cncchris33
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- Nov 14, 2009
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Not even close.
Imagine you had a million $ and went to bid on a lake house. You've done your homework and know it is worth around $400k. How much should you be willing to pay? If you pay much more than $400k then you're a fool who will soon be separated from your money. If someone else wants it for $600k... you let them buy it. Maybe they have some other motive for overpaying.... like Drink currently does.
There are other things you can buy. You can buy something worth a little more/less and instantly have equity vs them.
I hope you are better at managing your own finances than you are at understanding how an NIL strategy has to work. Showing discipline is a sign of having an EXCELLENT NIL setup.
LOL. This is typical whenever you get cornered by the facts and look stupid.Blah, blah, blah. Your same tired hyperbole. I am great at managing my own finances. Please stop thinking you know something about finances. You know as much about finances as you do about blue chip recruiting and how vital it is.
I think the solution to meeting the MO model is to simply create an NIL payday loan entity. The collective does their thing and company B advances some of the money at risk, wink wink.
Can’t be that difficult a solution path if you don’t intertwine the organizations.
All that would leas to is basically if you loan it out and the kid goes elsewhere, he would have to pat it back. Basically you would have schools buying out the kids loan, kinda like a cell phone company buying out a competitors contract to get them to come there. They created a monster with this NIL. It needs to be set in tiers kind of like the NFL draft rookie contract. The higher rated you are you fall in a certain tier then so on. Then the issue comes with which ranking do you use?