buckeyefarmer
Epic Contributor
My thought is, if you really should put your money into gold, then why is everyone on TV trying to sell theirs to you? I think the gold boat sailed away long ago, it's too high priced now to buy.
My thought is, if you really should put your money into gold, then why is everyone on TV trying to sell theirs to you? I think the gold boat sailed away long ago, it's too high priced now to buy.
D) In 1973 hid $1000 in hundred dollar bills for emergency. Still have them. Still worth $1000. Huge loss in value due to inflation.
IN 1973 I invested (saved) $43,000.
A) In 1973 bought house for $16,000. In 2005 sold house for $120,000 with about $30,000 of hurricane damage to it. Made $36,000 in rental income after all expenses, taxes, repairs, insurance, interest. Profit $140,000 over 32 years on $16,000 investment.
B) In 1973 bought house for $15,000. Have made $85,000 in rental income after all expenses. Could sell house today for $190,000. Profit $260,000 over 37 years on $15,000 investment.
Ive met few people whom really rang the bell on commodity plays....without giving it back again on the next transaction
Most of us are better off doing it via the diversified approach.....IMHO.
I feel that real estate is the best possible way to invest money BUT it takes research, instinct, knowledge of the market, more work than any of the other ways and good luck.
:thumbsup: Diversify over both time (i.e. don't try to time the market, you can't do it successfully for very long, & you'll waste a lot of time & $ trying) & allocation classes (establish how much Small Cap, Large Cap, Int'l, Bonds, Cash your portfolio consist of, & stick to that allocation thru thick & thin (notice how I excluded gold/ silver)).
And stick to your plan. Regular monthly or twice monthly investments will make you happy when 1) the market's up since, well, hey, the market's up!, and 2) when the market's down since you get to buy more cheaper.
:2cents:
I have several books & other sources stating, & backed by historical research, that over any 10-year period stocks have outperformed every other investment including real estate & gold/ silver.
An investor that regularly adds to his established stock index mutual fund portfolio through good times & bad doesn't need instinct or have to do a lot of work. He just keeps on keepin' on.
As always, my :2cents: