Archive for December, 2008

New Years Resolutions – Action
Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

A new year and a new start. If you haven’t already made some New Years Resolutions, it’s time to take ACTION and get some New Years Resolutions written down!

  1. Take some time-out to look back on the past year
  2. Write down and reflect on the achievements and fantastic memories you have made in 2008
  3. Ask yourself: What will I do in 2009 to gain more out of life?
  4. Write down S.M.A.R.T. (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-orientated) goals
  5. Celebrate the end of 2008 and the beginning of 2009!

See you all in the New Year! =)

New Year Resolution – Some Day I’ll…
Monday, December 29th, 2008

With the New Year fast approaching I’m hearing a lot of, “in the New Year I’ll…” especially when people are thinking about their New Year Resolution

Here are some examples and you might be able to relate to:
“In the New Year, I’ll quit smoking”
“In the New Year, I’ll quit drinking”
“In the New Year, I’ll quit gambling”
“In the New Year I will be turning a new leaf, no more hand to mouth”
“In the New Year, I’ll save more money”
“In the New Year, I’ll spend less money”
The list goes on and on…

You have to be very careful about this, because this is the perfect… “Some day, I’ll…”
If you don’t have the will power to make that “some day” TODAY, i.e. make the desired outcome so urgent that you’ll want to do it immediately, you’ll most likely not have the will power to make it happen when “some day” comes. So remember that you don’t need to wait for the New Year to start any change. Start today, no matter how big or small it is!

Happy New Year! and have a Great New Year Resolution

Boxing Day – Giving to the Less Fortunate
Friday, December 26th, 2008

Today is named Boxing Day because the tradition of giving gifts of cash, food, clothing and other goods to the less fortunate were placed into boxes for easier transportation. The goods were distributed based on the family needs and their services to the giver. Where is your box? Maybe you want to be a loaner and help out an entrepreneur in a 3rd world country?


Kiva - loans that change lives

Happy Boxing Day!

Merry Christmas from Your Success Club
Thursday, December 25th, 2008

Ho Ho Ho! Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Hope all our members and readers are having a wondering time with your family and friends! Here’s a cute youtube clip which might get you more in the Christmas mood.

Self Improvement Online at Your Success Club
Monday, December 22nd, 2008

If you don’t already know, Your Success Club is like a self improvement online book store/library. We source the best information from all over the world and delivery it straight to your computer, whether in printed, audio or video format.

I understand that knowledge is important, but something more important than knowledge is your time! Simply because once you spent or invested your time, it is gone forever.

“When you spend your money, you can always make more. But once you spend your time, it is gone forever!”

Improving ourself is part of living, whether it be in career, finances, relationships, health etc. We have been brought up at a very young age where we learnt to sit, crawl, walk, run, talk and jump. After that, we all went to school and continue our learning. I think everybody has a certain hunger for knowledge to do something or find something bigger and better.

Learning can be fun but also time consuming when we have research for materials or spend hours at book stores and libraries. Having self improvement online has revolutionise the ‘learning’ industry, now people can learn to play musical instruments online, trade stock options, buy properties, drive cars etc. It’s amazing how a single person can access such powerful information through a click of their button and here at Your Success Club is your opportunity to access the incredible resources

To get a taste of self improvement online, here’s some great resources to kick start you on your journey => Click Here

I warn you, this is a very long interview so make sure you have your cup of coffee nearby or enough time to read this article. It’s worth a read if you are interested in what is happening to the economy and gets an insight into the mind of George Soros.

Yesterday I posted an article from Warren Buffet and it’s quite interesting to see both their point of views on the current state of the economy.

The Financial Crisis: An Interview with George Soros

By George Soros, Judy Woodruff

The following is an edited and expanded version of an interview with George Soros, Chairman, Soros Fund Management, by Judy Woodruff on Bloomberg TV on April 4.

Judy Woodruff: You write in your new book, The New Paradigm for Financial Markets,[1] that “we are in the midst of a financial crisis the likes of which we haven’t seen since the Great Depression.” Was this crisis avoidable?

