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Old 05-23-2013, 08:54 AM   #1
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What would you do with it?

$10k isn't much these days, but I'm looking to do something aside from blow it on crap that I don't need. Was thinking of investing, but haven't the first clue where to start.

So, $10,000 that you don't need(assume that all bills, etc. are paid)...what comes to mind?

I know this is off topic, but who cares?
1. Part of downpayment on an investment property like a condomium. Little maintenance required because condo/HOA fees takes care of most of it. Rent it out to someone.

2. Start your own business doing something you love part time. $10,000 is not much, but it will get you started.

3. Invest in your happiness and spend it on a hobby. Racing, collecting things, etc.

4. Invest in your house. Do some renovations that improve the value of your home.
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:11 AM   #2
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PL, here is the fallacy:
"paying a mortgage with interest, property taxes, maintenance and all the other mandatory costs that go above an beyond the cost to rent"

Long term over the life of a 30 yr mortgage, these costs are always lower than the cost to rent a similar living space. This is an important distinction often overlooked in investment planning. Buffett agrees.
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:29 AM   #3
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PL, here is the fallacy:
"paying a mortgage with interest, property taxes, maintenance and all the other mandatory costs that go above an beyond the cost to rent"

Long term over the life of a 30 yr mortgage, these costs are always lower than the cost to rent a similar living space. This is an important distinction often overlooked in investment planning. Buffett agrees.
who said you have to be in the same rental for 30 years? and who has ever actually lived in the same rental for 30 years?

Putting a cap on your housing expenses, something a primary residence will never allow you to do as mortgage costs are not, nor will ever be, the only ownership cost, basically means that the renter/worker can simply give up convenience/amenities and move to an area where rent is lower or stable. Most importantly this allows the middle class worker to keep their retirement contributions untouched.
Mobility means flexibility in retirement planning. A home owner on a fixed income, without outside sources of passive income, on the other hand is giving up tomorrow to live well or conveniently today. Disaster. Particularly when you consider the fortunes that are being made in the oil/gas industry, health care/pharma/biotech and technology software/services/hardware that these middle income home owners aren't participating in as investors because they have to meet each uptick in the costs to own (aka owe).

Also, we just had a nearly seven year bubble of house-building, and after trillions in intervention by the Fed and Treasury house prices are still struggling five years after this bubble burst. That's a ton of inventory that renters can choose from, even if rent goes up, you can bet that the cost to own goes up that much more if that zip code also has rising incomes.

Basically you have to be extremely careful in doing some very long-term calculations of where you are buying and the expected ownership costs of buying into that zip code. And that's after you've calculated how much your income you can actually spend on the home purchase in the first place. If most people are not doing any of these calculations and simply out-bidding each other for homes (the very nature of RE) then these bidders have basically made it impossible for you not to over pay.
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:31 AM   #4
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I did not call home ownership an investment. My mortgage, taxes and insurance on my 2300 sq ft house equals the cost of a nice, not luxiourous, 2-3 bedroom apartment. I make my payments and by the time I retire, my house will have value, and then I will only be paying taxes, insurance and up keep for a whole lot less than a 1 bedroom apartment. As I get older, I can sell the house and use the proceeds to live out my final years where I want, wether it is a retirement community or what ever. My point was, home ownership is a good deal IF you don't overspend on a large, asset eating abode. If your income only allows buying a one bedroom condo, then that is what you can afford, and I still say, that is a better way to go than renting your entire life. Like I said, my home costs me monthly what a 2 bedroom apartment would cost but I have much more, including a two car garage to park my 986 in
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:44 AM   #5
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With a good budget, extra money is good for fun

I had this same dilemma a few months ago.

Background:
My wife and I both budget well, are saving for retirements, kids college, have a rainy day fund >6 months.

The company I work for ended up giving out much bigger bonuses this year, so we decided that we should replace the 986 we sold 3+ years ago.

Turns out, with ultra low interest rates and great credit, many banks are almost giving money away (~1% interest on new car loan), so we ended up getting a new 981 S.

Summary: If you have a budget with savings already, extra money is good for fun things.
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:58 AM   #6
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Oh, lord.

I belong to a couple of real estate forums and the "rent versus buy" threads go on forever.

Pro-renters tend to use the "you could have made more in stocks" idea. Meanwhile, as we said at the top of this thread, most average people do NOT make more in stocks. They buy too high, sell too low, and their average return is very puny.

Pro-buyers tend to stick with the "in time, buying will be cheaper than renting". But I recently checked the value of the first house we bought 20+ years ago for $67K, and it's now worth $100K. If we had been paying a mortgage (at those rates) all this time, we would be into it for about $120K. Plus repairs.

So. . .

