Wednesday, April 29, 2015

The Search for Yield Ends Here: Online Real Estate Investment With Fundrise

1:30 AM Posted by Kos Lo No comments

Guest Post By Ben Miller, Co-Founder & CEO, Fundrise

Every wealth manager has a theory on where to invest, but their advice and the opportunity to participate will cost you.

And, as we all know, the higher your cost of investing, the lower your overall profit.

Most money managers and hedge funds charge fees according to the “two-and-twenty” model, meaning they charge an average of 2% on all assets under management (AUMs) and an additional 20% of the “upside”, or any profits earned.

Money manager fees are high in nearly every case, with servicing usually at more than one percent. Furthermore, minimum investments can range from tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars. In REIT investments, for example, one must pay brokerage fees, and in the case of non-traded REITs, fees can amount to nine percent to 10 percent of the total investment.

Enter the InternetFundrise

Technology can play a major role in disrupting a broken financial system, particularly as it relates to investor fees. Bringing the investment process online can create a more direct, transparent model, which can lower both operating costs and investor fees.

The Internet has put power back in the hands of consumers by providing direct access to investments so that they no longer need to forfeit large shares of profits to fees. Motif Investing, Wealthfront, and Betterment provide investors with the ability to invest in diversified portfolios with nominal fees.

Crowdfunding is a great vehicle for individuals looking to move beyond the public markets and gain exposure to real estate. Companies like Fundrise provide investors with access to curated real estate deals for substantially lower fees and lower minimums than other investment avenues can provide.

Because of the efficiencies of a direct and transparent marketplace, Fundrise is able to charge 30 basis points (“Bps”) per year. (A basis point is .01% or 1/100th of 1%.)

To put it another way:

If you invested $10,000 in a one-year Fundrise investment, you would pay $30 ($10,000 x .003) in fees. On a comparable investment with a money manager, assuming the two-and-twenty model, you would see at least $200 per year in management fees plus an additional 20% fee charged on upside.

This graph outlines how the net returns of real estate investments with similar profiles can vary based on fees:

A savvy investor is one of who unlocks the full potential of passive income, asks smart questions, and succeeds in building a customized portfolio that fits their needs as a result!

[Source:modestmoney.com]Sourse: Thefinancebucks.com

Saturday, April 25, 2015

Opening of ties With Cuba is Going to Open Investment Opportunity

1:43 AM Posted by Kos Lo No comments

I live in Miami area, the area that is slated to benefit most once US starts doing business with Cuba. Our local economy is gearing up for the windfall. Everyone from porter to shipping lines, including local tour guides are upbeat. Let’s talk about the opportunities in real estate that the ties will open. Whether in residential properties or commercial big-ticket investment, there are tremendous potential in Cuba. Tourism from US alone could touch Multi-Billion dollars within first couple of years.

There are many options for investing in Real Estate both nationally and internationally.  Many Real Estate investors are free to choose which international Real Estate ventures are best for them. However, due to various international laws and restrictions, some countries may limit Real Estate investments by investors who are citizens of the United States.Cuba

Below is more detailed information about the laws and other areas US investors should know if you wants to buy a property in Cuba. Cuban laws restricts United States citizen as to how they can invest in Real Estate transactions in Cuba.

Investors in all parts of the world are free to travel to Cuba without any restrictions.  However, investors who happened to be US citizens are restricted. It is not the traveling that is restricted for US citizens, but according to recent studies, unless an investor has a specific license or a general license from the United States Treasury Office of Foreign Asset Control, US citizens have restrictions on spending money in Cuba, which is also illegal without these licenses.

Real Estate Agency Prestige International is understood to be amongst the first agencies applying to obtain the licenses. Those who are interested in taking advantage of Cuba’s investment opportunities may travel with state governors or any other and agricultural trade delegate.

When President Barack Obama announced that Cuba and the United States will restore its diplomatic relationships, many opportunities may become available for those interested in investing in Cuba, particularly within the real estate industry.

Jose Gabilondo, a professor at the Florida International University College of Law is an expert in Finance in Cuba and has indicated that United States based businesses should consider this announcement as the beginning of the end, with respect to the United States embargo in Cuba.

Gabilondo has added that Cuba has a great need for real estate investments, particularly due to its valuable seashore,  and its rural and urban areas, which according to Gabilondo are areas that need investment the most.

Investing in Cuba real estate also has additional limitations due to the lack of internal reforms of Cuba’s real estate system, as well as its real estate title system and its financial laws. The implementation of such reforms will likely attract more foreign investors.

