You know those people who have one job, and that’s it? Yakov Litinetsky is not that guy. He’s into real estate. He trades stocks — not just regular ones, but options and foreign stuff too. He collects antique paintings. And he buys businesses. Busy? Yeah. But he seems to like it that way.
Real estate without the fancy title
Yakov Litinetsky finds properties. Not in a chaotic, buy-everything-that-moves way. He’s picky. He looks for places that need some work but have good bones. Apartments mostly. Sometimes, small commercial buildings. He negotiates his own deals. No middleman. Just him, the seller, and a lawyer to check the paperwork. He says cutting out extra people saves money and headaches. Once he owns a place, he fixes what’s broken, finds tenants, and keeps everything running. Boring work, sure. But boring pays the bills.
Stock markets — and not just the easy ones
Most people buy a few shares of Apple or Tesla and call themselves investors. Yakov Litinetsky goes deeper. He trades options, which are riskier because they expire worthless if you guess wrong. He also watches foreign markets — Europe, Asia, places where most Americans never bother looking. Foreign exchange? Yeah, he does that too. Buying one currency, selling another, hoping the numbers move his way. Sometimes they do. Sometimes they don’t. But he’s been doing it long enough not to panic when things get ugly.
Old paintings from way back
This one throws people off. Yakov collects antique paintings. Not the kind you buy at Target. Real old stuff — 18th century, 19th century, sometimes older. He likes the stories behind them. Who painted it? Who hung it on their wall a hundred years ago? He doesn’t buy art just to sell it later. He buys what he actually enjoys looking at. But over time, those paintings usually hold their value or go up. So it’s a hobby that also happens to be smart financially.
Buying existing businesses
Yakov doesn’t start companies from zero. That takes too long. Instead, he finds small businesses that are already making money. Maybe the owner wants to retire. Maybe the company is fine, but it needs someone with fresh energy. He buys it, takes over, and runs it better. He’s done this a few times. Nothing huge — small manufacturing, a distribution thing, stuff like that. Solid cash flow. Low drama.
Final thought
Yakov Litinetsky doesn’t fit into one neat category. Real estate guy? Stock guy? Art collector? Business buyer? He is all of them. And honestly speaking, that keeps life interesting.
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