Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › 12%+ CD Rates
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May 24, 2009 at 8:15 AM #405583May 24, 2009 at 11:26 AM #405094sunny88Participant
It’s too good to be true…
May 24, 2009 at 11:26 AM #405790sunny88ParticipantIt’s too good to be true…
May 24, 2009 at 11:26 AM #405642sunny88ParticipantIt’s too good to be true…
May 24, 2009 at 11:26 AM #405580sunny88ParticipantIt’s too good to be true…
May 24, 2009 at 11:26 AM #405341sunny88ParticipantIt’s too good to be true…
May 25, 2009 at 11:18 AM #405571patientrenterParticipant[quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.
May 25, 2009 at 11:18 AM #406019patientrenterParticipant[quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.
May 25, 2009 at 11:18 AM #405324patientrenterParticipant[quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.
May 25, 2009 at 11:18 AM #405811patientrenterParticipant[quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.
May 25, 2009 at 11:18 AM #405872patientrenterParticipant[quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.
May 25, 2009 at 2:27 PM #405436daveljParticipant[quote=patientrenter][quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.[/quote]
The trick here is use of the Certificate of Deposit moniker for the security because people will automatically view it as an alternative to a US CD. While it is technically a CD, it’s really just a short-term investment in the junkiest of foreign junk bonds. Sure, you might actually get paid back – I don’t think this company is a scam or pyramid scheme in the traditional sense. But the borrowers they are funding are extremely high risk and there’s probably a very small margin of error in the portfolio. The important thing is not to think of this as a CD, but rather an equity-like debt instrument in a developing country, with a return that may or may not reflect its true risk. Personally, I wouldn’t touch this thing with a ten foot pole.
May 25, 2009 at 2:27 PM #406131daveljParticipant[quote=patientrenter][quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.[/quote]
The trick here is use of the Certificate of Deposit moniker for the security because people will automatically view it as an alternative to a US CD. While it is technically a CD, it’s really just a short-term investment in the junkiest of foreign junk bonds. Sure, you might actually get paid back – I don’t think this company is a scam or pyramid scheme in the traditional sense. But the borrowers they are funding are extremely high risk and there’s probably a very small margin of error in the portfolio. The important thing is not to think of this as a CD, but rather an equity-like debt instrument in a developing country, with a return that may or may not reflect its true risk. Personally, I wouldn’t touch this thing with a ten foot pole.
May 25, 2009 at 2:27 PM #405984daveljParticipant[quote=patientrenter][quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.[/quote]
The trick here is use of the Certificate of Deposit moniker for the security because people will automatically view it as an alternative to a US CD. While it is technically a CD, it’s really just a short-term investment in the junkiest of foreign junk bonds. Sure, you might actually get paid back – I don’t think this company is a scam or pyramid scheme in the traditional sense. But the borrowers they are funding are extremely high risk and there’s probably a very small margin of error in the portfolio. The important thing is not to think of this as a CD, but rather an equity-like debt instrument in a developing country, with a return that may or may not reflect its true risk. Personally, I wouldn’t touch this thing with a ten foot pole.
May 25, 2009 at 2:27 PM #405923daveljParticipant[quote=patientrenter][quote=NeetaT] There is nothing wrong with this investment. It is a user friendly form of hard-money lending. They lend at 15%-20% to people who have collateral worth 125% of the loan and pay the investor 12%. I did this for one year with a firm located in the US. It was scary at first, but it turned out well. Maybe I was playing roulette and didn’t know it.
[/quote]NeetaT, you scare me. You are risk-averse, but do things like this. It seems you are only comfortable taking high levels of risk when:
1. The promised rewards are high – high enough that common sense tells us there has to be high risk
2. The actual risks are concealed from you
I sure hope you don’t end up losing most of your money one day.[/quote]
The trick here is use of the Certificate of Deposit moniker for the security because people will automatically view it as an alternative to a US CD. While it is technically a CD, it’s really just a short-term investment in the junkiest of foreign junk bonds. Sure, you might actually get paid back – I don’t think this company is a scam or pyramid scheme in the traditional sense. But the borrowers they are funding are extremely high risk and there’s probably a very small margin of error in the portfolio. The important thing is not to think of this as a CD, but rather an equity-like debt instrument in a developing country, with a return that may or may not reflect its true risk. Personally, I wouldn’t touch this thing with a ten foot pole.
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