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Where else can I make an honest 5%?


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2017 Sep 22, 9:32pm   9,266 views  31 comments

by Bellingham Bill   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

Moved this month's IRA contribution into BAC-L when it was touching $1300

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/BAC-PL/

(it's a 7.25% yield preferred at $1000 issue price)

Converts into 20 shares of common if/when BAC goes over $65, hence the $1300 tether.

Seems like a no-brainer win/win here for me.

Case 1: BAC trades where it is, under $65: I get my $18 dividend per share every quarter, go me
Case 2: BAC goes over $65: I sell the position and look for something else
Case 3: BAC tanks like 2007-2008: All right, houses are cheap again!

#investing

Comments 1 - 31 of 31        Search these comments

1   Booger   2017 Sep 23, 6:33am  

Is this particular BAC preferred stock callable?

2   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 23, 7:59am  

No maturity; on or after 1/30/2013, if the price of the common stock exceeds 130% of the conversion price [$50 x 1.3 = $65] for 20 of any 30 consecutive trading days, the company may, at their option, force the preferred shares to be converted into common shares at the then prevailing conversion price.

http://www.quantumonline.com/search.cfm?tickersymbol=BAC-L&sopt=symbol

This might happen late next decade, if 1995-2007 is any pattern.

WFC also has WFC-L, which is the same deal.

I guess there are more futures than those three. Another alternative is the GOP discovers MMT, cuts taxes and pushes us into the fully automated luxury gay space communism future MMT would give us (along with $10 loaves of bread)

3   bob2356   2017 Sep 23, 10:26am  

Bellingham Bill says

Where else can I make an honest 5%?

Buy dirt. I'm getting 17-19% gross 10-11% net in the market I'm currently in. There are high profit markets out there if you really dig. Seems like some people are cadging on though. My current market just got hot for sales this summer after being dead for years. I may actually see some appreciation even though I invest for cash flow not any appreciation.

4   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 23, 12:56pm  

^ I said honest 5% :)

5   bob2356   2017 Sep 23, 2:38pm  

Bellingham Bill says

^ I said honest 5% :)

Playing the stock market casino with one of the great sucking squid banks that destroyed who knows how many peoples lives is more honest than putting up money out of my pocket to provide people with a place to live? I know all my tenants and fix anything that goes wrong immediately. How many people running BAC have you on their speed dial?

6   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 23, 6:46pm  

bob2356 says

than putting up money out of my pocket to provide people with a place to live?

unless you're building or rehabbing these places and selling them to people you're not actually doing that, you're just an unnecessary middleman taking a 11% cut of the money that somebody needs to pay to reside and work in that area.

you can find the economic parasite in the picture by removing them and seeing if the wealth creation -- the provision of new goods and services -- falls. MFH can operate as condos, so rental MFH is parasitism.

rental SFHs are incredibly more parasitic; in an ideal world moving in and out of SFHs would come with tons less friction. I mean, title insurance??? WTF!!! At any rate, that "place to live" would still exist if you didn't have the fee simple title to it.

As for BAC, yes they're squid. Nothing I like more than owning an issue they IPOd in 1/2008 paying more dividend yield than they paid to Uncle Warren and that they can't get rid of.

As my #3 option in my OP tried to state, I'm actively rooting for these shares to go to $0, as that future would have a high correlation with the housing market imploding again, something I'd like to have happen for the fourth time in my adult life when I'm finally actually positioned to take advantage of it.

7   bob2356   2017 Sep 23, 8:18pm  

Bellingham Bill says

unless you're building or rehabbing these places and selling them to people you're not actually doing that, you're just an unnecessary middleman taking a 11% cut of the money that somebody needs to pay to reside and work in that area.

Renters are adults who can make their own decisions without your patronizing. attitude. They are free to buy at any time. .By what sense of entitled arrogance do you get to decide who is an unnecessary middleman?

Bellingham Bill says

as that future would have a high correlation with the housing market imploding again, something I'd like to have happen for the fourth time in my adult life when I'm finally actually positioned to take advantage of it.

So without any parasitic rental units where would you have lived all those years until you were in a position to take advantage? A cardboard box? your car? You don't get to have it both ways.

8   Strategist   2017 Sep 23, 8:46pm  

bob2356 says

Bellingham Bill says


as that future would have a high correlation with the housing market imploding again, something I'd like to have happen for the fourth time in my adult life when I'm finally actually positioned to take advantage of it.


So without any parasitic rental units where would you have lived all those years until you were in a position to take advantage? A cardboard box? your car? You don't get to have it both ways.




