Showing posts with label bank loan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bank loan. Show all posts

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Real estates and properties


Welcome, my friend, to the world of real estate investing. When done the right way, investing in real estate can create for you an inflation-proof cash flow that will take care of you and your family forever.

Before I begin, I want to make one thing abundantly clear — this is going to take work. If you think you can just get started with your investing and wake up tomorrow morning a multimillionaire, you need to think again.

The general wisdom that real estate is all about location, location, location is flat out wrong. In the real world of investing, real estate is first and foremost about the motivation of the seller; secondly, it’s about the price and terms with which you can acquire a property; and then and only then about the location of the property.

Monday, February 16, 2009

The begining

Loans and mortgages are great!

Why? Because they make you rich.

How is that?

I hope that, reading this blog, you will learn:

a) what is the difference between poor, mid and high class
b) why is essential to buy real estates
c) how to manage properly your real estates and how to get the right people into your real estates so you get steady income every month
d) how to "read" properly balance sheets and cash flow
e) why is so important to become investor
f) why it is so important to get financial education
g) how loans actually help you get rich
h) why is so important to keep the right mind set to become rich.

Friday, October 12, 2007

What to buy?


For adults, keep your expenses low, reduce your liabilities and diligently build a base of solid assets. For young people who have not yet left home, it is important for parents to teach them the difference between an asset and a liability. Get them to start building a solid asset column before they leave home, get married, buy a house, have kids and get stuck in a risky financial position, clinging to a job and buying everything on credit. I see so many young couples who get married and trap themselves into a lifestyle that will not let them get out of debt for most of their working years.

For most people, just as the last child leaves home, the parents realize they have not adequately prepared for retirement and they begin to scramble to put some money away. Then, their own parents become ill and they find themselves with new responsibilities.

So what kind of assets am I suggesting that you or your children acquire? In my world, real assets fall into several different categories:

1. Businesses that do not require my presence. I own them, but they are managed or run by other people. If I have to work there, it's not a business. It becomes my job.
2. Stocks.
3. Bonds.
4. Mutual funds.
5. Income-generating real estate.
6. Notes (lOUs).
7. Royalties from intellectual property such as music, scripts, patents.
8. And anything else that has value, produces income or appreciates and has a ready market.