Posted By thilak

Azizi Ali, one of our famous local millionaires not only accumulates wealth for himself, but also help others achieve the same by training and imparting his knowledge. I found this topic quite interesting as I get questions or statements from friends and family members who say that market is down, so don't invest! or I'd want to monitor my fund performances on my own (mutual funds, to be exact) so that i know how much returns I'm making..

 

 

Special Report: How to Measure Returns
by Azizi Ali

"I made fifty thousand in the stock market in 99!" an acquaintance proudly
declare. In fact, it was so loud, he was practically screaming in your ear.
Which kind of make you feel inadequate because you only made ten grand. So you quickly change the conversation subject to the mating rituals of extinct
Sagittarian Mongolian bisons.

But hold on a second. Though it's true that you made less money than him, it does not necessarily mean that he is one up on you. Because we are only talking
of straight figures so far. And that is not how return on investment are calculated.

The correct way of measuring returns is in two ways: in percentage form and on an annual basis.

Return must be expressed on a percentage term

Return expressed in straight ringgit/dollar/yen has little meaning. This is
because straight ringgit amount do not reveal the amount of money that had to be
invested in order to earn that return.

For example, is RM10,000 a good return? The answer is that it depends on the
amount invested. If RM50,000 was invested, then RM10,000 would be an excellent return as it is a 20% return. However, if the original investment was RM500,000, then the return is a measly 2%. If his layout was five million instead, then he would have cried as his return is...0.2%! Pass the tissue paper, please.

Return must be expressed on an annual basis

But the job doesn't end there. Even after expressing the return in percentages,
it must also be expressed on an annual basis. This is the universally accepted
way of stating a percentage return.

Following the earlier example; if the RM10,000 return from the RM50,000 was
realized after just 6 months, then the annual return is 44% (The return is 44%
instead of 40% due to the compound effect). And even if the investment was
cashed out after that six months, we would still consider the return as 44%.

If on the other hand, the RM10,000 was realized at the end of two years, then
the return is only 9.54%. (Again, the 9.54% return instead of 10% is due to the
compounding factor).

So now you know that the return of x % in y number of years - often quoted by
fund managers - is not the right way of indicating return on investment. A 50%
return in five years may look good but that is only 8.44% annual return.

Then we can compare

Once we have the returns expressed in percentage form and on an annual basis,
only then we can compare the various returns from different investments. Only
then the comparison be fair and sensible. Orange to orange, durian to durian.

Coming back to the beginning example, if the guy made RM50,000 from investing RM500,000, his return on investment is 10%. Not bad. Something to crow about, I suppose.

But since you made the ten grand by investing only RM20,000, your return is a
fabulous 50%! Whaddaya know - You are the winner!

Now you can go back talking about sex and dead Sagittarian Mongolian bisons.


 
Posted By thilak

 

A good article from Investopedia. I wished I had these kind of financial knowledge first, instead of drooling on expensive cars and lifestyle..Anyway, its not too late, I guess, as the saying goes, 'It's better late than never'.

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by Gregory Bresiger

 

Being smart about credit card debt can help the average investor bank a guaranteed 18%. It is a conscious decision that could save the average household approximately $1,500 a year. So how can you bank these savings? Read on for tips from financial experts on how to tackle debt and grow you savings.

The Debt Dilemma
Let's say you owe $5,000 on your credit cards and are paying 18% interest. The credit card companies, which of course like having a steady stream of revenue, might ask you to make a minimum payment of $150 a month. But just making a minimum payment will result in years of debt.

Assuming you make no new purchases and pay a fixed $150 each month for the next several years, how long will it take to pay off the $5,000 debt? Three years and 11 months. You will also end up paying approximately $2,000 in interest. That's a lot of money to pay for credit.

Average Household Credit Card Debt
In relying on credit cards, some people throw away tens of thousands of dollars over decades.

As of 2007, the median amount of credit card debt carried by the average American household was $6,600, according to CardTrak.com. There are millions of cardholders who carry what advisors would say are dangerous amounts of card debt.

 

source

 

 

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Posted By thilak

 

Just thought of putting this article up on my site, since most of us would probably fall into this category. Maybe we should also try to emulate their styles....For a read of the complete article, just click on the source.

 

Justin and Emily Bergman

millionaire_bergmans1.jpgAges: Justin 25, Emily, 28
Occupations: Navy officer and administrator at a computer consulting firm
Salary: About $60,600 combined
TSP: $9,300
Roth IRA: $4,500
529 plan: $8,500 combined
Mutual fund: $15,200
Emergency Fund: $2,300

Auto expenses: $820 combined per month
Groceries: $360 per month
Tithe: $450 per month
Life insurance: $26 per month

 

Our Expert’s Take: The Bergmans are on the right track to reach millionaire status by the time they retire and should keep up the momentum, said Joseph Montanaro, a Certified Financial Planner at USAA who specializes in military savings.

