Asking a real estate agent whether you should buy a home right now is like to asking an alcoholic whether they think you should have a drink lol. Homes in my neighborhood that cost around $450k in sales in 2019 are now going for $800 to $950k. Every seller in my neighborhood is currently making a $350k profit. Simply unreal. In all honesty, deflation is what we require. The only other option is for many people to go bankrupt, which would also be bad for the economy. That is the only way to return to normal.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; its best to offset some of your real estate investments and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
It's often true that people underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to around $750k.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
My CFA ’’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Appreciate this recommendation, hopefully I can get some insight to where the market is headed and strategies to beat the downtrend with when I hear back from Aileen.
Please can I get involved in real estate? I don’t have the money to buy a house but I wish to start making a little investment in it for now,is it possible ?
Managing Money is different from accumulating wealth, and the lack of investment education in schools may explain why people struggle to maintain their financial gains.
Prioritizing effective personal finance management holds greater significance than the sheer amount saved, irrespective of income source. Consulting a certified financial advisor can offer tailored strategies to optimize financial results by reducing expenses and enhancing income
My CFA, James Brendan McCall, is a renowned figure in his field. I recommend researching his name online; you'll find all his credentials and everything you need to work with a reliable professional. With many years of experience, he is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
I love public REITs. I have several in my accounts. I have almost never been burned by REITs but it depends on doing research and choosing the ones that meet your investing style.
@@gallardodane O is a very large and popular one. I invested in CIM for a while until I learned you could not DRIP the dividends. That was several years ago. Things might be different, now. AGNC is popular. GLAD is doing well. MFA has had some trouble but might be a good buy, now. Keep in mind REIT are cyclical. They are popular when interest rates are falling, not so much when they are going up.
O is very popular GLAD seems to be doing well MFA was in a hole for a while but seems to be coming out of it. ORC if you want to get crazy AGNC is also popular
I know from experience publicly traded reits are the way to go after research. Entry is key. Much bigger dividend then most blue chip stocks. INCOME monsters out there in the REIT world.
He's right, the private ones are just crazy risky. That said you always want to diversify your stuff. BND - bond (3.05) (VBTLX ETF) JEPQ - Dividend (VOO) (33.30) VNQ - REIT (33.30) VTI - US Index (18.30) (VTSAX ETF) VXUS - international index (12.05) (VTIAX ETF) You're welcome :) Just find a good brokerage who is regulated and use the %s accordingly when you average dollar it.
Would love to own real estate but nearly impossible in NYC. Next best thing for me are REITs in the stock market. Plus I get to avoid all the landlord duties. =]
Think Money That's the main reason I started investing into REITs 10 years ago. Did not want landlord duties. No paper work,etc. And in my Roth 401k for tax free dividend payout later. Started investing with all money from selling my small rental. Some of my REITs just move up and down through the years reinvesting dividends steadily like I wanted. Some increasing dividends.....also at single digits increasing share price up to several thousand percent even through the recession.
I've been following REITs like AGNC and ORC for years. The problem with them is that their stock prices just keep dropping and they can drop the dividend at any time and then you're SOL.
If interest rates drop the share price will go up again. ORC is a fairly risky investment, as they have not been that smart the past few years. I do own ORC shares. O is a very popular option, and has been increasing its dividend slowly for several years.
Honestly, this situation makes me uneasy, especially with the potential depression, not just a recession. I'm not sure about my $130K investment strategy given the economic uncertainty.
I agree. Even with great opportunities, we should proceed cautiously. Seeking market analysis or advice from certified market strategists is important.
Absolutely, having a solid plan is crucial. My portfolio has doubled since early last year. My financial advisor and I are working towards a seven-figure goal, though it might take until Q3 2024.
That question and answer combo consumes 2+ hours of air time over the course of a year. That's 2 hours of programming with no content costs! Dave is laughing all the way to the bank! ;)
@@eugeneshelley9718 which is it 7,000, 8,000 9,000, 10,000 or 20,000 you supposedly received? You keep changing the amount you claim you've gotten back.
Yes. Always do your own due diligence, people always speak from their own point of view and according to their own interests, alot of bias advice around here. But yes, REITs are GREAT investments, but like everything, you need to know what you're getting into. It is literally like investing into real estate, except you're investing in a trust that KNOW what they're doing with said property and can give you returns in the form of dividends. Plus, you don't deal with the hassles you would deal with as a traditional landlord
Yeah but what if there's very low to no profit because the REIT manipulate the revenue to be allocated on operation expense and they just leave very small profit. 90% of that small profit will be shared to REIT holders.
