Wednesday, December 30, 2015

10 Silly and Dangerous Things People Say About Stocks


“Nature never deceives us; it is we who deceive ourselves.” – Rousseau (Émile, 1762)
Peter Lynch was the most successful fund manager in the world from 1977 to 1990, when he ran the Fidelity Magellan Fund. The fund grew from $20 million to $14 billion in assets under his leadership, and he walked out on top. Just before he retired, he wrote a best-selling book titled “One Up on Wall Street: How to Use What You Already Know to Make Money in the Market.”
And he has probably bought and sold more stocks than anyone else on the planet. I can’t think of anyone more qualified to make a list of the 10 silliest (and most dangerous) things people say to justify their bad stock-market decisions.
So, without further ado, here’s a quick look at Peter’s list — along with my comments on each one:
1. “If it’s gone down this much already, it can’t go much lower.”
I know that you’ve said this to yourself during the last two major downturns. You said it on Lucent. On Cisco. Sun. AOL. Enron. WorldCom, etc. How many times does an investor have to say this before he learns that it makes no sense? Outside of zero, there is no rule for how low a stock can go. The best advice I can give here: If you catch yourself saying this, it’s time to get out.
2. “You can always tell when a stock’s hit bottom.”
Nobody knows when a stock will bottom — so don’t try to guess it. Instead of trying to catch a falling knife, it’s much safer to let the knife hit the ground … and let it wiggle around a bit to be sure … and then pick it up.
3. “If it’s gone this high already, how can it possibly go higher?”
If you want to make 10 times your money, you can’t sell before the stock goes up 10 times. But nearly all investors do sell the big winners early because of this faulty logic. The only way to make real money in stocks is by letting them go higher — by not taking a profit early. It’s hard to do. But you’ve got to let your profits ride.
4. “It’s only $3 a share; what can I lose?”
What can you lose? You can lose 100%. Whether a stock is $3 or $50, if it falls to zero, it’s a 100% loss. If it falls to 50 cents, it’s not much better. Three bucks is no guarantee of a bargain. Resist the urge; it’s dangerous. You can still lose it all.
5. “Eventually, they always come back.”
I’m heard that a lot during the dotcom bust. It’s as if WorldCom, Enron, Global Crossing, and all the dot-coms were some kind of fluke. Fact is, they don’t always come back. If you catch yourself saying this about one of your stocks, it may well be time to get rid of it. Make sure you’re using your trailing-stop-loss strategy here. 
6. “It’s always darkest before the dawn.”
For the past several years, gold has done nothing but fall in price. But every year, somebody is saying “It’s always darkest before the dawn.” As Peter Lynch says, “Sometimes it’s darkest before the dawn, but then again, other times it’s always darkest before it’s pitch-black.” If you’re saying this — and you really believe it — please be absolutely certain that you’re not just rationalizing a bad decision.
7. “When it rebounds, I’ll sell.”
I’ve heard this phrase hundreds of times. Yet, I’ve never seen anyone follow his own advice here. When the stock rebounds, they decide there’s nothing wrong with it and they keep it. If it never rebounds, they keep it. The reason people do this is that they don’t like to admit they’re wrong. So, somehow, by holding a losing stock instead of selling it, there’s still a chance that they’ll be right on this loser. Usually, they’re not. If you find yourself in this boat, your best bet is most likely to sell immediately.
8. “What, me worry? Conservative stocks don’t fluctuate much.”
There isn’t a stock on the planet that you can afford to ignore. And as we’ve learned during the stock-market shellacking of 2008-09, even blue chips can get clobbered. This phrase justifies the decision to not pay attention to your investments. That’s a bad idea. It’s your money. It’s worth a little attention.
9. “It’s taking too long for anything to ever happen.”
I hear this phrase all the time. Investors want action. But think about this: A 12% annual return is about 1% a month. That’s a great return, but there’s no action. You don’t need action. Be patient. Lynch says it takes remarkable patience to hold on to a stock that everyone else seems to ignore. Most of the money he makes on a stock, he says, is in the third or fourth year of owning it.
10. “Look at all the money I lost because I didn’t buy it!”
Lynch says this thinking “leads people to try to play catch-up by buying stocks they shouldn’t buy, if only to protect themselves from ‘losing’ more than they’ve already ‘lost.’ This usually results in real losses.” Have you made any of these statements — or statements like these — in the past year?
Always remember: In the long run, it is much easier — and ultimately less painful — to correct a bad decision quickly than it is to continue searching for emotional justification as your portfolio continues to shrink.

