You're solely placing
risk on newly released TLD's but if I'm looking at your site you're fully invested in .com and many types of ccTLDs. It's looks as though you're operating in the same manner as new gTLD investors by holding such a large portfolio and admittedly saying you're only making some low XXX ccTLD sales currently.
I'm not trying to debate you but the truth is most domainers are running in the red, looking for decent sales to come around, it's how things work. No guts no glory with any type of investment and or any business investment.
My advise to new investors/members buying new gTLDs is watch out for the renewals. When they first launched, like with xyz some good deals were available. Now extensions like .store and I'm sure .web will be the same, out of reach. Either the purchase price will be out of reach with a low renewal, or it will be a high purchase price with a high renewal.
If you want to buy nGTLDs it's a good time to be looking at drops, good keywords with lower renewal. There was a day I thought a $250.00 per year for a nice keyword.extension was high but that's not the case now looking at whats being released and whats coming down the road.
I'm personally not looking for a golden retirement, just working to make a profit over time. But like we've discussed before it's going to take longer than a couple years to see how this all pans out.
Many of the responses here have no merit, some do but many don't. Saying .gdn stinks is easy to say on here but if you really think about it, it's just a extension. I could easy own LLL.any ccTLD too but I prefer LLL.gdn vs the many ccTLDs available.
I agree that some domains decrease over time but many increase in value over time too. I was looking at another members portfolio that's been around NP for years and they're still holding on to .coms registered back in 1998, 1999.
The next few years will break all this down, facts will prevail rather than speculation and constant bickering back and forth.