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Sane or Insane? .. Everything in cash for right time to invest beyond primary residence..


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2022 Apr 2, 11:48am   2,133 views  46 comments

by FarmersWon   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

Do You think holding cash is good idea?

Even Austin is Crazy .. This shows that Texas is getting on California bandwagon with no prop-13 and 2.5% property taxes.
https://www.redfin.com/TX/Austin/8223-Chalk-Knoll-Dr-78735/home/31228462?source=patrick.net

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26   Hircus   2022 Apr 3, 8:29pm  

stfu says
Patrick says
You'll pay something like 4%


Patrick you'll have to give me the phone number of the guy that will sell me gold for 4% above spot.

The best I've ever found is 'bouillon vault' but you don't get to hold the physical - it's in a vault in Switzerland.


Unless I'm calculating it wrong, this seems like about 3% above ask price for 1 bar

https://www.jmbullion.com/1-kilogram-gold-bar/?source=patrick.net

One day I will hold one of those kilo bars of gold in my hands ... and cackle to myself.
27   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Apr 3, 8:57pm  

cash is only good if you are about to use it on opportunity, or rainy day savings.

otherwise don’t sit on it. leverage is how you make money.
28   Ceffer   2022 Apr 3, 10:26pm  

Hircus says
The best I've ever found is 'bouillon vault' but you don't get to hold the physical - it's in a vault in Switzerland.

Better not. The Khazarian Mafia will just send a hit man to kill you and any other claimants, like they did financing Hitler in WWII, and the 'Swiss Vault' will just keep the gold and resell it temporarily to somebody else.
"We have many satisfied customers. The dead seldom complain. WWIII coming up!"
29   Patrick   2022 Apr 3, 10:31pm  

Onvacation says
Is that not the ultimate goal of investing? To be a rent receiving landlord?


To get rent from merely owning land is non-productive.

But to get dividends and capital gains from owning part of a company seems justified by what the company produces.

Like, if you own a windmill, someone had to build it, and some of the income goes to maintaining it, and it produces something which the plain land cannot.
30   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 4, 9:42am  

Eman says
Sorry, I don’t get regular paychecks. I see inflation on food, gas and everything around me including Tesla car prices. However, they haven’t impacted me one bit. I see it as a tax on the poor and lower class.

For me, it’s business as usual. I still dine out 7 days a week and still go on my normal daily life within feeling it. I hope the poor and lower class are happy with who they voted for.


So you don't use Federal Reserve notes at all, or have any other types of paper that you can only exchange for same notes?

Yes inflation hits hardest at the bottom, but if you think that's where it stays, you are in for a rude awakening. You see as each strata of income pushes people into the abyss of inflation, your strata moves closer. Eventually you'll fall in with the rest, and then you'll understand how cruel and ruthless your comment here sounds. Reminds me of the passage from Les Miserables where the french aristocrat tells the people to eat grass.
31   Hircus   2022 Apr 4, 6:37pm  

Patrick says
To get rent from merely owning land is non-productive.


I've been thinking about this statement. I'm not sure I see the picture cogently and correctly, but I feel like maybe the validity of the statement depends on the frame of reference, or frame of analysis.

The owner of the land likely purchased the land with capital (or, in any case, they surely could sell it in exchange for $). Capital is productive, generally speaking, because it could be spent on productive things.

1) The current owner would have paid less for the land if they knew they could not rent it. Conversely, the anticipation of renting meant the seller received more capital for selling him the land than they otherwise would have received. And capital is generally productive.

2) The person paying rent to the land owner also potentially receives a productivity boost via leverage. Instead of needing to outlay a large chunk of capital to purchase the land, they can instead rent it, allowing them to deploy their capital to productive endeavors, in exchange for a monthly fee. This arrangement is similar to a loan - in exchange for a monthly fee, you are given a chunk of capital for which you can deploy productively.