Hey Bob, you actually got something right. Congratulations.
Virtually everyone rents at some point in their lives. Students rent apartments, those seeking temporary accommodations rent, those who simply don't want to own rent, the poor rent. Even a night at a hotel is a form of rent.
I had a tenant who was living in a home worth several million dollars. She wanted to rent a 2 bedroom townhouse from me because she was having problems with her husband. When they made up, I let her off the lease and rented to someone else.
Being able to rent, and being able to rent out your property is a necessity for society.
9   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 23, 9:27pm  

bob2356 says
So without any parasitic rental units where would you have lived all those years until you were in a position to take advantage? A cardboard box? your car? You don't get to have it both ways.


state-owned housing for when I was in college (I got kicked out after the first year since UCLA didn't build enough dorms to serve demand). 2nd & 3rd years I lived in a room in an owner-occupied SFH, that was fine as she was providing the housing service by reducing her living space to accommodate me for $90/week compensation.

as an adult on my own, more condos, less apartments. "Projects" like how they have in the eurosocialist places (and Japan in the postwar, and Singapore now).

My main place in Japan I lived in for 5 years was interesting; owner lived on the first floor, his son on the 2nd, and they had 3 renters in the 5 unit building. Lot area was about the size of the driveway of the place I'm in now.

Owner-occupied housing + rental units is perfectly fine by me as this is an increase in supply. It's the absentee buy-to-let landlording thing that is causing so much economic asymmetry and dare-I-say predatory parasitism.

This strange paradigm, of working-class people in a not particularly desirable economic area paying more than they should for rent, becomes a bit more understandable when you know who their landlord is—Invitation Homes, the property subsidiary of Blackstone Group, the world’s largest private equity firm, and of late the nation’s largest purchaser of single-family homes. Thanks to its bucketloads of cash, economies of scale, and creative accounting, it’s managed to price many individual buyers out of the housing market over the last few years, cashing in on the recovery in housing, even as it made money before and after the crash.


http://evonomics.com/when-wall-street-owns-main-street-rana-foroohar-makers-takers/

As for the sell side, I like the "land bank" idea where people who want to move can just sell their RE property to the community and they put it on the market, without the REIC and its 6% + monopolization of RE law and sales listings getting involved at all.

Next you'll ride me for calling all the RE agents parasites : )
10   Strategist   2017 Sep 23, 9:45pm  

Bellingham Bill says

b) collectively, people buying up real estate as "income properties" reduce the supply on the market and make buying more expensive for people.


Duh....buying up real estate as income property would increase the supply of rentals making it cheaper to rent.
11   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 23, 10:06pm  

Strategist says
would increase the supply of rentals making it cheaper to rent


the supply of housing isn't increasing and that's the core problem. Even Pure Land Georgism isnt' going to lower housing cost without more supply than demand.

back to your point, as long as vacancy is low all LLs are price takers, free to evict tenants for the next who can and will pay more for the leasehold tenancy on offer.
12   bob2356   2017 Sep 24, 6:10am  

Bellingham Bill says

the supply of housing isn't increasing and that's the core problem.


You aren't aware that houses/condos are being built every single day? How is it a finite supply? Other than markets like CA or NY that are land or zoning restricted the supply is just fine. There is a very finite supply of people willing to have a tenant in their house. Even less willing to have a family live in their house. Nor are there that many people willing to share their life with their landlord.

Go sell your georgian idiocy some where else. Pie in the sky academic bullshit that has no relevance of any kind in the real world. Show one example anywhere on earth of georgism working. Land banks are for abandoned and tax foreclosed houses Again, show one place in the world where land banking is being used as you describe;

Anyone who wants to can do the work themselves and sell their house fsbo. It's very easy to do. No one is paying realtors at gunpoint. Again these are adults making their own choices that you seem to find not up to your standards. You being someone who has never stepped up to the plate and put any skin in the game.

You dodged the question. Where would you have lived until you could have afforded to buy if someone hadn't bought a condo and rented it to you? It appears you are a very willing participant in the system you are so anxious to condemn.
13   Strategist   2017 Sep 24, 8:28am  

Bellingham Bill says
Strategist says
would increase the supply of rentals making it cheaper to rent


the supply of housing isn't increasing and that's the core problem. Even Pure Land Georgism isnt' going to lower housing cost without more supply than demand.

back to your point, as long as vacancy is low all LLs are price takers, free to evict tenants for the next who can and will pay more for the leasehold tenancy on offer.


