Turn Your Old Gold Into Cash!

Sell Gold In Denver

My friend Rob makes at least 0 a day. He used to be a high flying lawyer, but he quit. Today, he makes more money selling the most arcane things for blood curdling prices. Consider some of the most recent big sells he's made:

Jun 2, 2009: A broken crystal for 0

June 18, 2009: Dried bat dung for

July 17, 2009: Stale pizza for 0

August 3, 2009: A petri dish full of bacteria for

September 10, 2009: An iphone used for two years- for 9

He's a master salesman and discovered something amazing: given the right spin, anyone will buy an item. Want to know one of his secret?

The FOUR STEP ONLINE AUCTION PROCESS

1) Rob sells his stuff only on online auction sites. His favorites are ebay.com and atomicmall.com To a certain extent, he does craigslist

2) He sets the sales period for only 3 days maximum. He then builds a fantastical story around the item.

3) Then he drives a boatload of twitter and facebook traffic to the auction page.

4) He ships the package.

That in sum is one of the methods that Rob executes to funnel income his way. It's worked so well, he actually hired two assistants picking up strange items at fleamarkets which they can build a story around... then sell off. On the average, he makes three sales a week- but if he wanted to, he can easily triple the output.

Think you can pull off the same trick? That guy made over ,000 just doing it! He's never found an unsellable item either. Everything he picked up for pennies sold for gold.

Know more about Rob and his crazy bag of tricks. He will amaze you with his online money making techniques at ebay!

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. QUESTION:
    How to sell scrap gold in Highlands Ranch Colorado?
    I live in Highlands Ranch Colorado, 20 miles south of Denver and Littleton. I have a few old gold rings and some broken 14kt gold necklaces that I would like to sell. I have tried craig's list but only seem to get weird people calling me from pawn shops that want me to take my gold down to Denver to sell it for half of melt value. I was thinking about sending the scrap gold to that CASH 4 GOLD business that I saw on late night TV but when I read the on line reviews NO one had any thing nice to say about their business. Other refiners seem to have a ounce or two minimum for shipping and still charge 10% and send you a check in about two weeks. There is a Hotel Gold Buyer in town this week end and they have bad on-line review as well. Is there a local jewelry shop that would pay cash on the spot and not charge me 50% commission. What is a fair commission when I sell my gold? Please respond with usual percent of commissions or refining charge. Or if you know of a trusted gold refiner if I have to mail my GOLD, Thanks for your responses.

    • ANSWER:
      I have checked into the Cash4Gold and it look like a big scam! The local pawn shop is only a good place to sell your gold if you need cash today and you don't mind getting 50% of value. I have sold a few things on Craig's list but people want you to give way your gold and jewelry because they think you are desperate for cash. found https://sites.google.com/site/goldsilverplatinumcoppermetals/ website looking for some one to by my gold coin because I don't want to pawn it or go to some crap hotel and get offered half of what it is worth. Check out that link and see if that guy is willing to give you a fair deal. Sound like he is Highlands Ranch Colorado just south of Littleton and Centennial I think it is very honest he explains his commission.

  2. QUESTION:
    If gold were sold by wiegh, would you rather buy it in denver or Death Valley?

    If sold by mass, in which of the two locations would you prefer to buy it? why?

    • ANSWER:
      you would want to sell it in death valley and buy it in denver. this is because of the inverse square law wich means that the closer things get to the center of the earth the heavier they get. so you buy o.999999999999 ounces of gold on denver it might be like 1.000000000000011 ounces of gold in death vally therefore you make profit

  3. QUESTION:
    if gold wer sold by weight. would u rather buy it in denver or death valley? if by mass, where? why? pls. help?

    • ANSWER:
      denver. gravity is weaker there, and since weight is mass times gravity, it would weigh less, making it cost less. i would then sell it in death valley, since i have no use for a lump of gold, and could then make a profit since it would weigh more in death valley and would sell for more.

      if it was mass, it would not matter.

      make it a good day

  4. QUESTION:
    If I bought ,000 worth of gold (by weight) in Denver, Colorado, and then went to Death Valley and sold it?
    If I bought ,000 worth of gold (by weight) in Denver, Colorado, and then went to Death Valley and sold it?

    How much would the profit be if it sold for exactly the same price, by weight?

