Forty4
Full House
Okay 3x what you wanted but have I got a deal for you...
I see an increase in renewable-powered microgrids and battery storage.I would buy shares in Rural Electric Coops solar generation and storage facilities all over the US. Not because of these storms or anything but because it’s a long term gold mine. I’d focus on the ones that have storage capacity.
So TESLA is up about 45% since January 2021ETH
BTC
-done over 9 years ago, not a million dollars worth but hopefully I’m a millionaire from it in another 4 years
I’d say medical related but if a public option gets passed now, yah kiss your healthcare goodbye
Hard money real estate land and commercial loans. I’d do them at 12% interest only for two years secured by California real estate FIRST trust deeds at 50% LTV. 1 milly pays 10k interest a month. Easy month. Get 2 million in and thats 20k a month interest (the exact number my dad lives off) - easy money - No one defaults at 50% down and I WALK every properly myself. If they default I can often be heard yelling jackpot. I have one two months behind now. Law says 60, I give them 90. If it defaults I have a first of 250k against a appraisal of 800k. It’s 26 acres and 4 bedrooms with a 2 mile private driveway in a gorgeous area to name ONE example.There's a lot of speculation around BITCOIN, ETH and cryptocurrency in general; stocks being overvalued or undervalued; industries being ready for investment or not... so here's a question:
If you had a million dollars IN HAND today, and you couldn't use it to pay bills, pay off your home, nothing personal. but just invest for aggressive-ish growth: given the markets, political environment, and the state of the pandemic: where /how would you invest the money, and why?
(I'm using a million instead of the usual $1000 proxy because I want the movement to be meaningful not just in percentage gain, and allow for enough room for good strategy.)
If only life was as simple now as it was post WWII. A lot has changed since then, they’ve invented computers and markets now exist that weren’t even possible back then. Plastics for example, have made possible cars and trucks in third world countries that would never have had enough metals, allowing trade and commerce on larger scale there than ever before. Markets have bloomed in many more nontraditional areas, and traditional companies with traditional investing strategies aren’t always going to be good performers. Average maybe, but not good. Average works better than nothing though!FWIW, my dad was an economist whose speciality was gold markets (his institute was the WSJ’s go-to source for gold commentary.) He also in the early 90s devoted the last decade of his career to studying the entire stock market post-WWII, running long-term computer sims of various strategies.
He found the best you could do with equities was to invest small amounts in the top 5-10 Dow 100 High Yield (dividend) stocks each month, and blindly selling the purchases from 18 months previous every month.
If only life was as simple now as it was post WWII.
Invest in food crops and sewage treatment then.In 1945, barely 10,000 Americans had a television. Barely half had a refrigerator. Home ownership was under 50%. Only 40% of households had a car—almost all of them having just one car. And most people had never flown in an airplane.
So yes, life and markets were drastically different in 1945, even compared with 1965.
And the same could be said again in 1985. And 2005. That’s the point of doing a long-term analysis.
There will always be major technological changes, which make the next generation feel they are living in a totally different era.
We like flatter ourselves that we live in special times, not governed by the same fundamental patterns of behavior as our grandparents’ generation. So we don’t want to learn from the past.
Especially with the rise of socialism, big government, shrinking middle classI’m late in this one. My answer is Multi family housing (apartments). One million as a down payment on a $5,000,000 property. Passive income of $10,000 to $12,000 per month to start. Later with rent increases and 20 year loan payoff, it should yield $40,000 a month net. With housing price increases, the apartment market will be strong for as for as I can see.
Invest in food crops and sewage treatment then.
Everything else you listed above the majority of the world lives TOTALLY without.
But the same could be said for money itself - the majority of the people in the world have none.
And that’s a long term trend since the beginning of people
You are GeorgeI’d also buy 50k in crypto diversified 50% big caps, 25% mid caps, and 25% small caps.
We are all George!You are George