Site icon Prosperity Research

What Will the Student Loan Debt Wipeout Really Cost?

What Will the Student Loan Debt Wipeout Really Cost?

On Wednesday, President Biden tackled student loan debt…

The pause on federal student loan repayment is being extended through the end of the year.

And the administration’s new plan would forgive $10,000 for borrowers making under $125,000 a year … and up to $20,000 for Pell Grant recipients.

But no matter what the plan is for forgiveness, there’s no doubt that student loan debt will continue to impact both older and younger generations.

For decades, a college degree has been considered the ticket to higher wages and a better life.

And this week, Charles shared his insights on whether college degrees are still worth paying thousands of dollars for.

Check it out — along with the rest of his latest Real Talk — below…

Warren Buffett’s Secret Millionaires Club
Here are Charles’ 3 must-read insights, 1 word for you to ponder and 1 question for you this week … including a must-watch series on intelligent investing for your kids, grandkids or even you!
How College Broke the American Dream
Charles sat down with Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Will Bunch to answer one big question: Is a college education still valuable today?
Corporate America Needs to Go on a Diet — Fast!
All of a sudden, we’ve gone from a strong economy to a corporate America that is out of shape. It’s time for these companies to slim down. And you can profit as they do
The Secret About Bear Markets
Every investor has to deal with bear markets. So, Charles shared a secret about bear markets that could have the biggest impact on the size of your brokerage account in the next five years.
Charles Went Through This Pain So You Don’t Have To
He once left hundreds of thousands of dollars on the table. And it sure was painful. But something Charles’ mentor told him changed his whole outlook — and can help you have a better investing mindset.

Regards,

Lina Lee
Senior Managing Editor, Real Talk

Real Talk, Real Readers!

From Sam S.: The worst investment advice I ever got was bitcoin. Didn’t do it. Don’t invest in what you don’t understand!

From Frank T.: I worked with a co-worker who knew about options, but I didn’t. He thought they were great because you didn’t have to put that much money up to invest.

I lost $8,000 on Bank of America because I did not know that the option could go to $0. That was an expensive wake-up call.

From Doug W.: Gosh, it’s been over 20 years since I called my broker at Merrill Lynch, asking to sell my shares of SDLI. And he said: “Keep your SDLI shares, and you’ll receive shares of JDSU.”

As a result, I did not follow my own instincts. (I originally invested $10,000 in SDLI rather than JDSU because of its terrible fundamentals.) My shares of SDLI were worth $40,000 the day I called. JDSU became “Just Don’t Sue Us,” and I could barely sell shares fast enough to keep half of my original investment.

Lesson learned: Be your own broker, and trust your own due diligence. Keep a record of why you purchase a stock.

From Brent J.: Charles, the worst advice for investing to me is, “buy high and sell higher.” Just as you cannot time the bottom, you cannot time the top, either.

Best to diversify into solid businesses when they’re trading at reasonably low valuations and then hold for the long term to see how it plays out. It’s far more boring, yet more consistently profitable. And I sleep fine at night!

From Charles H.: I agree with you on college tuition! The reason I didn’t do an extra year back in the ’60s was the cost to my parents.

“Use what you’ve got and develop it” was a good idea in theory. But it didn’t take into account where some of us were really at. The pressure was to follow “expectations.” Some couldn’t use most of what they’d got because they lacked understanding of what they had, if that makes sense.