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><channel><title>Income Blog &#187; Income Blog</title> <atom:link href="http://www.incomeblog.net/author/admin/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.incomeblog.net</link> <description>Personal Finance Formulas and Investment Strategies</description> <lastBuildDate>Tue, 13 Dec 2011 11:58:00 +0000</lastBuildDate> <language>en</language> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator> <atom:link rel='hub' href='http://www.incomeblog.net/?pushpress=hub'/> <item><title>What&#8217;s Health Got To Do With Wealth?</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/health-and-wealth/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/health-and-wealth/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 2011 08:17:51 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[General]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Health]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=38</guid> <description><![CDATA[Well&#8230; health and wealth are intrinsically connected. They go hand-in-hand. Why? Well, it&#8217;s simple. It you&#8217;re not feeling well you&#8217;ll simply be less productive. You&#8217;ll have less ideas and problem solving abilities and capabilities. It&#8217;s likely you&#8217;ll be thinking about your body issues rather than fully focusing on the job at hand. You&#8217;ll likely also [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well&#8230; health and wealth are intrinsically connected. They go hand-in-hand.</p><p>Why? Well, it&#8217;s simple.</p><p>It you&#8217;re not feeling well you&#8217;ll simply be less productive. You&#8217;ll have less ideas and problem solving abilities and capabilities. It&#8217;s likely you&#8217;ll be thinking about your body issues rather than fully focusing on the job at hand. You&#8217;ll likely also feel less enthusiastic about the job at hand.</p><p>That&#8217;s why I&#8217;ve been looking into various ways to to stay fully fit to be able to accomplish work goals more effectively. I&#8217;ve come across various products that I&#8217;ve tried and used. I was very happy to come across the <a
href="http://www.bluegreen-algae.com/">www.bluegreen-algae.com</a> site and in particular the Essentials product: <a
href="http://www.bluegreen-algae.com/essentials/">www.bluegreen-algae.com/essentials/</a>. For me it was a very effective and convenient product I could take with me &#8216;on-the-go&#8217; so I&#8217;m very happy I&#8217;ve found it as it takes care of most of my nutritional supplement needs that I&#8217;ve been looking for a long time. However, I believe that everybody&#8217;s body have different needs, imbalances and are lacking different things at different times so I urge you to get interested in the subject and find out what your body needs.</p><p>Of course regular exercise is very important too. Richard Branson said that daily exercise is the single biggest contributing factor to his success! Now that&#8217;s a statement! So exercising at least 3 times a week is highly recommended.</p><p>I also see a chiropractor regularly to put everything back into place and straighten things out. As I&#8217;m sitting down and looking at a computer screen most of the day this is getting more and more important.</p><p>Last but not least the following two points are also very important:</p><ul><li>Eat <strong>nutritional</strong> food (this does not include fatty fast food)</li><li>Drink plenty of water. I usually keep a 2 litre bottle of water next to me desk which I habitually have a drink from a few times and hour and the next thing I know is that before my working day has finished I&#8217;ve drank over 2 litres.</li></ul><p><em>Good luck to your success!</em></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/health-and-wealth/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Rich Dad Event Twitter: Business and Investing Quotes</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/rich-dad-event-twitter-business-investing-quotes/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/rich-dad-event-twitter-business-investing-quotes/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Mon, 18 Oct 2010 20:30:57 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[General]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Robert Kiyosaki]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=37</guid> <description><![CDATA[Interesting business and investing tweets form the recent Rich Dad Event. The following investment &#8220;quotes&#8221; form some of the Rich Dad basics of successful business and investing. Enjoy! #richdadevent Women are better investors because they can check their ego. They do a deal based on numbers not on the size of the &#8230;ego #richdadevent Real [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interesting business and investing tweets form the recent Rich Dad Event. The following investment &#8220;quotes&#8221; form some of the Rich Dad basics of successful business and investing. Enjoy!