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#21
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On Feb 20, 6:31*pm, Peter Clark
wrote: On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 16:16:30 -0800 (PST), "Robert M. Gary" wrote: Interesting that Southwest also doesn't have a defined benefit retirement plan, and instead has a 401K like the rest of us. I'm sure that helps. Wasn't a good part of it having real cheap fuel by long term options which have also now expired? I'd say that a good part of it was having management smart enough to take advantage of real cheap long term fuel options. The options may have expired, but the minds that charted that course are still there and they'll find something new to do. K l e i n |
#22
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On Feb 20, 7:42*pm, Dan wrote:
On Feb 20, 5:16*pm, "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Feb 20, 4:02*pm, Dan wrote: On Feb 20, 4:40*pm, Marty Shapiro wrote: Dan wrote in news:8e803d10-c44e-44da-bf45- : On Feb 20, 5:26*am, Denny wrote: Three years ago my mechanic/fbo put a ton of money into an Aztec, hired a pilot, hired a firm to create the books, had the FAA in on 3 different trips inspecting the plane, the office, the books, taking the pilot for a check ride, yadda, yadda... Then once approved to operate 135 he began bidding for jobs... He found that the competition was playing hardball, even running a Learjet on jobs for less than he was willing to do with the Aztec, they often bid jobs for barely more than their fuel costs apparently losing money to establish rapport with the shipper... The competitors took jobs where they would be deadheading back after the run and still underbid him, plus they beat him to the punch by taking the run a half day sooner because he was still trying to find cargo for both directions... *In the end he went belly up... If you are going to succeed you will do most of the flying yourself, you will need to be an A&P to hold your maintenance costs down, you will be ready to live out of the airplane yes, sleep in it for a week at a time as you hopscotch across the country taking cargo from a to b, then deadheading to c for a run to d, and so on, you will likely have to get by with only insurance for for PL & PD and take the chance you won't destroy the plane which means your family will have to front the money for the plane instead of a bank loan ... Other than that, it should be a piece of cake! denny Wow! That sounds like quite a nightmare. *Apparently aviation and successful entrepreneurialism do NOT go hand in hand. You paint a picture so bleak (and it might well be true) that it makes me wonder why anyone goes into aviation. I have a good paying job now, but I'd like to do something more fun when I get to a point in my life I can work and not be concerned with making top dollar (i.e. 10-20 years out). *I'm trying to plan out how I might prepare for doing something in aviation. Currently, when thinking about what I'd like to do when I "retire" I think I'd like to fly a lot. *However, it is expensive so it would be better to get paid to do it rather than spend big money on a hobby.. I'm not sure the CFI route is for me. *I prefer cross country flights with a definate destination. *--Dan I read several years ago that the combined record of all airlines since day one of commercial aviation shows a net loss. *As they say the only way to become a millionaire in aviation is to start with a few billion. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Somehow Southwest and Netjets are doing pretty good though, so with good management it should be possible to make money. Not that I claim to have the magic bullet of course. Interesting that Southwest also doesn't have a defined benefit retirement plan, and instead has a 401K like the rest of us. I'm sure that helps. -Robert- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Virtually no jobs in the corporate world these days have a pension. *I don't feel sorry for the Southwest pilots. *--Dan- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Pension? Don't give me no steeeking pension, give me stock options! |
#23
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On Feb 20, 8:13*pm, Larry Dighera wrote:
On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 18:40:15 -0800 (PST), Dan wrote in : The long term average for real estate appreciation is 5%, after accounting for inflation. To do as well in the stock market it would have to yield 25% appreciation, unless you're buying on margin..... We're getting off-topic here, but this is a interesting one... I see your point, however this is based on the assumption that market rent can pay for _all_ of the following. 1. Payments on an 80% LTV mortgage. 2. Property Taxes 3. Insurance (including liability risk) 4. Repairs, maintenance, and upkeep 5. Homeowners association bills (if applicable) 6. Property managment company (or you could handle the 3am calls yourself) 7. Also pay for the carry time required when between renters 8. Real-estate commissions when it comes time to sell. Can market rent pay for all of this? I doubt it, but honestly I have not done extensive research. Is anyone doing this who cares to share with the group? Granted, #6 could be done by the owner... --Dan |