George Soros: I think it was, but it would have required recognition that the system, as it currently operates, is built on false premises. Unfortunately, we have an idea of market fundamentalism, which is now the dominant ideology, holding that markets are self-correcting; and this is false because it’s generally the intervention of the authorities that saves the markets when they get into trouble. Since 1980, we have had about five or six crises: the international banking crisis in 1982, the bankruptcy of Continental Illinois in 1984, and the failure of Long-Term Capital Management in 1998, to name only three.

Each time, it’s the authorities that bail out the market, or organize companies to do so. So the regulators have precedents they should be aware of. But somehow this idea that markets tend to equilibrium and that deviations are random has gained acceptance and all of these fancy instruments for investment have been built on them.

There are now, for example, complex forms of investment such as credit-default swaps that make it possible for investors to bet on the possibility that companies will default on repaying loans. Such bets on credit defaults now make up a $45 trillion market that is entirely unregulated. It amounts to more than five times the total of the US government bond market. The large potential risks of such investments are not being acknowledged.

Woodruff: How can so many smart people not realize this?

Soros: In my new book I put forward a general theory of reflexivity, emphasizing how important misconceptions are in shaping history. So it’s not really unusual; it’s just that we don’t recognize the misconceptions.

Woodruff: Who could have? You said it would have been avoidable if people had understood what’s wrong with the current system. Who should have recognized that?

Soros: The authorities, the regulators—the Federal Reserve and the Treasury—really failed to see what was happening. One Fed governor, Edward Gramlich, warned of a coming crisis in subprime mortgages in a speech published in 2004 and a book published in 2007, among other statements. So a number of people could see it coming. And somehow, the authorities didn’t want to see it coming. So it came as a surprise.

Woodruff: The chairman of the Fed, Mr. Bernanke? His predecessor, Mr. Greenspan?

Soros: All of the above. But I don’t hold them personally responsible because you have a whole establishment involved. The economics profession has developed theories of “random walks” and “rational expectations” that are supposed to account for market movements. That’s what you learn in college. Now, when you come into the market, you tend to forget it because you realize that that’s not how the markets work. But nevertheless, it’s in some way the basis of your thinking.

Woodruff: How much worse do you anticipate things will get?

Soros: Well, you see, as my theory argues, you can’t make any unconditional predictions because it very much depends on how the authorities are going to respond now to the situation. But the situation is definitely much worse than is currently recognized. You have had a general disruption of the financial markets, much more pervasive than any we have had so far. And on top of it, you have the housing crisis, which is likely to get a lot worse than currently anticipated because markets do overshoot. They overshot on the upside and now they are going to overshoot on the downside.

Woodruff: You say the housing crisis is going to get much worse. Do you anticipate something like the government setting up an agency or a trust corporation to buy these mortgages?

Soros: I’m sure that it will be necessary to arrest the decline because the decline, I think, will be much faster and much deeper than currently anticipated. In February, the rate of decline in housing prices was 25 percent per annum, so it’s accelerating. Now, foreclosures are going to add to the supply of housing a very large number of properties because the annual rate of new houses built is about 600,000. There are about six million subprime mortgages outstanding, 40 percent of which will likely go into default in the next two years. And then you have the adjustable-rate mortgages and other flexible loans.

Problems with such adjustable-rate mortgages are going to be of about the same magnitude as with subprime mortgages. So you’ll have maybe five million more defaults facing you over the next several years. Now, it takes time before a foreclosure actually is completed. So right now you have perhaps no more than 10,000 to 20,000 houses coming into the supply on the market. But that’s going to build up. So the idea that somehow in the second half of this year the economy is going to improve I find totally unbelievable.

Woodruff: So how long will this last?

Soros: Well, it depends on when the authorities wake up, because you need to reduce the number of foreclosures. You need to keep as many people as possible in their houses so that they don’t come onto the market. You need to arrest the decline in house prices, but you also need to prevent human suffering and social disruption because it’s going to be very, very severe. Certain communities are already hurting and it’s going to get a lot worse. So action will have to be taken, but I don’t think it’s going to happen during this administration.

Woodruff: You said the Federal Reserve had to step in to engineer the buyout by J.P. Morgan of Bear Stearns to prevent a much bigger catastrophe. You’ve also said that to do this, the Fed had to take on considerable risk. Is this an unhealthy amount of risk that the Fed has taken on?

