Gold Investing Tips

6148124056 3988cec336 m Gold Investing Tips

There are many different types of products available with Texas Cash Cow Investments.

First there is something called the “A” product a.k.a. Texas Cash Cow Investments product, with a price of about $ 90,000 to $ 160,000. These houses by Texas Cash Cow Investments are new construction neighborhoods with houses that are built from 2000-2009.

 

There are about 3 products with the Texas Cash Cow Investments product name.

 

The first product is something that a person is going to want for long term and for cash flow. Texas Cash Cow Investments informs clients that these products are a little bit smaller in square footage at about 1,200 square feet. The cost in these Texas Cash Cow Investments products is low. With these products the returns are very high. Texas Cash Cow Investments sees cash flows at about $ 450 of month that you will want for a long period of time.

 

The second product costs approximately $ 110,000 to $ 120,000 that are from 1,400 to 1,700 square feet. These also offer a good cash flow but also have a little bit more appreciation put in by Texas Cash Cow Investments because of the square footage. If the market goes up $ 20 more per square foot, if you have a 1,500 square foot house, you are going to see about $ 30,000 return on you money. Texas Cash Cow Investments explains that with a smaller product, you aren’t going to see as much. This is the most commonly purchased products as it is versatile and provides steady cash flow overall. Texas Cash Cow Investments definitely recommends this second product.

 

The third product is about $ 120,000 to $ 160,000. Texas Cash Cow Investments explains these products as 1,800 to 3,000 square foot homes. With these Texas Cash Cow Investments products, house flippers and people who want to exit the market will want to get their hands on them. Texas Cash Cow Investments informs clients that these are products that customers will want to hang onto for a bit while the market goes up. Texas Cash Cow Investments investors typically purchase a little bit of both this third product and second product in order to maintain a good cash flow while having something large in their pockets down the line.

 

Texas Cash Cow Investments offers Cash Flow Kings to customers. Why it is called a “B” product is becausethese Texas Cash Cow Investments products are a little bit older than others but are in nice neighborhoods that bring high rent. A completed price for this Texas Cash Cow Investments “B” product is $ 50,000 to $ 90,000 and it may seem low to some people but because Texas Cash Cow Investments purchases in bulk, they can get very, very good prices. For a Cash Flow home, it allows people to get in and buy multiples for $ 60,000 each to maintain a steady cash flow with a return on investment that is extremely high.

 

Only with Texas Cash Cow Investments will you be successful in Dallas real estate property investments.

Call Texas Cash Cow Investments today or visit their website at http://www.texascashcowinvestments.com today!

No matter if you are a first time investor or a seasoned veteran, you have found “THE PLACE” to buy investment property in the Dallas metroplex. Texas Cash Cow Investment’s ability to purchase properties directly from the banks as well as owning a construction company allows us to offer our customers newly remodeled homes far below appraised/market value. Our “superior quality and attention to detail” construction philosophy on every home ensures that properties rent quickly and for top dollar. All of this equates our customers having instant equity as well as positive cash flow on each and every property we sell! Texas Cash Cow Investment offers a “one stop shop for investors”, which includes sales, financing, and property management. Take a look around our site, if you have any questions feel free to give us a call.

Watch the video related to investment

Women tend to attach more meaning to their precious metal investments, including ETF’s, than men do. Typically, women want their gold ETFs to work just right in more than one way. Purchasing precious metal investments involves personal taste and feelings to a great degree.

Comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    These links may be helpful:

    http://www.goldprice.org/
    http://goldinvestingnews.com/

  2. kevin says:

    The best way to start in gold and silver is to learn about it. This market is not complex. However it requires you to think in different terms.

    Start by listening to the following radio show on a daily basis. http://patriotarchives.blogspot.com/ It's called the Patriot Radio Newshour. These guys explain the gold and silver markets the best way.

    After you have listened to several of these shows then I can help you more. But first you must learn the fundamentals before you do anything.

    First thing you need to learn is to not think in terms of numbers of dollars. When you begin to stop thinking in terms of dollars then you can truly begin to understand gold.

    Im listening to today's Patriot Radio Newshour as I type this and you need to hear this show. Its right on the money.

  3. Ross B says:

    Yes you should put aside a sum of money in case you need it. The remainder you can use for investment.

