EPISODE · Jun 14, 2026 · 11 MIN
Debt: The Double-Edged Sword of Investing
from From Abundance to Wealth: Financial Fulfillment Through a Torah Framework · host Josh
What if the same tool that could double your money could also wipe out 80% of it before you know what hit you? You have $250,000. Do you buy one building with cash or four buildings with debt? Which choice makes you richer and which one takes everything?In this episode of From Abundance to Wealth, Josh Eisenberg breaks down the single most underestimated force in investing: debt. Using simple, concrete examples involving widgets, real estate, and stock market margin, Josh shows how borrowing money amplifies both your gains and your losses. You’ll learn why the same debt that doubles your returns can also wipe out four-fifths of your investment when the market turns.Josh also explains the difference between recourse and non-recourse debt, why real estate mortgages are structured differently than loans for merchandise, and how to evaluate whether the debt inside a company or inside your own portfolio is responsible or reckless.If you’ve ever wondered why some people grow wealth faster, or why stocks can go to zero even when the company still exists, this episode gives you the framework you’ve been missing.Key TakeawaysDebt magnifies returns, both positive and negativeUsing $250,000 of your own money plus a $750,000 mortgage can turn a 25% gain into a 100% gainThe same leverage can turn a 20% loss into an 80% lossBorrowing allows you to control more assets than you could with cash aloneReal estate mortgages are often non-recourse, meaning you can give back the building without personal liabilityTrade credit helps wholesalers sell more and retailers buy more, but it still carries riskPublicly traded companies use debt too, and stock prices reflect that leverageMargin accounts let individuals borrow to buy stocks, multiplying risk in the same wayUnderstanding debt structure is just as important as understanding price and cash flowIn This Episode[00:00] Recap of pricing: expected cash flow and multiples[00:54] The widget example: equity partner vs. debt financing[02:32] Real estate example: all-cash purchase vs. using a mortgage[03:40] How $250,000 becomes $500,000 (or $50,000)[05:21] The downside: why debt destroys wealth faster when markets fall[06:15] Real estate mortgages: non-recourse and why it matters[07:30] Trade credit in merchandise businesses[08:15] Corporate debt and how it affects stock investors[10:21] Margin accounts: borrowing to buy stocks[11:17] Bottom line: debt as a toolNotable Quotes [02:18] "If I have a choice between making 50 and making 90, everything else being equal, people would generally borrow money and make the 90 instead of the 50." — Josh Eisenberg[03:40] "My $250,000 became $500,000. Instead of making a 25% profit, I doubled my money by using a mortgage." — Josh Eisenberg[05:22] "When the market goes up, you make a lot of money. When the market goes down or something goes wrong, the loss is greatly magnified." — Josh Eisenberg[09:50] "If that company has debt, that will affect how quickly the stock value changes. Companies unable to service their debt often file bankruptcy, and the equity is then potentially wiped out." — Josh Eisenberg[11:28] "Debt either juices returns or increases risk. When you look at an investment, it's very important to understand how debt is used." — Josh Eisenberg
What this episode covers
What if the same tool that could double your money could also wipe out 80% of it before you know what hit you? You have $250,000. Do you buy one building with cash or four buildings with debt? Which choice makes you richer and which one takes everything?In this episode of From Abundance to Wealth, Josh Eisenberg breaks down the single most underestimated force in investing: debt. Using simple, concrete examples involving widgets, real estate, and stock market margin, Josh shows how borrowing money amplifies both your gains and your losses. You’ll learn why the same debt that doubles your returns can also wipe out four-fifths of your investment when the market turns.Josh also explains the difference between recourse and non-recourse debt, why real estate mortgages are structured differently than loans for merchandise, and how to evaluate whether the debt inside a company or inside your own portfolio is responsible or reckless.If you’ve ever wondered why some people grow wealth faster, or why stocks can go to zero even when the company still exists, this episode gives you the framework you’ve been missing.Key TakeawaysDebt magnifies returns, both positive and negativeUsing $250,000 of your own money plus a $750,000 mortgage can turn a 25% gain into a 100% gainThe same leverage can turn a 20% loss into an 80% lossBorrowing allows you to control more assets than you could with cash aloneReal estate mortgages are often non-recourse, meaning you can give back the building without personal liabilityTrade credit helps wholesalers sell more and retailers buy more, but it still carries riskPublicly traded companies use debt too, and stock prices reflect that leverageMargin accounts let individuals borrow to buy stocks, multiplying risk in the same wayUnderstanding debt structure is just as important as understanding price and cash flowIn This Episode[00:00] Recap of pricing: expected cash flow and multiples[00:54] The widget example: equity partner vs. debt financing[02:32] Real estate example: all-cash purchase vs. using a mortgage[03:40] How $250,000 becomes $500,000 (or $50,000)[05:21] The downside: why debt destroys wealth faster when markets fall[06:15] Real estate mortgages: non-recourse and why it matters[07:30] Trade credit in merchandise businesses[08:15] Corporate debt and how it affects stock investors[10:21] Margin accounts: borrowing to buy stocks[11:17] Bottom line: debt as a toolNotable Quotes [02:18] "If I have a choice between making 50 and making 90, everything else being equal, people would generally borrow money and make the 90 instead of the 50." — Josh Eisenberg[03:40] "My $250,000 became $500,000. Instead of making a 25% profit, I doubled my money by using a mortgage." — Josh Eisenberg[05:22] "When the market goes up, you make a lot of money. When the market goes down or something goes wrong, the loss is greatly magnified." — Josh Eisenberg[09:50] "If that company has debt, that will affect how quickly the stock value changes. Companies unable to service their debt often file bankruptcy, and the equity is then potentially wiped out." — Josh Eisenberg[11:28] "Debt either juices returns or increases risk. When you look at an investment, it's very important to understand how debt is used." — Josh Eisenberg
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Debt: The Double-Edged Sword of Investing
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