I agree the supply isn't increasing, so why blame the landlords when they have nothing to do with increasing the supply of new construction.
As long as vacancies are low, it's the tenants who are price takers not the landlords. And yes, landlords are always free to evict tenants they don't want. It's their property after all. If you don't like that, buy your own home. No one is stopping you.
14   HEY YOU   2017 Sep 24, 8:38am  

Become a Bank,the fucking Republicans will bail you out.
They will let you borrow at near zero to zero % interest &
you can make loans to all the American dumbasses that don't
know any better than to pay more than the initial price for their purchases.
Charge whatever interest you choose.The borrowers don't know any better.

Get rich on the ignorant!
15   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 24, 9:16am  

Strategist says
so why blame the landlords when they have nothing to do with increasing the supply of new constructio


rent-seeking is rent-seeking

because by their actions they are actively harming their renters and the community as a whole by their parasitism.

Morality can always be judged by translating economic activity as if it were between friends & family.

Would you sit in an investment property renting it out to family, pocketing the 11+% net in good conscience? Or would you arrange some sort of financing to give them ownership?

Free-enterprise business practices only work when there's sufficient competition for new business to constrain profit margins; otherwise it just becomes rent-seeking, as housing so aptly demonstrates.
16   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 24, 9:29am  

bob2356 says
Where would you have lived until you could have afforded to buy if someone hadn't bought a condo and rented it to you?


That's just it, I want to change the broken system we have.

Actually I don't really give a shit any more, I just want to educate other people to pick up the fight for economic justice, if they want.

My position is that it should be possible for people to live on this planet without having to pay the toll-takers who have bought up so much of the real estate stock.

How we get there is open to debate. That we should get there shouldn't be, as it's plainly obvious rent-seeking in RE is indeed a main cause of poverty amid progress, that Georgist claptrap that rubs you the wrong way for some reason.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=fbgu
shows how food & housing have tracked wages since 1970, the more people make the more food and housing prices go up.

green and purple are clothing and cars, showing increased productivity and offshoring mfg has made them more and more affordable.

Housing is the $2.5T/yr elephant in the room, much of it a rent-tap from working poor to parasitical wealthy.

This is obvious, yes?
17   Strategist   2017 Sep 24, 10:11am  

Bellingham Bill says
Would you sit in an investment property renting it out to family, pocketing the 11+% net in good conscience? Or would you arrange some sort of financing to give them ownership?


OMG...LOL. Do you realize how silly your responses are? Not even a shred of common sense.
18   FortWayne   2017 Sep 24, 10:42am  

Bac has been my best investment by far
19   bob2356   2017 Sep 24, 2:15pm  

Bellingham Bill says
bob2356 says
Where would you have lived until you could have afforded to buy if someone hadn't bought a condo and rented it to you?


That's just it, I want to change the broken system we have.

Actually I don't really give a shit any more, I just want to educate other people to pick up the fight for economic justice, if they want.

My position is that it should be possible for people to live on this planet without having to pay the toll-takers who have bought up so much of the real estate stock.

How we get there is open to debate. That we should get there shouldn't be, as it's plainly obvious rent-seeking in RE is indeed a main cause of poverty amid progress, that Georgist claptrap that rubs you the wrong way for some reason.


Grow up and join the real world. I bought my first house from hud for 27k totally trashed 30 years ago. I worked every night and weekend for 4 years and spent every cent on fixing it up. The equity I built let me move on and continue to build wealth.

The main cause of poverty? Bullshit. My very blue collar tenants all have no problem affording cigarettes, beer, and lottery. They all have expensive cable, current model smart phones, and late model cars. They are never going to be home owners. I don't smoke, drink, or play the lottery. I don't have cable and use a $5.00 tracphone. My ride is a 96 suburban with 320k. I own the houses mortgage free after a hell of a lot of work, blood, and sweat for a lot of years. Damn right I would take a profit on it.

So instead of stepping up to the plate, making the sacrifices, and doing the work you whine we need to change the system. Boo Hoo cry me a river of tears. Instead you invest in the stock market to fund the corporations buying up houses and renting them out. Perfect. Move your IRA to self directed and buy some houses yourself. Then you can fix them up and arrange financing to give people home ownership. What's stopping you? Make it happen instead of whining. Ante up your money.

Change the system to what? Where are all the examples of your ideal system in the real world? Crickets chirping.

You dodged the question again. Where would you live if someone didn't buy a condo and rent it out to you? Crickets chirping.

Why don't you move to somewhere that has economic justice that you approve of. Let us know where that is.
20   Strategist   2017 Sep 24, 3:49pm  

bob2356 says
Change the system to what? Where are all the examples of your ideal system in the real world? Crickets chirping.

You dodged the question again. Where would you live if someone didn't buy a condo and rent it out to you? Crickets chirping.