 

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Posted By thilak

by Gail MarkJarvis

Why is it a bad idea to pick stocks, watch their performance and then sell them if they drop below a certain price, as opposed to choosing a mutual fund?

Take stock of your mutual funds
 
What kind of fund do you have?
Compare your fund's performance
Look at expense ratios and loads
How buying hot stocks could burn you
Invest differently for short-term goals

The trouble is people make those promises to themselves and they don't keep them. There's actually behavioral research on this done by people who have studied both psychology and finance. Most people don't like the idea of a loss, and so once their stock falls, even though they promised themselves that they would watch it, they say to themselves, "Well, I think it'll come back," and they wait. What they don't realize is that stocks have no memory. Just because you bought the stock at $50 a share, doesn't mean that it's ever going to return to that. So, a lot of times what will happen is, people will buy it and hold it after things have changed a lot since the day they bought it, and it'll just keep going down.

There's a hot stock today, too, that won't be a hot stock later.

There was a a group of stocks in the 1970s called the Nifty 50 and at the time Wall Street was saying, "You can buy these stocks and hold them forever and never think twice about them, because they are such great companies they will be there forever." Well, you want to hear some of the names of those? Polaroid, which dealt with cameras, fell 91 percent and the stock never ever came back to the price people had paid for it. Another one was Avon, the makeup company. We don't think of that as a hot stock today, but in the '70s that was a hot stock.

The point is, there's a hot stock today, too, that won't be a hot stock later. You just don't know it. Because you don't know it, it's dangerous to buy just one or two stocks.

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Posted By thilak

Want to know why you're still struggling with your finances while worldwide, everyday, there's someone being declared as a millionaire? Read on, you may uncover your mistakes....

 

 

by Jay MacDonald
Monday, October 29, 2007
provided by

Want to get to the top financially? Take advice from those who are already there.

At a glance

Name: Keith Cameron Smith
Hometown: Ormond Beach, Fla.
Education: Calvary Christian Academy, Ormond Beach, Fla.

Career highlights:

  • Author of the national best-seller, "The Spiritual Millionaire" and "The Top 10 Distinctions Between Millionaires and the Middle Class"
  • Entrepreneur and self-made millionaire at age 33
  • Hosted "Flames of Truth," a motivational radio program, for five years
  • Hosts seminars and teaches success principles to individuals, churches and companies across America

Financial guru Keith Cameron Smith, author of the best-selling "The Spiritual Millionaire" and himself a self-made millionaire at age 33, invested $100,000 and two years of his life to meet face-to-face with some of the world's wealthiest people to learn what makes them tick.

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Overwhelmed by the life lessons they imparted, Smith holed himself up in a North Carolina cabin and, in one week, distilled their wisdom into a 100-page crib note for successful thinking, "The Top 10 Distinctions Between Millionaires and the Middle Class."

Some of the distinctions are commonsensical (millionaires think long-term, the middle class, short-term; millionaires take risks, the middle class avoids risk). Others are quite illuminating (millionaires ask themselves empowering questions, the middle class ask themselves disempowering questions; millionaires learn and grow, the middle class, not so much).

Smith, who became independently wealthy with a string of furniture stores in his hometown of Ormond Beach, Fla., continues to seek opportunities in networking and real estate as he travels the country teaching financial success principles to individuals and companies.

As part of our Financial Literacy tuneup, Smith shares with Bankrate his insights into how to think like a millionaire.

You were not born wealthy.

(Laughs) Oh no. I grew up on the lower end of the middle class. My dad never made more than $25,000 a year. He sold auto parts to different garages. He had different routes to a couple of different towns around Florida.

Did you attend college?

I went to college for two weeks and said that's not for me. I'm on the list of millionaires that just did it in the real world and didn't go to school. School is phenomenal for some people. Some people absolutely need to go to school as part of their purpose. But some people don't need to go to school. They don't need to get a good job so the government or your corporation can take care of you, because as we know, that formula doesn't work anymore.

When you go through failures like I have and like other millionaires have, you learn something on an emotional level that you cannot learn when you go to college. When you get intellectual knowledge from a book or a lecture, it's not the same as investing money in something and then seeing all that money disappear. When you learn something on an emotional level, that is what really starts making you stronger.

Your original goal was to be a golf pro, right? What happened?

I had an apprentice position at the LPGA International in Daytona Beach when they first got started. I helped them get their pro shop up and running and I had my handicap down to about a four and I thought for sure I was going to pursue golf as a career. I took the PAT, the player's ability test, a couple of times; that's where you have to play a couple of rounds and shoot like 150 between two rounds of golf. And I could never do it; my nerves just couldn't handle it. But that was one of the turning points in my life. I sat down with the pro there at the time and asked how long it was going to be before I could really start making good money. I was making $20,000 a year as an apprentice. He said, "I'm going to be honest with you, it's going to be at least five or six years before you can move up." And I said no way, I'm not going to sit here and make $20,000 a year for five or six years.

How did you lift yourself out of the middle class?