I started with self storage,data storage,cannabis,senior living,health,and ecommerce resistant REITs since ten years ago. Quarterly and monthly dividends compounding in Roth and pretax retirement savings. Doing extremely well.
Those self storage companies do pretty well. Speaking of that I know a guy who when he moved about 10 years ago to another smaller place he begin storing his extra stuff in climate controlled storage, (probably 3k value max of stuff) and long story short he paid on it monthly for nearly 10 years at $130 a month before he moved again to rent a house and closed the storage.
Chris Vandernaald So much of that is going on which is why I became interested in this REIT. And I think it really picked up when auto pay began and easier for people to throw money away monthly to store junk.
Latentk Just did. And that’s as far as I go. Initially spent hours reading, understand what they were,and doing math breaking down several categories and over100 individual REITs during a weekend before adding them to my portfolio years ago. Up to you to do your own due diligence and make financial decisions.
I've come across REITs and became interested. Especially wanting to build a real estate portfolio. How did you get started doing it? And is there any literature you'd recommend?
Question, in four years I plan to buy land in Texas to retire. Should I buy now if I find the land I want or continue saving money and then buy land in 4 years when I am ready to move?
I have most of my portfolio invested into various REITS and mREITS, as I only have a 10 year time frame until I retire, so I want to collect as much as possible in distribution payouts so I can supercharge my compounding interest plus build up an income portfolio to some day draw from. My wife, who is a bit younger, has the S&P in her IRA and we also have a joint account with another ETF to stay diversified. This was the best I could do since I did not start investing until later in life
@@Yaya-hk1cj ok here it goes. Find a good a very good company with all the fundamentals of investing right. Then make sure the company you buy is a company you want to hold for a while. Then see if you can sell options. Then buy 100 shares and sell contract of option to get premiums. You can sell it weekly of monthly. Just make sure you educate yourself enough about option selling. The strategy is called covered calls. Then sell options contract at high strike price so you don't need to worry you need to sell soon. Sell the contract for a week or month and this is how you generate revenue owning stocks with options. Again educate yourself a lot about it before doing it, is simple but you need to know very well how to do it.
@@johnwaters7847 that is so kind of you. I'm looking to explore the same options but it's challenging to get straight answers w/o signing up for some, "not-so- free" infomercial .
I just turned 50, and I’m overwhelmed about retirement. I’ve been considering real estate investments, but the idea of managing properties feels like a full-time job. On the other hand, REITs seem less hands-on, but I’m not sure if they’re as profitable. What’s better for retirees like me?
REITs have lower barriers to entry and are more flexible. I have to move every few years for my job and I can't imagine trying to manage properties from a distance without a management company and if you're paying a management company REITs tend to outperform Private Investment Property under a management company (unless you're dealing with a fixer upper maybe). Also, you have to factor in the value of your mental health. Bad tenants will really sour you on the experience and REITs allow you to get way better diversification, especially since most people who buy real estate leverage up.
Hey Dave here's an idea why not do a couple of videos on asset protection. I find that many people can make money but do not know how to manage it and to protect their assets. What do you think?
@@dominicankid1001 You're not factoring in gas, maintenance, repairs and taxes. When I used to do Grubhub, I had an excel spreadsheet to track numbers. You're going to pay a lot in taxes. 15% right off the top for social security and medicare. Then another 10% or so for regular taxes. Some people don't pay or do their taxes and 5 years down the road, the IRS sends out letter demanding payment for the past 5 years.
@@dominicankid1001 Better save money on the side to pay your taxes. I'd keep a seperate checking account just for taxes, maintence, repairs and gas for the car
Private investing is pretty much reserved for those who are willing to invest long term. If you're just trying to make quick cash and beat it, then private investing is not for you..
Yes.. that's a good one. I also like ETF's that hold primarily REITs. I have a small position in FREL (a Fidelity REIT ETF) and it's done well. I like your youtube channel btw. Good content my man.
Listen to an expert like Josh Brown on private REITs. Private REITs as a rule are crap. Anything that isnt created by a team where you are a member of team is you getting robbed. They make up the value of tha assets and thwy pay at least 10% commissions to the person that sells it to you.
I'm with rich uncles and they're as transparent as they get. Better business bureau gives them an A+ and returns are attractive. 33% of dividends made is tax sheltered, theres contractional rental increase so as they're paying off the balance and it goes down, the return is hypothetically suppose to increase, and they've honored 99% of investors request which includes selling their shares of they wanted to walk. I'm sticking with private reit. Also isn't influenced as hard as public traded which cam be volatile
Hey Mr. Ramsey! I want to put my money in Health, Retail/Mall, and monthly dividend. I have made a list of them: Health/Retirement Home REIT: Welltower Retail/Mall: Simon Property Group Monthly Dividend: O, AGNC, LTC, EPR, STAG Others: SKT, VNQ, IRM, PEAK, VER, EQR, NLY, CIM, ABDC, BX So I want to put my money in one of each. Of course there are some companies I have not listed so if you recommend anything please let me know. Either from your recommendation or from this list I provided, which company from each category would you recommend me to invest in. I want to this long-term since I am 21-years old.
