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-   -   Do you invest some of the money you make? if so, what do you invest it on? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=951649)

will76 02-02-2010 08:02 PM

Do you invest some of the money you make? if so, what do you invest it on?
 
Do you...

- only invest your money back into your business ?

- invest into other things? if so what ?


just curious what everyone else does with their money after they pay their bills, or do you just use what is left over to buy stuff ?

Bomber8888 02-02-2010 08:03 PM

Real Estate and hooker! :)

Nicky 02-02-2010 08:05 PM

Domains + some other mainstream stuff

fuzebox 02-02-2010 08:09 PM

Real estate, closing on our third rental property this week...

Redrob 02-02-2010 08:11 PM

Commerical Real Estate in growth markets.

Spunky 02-02-2010 09:36 PM

Stocks and bonds

candyflip 02-02-2010 09:38 PM

The house we live in.
Rental properties.
Kids education.

DBS.US 02-02-2010 09:50 PM

Rental properties:2 cents::thumbsup

Fat Panda 02-02-2010 09:53 PM

Beer and food

xxweekxx 02-02-2010 09:56 PM

where do you guys find rental properties from? and what are guarantees it'll be rented out? im interested in snagging up a few really.. it might be low return but i dont care, its long term money.. say u drop 500k, but only make 50k/yr, its not a bad investment considering u own the damn property

GAMEFINEST 02-02-2010 10:00 PM

saving up for the bad times..

fatfoo 02-02-2010 10:05 PM

Real estate is good. I never tried that.

A thought comes into my mind - I need to move myself and my business to a different physical location.

Sly 02-02-2010 10:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xxweekxx (Post 16807572)
where do you guys find rental properties from? and what are guarantees it'll be rented out? im interested in snagging up a few really.. it might be low return but i dont care, its long term money.. say u drop 500k, but only make 50k/yr, its not a bad investment considering u own the damn property

As much as you move around, I don't think it would be a good idea. Sure, hire a management company, but that will suck up pretty much all of your money. If you have large sums of money, you could probably find better things to do with it.

Bah... go for it.

As far as investments go... I have a 401(k), some side businesses, personal development, and a rental. It's kind of too much. Trying to consolidate more.

FrozenJag 02-02-2010 10:16 PM

Well first and foremost I always try to maintain zero debt. Even if its a car loan or something.

I invest heavily back into my online business through anything from buying sites, to hiring full time employees, domains, new sites, etc.

Then 2 years ago I started an offline company that just entered its third year in business and signed another 2 year extension on its largest contract.

Then I also save money in my bank accounts. I would like to have minimum of 6 months full living expenses just incase things took a turn for the worse.

I used to have 1 rental property but it became way too big of a headache. Im still growing though, I wasnt around in the super good times of adult where you could make hundreds of k's with not much work really. Going at 3 1/4 years now, so still along ways to go even though ive far surpassed my original goals.

theking 02-02-2010 10:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by will76 (Post 16807374)
Do you...

- only invest your money back into your business ?

- invest into other things? if so what ?


just curious what everyone else does with their money after they pay their bills, or do you just use what is left over to buy stuff ?

I invested in real estate holdings for more than twenty years. A few years ago I sold all of my holdings and invested in the market. I roll all dividends over and do not touch any of the principle as I have a monthly income (SSA disability check/100% disabled vet VA check) which more than meets my monthly needs or desires. I have zero debt and pay cash for anything I need or want. My needs and desires are simple so I am worth far more than I will even spend in my life time.

SomeCreep 02-02-2010 10:32 PM

Booooooooooze.

brand0n 02-02-2010 10:37 PM

gold, gold options, dinar.

mmcfadden 02-02-2010 10:43 PM

Hookers, those that are not hookers, and def. Booze

will76 02-02-2010 10:47 PM

looks like a close race between " boooooze and hookers" and "real-estate".

will76 02-02-2010 10:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xxweekxx (Post 16807572)
where do you guys find rental properties from? and what are guarantees it'll be rented out? im interested in snagging up a few really.. it might be low return but i dont care, its long term money.. say u drop 500k, but only make 50k/yr, its not a bad investment considering u own the damn property

Rental properties are not as easy as they sound. First and foremost you need to find a property you can buy, and rent for more than your expenses (mortgage, ins. prop tax, upkeep, etc...) that right there is not easy to do. Then you need to deal with people, some are great and you never hear from them, some call often for minor fixes. Then you can get the ones that are late or the ones that like to stay for 1 year and then move out.... which you then might have it vacant for a month or two, which is a killer on your ROI. Then you may get the people who trash your place and you have to go behind them and do a bunch of repairs.... people who don't do it don't know all that is involved and people who do have rentals either deal with the crap or are lucky and haven't had those type of tenants yet. You have to factor your "time" into the investment as well.

if you go with real-estate (in the US) prop tax sales are by far the best investment and I have looked at REO's, foreclosures, flipping houses, rentals, building new houses, etc... a lot of those are hard to find good deals in the first place, you can have unforseens (like a huge repair you find out a year after you buy or the tenant that doesn't pay for couple months, or it sits vacant for longer than expected) or you build a bunch of new houses and the market crashes before you are finished building them (<- been there) but with prop tax sales your time and risk is almost nothing, the reward is very high.

minddust 02-02-2010 11:01 PM

Gold.

I love holding gold...:helpme

BillyHoe 02-02-2010 11:11 PM

Blue chip Stock and the company

fuzebox 02-02-2010 11:12 PM

Will a lot of what you said seems to apply more to real estate as an active involvement business, but not as a long term passive investment...