</p><ul><li> #richdadevent Women are better investors because they can check their ego. They do a deal based on numbers not on the size of the &#8230;ego</li><li> #richdadevent Real Estate is about finding motivated sellers and creating a solution. Women excel in this area</li><li> #richdadevent Don&#8217;t find advisors that know how to &#8216;do it.&#8217; Find advisors who &#8216;do it.&#8217;</li><li> #richdadevent Looking for a new team member? Ask your current team for recommendations</li><li> #richdadevent When a mom shows a passion for investing &#8230; imagine what the children will achieve</li><li> #richdadevent Keep family and business separate. Don&#8217;t talk business during family time and vice versa</li><li> #richdadevent Sometimes the biggest challenge for women investors is a man&#8217;s ego</li><li> #richdadevent Find what excites you. F.O.C.U.S. follow one course until successful. The passion gets you through the difficulties</li><p><span
id="more-37"></span></p><li> #richdadevent We reward tenants for good behavior. If your property looks good after a year, they may get a free TV.</li><li> #richdadevent One thing to watch out for is an internal prejudice against women. When you seek financial advice, who do you ask?</li><li> #richdadevent Don&#8217;t give before you get. Women need to be careful not to give away what they haven&#8217;t created yet</li><li> #richdadevent Rich Women is about empowering women to realize that they can be just as good investors as men</li><li> #richdadevent You are always evolving. If you are not growing you are dying. There is no middle ground</li><li> #richdadevent The fear of mistakes is the fear of living&#8230; and learning</li><li> #richdadevent Be careful who you listen to and be aware of who&#8217;s projecting negativity</li><li> #richdadevent A soaring spirit still needs a healthy body. Money and spirituality are not opposites.</li><li> #richdadevent When I started investing I felt a lot of fear. I battled fear by taking a leap of faith over and over again</li><li> It&#8217;s official: The recession is over. But wait, isn&#8217;t unemployment high and growing? Isn&#8217;t the dollar dying?</li><li> #richdadevent Silver is a better investment than gold. Silver is consumed and there is more gold in the world than silver.</li><li> #richdadevent Gold standard would requires that we have enough gold to cover all the dollars in the world</li><li> #richdadevent Don&#8217;t let people know you need their money. Shift your context. You&#8217;re not taking their money, you&#8217;re doing them a favor.</li><li> #richdadevent Money isn&#8217;t money. The dollar is a promise to pay the deficit. When you save money, you are saving debt. Think about that.</li><li> #richdadevent Don&#8217;t take my classes if you&#8217;re not ready to put the education into action after.</li><li> #richdadevent Your education begin AFTER you take the classes. The classes make it so you are able to learn from real life.</li><li> #richdadevent NEVER leverage your money &#8230; unless you know how. Then you can get rich at an amazing rate.</li><li> #richdadevent You should always know what you&#8217;re next deal is BEFORE you have your $. Don&#8217;t wait for the money before you find your deal.</li><li> #richdadevent Don&#8217;t tell me investing is hard where u live Its hard everywhere&#8230;if you&#8217;re stupid Educated people can make money anywhere.</li><li> #richdadevent Lazy people use their own money. Its harder to get someone else to pay for it then to work harder &#038; pay for it yourself.</li><li> #richdadevents The more you know, the easier investing gets. But you still have to take that leap of faith.</li><li> #richdadevent My loans come from pension funds so employees rgiving me $ The gov gets the taxes I get the pension &#038; employees get screwed.</li><li> #richdadevent Gold and silver is for dumb investors. It&#8217;s a good investment, but it takes no brains.</li><li> #richdadevent Taxes are the punishment for everyone too lazy to get financial education</li><li> #richdadevent There are 4 parts to a deal: project, partners, finance, management. You must have all 4.</li><li> #richdadevent Interest rates are so low so that entrepreneurs can produce money and jobs</li><li> #richdadevent I never base my investments on increasing value. That&#8217;s capital gains. I base my investments on cash flow</li><li> #richdadevent Social entrepreneurs fill the void where gov fails. They make $ fulfilling gov promises.</li><li> #richdadevent I never got sued until I got rich. You need your asset protection BEFORE you get rich</li><li> #richdadevent Mutual funds in 401k is taxed at 35%. Mutual funds OUTSIDE of 401k get taxed at 15%. 