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Tips for newbie investers and new investing sites
Hey, here's some tips:
1. Always start out by investing a little, then raise it, when you are sure that they secure.
2. Always look when the site started, because many people make new sites, and wait for people to invest and then they close the site and take all the money people invested.
3. Ask people on forums if someone invested on there and if they are secure.
I hope you can use the tips
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05-09-2012 09:13 AM
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Re: Tips for newbie investers and new investing sites
I would like to add one more tip to it. Never invest more than what you can afford to lose out. It is not a smart idea to invest your entire monthly savings into a scheme that looks very enticing (chances are good that the site might scam you), and end up losing your money entirely.
Being active on forums helps a lot, you get to know first hand experience about which sites are paying and which are not, and news spreads fast when a site stops paying, so that you don't make the mistake of investing in failing sites.
Nothing is true... Everything is permitted.
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Re: Tips for newbie investers and new investing sites

Originally Posted by
omkar1991
I would like to add one more tip to it. Never invest more than what you can afford to lose out. It is not a smart idea to invest your entire monthly savings into a scheme that looks very enticing (chances are good that the site might scam you), and end up losing your money entirely.
Being active on forums helps a lot, you get to know first hand experience about which sites are paying and which are not, and news spreads fast when a site stops paying, so that you don't make the mistake of investing in failing sites.
Yea, that's a good tip, I should've added it. I'm also gonna add a new tip after this post. One that also is important, and good so you wont loose much.
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As a real estate investor, you will most likely be purchasing ownership interests and then earning a return on that investment by issuing leasehold interests to tenants, who will in turn pay rent. It is also not uncommon for an investor to acquire a long-term leasehold interest in land, which then has a building constructed upon it. At the end of the land lease, the land and building become the property of the original land-owner.
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