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The Modern Investments

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Since the global crash in 2008, the wealthy have been looking for new places to invest their money. Banks seemed like a safe option but for the super rich, they became a worry zone, this was because most banks would only guarantee the safety of set limits of cash. So if you had 500k sitting in the bank and the bank went bust, you would only get 75k of your money back.

Ok, so most of us aren’t sitting around with half a million dollars in the bank. However, that doesn’t mean we can’t draw some inspiration from the High Net Worth Individuals (HNWI) and invest some of our money into the trends they are setting.

Property is always a good place to stash your cash. Firstly you have a tangible asset, something that might lose money but will, at some point make money. You are far more likely to break even over a few decades than end up with a loss. So this could be seen as a safer bet than your bank. The interest rate on savings at most banks is rubbish. Investing money in property and renting it out could see you making a far better return than you were in your savings account. There are two safe options for investing into a property. One is to find any new houses for sale, especially ones which are being built in areas that aren’t currently fashionable. If you find out information about any potential projects in this neighborhood, you may see that house prices will go up. Eg, if there is a new school or business applying for application. This could push up home prices. The other option is to go old. Look for the worst house on the best street, invest a little time and money into doing it up, then sell it.

Another great alternative investment has been the classic car market. You need to stay ahead of the game here, making smart purchases before the rest of the world cotton on. For making smart purchases before the rest of the world cotton on. For example, the BMW Z3 is a cute little car which is set to be a future classic. You can pick one up for a few thousand dollars, in fact, you can find them for under 1000 dollars, you can then invest a little time and love into restoring it, and in 5 years time, you could have a car worth 15,000 dollars.

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What about investing in wine, companies like Woolfsung have been advising HNWI on the wine investment sector. Here the idea is that you buy up predicted good years and then stash them away in a cellar for ten years. Most vineyards have a pattern when it comes to years so experts can predict which will be good. Of course, there is always the risk that you may get it wrong, or that you haven’t stored it the right way. Then the wine will be ruined, and you lose the investment.

Check out what the elite pack is investing their money in and see if you can replicate it on a smaller level. You never know, your horse might come in.

Why Get-Rich-Quick Schemes Never Work: Lessons For Tomorrow’s Entrepreneurs

People are drawn to the idea that it’s possible to get rich quickly, especially kids. It’s a basic mammalian instinct: we want to get the most resources for the least expenditure of energy possible.

Unfortunately, the vast majority of get-rich-quick schemes don’t work, and our grand plans end up falling through. There are some good reasons for this.

Getting Rich Quick Means Being In The Right Place At The Right Time

News reporting on successful people has a tendency to bias our perspectives on how to generate wealth. The news only reports on the small cadre of individuals who made a fortune overnight, giving us the impression that building wealth is something that can happen in a matter of months. What we don’t see, however, are the millions of people who didn’t get rich quick and are working in regular businesses for regular incomes.

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Often, the people who get super rich, like Larry Page or Mark Zuckerberg, did so because they were in the right place at the right time. Larry Page was perfectly positioned in the late 1990s to launch his search engine, Google. He had the right skills, and technology had just reached the stage where internet search was possible. The same goes for Zuckerberg: he just happened to have the right skills at the right time to implement his social media technology. These were freak events, but they’re the ones we hear about all the time in the press.

Success Takes A Long Time

There’s a joke floating around that says it take 15 years to be an overnight success. And even some of the biggest names in the business community agree with this. Many of them, including Twitter CEO, say that they had overnight success – it just took them a decade of work beforehand.

This makes a lot of sense. To build anything substantial takes a lot of time and dedication. Nothing that was complex or truly useful to other people was built over a weekend – especially in the modern world. Instead, new products and services require a long ramp up and even then they may not be accepted by the market.

Success Is Never Risk-Free

Success often means going into debt or taking on unsecured personal loans to finance a business venture. In other words, there’s an element of risk involved. The more risk, the fewer people who are likely to want to undertake the project. This is one of the reasons why we see so many people setting up their own accounting businesses (because the risks are relatively small) compared to people creating their own space companies (because the risks are much larger).

Get-rich-quick schemes like to pretend that they are risk-free: a sure bet to make money. But if they claim this, then it almost certainly isn’t true. Entrepreneurs are constantly looking for the lowest risk enterprises to sink their money into. The chances that somebody else has found one of those opportunities and wants to share it with you is next to nothing.