    F = G(m1m2/r^2)
    I deleted this question and reposted it because the answers I got the first time around were really pissing me off.

    • ANSWER:
      You would profit .30 on the deal, if Denver is "exactly" 1 mile high (it's the official elevation of the city), and Death Valley is 282/5280 miles below sea level, and the mean radius is 6371 miles. Compute as follows:

      10,000((6371+1)/(6371 - (262/5280))² - 10,000 = 3.30

  5. QUESTION:
    Does Anyone Know where to buy the Reebok AFL Throwback Denver Broncos Gold Sweatshirt from last season 09-10?
    I have been on a quest for almost a year now, trying to find the GOLD throwback sweatshirt from last season... I seen it worn by the broncos coach during their throwback games last October...

    I have had no luck online, at ANY source!!! Be it eBay, amazon, all the pro shops, the CBS shop, the NFL shop, and just about every store online that sells gear.

    I have even called the shops in Denver and even made a trip from California to search for it, and i have still come up empty!

    Now i know they sold out but some one somewhere must have one or be willing to part with it.

    I have been trying to surprise my husband at every gifting occasion - birthday, Christmas, anniversary, valentines day and i have had no luck!!!!!

    So i am trying this forum in the hopes that someone out there can help me make his dreams come true!

    Cost is not an issue i will pay any price, as long as its still new or semi-new, in an Extra Large! if anyone out there comes across one please post info, links or phone numbers! Thanks!
    I have been searching eBay, Amazon and every other online retailer for almost a year now!!!

    Doe anyone have any other suggestions or know of someone with one who is willing to sell it????

    I am running out of places to look and go to, trying to find this sweatshirt has been an endless quest one that keeps coming up empty!!!.

    I have already been to Denver and invesco field and I haven't had any luck... Can anyone help me????

    • ANSWER:
      you should really try ebay or amazon, thats how i buy sports stuff..or you should try the reebok website or the broncos website

  6. QUESTION:
    conceptual physics problems?
    1. if a car is traveling westward with a constant speed of 20 m/s, what is the resultant force acting on it?

    2. If gold were sold by weight, would you rather buy it in denver or in death valley? If it were sold by mass, in which of the two locations would you prefer to buy it? Why?

    • ANSWER:
      1. Force is defined as the product of a body's mass and its acceleration. Acceleration is defined as a change in velocity. Since the velocity does not change, the resultant force is 0.

      2. Gravitational acceleration increases as you approach sea level. The gold would weigh the most in Death Valley and the least in Denver; buy by weight in Denver. If it were sold by mass, it does not matter where it is purchased, as the mass of the sample is the same universally.

  7. QUESTION:
    Should I buy these gold coins in the catalog?
    They cost + S&H. I want to make sure they're worth more than this so I can sell it and get a profit. The following coins are in the catalog:
    These are all coins

    1. 1795 Philadelphia
    2. 1841 'O' New Orleans
    3. 1876 Carson City mint
    4. 1911 Denver
    5. 1929 Indian Head

    Do you think these are real coins or just immitations? Are they worth more than what they're asking or less? What is their total value? Sources?
    http://www.sportsmansguide.com/net/cb/cb.aspx?a=390967

    • ANSWER:
      You are better off buying regular mint coins or certified gold bars. Gold is selling for about 00 per ounce. A gold coin is a face value, so face value is about 1/10 of an ounce which will run for about 0.

      You are getting these for plus S&H, too good to be true. They are either fake or gold-plated. And by looking at the dates, they are supposed to have neumismatic value, which will push them above 0 under normal circumstances. Don't buy them. Order your gold from either the U.S. mint or www.kitco.com

  8. QUESTION:
    Making money in Real Estate... need financial advice?
    Hey everyone,

    I'm 20 and just started this last spring as a real estate broker in the Denver Metro area for Re/Max and believe it or not I'm making a killing (6-figures... keep in mind I can't even drink yet) and would like to know if anyone has an INTELLIGENT ways I could invest some of my new found fortune. After today's newest drop in the stock market and oil prices I feel that for a safe bet investment there is always gold or silver but the buy low sell high motto is scratching at me saying that oil will soon hit the floor so get into that. Also, I was thinking of investing in Activision-Blizzard or Electronic Arts seeing how its Christmas time and they could see good sales because video games are the only things on kid's minds these days.

