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What is the logic behind these bank transfers? - We are told if you mysteriously receive $100,000 in your bank, to not spend a single cent of it because the bank will come after it eventually.Yet if I was to send $100,000 to a wrong bank account I'm told to ... See More say goodbye to it forever, best I'll get back is $2.What is the logic behind this one-way street?
Potential new neighbour hasn't been paying their body corporate fees - So I am looking to buy a unit on a block of 3 units total. Currently 2 units (including the one im interested in) are owned by 1 person, they have been covering the body corporate fees of all ... See More 3 units because the owner of the one other unit has refused to pay. They seems like one of those 'sovereign citizens'. So has far as I understand if I were to buy this unit I would have to cover 50% of this persons body corporate fees as well as my own. What are my legal rights in this situation? I am trying to save myself years of legal headache in the future.
Enough money for the next 30 years? - Hi Guys,I'm an Aussie that departed Australia a few years ago to live overseas.First my bio:\-Age is in the mid-50s\-Live in a cheap country outside of Australia\-Liquid assets of USD 650,000 cash in a brokerage account currently earning 4.5% interest\-I'm not working ... See More nor do I have any other type of income\-I believe I will **not** be entitled to an Age Pension in Australia the future\-My monthly living costs **are less than** USD 2000 (USD 24000 a year)\-My Aussie Super account has only about $A20,000\-I also have an emergency 6 month's worth of cash which is funding me currentlySo my question is; do I have enough money to cover my living costs for the next 30 years? Assuming of course I actually live that long. I plan to continue living in the cheap country I've been living in.I'm thinking about using my USD cash to buy dividend stocks that will give me a 5% return (USD 650000 x 5% = USD 32500) which is a good amount above my living expenses...any left over money I would use to buy more stocks.What possible flaws or risks can you see with such a plan? Any comments or advice are welcome. Thanks.
Goldman Sachs return to office mandate fuels remote work reckoning
Low fee ETF fight continues - News for anyone who cares, huzzah to the cheapskates like me.Finally someone undercutting Betashares on NDQ management fee. N100 launched with a MER of 0.24%, have to imagine exactly half the 0.48% of NDQ was deliberate shots fired 😂. Not affiliated, wish I was, ... See More sounds lucrative. Let the low fee wars carry on.
Electricity Bill Shock - Just moved into a small apartment after living in houses my whole life. Received first bill for 30 days of electricity usage - a whopping $300! Is this my new normal? There’s just 2 of us and we’re paying $1 a day service fee and 28c ... See More per KWH. Have dryer, electric water tank and mounted split system unit they we use rarely. Live like normal, 7 min showers / dryer on couple times a week / heat on once a week. Called up the supplier who said this is the actual meter reading and we’ve somehow churned through 800 KWH in a month. Anyone else in an apartment and cop this sort of usage?
Buying a 600k unit in Sydney - I'm looking to buy a unit in the 600k price range. I have a 90k deposit and my partner (both in our 30s) will help me with the deposit. Assuming I can afford the repayments plus living costs, bills etc, is it just ... See More a matter of getting a home loan from the bank/lender? Anything else I should know about, prepare for? Any tips and tricks?Also, on RE/Domain for sale listings,when it says price guide 570k - 580k, what price should I throw at them to start negotiations? I'm assuming they've inflated the price so that they can arrive at the desired price after negotiations? What happens during this negotiation process? Also, for auction ads which have price guide of 600k in Homebush, for example. How likely is it for the auction price to end up in that range and not balloon out of control?Assuming I'm looking to buy in Homebush, Burwood, Epping, Ashfield. My main goal is to just get my foot in the door of owning a unit. Assuming the unit is in livable condition, running water, electricity etc, does it matter where I buy? What are the essential things you would consider before buying a unit?Any advice welcome.Edit: I'm meeting up with Aussie Home loans and CBA today