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What would you do with $100 million?

Let's see...

I'd secure my retirement as well as my parents' retirement, buy the 2012 Volkswagen New Beetle, make sure my nieces' college is paid for, open my own cake shop, up my medical insurance so I have maternity coverage and then get pregnant and have my own kids.
 
Then take as much money as needed to cover my running costs and have a comfortable extra to spend by investing the money safely.

"Invest safely"? I've never heard of such a thing. I've always believed investments to be a bigger gamble than the lottery.

But, I'm interested in learning. Please explain. Exactly where can I invest money (on a fixed income) and NOT lose it? I really want to know.
 
There are plenty of "safe" investments out there, they just won't earn you very much. Nothing is 100% safe; no matter what you do with it there is always a chance you could lose it, but the risk is very low with the safer investments out there.
 
buy up a block in Albuquerque, level the homes, build my fortress *think Flakturm*
go from the Earth *dramatic pose* to the moon
Breakfast cereal: Sephy-o's
Buy chicken in a biskit, add green food dye, repackage as soylent green (It's People, Baby!)
Clothing line: H.F. Mudd's
Book: To Serve Man (101 delicious recipies)
 
Then take as much money as needed to cover my running costs and have a comfortable extra to spend by investing the money safely.

"Invest safely"? I've never heard of such a thing. I've always believed investments to be a bigger gamble than the lottery.

But, I'm interested in learning. Please explain. Exactly where can I invest money (on a fixed income) and NOT lose it? I really want to know.

Seriously?

There are any number of capital-protected income-generating products on the market, protected by a number of guarantees. Returns on these products are generally lower than when capital is at risk, but that's the trade-off you have.

Of course, nothing is 100% safe (companies can go bust, so can governments, there may be a global thermonuclear war tomorrow, but keeping it under the mattress isn't 100% safe either). For practical purposes, there are a large number of capital-protected, income-generating investments out there. There are also large number of investments that offer a lesser (but still large) degree of capital protection but the prospect of somewhat higher returns in exchange for the risk. And at the far end of the spectrum, there are lots of ways to risk your capital much more in exchange for a greater upside. Think of it as a spectrum; from what it sounds like, you want to focus on the extreme safe end of the spectrum, and limit your research to that.

I'm not going to give specific financial advice beyond that, but in a general sense, I'd certainly advise you to research.

Back on the thread's topic, $100M is far more than you'd want to invest safely in the above way. You'd want a diversified portfolio with some degree of protection, but you'd also have enough to permit some far more aggressive investments. So as for what I'd personally do with $100M, it's enough to indulge lots of immediate luxuries (the usual houses, cars, clothes, etc, probably about $10-15M total on all those things), and then to set up a permanently comfortable income-stream/lifestyle with the bulk of remainder. Sadly, it's not quite enough to really party in a big way (private jets, owning tropical islands, secret underground lairs, armies of fembots, etc, etc). You need to be a billionaire to really go to town these days. So I think after arranging the basics of a permanently comfortable life with about $80M, I'd use $20M to finance start-up/venture-capital projects. Not only would it be fun trying to figure out which concepts have potential, it would also hold out potential for really growing the total pot to something with global impact.
 
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i'd buy a bar, run it as a kick as nightclub in the center of london, and live a hedonistic lifestyle that would make hugh heffner and peter stringfellow look like saints lmao...

ok, seriously... i'd buy a bar and run it as a kick ass nightclub... i'd also privately fund nanotech research and a few other pet projects... i'd also be one of the front runner protesters, lead speakers for the 'We Consent' protest marches in London, not that i don't already do that lol

M
 
Zatanna, Black Canary... the whole fishnet division of the Justice League lol

M
 
Then take as much money as needed to cover my running costs and have a comfortable extra to spend by investing the money safely.

"Invest safely"? I've never heard of such a thing. I've always believed investments to be a bigger gamble than the lottery.

But, I'm interested in learning. Please explain. Exactly where can I invest money (on a fixed income) and NOT lose it? I really want to know.

Seriously?

There are any number of capital-protected income-generating products on the market, protected by a number of guarantees. Returns on these products are generally lower than when capital is at risk, but that's the trade-off you have.

Of course, nothing is 100% safe (companies can go bust, so can governments, there may be a global thermonuclear war tomorrow, but keeping it under the mattress isn't 100% safe either). For practical purposes, there are a large number of capital-protected, income-generating investments out there. There are also large number of investments that offer a lesser (but still large) degree of capital protection but the prospect of somewhat higher returns in exchange for the risk. And at the far end of the spectrum, there are lots of ways to risk your capital much more in exchange for a greater upside. Think of it as a spectrum; from what it sounds like, you want to focus on the extreme safe end of the spectrum, and limit your research to that.

I'm not going to give specific financial advice beyond that, but in a general sense, I'd certainly advise you to research.