401k is a scam to raise employee taxes</li><li> #richdadevent If you are going to be in business, its best to offset your earnings through real estate</li><li> #richdadevent The tax code awards the generous and punishes greed. There are even ways to MAKE $ by giving to charity</li><li> #richdadevent The tax principles are the same globally. Use debt to create wealth, pay no taxes. My friend Johan does this in Germany</li><li> #richdadevent You cannot &#8216;make it&#8217;, until you make it with your past. I had to communicate honestly with my dad.</li><li> #richdadevent I use 100% debt so I pay zero% taxes. Thats Xtreme financial intelligence</li><li> #richdadevent 3LawsofCompensation Givetoreceive Learntogive compounding knowledge/wealth TheMore youdothe first2the moreYou&#8217;ll getof the3rd</li><li> #richdadevent Bernacke says he doesn&#8217;t know why the price of gold is rising&#8230;could it be because of the TRILLIONS of dollars you printed?</li><li> #richdadevent People are looking to Obama to provide jobs &#8230; he&#8217;s NEVER had a job. He doesn&#8217;t even know what one looks like.</li><li> #richdadevent The &#8216;poor mindset&#8217; uses words like I, me, mine. The rich say, ours, we, us.</li><li> #richdadevent GreedvsGenerosity Entrepr use generosity They have a team&#038;they share They get a smaller piece ofthepie butthe pie is bigger.</li><li> #richdadevent Greed vs Generosity. Greed is selfish. It&#8217;s an employee mindset. Greed is punished by taxes</li><li> #richdadevent A high paying job is a myth. Those jobs will either tax you so high as to take your wealth or get shipped over seas.</li><li> #richdadevent Part of financial education teaches how to pay zero tax &#8230; legally. Employees can&#8217;t do this, entrepreneurs and investors can.</li><li> #richdadevent Education is a process The end of the public educ process is a job Financial education&#8217;s process ends w cash flow for life</li><li> PHD should stand for Poor Helpless and Desperate.</li><li> Poor is eternal broke is temporary</li><li> Robert and Kim just took the stage.</li><li> Robert is getting ready to take the stage here in Scottsdale.</li></ul><p>Follow <a
href="http://twitter.com/RichDadEvent">http://twitter.com/RichDadEvent</a></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/rich-dad-event-twitter-business-investing-quotes/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Robert Kiyosaki on Current (BP) and Upcoming Financial Disasters</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/robert-kiyosaki-current-upcoming-disasters/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/robert-kiyosaki-current-upcoming-disasters/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 21:20:34 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[General]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Robert Kiyosaki]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=36</guid> <description><![CDATA[Think the Gulf Spill Is Bad? Wait Until the Next Disaster The world knows BP is a disaster, a monster of a disaster. BP&#8217;s disaster makes Hurricane Katrina look like a rain shower. Every time a TV news station shows oil gushing from a broken pipe &#8212; one mile below the ocean&#8217;s surface &#8212; the [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><h2>Think the Gulf Spill Is Bad? Wait Until the Next Disaster</h2><p>The world knows BP is a disaster, a monster of a disaster. BP&#8217;s disaster makes Hurricane Katrina look like a rain shower.</p><p>Every time a TV news station shows oil gushing from a broken pipe &#8212; one mile below the ocean&#8217;s surface &#8212; the world gets sick. Scenes of oil-soaked pelicans struggling for life both angers and saddens us. The financial losses endured by small businesses and fishermen cannot be imagined, let alone conveyed by the media interviews. BP is a disaster with a scope beyond comprehension.</p><p>I was in England when President Barack Obama blamed and criticized BP for this tragedy. His criticism sparked the anger of the British. Politicians wanted him to tone it down, to be more careful in his choice of words. British Prime Minister David Cameron told Obama not to &#8220;go after BP for the sake of it.&#8221; Virgin&#8217;s Richard Branson said he was &#8220;kicking a company while it was on its knees.&#8221; Their concern was not for the environment or those suffering the ravages of this disaster. Their concern was for the pensioners who are counting on BP for a secure retirement.</p><p><span
