Magic Number For Pricing Online Courses

Apparently most online affliate programs $49.95. If you see an ad for ebooks or courses about affiliate marketing, email blasting, making money online, starting a business, adsense, adwords, spam marketeering, they all cost this same price. Some of them were originally listed for $97 but are now discounted to $49.95.

Who comes up with this number? Is there an institute of consumer psychology that comes up with a specific pricing at which point its really attractive? How come they all chose the same exact price?

Anyone know the answer to this? Maybe one of these courses will actually reveal this answer!

New Mortgages

Creative mortgages have been mushrooming over the past few years. I think they become popular whenever property values become too high and the affordability drops. After a crash in prices, the lenders tighten their lending standards and they disappear. [From what I heard about the last crash]

The Option ARM loans have been pretty popular among investors. You have an option to pay you monthly payment as a

  • Fully amortized 30 year loan
  • Fully amortized 15 year loan
  • Interest-only payment
  • Negatively amortized interest-only payment thats probably 1/4 or 1/2 of the Interest-only payment

I’m not a big fan of these loans or the negatively-amortized loans because the APR is usually 0.5% higher than the interest-only loans[IO loans] and you end up payment compound interest on the money you borrow. I’ve been getting IO loans where the interest rate is fixed for the first 5 years.

However a new loan that I may opt for is the fixed 30 year loan which is interest-only for the first 10. After that its amortized over the remaining 20 years. The interest rate if fixed over the life of the loan. I may end up gettting these loans since the interest rate is only 0.25-0.5% higher than the 5 year IO loans and it gives you the security that you’ll be able to afford the payments in the event you actually keep the property for a long period of time. I think a 40 year option is also available.

I would consider getting this on my personal residence over the regular 30 year amortized as it lets you pay less for the first 10 years.[whenever i buy my personal residence that is. I’m currently renting!]

What To Do If You Hate Your Job

The Wall Street Journal had an article about a person who quit her high paying job after 15 years and is starting a new career from scratch.

Other Bloggers have mentioned that pursuing a given occupation because it affords a better lifestyle is better than doing what you truly love.

Well if you dislike what you’re doing and you want to try your hand at something new, Vocation Vacations will set you up with a vacation at your new job. Unlike most jobs however, you pay for the experience just like a vacation. Here’s a good article about test driving your new job.

However if you can’t figure out what you want to do with your life, I recommend picking up Life’s a Bitch and Then You Change Careers : 9 Steps to Get Out of Your Funk and On to Your Future . Like the title suggests, for those of us who are dis-satisfied with our lives and occupations, it’ll give you some ideas on changing your career and putting you in touch with something more fulfilling.

The Object of My Desire


While blogging about saving money, making money and living frugally is all very fine, the whole idea is to get so damn rich you can buy any old crap you want. The object of my desire is the Ferrari Enzo. Only 350 were made and it costs around $700,000. While pretty ugly from certain angles, it looks like a space ship and packs a whopping 660 horses. Ferraris are expensive to maintain and require a transmission overhaul every 40,000 miles. So you have to be really really loaded in order to afford one. [Notice I said afford and not buy].

Something a little more affordable and probably just as much fun to drive is the new BMW M5. It packs 400 horses but at the touch of a button magically changes to 500! It won the highly covetted Internation Engine of the Year Award and costs a more affordable $85,000. Of course I won’t be buying one of these pretty soon [although my CPA might]. This should be more fun to drive than the Transporter’s 7 Series!

My next car is probably going to be the ultra cheap and fuel efficient Toyata Yaris which costs under $12,000 and gets upto 40 miles/gallon. However, if the wife will permit I may forgo this in order to get the new Dodge Charger. For $30k, you get a V8 hemi with 340 hp and 25 highway miles to the gallon! Now that should be fun to drive.

May be I’ll just have to make do with one of those bright red Ferrari Jackets for now!

Save money on energy costs

CNNmoney.com has an interesting article on how to reduce your energy costs by buying a windmill. Very interesting concept. It costs about $6000 and it’ll save you around $500/year. [probably even more in California]. You also might qualify government subsidies. Check out the company’s website for more info.

There’s also another article on saving money on energy by buying off-peak when its cheaper and storing it. Don’t know how effective this is but its also an interesting article.

I’m cheap so I’ll probably hang out at my friends places and use their elecriticity instead! 😉
Got any wacky ideas of saving electricity? Let me know.

How to become a Billionaire

Donald Trump wrote a book called “How to think like a billionaire’, which is by far the worst piece of crap ever written on Investing.  A far better book is The Art of the Deal which you can buy for under a buck! [Warning: None of the Donald’s books are on humility. They’re on creating a larger than life image and full of self-promotion and bragging. But then he’s not known for being modest.]

Anyway, I digress. The main focus of this post is this article, 7 ways to join the billion-dollar club. It essentially focused on businesses, but I realized with applies just as well to Real Estate Investors.

Here’s the gist of it:

1. Create and sustain a breakthrough value proposition.
Only buy value. Don’t go for those speculative deals and risky investments. Like buying in San Diego after everyone and their mother has gotten into investing there. Buy in places were the locals are still skeptical.

2. Exploit a high-growth market.
Find out which places are set to explode in terms of population and job growth.

3. Focus relentlessly on cash flow.
Hell yeah! Don’t buy property which doesn’t cashflow even after you put 20% down. That’s speculation. You’re not buying the value, but the hope that’ll it continue to appreciate and some other fool with take it off your hands.