Soros: This is their job, whether unhealthy or not; I don’t think it’s actually so severe. But that is their job, to save the system when it is in danger. However, because that is their job, it ought to be their job also to prevent asset bubbles from developing. And that task has not been recognized. Greenspan once spoke about the “irrational exuberance” of the market. It had a bad echo and he stopped talking about it. And it’s generally accepted that the Fed tries to control core inflation, but not asset prices. I think that control of asset prices has to be an objective in order to prevent asset bubbles because they are so frequent.

Woodruff: And that’s more than what the Fed is doing.

Soros: It’s more than what it’s doing now. You have to recognize that just controlling money doesn’t control credit. You see, money and credit don’t go hand in hand. The monetarist doctrine doesn’t stand up. So you have to take into account the willingness to lend. And if it’s too great—if borrowers can obtain large loans on the basis of inadequate security—you really have to introduce margin requirements for such borrowing and try to discourage it.

Woodruff: When you talk about currency you have more than a little expertise. You were described as the man who broke the Bank of England back in the 1990s. But what is your sense of where the dollar is going? We’ve seen it declining. Do you think the central banks are going to have to step in?

Soros: Well, we are close to a tipping point where, in my view, the willingness of banks and countries to hold dollars is definitely impaired. But there is no suitable alternative so central banks are diversifying into other currencies; but there is a general flight from these currencies. So the countries with big surpluses—Abu Dhabi, China, Norway, and Saudi Arabia, for example—have all set up sovereign wealth funds, state-owned investment funds held by central banks that aim to diversify their assets from monetary assets to real assets. That’s one of the major developments currently and those sovereign wealth funds are growing. They’re already equal in size to all of the hedge funds in the world combined. Of course, they don’t use their capital as intensively as hedge funds, but they are going to grow to about five times the size of hedge funds in the next twenty years.

Woodruff: How low do you think the dollar will go?

Soros: Well, that I don’t know. I can see the trend, but I don’t know its extent, and I don’t know when something might happen to turn it around. Once the economy stabilizes, probably the overshoot on the currencies would also be corrected.

Woodruff: Few people know more about hedge funds than you do. You’ve been enormously successful with your own hedge fund. Should hedge funds be more regulated by Washington?

Soros: I think hedge funds should be regulated like everything else. In other words, you have to control leverage—credit obtained for investment purposes—somewhere. Excessive use of leverage is at the bottom of this problem. And there have been hedge funds that have been using leverage excessively and some of those have gone broke. The amount of leverage that people are allowed to use has to be regulated. I think it’s best done through the banks. In other words, the banks’ reserve requirements—the amounts of money they are obliged to hold—should be tailored to the riskiness of their customers. So investment funds that use a lot of leverage ought to be seen as very risky; and therefore they would not get the amount of leverage they seek because the banks wouldn’t give it to them.

Woodruff: New regulation, though: Could that impede the ability of hedge funds to be the big players that they have been in these markets?

Soros: Yes, I think that there has been excessive use of credit and it does have to be limited. So we are now in a period of very rapid deleveraging and I think that in the future we ought not to allow leverage to be used to the extent that it has been in the past.

Woodruff: You write, “We are at the end of an era.” When this current credit crisis ends, will the US still be, no doubt about it, the world superpower when it comes to the economy?

Soros: Not at all. This is now in question. And you now have entered a period of really considerable uncertainty and turmoil because of the general flight from currencies, which manifests itself in the commodities bubble that has developed. The price of gold hasn’t yet gone as high as it might. So what comes out of this turmoil is very open to question. I think that you will have to somehow reconstruct the global financial architecture because you have recognized that, in effect, the economic weight has changed considerably among the different countries. China has become much more important and also India, and so on. What kind of system will evolve from this is, I think, a very open question.

Woodruff: What about China? How much of an economic competitor could it end up being?

Soros: Well, China is rising. It’s been the main beneficiary of globalization. Their currency is significantly undervalued and for various reasons they have to allow it to appreciate, recently at a rate of 10 percent. And it’s been accelerating now to 15, 20 percent, which makes the situation more difficult for the Fed because you now have the prospect of core inflation in the US accelerating because if our imports coming from China go up in price by 15 percent, it will come through in core inflation. The price of goods at Wal-Mart is rising and will probably continue to rise and then accelerate.