id="more-36"></span></p><p>On June 17, London&#8217;s Daily Mail ran a headline screaming, &#8220;Obama Bullies BP into Â£13.5bn Fund for Oil Spill Victims&#8230; but British Pensioners will Pick Up the Bill.&#8221; The British are angry with Obama for pressuring BP to suspend dividend payments and set aside $20 billion for the cleanup. Obama&#8217;s strong-arm position has not only affected British pensioners, who own 40% of BP, but American pension funds, who own 39%, as well. In other words, the economic damage of the BP disaster goes far beyond the Gulf. The damage is spreading to pensions, pensioners, and portfolios all around the world.</p><h3>An Atmosphere Changed</h3><p>While in London, I decided to go to dinner at Canary Wharf, ground zero for the next BP. Only a few years ago, Canary Wharf was one of the centers of the financial universe. Condo prices were sky high, offices were packed, and high-paid bankers filled Canary Wharf with wealth and excitement. Today, Canary Wharf seems to be dying. It has lost its vibrancy. Many restaurants and offices were nearly empty and there were few lights to be seen in those once-high-priced condos.</p><p>And Canary Wharf&#8217;s &#8216;BP&#8217; stands for Bomb Production. Canary Wharf is much like AIG, a factory for exotic financial products known as derivatives. The problem is that most people do not know what these murky and mysterious products are &#8212; and that includes the people who make them or buy them. It&#8217;s why Warren Buffett has called derivatives &#8220;financial weapons of mass destruction.&#8221; That is how powerful they are. During World War II, a ship exploded while loading bombs for transport at Port Chicago, California. The explosion flattened everything for miles. It is said that the ship&#8217;s anchor, which weighed tons, was found more than six miles away. Derivatives &#8212; financial bombs &#8212; have the same power if they accidently detonate inside a bank&#8217;s balance sheet.</p><p>The subprime disaster was a result of financial bombs &#8212; derivatives &#8212; exploding in financial institutions such as AIG and Lehman Brothers, as well as banks and financial institutions throughout the world. After the bombs AIG manufactured exploded, AIG received $181 billion in taxpayer funding and immediately sent $11.9 billion to France&#8217;s SociÃ©tÃ© GÃ©nÃ©rale, $11.8 billion to Deutsche Bank, and $8.5 billion to Barclays Bank of Britain. U.S. taxpayer money was going to bailout banks around the world. During the last three months of 2008, AIG was losing more than $27 million an hour. That is how powerful these derivatives can be. The problem I see is this: There are many more such bombs still sitting in balance sheets all over the world.</p><h3>Financial Bombs All Over the World</h3><p>Military bombs are classified by weight: 500-, 750-, and 1,000-pound bombs. Financial bombs have interesting labels such as CDO (collateralized debt obligations), ABS (asset backed securities), and CDS (credit default swaps). While they sound exotic and sophisticated, when put in everyday language, a CDO is simply debt sold as an asset. And CDS, or swaps, are simply a form of insurance.</p><p>Since the insurance industry is strictly regulated, and the bomb factories producing CDS did not want to comply with insurance industry regulations, they simply called them &#8216;swaps,&#8217; rather than insurance.</p><p>To make matters worse, rating agencies such as Moody&#8217;s and S&#038;P (and even Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan) blessed these financial bombs as safe, sound, and good for you. It was almost as good as the pope blessing these products. In 2007, the subprime boom busted, and we know what happened from there.</p><p>The problem is that approximately $700 trillion of these financial time bombs are still in the system. While people watch the BP disaster in the Gulf, few people are aware of the other BP, the financial bomb production that is still going on. If this derivative market begins to collapse, we will see another BP disaster.</p><h3>Can&#8217;t Clean Up the Next Disaster</h3><p>Most of us know there is not enough money in the world to clean up the Gulf. The same is true with the $700 trillion derivatives market. If just 1% of the $700 trillion derivatives market goes bust, that is a $7 trillion disaster. The entire U.S. economy is only $14 trillion annually. A 10% failure, equating to $70 trillion, would probably bring down the world economy. As with the BP Gulf disaster, there is not enough money in the world to clean up the next BP disaster.</p><p>Could such a financial disaster happen? The answer is &#8220;Yes.&#8221; In fact, just as President Obama pressured BP into doing the &#8220;right thing,&#8221; he is also pressuring the financial markets to do the right thing. The president and our congressional leaders are pushing through financial reform legislation. My concern is that, if not handled delicately, it is this financial reform that will set off the derivative time bomb&#8230; the next BP.</p><p>Currently, derivatives are traded over-the-counter, also known as off-exchange trading. This means derivatives are uncontrolled, unregulated, and unsupervised. The proposed financial reform legislation is pushing to have derivatives traded through an exchange. This will bring greater transparency and control. My concern is, when this happens, the reform will reveal fraud and failures we do not yet know about today. It will be like turning on the light and watching the cockroaches (bankers) run for cover.<br
