
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.
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wow this is so good thanks
Sounds OK as far as stocks go about 60%
But, you are high on cash right now.
When are you going to re-buy stock funds?
It will be kind of "tricky". Interest rates will surely go up but when, no one knows?
This sounds like you have been reading one too many finance text books. The numbers you are talking about can be computed, but are practically worthless. This is because the inputs to the calculations are estimates with such huge error margins that they should be termed "guesses". The biggest tip-off comes from the use of the term "standard deviation". This implies that the person with the formula thinks of market results as following a normal or Gaussian distribution. Professors like to believe this because it allows them to use all sorts of well understood statistical tools, so they ignore the ample empirical evidence that returns are not normally distributed.
I am not 75 years old. But, I've seen this economic mess before. Each time, it takes a shorter span of time to get back to normal.
At your age, you should probably remember the 1950s. Some folks thought they were "Happy Days", like the old TV show. Far from it. They were tough times.
Let's not forget the 1970s. Remember those red WIN buttons? (Whip Inflation Now) Hell, everything cost an arm and a leg back then and it was all poorly made crap. That's when the Japanese got their foot in the door with automobiles.
I also recall the great crash of 1987. Only be be a non-event within a couple of years. Then came the Savings and Load Crisis…with the Resolution Trust Company. Then, the George Bush Sr. recession that went along with the first war with Iraq. People were losing their homes then – because they speculated and bought second homes. And then the dot.com bubble burts, along with the 9/11 terrorist attacks, that sent the markets down by 30%.
The moral of this story is. If I were you. I would just sit tight for the time being. So far as stocks are concerned, we may retest the bottoms again at around 7,000 on the DJIA. More bad news to come; poor earnings, layoffs, maybe a few more financials to fail. But, what usually happens is that everyone flees stocks and stock based mutual funds…and then the Warren Buffetts of the world come along, pay rock bottom prices for the stuff and hold them until the ecnomy stabalizes. We're at about 8,000 on the DJIA right now. I am hopeful that we can close 2009 at 9,000…then onto 10,000 by the end of 2010. Basically, 1,000 points a year on the DJIA. That's nothing special…and will take us until 2014 to get back to where we were in mid-2007. But, add in the dividends and you are probably looking at 10% a year. Sure beats the 2% the banks are paying for their interest bearing accounts.
never ever sell property. you can use it so many ways.
if you want to invest in the stock market, i would take out an home equity line of credit and buy the stock with that, and if you have chosen the right stock and are making money, you can pay back the HELOC from that.
if you dont make money, and loose , at least you still have your house.
or take your cash flow from the rents received, save it until you have enough to invest.
The principle is as safe as the bonds, which would be extremely safe, but not totally riskless (though the risk is absolutely rock bottom, the US govt has never defaulted on a loan.)
The real problem you'd encounter with this strategy is inflation–over time if you lived off the interest rather than reinvesting it inflation would reduce the purchasing power of the $250k and the interest off of it. Also there are other investment options that will probably give you a better long term return that government bonds, like stocks.
try SPEF… it's open sources software…
Medium risk? Depending on your education of investments, this can vary from 4% to over 20% per year. There are many safe ways to invest to generate 20% a year. The difference is education.
Many people who answer don't always know different strategies that are out there. There are ways to structure your portfolio so you can have anything from zero risk, to a great deal of risk.
What's nice is if you're just looking for income, you can do it in several ways. You can collar some positions to insulate yourself from volatility. You can buy some nice conservative stocks and live off of dividends and covered calls. There's a lot out there.
Certainly some CFP's might know some of these strategies, but many do not. Take a moment for yourself and ask yourself how involved you want to be in managing your money. The more involved you become (at least initially), the greater the chance you'll find higher returns for yourself.
The further you separate yourself from being involved, the higher the chance that you'll not only pay more fees, but end up in the "buckets" of investments where you get "market" returns.
Food for thought, recently interest rates were such that you could lock in guaranteed 5% returns for several years. That wasn't too bad. So I would hope that any strategy you picked with any risk, would yield you significantly more than that!
Anyways, getting back to your question. I'd say at least 10%, but not with a Vanguard, or any mutual fund. You'd have to learn how to pick some reasonable stocks and/or sectors. Then learn how to write covered calls. It's very simple once you do. Most people I know who do this earn 3-5% a month, month after month, after month.
Hope this helps!
After 20 years, you will have $382,848.45 at 10% growth. Inflation adjusted is hard to predict because inflation is always changing. On average it's been between 3-4% per year. So at about 20 years form now, that $382,848.45 will be worth half that in today's dollars.
I would also recommend an IRA, whether it's a Roth or Traditional depends on your current and future income, estimates on your future personal income tax, and other factors. You could always do 50/50 into each.