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| Step1
- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
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| Step
2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned. |
| Step
3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
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| Step
4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health. |
Resources
You Might Need - Sean Toh
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4 Steps To Financial Freedom (2007
edition) Sean Toh
4 Steps To Financial Freedom
reveals the philosophies and secrets of Sean
Toh's financial journey in creating wealth
for himself. Here you will learn proven
principles and timeless wealth building
techniques, as well as simple, practical,
and proven financial strategies used by
thousands of people to create a life of
abundance. By starting to practice these
four steps, you will change you life. Make
the decision now to take the necessary
actions to embark on this journey of
creating wealth for yourself.
The 4 Steps to Financial Freedom
consist of:
- Step 1 - Get Healthy and Strive for
Great Health
- Step 2 - Adopt an Open Mindset to
Learn
- Step 3 - Invest Your Time in
Financial and Health Education
- Step 4 - Enjoy the Wealth that You
Have Created
You will also learn why financial
education is directly linked to your
financial destiny. Sean Toh shows you how to
get financial education and how you can
teach yourself to create and preserve your
wealth. He explains the different types of
incomes and how you can design a simple
model for yourself to take action on so that
you can start to see some financial success.
Embark
on your financial education today to reach
your financial destiny faster!
More information about Sean Toh: www.4stepsfinancialfreedom.com

Can
be ordered or purchased from Amazon!
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Time
Can help You Cut Down Your Risk
Even after the bear market of 2000-2002, the stock
market has returned, on average, about 12% per year
since World War II. That's for a portfolio that is
one-half large company stocks and one-half small
company stocks (using the data from Ibbotson
Associates, an industry leader in compiling market
statistics). This assumes all dividends were
reinvested and ignores the unfortunate fact that in
real life Uncle Sam steps in and confiscates a hefty
portion of your gains.
Of course, knowing the market's average return has
been 12% annually doesn't tell you what the return
will be this year. Such an average obscures some
pretty wild rides along the way (such as twelve-month
periods where losses were as horrifying as 36% and
gains were as breathtaking as 79%). In fact, only
about 4% of the time have stocks actually returned 12%
(give or take 1%) in a twelve-month period.
What it does tell you, however, is that time is on the
side of the long-term investor. The longer you are
willing to keep your money in the stock market, the
greater your likelihood of success. According to the
Ibboston data, if you picked any 12-month period at
random since World War II to own stocks, you had a 78%
chance of making money. How much money? Study the
historical evidence in the table. You would have had
about a 39% probability of making 20% or more, a 22%
chance of making 10%-20%, and a 17% chance of earning
1%-10%.
The numbers presented here are based on
"rolling" periods. After looking at the
results from holding periods that began on January 1,
I then "rolled" to the next month to see
what happened if the holding period had begun on
February 1. And so on through the year. This gives a
better understanding of the extremes you might expect.
Notice that only 9% of the three-year holding periods
lost money. In other words, if you held your stocks
for at least three years, you raised your likelihood
of making money to 91%! You can see that as the
holding period increases, the very large gains and
losses gradually disappear as the market moves closer
to its long-term historical average. More importantly,
by the time you reach a four-year holding period, any
losses you experience are likely to be minor. After
eight years, the losses have stopped altogether.
How can you apply this? By aligning your investment
expectations accordingly. Begin judging your
investment progress in terms of the market's long-term
average annual return and how much time remains before
you will need to sell your holdings. It may be that,
on occasion, your mutual fund portfolio will show far
greater growth than 12% annually (as it did last
year). Don't expect this to continue indefinitely.
Recognize it for what it is — one of those
above-the-norm results. Your additional profits will
provide you with a cushion in case the market is not
as kind to you this year.
On the other hand, if you finish this year ahead only
+4%, don't despair. You would temporarily be
"behind schedule" with respect to your 12%
goal, but as long as you still have many years
remaining in your expected holding period, you still
have the odds in your favor. You should hang in there
and wait for the stock market to do what it has always
done in the past — reward the patient investor.
In closing, let me say that investors should take on
the higher risks of owning stocks only because they
need the higher returns they offer. My advice is that
you not take on any more risk than necessary, that is,
that you invest at the lowest level of stock exposure
consistent with achieving your growth and income
goals.
By Austin Pryor
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