The reason I mentioned framing though, is because I'm not certain if I'm describing economics/productivity of "a single owner renting their land", or "a buyer, a seller, and a renter", or of "an economy that allows renting of land" etc... All three have different analysis boundaries, and I know from past experience, that you can sometimes lay your boundaries out in ways that lead to correct, but misleading/bunk results on account of the boundaries.

I'm also not sure of #1, as while the seller gained capital, the buyer lost it, although that happens in all transactions.

I guess my idea is half baked, but I decided the share it in hopes maybe someone else finds the perspective interesting, or sees things more clearly.
32   Eman   2022 Apr 4, 7:54pm  

NuttBoxer says
Eventually you'll fall in with the rest, and then you'll understand how cruel and ruthless your comment here sounds.


It’s a long way to get to me. I’ll probably be dead before then. Again, I hope the poor and middle class are happy with their votes and got what they voted for…..or not.
33   Eman   2022 Apr 4, 7:59pm  

Hircus says
The owner of the land likely purchased the land with capital (or, in any case, they surely could sell it in exchange for $). Capital is productive, generally speaking, because it could be spent on productive things.


I agree. Although capital can be invested in other assets, at the end of the day, capital is looking for yield, and real estate is one of the assets that produces yield.

The owner has to upkeep the building structures and provide regular repairs and maintenance. It’s nothing more than a glorified housing service provider. Thanks to inflation and leverage, that’s how the return is acceptable to the investors. Property tax is the tax on land. The structures get depreciated over 27.5 years.
34   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 4, 8:35pm  

Eman says
It’s a long way to get to me. I’ll probably be dead before then. Again, I hope the poor and middle class are happy with their votes and got what they voted for…..or not.


When you destroy a currency, the only ones who have enough are the ones destroying it. Either you will own nothing by 2030, or they will. But the middle ground you're wishing for flew out the window along with common sense the day the scamdemic started.

The only ones satisfied with election outcomes are the ones who don't vote. Because they're the only ones smart enough to realize life is what you make of it on your own, and those waiting for salvation by government will be waiting their whole lives.
35   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Apr 4, 8:43pm  

Onvacation says
FarmersWon says
Warren buffet is typical rent seeking land lord.

Is that not the ultimate goal of investing? To be a rent receiving landlord?
If only we could have the rent seeking without the corruption of inside trading and government picking the winners. Buffet has deep ties to the deep state.

The definition of "rent seeking" is: "practice of manipulating public policy or economic conditions as a strategy for increasing profits."

So, by its very nature, that is corruption. I think that Buffet has been doing a lot of that sort of thing. Maybe not in the 1970s, but certainly in the last decade.
36   Onvacation   2022 Apr 4, 8:43pm  

Hircus says

One day I will hold one of those kilo bars of gold in my hands ... and cackle to myself.

Go to the Gold and Silver shop that has such a thing and ask them if you can take a selfie with one.


Or you could buy one for under $65K.

Warn the shopkeeper that you're going to cackle. They are armed and dangerous.
37   Onvacation   2022 Apr 4, 8:46pm  

Big bars of gold are incredibly dense. The Spanish treasure galleons went to the new world ballasted with cobble stones and returned with ballasts of gold.
38   Goran_K   2022 Apr 5, 6:17am  

So far we have gold, TIPS, stocks, or real estate.

I seriously am looking to move a large amount of cash into an investment (over 200k).

What would you guys go for?
39   HeadSet   2022 Apr 5, 7:51am  

Eman says
Property tax is the tax on land. The structures get depreciated over 27.5 years.

Property tax is levied on the "improvements" (structures) as well. In fact, most tax invoices will list the land and structure property tax as separate items. That 27.5 year depreciation applies to residential rental property, and deals with income tax as a method of lowering taxable profit, since expensing the whole house in the year it was bought is impractical. That depreciation is no more a "tax advantage" than any other business that can deduct expenses, such as a tradesman who can depreciate his vehicle or expense his tools.
40   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Apr 5, 8:02am  

Goran_K says
So far we have gold, TIPS, stocks, or real estate.

I seriously am looking to move a large amount of cash into an investment (over 200k).