Sounds like you’ve done a fair amount of due diligence already & now it’s time to take action . Pick one from all the 3 categories that yields what interest you most & go for it . Thanks for the shared ideas !
LetsGoToMarsMan I started reading books in school library on investing during 9th grade and started buying oil/gas stocks in 10th grade with Schwab account.
This Housing market crash might end up being a part of us for a very long time. With inflation currently at about 9%, my primary concern is how to maximize my savings/retirement fund of about $300k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains.
Apartments, condos and commercial real estate are the new housing bubble. 15 years ago companies were building homes so the mortgages could be bundled into bonds, now the exact same thing is happening with apartments, condos, student housing and Commercial Backed Mortgage Securities. Look it up. These types of units are being overbuilt due to easy low interest loans from the banks and the perception that they're foolproof. it's happening all over the nation and in some places they're starting to have high default and vacancy rates. time will tell if it'll be as bad as the housing bubble, but it's gonna pop someday.
Yes I' m also a living testimony of expert Mrs Patricia , Mrs Patricia has changed my financial status for the best.all thanks to my aunty who introduced her to me
Read the fine print of an ETF. Part of the reason why they're so flexible and cheap compared to already very convenient mutual funds is because an ETF can, in the event of a liquidity crunch, issue stock to withdrawing investors instead of actual cash. So let's say in the very likely event that an ETF such as ARK starts dissolving, Cathie Wood can "reimburse" investors with worthless shares of unprofitable companies instead of the free-falling cash equivalent of what they're "worth." A mutual fund has to give its withdrawing investors cash
I just sold my REIT fund, VNQ. Still holding GNMA and a preferred ETF which holds preferred shares of REITs. That’s my only real estate exposure. Rent an apartment also. Prefer cash in savings account.
I will forever be indebted to you, Mrs Constant Carlotta. You have changed my entire life. I will continue to preach in your name for the world to hear that you saved me from huge financial debt with just a small investment. Thank you very much!
I am also a proud beneficiary! I have built my portfolio massively and am still building it. I started with a UA-cam referral and just like this and a few thousand. I am way up to the profit now'.
I will advise to try investowith Robinhood, PFI trades, skysloop, Brivity They are a good please to invest. I have tried them and I think PFI is better because it’s possible to withdraw profits any time you wants
I'm 48years old living in California, I'm hoping to retire at 50 if things keep going well for me. Bought my third house last month and I can't be more proud that am i now. I'm glad I made great decision about my finances that changed me forever but now I can't seem to make any other smart investment.
The first step to successful investing is figuring out your goals and risk tolerance either on your own or with the help of a financial professional but is very advisable you make use of a professional like I did. If you get the facts about saving and investing and follow through with an intelligent plan, you should be able to gain financial security over the years and enjoy the benefits of managing your money.
@@viewfromthehighchairr Factos!! Since the market became extremely volatile and pressure increased (I should be retiring in 17 months), I took the decision to work closely with a financial advisor. It has already been 9 months and counting, and I have made approximately 600K net from all of my holdings.
@@Harperrr.99 That's impressive, my portfolio have been tanking all year, tried learning new strategies to gain in the current market but all of that flew right over head, please would you mind recommending the Adviser you're using.
@@AlbertGReene-p8w My advisor is the quite famous NICOLE DESIREE SIMON She has been making a fortune online worth millions of dollars in digital assets for a select few for years. Lately, these types of services have appeared that allow you to copy the results of the experts. She demonstrates how to copy it automatically using that system.
Asking a real estate agent whether you should buy a home right now is like to asking an alcoholic whether they think you should have a drink lol. Homes in my neighborhood that cost around $450k in sales in 2019 are now going for $800 to $950k. Every seller in my neighborhood is currently making a $350k profit. Simply unreal. In all honesty, deflation is what we require. The only other option is for many people to go bankrupt, which would also be bad for the economy. That is the only way to return to normal.
Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; its best to offset some of your real estate investments and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.