    As you are new to investment I suggest that you try to learn as much as possible even before you invest a single cent. There are lots of investment opportunities out there. But you will need to know what you are doing. I agree with one of the earlier post that says don't ask for tips from forums and the internet. You will have to do the research yourself. So start investing in yourself first with an education in investment. You can surf the Internet to gain a basic understanding of investment and then move onto attending courses or seminars. Learning about investment is never ending so don't stop learning.

    Let me end with this proverb: Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. Good luck.

  4. Lubbie says:

    The premium cable market is somewhat a scam and in most all cases, you will probably be fine without the high priced ones.

  5. jordan says:

    The question pertains to gold bullion, not paper.

    I've been trading gold and silver through Apmex.com for years without any problem. They will sell you metal at the current futures price (quoted on their website real time) plus a small markup. They will buy your metal at the current futures price, minus a small markdown. There is always a spread between the bid/ask, and with Apmex, you know exactly what it is and can determine easily if it is fair compared to others.

    http://www.apmex.com

    If you want to buy or sell, you can do so anywhere online, or at your local coin vendor or jewelry store:

    http://www.kitco.com
    http://nickelalloy.com/
    http://www.tulving.com/goldbull.html#silver

    Metals Info Network
    http://www.amm.com/

  6. Curtis S says:

    I agree that buying bricks of gold is not the best way to invest in gold.

    I agree that if one wants to invest in gold, GLD is prob a better way of doing that.

    I strongly disagree that "Gold's best as a long-term investment."

    According to Chase Performance Digest, Gold is the 2nd WORST long term investment after (non-industrial) diamonds.

    Book links:
    http://openlibrary.org/b/OL11565997M/Chase-Investment-Performance-Digest%3A-Performance-and-Rankings-of-the-World%27s-Major-Investments-
    http://www.amazon.ca/Chase-Investment-Performance-Digest-Collectibles/dp/0944822088

    Note:
    "Thomson Financial Services Acquires Chase Global Data & Research"
    http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1998_Oct_1/ai_53048226/

    If you bought gold in 1980 (with US Dollars), it took you about 25 years to break even again (chart):
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7284184.stm

    The main reason why people buy gold is an inflation hedge. Gold has NO (material or vital) industrial use, thus demand is consumer and speculative driven.

    Alternative to gold as an inflation hedge:
    Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS)
    http://www.savingsbonds.gov/indiv/products/prod_tips_glance.htm

    Was long DGP (Deutsche Bank Gold Double Long ETF) for about 3 weeks (about 24% or so net gain) and sold it when gold broke to about $1,003 earlier this year. Avoided gold ever since.

  7. IcyPolls.com says:

    When you buy "rare" coins you are paying substantial premium for the rarity, over the fair value of the gold in the coin. You can buy so-called "bullion" coins (e.g., krugerrands, maples, pandas) for a small premium over spot, if you can find them.

    Those gold eagles are 1/10 ounce, and they are selling them for $159, that comes to $1590/ounce.
    Spot price this morning is $1103.60 /ounce.

    Grandpa

  8. Rouge<3 says:

    I don't mean to be a hardnose, but the people denouncing gold are leaving out key points. For example, the person that said the one company that said Chase Global Digest ranked gold as the 2nd worst performing asset next to diamonds. It's interesting that Chase Global digest said "28 years ago". That's because 28 years ago, gold reached it's peak. For 22 years after that gold was in a brutal bear market. Yet, what the poster (and Chase Global) failed to tell you was that from 1971 to 1980 gold went from $35 per oz to $850 per oz – a return of 2,329%. Yet from 1966 to 1982, stocks were in one of the most brutal bear markets in history and for 16 years went no where and showed a loss of 22% during that time.

    Yet, the poster also fails to mention that from 2000 to today, the Dow is up a whopping 120 points, a total return of 1% in the last 8 years. The S & P 500 is showing a LOSS of 15.4% during that same time period. Yet, from 2000 to now, gold went from $280/oz. to $886/oz as of today, a return of 216%. And when people say gold doesn't pay a return/dividends, well, how many stocks pay dividends?

    Also, people saying gold is trading near a 20 year peak are making a very erroneous analysis. In terms of "nominal prices", yes, gold is above it's all time high set in 1980, BUT you have to look at "real prices". Adjusting for inflation, gold would have to trade somewhere north of $2500/oz. to equal it's 1980 all time high. Silver would need to trade at $365/oz. Gold would have to go up another $1400 and silver over $340 to equal it's 1980's inflation adjusted high.