Back on the thread's topic, $100M is far more than you'd want to invest safely in the above way. You'd want a diversified portfolio with some degree of protection, but you'd also have enough to permit some far more aggressive investments. So as for what I'd personally do with $100M, it's enough to indulge lots of immediate luxuries (the usual houses, cars, clothes, etc, probably about $10-15M total on all those things), and then to set up a permanently comfortable income-stream/lifestyle with the bulk of remainder. Sadly, it's not quite enough to really party in a big way (private jets, owning tropical islands, secret underground lairs, armies of fembots, etc, etc). You need to be a billionaire to really go to town these days. So I think after arranging the basics of a permanently comfortable life with about $80M, I'd use $20M to finance start-up/venture-capital projects. Not only would it be fun trying to figure out which concepts have potential, it would also hold out potential for really growing the total pot to something with global impact.

Thank you. This information has been helpful.

"Fembots", eh?

Heh.:lol::bolian:
 
Let's see...

I'd secure my retirement as well as my parents' retirement, buy the 2012 Volkswagen New Beetle, make sure my nieces' college is paid for, open my own cake shop, up my medical insurance so I have maternity coverage and then get pregnant and have my own kids.

Ummm... with 100 Million you wouldn't need medical insurance. You could have your own mini-hospital built with a staff of highy skilled doctors and nurses.
 
For $100 million? You might be able to build it, you wouldn't be able to run it for long.
 
Sadly, it's not quite enough to really party in a big way (private jets

It's certainly possible to own a very nice private plane for under a million. A 60s-era 172 can be had for around $50k. If you want a cabin you can move around in, that's probably a few million; if you want a jet, then we're getting into the big numbers.

That's just the purchase price, of course; there's also the operating costs. Jets tend to burn a lot more fuel than props compared to the increase in speed, so for an "economical" private plane, a jet might not be ideal.

My $100 mil would definitely include a nice 4- or 6-seater airplane, perhaps a Corvalis or SR-22. Those run about $500,000 new. Something with some decent speed for the longer trips, but I wouldn't bother with intercontinental range, at least at first.

I'd want my own hangar, of course, and if I have the space, a runway in my back yard would be neat...
 
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Well I'd put $5 million into a retirement fund and that takes care of my finances for the rest of my life. The interest from those savings would be enough to buy me anything I want and to help out my friends/family if needed, so I really have no use for the other $95 million.

Firefly Season 2? Fully functional Gundam? Guarantee a Ninth Doctor reappearance? Or I could be boring and go with charity.
 
Sadly, it's not quite enough to really party in a big way (private jets

It's certainly possible to own a very nice private plane for under a million. If you want a cabin you can move around in, that's probably a few million; if you want a jet, then we're getting into the big numbers.

That's just the purchase price, of course; there's also the operating costs. Jets tend to burn a lot more fuel than props compared to the increase in speed, so for an "economical" private plane, a jet might not be ideal.

My $100 mil would definitely include a nice 4- or 6-seater airplane, perhaps a Corvalis or SR-22. Those run about $500,000 new. Something with some decent speed for the longer trips, but I wouldn't bother with intercontinental range, at least at first.

I'd want my own hangar, of course, and if I have the space, a runway in my back yard would be neat...

I know the rough figures which why $100M isn't quite enough once you include everything else I want, and considering the cost of a high-spec interior and annual operating costs. I'd ideally want the new G6 (unless they can't figure out why that one they were testing crashed, in which case I'd "settle" for a G5). The whole point for me would be the speed and luxury, so I can't see the point of a lower-spec or prop-driven plane. I don't want a mere executive shuttle, and I don't enjoy flying in and of itself. What I want is a fast & luxurious way of being moved intercontinentally and on-demand. If I can't afford it as a permanent thing - and for just $100M I certainly can't - then I'd just charter as needed (or even just slum it in First) instead. :D

I like the idea of a runway in the back yard. Doesn't Travolta have something like this for his little toy?
 
The whole point for me is being able to take my "flying car" to the next state over for dinner if I want to, and then return a few hours later. I can do that right now (actually I have on a few occasions, for a few hundred $ per trip), but it would be much more fun if the plane weren't a rental.

Foreign travel is a lot of fun too, but it's a completely different type of flying.
 
Then take as much money as needed to cover my running costs and have a comfortable extra to spend by investing the money safely.

"Invest safely"? I've never heard of such a thing. I've always believed investments to be a bigger gamble than the lottery.

But, I'm interested in learning. Please explain. Exactly where can I invest money (on a fixed income) and NOT lose it? I really want to know.

I meant staying away from risky investments like junk bonds and such.. basically anything that promises huge profits in short amounts of time.
You may get lucky and make a ton of money but you can also lose it easily.

"Standard" practice would be to invest a third in the stock market (managed fonds are the best), something that may be unique to Germany called "Bundesschatzbrief" (basically a government saving bond that generates a steady, moderate amount of interest) and the last third in real estate.

That's what i consider safe.. spread out your money so if one approach fails you don't lose it all.
 
^ This. What's money good for if you can't enrich the lives of the people you love?

Why are the people you love more important that the 7,001,237,948 others?


Sorry it took me so long to post in here. I was counting.
 
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