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no--67 · 8 months
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Also one last post for the night, if this is you please rebog, I for one was born in the wrong generation, should have been a rare fish...
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thesirencult · 6 months
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Before you become physically abundant you have to cultivate an abundant mindset.
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azusa2023 · 4 months
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"Fuel your financial journey with the power of US stocks! 🚀 Don't just watch, be a part of the wealth revolution! 📈 Join my dynamic stock investment group, where opportunities ignite, insights flourish, and success awaits. Seize the moment, let's rewrite the story of your financial triumph together! 💪💼
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theambitiouswoman · 7 months
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Hi!
Thanking for answering my ask,
If you don’t mind I would love it if you could get into the tax part, I just want to know as much as I can. 😆
Ok this is fun, prepare to have your mind blown.
I have to disclose that I am not a financial advisor or an accountant <3
Trusts: You want to consider purchasing the properties under a trust. Tax implications can vary under trusts. Revocable living trust will allow you to be treated as the owner, but in an irrevocable trust, it is a separate entity. In some structures, you would only pain capital gains, which can also be transferred to a separate trust, and you do not end up paying capital gains on the property. You do this with a charitable remainder trust. Generally, if a property is held in a trust, rental income generated from that property is typically subject to income tax. The trust itself may be responsible for paying those taxes, or the tax liability might pass through to the beneficiaries, depending on the type of trust and its specific provisions. This will change the amount you would pay in taxes. If the property was purchased as a primary home, there could also be capital gain exceptions depending on the trust. Your income affects the rates you pay on specific trusts. Before I continue, I want to suggest speaking to an actual attorney, not an accountant. Most are not knowledgable or equipped to properly guide you here. Same as with traditional, in a trust you can deduct property related expenses like mortgage interest, property taxes, maintenance costs, and depreciation, from the rental income. This can help reduce the taxable income generated by the property.
IRA's: You can use a self directed IRA or other retirement accounts to invest in real estate. The gain from these investments grow tax deferred within your account. This is something you should also consider doing.
Depreciating assets: Real estate can depreciate overtime. This doesn't include land. But when it depreciates, you can deduct the properties cost. This would offset the income you would pat taxes on.
1031 Exchange: Filing a 1031 will allow you to defer paying capital gains on an investment property when it's sold, as long as another "like kind" property is purchased with the profit gained from the sale.
Mortgage Interest Deduction: Interest paid on mortgages for investment properties can be deducted.
Carry Forward: If your expenses exceed your rental income, you could have a net loss. Some of these losses can be used to offset other taxable income, while others might be carried forward to future years.
Living in the property: If you live in the property for 2 years. you can exclude a portion of the capital gains from your taxable income when you sell.
Opportunity Zones: Opportunity zones offer tax incentives, including deferring and potentially reducing capital gains taxes.
Expenses: All repair expenses can be deducted.
Installments: You can structure your sale to receive payments over time. This spreads out the capital gains and reduces tax impact.
Tax Credits: There are a ton of tax credits for investors. Would research in your state.
More deductions: Interest on a mortgage for an investment property is typically tax deductible, as are property taxes and many other expenses related to the property like Insurance premiums.
Cost segregations: You can hire someone to reclassify certain areas of your property to accelerate depreciation. This will give you a significant upfront tax deduction.
Pass throughs: Certain pass through entities (like LLCs, S Corporations, and partnerships) may be eligible for a deduction of up to 20% of their business income from rental properties.
I can keep going on this, but strongly recommend you read these books:
Loopholes of the Rich: How the Rich Legally Make More Money and Pay Less Tax 
Tax-Free Wealth: How to Build Massive Wealth by Permanently Lowering Your Taxes 
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csuitebitches · 2 years
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Questions You Need to Answer as a Business Owner/ Start Up Founder
Here’s a list of questions you should be able to answer while preparing for a client call, investor meeting or presentation.
- Have you conducted customer research? What was the outcome?
- What was a lesson you learned along the way?
- How do you develop product strategy?
- Who is your primary customer?
- If most of your business is partnership based; What drop rate are you expecting when your trial/ pilot with these partnerships is over?
- How much risk does your distribution strategy have?
- How easily can your competition replicate you?
- How easy or expensive is it for your customers to switch to your competition instead of you?
- What are some major barriers you’re expecting?
- what KPIs are you expecting from your pilot? Which one are you going to focus deeply on?
- What is your burn rate?
- Talk about your unit economics a little more.
- Are you focused on growth or profitability?
- How can you achieve break even faster?
- What’s your current cap table?
- What will you do if your top line don’t match expectations?
- What is your vision?
