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10 February 2018 | 4 replies
Assuming this will be a 69,000 GBP loan, we are talking about 4,140 GBP yearly cost, which can be covered by the rent.There are many considerations here such as foreign currency fluctuations, but I'd like to ask specifically about the pros and cons between these two choices.
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25 July 2018 | 212 replies
Now I gotta worry about secession, the US dollar collapsing and the price of crypto currencies when I'm analyzing deals?
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7 February 2018 | 12 replies
If you look into the history of currencies the current scenario has always ended into massive inflation or a crash/reset of the system.
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26 July 2021 | 71 replies
Not for dividends on stocks I own or crypto currency proceeds; but rather for rental income on real estate that I own.
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14 February 2018 | 33 replies
What is likely is the dollar will lose value compared to other currencies or hard assets, but it will be gradual.
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10 August 2017 | 7 replies
Currency on public records from services varies a lot by county, primarily because of one of two things: the county is too small to justify abstracting data on a daily basis, or the county itself is difficult to get data from on a timely basis.
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1 May 2017 | 0 replies
I have recently moved out of the US and working abroad as an expatriate - but now I am getting paid for my work in the local (non-US) currency/bank.I would still have my permanent resident status in the US and tax returns (I have an accountant helping with my taxes relating to how the US handles taxation for expatriates), but I would obviously be missing my (US-based) pay stubs, and my US Bank statements would show chunks of money being transferred in (that I would be doing from my international bank where I am receiving my salary).I was just wondering if getting a mortgage or refinancing an existing mortgage in the US was still possible, and if there were any tricks/pointers that I need to know about?
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20 May 2017 | 1 reply
It's like they've accepted that they'll be working 12 hour days until they're 45, they're delaying thinking about saving or investing until then, and the only currency they care for is social currency in their niche social circles.
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20 May 2017 | 0 replies
It's like they've accepted that they'll be working 12 hour days until they're 45, they're delaying thinking about saving or investing until then, and the only currency they care for is social currency in their niche social circles.
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14 June 2017 | 14 replies
A lot of investors are going to the States, but I don't know the markets well enough, I can't add value, and currency risk exists so I've stayed clear.As for financing, I can talk off-line and share my experiences if that's helpful.