Top 5 investments of All the time

Top 5 investments of All the time - For passive income.




1. Introduction: Confusion and Desire for Investment 

I don’t even know what day of the week it is anymore. What year is it? We are officially on level six of Jumanji. I can’t wait for this year to finally be over. But speaking of levels, when I was 19, I had one thing and one thing on my mind: how’d I get a girl, and I couldn’t. So I settled for the next best thing. I wanted to make as much money as I possibly could so that I could trap them. So, I started learning card tricks, as many contracts as I could, except the problem was that I could trick other people into thinking that I could maybe produce lots and lots of money, but I couldn’t trick the one thing that actually mattered: my wallet. So that still stayed empty. Now maybe you can relate, but when I was younger, I just wanted to know the answer to this one question: what’s the best thing that money can buy as far as an investment for passive income or just in general?


2. Investing Criteria: Money, Ease of Use, Safety, and Taxes


Relax, dude. You’re like 12. Just stop stressing, enjoy your life because everything’s gonna be all right. I was that annoying kid that would always ask, ‘What do you do for a living? How much money do you make?’ Nobody would ever answer me because that’s weird, but the people that did always said the exact same generic answer. I didn’t understand. ‘It depends, what’s your goal?’ What do you mean, it depends? We all have the same goal. It’s to make a lot of money and to be rich. Just show me the real-life equivalent of jumping from world one to four and four to eight, Super Mario style, and I will leave you alone. It seemed so black and white at the time when I didn’t understand anything about money. So, I wanted to make this video in case they invent a time machine so that I could go back and show myself this video, since that won’t happen, I wanted to answer this question in a way that my younger, more stubborn self would understand and wanted to hear it by sharing the top passive income investments of all time. Let’s begin.


3. Alternative Investments: Collectibles and Their Risks

 I mean, either. So let’s figure out what it means to be the best investment in the world. First, it needs to actually make money. The more money it makes, the higher the score. Second, it needs to be pretty easy for people to actually do. I don’t want to do another 100 consecutive jumps on Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars. I already did that. I got my super suit, and it was the most difficult thing I’ve ever done. I never want to do it again, so I don’t want my investments to be difficult. The easier it is for other people to do, the higher the score. Third, how strong or fragile are these blocks that I’m actually building with? How far can we push our investments before they break? The higher the score, the less risk we have to take. And the last criteria are taxes. The higher the score, the fewer taxes we have to pay from our passive income, which means we get to keep more for ourselves, which means a higher Jig score from 1 to10 

4. P2P Lending: Pros and Cons of Person-to-Person Lending


So here we go. This is a 1998 Happy Birthday Pikachu investment, and it is one of the rarest cards Pokemon has ever made. And if you had one of these when you were 12, you were considered cool. Now let me show you some of the quirks and features of this card. Sorry, I just wanted to try being Doug Demuro for a second. But the first investment is not Pokemon cards, it’s alternative investments, and it’s stuff that most people buy thinking that it’s a great investment, but the reality is it’s just stuff we buy and we convince ourselves into thinking that it’s actually a great investment when it isn’t. It’s just the coping mechanism. And these things include collectibles, things like cars, coins, watches, Yu-Gi-Oh cards, basically all the things you and I probably own and are the most proud of. But these investments don’t actually produce anything of value

 They just sit there looking pretty while you hope that the next guy who comes around pays more for them than you originally did. And for this reason, I’m going to give it a 3 out of 10. And I’m taking all the risk. But for the earnings criteria, I’m going to give this one a 2 out of 10 just because there’s so much randomness involved and there’s a degree of luck that’s way beyond my control. Plus, it doesn’t pay me any passive income at all. But to be fair, it is accessible to everybody, and anyone can do this all around the world, which is why I’ll give it a high score of 8 out of 10. Now, for safety, leaving your money here isn’t something that’s a great idea. It can be damaged, it can be stolen, and if you try to sell that rare and valuable thing, you might sell it for a profit today, but tomorrow, the mood will change, and there goes your money. So, I’m going to give it a 5 out of 10. And it’s difficult to value it based on intrinsic value, and when you do decide to go and sell it, there are no tax write-offs, and you’re going to get hit with a 28% capital gains rate, and that’s long term after you held on to it for more than a year. That is a 3 out of 10, bringing the grand total of 18 out of 40, putting it in last place, and I’m gonna give it a participation trophy.


5. Royalties: Earnings from Product Sales and Its Difficulty


The second one is called P2P lending, which was introduced to me about six years ago. It’s also called person-to-person lending. It’s where companies take our investor money and they lend it out to people and small businesses that were otherwise not approved from the traditional banking system for a loan. This means they’re usually higher risk, which means they have lower credit scores, which also means we get to charge them more money, and so we make more, and they get to borrow money they otherwise would have never had access to. The traditional rate of return for this is around four to seven percent, which is good. So I’ll give it a solid 5 out of 10 for both the money and the safety because you can essentially pick and choose which way you want to go. Just be careful because it is very easy to get started, 8 out of 10 on the difficulty, which means you can just do this online in like 10 minutes, but you might not get your money back because some people won’t be able to pay back their loans. Now as far as taxes go, for these investments, these are taxed at ordinary income tax rates, so I’ll give it a 5 out of 10. It’s not as good as capital gains, but it’s okay. So 5 out of 10 for a grand total of 23 out of 40.


Number three: royalties. This is when you get paid for having a little bit of nobility in your blood

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