The Critical Difference Between Making Money And Building Wealth

There’s a big difference between making money and building wealth. Making money is all about generating as high an income as possible by getting a high paying job or running a business. Building wealth, on the other hand, is about creating a stock of value that goes up over time.

Recently, US Trust went and asked more than 600 people with a net worth of over $3 million how they built their wealth. The report, entitled, Insights on Wealth and Worth, generated a significant amount of data which made clear the difference between making money and building wealth.

Here are some of the insights from that report that we can all use.

Build Wealth Slowly

The widespread perception of wealthy people is that they grew up with a silver spoon in their mouths, having rich parents and ample opportunity to do well in the marketplace. But it turns out that that is a bit of a myth. According to data from the study, 58 percent of respondents said that they had humbled middle-class beginnings, and a further 19 percent said that their families were outright poor. Further evidence indicated that only around 10 percent of the wealth of people in the study had actually come from inheritance. The rest of it (more than half) had been earned through income, and around 30 percent of it had come from investments.

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What this showed, therefore, was that most wealthy people got to where they are today through traditional methods, like saving their money and making sensible investment decisions. Many said that they had a lifelong history of saving and investing, some beginning to do so as early as age 14.

Go With Basics Rather Than Newfangled Investments

What was so interesting about the survey was that the majority of individuals didn’t do anything innovative when it came to their investments. 89 percent invested in stocks and bond and in their businesses. Only 11 percent attributed their success to alternative forms of wealth management.

What this indicates is that the simplest methods are still probably the best. Yes, big investment houses might have complicated algorithms that make millions of well-diversified transactions every second on the stock exchange, but most people built their wealth through simple mechanisms, like a cash advance online to kickstart their businesses. It’s about having a great business idea or a well diversified portfolio – not looking for some get rich quick scheme using an unreliable investment product.

Ride The Market, Don’t Guess

Most people who get into investing think that they have to regularly predict where the market will head next. Sell high and buy low, right? Well, although that might sound like a great idea, it’s not usually how it works in practice, and it certainly isn’t how the majority of wealthy people in the study made their fortunes. According to the report, only 14 percent said that they made the bulk of their money by timing their investments. The rest said that it was just a case of “buy, hold and wait” for the stock price to go up.

How The Rich Think (And What They Won’t Tell You In The Mainstream Media)

If you were to base your opinion of wealthy people on what the mainstream media told you, you’d leave with the impression that they were all raised with a silver spoon in their mouths, they exploit other people, and they got massive injections of cash from their parents. But it turns out that only around 10 percent of the wealth that rich people have came from their families. The rest, (that is 90 percent of it), came from the own hard work and some pretty shrewd investment decisions.

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The mainstream media doesn’t want you to know this. Instead, they do their best to give you the idea that getting rich is something that only an elite few can achieve at the expense of everybody else, creating resentment and causing you to think that there’s nothing you can do to dramatically change your financial situation. Of course, none of this is true. Most of the people we’re going to discuss in this article got rich thanks to a good worth ethic, simple financial habits and persistence. In the end, it’s that that pays off.

Let’s take a look at how rich people think: perhaps we could learn something.

They’re Cheapskates

The rich understand that there are savings to be had at every turn. Hilary Swank, the award winning American actress, told talk show host Kelly Ripa that she still used coupons from the newspaper, even though she had made enough money to pay for groceries for the rest of her life. She said that she couldn’t resist grabbing coupons out of the newspaper. They are like “dollar bills staring you in the face.”

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It’s this desire to save all the time that characterizes the wealthy. They understand that the best way to build wealth is to hoard it, and then reinvest it at a high return. They realize that there are always savings to be had, whatever they are engaged in, and they’re willing to negotiate prices down all the time. It’s not just about how much you can earn for the rich, it’s also about how far that money can go.

They Go To The ATM Once Per Week

Alan Corey is the author of A Million Bucks by 30. He’s made a lot of money, but he doesn’t like to splash out, just for the sake of it. Instead, he plays a game with himself. He goes to the cash machine once per week, takes out the money he’s allowed to spend that week, and then goes through the rest of the week paying for everything with cash. Every week he lowers the amount that he takes out of his bank account by $20, just to find out how little he can spend.