Why don't you move to somewhere that has economic justice that you approve of. Let us know where that is.


I'm convinced he lives in mom's basement. Where else can he get free rent and laundry service? That's economic justice to him.
21   lostand confused   2017 Sep 24, 3:58pm  

Outside of the coastal areas and some major metropolis, land is plentiful, rents ae cheap and house prices are moderate.
22   joeyjojojunior   2017 Sep 24, 4:03pm  

lostand confused says
Outside of the coastal areas and some major metropolis, land is plentiful, rents ae cheap and house prices are moderate.


Unfortunately, good paying jobs and good schools are scarce in those areas.
23   Strategist   2017 Sep 24, 4:03pm  

bob2356 says
The main cause of poverty? Bullshit. My very blue collar tenants all have no problem affording cigarettes, beer, and lottery. They all have expensive cable, current model smart phones, and late model cars. They are never going to be home owners. I don't smoke, drink, or play the lottery. I don't have cable and use a $5.00 tracphone. My ride is a 96 suburban with 320k. I own the houses mortgage free after a hell of a lot of work, blood, and sweat for a lot of years. Damn right I would take a profit on it.

You are so evil, you capitalist peeg.

bob2356 says
So instead of stepping up to the plate, making the sacrifices, and doing the work you whine we need to change the system. Boo Hoo cry me a river of tears. Instead you invest in the stock market to fund the corporations buying up houses and renting them out. Perfect. Move your IRA to self directed and buy some houses yourself. Then you can fix them up and arrange financing to give people home ownership. What's stopping you? Make it happen instead of whining. Ante up your money.

He doesn't have any money. He is the financial advisor of his girlfriend who has a thousand dollars.
24   lostand confused   2017 Sep 24, 4:07pm  

joeyjojojunior says

Unfortunately, good paying jobs and good schools are scarce in those areas

Depends on the locale and your profession. if your skillset gets only certain level of jobs, no point living there sharing a 2br with 6 other folks.
25   bob2356   2017 Sep 24, 4:29pm  

Strategist says

You are so evil, you capitalist peeg.


Absolutely.

26   WatermelonUniversity   2017 Sep 24, 5:59pm  

Bellingham Bill says

b) collectively, people buying up real estate as "income properties" reduce the supply on the market and make buying more expensive for people.


but how will people (with no money to buy) rent if no one is a landlord? these renters obviously don't want to live in apartments, even willing to pay "middlemen"'s fees, otherwise they would have done that already.
27   anonymous   2017 Sep 24, 6:13pm  

Germany has broken this cycle by inducing the private sector to overbuild, and we can and should do the same.

----------------

Wouldn't that be MAGA?

It's as if these people don't understand the history of this country. A nation created by immigrants who came here for the Free land.
28   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 24, 6:28pm  

bob2356 says
You dodged the question again. Where would you live if someone didn't buy a condo and rent it out to you? Crickets chirping.


I tried to answer it above, and I'll try again via analogy.

I argue that our current system of land tenancy is profoundly unjust. Yet I rent, still saving to buy a place, next year most like. I am a hypocrite like Al Gore flying around the world talking about AGW? Doesn't matter, because the hypocrisy argument is a dodge, a deflection into the ad-hom fallacy.

I'd like to see enough quality housing available everywhere people want to live, along with the concomitant mass transit investments necessary to make that density actually livable.

Yet I still rent. Does that make my above desire for the future fallacious?

I think the current present is sub-optimal. I see how rich people picked up a lot of real estate in the last crash and are now renting it out at very nice profit, and I know these profits will continue to rise especially in CA and other states with nifty Prop 13 tax protections on LLs.

It's not just LLs, it's of course NIMBYism limiting housing. But private LLs are not necessary for the provision of sufficient housing for everyone. Singapore, Germany, and Japan showed that it's possible for government to throw over the Monopoly board and move who holds the whip in the tenancy relationship from leasor to lessee.

The sticks and bricks aren't what makes housing so expensive, MOSTLY what we pay for housing is simply what value we give to access to everything outside the lot lines; the LL is getting paid for providing things he is not actually producing.

He's actually really getting something for nothing.

Ok, time for the analogy. Let's cast the current situation as if the government has privatized O2, worse, driven all the O2 out of the atmosphere and now there's a neoliberal free market in O2 supplies from the annual supply allotment from the government.

You want O2, you've got to either buy your title to it from someone who owns one they aren't using, or of course you can rent one from someone if you can't afford that investment.

Population is going up of course so demand is increasing, putting price pressure on the fixed supply.