Education. I started learning, but it wasn't education in the school system. It was education from my real-world experience as an entrepreneur and taking risks and having some good successes and some failures, too. Those are always tough when you go through them, but I honestly can say, thank God for those, too. Because those are the situations I really learned the most from, so I had some new knowledge to apply on the next endeavor.

Your book seems to strip down dozens of motivational books to their essence.

What I tried to do in my book was to stay away from specific areas like real estate or stocks or small businesses and instead encourage people to pursue their own passion to create wealth. What would they love to do to wake up and make money every morning? That's the key to it. By far, one of the biggest things I learned talking to all these millionaires was they really enjoyed whatever they were doing.

You maintain that the wealthy expect different things from money than the rest of us. How so?

The very poor and the poor are stuck in survival mode; they just want to survive. The primary goal of middle-class people is comfort; I just want to have enough; I just want to be comfortable. When you get into the rich and the very rich, their primary goal is freedom; I'm going to do whatever it takes to experience freedom. That's the biggest difference. It's OK to have a plan for survival, it's OK to have a plan for comfort, but just make sure that most of your mental energy is focused on freedom. Then you'll start experientially understanding the old saying, "Seek and you will find." If you seek to survive, you will. If you seek to be comfortable, you will be. But if you seek freedom, you will find it. It just takes longer to create freedom in your life than it does to create survival. Does it take longer to grow a weed or an oak tree? Financial freedom is like an oak tree, where survival or comfort is like growing a weed or a little bush; it doesn't take too long.

Do you remember when you turned the corner and began to think like a rich man?

Yeah, I do. I can remember banging my head against the inside of an elevator. I had just worked 11 hours at a golf course as an assistant pro and I was going to work at a high-dollar restaurant that night from 7 until midnight, and I was banging my head against the elevator, thinking, "God, there's got to be an easier way to make money than this." Shortly after that, I decided I was done working for somebody else. I was going to learn how to earn profits. That has made all the difference. From the age of 15 to 25, I worked for wages. At 25, I started working for profits, and at 33, I became a millionaire for the first time.

You maintain that the wealthy expect different things from money than the rest of us. How so?

The very poor and the poor are stuck in survival mode; they just want to survive. The primary goal of middle-class people is comfort; I just want to have enough; I just want to be comfortable. When you get into the rich and the very rich, their primary goal is freedom; I'm going to do whatever it takes to experience freedom. That's the biggest difference. It's OK to have a plan for survival, it's OK to have a plan for comfort, but just make sure that most of your mental energy is focused on freedom. Then you'll start experientially understanding the old saying, "Seek and you will find." If you seek to survive, you will. If you seek to be comfortable, you will be. But if you seek freedom, you will find it. It just takes longer to create freedom in your life than it does to create survival. Does it take longer to grow a weed or an oak tree? Financial freedom is like an oak tree, where survival or comfort is like growing a weed or a little bush; it doesn't take too long.

Do you remember when you turned the corner and began to think like a rich man?

Yeah, I do. I can remember banging my head against the inside of an elevator. I had just worked 11 hours at a golf course as an assistant pro and I was going to work at a high-dollar restaurant that night from 7 until midnight, and I was banging my head against the elevator, thinking, "God, there's got to be an easier way to make money than this." Shortly after that, I decided I was done working for somebody else. I was going to learn how to earn profits. That has made all the difference. From the age of 15 to 25, I worked for wages. At 25, I started working for profits, and at 33, I became a millionaire for the first time.

Some people reject the idea of wealth, "It's lonely at the top" and so forth. What do you say to them?

A lot of people are still stuck in the comfort mode, they just want to have enough, and they think if they pursue all that money, they'll lose their family; they'll lose their health. That's not me at all. God, family and finances are my priorities. I never wanted to be somebody that went after financial freedom and lost my health or lost my family. I refuse to go down that path. But I've known people that do that. They put money as such a high priority in life that they lose the things that matter most. But if you keep your priorities in order and focus on financial freedom, it's a wonderful world. I love people and I use things. There are some millionaires out there that love things and use people and that is definitely the wrong formula.

Do you manage your own money?

I did everything on my own, yes. I never went to a professional to handle my money for me. What I've come to find out is, while some of those guys are great, a lot of those guys just put on a front; they're making $50,000 a year and they're trying to tell someone who is making a million dollars a year how to invest their money and they really don't know; they're just doing what they've been told to do. I'm not knocking anyone; if you're going to use one, make sure you find a good one who is doing very well financially themselves.

What do you see yourself doing 10 years from now?

There are some things we do for money that are only good for a certain season. That's why we have to keep our eyes open for new opportunities. I'm constantly polishing my portfolio and looking at different forms of income. I never got heavily involved in the stock market. I am still dabbling in real estate but nothing real serious right now. I'm still a young entrepreneur. I still have a lot to learn. I haven't mastered all those principles; I'm still living them on a daily basis. When I focus on them, it seems like opportunities come my way and I make some better decisions. It's not just about the money, it's about the learning process.

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