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the Internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…


Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Wealth Building Secret #2: Earn More Than You Spend



“I didn’t want to be rich, I just wanted enough to get the couch reupholstered.” – Kate (Mrs. Zero) Mostel
If you continue to get up early and read Ray's Wealth Wisdom, your income will climb. How do I know that? Because the world is starved for ambitious, hardworking, and focused people. Waking (and getting to work) early gives you a head start day after day, month after month, year after year. That adds up. By charging your batteries with Ray's Wealth Wisdom (Seven Years to Seven Figures), your energy will always be high and your efforts razor-sharp — focused toward achieving your goals.
Even a modicum of extra effort will give you enough extra income to become wealthy eventually. The best-selling book “The Millionaire Next Door” (by Thomas Stanley and William Danko) documented that. If you are satisfied being among the “lumpen capitalists” (see “How Rich Do You Want to Be?” below), the secret is to spend less than you earn, invest those extra savings over a long period of time, and let the miracle of compound interest do the rest.


But you probably don’t want to wait 30 or 40 years. And you may not be satisfied with a mere $500,000 to $1,000,000 in net worth. If so, you are going to have to do the following:
* Learn (and eventually master) a financially valuable skill.
* Use it to position yourself as a profit maker.
* Secure for yourself a fair cut of the success you create.
This will give you — almost from the start — an above-average income. And that income will increase as you get better at what you do. But no matter how high you boost your income, you won’t acquire wealth unless you learn to spend less than you make. For it is the money we save, not the money we make, that determines our wealth.
That’s what I’d like to talk about today: how to avoid the very natural and deceptively powerful impulse to spend more as you make more.
If you have enjoyed a growing income, you already understand (all too well) what I’m talking about. Make more money and things get better: your car, your clothes, even (and most expensively) your home address. That’s fine so long as there is a limit. But for many (if not most) income builders, the desire to spend is always two steps ahead of the ability to earn. If you fall into that trap, you will have the accoutrements of wealth but never its most valuable benefits: financial peace of mind and the freedom to stop working.
Fat people consume more calories than they burn. Poor people spend more money than they earn. Getting thin and getting wealthy are the two easiest things you can do — at least in theory. The hard part is the mental discipline.
We’ll talk about dieting some other time. Today, I want to give you one powerful trick that will give you a wealth builder’s mind-set.
It’s a technique I stumbled upon many years ago that has been a great help in my financial success. It has allowed me to get richer in good times and bad, when my ideas were working and when they were not, when the economy boomed and when it stalled. It’s something you can do for yourself. Something that will change you in a subtle but powerful way so that you will never have to worry about being poor again. It’s the financial equivalent of a diet pill that would make it impossible to ever gain back a pound of lost weight Wouldn’t that be nice!
This came to me about 20 years ago, when I first was introduced to the teachings of Jim Rohn. Jim was big on "the numbers tell the story". He explained that Las Vegas casinos complete a profit and loss statement hourly! Why? Because of all the activity, even a little neglect could spell disaster. So I decided to really focus on my numbers.  Every day after my business opened, I’d count the money that came in. Then, I started doing something that I’ve continued to do to this day.
I took out a sheet of paper and tallied up the value of everything I owned and everything I owed. There was an 8-year-old car that was worth about $1,500, some cheap jewelry I had bought for my wife that I could hock for maybe $200, and a couple of inexpensive (but actually good-quality) oil paintings I’d bought that might get me $50 each in a garage sale. That was about it. Except, of course, for the sweet green cash that was piling up in my mind each day as my fledgling business paid back its start-up capital and went on to earn thousands and then tens of thousands of dollars.
When I started this little scribbled list, my financial assets were overshadowed by my debts and liabilities (credit-card debt, some old student debt, a car loan on that piece of junk vehicle, etc.). The bottom line was bright red. But since I had a cash-positive business, things were getting better every day. The hole I had dug for myself was getting less and less deep. In a matter of months, I could poke my head above ground level and see a future for myself. A year later, I was among the lumpen lot!
It wasn’t a straight march up. A year later, I was a partner in about a dozen operating businesses and suddenly found myself — for several scary months — more than a million dollars in the hole. If things hadn’t turned around, it would have been very bad for my family.
Those two experiences — making that good, fast money and then almost losing it — inspired me to adjust my habit of adding up my wealth. The twist was this: I promised myself that I would do whatever it took to make sure that each new total — each new bottom-line number — was larger than the one before. Since I’d gotten into the habit of running my numbers on a monthly basis, my vow meant that I was committing to becoming wealthier every month.
That may seem like a simple promise, but it had a profound impact on the way I thought about myself, my job, my business relationships, and wealth building itself. It made me see — almost instantly — that many of my habits (including some of my spending habits) were financially unhealthy. It also gave me, at times, the panicked energy I needed to do something drastic — to start something new or end something that had gone wrong . Plus, it gave me an underlying determination to get a little bit richer every day — and this, as Robert Frost said, has made all the difference.
You might want to do the same thing:
* Make it a habit to recalculate your net worth on a monthly basis.
* Then promise yourself you’ll do what it takes to make that bottom line always bigger than it was before.
You’ll have to be scrupulously honest. The temptation to meet your goal by overvaluing a particular asset may be strong, so be aware of it and resist it.
Counting your money is an unseemly activity. You probably don’t want to do it in front of anyone else. And you certainly don’t want to talk about it. But it will remind you of the progress you’re making — and that will give you the mental strength to continue. Ultimately, it will make spending less than you earn automatic. And that means your future wealth will be guaranteed.
Don’t dismiss this little technique because it’s simple. All the best and most powerful things in life are simple. This WILL make a difference. Do it.$