Woodruff: So while people are thinking that goods are cheaper from China, you’re saying the prices go up. It affects so many things that we buy in this country. What of Russia and how its economy is doing?

Soros: Basically, the country is benefiting from the high price of oil, but, at the same time, it is reestablishing a very authoritarian regime where the rights of investors are not respected. Now it is British Petroleum that is being chased out. So you invest at your own risk. I’ve done it and I’m not going to do it again.

Woodruff: So what you see in Russia tells us that political freedom and economic freedom are separable after all?

Soros: Well, the lack of political freedom also impinges on the rights of shareholders. So it’s not a suitable area for investing exactly because you don’t have the rule of law. China is improving a great deal. The rule of law is getting stronger in China, even though you don’t have democracy.

Woodruff: The most attractive emerging market?

Soros: At this time, the outlook for India is also very good.

Woodruff: Let me mention two other points because they are so much on the minds of our leaders today. One is fighting the war on terror. Should the next president be prepared to sit down with the leaders of organizations like Hamas, like Hezbollah, countries like Iran?

Soros: Absolutely. I wrote another book arguing that the entire idea of a “war on terror” is a misleading concept that has got this country off on the wrong track.[2] It is responsible for our invading Iraq under the wrong pretenses and for a decline of our political influence and military power that has no precedent.

Woodruff: Where do you see the “war on terror” ten years down the road?

Soros: I hope that we will put it behind us. If you think in terms of human security and you say that the role of governments is to make the people secure, then it leads you to a completely different line of action. And even in Iraq, the surge, which was quite successful militarily, tried to provide protection for civilians, instead of just chasing terrorists whom we couldn’t find after breaking into houses and terrifying the people. Concern for human security, making us feel safe and making the people in other countries feel safe: I think that would get you to a totally different line of action.

Woodruff: Bringing us back to this country in the midst of this economic credit crisis that you write about and that you’ve been describing, we are also in the middle of a presidential election. You endorsed Barack Obama the day he announced. Why him rather than your home state senator, Senator Clinton?

Soros: Well, I have very high regard for Hillary Clinton, but I think Obama has the charisma and the vision to radically reorient America in the world. And that is what we need because I’m afraid we have gotten off the right track and we need to have a greater discontinuity than Hillary Clinton would bring.

Woodruff: You have no concern that he lacks the experience to lead in this dangerous time that we live in?

Soros: I think that he has shown himself to be a really unusual person. And I think this emphasis on experience is way overdone because he will have exactly the same advisers available as Hillary Clinton, and it will be a matter of judgment whom he chooses. And actually, he is more likely to bring in new blood, which is what we need.

Woodruff: Recently, Senator Obama has endorsed some of the things we’ve been talking about: greater financial regulation, having for example the Federal Housing Administration insure unaffordable mortgages against default. Do you think this goes far enough, what he’s talking about? Did he talk with you at all?

Soros: No, I’ve had absolutely no contact with him or any of the Democratic leadership on this issue. Now that my book is out, maybe I will in the future. But these are my ideas and they are not responsible for them.

Woodruff: From what you know about what he’s saying about the housing crisis, do you think he goes far enough?

Soros: No, nothing right now goes far enough and Representative Barney Frank, who really understands the issues, is not pushing that far because, in order to get bipartisan support, you can’t. So if you want something done, you have to set your sights lower. And that is what he has done and I think he is getting a few things through. But they are not enough.

Woodruff: A larger question on the campaign—you gave, I believe, something like $23 million in 2004 to various Democratic efforts: MoveOn.org and candidates. Far less than that so far this year—why the change?

Soros: Well, because I think that was a unique time when not having President Bush reelected would have made the situation of this country and of the world much better. I think now it’s less important. And, in any case, I don’t feel terribly comfortable being a partisan person because I look forward to being critical of the next Democratic administration.

Woodruff: What of your book and the philosophy that comes of it?

