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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Liquid Assets and Expensive Car Purchase
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<blockquote data-quote="MFE" data-source="post: 15727861" data-attributes="member: 36397"><p>The smartest guys I know, including the one who owned a purple mustang GT in 1998 and now owns his second Noble, after moving through corvettes, several Vipers, Porsche GT3s and several Ferrari's, don't get burdened by debt. They buy good cars opportunistically, drive the piss out of them for a relatively short while, and sell them while they're still <em>gaining</em> value. They move the profits into better/more valuable cars. They make good livings but aren't Google-rich. In the early days when they can't afford super-cars, they're saving money while enjoying their cars, so they can trade up a level, every single time. 20 years later they're driving Ferrari's. Buy low, sell high, bing bang boom.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MFE, post: 15727861, member: 36397"] The smartest guys I know, including the one who owned a purple mustang GT in 1998 and now owns his second Noble, after moving through corvettes, several Vipers, Porsche GT3s and several Ferrari's, don't get burdened by debt. They buy good cars opportunistically, drive the piss out of them for a relatively short while, and sell them while they're still [i]gaining[/i] value. They move the profits into better/more valuable cars. They make good livings but aren't Google-rich. In the early days when they can't afford super-cars, they're saving money while enjoying their cars, so they can trade up a level, every single time. 20 years later they're driving Ferrari's. Buy low, sell high, bing bang boom. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Liquid Assets and Expensive Car Purchase
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