Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Buying and Selling RE › Why can I not get a loan?
- This topic has 735 replies, 51 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 10 months ago by davelj.
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January 24, 2009 at 10:53 AM #335326January 24, 2009 at 11:20 AM #334815daveljParticipant
[quote=equalizer]davelj
the problem is mutual fund and pension managers always vote per bod wishes, it other peoples money they couldnt give a damn as long as they get their 1%+ fee every year. dont forget that prof jeremy siegel basically said to stay away from most tech stocks cause they dole out all profits to employee options diluting ind investor.[/quote]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
January 24, 2009 at 11:20 AM #335145daveljParticipant[quote=equalizer]davelj
the problem is mutual fund and pension managers always vote per bod wishes, it other peoples money they couldnt give a damn as long as they get their 1%+ fee every year. dont forget that prof jeremy siegel basically said to stay away from most tech stocks cause they dole out all profits to employee options diluting ind investor.[/quote]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
January 24, 2009 at 11:20 AM #335230daveljParticipant[quote=equalizer]davelj
the problem is mutual fund and pension managers always vote per bod wishes, it other peoples money they couldnt give a damn as long as they get their 1%+ fee every year. dont forget that prof jeremy siegel basically said to stay away from most tech stocks cause they dole out all profits to employee options diluting ind investor.[/quote]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
January 24, 2009 at 11:20 AM #335258daveljParticipant[quote=equalizer]davelj
the problem is mutual fund and pension managers always vote per bod wishes, it other peoples money they couldnt give a damn as long as they get their 1%+ fee every year. dont forget that prof jeremy siegel basically said to stay away from most tech stocks cause they dole out all profits to employee options diluting ind investor.[/quote]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
January 24, 2009 at 11:20 AM #335341daveljParticipant[quote=equalizer]davelj
the problem is mutual fund and pension managers always vote per bod wishes, it other peoples money they couldnt give a damn as long as they get their 1%+ fee every year. dont forget that prof jeremy siegel basically said to stay away from most tech stocks cause they dole out all profits to employee options diluting ind investor.[/quote]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
January 24, 2009 at 11:55 AM #334847TheBreezeParticipant[quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market.
January 24, 2009 at 11:55 AM #335175TheBreezeParticipant[quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market.
January 24, 2009 at 11:55 AM #335261TheBreezeParticipant[quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market.
January 24, 2009 at 11:55 AM #335289TheBreezeParticipant[quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market.
January 24, 2009 at 11:55 AM #335371TheBreezeParticipant[quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market.
January 24, 2009 at 12:10 PM #334852daveljParticipant[quote=TheBreeze][quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market. [/quote]
Then either park your money in a money market mutual fund or… don’t work for a company that only offers you such limited investment options. Again, this all gets back to choices. If you love the job and the 401K choices are imperfect, then you’ve got a choice to make, right? But it’s still a choice. Life is full of trade-offs.
January 24, 2009 at 12:10 PM #335180daveljParticipant[quote=TheBreeze][quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market. [/quote]
Then either park your money in a money market mutual fund or… don’t work for a company that only offers you such limited investment options. Again, this all gets back to choices. If you love the job and the 401K choices are imperfect, then you’ve got a choice to make, right? But it’s still a choice. Life is full of trade-offs.
January 24, 2009 at 12:10 PM #335266daveljParticipant[quote=TheBreeze][quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market. [/quote]
Then either park your money in a money market mutual fund or… don’t work for a company that only offers you such limited investment options. Again, this all gets back to choices. If you love the job and the 401K choices are imperfect, then you’ve got a choice to make, right? But it’s still a choice. Life is full of trade-offs.
January 24, 2009 at 12:10 PM #335293daveljParticipant[quote=TheBreeze][quote=davelj]
Then don’t invest in mutual funds or put your money in pooled pension funds where managers won’t vote in your best interests. No one forces anyone to invest in a company directly or indirectly. The bottom line: people are lazy and want to find someone to blame for the outcome of their laziness.
[/quote]Actually, if you want to parake in the tax benefits and matching funds that come with a typical 401(k), you usually have to choose some type of mutual fund if you want to invest in the stock market. [/quote]
Then either park your money in a money market mutual fund or… don’t work for a company that only offers you such limited investment options. Again, this all gets back to choices. If you love the job and the 401K choices are imperfect, then you’ve got a choice to make, right? But it’s still a choice. Life is full of trade-offs.
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