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	<title>Managing your Financial &#187; estate</title>
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		<title>Women &amp; Financial Independence</title>
		<link>http://www.alfredbusiness.com/women-financial-independence/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jun 2010 04:04:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.alfredbusiness.com/?p=36</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Women and financial independence is quite possible but will be more difficult than a man achieving financial independence. Financial independence indicates that there is no dependence on a paycheck and that basically you are your own boss. Women having the responsibility to raise families often have to put their financial independence on hold until the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Women and financial independence is quite possible but will be more difficult than a man achieving financial independence. Financial independence indicates that there is no dependence on a paycheck and that basically you are your own boss. Women having the responsibility to raise families often have to put their financial independence on hold until the family unit is feasible for business endeavors. Financial independence does not mean to have a large bank account. Financial independence indicates that the the woman can not has their own businesses.<span id="more-36"></span><a href="http://www.alfredbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/grocery-shopping-save-money-women.jpg"><img src="http://www.alfredbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/grocery-shopping-save-money-women-150x150.jpg" alt="" title="grocery-shopping-save-money-women" width="150" height="150" class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-37" /></a><br />
Very few people has achieved financial independence because of the risks that have to be taken and the financial capital needed for business start ups not only for women but for men as well. . One may say that Warren Buffet the billionaire has financial independence but it appears that he works harder at forecasting the economy than being employed. Most financial independent people are either in real estate or investment banking and have their own business. Women owned businesses can indicate financial independence because they are self supporting which indicates independence and building wealth to be self sustaining.<br />
The term rich and financial independence has been used synonymously but there are rich people who are not financial independent and financial independent people who are not rich. For the sake of everyday terms and for a goal that would put the high achiever in reach of a lucrative income, financial independent is described as owning your own business and not having a boss. Most men achieve this plateau of financial independence than women but that is no indication that there are top producing financial independent women. The numbers are scarce of women and financial independence than men in the same financial status. Being responsible for the sustainability of the business and the longevity of the business along with the customer retention is paramount of women and financial independence.<br />
Women owned business are in the minority and there are less financially independent women than men. A generalized reason for this inequity is the fact that women are most likely wives and mother who takes care of family and supplement income with a part time job or even a full time job. Social norms still places the man as the head of the household and the one responsible for the financial stability of the family. Given this responsibility, it is the man of the household who is most likely seeking to be financially independent. Women are seeking to be financially independent but not on the larger scale as men.<br />
Even in the workforce, a woman&#8217;s salary still trails that of a man. If a woman is seeking financial independence, there will be steeper mountains to climb to reach that goal. Venture capital to get started can be more difficult to obtain and most likely the woman would have to to get helpful information on starting a business from the Small Business Administration or the SBA. Recently, investment groups just for woman has sprung up around the country and this is one way to get venture capital to get started on owning a business and becoming financial independent.<br />
Owning a business is a twenty four hours a day job seven days a week and there is never enough hours in a day to work on building a business for financial independence. Most likely the woman can use time management to get tasks done but must be prepared for the hard work and long hours to get a business started even after qualifying for venture capital. A woman can achieve financial independence but the work is hard and the hours are long but worthwhile if financial independence has become a lifetime goal.<br />
•	AWAKE : Association of women entrepreneurs of Karnat&#8230;<br />
In India women are still to find their footing financially. Even today well educated women sit at home to raise a family rather than continue working. For the majority of the middle class husbands it is still&#8230;<br />
•	How To Be A Stronger, More Independent, Woman &#8211; 15 T&#8230;<br />
1. Get a solid education that will result in work that pays well, or get training that offers solid, marketable skills for work that pays well. Financial independence is vital. 2. Learn about&#8230;<br />
•	How To Become A Stronger And More Independent Woman,&#8230;<br />
1) Make a decision to be independent. Independence is in a way, being able to make decisions and then acting upon them. Independence is also being able to correct a decision that you may have taken and&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Managing your Own Money</title>
		<link>http://www.alfredbusiness.com/managing-your-own-money/</link>
		<comments>http://www.alfredbusiness.com/managing-your-own-money/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jun 2010 03:45:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.alfredbusiness.com/?p=25</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Many investors who manage their own money and their own investments have several tremendous advantages over fund managers. Investors who have bypassed the allure of the fund management industry often come to realize that through diligent research and logic, they can keep up with the returns of the big boys.