    • ANSWER:

  9. QUESTION:
    Approximately how much could I get (U.S. $) for a set of 2003 U.S. Mint uncirculated coins? READ DETAILS:?
    OK there are 2 envelopes. 1st one:
    DENVER
    Includes:
    Certificate of authenticity signed by Henrietta Holsman Fore,
    the Illinois quarter, Alabama quarter, Maine quarter, Missouri quarter, Arkansas quarter, one cent, 5 cent, dime, half dollar, gold dollar. all are UNCIRCULATED AND LAMINATED.
    the Philidelphia includes:
    Certificate of Authenticity signed by Henrietta Holsman Fore, Illinois quarter, Alabama quarter, Maine quarter, Missouri quarter, Arkansas quarter, one cent, 5 cent, dime, half dollar and gold dollar, again they are all LAMINATED AND IN PERFECT, UNCIRCULATED CONDITION. both have matching envelopes to hold the coins and the certificates. So how much would i get for this collection approximately, and in u.s. dollars please? Also, where could i sell them? (flea market, bank?)

    THANK YOU

    • ANSWER:
      Problem is there is nothing rare or unusual about those sets and there were tons issued. You might have some luck on E-bay if someone fell in love with the item without checking the value.

  10. QUESTION:
    All of the following were results of the growth of mining except?
    A) People flocked to the West in great numbers to try to strike it rich.
    B) Gold prices greatly increased as more deposits were found in the West.
    C) Vigilante committees formed to try to fight crime in the new mining towns.
    D) The increased population in the West allowed some areas to become states.

    2. Boomtowns sprang up in many locations in the late 1800s. What were boomtowns?

    A) Modern towns with opera houses, furniture, and fashions from Europe
    B) Towns with booming financial institutions
    C) Large cities settled by prospectors
    D) Abandoned, ghost-towns

    3. Which city was a major supplier to mining towns in Colorado and became the second largest city in the West?

    A) Leadville
    B) Albuquerque
    C) Flagstaff
    D) Denver

    4. What were the effects of mining in the 1880s?

    A) Colorado, Arizona, the Dakotas, and Montana gained statehood.
    B) Railroads were built through the Appalachian Mountains.
    C) Tombstone, Arizona became famous for its effective vigilance committee.
    D) Mining caused slow growth in the towns where ore was found.

    5. Western mining growth most affected which of the following industries in the United States?

    A) Textile mills
    B) Railroads
    C) Tobacco processing plants
    D) Insurance industry

    6. What changed after the Civil War that made moving cattle to eastern markets more practical?

    A) Beef was being purchased at higher prices.
    B) Roadways were safer when fighting stopped.
    C) Horses were available for ranching.
    D) Semi trucks were available after the Civil War.

    7. Why did ranchers round up cattle for the long drive from Texas to the Plains?

    A) There was better grazing land further north.
    B) Ranchers were relocating to the North to join the Union states.
    C) Ranchers could sell their cattle at higher prices to be shipped east on the railway.
    D) The cattle could not survive on the harsh climate of the Great Plains.

    8. What negative effect of the growth of ranching contributed to the end of the cattle drives?

    A) Too many cattle were bred and the herds got too large to move.
    B) Cowboys no longer wanted to deal with the rough terrain and difficult conditions on the trails.
    C) Sheep herders relocated flocks to the open range and farmers installed barbed wire.
    D) Demand for beef in the U.S. dropped, so cattle drives were no longer needed.

    9. What was one way the growth of ranching changed the industry?

    A) Ranchers created fenced-in properties for their cattle.
    B) Cowboys were no longer needed on ranches.
    C) Cattle herds from the East were combined with the longhorns on ranches in the Plains.
    D) The number of haciendas increased throughout the West.

    10.