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…
 

Thursday, November 26, 2015

The Greatest Financial Gift You Can Give to Your Children


I wrote this essay for your children and grandchildren.
You’ve probably heard about America’s huge debt load. The U.S. government’s financial obligations now exceed $663,000 per American family. This burden will fall on the youngest Americans.
It’s unethical. It’s unfortunate. But it’s the reality.
With this giant financial obligation bearing down on them, it’s critical that now – right now – your children and grandchildren learn about money and finance. They need to know the basic principles… like how to be independent, why debt is dangerous, and how to grow money.
They don’t teach finance in schools. If you don’t teach them this knowledge, no one will. They call this financial illiteracy.
If our children are financially illiterate, they have as much chance of survival as a swordsman in a gunfight. There will be no mercy for the financially illiterate in the future. It’s likely these people will live as indentured servants to the government and its creditors.
But if our kids have a grasp of finance and its basics – and they obey its laws – they will grow up rich. They will be in a position to help other Americans, too.
Below, you’ll find the three vital financial concepts all children need to understand. Please pass them on to your children and grandchildren as soon as you can. I have three children… And these three concepts are my starting point for their financial education.
First of all, our kids must know that they are not entitled to money or wealth… or anything for that matter, even Christmas presents. They must earn money. I want my children to learn that they shouldn’t expect anything to be handed to them. I don’t want them to rely on the government for their livelihood, like many people do right now.
So many people treat money and prosperity as an entitlement. The government even calls its welfare programs “entitlements.” This word – and what it represents – gets stamped into young people’s brains. Kids act as if they are somehow entitled to toys, video games, and cars. But why should they be? Just because they have parents, it doesn’t mean they should get everything they want.
It's good to regularly remind your children of this when they are old enough to understand it. Not paying kids an allowance is a great start. An allowance would reinforce the sense of entitlement. They can make money by earning it: doing the dishes, making their beds, mowing the lawn… there are a million things. It's better to pay them for doing those things. But I’m not going to just give them money.
The second concept our children need to understand is debt. Debt is expensive. If you abuse it, it will destroy you. Like the entitlement mentality, debt is an enslaver. It robs you of your independence. I avoid debt in my personal life… and when I’m choosing investments.
The best way to illustrate the cost of debt is to calculate the total amount of interest the debt generates in dollars over the lifetime of the loan, instead of looking at the interest rate (like most people do). Once you look at it like that, you can see how expensive borrowing money really is.
For example, say you borrow $100,000 with a 30-year mortgage at 7%. Over 30 years, you’ll end up paying $140,000 in interest to the bank. In the end, you’re out $240,000 for a house that cost less than half that. Not a good deal.
The third thing our kids need to learn is the power of compound interest and the best way to harness it.
Compound interest is the most powerful force in finance. It is the force behind almost every fortune. The brilliant Richard Russell calls compound interest “The Royal Road to Riches.” And it’s mathematically guaranteed.
Let’s say, for example, you have $100 earning 10% annual interest. At the end of a year, you’ll have $110. During the second year, you’ll earn interest on $110 instead of $100. In the third year, you’ll earn interest on $121… and so on. This is the power of compound interest. The numbers get enormous over time, simply because you’re earning interest on your interest.
Because time is the most important element in compounding, it’s an incredibly powerful idea for children to understand. They have the ultimate edge in the market: the time to compound over decades.
The stock market is the best place to earn compound interest. You buy companies that have 50 years or more of rising dividend payments ahead of them. Then you let the mathematics work.
As soon as your kids are old enough to understand some arithmetic, you can sit down with the classic compounding tables and show them which stocks they have to buy. I’ll use Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, and Philip Morris as examples.
Another very safe place to save and compound your money is our “Income for Life” strategy. 
After that, assuming they have the discipline to follow through, they will get rich. There’s no doubt about it.
In sum, you have the responsibility to educate your family about finance. If you don’t, no one else will, and they will suffer for it.
Encourage them to work hard and avoid the entitlement mentality. Teach them the power of compound interest and explain the dangers of debt.
If you do this, you will equip your kids and grandkids to survive financially in the difficult circumstances ahead. You’ll provide them with something that nobody can place a price on: the power of independence.$