    And what really baffles me is that gold has only been in a bull market for about 6 years now – after being in a secular bear market for 22 years, yet stocks have been in a bull market since 1982 (26 years) the longest bull run in history and no one even questions that. No asset goes up forever. All assets have cycles. In stocks, from 1949 to 1966 was a 17 year bull market, from 1966 to 1982 was a 16 year bear, and from 1982 to (really 2000) now has been a bull cycle.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-stocks. During the 80's and 90's, I was very pro stocks, but I also knew that stocks also run on a cycle and I saw that cycle ending in 2000. In 2002, precious metals bottomed (gold at $250/oz and silver at $4.50/oz).

    Gold and commodities are reacting to the decline in the dollar and when the Fed lowered interest rates a few months ago, they telegraphed to the world that they were not going to defend the dollar. A devaluing dollar is inflationary. Think of it this way; from 2001 to 2008, crude oil is up 130% in Euro's, 170% in Canadian Dollars, 135% in Australian Dollars – but up 305% in US Dollars. The world is losing faith in the dollar. The US Dollar index is now, just 2 points above it's lowest level EVER.

    I personally began buying up silver when it was in the $4/$5 an oz. range. It's now trading near $17 an oz. I've seen my investment more than triple in 6 years. I saw the cycles in stock ending in 2000 and I shifted my focus. Remember, all investments have cycles, the pros know that and the pros always make money because they know when cycles are completing and act accordingly.

    Also, if people tell you that gold is in a bubble, I beg to differ. Their rationale for a bubble is that price shot up. That's not the true definition of a bubble. When a bubble exists in an asset, there is no fundamental reason supporting such a rapid price rise and there is an overhang of supply and the general public loses any common sense and buys so they don't miss out. During the equity bubble, within the last 5 years, people were buying just because they could. Companies that had no revenues, no sales, no product saw their stocks skyrocket. People bought just because the company had a ".com" in their name. Every other day there was a new IPO – stocks were greatly out of sync with normal valuation models – and we saw what happened. The housing market was the same – people bidding $80,000 above list, people buying houses sight unseen, people believing that prices would keep rising forever, builders building at a rate of 2 million units per year, when the population was growing at a rate of 1.1 million a year (a huge overhang of supply) – and we are witnessing what happened – everybody was becoming a flipper or real estate investor.

    But do we see that same mania in gold? No, most people are still shunning gold. Also, there are fundamentals that are driving the price of gold. The fed is pumping the money supply at an unprecedented rate (along with the major central banks). There is no overhang of supply, as a matter of fact, gold demand is vastly outpacing supply by millions of ounces a year. Remember, gold (precious metals) are sensitive to inflation as are commodities in general. We have seen the price of crude oil more than double in a very short period of time. Are commodities volatile? Sure they are. But to apply that solely to commodities is erroneous. Look at anyone that had stock in Bear Sterns. I do trade commodities, but I'm a true trader, I have no market bias. I will short a asset in a heart beat if I see indications that prices will fall and I will go long just as quickly if I see the signs of a rally. Most people have a market bias.

    I personally can not tell you what you should do. What I see is the Fed taking a path that is leading to the destruction of the dollar and I'm investing accordingly. What you MUST do is not listen to me or anyone else in this forum. You're 18 and asking very wise questions, so you have the mental acumen to make good decisions. Most 18 year olds would blow it on a car and junk, but you're thinking with a very mature mind. Pay attention to what the fed and government is doing relative to the fiscal policy of this country. Then compare various investments and see how they react to such policies and then make your decision on what to do.

    I personally am not investing in stocks or any "paper" assets because those assets are cashed in in Dollars. Why would I want to get paid in a currency that's about to fall of the edge of a cliff?

    During the Weimar Hyperinflation, the people the did well and prospered were the ones that had gold and silver. I see the U.S. heading down that same path.

  9. mom-to-be says:

    Gold is currently very easy to buy as a traded index fund under the symbol GLD. Here is my take. I do believe that inflation is going to be an extremely great concern. The government in fact is attempting to increase inflation to stabilize the house market. They were not satisfied with the last housing bubble they created. They want to create another. They figure that inflation should create a lasting housing bubble for them. GLD is relatively cost free. The expense ratio is 0.4%, less than many mutual funds although there is no income when investing in gold. Also the tax consequences are more severe. It is considered and taxed as a collectible. One of those idiotic IRS rulings So is silver. If you are wanting to invest some money in GLD the place to do so is within a Roth IRA account since nothing within that account is taxable.

    I hope that I am wrong about inflation, but if I am not then gold is going to be increasing even more than it has already increased.

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