4. Leverage big-brother alliances.
Find people like you and band together to get better pricing with builders and property managers. Even if you don’t always get better pricing, you usually get better service.

5. Pack your board with industry experts.
Always read up on the experts like WSJ.com and John Burns. Listen to the “gurus” but don’t follow them blindly. They always have something to gain so they’re advice is always biased.

6. Use marquee customers to build credibility.
Once you’ve done a few deals with partners, use them to promote your credibility. This is particularly useful when you want to raise money for a new project.[In my previous post I mentioned that buying foreclosures requires a lot of cash. This is where your credibility comes in handy].

7. Build an inside-outside leadership team.
You’ll need great people to handle the inside business[lawyers and CPAs] and the outside business[agents and property managers].

There you now know how to create a billion-dollar empire!

Check out my bookstore.

How To Stop Foreclosure in 2 Hours!

Went to a real estate meeting last night. The speaker was Ward Hannigan a local san diego investor who cleaned up the town during the last 2 RE recessions buying foreclosures. He thinks during the next downturn[which is going to hit in the next few years] he’s doing to make more money than he’s made totally during the last 24 in the foreclosure business.

He’s very much the contrarian investor. What is contrarian investing? It means you have the guts to go against the crowd [and popular sentiment] and do exactly the opposite. You sell when others are ecstatic and a you buy when others are fearful and have given up hope. Why does this work? Because people are usually wrong when they all put their heads together. A great book on the psychology of the common investor is Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds. It explains the feeding frenzies that have occured over the past few hundred years. [you get the weird feeling its describing the stock market craze and crash of 2000].

He says in a few years, when most people have given up on investing in Socal, it’ll be time to buy. You’ll need a lot of cash to pay for homes at auctions but you’ll need to buy them at 65-70% of the then FMV [Fair Market Value].

Here are some of his tips in no particular order.

  • Stick to entry-level housing in core urban areas. Stay away from remote areas.
  • Don’t buy condo’s, except in Downtown San Diego.
  • Don’t buy office Buildings
  • Buy on the 4th postponment of an auction[weeds out the less motivated investors]
  • Get several cashiers checks in various amounts.
  • Ask for the TSG when you win at an auction[Trustee’s Sale Guarantee].
  • If you doing pre-foreclosure buying, postpone the foreclosure by filing chapter 13

As an exercise he said those of you that were really interested should go down to the local court to find out how to file Chapter 13. Infact, as a motivational tool, he promised lunch to anyone who could prove that they went down to the office today. So during my lunch break I headed downtown to find out how to file chapter 13! After spending 15 minutes getting into the courthouse[had to go through the scanner and remove my belt and shoes], I find out there’s a seperate Bankrupcy court. After spending another 15 minutes wandering around, I finally found it. No, I did NOT stop to ask for directions to bankrupcy court! Funnily enough, it was absolutely empty! Didn’t think warranted its own building [which was quite pretty]. Maybe filing bankrupcy a seasonal thing 😉

The clerk asked me if I wanted the forms for emergency chapter 13 filing. I was amazed at her prescience. My next thought was “wow, do I look like such a loser?”, but then she asked if I was part of a class. Aha! Several other people had shown up before I did. Anyway I said no I put on a face like I was hurt she was making fun of me! I found it it takes about 10 mins to file, once you filled up the couple of pages and it costs $274. “Thats it?” I asked incredulously?

So for a few pages of paperwork and a few hundred bucks I could get my creditors off my back for a while [& ruin my credit for the next decade]! Awesome! Don’t you just love this country! Of course I’m being facetitious. Chapter 13 is just a reorganization of debt. You have to pay back a lot of it over the next 3-5 years.

Market Update

In my last post I mentioned that the Dow was up despite a bunch of negative news. As I expected it didn’t last and the Dow is down 200 point over 2 sessions. Historically May through September is a bad time for the markets. Someone did a study that if you invested only between October and April you’d make much more than the industry average in the long run.[sorry, I can’t recall the source].

Someone I know, Robert Campbell, author of Timing the Real Estate Market, said that if you invest on December 1st of every year and pull your money out on January 15th[45 days later], you would make a 7% return 80% of the time!

Anyway, I think the market is going to continue to do badly in the short term. I had previously mentioned RNE, IIF and IFN. Today they’re all down between 5-15%. I’m going to use this as a good opportunity to get in. [NOTE: DON’T BLINDLY FOLLOW MY ADVICE. DO YOUR OWN DUE DILIGENCE]

Back To The Old Drawing Board

While the new format of the blog worked fine on my Windows 2000 machine under Firefox 0.9, it didn’t work well under Internet Exploder nor under WinXP and a different version of Firefox. I did spend several hours messing with the stylesheet but I now must admit temporary defeat and revert back to the old format.

Besides, I’d rather be blogging!

Gold today jumped up a few more bucks to $704. Two people asked me if it was still a good time to buy. The answer is no. Wait for a consolidation at these levels before venturing in.

Bernanke raises interest rates for the 16th time in row. He’s not saying if he’ll raise them again, but he sure ain’t lowering them!

Oil is still hovering at $72/barrel.

The Dollar slides against the Euro to its lowest point in 12 months.

Despite all this bad news, the Dow still rose 3 points. Thats pretty unusual. Lets see if it holds up tomorrow.