What would you guys go for?


real estate is work, a lot of work from what ive seen. if you want it easy, buy stocks. buy index funds and youll get market returns.
41   Goran_K   2022 Apr 5, 8:50am  

Fortwaynemobile says
Goran_K says
So far we have gold, TIPS, stocks, or real estate.

I seriously am looking to move a large amount of cash into an investment (over 200k).

What would you guys go for?


real estate is work, a lot of work from what ive seen. if you want it easy, buy stocks. buy index funds and youll get market returns.


So what are you thinking, wait for a SPY dip, and just buy like 400 shares?
42   EBGuy   2022 Apr 5, 2:22pm  

HeadSet says
That depreciation is no more a "tax advantage" than any other business that can deduct expenses, such as a tradesman who can depreciate his vehicle or expense his tools.

Bear in mind that you're talking to a guy with a Cybertruck on order (which happens to be over 6,000 lbs). eMan understand the game...
43   EBGuy   2022 Apr 5, 2:43pm  

Goran_K says

So what are you thinking, wait for a SPY dip, and just buy like 400 shares?

Good to have you back Goran. Hopefully you're not having to deal with stinky co-workers these days. You got me wondering about this....

VFIAX vs. SPY: A Mutual Fund vs. ETF Case Study

Both VFIAX, a mutual fund, and SPY, an ETF, seek to track the S&P 500.
One of the primary differences between the two is that Vanguard's VFIAX has a lower expense ratio of 0.04% versus the SPY's 0.0945%.
The SPY ETF may have a slight tax advantage over the VFIAX mutual fund since it's not actively managed, meaning there's less buying and selling of trades.
VFIAX and SPY are generally considered strong investments, especially for passive investors.
44   Eman   2022 Apr 5, 2:54pm  

HeadSet says
Property tax is levied on the "improvements" (structures) as well. In fact, most tax invoices will list the land and structure property tax as separate items. That 27.5 year depreciation applies to residential rental property, and deals with income tax as a method of lowering taxable profit, since expensing the whole house in the year it was bought is impractical. That depreciation is no more a "tax advantage" than any other business that can deduct expenses, such as a tradesman who can depreciate his vehicle or expense his tools.


My argument is that the land is not unproductive as claimed. The city puts an ordinance on what can be built there. Someone paid money for it. Someone is paying the property tax on it. It’s an investment for someone. The city can always use eminent domain to get the land and use it for “more productive” cause as they see fit.

With respect to depreciation and expenses, it’s so beneficial to run a business. A lot of normal daily expenses get deduct upfront. Business owners only have to pay taxes on what’s left. This is why some business owners drive fancy cars and wearing nice stuff because all these stuff get expensed. Either buy/rent nice things or pay more taxes? Such an easy decision.

@EBguy, in addition to the Cybertruck, did you know the Model X also qualified for business expense? 😘
45   Goran_K   2022 Apr 5, 3:13pm  

EBGuy says
Goran_K says

So what are you thinking, wait for a SPY dip, and just buy like 400 shares?

Good to have you back Goran. Hopefully you're not having to deal with stinky co-workers these days. You got me wondering about this....

VFIAX vs. SPY: A Mutual Fund vs. ETF Case Study

Both VFIAX, a mutual fund, and SPY, an ETF, seek to track the S&P 500.
One of the primary differences between the two is that Vanguard's VFIAX has a lower expense ratio of 0.04% versus the SPY's 0.0945%.
The SPY ETF may have a slight tax advantage over the VFIAX mutual fund since it's not actively managed, meaning there's less buying and selling of trades.
VFIAX and SPY are generally considered strong inv...


Nice to see you my man.

I actually do like Vanguard products and have an account with them. I might lean that way.
46   EBGuy   2022 Apr 5, 3:28pm  

Eman says
@EBguy, in addition to the Cybertruck, did you know the Model X also qualified for business expense?

Yeah, when I was checking it out a couple of days ago I noted the GVWR just tipped the scales...

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