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28 February 2020 | 1 reply
i.e. people person vs numbers person, Meyers Briggs, etc.The people that do well in stocks tend to be highly educated, decades long stamina, world class numbers and analytical skills, readers not talkers, life long learners that can connect many global dots together into a strategy.But most run on emotions and that's why the only winner this week was JPM/GS on the VIX.Now if you meant trading, things get worse, as 90% or more fail...If you can't handle high amounts of risk, stress, losses, etc.stick to real estate or hire a world class broker that has your back.If you still want to invest, I would recommend going short NOT LONG until we hit bottom!!!
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14 April 2020 | 12 replies
I think a decent summary of this is, return on investment is the gain or loss relative to your capital invested, while return on equity is your gain or loss relative to the equity held in your investment.
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1 March 2020 | 11 replies
It's just a good idea for them, but for me, its contractual stipulation protects me from any claim from my tenant in event I'm sued for losses from some catastrophic or other events that causes tenant losses.
2 March 2020 | 5 replies
Loss of Use / Loss of Rents: Normally, there is a 20% included limit.
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2 March 2020 | 1 reply
That said, if your losses are not too deep, you may want to just move forward and chalk this up to a mistake you made (not staying heavily involved in the project to check up on it daily or at least multiple times a week.
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6 March 2020 | 5 replies
Hi Ronnie, Super sorry to hear that happened, I would document everything you can clearly on losses accumulated as well as proof of negligence on construction you say he has not done correctly.
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1 March 2020 | 3 replies
Less of a loss of revenue than discounting the rent by $100-200 a month.
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4 March 2020 | 13 replies
Remember, you can ride the rollercoaster, but you only realize a loss when you get off the ride.
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23 August 2020 | 19 replies
You may also be hurting now because you didn't file a state tax return in those years because now you lose out on claiming the losses allocated to that state.Your accountant likely didn't want to file in MA because he would have to pay an additional cost to file there...or he was grossly negligent(or both).
4 March 2020 | 2 replies
I am early in my research, but It seems like PAL rules- passive loss options might be a possibility (I make less than $100000 and less than 25,000 in costs)?