Family's Fall from Affluence Is Swift and Hard

Grateful to have found work in this tough economy, Nick Martin teaches grape growing and winemaking each Saturday to a class of seven students in a simple metal building here at a satellite campus of Highland Community College.

Then he drives 14 miles in an 11-year-old Ford Explorer to a sparsely furnished tract house that he rents for $900 a month on a dead-end street in McFarland, a smaller town. Just across the backyard is a shed that a neighbor uses to make cartridges for shooting the prairie dogs that infest the adjacent fields.

It is a far cry from the life that Mr. Martin and his family enjoyed until recently at their Adirondacks waterfront camp at Tupper Lake, N.Y. Their garage held three stylish cars, including a yellow Aston Martin; they owned three horses, one that cost $173,000; and Mr. Martin treated his wife, Kate, to a birthday weekend at the Waldorf-Astoria, with dinner at the "21" Club and a $7,000 mink coat.
That luxurious world was fueled by a check Mr. Martin received in 1998 for $14 million, his share of the $600 million sale of Martin Media, an outdoor advertising business begun by his father in California in the 1950s. After taxes, he kept about $10 million.

But as so often happens to those lucky enough to realize the American dream of sudden riches, the money slipped through the Martins' fingers faster than they ever imagined.

They faced temptations to indulge, with the complexities and pressures of new wealth. And a pounding recession pummeled the value of their real estate and new financial investments, rendering their properties unaffordable.

The fortune evaporated in little more than a decade.

http://finance.yahoo.com/banking-bu...familys-fall-from-affluence-is-swift-and-hard

This guy gets $10 Million and it's all gone!
 
You might be surprised how quickly money can grow legs and run away.

Plus, it's never fun to wake up one morning and realize the value of your stocks took a shit overnight - through no fault of your own.

Which happened to alot of people a couple of years ago. Some are young enough to recover a 60% loss. Older folks, not so much.

That's not saying these people had that happen. They seemed to be living large and living large costs lots of money. If you're not bringing in the large as steady as it's going out, well..... eventually it will run out. Especially in a shit market when you're not doubling your money in 5 years or so any longer.
 
Well they did make some bad investments and took a lot of chances with their money in their defense but to live so extravagantly I put the major blame on their spending habits. C'mon they lived the American Dream in the US and then they moved to Europe, bought a house there, expected that the wife was going to make lots of money on a book she wrote and it failed. Then they moved back to Vermont spending so much on a house there. Just very poor management of money imo. Even if they had invested differently their spending would have brought them down to this point sooner or later.
 
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