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Waste Time

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We have 1 summarized appearance for Waste Time so far. Browse all podcasts to discover more episodes.

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→ WHAT IT COVERS The episode examines investment scams targeting retail investors through IPOs and real estate platforms, highlighting how relaxed SEC regulations enabled fraudulent emerging growth companies and platforms like Yieldstreet to cause massive investor losses. → KEY INSIGHTS - **IPO Fraud Pattern:** Since September, the SEC suspended trading in 12 emerging growth companies, more than the previous four years combined. All 12 were Asia-based penny stocks on Nasdaq that manipulated prices to inflate volume and deceive investors seeking quick returns. - **Real Estate Platform Deception:** Yieldstreet advertised 20% annual returns on projects including a Nashville luxury apartment building overseen by former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann's family office. Investors like Justin Klitsch lost $400,000 when projects ran out of money, consumed by fees with no liquidity. - **Diversification Over Speculation:** Owning five individual stocks creates significantly higher volatility than owning five funds containing 150 to 1,000 companies each. Investors seeking wealth should prioritize broad market exposure over concentrated bets that rely on luck rather than systematic returns over time. - **Investment Priority Framework:** Asset allocation comes first by eliminating investments mismatched to time horizons, like cash in retirement accounts. Asset selection follows by choosing between US and international companies, large and small caps. Tax strategy ranks third, focusing on Roth placement for growth assets and dividend-paying investments in taxable accounts. - **Property Tax Recalculation Risk:** When purchasing homes in states with capped property tax increases like Michigan's 3% annual limit, buyers face significant tax jumps at sale. A seller paying $2,800 annually could result in the new buyer owing $4,600 because the taxable value uncaps and resets to current market value. → NOTABLE MOMENT One investor bought so many shares of a penny stock with tens of thousands of dollars that he became a majority owner of the company, requiring public disclosure forms before selling and discovering he was essentially buying his own float as the sole purchaser. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Navy Federal Credit Union", "url": null}, {"name": "Stacking Benjamins Vault", "url": "stackingbenjamins.com/vault"}] 🏷️ IPO Fraud, Real Estate Investing, Asset Allocation, Property Taxes, Investment Scams

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