Soros: In human affairs, as distinguished from natural science, I argue that our understanding is imperfect. And our imperfect understanding introduces an element of uncertainty that’s not there in natural phenomena. So therefore you can’t predict human affairs in the same way as you can natural phenomena. And we have to come to terms with the implication of our own misunderstandings, that it’s very hard to make decisions when you know you may be wrong. You have to learn to recognize that we in fact may be wrong. And, even worse than that, it’s almost inevitable that all of our constructs will have some kind of a flaw in them. So when it comes to currencies, no currency system is perfect.

So you have to recognize that all of our constructions are imperfect. We have to improve them. But just because something is imperfect, the opposite is not perfect. So because of the failures of socialism, communism, we have come to believe in market fundamentalism, that markets are perfect; everything will be taken care of by markets. And markets are not perfect. And this time we have to recognize that, because we are facing a very serious economic disruption.

Now, we should not go back to a very highly regulated economy because the regulators are imperfect. They’re only human and what is worse, they are bureaucratic. So you have to find the right kind of balance between allowing the markets to do their work, while recognizing that they are imperfect. You need authorities that keep the market under scrutiny and some degree of control. That’s the message that I’m trying to get across.

Notes

[1] Available in a digital edition from Amazon.com and other distributors; to be published as a book in May by PublicAffairs.

[2] The Bubble of American Supremacy: The Costs of Bush’s War in Iraq (PublicAffairs, 2004).

Source from New York Review of Books

Warren Buffet – Bad News a Boon for Investors
Saturday, December 20th, 2008

I came across this awesome article by Warren Buffet that everybody needs to read, especially if you’re a long term investor and like accumulating assets. Warren Buffet is know as a value buyer and in this article he lets everybody know his simple strategy. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!

The time to buy is when everyone else is too fearful to do so, writes Warren Buffett.

'If you wait for the robins, spring will be over'...Warren Buffett says you can now get a slice of the future. PHOTO: Bloomberg.com

THE financial world is a mess, both in the United States and abroad. Its problems, moreover, have been leaking into the general economy, and the leaks are now turning into a gusher. In the near term, unemployment will rise, business activity will falter and headlines will continue to be scary.

So … I’ve been buying American stocks. This is my personal account I’m talking about, in which I previously owned nothing but United States government bonds. (This description leaves aside my Berkshire Hathaway holdings, which are all committed to philanthropy.) If prices keep looking attractive, my non-Berkshire net worth will soon be 100 percent in United States equities.

Why? A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful. And most certainly, fear is now widespread, gripping even seasoned investors. To be sure, investors are right to be wary of highly leveraged entities or businesses in weak competitive positions. But fears regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation’s many sound companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be setting new profit records 5, 10 and 20 years from now.

Let me be clear on one point: I can’t predict the short-term movements of the stock market. I haven’t the faintest idea as to whether stocks will be higher or lower a month — or a year — from now. What is likely, however, is that the market will move higher, perhaps substantially so, well before either sentiment or the economy turns up. So if you wait for the robins, spring will be over.

A little history here: During the Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932. Economic conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already advanced 30 percent. Or think back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States in Europe and the Pacific. The market hit bottom in April 1942, well before Allied fortunes turned. Again, in the early 1980s, the time to buy stocks was when inflation raged and the economy was in the tank. In short, bad news is an investor’s best friend. It lets you buy a slice of America’s future at a marked-down price.

Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.

You might think it would have been impossible for an investor to lose money during a century marked by such an extraordinary gain. But some investors did. The hapless ones bought stocks only when they felt comfort in doing so and then proceeded to sell when the headlines made them queasy.

Today people who hold cash equivalents feel comfortable. They shouldn’t. They have opted for a terrible long-term asset, one that pays virtually nothing and is certain to depreciate in value. Indeed, the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts.

Equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably by a substantial degree. Those investors who cling now to cash are betting they can efficiently time their move away from it later. In waiting for the comfort of good news, they are ignoring Wayne Gretzky’s advice: “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.”

I don’t like to opine on the stock market, and again I emphasize that I have no idea what the market will do in the short term. Nevertheless, I’ll follow the lead of a restaurant that opened in an empty bank building and then advertised: “Put your mouth where your money was.” Today my money and my mouth both say equities.

Warren E. Buffett is the chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, a diversified holding company

Buffet, W 2008, ‘Bad News a Boon for Investors’, The New York Times, 16 October, Financial Review.