    All of the following were effects of increased ranching except:
    A) Cattle prices decreased over time due to a large supply on the market.
    B) Many ranchers attempted to take over lands that Mexican people had claimed for years.
    C) Foreign investment in the cattle business
    D) A decrease in boomtowns as people moved to the Plains to start ranches

    • ANSWER:
      1)b
      2)c
      3)d
      4)a
      5)b
      6)a
      7)c
      8)c
      9)a
      10)d

  11. QUESTION:
    u.s history lesson 15-1 quiz help please?
    okay i do not want no rude answers or remarks if you cant answer it then dont post anything please

    1.
    All of the following were results of the growth of mining except:
    A) People flocked to the West in great numbers to try to strike it rich.
    B) Gold prices greatly increased as more deposits were found in the West.
    C) Vigilante committees formed to try to fight crime in the new mining towns.
    D) The increased population in the West allowed some areas to become states.
    2.
    Boomtowns sprang up in many locations in the late 1800s. What were boomtowns?
    A) Modern towns with opera houses, furniture, and fashions from Europe
    B) Towns with booming financial institutions
    C) Large cities settled by prospectors
    D) Abandoned, ghost-towns
    3.
    Which city was a major supplier to mining towns in Colorado and became the second largest city in the West?
    A) Leadville
    B) Albuquerque
    C) Flagstaff
    D) Denver
    4.
    What were the effects of mining in the 1880s?
    A) Colorado, Arizona, the Dakotas, and Montana gained statehood.
    B) Railroads were built through the Appalachian Mountains.
    C) Tombstone, Arizona became famous for its effective vigilance committee.
    D) Mining caused slow growth in the towns where ore was found.
    5.
    Western mining growth most affected which of the following industries in the United States?
    A) Textile mills
    B) Railroads
    C) Tobacco processing plants
    D) Insurance industry
    6.
    What changed after the Civil War that made moving cattle to eastern markets more practical?
    A) Beef was being purchased at higher prices.
    B) Roadways were safer when fighting stopped.
    C) Horses were available for ranching.
    D) Semi trucks were available after the Civil War.
    7.
    Why did ranchers round up cattle for the long drive from Texas to the Plains?
    A) There was better grazing land further north.
    B) Ranchers were relocating to the North to join the Union states.
    C) Ranchers could sell their cattle at higher prices to be shipped east on the railway.
    D) The cattle could not survive on the harsh climate of the Great Plains.
    8.
    What negative effect of the growth of ranching contributed to the end of the cattle drives?
    A) Too many cattle were bred and the herds got too large to move.
    B) Cowboys no longer wanted to deal with the rough terrain and difficult conditions on the trails.
    C) Sheep herders relocated flocks to the open range and farmers installed barbed wire.
    D) Demand for beef in the U.S. dropped, so cattle drives were no longer needed.
    9.
    What was one way the growth of ranching changed the industry?
    A) Ranchers created fenced-in properties for their cattle.
    B) Cowboys were no longer needed on ranches.
    C) Cattle herds from the East were combined with the longhorns on ranches in the Plains.
    D) The number of haciendas increased throughout the West.
    10.
    All of the following were effects of increased ranching except:
    A) Cattle prices decreased over time due to a large supply on the market.
    B) Many ranchers attempted to take over lands that Mexican people had claimed for years.
    C) Foreign investment in the cattle business
    D) A decrease in boomtowns as people moved to the Plains to start ranches

    • ANSWER:
      Sorry but your grammar is atrocious. You do not want ANY rude answers. Also, the first letter of a sentence is always capitalized and "can't" and "don't" are contractions that have an apostrophe in them. You're a failuire waiting to happen in both English and History. I suggest you start studying.

  12. QUESTION:
    does any insight students know quiz 15-1 in u.s history?
    1.All of the following were results of the growth of mining except:
    A) People flocked to the West in great numbers to try to strike it rich.
    B) Gold prices greatly increased as more deposits were found in the West.
    C) Vigilante committees formed to try to fight crime in the new mining towns.
    D) The increased population in the West allowed some areas to become states.

    2.Boomtowns sprang up in many locations in the late 1800s. What were boomtowns?
    A) Modern towns with opera houses, furniture, and fashions from Europe
    B) Towns with booming financial institutions
    C) Large cities settled by prospectors
    D) Abandoned, ghost-towns

    3.Which city was a major supplier to mining towns in Colorado and became the second largest city in the West?
    A) Leadville
    B) Albuquerque
    C) Flagstaff
    D) Denver

    4.What were the effects of mining in the 1880s?
    A) Colorado, Arizona, the Dakotas, and Montana gained statehood.
    B) Railroads were built through the Appalachian Mountains.
    C) Tombstone, Arizona became famous for its effective vigilance committee.
    D) Mining caused slow growth in the towns where ore was found.