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…
 

Friday, November 20, 2015

How to Create Personal Wealth


Donald and Mildred Othmer were ordinary Americans. Don was a chemical engineering professor in Brooklyn. Mildred was a teacher. They never did anything extraordinary and never had great luck at anything, yet they did amass a $750 million fortune before they died.
They did it by following two principles that we talk about constantly:
1. Have a second income. Both Don and Mildred developed secondary sources of cash. Don wrote and filed patents. Mildred worked as a buyer for her mother’s dress shop. This extra income wasn’’t ever phenomenal, but it was, for many years, significant (in the range of $15,000 to $50,000 per year).
2. Invest it wisely. The Othmers put all of that secondary income into “value” investments. Since they understood that they did not and would never understand other people’s businesses well enough to predict how they would perform, they invested their extra income in businesses that had good “fundamentals.” The stocks they invested in represented companies with a steady history of growth and earnings. They favored businesses they could understand.
Luckily for them, they found one company with a growth plan that reflected their conservative investment philosophy: Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Warren Buffet’’s company. The Othmers were so impressed with Berkshire and with Buffet’s analysis that they bought $50,000 worth of the company’s stock. How good an investment did that turn out to be? They saw their $42 shares go up to $77,250. You don’’t need to be lucky enough to pick Warren Buffet as your stock adviser to become wealthy. Had the Othmers invested in any ordinary index fund (or even municipal bonds), their net worth would have been in excess of $100 million. That’’s plenty enough for a comfortable retirement, don’’t you think?
The Othmer formula — having a second income and investing it wisely — applies to folks who have regular jobs and don’’t have the nerve to give them up. If you have your own business, you should not find something additional to do but instead do more in your business. Treat that “more” as a second job and take all the money you make from that and treat it exactly as the Othmers did. The important thing is to develop a comfortable lifestyle that allows for all your needs to be met on your “regular” income and then create — for your personal wealth fund — an additional $5,000 to $50,000 a year (or more if you can) that can grow steadily, taking advantage of the miracle of compound interest.
Here’’s what you can do today: Figure out how to make an extra $5,000 to $50,000 in the next 12 months and promise yourself that you will invest every penny of it.$