HandballJim 02-02-2010 11:13 PM

better domains, and looking at maybe buying a nice co-op...the only problem is NYC real estate did not get hit much yet so everything is still expensive. for example the one I like is a 2 bed/2 bath going for $249k and $950 a month maintenance...there is a wait list and extra fee for parking. (I will most likely find street parking 5 blocks away) Kitchen is new (but no granite top), both bathrooms need work and I would need to redo them.

will76 02-02-2010 11:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by fuzebox (Post 16807685)
Will a lot of what you said seems to apply more to real estate as an active involvement business, but not as a long term passive investment...

not sure i follow, exactly.

If you talking about long term real-estate as far as rentals? it can be "passive" from a time standpoint, you could hire a handy man and/or prop manager to deal with everything so you don't have to be hands on. But you still have all the other risks, vacancy rate, cost for repairs, uncollected rent, etc etc... And now you have more costs because you have to pay someone to do that work, so your "deal" has to be that much better so it can at least pay for the mortgage muchless make you a profit.

Please explain what you thinking about as long term passive investment when it comes to real-estate. I don't know what else would be "long term" unless you were renting it. Building, fliping, etc.. are all short term. You wouldn't buy something and let it sit and do nothing with it for many years then sell it. The only long term passive real-estate investment I can think of is buying your own home.

theking 02-02-2010 11:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by will76 (Post 16807653)
Rental properties are not as easy as they sound. First and foremost you need to find a property you can buy, and rent for more than your expenses (mortgage, ins. prop tax, upkeep, etc...) that right there is not easy to do. Then you need to deal with people, some are great and you never hear from them, some call often for minor fixes. Then you can get the ones that are late or the ones that like to stay for 1 year and then move out.... which you then might have it vacant for a month or two, which is a killer on your ROI. Then you may get the people who trash your place and you have to go behind them and do a bunch of repairs.... people who don't do it don't know all that is involved and people who do have rentals either deal with the crap or are lucky and haven't had those type of tenants yet. You have to factor your "time" into the investment as well.

if you go with real-estate (in the US) prop tax sales are by far the best investment and I have looked at REO's, foreclosures, flipping houses, rentals, building new houses, etc... a lot of those are hard to find good deals in the first place, you can have unforseens (like a huge repair you find out a year after you buy or the tenant that doesn't pay for couple months, or it sits vacant for longer than expected) or you build a bunch of new houses and the market crashes before you are finished building them (<- been there) but with prop tax sales your time and risk is almost nothing, the reward is very high.

I took Will Roger's advice when he was once asked what to invest in. I was in the 2nd year of the 12 years I spent in the Army when I began to acquire property. I bought a ton of fixer uppers over the years. I hired retired trade workers (plumbers, carpenters, electricians etc.) that wanted to make some extra bucks under the table for a small portion of what their normal pay would have been. In the beginning I would flip them for a profit to buy more fixer uppers...but as time went by finances grew and I did not need to flip them...so I began to rent them out. I hired a manager so I did not have to mess with the mundane problems of renting. When I decided to completely retire I sold all of my holdings (almost all of them were paid in full and to a single buyer) and I had a substantial number of housing rentals and business rentals and several undeveloped properties when I sold. The only real problems I encountered over the years was with local zoning laws and crooked or inept inspectors.

Barefootsies 02-03-2010 12:31 AM

Right now, almost all of it is going back into the business and/or paying down debt.

The goal is to fully own my house, and have student loans paid off by the time I am 40. Then I can move on to some rentals and other investment things I am reading up on now.

Who knows what the credit market will look like in a few years time at the rate things are going. So I am planning on paying down everything I know for a fact they look at in assets, debt, and cash money on hand (as well as investments).

:2 cents:

istanboys 02-03-2010 06:04 AM

I invest most of it back into the business. I just use what is left over to buy stuff, which can hardly be called an investment.

pornguy 02-03-2010 06:07 AM

Real Estate and Stocks.

shuki 02-03-2010 06:19 AM

Real Estate for sure....looking at a nice development project right now.

Bhunter 02-03-2010 06:31 AM

- beer
- junk food
- hookers
<--- panties

I guess I'll never reach the top. :Oh crap







































No.. but seriously..

Domains
Ads
Content
Software

CDSmith 02-03-2010 06:52 AM

I'm invested in:
RSP's (as in Retirement Savings Plan)
Rental/revenue property
Mutual funds
Various stock investments
My business

halfpint 02-03-2010 06:54 AM

No cause my misses spends all my money on shit things she dosent even need

dcalm 02-03-2010 07:00 AM

i'm saving up for underground bunker [but like 5 star hotel ;] in mountains... best investition: gold and ground.

anywany - you know what killed fuckin' dinosaurs? i dont want it to kill me :D

wild johnny 02-03-2010 07:07 AM

Right now Bonds, general electric at 5.75% . and I have 1 rental property.

HerPimp 02-03-2010 07:24 AM

After bills are paid invest back in business and training. No hoarding. Never give up, Never surrender!

Adraco 02-03-2010 08:06 AM

I make personal loans. People who for some reason can't loan money from a bank can take personal loans from me. The return is decent and somewhat predictable over the years. A little depending on the person, say that I charge around 20% interest rate on a yearly basis, about the same as a credit card. I count on loosing about 10% in defaults leaving me with around 10%. So far my average loss level is at 4.92% over the last five years, leaving an average of 15.02% profit over the last five years. And I have happy, returning cutomers too.

xxweekxx 02-03-2010 08:22 AM

so u have a payday loan company basically?

Adraco 02-03-2010 08:47 AM

I gues you could compare it to a payday loan, but I usually make quite large loans and over a period of 24 to 60 months usually.

jerryb 02-03-2010 08:57 AM

Physical Gold --- no paper gold. Have 241 oz at present and couple more coming in in a couple days. Solid hands on physical Gold is breathtaking. :-)


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