    5.Western mining growth most affected which of the following industries in the United States?
    A) Textile mills
    B) Railroads
    C) Tobacco processing plants
    D) Insurance industry

    6.What changed after the Civil War that made moving cattle to eastern markets more practical?
    A) Beef was being purchased at higher prices.
    B) Roadways were safer when fighting stopped.
    C) Horses were available for ranching.
    D) Semi trucks were available after the Civil War.

    7.Why did ranchers round up cattle for the long drive from Texas to the Plains?
    A) There was better grazing land further north.
    B) Ranchers were relocating to the North to join the Union states.
    C) Ranchers could sell their cattle at higher prices to be shipped east on the railway.
    D) The cattle could not survive on the harsh climate of the Great Plains.

    8.What negative effect of the growth of ranching contributed to the end of the cattle drives?
    A) Too many cattle were bred and the herds got too large to move.
    B) Cowboys no longer wanted to deal with the rough terrain and difficult conditions on the trails.
    C) Sheep herders relocated flocks to the open range and farmers installed barbed wire.
    D) Demand for beef in the U.S. dropped, so cattle drives were no longer needed.

    9.What was one way the growth of ranching changed the industry?
    A) Ranchers created fenced-in properties for their cattle.
    B) Cowboys were no longer needed on ranches.
    C) Cattle herds from the East were combined with the longhorns on ranches in the Plains.
    D) The number of haciendas increased throughout the West.

    10.All of the following were effects of increased ranching except:
    A) Cattle prices decreased over time due to a large supply on the market.
    B) Many ranchers attempted to take over lands that Mexican people had claimed for years.
    C) Foreign investment in the cattle business
    D) A decrease in boomtowns as people moved to the Plains to start ranches

    • ANSWER:
      b
      c
      d
      a
      b
      a
      c
      c
      a
      d
      i just took this
      can you help me this its the unit 14 test a questions 11-25
      http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20101202154431AAyyiUx

  13. QUESTION:
    Did you know some famous Witnesses of Jehovah?
    Politics:
    - Dwight D. Eisenhower - U.S. President (raised JW)
    - Evelyn Mandela - first wife of South African president Nelson Mandela (convert to JWs)
    - Lieby Piliso - Nelson Mandela’s younger sister

    Sports:
    - Venus Williams and Serena Williams - world chamption/Olympic gold medalist tennis players
    - Lou Whitaker - professional baseball player (Detroit Tigers)
    - Chet Lemon - professional baseball player (Detroit Tigers)
    - Shont’e Peoples - professional football player (Saskatchewan Roughriders); convert to JWs
    - Kid Gavilan - welterweight champion boxer; elected to boxing Hall of Fame in 1990 (convert to JWs)
    - Dave Pear - NFL professional football player for Colts, Buccaneers, and Raiders (convert)
    - Mark McCumber - professional golfer
    - Dave Meyers - professional basketball player (Los Angeles Lakers in 1970s)
    - Danny Granger - professional basketball player (Indiana Pacers)
    - Travis Scott - NFL football player for Rams (raised JW)
    - Willie Wise - NBA professional basketball player for Seattle Super Sonics and Denver Nuggets

    Music:
    - Prince - pop singer (convert to JWs)
    - Selena - Tejano singer (Selena Quintanilla)
    - Hank Marvin - famous guitarist with the Shadows (convert to JWs)
    - George Benson - singer, guitarist
    - Larry Graham - singer; member of Sly And The Family Stone between 1967 and 1972, founder of Graham Central Station
    - David Thomas - songwriter/vocalist for Pere Ubu (convert to JWs)
    - Herman Pizzanelli - leading Uruguayan concert guitarist in the 1960s (convert to JWs)
    - Dave Hill - musician, Lead Guitarist and back vocals for Slade (convert)
    - Rebbie Jackson - singer
    - Michael Jackson - singer, pop superstar (lapsed)
    - Janet Jackson - singer (lapsed)
    - Katherine Jackson - matriarch of the Jacksons musical dynasty
    and the mother of pop music legends The Jackson 5,
    Michael Jackson and Janet Jackson- La Toya Jackson - singer (lapsed)
    - Jackson Five - musical group (lapsed)
    - Ja Rule - rap singer, film actor (raised)
    - Patti Smith - punk rock star
    - Geri Halliwell - singer (Spice Girls)
    - Jill Scott - R&B/neo-soul singer-poet
    - Roy Harper - songwriter, musician (raised)
    - La Lupe - Cuban salsa singer (convert)