Here I am renting my O2 supply from someone, and arguing that this situation is total bullshit and how did we come to this anyway??

You come back with the bullying tactic of your argument is invalid, how would you be getting your oxygen if not from somebody who already owns it.

David Lloyd George, back when Parliament was |this close| to peacefully decapitating the landlordism in England, said it best:

"To trace a legal title to land one must trace it back to the man who stole it"

Investment in the sticks in bricks really isn't what RE is all about. Buying up the Monopoly board and enjoying the monopoly rents therein is the true game.

And that's why it's not an honest 5%.
29   Strategist   2017 Sep 24, 8:17pm  

Bellingham Bill says
I think the current present is sub-optimal. I see how rich people picked up a lot of real estate in the last crash and are now renting it out at very nice profit, and I know these profits will continue to rise especially in CA and other states with nifty Prop 13 tax protections on LLs.

It's not just LLs, it's of course NIMBYism limiting housing. But private LLs are not necessary for the provision of sufficient housing for everyone. Singapore, Germany, and Japan showed that it's possible for government to throw over the Monopoly board and move who holds the whip in the tenancy relationship from leasor to lessee.

The sticks and bricks aren't what makes housing so expensive, MOSTLY what we pay for housing is simply what value we give to access to everything outside the lot lines; the LL is getting paid for providing things he is not actually producing.

He's actually really getting something for nothing.


So you are a commie. All you had to do was tell us that, and we would understand.
30   Bellingham Bill   2017 Sep 24, 9:06pm  

Strategist says
So you are a commie. All you had to do was tell us that, and we would understand.


The red, red herring

"Royal libertarians" are fond of confusing the classical liberal concept of common land ownership, particularly as espoused by land value tax advocate Henry George, with socialism. Yet socialists have always been contemptuous of George and of the distinction between land monopoly and capital monopolies. However, Frank Chodorov and Albert J. Nock (the original editors of The Freeman) were both advocates of George's economic remedies as well as lovers of individual liberty.

The only reformer abroad in the world in my time who interested me in the least was Henry George, because his project did not contemplate prescription, but, on the contrary, would reduce it to almost zero. He was the only one of the lot who believed in freedom, or (as far as I could see) had any approximation to an intelligent idea of what freedom is, and of the economic prerequisites to attaining it....One is immensely tickled to see how things are coming out nowadays with reference to his doctrine, for George was in fact the best friend the capitalist ever had. He built up the most complete and most impregnable defense of the rights of capital that was ever constructed, and if the capitalists of his day had had sense enough to dig in behind it, their successors would not now be squirming under the merciless exactions which collectivism is laying on them, and which George would have no scruples whatever about describing as sheer highwaymanry.

--Albert J. Nock "Thoughts on Utopia"

http://geolib.com/essays/sullivan.dan/royallib.html
I, sir, am not a communist, and calling me that is a fallacious thinking in the form of the excluded middle

What capitalism isn't, actually, is profiting from getting something for nothing, taking money from people without providing any new goods or services in return for that consideration.

Sounds more like robbery to me.

Anyhoo, we can agree that Churchill was never a communist, yet he said all I'm saying:

http://www.cooperative-individualism.org/churchill-winston_mother-of-all-monopolies-1909.htm
31   bob2356   2017 Sep 25, 5:48am  

Bellingham Bill says
It's not just LLs, it's of course NIMBYism limiting housing. But private LLs are not necessary for the provision of sufficient housing for everyone. Singapore, Germany, and Japan showed that it's possible for government to throw over the Monopoly board and move who holds the whip in the tenancy relationship from leasor to lessee.


Singapore? Japan? Germany? They are rent subsidized and/or public housing. So what you want is everyone else to subsidize you ? Free ride, take it easy. Want to compare free market purchase prices between these places and the US?

Bellingham Bill says

What capitalism isn't, actually, is profiting from getting something for nothing, taking money from people without providing any new goods or services in return for that consideration.

Sounds more like robbery to me.


Getting something for nothing? That's why you are a renter. Capitalism is the investment of capital for a return. Providing people with a place to live they don't want to or can't afford to buy is a service. Just because you want everyone else to subsidize you doesn't make it not true.

Are you still working on a list of places where your theories about georgism and land banks are in action? When can we expect to see it? Reminds me of the story of the man who goes to the butcher and asks how much for a steak. the butcher says $10 the man says that it's only $6 down the street. the butcher says then buy it down the street. the man says they are out. the butcher says that when I run out it will be $6 also.

When will you be converting your IRA to self directed and buying some houses to put your altruistic beliefs into action? Actions speak louder than words.

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