โMar-08-2023 12:33 PM
โMar-27-2023 03:08 PM
โMar-27-2023 01:53 PM
valhalla360 wrote:First of all, Iโm not investing on margin. Margin is when you borrow money to invest it. I had the money to start with and wasnโt over buying my bank account or may abilities to pay the tab. I made that clear a number of pages ago.nickthehunter wrote:
I didnโt say โI had the cash on hand to pay it offโ, I said โI had the money to pay it offโ. As a matter of fact I even told you the money was invested and what it was invested in. And Itโs still invested, and Iโm still ahead by a wide margin. But like I also said, different strokes for different folks. You can be you and I can be me.
So when the market tanks and you need cash to pay the loan, you just locked in your losses.
Yeah, you can be you but just pointing out for others some of the risks of investing on margin.
โMar-27-2023 12:16 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
So when the market tanks and you need cash to pay the loan, you just locked in your losses.
Yeah, you can be you but just pointing out for others some of the risks of investing on margin.
โMar-27-2023 10:35 AM
wing_zealot wrote:
..."But those days are gone. Your plan won't work for anybody moving forward...
What you are saying is companies will not make a profit in the future and stock prices will cease to go up (for now and in the future). (My money is invested in the market also) When that happens, RV Loans will be the least of the problems; for you, me, Nick, and everyone else.
โMar-27-2023 10:24 AM
nickthehunter wrote:
I didnโt say โI had the cash on hand to pay it offโ, I said โI had the money to pay it offโ. As a matter of fact I even told you the money was invested and what it was invested in. And Itโs still invested, and Iโm still ahead by a wide margin. But like I also said, different strokes for different folks. You can be you and I can be me.
โMar-27-2023 10:06 AM
restlessways wrote:..."But those days are gone. Your plan won't work for anybody moving forward...nickthehunter wrote:
To answer the question, I can write off 100% of the interest on a second home. However, that doesn't put me over the top for exceeding the standard deduction. So financing to write off the interest gains does absolutely nothing for me. That overall is probably a bad strategy. At most, if you paid $1,000 in interest in a year, it would net save you $370 in taxes (37% or less depending on Taxable Income).
But keeping my money invested and using other peoples money while only paying them 4.49% in interest is a winner. The money I kept invested is right now worth almost 70% more over the last 8 years, and that is even after it went down over 36% last year.
Now to head off the naysayers, the money is invested in a Roth IRA, total market index fund (VTSMX). I've had the fund for about 20 years, nothing fancy, moderate to above average risk. If I was going to pay cash for the RV, this is the fund the money would have come out of.
Sure, during the biggest everything bubble in the history of mankind. Even a monkey couldn't go wrong with what the FED was doing by artificially repressing interest rates and juicing asset prices. But those days are gone. Your plan won't work for anybody moving forward. In fact it will financially destroy them. Eveybody's a financial genius when the FED is printing.
โMar-27-2023 06:10 AM
valhalla360 wrote:I didnโt say โI had the cash on hand to pay it offโ, I said โI had the money to pay it offโ. As a matter of fact I even told you the money was invested and what it was invested in. And Itโs still invested, and Iโm still ahead by a wide margin. But like I also said, different strokes for different folks. You can be you and I can be me.nickthehunter wrote:valhalla360 wrote:Even when the market goes down, I still have the money to pay it off; and still get to keep the difference on what I already made.
Operating on leverage works great until it doesn't...then it multiplies the losses. The ones talking about being savey, always gloss over this part and it would never happen to them...until it does.
The trick is to get ahead of the game. Once you have no loan payments, it's easy to save up for big ticket items.
I have a 15 year RV loan at just over 4% that I've had for about 8 years. I'm way ahead of the game at this time. Today, I can pay it off any day I want, and still keep a pretty nice sum of money.
What it boils down to is: What works for you, doesn't necessarily work for everyone else. There is not only one right answer.
Ummm...if you have the cash on hand to just pay it off, you are foregoing the roi on that cash to protect you from being leveraged.
โMar-27-2023 05:33 AM
winnietrey wrote:
Way too much talk about money and way too little talk about life.
First, I do not want to pay interest. I avoid it if at all possible. But I value life more than money.
Better to pay a little interest, than wait in my opinion. Kids grow up we get old. I am a fan of do it while you can.
โMar-27-2023 05:29 AM
nickthehunter wrote:valhalla360 wrote:Even when the market goes down, I still have the money to pay it off; and still get to keep the difference on what I already made.
Operating on leverage works great until it doesn't...then it multiplies the losses. The ones talking about being savey, always gloss over this part and it would never happen to them...until it does.
The trick is to get ahead of the game. Once you have no loan payments, it's easy to save up for big ticket items.
I have a 15 year RV loan at just over 4% that I've had for about 8 years. I'm way ahead of the game at this time. Today, I can pay it off any day I want, and still keep a pretty nice sum of money.
What it boils down to is: What works for you, doesn't necessarily work for everyone else. There is not only one right answer.
โMar-26-2023 04:00 PM
CWilson wrote:
They would remove the masks when going into the rig.
โMar-26-2023 03:40 PM
wapiticountry wrote:
The โbuying of toysโ was an anomaly during the Covid restrictions. Many were bought with cash by people who will never miss the money. Vacation options were virtually eliminated. No cruises, no trips to Europe, no Broadway shows while eating in 5 Star restaurants and staying at the Ritz. Spending $25,000 or more for an RV didnโt stress them out, it was what they would have spent anyway. Only difference is they had something more tangible than photos and memories when their vacation ended. Some will have enjoyed the experience and add RVing to their vacation options, others will park it and never give it another thought and some will sell. None of the buyers from this demographic are going to be forced to liquidate due to financial hardship.
โMar-26-2023 03:13 PM
โMar-26-2023 02:09 PM
โMar-25-2023 04:02 PM