It's often true that people underestimate the importance of financial advisors until they feel the negative effects of emotional decision-making. I remember a few summers ago, after a tough divorce, when I needed a boost for my struggling business. I researched and found a licensed advisor who diligently helped grow my reserves despite inflation. Consequently, my reserves increased from $275k to around $750k.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
My CFA ’’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
Appreciate this recommendation, hopefully I can get some insight to where the market is headed and strategies to beat the downtrend with when I hear back from Aileen.
Please can I get involved in real estate?
I don’t have the money to buy a house but I wish to start making a little investment in it for now,is it possible ?
Managing Money is different from accumulating wealth, and the lack of investment education in schools may explain why people struggle to maintain their financial gains.
Prioritizing effective personal finance management holds greater significance than the sheer amount saved, irrespective of income source. Consulting a certified financial advisor can offer tailored
strategies to optimize financial results by reducing expenses and enhancing income
People downplay planner’s role, until they are burnt by their mistakes.
How did you find a good finance advisor? How do you know if they are trustworthy and competent.
My CFA, James Brendan McCall, is a renowned figure in his field. I recommend researching his name online; you'll find all his credentials and everything you need to work with a reliable professional. With many years of experience, he is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
I love public REITs. I have several in my accounts. I have almost never been burned by REITs but it depends on doing research and choosing the ones that meet your investing style.
Do you mind sharing which companies you recommend using ?
@@gallardodane O is a very large and popular one.
I invested in CIM for a while until I learned you could not DRIP the dividends. That was several years ago. Things might be different, now.
AGNC is popular.
GLAD is doing well.
MFA has had some trouble but might be a good buy, now.
Keep in mind REIT are cyclical. They are popular when interest rates are falling, not so much when they are going up.
O is very popular
GLAD seems to be doing well
MFA was in a hole for a while but seems to be coming out of it.
ORC if you want to get crazy
AGNC is also popular
In addition, STAG.
I’m currently looking into adc, my goal right now is 20 shares in adc, and 5 shares of 0. Still shopping tho, have some now
"Better than I deserve" how lovely 😊
I know from experience publicly traded reits are the way to go after research. Entry is key. Much bigger dividend then most blue chip stocks. INCOME monsters out there in the REIT world.
Could you please give me some examples of the best RETS to invest in?
@@libertasca1636w p carey, realty income & equinix are my top 3 picks
@@libertasca1636I’m just a guy on the internet but I really like
Reality income (stock ticker O)
@@libertasca1636VNQ, FREL, XLRE are my top pics. They are all ETFs
@@libertasca1636O
One thing Ramsey didn’t say is that since 1960 reads are supposed to provide 90% of profits to shareholders via the government agreement
I bought a lot of high quality REIT's during the Covid crash. They were the best investments I've ever made. Nothing else has come close.
Great. Any REIT you can recommend
Love it ❤
He's right, the private ones are just crazy risky. That said you always want to diversify your stuff.
BND - bond (3.05) (VBTLX ETF)
JEPQ - Dividend (VOO) (33.30)
VNQ - REIT (33.30)
VTI - US Index (18.30) (VTSAX ETF)
VXUS - international index (12.05) (VTIAX ETF)
You're welcome :)
Just find a good brokerage who is regulated and use the %s accordingly when you average dollar it.
Bought IVR and BPY recently. In it for the long run.
Bakersfield Tales ill check it out
@Joshua's Bakersfield Channel this aged well
@@alwayscreatingio what happened?
Would love to own real estate but nearly impossible in NYC.
Next best thing for me are REITs in the stock market.
Plus I get to avoid all the landlord duties. =]
Think Money you have a very weird profile picture, like a teenage girl on instagram.😂
Notbullshit Advice hey, at least it caught your attention lol 🤷♂️
@@ThinkMoneyBenny
I thought Mac Miller died
Patrick LOL i shouldn’t be laughing at that but good 1
Think Money
That's the main reason I started investing into REITs 10 years ago.
Did not want landlord duties. No paper work,etc.
And in my Roth 401k for tax free dividend payout later.
Started investing with all money from selling my small rental.
Some of my REITs just move up and down through the years reinvesting dividends steadily like I wanted. Some increasing dividends.....also at single digits increasing share price up to several thousand percent even through the recession.
Non-tradable REIT's? Ouch. 😩
Great response! Thank you for your wisdom.
I find rental properties hard to manage. Are reits a good alternative?
I've been following REITs like AGNC and ORC for years. The problem with them is that their stock prices just keep dropping and they can drop the dividend at any time and then you're SOL.
If interest rates drop the share price will go up again. ORC is a fairly risky investment, as they have not been that smart the past few years. I do own ORC shares.
O is a very popular option, and has been increasing its dividend slowly for several years.
