| Re: Reserve Studies | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
|
From: Brian Bartholomew (bb |
|
| Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2006 11:43:52 -0700 (PDT) | |
> It's reasonable to expect an investment can earn 4% a year, each year
> for 20 years. I'm really rusty, but isn't the long-term stock average
> something like 12%, not counting inflation? Which makes the real rate
> about 7-8%? What happens to the reserve if inflation goes over 7% to
> create the appearance of paying out social security for baby boomers?
| Our current consultant is using 6% at the moment
Do you mean your plan is set up for investments that earn a net 6%
after monetary inflation and taxes?
-----
> Think of this fund as preserving the real estate in the condition it
> was when it was purchased.
I certainly like the goal of keeping the real estate in a roughly
constant good condition, but I'm wondering if there are other ways to
implement that goal that don't involve saving a pile of near-cash.
Brian
- Re: Reserve Studies, (continued)
-
Re: Reserve Studies Brian Bartholomew, August 5 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Robert Heinich, August 6 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Brian Bartholomew, August 6 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Sharon Villines, August 7 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Brian Bartholomew, August 7 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Sharon Villines, August 8 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Sharon Villines, August 8 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Jim Snyder-Grant, August 8 2006
- Re: Reserve Studies Rob Sandelin, August 8 2006
-
Re: Reserve Studies Brian Bartholomew, August 5 2006
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