“An unwritten want is a wish, a dream, a never-happen. The day you put your goal in writing is the day it becomes a commitment that will change your life. Are you ready?”
Tom Hopkins
Do You Know What Your Advisor Does I read the following article this morning and while it supports what I have always said, Strategic Asset Allocation provides more return over the long run than Tactical Asset...
Financial Advisors Deserted By Vishal Teckchandani Fri 26 Jun 2009 More than 25 per cent of wealthy clients in 2008 withdrew their assets from their wealth management firm and deserted their financial...
It's Happening Already I have been saying this for many years now and it is the main reason why the companies Financial Gain Australia and then Financial Gain NZ were started. Eventually and...
I'm in the News City suites are on the rise 4:00AM Sunday May 24, 2009 By Jane Phare Older investors are helping fuel a resurgence in the inner-city Auckland apartment market. The sector...
Completely Wrong The Reserve Bank has left the Official Cash Rate (OCR) unchanged at 2.5 percent but indicated it may cut again. It's the first time in nine reviews of official interest...
“An unwritten want is a wish, a dream, a never-happen. The day you put your goal in writing is the day it becomes a commitment that will change your life. Are you ready?”
Tom Hopkins
When you have a purpose in life, a vision for what you want to achieve, and know why you want to achieve it, work becomes fun, and the time you spend working seems to just whizz by
A good plan is like a road map: it shows the final destination and usually the best way to get there.
Isn’t that the truth.
I do not have superior intelligence or faultless looks. I do not captivate a room or run a mile under six minutes. I only succeeded because I was still working after everyone else went to sleep.”
My wife sent me this little saying because it made her think of me
The heights by great men reached and kept
Were not attained by sudden flight,
But they, while their companions slept,
Were toiling upward in the night.
–Henry Wadsworth Longfellow