Honestly, this situation makes me uneasy, especially with the potential depression, not just a recession. I'm not sure about my $130K investment strategy given the economic uncertainty.
I agree. Even with great opportunities, we should proceed cautiously. Seeking market analysis or advice from certified market strategists is important.
Absolutely, having a solid plan is crucial. My portfolio has doubled since early last year. My financial advisor and I are working towards a seven-figure goal, though it might take until Q3 2024.
Can you share details of your advisor? I want to invest my increased cash flow in stocks and alternative assets to achieve my financial goals.
Her name is Bonita Jeanette Rodriguez. Just look her up, and you'll find the details to set up an appointment.
Thanks for sharing. I searched for her name and found her website. I reviewed her credentials and did my research before contacting her. Thanks again.
Can people stop asking Dave how he is because he is going to be “ better than he deserves”
That question and answer combo consumes 2+ hours of air time over the course of a year. That's 2 hours of programming with no content costs! Dave is laughing all the way to the bank! ;)
@@eugeneshelley9718 which is it 7,000, 8,000 9,000, 10,000 or 20,000 you supposedly received? You keep changing the amount you claim you've gotten back.
It's people being polite/force of habit
We don't care how he is. We just want to hear the good advice.
One it's habit, second you never know.
This video is old, but aren't REITs REQUIRED to pay 90% of earnings to shareholders?
Yes. Always do your own due diligence, people always speak from their own point of view and according to their own interests, alot of bias advice around here. But yes, REITs are GREAT investments, but like everything, you need to know what you're getting into. It is literally like investing into real estate, except you're investing in a trust that KNOW what they're doing with said property and can give you returns in the form of dividends. Plus, you don't deal with the hassles you would deal with as a traditional landlord
Yeah but what if there's very low to no profit because the REIT manipulate the revenue to be allocated on operation expense and they just leave very small profit. 90% of that small profit will be shared to REIT holders.
*this is a question I haven't heard Dave answer so it was pleasantly novel*
You're *BOLD*
Solid advice, I have been purchasing pubic REIT's and growing my dividend income lately. 🚀Just learn and take action!!!
Are they doing better than the S&P 500
@@GQ-jv9uw I don't track the S&P, but my monthly dividends are growing & my portfolio has made gains.
I love Realty Income (O) and am long :)
I bought that many years ago and have made a very very good return. New Management now, keep your eye on it.
I have that one too. Doing pretty well
What like 7” or something
I saw this cryptonaid. com site online i invested with them and received cash out of $10,000
@@eugeneshelley9718 which is it 9,000, 10,000, 20,000 you supposedly received? You keep changing the amount you claim you've gotten back.
I just found out my dad lost just over $4M in a REIT in the early 2000's!! He just passed away and has very little left. Bummer!!
Good information. I will stick to "O" Realty stock.
I love hearing him say that!
Great video thanks Dave. I like (IYR) and (VNQ)
VNQ and done.
What percenage of your portfolio is VNQ?
@@tchrisou812 I believe less than 10% but I drop the dividends
@@djpuplex Thanks for the reply.
@@djpuplex what does it mean to "drop the dividends"?
@@Mehwhatevr Dividend reinvestment plan, DRIP, DROP, DRIPPIN'
I barely want to do a public REIT so probably no-go for a private one... I’d rather do the real thing and hold physical property
I started with self storage,data storage,cannabis,senior living,health,and ecommerce resistant REITs since ten years ago.
Quarterly and monthly dividends compounding in Roth and pretax retirement savings.
Doing extremely well.
Those self storage companies do pretty well. Speaking of that I know a guy who when he moved about 10 years ago to another smaller place he begin storing his extra stuff in climate controlled storage, (probably 3k value max of stuff) and long story short he paid on it monthly for nearly 10 years at $130 a month before he moved again to rent a house and closed the storage.
Chris Vandernaald
So much of that is going on which is why I became interested in this REIT.
And I think it really picked up when auto pay began and easier for people to throw money away monthly to store junk.
Would you mind sharing which REITs you are working with?
Latentk
Just did. And that’s as far as I go.
Initially spent hours reading, understand what they were,and doing math breaking down several categories and over100 individual REITs during a weekend before adding them to my portfolio years ago.
Up to you to do your own due diligence and make financial decisions.
I've come across REITs and became interested. Especially wanting to build a real estate portfolio. How did you get started doing it? And is there any literature you'd recommend?
Question, in four years I plan to buy land in Texas to retire. Should I buy now if I find the land I want or continue saving money and then buy land in 4 years when I am ready to move?
I'd say buy ASAP before land prices skyrocket any more.
It’s been 4 years any bought land?
