I am starting a ponzi scheme and I can let you in on the ground floor.ILOVETHIS said:I legally came into some money, 100Gs. I want to invest it. How and where should I invest it? I want to invest in something that makes money and not spend it on sps.
This is the best advice so far. The problem with most "financial advisors" is that they're nothing but glorified mutual fund salesmen. Once they sell you their products they then have a license to hit you with fees up the wazoo, and they're not even required to disclose how much they're charging you.Blue5658 said:Go to a reputable financial advisor that is compensated by you on a fee-for-service basis, rather than the funds that he sells. He will build you a plan based on your personal needs and circumstances.
When you put it like that, 100000 isn't that much money, is it?fuji said:At $150-200 per session and assuming a session per day you'll run through the $100k in around 16-20 months.
kitaa said:In the long run nothing beats real estate!
Oh really? Ever heard of a thing called a prospectus? It's not that salespeople don't disclose, it's that clients can't be bothered to read or ask...Mikehorn said:This is the best advice so far. The problem with most "financial advisors" is that they're nothing but glorified mutual fund salesmen. Once they sell you their products they then have a license to hit you with fees up the wazoo, and they're not even required to disclose how much they're charging you.
Ever heard of a guy named Eric Sprott or try Barometer Asset Management or even most boring dividend funds? - they've been better than real estate for 20 years, even with this run up in housing we've seen for the past few years.kitaa said:In the long run nothing beats real estate!
Timbit said:Oh really? Ever heard of a thing called a prospectus? It's not that salespeople don't disclose, it's that clients can't be bothered to read or ask...
Ever heard of a guy named Eric Sprott or try Barometer Asset Management or even most boring dividend funds? - they've been better than real estate for 20 years, even with this run up in housing we've seen for the past few years.
My advice - talk to some friends or colleagues and get some referrals to financial advisors. Then interview those referrals and find out how they go about making recommendations. Choose the person you're most comfortable with. Then, last, but not least, ask questions and never NEVER trust that person - open your mail, check your portfolio balance and keep asking questions.
Timbit
yeeepppppppppeeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrkitaa said:In the long run nothing beats real estate!