đ¨ INSIDE RICK ROSSâ SMARTEST MONEY MOVE: Early on, Rozay listened to one piece of financial advice from his mother â and years later, itâs turning into a payoff thatâs leaving fans stunned đ¸đł
Behind the image of a rap mogul is one unexpected asset quietly generating serious wealth. Most fans would never guess what it is â but insiders say it may be one of the sharpest business decisions in music history.
đĽ Over 1.5 MILLION people are already buzzing about it â see what Rick Ross actually owns and why itâs changing how artists think about money. Full details below đ
Rick Ross followed his mom’s financial advice early in his career â now he’s getting rich off this 1 asset
Johnny Nunez / WireImage
Moneywise and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue through links in the content below.
Becoming a star in the music industry can be incredibly lucrative. Once youâve made it, however, figuring out how to maintain and grow your wealth is the next challenge.
When rapper Rick Ross first started making serious money, he followed the financial lessons his mother taught him, which influenced the direction he took fortune.
âI would say, âMom, what do you think about the stock market?â And she would say, âSon, I donât really rock with the stock market. I donât know much about it, but I know about real estate,ââ he recalled to Forbes in an article published in June 2021. âWhen you buy something, make sure you can touch it.ââ
Must Read
Thanks to Jeff Bezos, you can now become a landlord for as little as $100 â and no, you don’t have to deal with tenants or fix freezers. Here’s how
Dave Ramsey warns nearly 50% of Americans are making 1 big Social Security mistake â hereâs what it is and 3 simple steps to fix it ASAP
I’m 49 years old and have nothing saved for retirement â what should I do? Don’t panic. Here are 6 of the easiest ways you can catch up (and fast)
He noted that his mother, a registered nurse who worked multiple jobs, had âalwaysâ invested in real estate. Coming from Clarksdale, Mississippi â where property prices were cheaper â she would âjust keep buying houses.â
Ross took her advice to heart. In 2008, he purchased a house just two blocks from boxing legend Evander Holyfieldâs massive Fayetteville estate in Georgia, according to Forbes. That was only the beginning.
In 2014, he acquired Holyfieldâs former estate for $5.8 million. Five years later, he expanded his holdings, buying an adjacent 87-acre plot for $1 million.
His real estate streak continued. In 2021, Ross paid $3.5 million in cash for a custom Florida mansion formerly owned by NBA star Amarâe Stoudemire, per Forbes. And in 2023, he reportedly went on a real estate buying spree, snapping up tens of millions of dollars in property across Texas, Georgia and Florida.
‘I’ll never stop’
Today, Ross enjoys success as both an artist and business investor, but his real estate acquisitions have also played a role in adding to his wealth.
For example, Ross told Forbes heâs earned millions from entertainment studios that used his Fayetteville property as a shooting location. And during an interview in 2021 on Assets Over Liabilities, a podcast from REVOLT, Ross revealed that even though he hadnât spent a night in the Stoudemire mansion, the investment paid off. He estimated that he could sell it for âmaybe $3 million moreâ than what he originally paid.
Despite already amassing an impressive real estate portfolio, Ross also said he had no plans to slow down.
âAm I still looking for property investments? Of course, I’ll never stop doing that,â he said.
Ross says he learned through his mom how even modest homes can see tremendous appreciation over time.
âWhere we grew up, those houses might have been $50,000 at the time. Now, those same houses are worth half a million dollars,â he said.
Investing in real estate â no platinum records required
Rossâs experience highlights a key trend in America: home prices have been steadily rising. Over the past decade, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index has surged by more than 90%.
But real estate investors donât have to rely solely on price appreciation to see returns. High-quality properties can also provide a steady stream of rental income, making real estate a dual-benefit investment.
Ross has been able to build his property portfolio thanks to his music earnings, but you donât need to be a rap star to start investing in real estate.
New investing platforms are making it easier than ever to tap into the real estate market.
For accredited investors, Homeshares gives access to the $36 trillion U.S. home equity market, which has historically been the exclusive playground of institutional investors.
With a minimum investment of $25,000, investors can gain direct exposure to hundreds of owner-occupied homes in top U.S. cities through their U.S. Home Equity Fund â without the headaches of buying, owning or managing property.
With risk-adjusted target returns ranging from 14% to 17%, this approach provides an effective, hands-off way to invest in owner-occupied residential properties across regional markets.
mogul is a real estate investment platform offering fractional ownership in blue-chip rental properties, which gives investors monthly rental income, real-time appreciation and tax benefits â without the need for a $250,000 down payment or 3 A.M. tenant calls.