/> While it is commendable that President Obama holds the rich and powerful accountable, I wonder what the price will be.</p><p>How many BPs can we afford?</p></blockquote><p>[<a
href="http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/richricher/257090">source</a>]</p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/robert-kiyosaki-current-upcoming-disasters/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Richard Duncan Video: The Current Economy and Investment Strategies</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/richard-duncan-video-economy/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/richard-duncan-video-economy/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2010 15:11:33 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Video]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Richard Duncan]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=35</guid> <description><![CDATA[The economy is in trouble, but Richard Duncan has a solution. The chief economist at Black Horse Asset Management has also worked at the World Bank and served as the global Head of Investment Strategy of ABN AMRO Asset Management; his new book is The Corruption of Capitalism. Jack Otter spoke with him about the [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<div
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 </script></p><p><em>The economy is in trouble, but <a
href="http://www.incomeblog.net/tag/richard-duncan/">Richard Duncan</a> has a solution. The chief economist at Black Horse Asset Management has also worked at the World Bank and served as the global Head of Investment Strategy of ABN AMRO Asset Management; his new book is <strong>The Corruption of Capitalism</strong>. Jack Otter spoke with him about the state of the economy, what we can learn from Japan&#8217;s mistakes, and what investors should do to protect themselves.</em></p><p><span
id="more-35"></span></p><h3>Back in 2008, everyone knew we were in big trouble. But right now the perception is things are turning around &#8230; and soon the world will be back to normal. In your book, you say that perception is actually just a pipe dream.</h3><p>That&#8217;s right. Everyone needs to understand that we are being supported by government life support.</p><p>For example, last year the U.S. economy shrank by 2 percent, but the budget deficit was 10 percent of GDP — so had it not been for this &#8230; budget deficit, the economy wouldn&#8217;t have shrunk by only 2 percent. It would have been minus 2, plus minus 10 or minus 12, plus a multiplier: The economy would have contracted by 15 percent, unemployment would have gone above 20 percent, [and] it would have been a complete replay of the Great Depression. And this year&#8217;s the same. This year we&#8217;re looking at 11 percent of GDP budget deficit.</p><p>So we&#8217;re on government life support. This could remain like this for a number of years because the private sector is broken.</p><h3>So what you&#8217;re saying is hundreds of billions of dollars are flowing from the government into the economy, and if it were not for that, the economy would be in deep trouble.</h3><p>That&#8217;s right. In fact, $1.6 trillion this year.</p><h3>And that&#8217;s all borrowed money?</h3><p>That&#8217;s right.</p><h3>Will we ever pay it back?</h3><p>They will probably never pay it back.</p><h3>You clearly think deficits are a big problem; you despise them. Yet in your book, you say we can&#8217;t live without one.</h3><p>I think there are three important lessons that policy makers should learn from Japan&#8217;s &#8230; post-bubble experience. Their bubble popped in 1990 — 20 years ago.</p><p>The first lesson is when a giant bubble pops, it&#8217;s necessary for the government to support the economy with massive budget deficits for far longer than anyone thinks. Even now, the Congressional Budget Office is projecting $10 trillion worth of budget deficits over the next 10 years.</p><p>Point No. 2, though is that these budget deficits are much easier to finance than people currently realize. Japan has 200 percent government-debt-to-GDP [ratio], but the 10-year bond yield in Japan is only 1.4 percent — meaning that it&#8217;s very cheap to finance that government debt.</p><p>And the third and most important lesson we need to learn from Japan&#8217;s experience is not to waste all this money &#8230; building bridges to nowhere the way they did, but to spend the money wisely. [We need] to restructure the American economy, to actually make it viable again — because right now the U.S. economy is not viable. And that&#8217;s because wages in the manufacturing sector here are 40 times higher than they are in most of the rest of the world, where they are $5 a day.