#24
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On Feb 21, 12:01*am, Dan wrote:
On Feb 20, 8:13*pm, Larry Dighera wrote: On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 18:40:15 -0800 (PST), Dan wrote in : The long term average for real estate appreciation is 5%, after accounting for inflation. To do as well in the stock market it would have to yield 25% appreciation, unless you're buying on margin..... We're getting off-topic here, but this is a interesting one... I see your point, however this is based on the assumption that market rent can pay for _all_ of the following. 1. Payments on an 80% LTV mortgage. 2. Property Taxes 3. Insurance (including liability risk) 4. Repairs, maintenance, and upkeep 5. Homeowners association bills (if applicable) 6. Property managment company (or you could handle the 3am calls yourself) 7. Also pay for the carry time required when between renters 8. Real-estate commissions when it comes time to sell. Can market rent pay for all of this? *I doubt it, but honestly I have not done extensive research. *Is anyone doing this who cares to share with the group? Granted, #6 could be done by the owner... *--Dan I have a rental unit that I purchased at the height of the RE boom. Bought it 100% financed with a 10 year interest only loan. Now the market has tanked. I owe much more than the property is worth. The payment exceeds the rent that I can collect. The last renter skipped out on the last 2 months' rent, took our couch and a vacuum cleaner. This after she let her kids overflow the tub and flooded the kitchen's ceiling. We patched and painted the ceiling ourselves, because the handyman wanted much more than a fair price. This renter also killed our washing machine by washing her kids $300/pair sneekers and a way too big comforter and arearug in it. We ended up having to buy a new set washer and dryer because we wanted someting that matched and also knew that the dryer is pretty old. The new tenants are good people, but the rent just wont cover the mortgage payment, so we have negative cashflow every month and negative equity to boot. Since the new tenant moved in, we had to install a new hot water heater because the hot shower only lasted 5 minutes. The plumber said it was calsium buildup. Oh yea, we also had replace the shower plumbing because the mixing valve stopped mixing. Other than that, RE is an excellent investment. Wil |
#25
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On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 21:27:47 -0800 (PST), William Hung
wrote in : I purchased at the height of the RE boom. Bought it 100% financed with a 10 year interest only loan. That wasn't too smart. |
#26
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![]() "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 21:27:47 -0800 (PST), William Hung wrote in : I purchased at the height of the RE boom. Bought it 100% financed with a 10 year interest only loan. That wasn't too smart. Wound, meet salt. Yeesh. - c |
#27
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Peter Clark wrote:
Wasn't a good part of it having real cheap fuel by long term options which have also now expired? That has helped them make good profits in the last few years, but Southwest's unparalleled success over the last 30 yrs. has been the result of exceptional management. Unlike most other airlines, they identified a market niche (cheap, short haul flights), formulated a plan to serve that niche at a profit and stuck to the plan. They did not try to grow themselves into a mega-airline, which has been the downfall of many start up airlines that had some early successes. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200802/1 |
#28
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On Thu, 21 Feb 2008 08:36:48 -0800, "gatt"
wrote in : "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 21:27:47 -0800 (PST), William Hung wrote in : I purchased at the height of the RE boom. Bought it 100% financed with a 10 year interest only loan. That wasn't too smart. Wound, meet salt. Yeesh. Yah, but I took Mr. Hung's comment to be a mild refutation of the premise. Obviously I wasn't advocating buying at the top of the market for no money down with a 10 year note, so ... |
#29
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![]() "Larry Dighera" wrote in message ... On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 18:40:15 -0800 (PST), Dan wrote in : The long term average for real estate appreciation is 5%, after accounting for inflation. To do as well in the stock market it would have to yield 25% 90% of all Millionares did it in real estate. |
#30
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I wanted to do this also. I registered www.jointhemilehighclub.com I had an
idea of going to carnivals putting up a booth and taking couples up getting a mile above ground and letting them join the club. Give them some shirts collect $500.00 and call it a day. That sounds like a fun job. |
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