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…
 

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

4 Steps To Wealth Building



““The harder I work, the luckier I get.”” – Lee Trevino


If you want to be wealthy one day, there are four things you must do:
1. Master a financially valuable skill.
2. Develop a high income.
3. Invest conservatively in other businesses.
4. Invest aggressively in a business you know.
I'’ll talk in more detail about each of these at a later time, but for today I’'d like to clarify what I mean by “financially valuable skill.”
A financially valuable skill might include doctoring or lawyering, but for the purposes of this and future conversations, try to think of them as falling into one or several of three categories:
* speaking well
* writing well
* thinking well
Speak And/Or Write Well And They Will Follow You
In any organization or organized system, power moves inexorably to those who are persuasive. The means of communication you develop doesn't matter so much. What counts is that you have a way to convince people that your ideas are worthwhile.
It goes without saying that you don’t need flawless grammar and a good vocabulary to be persuasive. They can help, but they are minor skills in the Art of Rhetoric.
All Difficult Problems Are Collections Of Simple Problems
By thinking well, I mean having the ability to analyze a problem and figure out its component parts, what it is made up of and how important each of these pieces is. If you apply this thinking to a business situation,– say analyzing a market,– you can figure out solutions before your colleagues have begun to figure out the problems.
Great marketers are really great thinkers. They look at a complicated market, break it down into understandable patterns, and develop a selling program that reflects those patterns. If you can figure out how to sell products/services when everybody else is throwing up their hands in despair, you’ll be rich and powerful sooner (probably) than you even want to be.
To make a high income (in excess of $100,000), you almost have to have one of these skills.
Spend some time today thinking about what kind of valuable skill you have and how you might use it to get your income up – at least to a hundred grand. More if you want more.$

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…
 

Monday, November 16, 2015

Are the Rich Smarter Than You?


“Well if you’re so damn smart, why aren’t you rich?”
I heard this question asked when I was young, and it ingrained in me the notion that the rich must have a little something extra going on upstairs, otherwise, we’d all be rolling in it. Right?
There is, in fact, some evidence to support this. According to a recent report from the U.S. Census Bureau, there is a strong positive correlation between income and education. Over an adult’s working life, on average…
  • High school graduates should expect to earn $1.2 million.
  • Those with a bachelor’s degree, $2.1 million.
  • Those with a master’s degree, $2.5 million.
  • Those with doctoral degrees, $3.4 million.
  • Those with professional degrees, $4.4 million.
But here’s the rub. Studies show that those who earn the most aren’t necessarily the richest…
How to Determine Real Wealth
To determine real wealth, you need to look at a balance sheet – assets minus liabilities – not an income statement. According to the late Dr. Thomas J. Stanley, the bestselling author of The Millionaire Next Door and perhaps at the time the country’s foremost authority on the habits and characteristics of America’s wealthy. Many of his findings are just the opposite of what you’d expect.
For example, we generally envision millionaires as Bentley-driving, mansion-owning, Tiffany-shopping members of exclusive country clubs. And indeed, Stanley’s research reveals that the “glittering rich” – those with a net worth of $10 million or more – often meet this description.
But most millionaires – individuals with a net worth of $1 million or more – live an entirely different lifestyle. Stanley found that the vast majority:
  • Live in a house that cost less than $400,000.
  • Do not own a second home.
  • Have never owned a boat.
  • Are more likely to wear a Timex than a Rolex.
  • Do not collect wine and generally pay less than $15 for a bottle.
  • Are more likely to drive a Toyota than a Beemer.