    Actors and Actresses:
    - Terrence Howard - actor; Ray, Hustle & Flow, etc.
    - Teresa Graves - actress, star of TV movie and TV series “Get Christie Love!” (convert to JWs)
    - Lark Voorhies - TV/movie actress
    - Michelle Rodriguez - actress, movie star (lapsed)
    - Wayans Brothers - and sisters: Damon Wayans, Dwayne Wayans, Keenen Ivory Wayans, Kim Wayans, Nadia Wayans, Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans;

    Comedians, Actors, Filmmakers:
    - Rustom Padilla - Filipino movie star
    - Carmina Villarroel - Filipino actress
    - Naomi Campbell - supermodel
    - Kim Holland - Dutch porn star (former JW)

    Literature:
    - Mickey Spillane - best-selling crime novelist (convert to JWs)
    - Gloria Naylor - novelist, author of The Women of Brewster Place (1982, American Book Award)
    Religious Leaders:
    - Charles Taze Russell - founder and first president of Jehovah’s Witnesses and Watchtower Society; died in 1916
    - Joseph Franklin Rutherford - second president of Jehovah’s Witnesses, from 1916 until his death in 1942
    - Nathan H. Knorr - third leading figure in the history of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, president of Watchtower Bible and Tract Society from 1942 until he died in 1977
    - Frederick W. Franz - president of Watchtower Society from 1977 until his death in 1992
    - Milton G. Henschel - president of Watchtower Society from 1992 to 2000
    - Don A. Adams - current president of the Watchtower Society, since late 2000

    Other:
    - Margaret Keane - artist famous for her “Big Eye” paintings (convert)
    - Carol M. Swain - political scientist; professor at Vanderbilt University; author of Black Faces, Black Interests and The New White Nationalism in America: Its Challenge to Integration; left the Witnesses at the age of 20, in 1975
    - Viv Nicholson - famous London lottery winner in 1961. She then became a devout JW. The musical Spend, Spend, Spend was based on her story.
    - Rene Montes de Oca Martija - dissident human-rights activist in Cuba (son of JW)
    - Hayden Covington - leading attorney for the Jehovah’s Witnesses, Watchtower Society; won multiple U.S. Supreme Court cases; represented Muhammad Ali in court
    - Firpo Carr - historian, author of Germany’s Black Holocaust: 1890-1945; Wicked Words: Poisoned Minds - Racism in the Dictionary; founder: Scholar Technological Institute of Research, Inc. (STIR). No longer associated. Heard on L.A. radio defending Michael Jackson during his trial. (lapsed)
    - Angelo Palego - leader of team searching for Noah’s Ark
    Some have left the Truth, Others learned and excepted it.
    bar_enosh- I couldn't agree more. We are all imperfect, and it is Jehovah that will read our hearts in the end.

    • ANSWER:
      Many of those people are questionable. Because someone "was" one of Jehovah's Witnesses, or even "raised" a Witness is meaningless unless they continue to follow the path of Jesus Christ.

      And one mentioned as "lapsed," Firpo Carr, has for some time been reinstated and continues active as a Witness.

      The final judgment is in the hands of the Lord Jesus Christ, who judges on Jehovah's behalf.

      In the meantime, all that any of us can do is to endure in faith, following closely the footsteps of Christ, our Exemplar.

  14. QUESTION:
    Making money in Real Estate... need financial advice?
    Hey everyone,

    I'm 20 and just started this last spring as a real estate broker in the Denver Metro area for Re/Max and believe it or not I'm making a killing (6-figures... keep in mind I can't even drink yet) and would like to know if anyone has an INTELLIGENT ways I could invest some of my new found fortune. After today's newest drop in the stock market and oil prices I feel that for a safe bet investment there is always gold or silver but the buy low sell high motto is scratching at me saying that oil will soon hit the floor so get into that. Also, I was thinking of investing in Activision-Blizzard or Electronic Arts seeing how its Christmas time and they could see good sales because video games are the only things on kid's minds these days.

    • ANSWER:
      Im just a month old in real estate here in the Phil. A lot of the rich people actually accumuated their wealth through the same industry. Why don't you invest in real estate as well. Do buy and sell properties or invest in condotels. There is always what we call return of investment.


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