@@benjaminstopper8401 yes but still trying to save to do the improvements…it’s undeveloped acreage
What’s his ultimate advice? 🤔. Didn’t quite get it .
I am very interested in these type of situations financially. I am glad that i got to get back into myself and my finances.
thank you for your insight.
I am a real estate investor and I can say Daves advice when it comes to stocks is decent but the real estate stuff is ROCK SOLID!!
I have most of my portfolio invested into various REITS and mREITS, as I only have a 10 year time frame until I retire, so I want to collect as much as possible in distribution payouts so I can supercharge my compounding interest plus build up an income portfolio to some day draw from. My wife, who is a bit younger, has the S&P in her IRA and we also have a joint account with another ETF to stay diversified. This was the best I could do since I did not start investing until later in life
Try to learn covered call options so you can maximize income keep your shares and buy much more month after month.
Is a fasttrack.
@@johnwaters7847 could you tell me how
@@Yaya-hk1cj ok here it goes.
Find a good a very good company with all the fundamentals of investing right.
Then make sure the company you buy is a company you want to hold for a while.
Then see if you can sell options.
Then buy 100 shares and sell contract of option to get premiums.
You can sell it weekly of monthly.
Just make sure you educate yourself enough about option selling.
The strategy is called covered calls.
Then sell options contract at high strike price so you don't need to worry you need to sell soon.
Sell the contract for a week or month and this is how you generate revenue owning stocks with options.
Again educate yourself a lot about it before doing it, is simple but you need to know very well how to do it.
@@johnwaters7847 that is so kind of you. I'm looking to explore the same options but it's challenging to get straight answers w/o signing up for some, "not-so- free" infomercial .
@@sandrabalogun4409 is all good. Just make enough research about it.
Many REITs have comparable returns to other stocks. I hold 10% and should be fine for most investors
He's talking about something like fundrise (which is awful) no easy way to get out of it
@@eugeneshelley9718 which is it 9,000 or 10,000 you supposedly received? You keep changing the amount you claim you've gotten back.
I just turned 50, and I’m overwhelmed about retirement. I’ve been considering real estate investments, but the idea of managing properties feels like a full-time job. On the other hand, REITs seem less hands-on, but I’m not sure if they’re as profitable. What’s better for retirees like me?
I would rather invest by myself in a good real estate. Why this constellation when you can invest directly
How though (if you don't have a lot of money)?? The only way for ordinary ppl is the stock market
Not everyone has the capital to invest in physical real estate. So, REITs are the next best thing.
Dealing with tenants truly sucks.
REITs have lower barriers to entry and are more flexible. I have to move every few years for my job and I can't imagine trying to manage properties from a distance without a management company and if you're paying a management company REITs tend to outperform Private Investment Property under a management company (unless you're dealing with a fixer upper maybe). Also, you have to factor in the value of your mental health. Bad tenants will really sour you on the experience and REITs allow you to get way better diversification, especially since most people who buy real estate leverage up.
Spot on advise.
Hey Dave here's an idea why not do a couple of videos on asset protection. I find that many people can make money but do not know how to manage it and to protect their assets. What do you think?
Just deliver pizzas bro safest investment 😁
brother i deliver for grubhun and uber eats making 1000 every week , its not much but is good for a person did not went to college with debts.
@@dominicankid1001
You're not factoring in gas, maintenance, repairs and taxes.
When I used to do Grubhub, I had an excel spreadsheet to track numbers. You're going to pay a lot in taxes. 15% right off the top for social security and medicare. Then another 10% or so for regular taxes.
Some people don't pay or do their taxes and 5 years down the road, the IRS sends out letter demanding payment for the past 5 years.
@@dominicankid1001
Better save money on the side to pay your taxes. I'd keep a seperate checking account just for taxes, maintence, repairs and gas for the car
@@MichaelP-ke1tm i do my taxes every 4 moths i just pay 750 each months but if you do all together would def be a headache
@@MichaelP-ke1tm you don't even need a car to do grubhub you could use a bike
Anyone that invested in a Reit and done well, would you mind sharing which one you went with?
My favorite is TWO but if you’re starting out, buy a REIT ETF to minimize risk.
O (Realty Income Corporation) has been pretty good.
Private investing is pretty much reserved for those who are willing to invest long term. If you're just trying to make quick cash and beat it, then private investing is not for you..
Could you explain it ?
Arbor Realty has treated me well. I only have about 1 percent of portfolio in it
We invest in a REIT etf on my channel and it got hammered in 2022. Still holding and collecting dividends though!
Anyone have examples of good reit’s?