The sucker part of home ownership is the total of 30 years of mortgage costs (usually 2.5-3 times the original purchase price), holding on when the "fashion" of a particular house style or neighborhood fades, and choosing properties with high upkeep.

The sucker part of renting is there is no hope of any type of return, your neighbors are transient, and rental rates tend to only go up.

Point is, there are tradeoffs with both.
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Old 05-23-2013, 10:09 AM   #7
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Our house is paid for.

Don't know if it's an investment or not, but I can tell you that it feels wonderful not to have to write out a mortgage check each month.

We paid ours off early. In the final analysis, we paid 1.5 times the purchase price of the house. It is now worth that much.

Like I said, it feels DAMN good.

Gotta call my buddy Warren now..............

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Old 05-23-2013, 10:27 AM   #8
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Oh, lord.

I belong to a couple of real estate forums and the "rent versus buy" threads go on forever.

Pro-renters tend to use the "you could have made more in stocks" idea. Meanwhile, as we said at the top of this thread, most average people do NOT make more in stocks. They buy too high, sell too low, and their average return is very puny.

Pro-buyers tend to stick with the "in time, buying will be cheaper than renting". But I recently checked the value of the first house we bought 20+ years ago for $67K, and it's now worth $100K. If we had been paying a mortgage (at those rates) all this time, we would be into it for about $120K. Plus repairs.

So. . .

The sucker part of home ownership is the total of 30 years of mortgage costs (usually 2.5-3 times the original purchase price), holding on when the "fashion" of a particular house style or neighborhood fades, and choosing properties with high upkeep.

The sucker part of renting is there is no hope of any type of return, your neighbors are transient, and rental rates tend to only go up.

Point is, there are tradeoffs with both.
I agree a poorly informed investor and the stock market are a disastrous mix.

Poorly informed investors are the life blood of the real estate industry and banks.

The average worker is first fleeced by the bank holding their mortgage and the actively-managed mutual fund industry picks off what's left. Both fleecings can be avoided, the latter easily, the former a bit trickier but doable.
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Old 05-23-2013, 09:56 AM   #9
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I make my payments and by the time I retire, my house will have value, and then I will only be paying taxes, insurance and up keep for a whole lot less than a 1 bedroom apartment. As I get older, I can sell the house and use the proceeds to live out my final years where I want
most are making that same bet. That the % of their income that goes into their home (above the cost to rent) will perform better going to the bank each month, than going into the investment account(s). And they're making that bet based on a real estate market that once existed but is no longer the case. Today equity-killing ownership costs are much higher, while the only thing that drives up real estate prices, rising incomes -- in a sustainable way (not a bank-fueled credit bubble) -- will not be there like it once was. A new math is required and most home buyers are still using the old math.

Also, if you look at the performance of real eastate vs most asset classes it contradicts that very bet over most time periods. Now subtract the costs involved in holding investments in each asset class from the performance and the rationale for shoveling that extra income into the bank's TBTF grubby mitts, for 30 years, becomes even more perplexing.

My guess: rent, invest the income you are saving in not working for the bank and the local tax authorities (a home owner's second job they don't know they have) into different asset classes, keep your investments out of actively managed mutual funds or all other types of managed funds and if you must own actual physcial real estate in your portfolio, do so with income properties in low property tax zip codes so that you can cut the bank out of the partnership ASAP and start collecting that rental income (or buy a primary residence that is also a multi-unit income property). Over the course of 30 years, you'll be able to buy twice the home you'll be living in now with a four car garage and you can write the property tax, utility, HOA and insurance checks without even looking at the amounts....because you'll be a millionaire.
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Old 02-26-2014, 07:03 AM   #10
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I remembered this thread when I saw this pop up yesterday.

Warren Buffett picks simple index fund for his inheritance to wife - Barrons.com

Talk about putting your money where your mouth is. If Buffett's old lady inherits the world he's instructed the lawyers that 90% of the cash, (his Berkshire shares are all going to charity), simply go into one of Vanguard's index funds. 10% will go into bonds. Not surprising to those who
know of his long-standing bet against anyone on Wall Street who thinks they beat that fund over 10 years. The point of the bet was to show that inverstors are needlessly over-paying for performance at virtually every income level.