Investing in Cuba real estate also has limitations with respect to foreign investors concerning the foreign ownership rights of Cuban real property.  Additionally Cuba does not have an adequate real estate contract system and it also needs to enforce issues concerning judicial property rights

When making decisions about Investing in Cuba real estate, investors need to be aware of a variety of issues and restrictions to be successful investors. Including having the ability to attract buyers – either local or international buyers, as well as becoming abreast of all of the international laws between Cuba and the United States with respect to Investing in Cuba real estate.

Additionally US real estate investors who have an interest in investing in Cuban real estate should be concerned about safety issues when investing abroad. Investors traveling to and from Cuba to manage their investment properties, also need to be concerned about the safety and security of the property in their absence.

When properties have little activity they appear abandoned, which could result in vandalism and squatting by the homeless. It is best to work with Cuban officials to find out about Cuban laws concerning working with property management companies during the investor’s absence.

Investors also need to become aware of the Cuban laws concerning areas such as renting and leasing property as well as insurance issues among other things.  Investing in real estate in Cuba can be very rewarding, but it has its challenges as well.

[Source:onecentatatime.com]Sourse: Thefinancebucks.com

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

How a Forex Trading Journal Can Help You Make Money

12:52 PM Posted by Unknown , , No comments

You may wonder why it is necessary to keep a separate trading journal, since just about every broker provides a real-time record of your trades. In fact, one could argue that the broker's record also keeps track of available buying power, margin usage and profit and losses for each trade made. Still, there are benefits to keeping a separate trading journal, and here is why. 

1. Historical Record
Over a period of time, the journal will provide a historical perspective. Not only will it summarize all your trades, but it will provide, at a glance, the state of your trading account showing each individual trade and the accumulated effects of all your trades to date. In other words, it becomes your personal performance data base, which will provide you with the opportunity to go back in time and determine how often you traded, how successful each trade was, which currency pairs performed better for you and even what time frames gave up the best profit percentages. Depending how analytical you want to be, you will be able to glean a great deal of information from your recording efforts.

2. Planning Tool
Not only should a good trade journal record your actual trade data, but it should also provide information on what your plans are for each trade. This feature allows you to consider each trade before you take it by setting parameters for where you want to enter, how much risk you can accept on the trade, where your profit target will be set and how you will manage the trade as it proceeds. In other words the journal becomes a way for you to record your thoughts in actual numbers, and makes it possible to convert wishful thinking into practical reality. It forms the basis of a method for planning your trade, and then trading your plan.

3. Methodology Verification 
Another very important by-product of a trading journal is the fact that, over time, it will verify your methodology. You will be able to see just how well your system performs in changing market conditions. It will answer questions like: How did my system perform in a trending market, a range bound market, different time frames and the impact of your trading decisions such as placing stop loss orders, too tight or too loose? In order to retain the full details for the logic behind a particular methodology, the trading journal must be fully comprehensive.

4. Mind Pattern Modification (Method to Change Habits)
One of the most useful features of your journal will be the concrete help it provides in forcing you to change your habits from destructive to constructive. As you learn how to trade your plan, you will develop a greater level of confidence. Your profitable trades won't feel so random, and your losses will be "planned for," and therefore won't ding your psyche in a way that will make you feel that a loss means you are a loser. A very important mental and emotional factor in trading is your level of confidence. Confidence is the antidote for the fear and greed cycle in which many traders will get caught. Fear and greed is a natural, hardwired response in most humans. If you are winning, you want to win more; if you are losing, you feel fear and even panic as your account dwindles towards zero.
Having a journal that gathers your statistics sets up a trading plan by defining parameters of action needed, provides a rear view mirror so that you can measure how well you executed each trade, and most importantly provides you with the feedback to develop and evolve your trading skills, is an extremely valuable tool for becoming successful. You will find a good trading journal to be a best friend and mentor as you make progress.

