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Thread: Wiped Out

  1. #1
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    Default Wiped Out

    We had some friends over for lunch today while passing through.

    Mid 40s, retired, from Boston. Last year at this time they had $2 million in the market and several investment properties worth about $3M a couple years ago.

    They've lost the properties, are barely hanging on to their heavily mortgaged home and the $2M is now at about $300K.

    From comfortable, to the spectre of dog food.
    Two lifetimes of hard work down the drain.

    They both look like hell.
    I don't think they will live much longer.
    Death will be a blessing.


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    I have been there, but then I found "The Book", I saw the light, and discovered a life worth living. Your friend's might enjoy, "Burning Daylight", by Jack London. There is more to life than money.

  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by BraggSurvivor View Post
    They both look like hell.
    I don't think they will live much longer.
    Death will be a blessing.
    I highly doubt that they wont live much longer and they seam pretty snobbish considering over 1 billion people live on less than 1 dollar a day...

  4. #4
    Administrator Rick's Avatar
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    And if my friends start thinking I would be better off dead I think I'll find new friends.
    Tracks Across the High Plains...Death on the Bombay Line...A Touch of Death and Mayhem...Dead Rock...The Griswald Mine Boys...All On Amazon Books.

  5. #5

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    They gambled (investing in homes, stocks, etc is a form of gambling since, of course, nothing is certain) and they lost.

    However, they are likely to be reasonably intelligent and have resources (other than money perhaps) that are very valuable and can if they choose rebuild what is important to them.

    I suggest they choose to cause money not to be their main criteria for happiness. That is their choice, of course, but relying on accounting numbers for happiness is not a long lasting road to life fulfillment IMHO.
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    Senior Member bulrush's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hopeak View Post
    I have been there, but then I found "The Book", I saw the light, and discovered a life worth living. Your friend's might enjoy, "Burning Daylight", by Jack London. There is more to life than money.
    I agree. But money is convenient for buying luxuries like food and shelter.

    When money is your god, you will never find happiness.
    Last edited by bulrush; 10-22-2008 at 08:46 AM.

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    Senior Member bulrush's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ledzeppie View Post
    I highly doubt that they wont live much longer and they seam pretty snobbish considering over 1 billion people live on less than 1 dollar a day...
    Over 1 billion SURVIVE on $1 per day. They certainly do not live in any sense of the word.

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    sheesh....

    300K? - If I were to cash that in, I could live VERY well for the next decade. They might be mortgaged to the teeth, but let 'em sell, take the losses, take their lumps, and live within their means.

    no sympathy here.

    as "far as death being a blessing" - what a bunch of screwed up priorities.
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    Super Moderator crashdive123's Avatar
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    I tried to reply to this thread earlier, but my computer locked up.......must be a conspiracy. Anyway....Bragg - now I see where all of your doom and gloom comes from. You hang out with people that are such poor investors that they lose 94% of their financial holdings. You really need to hang with a smarter/less greedy crowd.
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  10. #10
    Senior Member bulrush's Avatar
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    The people Bragg mentioned above probably just did what their financial advisor (FA) told them to do. When you pay someone else for advice, that means you have an extra hour to vacation in the Bahamas. And it's all worth it.

    Their lack of attention to their investments only cost them several million dollars. But they did get that extra hour of beach time!

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    I don't feel sorry for them.

    I think it might be something we will all end up getting used to.

    The ironic part is that the ones that have never been through loss before are the ones that will be hit the hardest.

    If a man loses 3 mil and his life savings in the market, it is a hell of a lot harder to take that to the folks that have their Pacer wagon repoed.

    My friends are 300k better off than most and just maybe will have to un-retire and work for a living.

    It is my opinion that the concept of retirement is obsolete from now on. A 1950's household and career path simply doesnt exist in this day and age.

    We must work and earn money, then manage our assets, and that is what retirement can be. But counting on a check from profit sharing or a 401k is nuts.

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    Starving Artist
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    agreed - for too long, the US economy has prospered from the buying and selling of others while the actual production of "stuff" has been viewed as a liability rather than a commodity.
    That's why I'm ready to bag my day job (sales) and find a job where I actually make something.
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    Senior Member Ole WV Coot's Avatar
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    Champagne appetite on a beer budget won't float your boat. You only go around once and I enjoy it. I lost and still losing in the market but I do OK. Down too much to sell so I will ride it out. I retired at 52, have no debt nor expensive habits. Don't have to impress anyone either. Your friends best get into the real world where you learn to win, lose or draw and still live . I like wood heat, furnace & AC and keep a couple of generators. Wood is nice to back up to for a quick warm and have an average size house. If you want the BIG dog house & impress the Jones bunch guess it's gonna be a long, rough road and most funeral homes give a 20% discount for "walk-ins".
    Don't pick a fight with an old man. If he's too old
    to fight... he'll just kill you.

  14. #14
    missing in action trax's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by BraggSurvivor View Post
    Mid 40s, retired, .......
    and the $2M is now at about $300K. ....

    From comfortable, to the spectre of dog food.
    .I don't think they will live much longer.
    Death will be a blessing.
    Yo! Miss Drama Queen, spectre of dog food with 300K and they're only in their mid-40's? Give your head a shake. They're a long f***ing way from the spectre of anything Tell buddy to go pump gas somewhere and tell Mrs. Buddy to practice saying "welcome to Tim Horton's can I take your order?" and she's hired.
    some fella confronted me the other day and asked "What's your problem?" So I told him, "I don't have a problem I am a problem"

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    Quote Originally Posted by trax View Post
    Yo! Miss Drama Queen, spectre of dog food with 300K and they're only in their mid-40's? Give your head a shake. They're a long f***ing way from the spectre of anything Tell buddy to go pump gas somewhere and tell Mrs. Buddy to practice saying "welcome to Tim Horton's can I take your order?" and she's hired.
    Couldn't have said it any better than that.
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    Well, now they know how all the rest of the people feel who aren't filthy rich. The nice thing is when you're "poor" (financially speaking), you don't have money to lose and have the wherewithall to get by without it. They should consider themselves lucky to embark on a whole new learning experience.
    Actions speak louder than words

  17. #17

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    With the market down around 40%, it takes a rare talent to be down 85%. They were probably overleveraged on the real estate, like so many others.

  18. #18
    Neo-Numptie DOGMAN's Avatar
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    retired in their mid 40's? Wow...why? Vacationing to Alberta when they are losing their arses financially? Wow...why? Being retired in Boston (the second most expensive city to live in the USA) wow...why? Sounds like your friends are just plain ding dongs.

    Lastly, I'd say being in your 40's is hardly "a lifetime of hard work".
    The way of the canoe is the way of the wilderness and of a freedom almost forgotten- Sigurd Olson

    Give me winter, give me dogs... you can keep the rest- Knud Rasmussen

  19. #19
    Starving Artist
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    *ahem*

    300K in portfolio is not actual cash until sold.
    300K in investment stocks does not include debt - which they probably have a lot of in the form of property mortgages which may now be upside-down.

    In all likelihood, they ain't rolling in the money, and may be facing some real issues from being overextended.
    But the "retired at 40" part.... bet they're more than able to work...
    Dennis K.
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  20. #20
    missing in action trax's Avatar
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    We-he-helll, given the perspective of most of the responses here--- ya just might want to find a different case study for Social Economics 101 in wilderness survival there, pumpkin
    some fella confronted me the other day and asked "What's your problem?" So I told him, "I don't have a problem I am a problem"

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