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Old 01-27-2020, 08:13 PM   #61
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Originally Posted by vchan2177 View Post
....Over the last two centuries, about 90 percent of the world’s millionaires have been created by investing in real estate. ....
Ok, given the qualifier of over the last two centuries (1820-2020 or thereabouts) I guess it may be plausible..... but not if you asked today's millionaires the principal sources of their wealth.
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Old 01-27-2020, 08:22 PM   #62
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^vchan2177. Comments to the link you posted stated "It was said by Andrew Carnegie at the turn of the century. (http://www.tnj.com/archives/2004/october/real-estate). It makes sense though if you consider that 1 in 300 Americans is a millionaire, and most make it from their home value. Same applies world wide".

A unsubstantied statement made by Andrew Carnegie at the turn of the (previous) century (around 1900) may have little to no correlation with where today's millionaires made their money. A millionaire in 1900 equates to about $31M today. And considering that most people (presuming today) "make it from their home value", which you can't spend without selling (and still needing some place to live)....the statement is misleading at best.

Anyway, a lot of people leverage real estate, and make a lot of $ over the long run. Counting depreciation, which you have to 'pay back', tax write-offs, and not counting all of your costs (insurance, propety taxes, maintenance, mortgage interest, etc.)...can give one an unreastic idea of your actual rate of return, especially after you sell and pay taxes. If you buy in the right place at the right time, and if you can have close to a neutral cash flow (or just get lucky), the you can rake in the $ in real estate. But it's also subject to sudden drops in many markets.
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Old 01-27-2020, 08:28 PM   #63
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Originally Posted by vchan2177 View Post
...it is my opinion that you can make money in real estate. Please respect this opinion and I will respect your opinion.....
To be clear, I never said that you couldn't make money in real estate. I just said that for the individual investor that is it hard to avoid geographic and/or property-type concentration risk investing in properties.

What I objected to more recently is your posting absurdity framed as facts... like "90% of the millionaires made their fortune in real estate" and "consult a professional Financial Advisor who is licensed and certified by the FTC" when the FTC doesn't certify financial advisors and it is just untrue that 90% of today's millionaires made their fortune in real estate (though I guess if you go back 200 years then it is allegedly true )

I'll make you a deal..... you stop posting absurd things as facts and I'll stop posting rebuttals.
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Old 01-28-2020, 05:09 AM   #64
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Originally Posted by ncbill View Post
You're really advocating speculation, not investing, in real estate.

While RE investors use depreciation to offset other income they do their best to avoid being stuck with properties with a negative cash flow.

And 2.4% is a sub-par return for rental real estate...OP should redeploy that capital.


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Old 01-28-2020, 11:11 AM   #65
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To be clear, I never said that you couldn't make money in real estate. I just said that for the individual investor that is it hard to avoid geographic and/or property-type concentration risk investing in properties.

What I objected to more recently is your posting absurdity framed as facts... like "90% of the millionaires made their fortune in real estate" and "consult a professional Financial Advisor who is licensed and certified by the FTC" when the FTC doesn't certify financial advisors and it is just untrue that 90% of today's millionaires made their fortune in real estate (though I guess if you go back 200 years then it is allegedly true )

I'll make you a deal..... you stop posting absurd things as facts and I'll stop posting rebuttals.

OK deal. However, what is absurd to you...may not be absurd to me or other people. I will try to do my best. I do object in the manner how you disagree. Let me cut and paste the community rules:
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  • Do not engage in personal attacks. Challenge others' points of view and opinions, but do so respectfully and thoughtfully. Excessive sarcasm, extreme belligerence, insults, profanity, extreme anger, offensive comments about race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, and national origin, are not acceptable.
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I suggest you re-read your posting number #39 to Another Reader which states "put up or shut up". That does not fall into the respect or kindness category.

We both violate the use of profanity so both of us should restrain in the use of profanity.

As far as your proposed deal: I WELCOME your rebuttals as long as you comply with the community rules. I also intend to comply with the community rules as well. I am surprised that Another Reader has not notify a mediator on your comment number #39.....which is a more serious violation than my absurd comment. My absurd comments does not violate the community rules except for my one use of profanity in a poor attempt to inject some humor.

My observation: ut2sua read your comment #39 and Another Reader comments and ut2sua discovered it was getting out of hand and he was extremely diplomatic in his comment #40. ut2sua deserves a standing ovation.

This posting is about utzsua and not about me or you. If you read his original posting: He appear to seek help in bonds. In response to utzsua's request regarding bonds, here is a link below which may be helpful to ut2sua.

https://obliviousinvestor.com/what-h...-market-crash/


IMO....Investors need to know how investment vehicles behaves in a bull market and a bear market. The bull market behavior is more easily obtained and that identifies the reward part. The link above identifies the risk part. You put both together you have your reward/risk. If you want to write a rebuttal, ut2sua and I will welcome that.
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Old 01-28-2020, 01:45 PM   #66
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pb4uski is one of the most knowledgeable and consistent contributors to this site. I respect his opinions and analysis, nearly above all others here. pb4uski's posts are almost always based on facts, detailed analysis and extensive research and knowledge of subject matter, and not on baseless opinions.

