land does not equal real estate. real estate is taxable as it belongs to the royal estate. Yet, per the constitution for the United States of America - allodial title for land creates a title that is free of all encumbrances and is un-alienable or as jefferson expressed more properly - inalienable. real estate is not a real asset. only land is a real asset the two are very different.
ClayTrader Oddly enough it's a top google search question. I believe it refers to non-GAAP reporting of "good will" meaning positive sentiment from some third party or parties and the "value" that it has. Certain brands have a reputation for charitable works or an otherwise positive reputation, meaning people will donate/pay/associate more than they would otherwise. For ex, when Chick-fil-A began publicaly advocating Christianity, they got a lot of ill will from the general public but a BIG kick of good will from self identified Christians. Supposedly their sales went up, and a non-GAAP accountant might want to call that "value" over competitors making equivalent sandwiches.
real is defined as “of the royal”. real estate = estate of the royal. land that has no encumbrances is not real estate. don’t be fooled again. a real assetts belong to the estate
@@claytrader Maybe you could buy new whiteboard markers. It would also help to not pause this much. For instance by putting less time into your drawings (although they are lovely).
@@marjavanderwind4251 I switched back to a blackboard now for my newest videos, so that was good feedback. I'll keep in mind about the drawings.... although, there may be a lesson in patience within there given they literally are only taking me a few seconds to draw lol
I'm here because of my online class. You're a big help, you are a good teacher also I can understand your teaching very well. Thank you for this.
Happy to help!
That's right. Creating your own economy is the way to go!! 🌟🌟🌟
Boom!
I love your style of explaining things, thanks for this!
Glad you like them!
@@claytrader the amazing thing is that you still reply comments to videos of the past. Amazing stuff!
@@KingsleyOkeze tryin' my best!
Very convincing expllanation :) Do you still hold these live sessions?
Yes, I do.
THANK YOU!
You're welcome!
Good one, nice sense of humor indeed!...thanks for the clarity though! :)...
Thank you for watching!
Very good Video! Thanks for the explanation!
Thank you for watching.
THANK YOU..
You're welcome
when is it the best time horizon to invest in real and financial assets
That depends on quite a bit...
hello, sir, can I write in paper that real assets are those who have some market value.
I don't know, can you? It's your paper... not mine :-)
Thanks a lot. Need this for my econ class!!
Glad it was helpful!
Really you explains sooo well...😍
Glad you think so!
A very elaborate explanation
Thanks
one advice - please use better color markers.
I agree!
My teacher give this for my GRADE 7 Economics
What is "this"?
@@claytrader your video for online learning☺️
@@farrelpermadi5471 i'm honored then!
I love this channel!
Thanks for watching!
PowerPoint knowledge would also be a real asset to be able to produce an easily digestible video :D
Cheers!
thank u so much u helped me a lot
Thanks for watching!
You are a good man
Thanks!
Great
Cheers
good explanation!
Glad it helped!
dude,, like, just put the words bro, no need to draw😂😂😂
Thanks for the thoughts
But sir real asset has 2 type tangible and Intangible assets
Yup
land does not equal real estate. real estate is taxable as it belongs to the royal estate. Yet, per the constitution for the United States of America - allodial title for land creates a title that is free of all encumbrances and is un-alienable or as jefferson expressed more properly - inalienable.
real estate is not a real asset. only land is a real asset the two are very different.
Stop trying to sound smart and be smart by understanding the core idea being conveyed.
thanks
You're welcome.
thx
You're welcome :-)
Is goodwill a real assets
I'm not sure what you mean.
ClayTrader Oddly enough it's a top google search question. I believe it refers to non-GAAP reporting of "good will" meaning positive sentiment from some third party or parties and the "value" that it has.
Certain brands have a reputation for charitable works or an otherwise positive reputation, meaning people will donate/pay/associate more than they would otherwise.
For ex, when Chick-fil-A began publicaly advocating Christianity, they got a lot of ill will from the general public but a BIG kick of good will from self identified Christians. Supposedly their sales went up, and a non-GAAP accountant might want to call that "value" over competitors making equivalent sandwiches.
real is defined as “of the royal”. real estate = estate of the royal. land that has no encumbrances is not real estate. don’t be fooled again. a real assetts belong to the estate
Step out of the textbook and into the real world.
Nonsense
How so?
You need to work on your presentation!
Thanks for the thoughts. Did you have any actual details?
@@claytrader Maybe you could buy new whiteboard markers. It would also help to not pause this much. For instance by putting less time into your drawings (although they are lovely).
@@marjavanderwind4251 I switched back to a blackboard now for my newest videos, so that was good feedback. I'll keep in mind about the drawings.... although, there may be a lesson in patience within there given they literally are only taking me a few seconds to draw lol
1. Buy a new shirt
2. Get a proper haircut
3. Work out at a gym
4, Don’t use you a school’s whiteboard
5. Teach me about money
Only if you teach me about how to become a Keyboard Warrior.
6. Invest in fresh markers.