Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
- Posts
- 13,774
- Reactions
- 10,531
Thanks for the advice GG so I need to find one with some old decrepid at the desk, no fish and an old outhouse out the back. Sounds like good financial advice. ...and educate yourself so you don't need a financial planner, and look after your own money. I'm taking this all on board, by this time next year I should be half way there I reckon.
Thanks for the advice GG so I need to find one with some old decrepid at the desk, no fish and an old outhouse out the back. Sounds like good financial advice. ...and educate yourself so you don't need a financial planner, and look after your own money. I'm taking this all on board, by this time next year I should be half way there I reckon.
Harleyquin,
I assume, for what you have written, that you don't have much money. Nothing shameful about that. However, if you can, just go to a bookstore, go to the personal fiance section and just browse. Buy if you like the book and you have $20-$30 in your pocket. Stay away from stuff you feel is too technical for you. Get some ideas. Go to your local Library and browse. Search the internet, if you come across investment books you, and only you, feel you are interested in, ask the library to get it in for you.
Whatever you decide, get a $10 calculator from your local supermarket and play with some finance numbers and estimates. For profits, halve the result because you're probably being too optimistic. For losses, double them just to be on the safe side.
Just keep on asking question after question until YOU are satisfied. Always ask yourself what is in in for them and how much am I left with. Generally the answer will be a lot and not much.
And keep on kicking those Storm advisers in the nuts. They thoroughly deserve it.
There was part of Carey Ramm's post a few pages where he quoted the CBA's letter to 60 Minutes which addressed this point.We posted at exactly the same time, so I missed your post.
So then, it looks like CGI is trying to pull the wool over everyone's eyes with their claim that clients authorised them to deal direct with Storm.
Sooner or later one or the other party is going to produce proof that they're being truthful and the other is a liar.
Hope you are not intending to hold your breath waiting for this to happen.I've made my thoughts on storm central very clear and there is mounting evidence that this man EC and close cohorts should be jailed for life
Hope you are not intending to hold your breath waiting for this to happen.
I will be very surprised if Manny or his minions do any jail time at all.
Thanks for the advice GG so I need to find one with some old decrepid at the desk, no fish and an old outhouse out the back. Sounds like good financial advice. ...and educate yourself so you don't need a financial planner, and look after your own money. I'm taking this all on board, by this time next year I should be half way there I reckon.
Real estate.....a bit of common sense and a few bob to get you started are all you need here. Residential real estate in growth areas will increase in value faster than the rate of inflation, and rentals will go up accordingly. Many people have built impressive property portfolios by putting deposits on houses in growth areas, borrowing the balance, and letting their tenants and the tax man meet most of the loan commitments. The amount of money that comes out of your pocket every month can be surprisingly small if you adopt this approach to property investment.
If you can fund the deposit on a house, banks will usually lend you the rest if you show you can meet the loan commitments. You can always utilise fixed rate loans if you're worried about interest rate rises.
The big growth areas in Queensland are the south east corner, Brisbane out to Toowoomba, Bundaberg, Hervey Bay, and various major centres along the central and northern coastline. Rocky, Mackay, Townsville, Cairns, have all experienced strong growth and will do so again, although they've currently slowed down to some extent.
The following link may give you some useful information.
http://www.hotspotting.com.au/
QUOTE]
Thanks for this post Bunyip, If you happen to have any other interesting sites for realestate please post them, as I am focusing some attention in this area now, as in the past, under storms advice, I did not.
Mate , there are very few asf'ers who haven't been taken by some bastard adviser at one time or another.
Welcome to the club.
And your plan is a good one.
Learn the search button. Its all in asf.
gg
Hi Ya Shibby!!!
i am most interested in your comment that your adviser had sold their portfolio up but was under instructions not to sell your portfolio.
In recent weeks i have become aware that during the may to september period some of the advisers sold their private portfolios. I am collecting information on which advisers and dates.
Shibby can u tell me (either in a post or as a private message) which adviser u had and what date they told u they had sold their portfolio.
If anyone else out there has information on advisers selling out can they contact me also. Shows how useful this forum really is.
Guys the reason storm didnt want to sell anyone out (why storm instructed advisers not to sell anyone out) was that they new if they liquidated the portfolios there would be no way they could get anyone back in the market and hence they would have no clients and no business (storm would have been back to square 1) - so they cross their fingers and hoped the market would bounce back before the margin loans were called in (they gambled for purely selfish reasons and lost with the clients being the big losers). Most stormers were sold out between 4400 and 4000. The market fell another 23% from this point. At 3100 the negative equity in the storm portfolios would have exceeded $300m.
Another point to remember is that the Maquarie margin lending book was of similar size to CGI - there was over $2billion in margin loans! I understand that once the Margin lending book reached a certain size, the interest rates on the Storm corporate loan facility (used for building purchases etc) became zero. Pure conflict of interest!!!
I also suggest you read the Alan McDonald submission (the Storm IT guy) as i think he is pretty much on the money in terms of what happened and how it went down.
"Six key issues emerge in fiasco's wake"
"Storm Financial lived up to its name again yesterday as co-founder and chief executive Emmanuel Cassimatis broke months of silence to give his side of the story about the collapse."
Read more in the Australian Financial Review Friday, 04 September 2009 in COMMENT by Duncan Hughes
"CBA supplied 'substantial, accurate information' "
"Commonwealth Bank of Australia executives have claimed the bank supplied Storm Financial with daily updates about its clients' debt positions as the sharemarket was crashing late last year and rejected claims from the adviser that the data was seriously flawed."
Read more by Marsha Jacobs in The Australian Financial Review of Sept 5 2009.
Mr Cohen said that when the bank raised the issue of market falls with Storm, Mr Cassimatis's wife, Julie, emailed asking CBA not to contact customers directly.
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