texasclouds
En-Route
Reopen Globe Swift manufacturing, give POA members the original aircraft pricing.
The first mistake was selling the apartments , because we all know real estate is one of the best investments there is!
That said, I’d more than likely take half of it and put it into some good ETF’s or mutual funds and forget about it until I near retirement. The other half would go back into real estate and/or start a business.
First thing I'd do, is ask a bunch of pilots
Into what?
As the OP has noted, real estate is having issues for him since it's gotten harder to evict people who don't pay rent. Plus you have a physical asset and if it turns out your renters use the place as a meth lab (happened to friends of mine) then that can really cause you problems.
Starting a business? Well, that involves a lot of risk, not to mention a lot of work (BTDT... more than once). It would work for your phase of life (young, single adult), but that doesn't necessarily go well with retirement.
Of course, stocks and other investments have all kinds of other risks associated. But a diversified portfolio with a good advisor would be how I'd go.
I agree with Ted here, starting a business is a great dream, but it is a vortex, especially if it is successful, and can easily suck you into servitude toward the business. The more successful the business, the more difficult it becomes to extract yourself from it. Definitely not something to delve into if you want to retire, unless it's a hobby type business like repairing watches or shoveling snow occasionally.
Yeah, in reading through the advice on here I see some good advice, and a lot of advice from people who clearly have no idea WTF they're talking about.
Can you honestly think of any threads on here that statement wouldn't apply to?
The more I think about starting a business, the harder it is for me to convince myself it would be a good idea. I'd work more than I currently do and have a lot more stress and responsibility all for maybe making more money, maybe making less, maybe losing it all. Hard for me to convince myself that's worth investing $1M in (not that I'm in that position anyway) vs. some kind of other investment that I may lose, but at least I don't have to work on every day.
It can be tough unless you have something like the next facebook, or tesla and can fund it. Your kids are still pretty young from what I can tell, give it a few years, maybe one will get the entrepreneurial bug (along with a good idea) then you can partner with them, they work, you fund and share in the profits.
My son has the bug, and he has a bunch of good ideas, the problem is he is in a job in SF where they are paying him so much it's not worth the risk to leave. I think in about 5 years he'll be set and venture off.
Plastics? I must be slow. @wrbix
Let me know when you need a flying CFO.I certainly see that happening. My son is very interested and has lots of ideas. We'll see.
My commercial re broker always said never buy a self storage and never build a laundromat.Self storage place. Build, don’t buy.
Which is why you instead buy EXR and let them do the work. Unfortunately their massive growth has slowed. If you invested 10 years ago you'd be a happy camper.My commercial re broker always said never buy a self storage and never build a laundromat.
Too much work either way.
I've been a landlord in the past. Have you?Yeah, in reading through the advice on here I see some good advice, and a lot of advice from people who clearly have no idea WTF they're talking about.
As the OP has noted, real estate is having issues for him since it's gotten harder to evict people who don't pay rent. Plus you have a physical asset and if it turns out your renters use the place as a meth lab (happened to friends of mine) then that can really cause you problems.
We've had that experience as well. I'll say that being a licensed certified meth cleaner is lucrative. it cost us around 5k for one afternoon of his work. At the time there were only about 13 guys licensed to do it in all of Tennessee.
Yes! My BIL owns a few of these. A very good investment!Self storage place. Build, don’t buy.
And insurance won't cover it either...In the case of our friends, it was bad enough that they had to strip out most of the interior of the house. It was a lot of work, they lost a bunch of money that they could never get back.
Into what?
My best rentals were nicer homes 4/2.5/2 with cheaper than market rents that incentivized the renter to stay for years, pay on time, and essentially leave me alone. Low turnover, low vacancy, lower expenses and hassle. Severe background checks and selectivity a must.
Who were the big winners when the Weimar republic fell?
I've been a landlord in the past. Have you?
All that's happened is the OP's costs have gone up a bit. My guess is functionally they haven't gone up much, it's always been tough to get rid of deadbeat tenants. I could be wrong, I suspect the 'rona has made a lot more deadbeat tenants, though I can hardly blame the tenants for their vagrancy. Even if that impinges costs more, it is temporary in nature and likely to affect the whole rental industry. There are now lots of low wage earners out of work, and they aren't easily dislodged. So if the OP sells out his apartments he's going to face the same problem no matter where he goes.
Were he just looking to retire the hit from capital gains might be worth it to get the money out, but that doesn't seem to be the case from what he wrote. I'd ride out the bad times, but I'm not in the biz.
We have had this almost exactly. One of the best changes we made was to non-renew the mod-rehab contracts with housing. Housing tenants didn't have any deposit to speak of, and the damage to the units was significant. Also housing paid rates below market.The other end of the spectrum are concrete block section 8 multi-family units. Tiled and linoleum floors with the most basic appliances the agency allows. Painted washable walls, no laundry. Government pays the rent on time. Must-have is a manager and a handyman in between you and the tenants who only deal with some nondescriptly named LLCs as recipient of the checks.
It's gotten harde and harder to start one, and the government is still so used to traditional employment that I don't expect it to get any better soon. And yes, I work with a lot of entrepreneurs.The more I think about starting a business, the harder it is for me to convince myself it would be a good idea. I'd work more than I currently do and have a lot more stress and responsibility all for maybe making more money, maybe making less, maybe losing it all. Hard for me to convince myself that's worth investing $1M in (not that I'm in that position anyway) vs. some kind of other investment that I may lose, but at least I don't have to work on every day.
Yup....Ball bearings..........everything uses ball bearings............
It's gotten harde and harder to start one, and the government is still so used to traditional employment that I don't expect it to get any better soon. And yes, I work with a lot of entrepreneurs.
Or a funeral home. No shortage of people dying to get in.Buy a nursing home. No shortage of old people
There is in NYS now....Buy a nursing home. No shortage of old people
Or a funeral home. No shortage of people dying to get in.
If you had 2 billion, you could try going in as a (relatively small) independent investor and trying picking and influencing individual stocks.Assuming one were to sell some apartments they own and received a couple million. What would be good options for investing that money today? Of course this would be after buying the obligatory Bonanza...