Black Investors Taking Urban Real Estate Markets by Storm



Thanks in large part to a new book entitled, "Secrets Of The Money Changers," by James Hart, Black investors are strategically taking urban real estate markets by storm in what may be the fastest rising cooperative economic movement in the country. This according to the Office of Public Housing and Real Estate Trends.

As recently described in the Wall Street Observer News, educated groups of forward-thinking Black investors are fast adding commercial and residential properties--even vacant land to their investment portfolios. Furthermore, notes economist Joseph Hamilton, "It was a matter of time, before African- Americans would get the kind of knowledge that Hart writes about in his book, and ethically capitalize on portfolio building strategies that have long been the investment advantage of Wall Street millionaires."

In fact, Black investors report that together as small, knowledgeable, and tightly-knit teams: "we can amass a stable of successful business investments and prime real estate." And according to Hamilton at this time, they are succeeding beyond all expectations.

Alas, leading economic behavioral scientist, Patricia Vanderpool, insist she is not at all surprised by this covert ground swell of Black investment cooperatives across urban America at precisely this time. Because as Vanderpool candidly stated: "Once a people exhaust social apathy and economic naivete, their collective intelligence (economic or otherwise) is certain to appear. And Blacks as a group understand that they are in a ferocious economic war. A war that they are using as an impetus and opportunity, to excel!"

For more information regarding the book Secrets Of The Money Changers, go to www.efobi.com.

Gideon Rothschild is an economist and international financier at The James Kennedy Institute for Economic Intelligence and Trends, a global investment consulting firm and monetary policy advisor to governments in emerging nations. His email address is email protected from spam bots.





Black Investors Taking Urban Real Estate Markets by Storm