While his response in Post #39 was a bit on edge, I don't think he actually passed the line with regard to "Excessive sarcasm, extreme belligerence, insults, profanity, extreme anger, offensive comments about race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, and national origin, are not acceptable."

FWIW.
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Old 01-28-2020, 01:56 PM   #67
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pb4uski is one of the most knowledgeable and consistent contributors to this site. I respect his opinions and analysis, nearly above all others here. pb4uski's posts are almost always based on facts, detailed analysis and extensive research and knowledge of subject matter, and not on baseless opinions.

While his response in Post #39 was a bit on edge, I don't think he actually passed the line with regard to "Excessive sarcasm, extreme belligerence, insults, profanity, extreme anger, offensive comments about race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, and national origin, are not acceptable."

FWIW.

That is really up to a moderator to decide. However, I will not to get a moderator involved. I think we can handle this situation ourselves. You know me...my first priority is surfing and the girls in bikinis in Waikiki. All of this stuff is secondary. BTW Raheem Mostert of the 49'er is a surfer dude. If you watch his videos, he pops up a lot faster than I ever can.
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Old 01-28-2020, 02:04 PM   #68
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Why don’t you all take a step back and quit the bickering. You can disagree without being disagreeable.

If anyone thinks a post is out of order, please report it using the post report function.
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Old 01-28-2020, 03:51 PM   #69
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OP here, thanks all for your inputs/comments. It is great to learn the different view points. I realized very quickly after joining this forum that I am a highly uneducated investor especially regarding bonds and bond funds (on top of being highly uneducated on many RE related topics). After getting many helpful guidance from everyone on this thread and other threads, and after reading a couple of books recommended by folks in this forum ("Why bother with bonds" and "The four pillars of Investing"), I feel a lot more comfortable with bond investing now. As I improve from highly uneducated to slightly-less-highly uneducated, I would like to share with the beginner bond investors one interesting thing I learned about bond funds in the last few days:
If you buy a bond or bond fund, and interest rate goes higher, your principle will go down *bad* (how much it goes down is determined by a math equation, as bp4uski pointed out to me in another thread), but if you hold your bond or bond fund for a period as long as the bond duration and reinvest all dividend, you will effectively get all you $ back *not too bad*. I got this understood for a single bond before, but I didn't know a bond fund will also follow this math.
The above is good to the first order, I am not discussing opportunity cost and other lost here. I want to share the above because that was one thing I wanted to understand, but couldn't before.
FWIW, I believe Vchan2177 was trying to help me with his personal view point. His message got across to me fine. I asked for input, and I thank you all for providing them.
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Old 01-28-2020, 04:18 PM   #70
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Why don’t you all take a step back and quit the bickering. You can disagree without being disagreeable.

If anyone thinks a post is out of order, please report it using the post report function.

OK. I do not intend to report that a post is out of order. I hope the other members feel the same way. In the future, my preference is to have me and the other members exchange personal emails to discuss the issue privately.... rather than do it publicly. This is because when one party feels insulted or challenged by another party in public, it escalates and it ends badly.
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Old 01-28-2020, 04:20 PM   #71
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OP here, thanks all for your inputs/comments. It is great to learn the different view points.
FWIW, I believe Vchan2177 was trying to help me with his personal view point. His message got across to me fine. I asked for input, and I thank you all for providing them.

Another standing ovation from me.
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Old 01-30-2020, 04:58 PM   #72
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I'm no crack investor but I've done well with Pimco bond funds for many years- diff ones (I had more options after turning the Fidelity 401k into an ira). I'm 60/40 and plan to stay with that ratio for now.

PONAX has been paying me nice returns for several years, and I currently have my eye on 3 other bond funds to invest about 50k in cash (I sold some losers) once triggers are hit by one or more of them.

I could ride out a downturn (I've bridged from now until 65 with other $ & will take SS @70), but I don't want to see a massacre between now and 2030. Ya can;t time the market. Well, I can't.
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Old 02-05-2020, 04:50 PM   #73
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Update: I was able to convince DW to FIRE this year. Her work is currently not enjoyable with extra stress (on top of her being a workaholic). After showing her our numbers, and making my promises that we will be fine, she has set a date of 5/15/2020 as her last day. Her only request was to keep our rental properties, so I agreed to not touch those. My work is a lot easier and the $ is good so I plan to FIRE 2 years from now (get to 55 to have access to my 401K). I am in the process of consolidating our scatter IRA accounts and move them to 401K accounts so I can do some backdoor ROTH conversion (have none right now because of the pro-rata issue). I will also move toward a 60/40 AA for the $ in IRA/401K while not touching the after tax cash. I realized we need the cash to control our MAGI during the early RE years. Thanks all for your valuable inputs
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