If you’ve ever considered the miracle of compounding, you know that interest on interest can pay off big time. One of the simplest ways to invest money is to double it for higher and higher transactions. With just $500 dollars you can turn it into $1,000,000 in exactly 11 easy steps. Let’s see how this can be achieved.

500

1000

2000

4000

8000

16000

32000

64000

128000

256000

512000

1,024,000

The 11 steps above show how money can stack up when you double it at each step. Let’s look at an example and see how this can be achieved using ever higher levels of equity.

Doubling your capital is the same as saying you made a 100% return. You spend $500 but get $1000 back. How can this be achieved, legally and with the least possible risk? Because if you can do it once, you can do it at every other level because it’s the percentage ratio that matters and not the level you’re capitalizing on.

Say for example we have $500 and we borrow another $1000 on our credit card which we will pay off before the interest free period ends. Borrowed funds cost us nothing because of this. We look for an investment object that is well below the price. An investment object can be anything, say we find a car that the person down the street is selling because he bought a new car and doesn’t want the other car. They don’t care too much if they get full price, they just want to sell it. You offer them $1500 and they gladly accept. But the car is easily worth $2,000.

You put it in the classifieds for $2,300 and someone comes along and offers you the $2,000 you were looking for in the first place. Tell me this… how long do you think such a transaction would take? One year? 6 months? I’m sure you could hit your first compounding goal in a few weeks. You pay the borrowed $1,000 back to your credit card and keep $1,000. You’ve doubled your money for the first time and it only took a few weeks. Later, as your capital grows, you go into raw real estate and land, you can look at luxury yachts and gemstones, in fact anything that matches your starting capital level and is priced below intrinsic value. .