O-Realty Income
STAG-Stag Industrial
-
Those are two of the best and both pay monthly dividends.
MPW, WSR, IIPR
Okay, and how do you go about looking into it than?
I dunno, maybe search for "REIT" on the internet and here on UA-cam?
Depends on which one and how much of it you expose yourself to. Love Realty Income myself (O)
Yes.. that's a good one. I also like ETF's that hold primarily REITs. I have a small position in FREL (a Fidelity REIT ETF) and it's done well. I like your youtube channel btw. Good content my man.
Listen to an expert like Josh Brown on private REITs.
Private REITs as a rule are crap. Anything that isnt created by a team where you are a member of team is you getting robbed. They make up the value of tha assets and thwy pay at least 10% commissions to the person that sells it to you.
So I guess the takeaway, win some lose some, break even. THE HOUSE A.K.A. ETF S AND P ALWAYS WINS.
This clown always wants people to deleiver pizza and says all forms of investing is not good even though thats how we made his money
11 cents a day for the 1st year and then after that if you have the patience who knows lol
"If I had money I could burn, I'd be okay with it." That's not exactly a brightly glowing recommendation.
I'm with rich uncles and they're as transparent as they get. Better business bureau gives them an A+ and returns are attractive. 33% of dividends made is tax sheltered, theres contractional rental increase so as they're paying off the balance and it goes down, the return is hypothetically suppose to increase, and they've honored 99% of investors request which includes selling their shares of they wanted to walk. I'm sticking with private reit. Also isn't influenced as hard as public traded which cam be volatile
Which platform do you use for REITS? I’m on the fence about Fundrise or going the publicly traded route such such O, STAG& STOR
Investing in what you control yourself, just feels like no other.
Money don't care about your feelings
Even Blackrock and George Soros loose hundreds of millions from time to time. It's great to be diversified once you are rich
Anyone heard of RAD diversified
Sounds like he's talking about Syndications, not REITs.
Why private? There's plenty of good public REITS.
People that listen to Grant Cardone
Lower correlation to the stock market, even over public REITS.
Hey Mr. Ramsey! I want to put my money in Health, Retail/Mall, and monthly dividend. I have made a list of them:
Health/Retirement Home REIT: Welltower
Retail/Mall: Simon Property Group
Monthly Dividend: O, AGNC, LTC, EPR, STAG
Others: SKT, VNQ, IRM, PEAK, VER, EQR, NLY, CIM, ABDC, BX
So I want to put my money in one of each. Of course there are some companies I have not listed so if you recommend anything please let me know. Either from your recommendation or from this list I provided, which company from each category would you recommend me to invest in. I want to this long-term since I am 21-years old.
Sounds like you’ve done a fair amount of due diligence already & now it’s time to take action . Pick one from all the 3 categories that yields what interest you most & go for it . Thanks for the shared ideas !
What public reits was he talking about?
There are basically securities traded publicly, like medical buildings, and those appreciate fast and a lot
@@mikemike1200 do you know any i can invest into?
Check out o stock it has a great reputation for a monthly paying reit
I understand this from a unique perspective
I know of a reit with 14%
Would you care to share it
Any REIT with those dividends are dying. Like mall REITs. Dividends are high because prices are low because noone wants it
@@abitamimbharmal1498 Yeah you're right. Better stick with residential, that's never dying.
Reits done well and maximizing income and reinvestment may very well lead a person to an early retirement
Just Invest in REIT ETFS .
lol wow he strikes again, and yes I would go public versus private these days
as far as reits goes, thanks for confirming that lol
Blue owl/maybe some black rock
I’m 23, how do I start investing
LetsGoToMarsMan index funds
Index funds and rental properties
Mr. Wick idk how😂
LetsGoToMarsMan
I started reading books in school library on investing during 9th grade and started buying oil/gas stocks in 10th grade with Schwab account.
Open a robin hood account
If you call it an R-E-I-T
That’s a hell no for you 😵💫
Well that answers the question of Fundrise lol
This Housing market crash might end up being a part of us for a very long time. With inflation currently at about 9%, my primary concern is how to maximize my savings/retirement fund of about $300k which has been sitting duck since forever with zero to no gains.
VNQ ( vanguard real estate investment trust) that I use, and I am ok with short-term volatility as long as I do not deal with people AKA tenants
Apartments, condos and commercial real estate are the new housing bubble. 15 years ago companies were building homes so the mortgages could be bundled into bonds, now the exact same thing is happening with apartments, condos, student housing and Commercial Backed Mortgage Securities. Look it up. These types of units are being overbuilt due to easy low interest loans from the banks and the perception that they're foolproof. it's happening all over the nation and in some places they're starting to have high default and vacancy rates. time will tell if it'll be as bad as the housing bubble, but it's gonna pop someday.
harrison wintergreen
REITs are more than just apartment ,condos,and commercial real estate.
