Quote from GTS:
Its certainly better than quoting some tired cliche from your grandfather.
Quote from Smart Money:
To give you an example, at the point that Bill Gates was worth $10 million dollars (like back in the 1980s), I'm willing to bet that if he went to a financial advisor they would have told him, "You've got too much tied up in Microsoft stock and you need to diversify...sell all but 10% of it and buy stock from other companies". See what I mean? You can't point to one VERY wealthy person who didn't get there by taking a big, undiversified, bet. Now, if you're getting up there in age or something...sure...diversify like crazy!
SM
No it hasnt. Most people do not accelerate their mortgage payoff in lieu of investing and historically, long-term investing in equities has produced returns that have outpaced mortgage rates.Quote from myminitrading:
Well that tired cliche has stood the test of time.
Red herring. Your initial post asked whether it made more sense to invest vs accelerate paying off your motgage. No one has said that the investment must take the form of complex strategies.And complex strategies are nothing more than gimmicks to generate revenue for the banks and exchanges that create them.
Until I read an actual quote from Warren that says he personally advocates paying off a mortgage faster vs investing I will assume that is something you just made up in a lame attempt to align yourself with someone with some credibility.Warren buffets strategy seems to do well.
Quote from GTS:
No it hasn't. Most people do not accelerate their mortgage payoff in lieu of investing and over the long-term past investing has outpaced mortgage rates.
Red herring. Your initial post asked whether it made more sense to invest vs accelerate paying off your mortgage. No one has said that the investment must take the form of complex strategies.
Until I read an actual quote from Warren that says he personally advocates paying off a mortgage faster vs investing I will assume that is something you just made up in a lame attempt to align yourself with someone with some credibility.
So taking this saying literally, your grandfather advocates waiting until you have enough cash to buying your first car without a loan and your house without a mortgage?Quote from myminitrading:
Well I can see were this is going, The saying from my grandfather was, "Work hard, stay out of debt, save and invest wisely"
Quote from Eliot Hosewater:
On the other hand, how many BG's are there compared to Enron employees who lost their retirement?
Quote from GTS:
No it hasnt. Most people do not accelerate their mortgage payoff in lieu of investing and historically, long-term investing in equities has produced returns that have outpaced mortgage rates.
Red herring. Your initial post asked whether it made more sense to invest vs accelerate paying off your motgage. No one has said that the investment must take the form of complex strategies.
Until I read an actual quote from Warren that says he personally advocates paying off a mortgage faster vs investing I will assume that is something you just made up in a lame attempt to align yourself with someone with some credibility.
Quote from GTS:
So taking this saying literally, your grandfather advocates waiting until you have enough cash to buying your first car without a loan and your house without a mortgage?
Like I said before, pithy sayings shouldn't be the basis for your financial planning. Saying "invest wisely" is about as useful as saying "buy low and sell high". The devil is in the details.
Read: http://www.ricedelman.com/planning/home/rule21.asp
"Never Own Your Home Outright. Instead, Get a Big 30-year Mortgage, and Never Pay It Off â Regardless of Your Age and Income"
I thought you said "Stay out of debt"?!? Must have missed the footnote that said its ok to incur debt for investment purposes. Maybe that was your grandmothers saying?Quote from myminitrading:
Your getting confused, first of all a home is the biggest investment most will make, get it investment.