</p><h3>Wow. That&#8217;s an interesting point in your book. You talk about how that money should be spent — and you say the government should invest in three 21-century industries. Can you explain that?</h3><p>This money is going to be spent one way or the other. It&#8217;s just a matter of whether it&#8217;s wasted, frittered away, and stolen by special interest groups, or if we actually spend it wisely, restructuring the economy. &#8230; Instead of spending $10 trillion &#8230; over the next 10 years, I propose $13 trillion, an extra $3 trillion. The government should pump $1 trillion into solar energy, $1 trillion into the genetic engineering and biotechnology, and $1 trillion into nanotechnology. This would give us an unassailable lead in the 21st-century industries, and lock in another American century.</p><h3>That&#8217;s a nice vision. But in Washington there&#8217;s not a whole lot of appetite for extra spending. Of course, as you say, it still goes on, but: Politically, how much of that is viable and how do you make it happen?</h3><p>Politically it is difficult, because there are many special interests who do not want to see these things occur. You can imagine there&#8217;d be a lot of opposition from oil companies to trillion-dollar investments in solar energy. But still, at the very least, I hope this book provides a real clear analysis of what has gone wrong — not sugar-coat it, but with looking at the situation with our eyes wide open — and offers some solutions as to how we can get out of this. &#8230; I hope it provokes a discussion and a debate as to how we really could get out of this crisis. And if someone comes up with a much easier solution, I&#8217;d certainly support it.</p><h3>You write that the financial industry has become a menace to society. Can you explain what you mean by that?</h3><p>Right now, the three largest U.S. banks control most of this country&#8217;s deposits. And at the same time, these same banks are speculating in the derivatives market at the rate of trillions of dollars a day. This is a recipe for catastrophe. They blew up in 2008, had to be rescued, and now they still have not been reformed. They should be broken up into small, very tightly regulated utilities. Instead of being too big to fail, they should be made too regulated to fail.</p><h3>Now what about these side activities, this proprietary trading: Would you stop that, or just let other companies do that that don&#8217;t have a government back up?</h3><p>Banks should be banks and lend money, and that&#8217;s all they should do. Speculators and investment banks should be allowed whatever they want to do with their own money or their investors&#8217; money. They shouldn&#8217;t be rescued by the government, they shouldn&#8217;t be allowed to be too big to fail — and they shouldn&#8217;t be able to use people&#8217;s deposits to speculate with.</p><p>A commercial bank should be a bank; an investment bank should be an investment bank. We need a return to the Glass-Steagall era, which provided 70 years of financial sector stability.</p><h3>As an investor, looking at this somewhat uncertain future, what should I do?</h3><p>Every investor is different, of course. Someone with a billion-dollar portfolio needs to do something in a different way than one who has $100,000 to invest.</p><h3>Let&#8217;s consider that [$100,000] person &#8230;</h3><p>&#8230; If their portfolio is large enough.</p><p>It&#8217;s important to have a broadly diversified portfolio.</p><p>I think gold is the surest bet. I believe that gold is likely to go up 10 percent a year, on average, for the rest of our lives. There may be some years when it drops 30 percent. But on average, gold seems to be the surest bet.</p><p>Still, no one should put his or her eggs all in one basket — not even a golden basket. So &#8230; I would also have in my portfolio blue chip stocks with a high dividend yield, in this country and other countries.</p><p>Also, government bonds: U.S. government bonds and German government bonds.</p><p>Next, I would recommend &#8230; buying a residential building to rent out.</p><p>And finally, I would recommend debt — fixed-interest-rate debt to finance your residential building.</p><p>And that way you&#8217;d be very broadly diversified.</p><p>The reason why it&#8217;s so diversified is because we&#8217;re on government life support; no one can be certain what the government&#8217;s going to do. If they spend too much money, we&#8217;re going to get very high rates of inflation. That would be bad for bonds and stocks, butwould be very good for commodities. Meanwhile, your debt would evaporate — and you still would have rental income.