Corey’s behavior goes against everything we think we know about the rich from watching TV. We see them in their million dollar cribs or on their luxury yachts, but this is mostly for show. The vast majority of very wealthy people live modest lives in modest homes, with modest cars.

The Rich Are Just Like You

Researchers at the University of Georgia Survey Research Institute wanted to find out whether the rich paid more for regular items, like haircuts. They found that millionaires pay the same as the rest of us, around $16 for a short back and sides, meaning that they don’t splash out just for the sake of it.

They Hate Waste

A lot of wealthy people run their own businesses. As a result, they hate waste that eats into their profits. It’s something that Pat Brennan, co-owner of a custom home building company in Pennsylvania knows a lot about. One day she was working with her granddaughter doing paperwork in the office. Some of the paperwork was held together by paperclips, and so Brennan told her granddaughter to remove the paper clips so that they could be used again. The granddaughter protested, saying that paper clips were cheap and so it didn’t matter. But Brennan hit back, informing her that even though they cost pennies, a penny could stretch a long way when you needed it to.

They Invest On Whims

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A partner at a Washington DC law firm recalls the time when he saw an opportunity for an investment. It was in the spring of 2012, and he was reading the Wall Street Journal. He saw that a company had just been acquired by another corporation, and realized that it would be good for that company’s business and profitability. That morning, he decided to buy $5,000 worth of shares so that he could cash in on the rising stock price as news of the company’s acquisition filtered through the rest of the market. Sure enough, the stock price began to rise, and by the end of the day, it was up by more than 50 percent. It was at that point that the partner decided to sell, netting himself nearly $2500 in a single day.

They Accept That Risk Is The Price Of Success

When AOL started to fail as a business back in the late 1990s because of its refusal to change with the times, it laid off more than 300 staff. One of those staff was Peter Shankman, and he was desperate for money. He took the $500 he had left and instead of wasting it on rent, he plowed it into a T-shirt business. The film Titanic had just been released, and so he printed out a bunch of T-shirts that read “It sank. Get over it.” Shankman knew that he had to sell the T-shirts otherwise he would be homeless. He quickly sold 500 shirts in six hours, making more than $5,000. But he didn’t stop there. Next, he contacted USA Today and told them about his story. They published the article in the paper, and he then went on to sell another 10,000 shirts, which provided the capital he needed to start his business. It just goes to show that getting a small amount of money from places like the Personal Money Store can help people make significant returns in the future.

They Are Careful About Giving To Friends And Family

Charity is something that is really hard to get right. Obviously, wealthy people want to support other people who are in financial need. But they understand that doing so can often create dependence: it’s a lot easier to rely on a millionaire for your income than it is to go to work every day.

Legg Mason, an asset manager, decided to do a survey of wealthy people to see what they thought about their friends and families paying their own way. They found that more than 72 percent of people with more than $250,000 in investable assets thought that their children should pay at least some of their college tuition. A third thought that prospective students should pay around half.

Why Profits Are Better Than Wages

Why Profits Are Better Than Wages by Jim Rohn

jim-rohnI love this brief but inspiring message from Jim Rohn and thought I would post it to inspire parents to share with their kids.

Please feel free to leave your comments below or via Facebook.

My mentor, when I was 25 years old, dropped a phrase on me that changed my life forever. He said, “Profits are better than wages. Wages will make you a living—profits can make you a fortune.” You know it is a bit difficult to get rich on wages, but anybody can get rich on profits. Profits change your whole attitude, even if you start part-time.

It can be a landscape business in the summer or hanging Christmas lights in the winter. It can be training, consulting or tutoring. It can be your hobby of painting, writing, crafts, woodworking, computers or cooking. But once you start investing even part-time effort into your own business, you will find how much more exciting it is to get up in the morning and go to work on your fortune, even if you’re only spending a few hours a week doing it.

How empowering it is to be able to go to work on your fortune every day rather than going to work solely to pay the rent. When you parcel out part of your time to make your fortune, your whole attitude changes—your spirit changes.

It is in your voice. It is in your face. It is in your gestures. And then you can say, “I am now working full-time on my job and part-time on my fortune because I found a way to make profits.” Wow!