  • Have never paid more than $400 for a suit.
  • Spend very little on prestige brands and luxury items.
This is certainly not the traditional image of millionaires. And it makes you wonder, who the heck is buying all those Mercedes convertibles, Louis Vuitton purses, and $70 bottles of Grey Goose vodka? The answer, according to Dr. Stanley, is “aspirationals.” People who act rich and want to be rich, but really aren’t rich.
Many are good people, well educated, and perhaps earning a six-figure income. But they aren’t balance-sheet rich because it’s almost impossible for most workers – even those who are well paid – to hyper-spend on consumer goods and save a lot of money. (And saving is the key prerequisite for investing.)
This notion shocks many Americans. During an Oprah appearance, Dr. Stanley was asked the following question from a member of the audience, one he’d heard hundreds of times before:
“What good does it do to have all this money if you don’t spend it?”
She was angry, indignant even. “These people couldn’t possibly be happy.”
Keeping Up With the Joneses and Smiths
Like so many others, this woman genuinely believed that the more you spend, the better life is. Understand, we’re not talking about people who live below the poverty line. (Clearly, their lives would be better if they were able to spend more.) We’re talking about middle-class consumers and up, those who often live beyond their means and then find themselves under enormous pressure, especially in a weak economy.
Some were overly optimistic about their earning prospects. Others didn’t realize that they are up against an army of the best and most creative marketers in the world, whose job it is to convince you that “you are what you buy,” that you need to outspend – to out-display – others.
The unspoken message behind the constant barrage of TV and billboard ads featuring all those impossibly good-looking men and women is that you are special, you are deserving, and you need to look and act successful now.
According to Dr. Stanley, “The pseudo-affluent are insecure about how they rank among the Joneses and the Smiths. Often their self-esteem rests on quicksand. In their minds, it is closely tied to how long they can continue to purchase the trappings of wealth. They strongly believe all economically successful people display their success through prestige products. The flip side of this has them believing that people who do not own prestige brands are not successful.”
Yet “everyday” millionaires see things differently. Most of them achieved their wealth not by hitting the lottery or gaining an inheritance, but by patiently and persistently maximizing their income, minimizing their outgoing, and religiously saving and investing the difference.
You Aren’t the Car You Drive or the Watch You Wear…
They aren’t big spenders. They just recognize that real pleasure and satisfaction doesn’t come from the car you drive or the watch you wear, but time spent on activities with family, friends, and associates.
They aren’t misers, however, especially when it comes to educating their children and grandchildren – or donating to worthy causes. Although they are disciplined savers, the affluent are among the most generous Americans in charitable giving.
Just how prevalent are American millionaires? According to the Spectrum Group, there were 8.39 million U.S. households with a net worth between $1 million and $5 million at the end of 2014. Very few of them won a Grammy, played in the NBA, or started a computer company in their garage. Clearly, thrift and modesty – however unfashionable – are still alive in some parts of the country.
So while millions of consumers chase a blinkered image of success – busting their humps for stuff that ends up in landfills, yard sales, and thrift shops – disciplined savers and investors are enjoying the freedom, satisfaction, and peace of mind that comes from living beneath their means.
These folks are turned on not by consumerism but by personal achievement, industry awards, and recognition. They know that success is not about flaunting your wealth. It’s about a sense of accomplishment… and the independence that comes with it. They are able to do what they want, where they want, with whom they want.
They may not be smarter than you, but they do know something priceless: It is how we spend ourselves – not our money – that makes us rich.$