Founded by former Goldman Sachs real estate investors, the team hand-picks the top 1% of single-family rental homes nationwide, guided by proprietary underwriting and market analytics typically used by large institutions.
Each property undergoes a vetting process, requiring a minimum 12% return even in downside scenarios. Across the board, the platform features an average annual IRR of 18.8%. Their cash-on-cash yields, meanwhile, average between 10-12% annually. Every investment is secured by real assets, not dependent on the platformâs viability. Each property is held in a standalone Propco LLC, so investors own the property â not the platform. Blockchain-based fractionalization adds a layer of safety, ensuring a permanent, verifiable record of each stake.
Getting started is a quick and easy process. All you need to do is sign up for an account and then browse available properties. Once you verify your information with their team, you can invest in the properties of your choice in as little as 30 seconds.
Another option is First National Realty Partners (FNRP), which targets necessity-based commercial real estate.
The platform lets accredited investors own a share of institutional-quality properties leased by national brands like Whole Foods, CVS, Kroger and Walmart. Accredited investors can enjoy the potential to collect stable, grocery store-anchored income every quarter.
News
HE WAS STARING AT THE WALL FOR 10 MINUTES â WIFE REVEALS THE MOMENT SHAMAR ELKINS âSNAPPEDâ BEFORE THE HORROR UNFOLDED IN SHREVEPORT
âHE WAS STARING AT THE WALL FOR 10 MINUTESâ â WIFE REVEALS THE MOMENT SHAMAR ELKINS âSNAPPEDâ BEFORE THE HORROR UNFOLDED IN SHREVEPORTIn a chilling new account, the surviving wife of Shamar Elkins describes a disturbing silence inside the home…
âTHE MESSAGE WAS DELETED IN 0.8 SECONDS.â A recovered phone revealed a message typed by Shamar Elkins that was deleted in less than a second. Forensic analysis showed the message contained only seven words. Investigators refused to disclose even part of its content⌠but said it directly referred to âwhat would happen next.â
The digital fingerprint of a crime is often more revealing than the physical scene itself and in the aftermath of the Shreveport massacre on April 19 2026 the technological forensic investigation has taken center stage. While the public and the…
âTHE CHILD HID UNDER THE TABLE FOR 37 MINUTESâ A survivor reportedly hid under a kitchen table for 37 minutes during the chaos. When found, the child calmly recounted to investigators what Shamar Elkins said before the first shots were fired â a detail that contradicts everything recorded in the 911 call
THE ARCHITECTURE OF A TRAGEDY IN CEDAR GROVE The events of that Sunday morning did not occur in a vacuum. Shamar Elkins, a 31-year-old former signal support systems specialist in the Louisiana Army National Guard, was a man whose life…
âHE SEARCHED THIS PHRASE SIX TIMES BEFORE THE ATTACK â POLICE ARE BRAINLED.â Phone records linked to Shamar Elkins reveal a disturbing pattern: the same search term was entered six times in less than 48 hours before the tragedy. Detectives say this is unrelated to any known family disputes⌠and may point to an unexpected underlying cause
THE ANATOMY OF A FAMILY ANNIHILATION: BEYOND THE VIRAL HOOKS The tragedy that unfolded in Shreveport, Louisiana, on April 19, 2026, has been described by local officials as one of the most “evil” scenes in the cityâs history. Eight children…
BREAKING NEWS: Troy Brown, Shamar Elkins’ brother-in-law and father of one of his victims, has revealed the last message Elkins sent, which still haunts him
Brother-in-law of suspect Shamar Elkins speaks out Man facing divorce kills 8 children, including 7 of his own, in shooting rampage A Louisiana man killed 8 children, 7 of his own. His family said warning signs preceded the tragedy  …
âTHE 911 CALL WENT SILENT FOR EXACTLY 11 SECONDS.â Dispatchers reviewing the audio tied to Shamar Elkins say there is a strange 11-second gap where no sound is recorded at all â no voices, no background noise. When the audio returns, one child is heard whispering something that police refuse to confirm⌠and it changes everything
THE SHREVEPORT MASSACRE: A DESCENT INTO DOMESTIC TERROR The silence that fell over the Cedar Grove neighborhood of Shreveport, Louisiana, on the morning of April 19, 2026, was not the peaceful quiet of a Sunday dawn. It was a heavy,…
End of content
No more pages to load