The manager of The Motley Fool's Dividend Reinvestment Plan portfolio explains why direct investing is a cost-effective method for investors of all levels.
The must-read summary of Jeff Fischer's book: "Investing Without a Silver Spoon: How Anyone Can Build Wealth Through Direct Investing". This complete summary of the ideas from Jeff Fischer's book "Investing Without a Silver Spoon" puts forward a case for sensible investing that yields a long-term return without massive capital at the start. In fact, direct investment plans allow a person to build wealth slowly and steadily by investing in companies at whatever rate they can afford on a regular basis without using (or paying) a broker. By then reinvesting the dividends that are earned through buying more stock, compound growth occurs over the longer term. This summary explains that direct investors can take positive control of their own financial futures. Prospective investors will be taken through the financial jargon, what you need to begin, and how to invest for the long-term, not short-term. It acknowledges that Direct Investment isn’t for everyone – if you have a high interest debt, for example – but believes that good research combined with intelligent decision-making can yield financial freedom and a worry-free retirement. Added-value of this summary: • Save time • Understand the key concepts • Increase your business knowledge To learn more, read "Investing Without a Silver Spoon" and invest effectively!
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A guide to personal finance in uncertain economic times provides advice on how to develop a customized appraoch to handling money, covering everything from investment and savings to spending, insurance, and estate planning.
The next generation within wealthy families are often said to be born with a silver spoon in their mouths. Perceived as free from life’s toughest challenges. “Having it all.” But being raised in affluence brings a unique set of pressures and hidden tripwires. Great wealth casts a long shadow. Inheritors commonly face intense familial expectations, public scrutiny and judgment, and confusing or debilitating self-narratives, under which many flounder. And we—as family, friends, and society—slowly lose their contribution to our lives and the common good. The Myth of the Silver Spoon helps guide the next gen of the affluent, their families, and the ecosystem of professionals who influence them—wealth advisors, estate attorneys, tax attorneys, philanthropic advisors, family office professionals, and career coaches—to identify and confront negative thinking and behaviors related to wealth. Through new research, meaningful storytelling, and actionable concepts, Kristin Keffeler—an expert advisor, consultant, and certified professional coach to high-net-worth families—helps readers clear the internal and external clutter from their paths that accumulates from growing up with wealth. She shows readers how to: Put words to their difficulties and dismantle the hidden tripwires of affluence Address challenges at their root, including when raising children of their own, instilling guardrails against entitlement and feelings of helplessness Identify structures for finding and sustaining one’s own vision of a fulfilling, impactful life Privately held wealth has great potential to benefit society. But only if it is held by people able and willing to do good with it. Whether you’re a rising gen yourself or gifting this to a client, The Myth of Silver Spoon offers a compassionate discussion and a seven-step process for connecting a rising gen’s innate strengths to the embers of their hopes, so that they can move forward creating thriving and impactful lives.
The Death of Character is a broad historical, sociological, and cultural inquiry into the moral life and moral education of young Americans based upon a huge empirical study of the children themselves. The children's thoughts and concerns-expressed here in their own words-shed a whole new light on what we can expect from moral education. Targeting new theories of education and the prominence of psychology over moral instruction, Hunter analyzes the making of a new cultural narcissism.