early-retirement-investor.com
Is now the best time to buy shares
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/best-time-to-buy-shares.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Is now the best time to buy shares? Is now the best time to buy shares? It sounds obvious, but in my book the best time to buy shares is when they're cheap. Normally, investors buy shares when the news is good. This means they are buying shares at high prices, while selling them when the gloom gets going, i.e. they are selling them low. Basically, you are losing twice: once on the up and secondly, when you’re exiting. Remember Warren Buffett’s comment on this:.
early-retirement-investor.com
Wealth building the easy way. Here’s how.
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/wealth-building.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Devise a Wealth Building Strategy. And try to stick to it! Wealth building is realy easy with the right mindset. Unless you are a 'hyperspender'! Many of us dream of being wealthy or building wealth. Real, substantial and sustainable wealth. Liquid wealth. The hyperspender in you is your worst enemy! They believe that buying certain products and services have a direct influence on their happiness. Whatever it is, they need to have it NOW. Unless you are the Governme...
early-retirement-investor.com
Your Financial Life Cycle. Determine where You are.
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/financial-life-cycle.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Your Age Determines Where You are in Your Own Financial Life Cycle. It doesn’t need to be so! In general your age very much determines where you are in your own financial life cycle. The earning money phase. At the start of your financial life cycle, in the main once you have entered the job market, during the first 10, 15 or even 20 years or so of your career your income tends to increase (rapidly). However, in those early years. The wealth accumulation phase.
early-retirement-investor.com
Save for Retirement using ISA, SIPP and company pension plans
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/save-for-retirement.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Save For Retirement Using Existing. The best places to save for retirement are in tax favourable retirement accounts such as individual savings accounts ("Retirement ISAs") and self invested personal pensions ("SIPPs"). SIPPs as a vehicle to save for retirement. With SIPP's, you get tax relief on your contributions which is hugely beneficial when you save for retirement. In effect, this gives you back the tax you've already paid on earned income. Thus, basic...Anybo...
early-retirement-investor.com
Early Retirement Investor’s Wealth Building Tips.
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/wealth-building-tips.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Essential Wealth Building Tips. For you to select. Cherry pick our wealth building tips. What follows is a rather long list of ‘common sense’ wealth building tips and strategies for you to consider when you are developing your own wealth building plan. STEPS TO CONSIDER FOR YOUR OWN WEALTH BUILDING PLAN:. Start with our wealth building tips that apply most to you and are relevant to your situation. Not all suggestions fit all people. 10 or even 20 years? It's almost...
early-retirement-investor.com
Nuclear Power A Force To Be Reckoned With For Investors
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/nuclear-power.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Nuclear Power: a multi-decade. The re-emergence of nuclear power as a long term investment theme and the looming uranium shortage is excellent news for nuclear reactor builders and young uranium explorers and mining companies, and their investors. Why I like nuclear energy? Let me give you some reasons why you may want to consider investments in nuclear energy and uranium mining:. The world’s energy needs on the increase. Nuclear is actually inexpensive in compariso...
early-retirement-investor.com
Emergency Budget 2010: Capital Gains Tax To Rise to 28%
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/capital-gains-tax.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Capital Gains Tax Raised in Emergency Budget. Capital Gains Tax rate only partially increased. In May 2010, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, had announced that capital gains tax (CGT) would increase from 18 per cent to rates similar or close to those applied to income. Emergency Budget 2010: Capital Gains Tax measures. It could have been worse, but these are the main changes:. Basic-rate taxpayers will continue to pay CGT at a rate of 18pc. Unfortuna...
early-retirement-investor.com
Elderly care in crise in the United Kingdom
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/elderly-care.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. Where is the money going to come from to pay for elderly care? The cost of elderly care is spiralling out of control. Questions we need to ask ourselves, include:. How will the older population afford long-term care? How can the government help? How can you help? Who is going to pay the elderly carers? Perhaps your parents can sell their house, right? Perhaps the children of older people should make a contribution? Perhaps the tax payer should pay for elderly care?
early-retirement-investor.com
UK State Pension Crisis! What To Do Next
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/state-pension-crisis.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. What is happening with Your. Lets' start with some history. When the basic UK State Pension was first introduced in 1908, means-tested pensions were paid out without anything having already been paid into the scheme. It required (and still requires) a continuing supply of (new) taxpayers to pay for current State Pensions. Fast forward to 1946. Add another 70 years later . . . . The State Pension allowance has risen from around 23 a week in 1979 to 97.65 today, a...
early-retirement-investor.com
Is Europe in default. What's going on? How to protect yourself?
http://www.early-retirement-investor.com/europe.html
Click Below To Subscribe For Updates:. What is going on in Europe? How serious is a European country defaulting? In the May/June 2010 editions of Dividend Alerts. I predicted that the situation in Europe would only get worse. In fact, I forewarned that the future of the EURO as we than knew it was on the cards. Now some 14 months later, let’s see if we can make sense of it all . . . Should we care if Greece defaults on its debts? Yes, we should! Remember the 2007 2009 banking crises? Back then the rot st...