[Do you know how Facebook and Google became the most powerful companies in the world?

It’s NOT helping you share pics of last night’s dinner...
It’s NOT searching for drunken cat videos…
And it’s DEFINITELY NOT about free Gmail accounts.
 
The simple truth is Facebook and Google SELL TRAFFIC.

They SELL TRAFFIC to business owners, and that advertising revenue alone has turned them into billion dollar companies.
 
Traffic is the most valuable commodity on the internet, and that will never change.
 
This is why using the Traffic Authority business system is the ultimate way to make extra income in your business…
 

Sunday, November 15, 2015

How to Stop Losing Half of Your Money and Live Without Worry


Every eight to 10 years, inflation cuts the wealth you have in cash by half.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics says the inflation rate has averaged 2.6% since 1990. In fact, it’s at least twice that much. And it could be four times that much…
You see, in 1990, the government changed the way it calculates inflation. It conveniently removed certain costs from the Consumer Price Index calculations. Those included the prices of fuel and other commodities.
If you use the older, more credible government calculation, inflation for the last 20 years would average 6.5% per year. And according to the American Institute for Economic Research, it is actually closer to 8%!
An inflation rate of 8% means that $100,000 in cash today will be worth only $46,319 in 10 years. That’s more than half its value, gone.
In 20 years, it’s only worth $21,455. In 30 years, it’s worth an abysmal $9,938.
What can you do to protect yourself?
When most people think about arming themselves against inflation, they think in terms of investing: investing in hard assets and high-quality companies that can charge more for their products as their cost of goods increases with inflation.
They are great inflation hedges. But will this “Wall Street strategy” really help you?
Sure, but not nearly as much as Wall Street would have you think. That’s because they protect only a tiny part of your overall cash flow.
Let me ask you this: What percentage of your income do you save every month?
If you are like most U.S. citizens, you save a paltry 5.8% of your income. Put differently, Americans spend an astonishing 94.2% of their income.
When you are spending 90%-plus of your income every year, it is difficult to protect yourself against inflation. This is because investment hedges (such as the ones I described) benefit only the cash you put into them.
Let’s use some numbers as an example to make the point clearer.
Say you earn $100,000 of income. And let’s say you’re fortunate enough to save 20%, or $20,000. You put it in a traditional inflation hedge, such as gold or real estate.
Next, let’s say inflation spikes 10% in one year. We’ll assume that means your inflation hedge will increase by the same amount. If your inflation hedge rises 10%, it will increase your overall net worth only by $2,000.
And that’s if you save 20% of your income. Remember, the typical American only saves a little over 5%.
I hope you’re beginning to see how Wall Street’s laser focus on nothing but inflation-hedge investments is incomplete. It’s kind of like going to the emergency room for a broken leg, but the doctor insists everything will be OK if he just Band-Aids the scratch on your leg.
What’s the answer, then?
When I sit down with new clients, I tell them something that very few in the investment world say:
“You cannot hope to get wealthy by investing alone.”
You need to base your foundation of true wealth building on
  • increasing the proportion of your income that you save and
  • increasing your income.
These same strategies are also the solution to beating inflation.
Think about it: How can you grow wealthy when 80%-plus of your costs are going up because of inflation, yet only 5% of your income is in an inflation-protected asset? How can you grow wealthy when your boss gives you only 3% yearly cost-of-living wage increases, but inflation is rising at 5%?
The truth – the boring-yet-powerful truth – is that the two most effective ways to combat the pernicious effects of inflation are to decrease the amount of money you spend every year and to increase the amount of money you earn.
I have lots of ideas on how to spend less… You might see them in a future essay. But today, I’d like you to follow me for a moment as I use an analogy…
Imagine a water faucet pouring into a bucket. Your goal is to fill the bucket. But in the bottom of the bucket, there is a large hole that’s leaking water.
You probably know where I’m going with this. The faucet is your income – filling the bucket (your wallet) – and the hole in the bottom of the bucket is inflation – draining it.
Just spending less and saving more would be like trying to put Scotch tape over the hole in the bucket to stop the leaking. It will help, but you’re still going to lose a lot of water. You’re still losing to inflation. What now?
Then we turn to focusing on how much water is pouring out of the faucet.
In other words, you need to increase your active income. You need to make sure your active income is increasing at the same rate as the inflation rate, if not faster.
For every drop of water leaking out of the hole, you need at least a drop – if not more – pouring in from the faucet.
There are two primary ways to do this.
One, you become so valuable at your current job that your bosses reward you with a higher salary.
What could you do that would set you apart from the other employees? What could you do that would truly add value for your boss or the company? What actions could you take today that will get you noticed as valuable and irreplaceable?
I’ll give you a hint. Your job is to produce long-term profits. In other words, your job is to help your company make more money.
The secret to getting above-average raises each year is to accept that as your fundamental responsibility – and to transform the work you are doing now in such a way that it will produce those long-term profits.
To achieve this, do everything in your power to become the most valuable person in your company. Arrive early. Work hard and work smart. Volunteer for projects. Take initiative. Become the “go to” person for ideas and solutions. Become indispensable.
That way, your boss (or even your boss’ boss) will reward you with bigger raises and compensation (pay raises that are at least as much as the annual increase in inflation).
The better you can do it, the more money you will make. It’s as simple as that.
If increasing your salary from your primary job isn’t a possibility for whatever reason, you must focus on the second way of earning more income: finding or creating a new stream of income.
There are many ways to generate extra income. Working a second job. Freelancing… consulting… blogging… copywriting…Uber... the possibilities abound.
But the key is to begin looking right now. Start a Google search. Make a phone call to ask questions. Set up an informational interview to learn more about a possibility. The point is, take action.
As I have explained many times, “There is no faster or surer way to become wealthy than by creating extra income and allocating it toward one’s investments.”
Wall Street declares that you can beat inflation by simply investing in the right kind of assets. And yes, while that is important, that strategy alone will not beat inflation.
The best way to combat and beat inflation is to spend less and earn more.
I can promise you this: A month after you start implementing the strategies I showed you today, you will feel much better about the threat of inflation.
And as time passes, you will be able to sleep comfortably at night. You’ll know that you are immune to inflation’s malicious effects.$

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