneurial way of creating wealth. He got into purchasing performing assets to secure a future for his family so they didn’t have to go through the same financial pain as he did growing up. After spending years building up enough passive income through performing assets to quit his high-paying media career, Clayton launched the Financial Freedom Academy because he realized his passion is in helping others learn that they don’t have to just work for a pay check, and they don’t need US$1 million to achieve financial freedom.
“So what happens to a lot of people that start to make money is that they quickly find ways to squander it because money flows to those people who take care of money … and guess what? Money flows away from people that don’t take care of it, and not taking care of it doesn’t just mean making stupid investments … it also means you … think you need to hold on to it like a hoarder.”
Clayton Morris
Worst investment ever Clayton catches property bug after flipping condos for good profit
It was 2006. Clayton was working for Fox News’ The Daily Buzz program out of Orlando, Florida, in the US when he caught the real estate bug. He had lived in and fixed up a one-bedroom condo on a golf course he had bought for US$75,000 since he moved to Florida in 2004 to work on the TV show. Then the woman in the two-bedroom condo next door died and her family were looking for a private sale as it needed renovation so he made an offer to buy it. Without any experience, he started carrying out repairs on the place every day after work. He then listed them and sold them for a handsome profit of around $80,000 just before the market crashed. He had made a fortunate investment and definitely had the bug.
Rolls money into golf community in the North Carolina mountains
He then took that money and rolled it into a speculative land project in the beautiful mountain area of Cashiers, North Carolina. The project, a Phil Mickelson https://mickelsongolfproperties.com/ (golf course community) that a friend of Clayton’s had found in a backroom seminar in Manhattan, required $30,000 upfront for two blocks of land on which two log cabins would be built with funds from a construction loan. The idea was that Clayton could flip the cabins and double his money. He was shown marketing materials on a website with running water sounds and visions of the proposed clubhouse and multiple phases.
Negative associations with money almost drive him to get rid of it
Some emotional negative associations with money were happening with Clayton from his upbringing that made him feel uncomfortable holding on to the profit he had already made. He said he never felt he was worthy of the money or worthy of success.
Visit to beautiful but empty mountain site briefly inspires investor
A short time later, while waiting for the cabins to be built, the market collapses, the builder withdraws from the deal, and they have to find another builder. Clayton drives to North Carolina to see his plot of land meets a promoter at their “beautiful” offices in Cashiers town that has posters with a demonstration building, the construction phases, a log cabin in a field, and lots of hot tea and coffee. They go to visit