My investment business, albeit in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Many investors who manage their own money and their own investments have several tremendous advantages over fund managers. Investors who have bypassed the allure of the fund management industry often come to realize that through diligent research and logic, they can keep up with the returns of the big boys.<br />
My investment business, albeit in the fund management profession, is run along the private investor’s lines. All of the advantages below are practiced by my fund.<span id="more-25"></span><br />
While this may appear to be caused by superior market knowledge and over-confidence, there are in fact a number of advantages the small guy has. I advise all amateur and part-time investors to read over these structural advantages and use them to your benefit.<br />
1. You can wait.<br />
Private investors have the luxury of time on their side. If you cannot find anything attractive you can stay in cash. Fund managers do not have this luxury for two reasons. Firstly, they have to invest to their mandate irrespective of current market valuations (for example equity funds must have a certain percentage of their money in equities at all times). Holding cash in the fund is also a risky strategy for fund managers as they run the risk of being left behind by their peers, whom they are compared to on a quarterly, monthly and sometimes even daily basis.<br />
2. You can invest anywhere and everywhere.<br />
Without an investment mandate, you can invest in any type of asset in any country that offers an attractive risk return trade-off, be it corporate bonds, equities, options, real estate etc. As mentioned above, fund managers have to stay within the fund&#8217;s investment area. In the case of pension funds, there are even more severe limits that, in my opinion, limit the returns the fund can provide.<br />
3. You can invest in any size<br />
Similarly to investing anywhere, there are no size constraints on your investment. Fund managers are faced with ridiculous restrictions as to how much to “weight” to certain indexes in order to match their performance as closely as possible.<br />
4. You have no benchmark<br />
You only have one goal in mind, and that is to grow your investment portfolio each year irrespective of what the market does. I do not consider it a good year if I have lost 25% while the market has lost 40%. Fund managers are groomed to beat their benchmark and this performance is always viewed in context, irrespective of absolute return.<br />
5. You can focus and ignore<br />
Studying, understanding and applying what has worked in investing is all you need to do to be successful as a private investor. I advocate reading Benjamin Graham classic, The Intelligent Investor. The rest should follow. Pay no attention to market noise, alternate opinions or what the television “talking heads” say. Do your own research and arrive at your own conclusions.<br />
6. No conflict of interest<br />
The individual investor has only their interest to look out for. This is a big advantage when it comes to large fund managers catering to larger institutions. Fund managers have to think of keeping their jobs, increasing their assets under management and keeping clients happy, suggesting that performance is not the most important thing on their minds. Also, clashes between investment banks and fund managers are regular occurrences and sometimes result in inopportune purchases by fund managers.<br />
7. You can have a long view.<br />
According to a study by the New York Stock Exchange the average holding period of shares held has declined from five to six years in the 1950s to 11 months, meaning the average holding period is less than one financial year. It is extremely unlikely and almost impossible that an undervalued company can right itself in such a short period of time. This may be the largest competitive advantage you have: The ability to look at a company solely on valuation and keep it as long as it is undervalued, irrespective of what the competition is doing or market price.<br />
8. No peer pressure.<br />
There is no pressure to buy or sell any investments. Fund managers get compared to benchmark indices and other funds, including the individual fund holdings. If you manage your own money you have none of these problems.<br />
9. You decide.<br />
The private investor is in control of all their decisions. You make the final decision after you have done the analysis. You may be wrong but at least you make the calls either way. Many fund managers are run by committee which leads to inherent clashes. Try telling your boss that his investment ideas are wrong!<br />
10. You don’t have to di-worse-ify!<br />
Every individual should hold only as many stocks as they feel comfortable with. There is no set limit either on the low or high end. However, most mutual funds hold positions in excess of 100 stocks. My business has only 7 positions. While I advise 10 as the optimal, we won’t buy stocks just because we hold seven and need ten!<br />
11. You control the costs<br />
Controlling costs and fees (the friction of investing), is a very important part of realizing superior long-term results. Discount brokers provide ideal services for the private investor, so long as you are not a day trader! Calculated over a period of 20 to 30 years keeping costs low makes a huge difference.<br />
12. You can be fully invested<br />
This is a huge structural advantage you have and is the bane of the fund management business. Fund managers are bound to get redemption requests when markets fall, and to meet such requests either need to be in cash or sell shares. However, as we have seen in 2008 in particular, when markets are falling liquidity drops, sometimes to the point where a fund manager is unable to sell his position. This results in selling pressure on stock prices leading to further market falls, thus triggering more redemptions, and so on.<br />
There are of course a few funds where the drawbacks mentioned below do not apply but they are in the minority, my fund being one of those. The large bulk of fund management companies are focused on growing the amount of money they manage, while the performance of your portfolio is not the utmost concern.<br />
If you do not want to manage your own investments then find a fund manager who is not bound by parameters and can show clearly that the performance of your investment is there foremost concern.</p>
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