</p><p>On the other hand, if the government spends too little, we&#8217;re going to have deflation. That would be bad for commodities but good for bonds — and you&#8217;ll still have your rental income. The rents might go down, but so will the price of everything else.</p><p>So because we can&#8217;t be too sure what the government is going to do — and because the government is driving this economy now —diversification is the only way to have proper insurance.</p><h3>That&#8217;s a very interesting. One more question: REITs. Is that for somebody who can&#8217;t afford a residential building? Can you invest in real estate through other implements?</h3><p>I think no two REITs are the same. You&#8217;d have to look into at them very carefully.</p><h3>And it might not provide that benefit, if your debt&#8217;s going down and rents are going up.</h3><p>That&#8217;s true.</p><p><small>[<a
href="http://moneywatch.bnet.com/investing/article/richard-duncan-economy-on-life-support/430244/">source</a>]</small></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/richard-duncan-video-economy/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>1</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Warren Buffett and Bill Gates: MBA Talk at Columbia University</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-bill-gates-mba-talk-columbia-university/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-bill-gates-mba-talk-columbia-university/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 13:35:42 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Video]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Warren Buffett]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=34</guid> <description><![CDATA[Warren Buffett and Bill Gates talk to the MBA students at Columbia University in New York. Enjoy the town-hall interview: CNBC: Warren Buffett &#038; Bill Gates &#8211; Keeping America Great. The talk overall was quite interesting. Warren Buffett kept things light with his usual manner of funny and logical humour. His honest answers is one [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a
href="http://www.incomeblog.net/tag/warren-buffett/">Warren Buffett</a> and Bill Gates talk to the MBA students at Columbia University in New York. Enjoy the town-hall interview: <strong>CNBC: Warren Buffett &#038; Bill Gates &#8211; Keeping America Great</strong>.</p><p>The talk overall was quite interesting. Warren Buffett kept things light with his usual manner of funny and logical humour. His honest answers is one of the many reasons people admire him so much. For example, a woman in the audience asked what industry will be good to be in in future and Bill Gates named a few (IT, Healthcare, Energy&#8230;). But Warren said that she should do what she&#8217;s passionate about and what she cares about and not what the sectors are going to do well in future, as she&#8217;ll most probably do very well and she&#8217;ll be happier if she does what she&#8217;s passionate about.</p><p><object
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/> </object></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-bill-gates-mba-talk-columbia-university/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>2</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>Warren Buffett on Borrowing Money</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-on-borrowing-money/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-on-borrowing-money/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2009 23:52:54 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[General]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Money]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Warren Buffett]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=33</guid> <description><![CDATA[More smart people have gone broke through leverage than to any other activity. A smart person can&#8217;t go broke unless they use leverage. As one of my friends says: If you&#8217;re smart, you don&#8217;t need it. And if you&#8217;re dumb you&#8217;ve got no business using it. So, it just doesn&#8217;t make sense. -Warren Buffett]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>More smart people have gone broke through leverage than to any other activity. A smart person can&#8217;t go broke unless they use leverage. As one of my friends says:<em> If you&#8217;re smart, you don&#8217;t need it. And if you&#8217;re dumb you&#8217;ve got no business using it</em>. So, it just doesn&#8217;t make sense.