I personally love illiquid investments. If it's a good investment I don't want to do something stupid and sell it.
Thank you Dave...
Ramsey gives good advice as an old grandpa who has seen it all but the newborns just don't get it
Real Estate investment can be trusted if only you have ideal for investing.
if the market is bad it will affect individual to invest in real estate.
Rich Dad is better.
Mrs Patricia is legit and her method works like magic I keep on earning every single week with her new strategy
I think I'm blessed because if not I wouldn't have met someone who is as spectacular as expert Mrs Patricia
I think she is the best broker I ever seen
I think I'm blessed because if not I wouldn't have met someone who is as spectacular as expert Mrs Patricia
I think she is the best broker I ever seen
Yes I' m also a living testimony of expert Mrs Patricia , Mrs Patricia has changed my financial status for the best.all thanks to my aunty who introduced her to me
Nah, N. VA is not Virginia....it's little DC. Highly leftist and the cause of a lot of headache for the rest of us Virginians.
Yup I grew up in VA, its lost. Worse than MD.
Agree, the left leave their policies and are too dumb to recognize that they voted for it
Haha that’s how northern Virginians feel about southern Virginians. Causing headaches that is.
That’s why we generate the most income to our state. Your welcome.
Easy to generate income when your local product is a national parasite.
Better than I deserve what’s up
Never buy Mutuel Funds .... Always ETFs
What is your reasoning?
@@joeb1522 higher management fees & return less than the market S&P 500.
Read the fine print of an ETF. Part of the reason why they're so flexible and cheap compared to already very convenient mutual funds is because an ETF can, in the event of a liquidity crunch, issue stock to withdrawing investors instead of actual cash. So let's say in the very likely event that an ETF such as ARK starts dissolving, Cathie Wood can "reimburse" investors with worthless shares of unprofitable companies instead of the free-falling cash equivalent of what they're "worth." A mutual fund has to give its withdrawing investors cash
horribly vague advice.
Really?
QNH triple niner
I just sold my REIT fund, VNQ. Still holding GNMA and a preferred ETF which holds preferred shares of REITs. That’s my only real estate exposure. Rent an apartment also. Prefer cash in savings account.
Public is fine, private a no no
I will forever be indebted to you, Mrs Constant Carlotta. You have changed my entire life. I will continue to preach in your name for the world to hear that you saved me from huge financial debt with just a small investment. Thank you very much!
I am also a proud beneficiary! I have built my portfolio massively and am still building it.
I started with a UA-cam referral and just like this and a few thousand. I am way up to the profit now'.
Her passion for her work to bring out the truth is very impressive. Thank Carlotta^.
Trading with Mrs Constant Carlotta has kept my financial status for over one year now. For real she is very profitable.
I made $6,500, yielding just within 14 days of my speculation with an autograph amount of $2000, all with the help of Professor Constant Charlotte.
it's a good idea to ruin our economy...I thought ethics and morals mattered with this guy.
Ramsey is a 🤡
I will advise to try investowith Robinhood, PFI trades, skysloop, Brivity They are a good please to invest. I have tried them and I think PFI is better because it’s possible to withdraw profits any time you wants
I'm 48years old living in California, I'm hoping to retire at 50 if things keep going well for me. Bought my third house last month and I can't be more proud that am i now. I'm glad I made great decision about my finances that changed me forever but now I can't seem to make any other smart investment.
The first step to successful investing is figuring out your goals and risk tolerance either on your own or with the help of a financial professional but is very advisable you make use of a professional like I did. If you get the facts about saving and investing and follow through with an intelligent plan, you should be able to gain financial security over the years and enjoy the benefits of managing your money.
@@viewfromthehighchairr Factos!! Since the market became extremely volatile and pressure increased (I should be retiring in 17 months), I took the decision to work closely with a financial advisor. It has already been 9 months and counting, and I have made approximately 600K net from all of my holdings.
@@Harperrr.99 That's impressive, my portfolio have been tanking all year, tried learning new strategies to gain in the current market but all of that flew right over head, please would you mind recommending the Adviser you're using.
@@AlbertGReene-p8w My advisor is the quite famous NICOLE DESIREE SIMON She has been making a fortune online worth millions of dollars in digital assets for a select few for years. Lately, these types of services have appeared that allow you to copy the results of the experts. She demonstrates how to copy it automatically using that system.
motha fucka save some houses for us. Damn. lol
VNQ and done.