Success Stories
The Patient Investor (feat. Chen Wang)
By Sharon Sweda
Wang’s secret is long-term real estate. It is a strategy which takes patience and great foresights.
The investment culture in America swirls in turbulence. Historical investment strategies are challenged by poor performance and the extended continuance of low interest rates. Those who are looking ahead to retirement face the ever-increasing concern for a diminishing and weakened Social Security system.
Government officials are deadlocked in debate over the financial plight of the boomer generation’s entry into their golden years. The nation’s largest population sector threatens to drain the retirement provision that most Americans are expectant of and dependent upon.
The stock market’s sporadic performance is no better. Broad market adjustments of recent years are erasing the portfolios of its investors. Portfolio remnants cannot regenerate fast enough to secure their holder’s retirement vehicle, much less the effect created when the soon-to-retire 77 million boomers begin drawing their money out of the stock market to supplement Social Security benefits.
If the valid concerns of losing Social Security and poor stock market performance are not enough of a catastrophic worry, the time-tested asset of real estate also continues its periodic fluctuations. Yet, the turmoil of real estate investing is a storm that can be calmed, according to real estate guru, Chen Wang.
Chen Wang is not an infomercial investment figure. Wang’s strategies are not packaged and marketed to viewers or seminar attendees. He is not a proponent of using “other people’s money” to pyramid build your personal wealth and never promises overnight success.
“I never recommend an investor to invest his ‘rainy day’ funds,” Wang stressed. “When people commit their emergency money, they have a tendency to need the money or face urgent situations. The secret is long-term real estate. We purchase underperforming property in the path of growth and hold it until demand and inflation increase its value. It is a program which takes patience,” Wang adds.
|
Back Continue » |