Either way this is Buffett's rubbishing of any actively managed mutual fund, any hedge fund or whatever kind of fund. Yet people still choose or are forced (via pre-selected 401K funds) to needlessly waste their finite capital in actively managed investments that can not beat a simple S&P index fund and can suck away at your annual returns, which they cleverly disguise by trying to have you believe that the expense ratio is the only signifcant management cost.
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Old 02-26-2014, 07:34 AM   #11
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Spend it on something fun. You will be lucky to make any money investing in the market. I took all of my investments and paid off my home a while back. Once you factor in management fees, stock or fund purchase costs etc. you may find you may have lost money. It is too much effort for too little benefit being in the market. I was buying stocks and mutual funds for years and wasted a lot of time doing it. However, you could get lucky and hit a home run with your investment.
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Old 02-26-2014, 07:50 AM   #12
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You will be lucky to make any money investing in the market.... It is too much effort for too little benefit being in the market.
I think you will be unlucky to lose money investing in an index fund over the long term. It simply mirrors the health of the U.S. economy. Over the long run the U.S. economy will do better. How the average worker in that economy fares over the long run is another matter but big companies will keeep on keeping on.

As to your second point, It will be too much effort to sustain employment after age 65 if you fail to invest at all.

But I agree, the average investor has wasted a lot of time and money trying to pick and choose their way to positive long-term performance in the stock markets.
Assett diversification, over the long run is a better use of time and fees. However that diversfication needs to include at least some stake in the stock market, preferably as Mr. Buffett has demonstrated, in a fund that simply buys the whole U.S. stock market without any active management fees. A very simple investment that any worker, no matter how educated, can take advantage of. And is nearly impossible to beat over a 10 year period to boot. win win. Just make sure you don't have all your money in stocks, or all your money in your house, or all your money in some gold coins because Richard Petty buys gold too.
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Old 02-26-2014, 07:59 AM   #13
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I think you will be unlucky to lose money investing in an index fund over the long term. It simply mirrors the health of the U.S. economy. Over the long run the U.S. economy will do better. How the average worker in that economy fares over the long run is another matter but big companies will keeep on keeping on.

As to your second point, It will be too much effort to sustain employment after age 65 if you fail to invest at all.

But I agree, the average investor has wasted a lot of time and money trying to pick and choose their way to positive long-term performance in the stock markets.
Assett diversification, over the long run is a better use of time and fees. However that diversfication needs to include at least some stake in the stock market, preferably as Mr. Buffett has demonstrated, in a fund that simply buys the whole U.S. stock market without any active management fees. A very simple investment that any worker, no matter how educated, can take advantage of. And is nearly impossible to beat over a 10 year period to boot. win win. Just make sure you don't have all your money in stocks, or all your money in your house, or all your money in some gold coins because Richard Petty buys gold too.
I did not say dont save or invest. You can still save money and ivest in items you feel will appreciate. I just dont think its wise to give money to investment firms or ask for their advise. I was in the market for about 13 years and when I did the math I barely made any money when I sold out. It is crap shoot not a guarentee.
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Old 02-26-2014, 08:04 AM   #14
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option 1: with the 10K, i would sell my box and get a nicer car
option 2: with the 10k, sell my box, and the additional cash I have put a down payment on a nice apartment or house...
option 3: pay off all of my student debt
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Old 02-26-2014, 08:31 AM   #15
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I did not say dont save or invest. You can still save money and ivest in items you feel will appreciate. I just dont think its wise to give money to investment firms or ask for their advise. I was in the market for about 13 years and when I did the math I barely made any money when I sold out. It is crap shoot not a guarentee.
what year did you cash out?
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Old 02-26-2014, 09:33 AM   #16
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"what year did you cash out? "

2010. I was tired of giving my money away. I was feeling like chum in the water with sharks. Now, if I had one million dollars or so that would be different. I would likely take the smaller margins, knowing that I can come and go in the market with having to be in for the long haul trying to make 10% or more. I dont like that much exposer in the market anymore. My company invests 6% or 7% of my gross salary each month though.
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Old 02-26-2014, 11:49 AM   #17
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^ Sounds like the Mark Cuban approach. He says 'buy and hold is for morons'.
He says he's all cash and only buys when the market has taken a severe beating. Then when everyone thinks its nothing but blue skies he sells and is back in all cash.

I would agree that the concept of "dollar cost averaging" is very suspect on a return basis, and coupled with a "long only" mentality (too many average investors never take money off the table after stellar years like 2013) it does set up a situation where its like sheep to the slaughter. But at the end of the day you ultimately have to believe that when share prices simply get too cheap, the deep pockets will almost assuredly always come in to scoop up fire sale prices. Except it's not just U.S. investors doing this now, it's a whole international pool of new investors as well. The same ones who are boosting real estate prices in big markets like NYC and Miami. It would have to be a really insane set of conditions, all happening at once to keep the investor away for good. Even a spectacular $20 trillion debacle, enough to buy and destroy China three times over, like in 2008 only saw a less than one year period before the reversal was firmly in place. Maybe the next collapse will take two years to recover from, but I sometimes wonder what it would have to take to keep them all way forever. I think aliens would have to come from another planet.
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