</p></blockquote><p>-<strong>Warren Buffett</strong></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/warren-buffett-on-borrowing-money/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>The Difference Between Investing and Speculating by Warren Buffett</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/difference-between-investing-speculating-warren-buffett/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/difference-between-investing-speculating-warren-buffett/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Fri, 30 Oct 2009 20:53:42 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[General]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Money]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Warren Buffett]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=32</guid> <description><![CDATA[Invest &#8211; don&#8217;t speculate! Investing isn&#8217;t gambling, there&#8217;s a real distinction. Basically, it&#8217;s subjective, but in investment attitude you look at the asset itself to produce the return. So if I buy a farm and I expect it to produce $80 an acre for me in terms of it&#8217;s revenue from corn, soya beans etc. [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Invest &#8211; don&#8217;t speculate!</h2><blockquote><p>Investing isn&#8217;t gambling, there&#8217;s a real distinction. Basically, it&#8217;s subjective, but in investment attitude you look at the asset itself to produce the return. So if I buy a farm and I expect it to produce $80 an acre for me in terms of it&#8217;s revenue from corn, soya beans etc. and it cost me $600. I&#8217;m looking at the return from the farm itself. I&#8217;m not looking at the price of the farm every day or every week or every year. On the other hand if I buy a stock and I hope it goes up next week, to me that&#8217;s pure speculation.</p></blockquote><p>-<strong>Warren Buffett</strong></p> ]]></content:encoded> <wfw:commentRss>http://www.incomeblog.net/difference-between-investing-speculating-warren-buffett/feed/</wfw:commentRss> <slash:comments>0</slash:comments> </item> <item><title>The Crisis of Credit Visualized</title><link>http://www.incomeblog.net/crisis-credit-visualized/</link> <comments>http://www.incomeblog.net/crisis-credit-visualized/#comments</comments> <pubDate>Sun, 20 Sep 2009 17:55:59 +0000</pubDate> <dc:creator>Income Blog</dc:creator> <category><![CDATA[Video]]></category> <category><![CDATA[Money]]></category><guid
isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=31</guid> <description><![CDATA[The Crisis of Credit Visualised Video by Jonathan Jarvis beautifully illustrates how the credit crisis or credit crunch came about. It&#8217;s a very well made video that is easy for non-financially literate people to understand. The video illustrates the relationship between the home-owners, banks, brokers, hedge funds, CDO&#8217;s, investment bankers, prime mortgages, sub-prime mortgages etc. [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The <strong>Crisis of Credit Visualised</strong> Video by <em>Jonathan Jarvis</em> beautifully illustrates how the credit crisis or credit crunch came about. It&#8217;s a very well made video that is easy for non-financially literate people to understand.</p><p>The video illustrates the relationship between the home-owners, banks, brokers, hedge funds,  CDO&#8217;s, investment bankers, prime mortgages, sub-prime mortgages etc. and makes it easy for anybody to understand.</p><p><object
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isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=30</guid> <description><![CDATA[Warren Buffett gives an interview on CNBC on the economy and investment outlook.]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Warren Buffett gives an interview on CNBC on the economy and investment outlook.</p><p><object
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isPermaLink="false">http://www.incomeblog.net/?p=28</guid> <description><![CDATA[Dr Marc Faber is interviewed by HoweStreet.com on the 8th of May 2009 which produced the following two interesting videos. With all the government bailouts I was surprised to hear that the possible M3 (simple definition here), which the Fed stopped reporting. It is reported to be increasing to around 10% per month. That&#8217;s going [...]]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a
href="http://www.incomeblog.net/tag/mark-faber/">Dr Marc Faber</a> is interviewed by HoweStreet.com on the 8th of May 2009 which produced the following two interesting videos.</p><p>With all the government bailouts I was surprised to hear that the possible <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_(economics)#Empirical_measures">M3</a> (simple definition <a
href="http://financial-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/M3">here</a>), which the Fed <a
href="http://www.kitco.com/ind/Turk/turk_mar262006.html">stopped reporting</a>. It is reported to be increasing to around 10% per month. That&#8217;s going to be quite a bit of inflation heading our way.</p><p>Marc Faber has some very interesting things to say, as always, and I&#8217;ve enjoyed the videos &#8212; especially part 2.</p><p><strong>Part 1</strong><br
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