SeanEdwards
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- Joined
- May 21, 2007
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- 4,407
Toilet Paper.
deleted your response? Just sent you a message!

That's why I deleted it![]()

Since that won't be able to buy a half an ounce of gold, let alone any amount of any real value, I was looking to put it into silver. I am 16, so I am looking for long-term investments, since college is pretty much covered. Is there anything besides silver and other precious metals that is undervalued and will increase or maintain its value as we enter into a recession with temporary deflation before we get massive inflation?
I'd ask my parents, but when I ask them they don't say anything and quickly change the subject.
Edit: Thanks for all the advice!
Don't buy PMs with so little money. PMs are a nice LONG term store of value, but they don't work for you (dont pay any interest or dividends) and they are illiquid. Put it in an index fund, dividend fund or stock, or bond fund, and reinvest the interest/dividends. Look into DRIPs (dividend reinvestment plans) and the like. You need to get the money working for you - and PMs don't do that. Sure, you can make capital gains, but it means very little unless you can take those gains and reinvest. Or hell, find some sort of real-world "investment" that can generate some passive income flow. Warren buffet started out buying pinball machines and putting them up in barbershops - not something thats necessarily feasible in this day and age, but if you want a small amount of money to start working for you, thats the sort of thinking needed to really jump-start it.
Don't buy PMs with so little money. PMs are a nice LONG term store of value, but they don't work for you (dont pay any interest or dividends) and they are illiquid. Put it in an index fund, dividend fund or stock, or bond fund, and reinvest the interest/dividends. Look into DRIPs (dividend reinvestment plans) and the like. You need to get the money working for you - and PMs don't do that. Sure, you can make capital gains, but it means very little unless you can take those gains and reinvest. Or hell, find some sort of real-world "investment" that can generate some passive income flow. Warren buffet started out buying pinball machines and putting them up in barbershops - not something thats necessarily feasible in this day and age, but if you want a small amount of money to start working for you, thats the sort of thinking needed to really jump-start it.
Ahh.....Now we're all wondering what it was!![]()
I challenged him to pay off my student loan in four years by giving him 50% of the debt value. He explained in the PM that the return rate wouldn't be proportional if given tens of thousands of dollars, so I deleted it since it came off overly-assholish anyways.
I guess that it all comes out even in the long run.....You gave excellent advice on page two.Is there any particular stocks I should look at, or would something like Kludge suggested work? My hope was to get enough money to eventually help finance the down payment on my first home, so 50 years isn't exactly my time frame, I'd hope to get into my own home by age 30, so apx. 14 years.
There is money to be made above the market averages investing in individual stocks, but you have to be willing to invest the time/research into it. If that doesn't sound interesting to you, the best bet would probably be index funds. I'd look at a basket of diversified and liquid ETFs with the lowest expense ratios you can find.
In 14 years, the dollar amount you can receive for gold or silver might be a lot higher if the worth of paper money goes kaput, but the value of what that gold or silver buys will not have changed much. The ounce of gold you buy today will purchase roughly the same amount of goods that an ounce of gold in 14 years from now will. In other words, it's not going to get you a down payment on a house.
rice or silver