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fxgstxg · 5 months
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Feel like I shouldn't have to say this and I'm mostly just preaching to the choir but housing should not be an investment opportunity. Living, breathing humans reside in that house. You're disgusting if you're a landlord, even more so if you have your tenants live in dangerous conditions. If you're gonna own the property, it's your responsibility for maintenance. Point-blank and I don't wanna hear anyone tell me otherwise.
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karlrincon · 1 year
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STARSHIP IS LAUNCHING TOMORROW! 🚀🚀🚀
SpaceX
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no--67 · 6 months
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It's time... Also wish @the-real-ethereal a happy birthday!
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mentalbarf · 1 month
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BLINDED BY THE MEME leveraged up like a douche, missing another runnner on dex screen[er] Mental Barf 2024
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thesirencult · 4 months
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Every good investor must be a good entrepreneur and every good entrepreneur must be a good investor.
When you are investing or trading stocks/crypto/commodities etc. you have to think like a business person. You are essentially running a business. You have your capital, as small or as big as it is and you're a seller. You have to have the operational part down and nailed. Keeping records of your trades and seeing the whole picture, both peripheral and focused vision.
When you own a business you have to think like an investor and see your business as an investment. Do not attach yourself emotionally to the business. Do not run the business like a DIY home project but as an investment you want to see flourishing.
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"And back in the spring of 1720, Sir Isaac Newton owned shares in the South Sea Company, the hottest stock in England. Sensing that the market was getting out of hand, the great physicist muttered that he 'could calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of the people.' Newton dumped his South Sea shares, pocketing a 100% profit totaling £7,000. But just months later, swept up in the wild enthusiasm of the market, Newton jumped back in at a much higher price—and lost £20,000 (or more than $3 million in today’s money). For the rest of his life, he forbade anyone to speak the words 'South Sea' in his presence.
Sir Isaac Newton was one of the most intelligent people who ever lived, as most of us would define intelligence. But, in Graham’s terms, Newton was far from an intelligent investor. By letting the roar of the crowd override his own judgment, the world’s greatest scientist acted like a fool."
— Benjamin Graham, The Intelligent Investor, 1949
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01deeplyjessica · 7 months
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A screenshot from a video 📊🍉 !!!
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scotianostra · 3 months
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John Boyd Dunlop, who patented the first practical pneumatic tyre, was born in Ayrshire on February 5th 1846.
Dunlop worked as a veterinary surgeon in Edinburgh for almost a decade before moving to Ireland.
It was whilst in Ireland he first noticed that horses had to pull very heavy loads, straining against solid leather collars. So he attempted to make an air cushion collar to ease their burden. While he was working on this idea, his young son, Johnnie, complained to him about the bumpy cobblestones of the Belfast streets which made it very uncomfortable for him to ride his tricycle. All the tyres on all tricycles and bicycles were made of solid rubber at that time. John Boyd Dunlop decided to do something about it.
He consulted his doctor, Sir John Fagan, who told him how he had been able to make his very sick patients comfortable by having them lie on air cushions in hospital. Dunlop wondered whether his son Johnnie would be more comfortable on his tricycle if he could make air cushion tyres for it instead of the solid ones.
So Dunlop had come up with an idea to smooth out the youngster’s ride. He made a set of tires for the tricycle. He took two strips of rubber, and glued the edges together to make a tube. He wrapped the tube around the tricycle wheel, and wrapped the tube in linen tape to give the tire a tread. Then he did something which was unusual for the time. He filled the rubber tube with air using a pump made for filling footballs.
He wasn’t the first to do this. Another Scottish inventor named Robert Thompson had invented an inflatable tire back in 1845, but no one paid much attention to it. So it was left to Dunlop to reinvent the pneumatic tire forty-three years later.
It soon became very popular because it was discovered that as well as being more comfortable, a cyclist could travel faster and with less effort using pneumatic tyres. Dunlop patented his design in 1888. In 1889 the Pneumatic Tyre Company was set up and after more development the tyre was made suitable for all sorts of vehicles, especially cars. Within ten years of patenting the device, it had almost entirely replaced solid tires and had been implemented for use in the new automobiles by Andre and Edouard Michelin.
John established what would become the Dunlop Rubber Company but had to fight and win a legal battle with Thomson. John Dunlop did not benefit much financially from his invention - he sold the patent and company name early on. Despite Thomson’s earlier work, Dunlop is credited with the invention of the modern rubber tyre.
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Custom typography design
Typography plays a vital role not just in branding but also in design communication, providing consistency across different platforms; making it readable and memorable.
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ccgvinc · 2 months
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