The Fisherman and Businessman
Friday, December 19th, 2008

Here’s an insightful story from the internet I would like to share with you:

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A successful businessman took a vacation to a small coastal Mexican village on doctor’s orders. As he was taking a walk along the pier, he sees a small boat full of several large fish. The businessman complimented the fisherman and asked him: “How long did it take you to catch them?”

“Only a little while,” the fisherman replied.

“Why don’t you stay out longer and catch more fish?”

“I have enough to support my family and give a few to friends,” the fisherman said as he unloaded them into a basket.

The businessman then asked, “But what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The fisherman replied, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take a siesta with my wife, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life, senor.”

The businessman scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds buy a bigger boat and with the proceeds from the bigger boat you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would increase your profits and sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing and distribution. You would need to leave this tiny coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then to LA and eventually NYC where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The fisherman asked, “But senor, how long will this all take?”

The businessman replied, “15-20 years.”

“But what then, senor?”

The businessman laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions.”

“Millions, senor? Then what?”

The businessman said, “Then you would retire. Move to a tiny coastal fishing village where you could sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take a siesta with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”

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The moral of the story is to know how to balance your time between your loved ones and your journey to bigger and better things.

Wealth is not about the money, it’s about what you can do with it.

Somebody asked me if it is worthwhile to get a depreciation schedule for his rental property. Strangely I hesitated and did a mental calculation before replying, “Its a numbers game, as long as you can get more back from the rental property depreciation then its worth it. The chances of this is very high”

The cheapest depreciation schedule that I know about is from Tax Shield so lets go through the numbers and do a quick sanity check.

Assumptions

  • Marginal tax rate is 30%
  • Cost of Depreciation Schedule is $275

Obviously, the cost of the depreciation schedule is also deductible as it is a cost of managing your rental property and tax affairs and directly link to the income generation of the rental property. This means the after tax cost of the Depreciation Schedule is $192.50 ($275 x (1-30%))

For the depreciation schedule to be worthwhile there must be $641.67 (192.5 / 30%) worth of depreciation over the life of the schedule. Ideally you would want the $641.67 to be within the first few years so that you can breakeven within the first year or two.

i.e. Tax Shield has to find $641.67 worth of fittings and fixtures to depreciate over the next 30 years in order for you to break-even. The bonus is items that are classified as “low-value pool” can be depreciated over their effective life (which is usually a lot quicker). Examples could be, kitchen stove, oven or range hood.

Most rental property would have fixtures and fittings like carpets, laminates, floorboards, tiles, blinds, curtains and/or light fittings. These few items alone would make it easy for companies such as Tax Shield to find thousands of dollars worth of depreciation.

In my opinion, it’s almost certain you’ll get your money back for the schedule PLUS more for your back pocket!

Some things you will want to consider are:

  • Age of property
  • Recent renovations or improvements

I must admit, I have an investment property that is really old, it was built back in the 1960s and I didn’t think it would be worthwhile paying for a rental property depreciation. After going through this exercise, I decided to invest my $275 and to my delight the depreciation schedule is being paid for within a year. i.e. there was more than $641.67 worth of depreciation within the first year that I could claim.

This also made me think about how much my accountant really understood about property taxes and rental property depreciation. They obviously don’t invest in rental properties of their own; otherwise they would have encouraged me to get one especially when I asked them whether I should or not.

Justin Herald teaches us Attitude
Monday, December 15th, 2008

Justin HeraldJustin Herald started his Attitude Gear brand with just $50, now it’s licensed worldwide at $32 million. This book summary really condenses the key points found in his two books, Would You Like Attitude With That? and What Are You Waiting For?, which we can use and apply in business as well as everyday life.

Click here to download the book summary now

“Winners make it happen… Losers let it happen!”

Justin teaches us the importance of never giving up, learning from our mistakes, finding our dreams and much, much more. Justin takes you on his journey, through the good and the bad, and gives you fantastic tips to guide you along on your journey towards your dreams.

I’ll end this now with one of my favourite Attitude Inc statements:

“The impossible is what nobody can do until someone does it”

Find more incredible content from Justin Herald.