The Two-Part Journal
It is recommended to set up a trade journal that accomplishes two main concepts:
  • A chronological columnar list of trades that you can total and aggregate, so that you can have a record of all your efforts. This is best accomplished by hand writing in the columns all the pertinent data. Of course, you can keep records using an Excel spreadsheet that can automatically do the math for you, and which will remove simple calculation errors. This depends on your own abilities in spreadsheet modeling.
  • A printout of the actual chart you used to determine the trade, indicating your entry level, your stop loss level and your potential profit level, should be clearly marked up on the chart. In addition, you should record your reasons for taking the trade. Keep a section on the chart where you can indicate the following:
    • Fundamental Reasons (Example) "I believe the dollar will continue to weaken, due to the Fed's long term policy of keeping interest rates lower than trading partners and maintaining a high trade deficit."
    • Technical Reasons (Example) "The dollar has retraced back to a resistance level that provides an opportunity to sell the dollar."
    • Sentimental Reasons or Market Psychology (Example) "Traders are reducing their appetite for risk based on the extended run in commodities and the potential for a correction, as well as the lackluster performance of the U.S. economy, as measured by the weakening GDP data and the poor job creation numbers."
Note your comments on the actual printout or screen capture of your chart. Finally, you should set up a journal for each type of trading methodology or system you employ. Do not mix systems, as the results of your trades will derive from too many variables and will then be inconclusive. Therefore, if you have more than one trading system or methodology, you should keep a journal for each one.
Every trade you record should be based on only one particular system, which will then give you the ability after 20 trades or so to calculate the expectancy or reliability of your system.
Here again is the expectancy formula:

E= [1+ (W/L)] x P – 1
W = Average Winning Trade
L = Average Losing Trade
P = Percentage Win Ratio

Example:
If you made 10 trades, and six of them were winning trades, four losing, your percentage win ratio would be 6/10, or 60%. If your six trades made $2,400, then your average win would be $2,400/6 = $400. If your losses were $1,200, then your average loss would be $1,200/4 = $300. Apply these results to the formula and you get: E= [1+ (400/300)] x 0.6 - 1 = 0.40 or 40%. A positive 40% expectancy means that your system will return you an additional 40 cents over every dollar in the long term.

Conclusion 
Once you know your system's expectancy, you can act with confidence. Confidence is the key to execution. If you lack confidence you will not be able to execute your trades according to your plans and you will either second guess yourself or become paralyzed from too much analysis of data coming in from the market. Make a trading journal your first trading habit. It will become the key to all your good trades in the future.


Friday, April 17, 2015

How Investors Can Win in a Volatile Market


Increased volatility leads many traders to seeing an increase in trading opportunities. The huge market swings trigger thoughts of monumental upside, but also for potential loss especially if traders do not take the necessary precautions. During times of volatility, traders need to adjust their strategy to compensate for erratic market. When trading during these market conditions, traders should follow the rules below.
1. Be More Selective Before Placing Trades
Wanting to take advantage of all the trading opportunities that present themselves in volatile markets, traders are tempted to place an increase number of trades. This temptation should be avoided. It is important to remember that in volatile times, losses are likely to be big. Before placing a trading, assess risk tolerance levels. Determine the level of risk that is acceptable for the trader both psychologically and financially before placing any trades.
2. Use Less Leverage
During high market volatility, losses can be traumatic. With the average trading range increased in volatile times traders should be considering how leverage will affect trades. At a one percent or even a half percent margin, investors should be mindful of how much leverage or even the size position being traded can affect their portfolio. In normal market conditions, placing a 2 lot position is fine when you are looking to make about 50-100 pips. During a more volatile time, when the potential loss is 100-200 pips, it stops being an effective risk to reward ratio. To compensate traders should look to taking on smaller trading positions, in this case only one lot as opposed to the average 2 lot position.
3. Trade with More Discipline
Traders should always follow their predetermined trading strategy regardless of market condition. During volatile markets, this is even more important to use that same level of restraint. Traders must adhere to any set stops, contingency plans or risk management benchmarks without hesitation. This will help to define how much risk is taken should price action be uncontrollable. Without this level of discipline and self control losses can be great.
4. Tighten Stops
Many traders are hesitant to use tighter stops in volatile markets because they see the large swings increasing the likelihood that the position will be taken out. Having tighter stops can also provide great risk managers in times of extreme volatility. For example, on a EURUSD trade, rather than setting an 80 pip stop to protect your position, consider placing a 50-60 pip stop. This will insure the protection of your currency position and if the stop is broken, there is a high likelihood that the trend will continue lower and the stop took you out before you could potentially lose more money.
The width of the stop being set does depend on the currency pair being trading as some pairs have wider ranges. In a Yen cross like the GBPJPY or AUDJPY, traders may be more likely to have wider stops as their average daily range is 50% more than that of the EUR/USD. With that said, stops during volatile market conditions should not as wide as before. Instead of a stop 100 pips below entry, traders may consider a 25 pip reduction and have a 75 pip stop. Below is a chart showing the EURUSD and the GBPJPY on the same very volatile day in the forex market. The EURUSD had an impressive range of nearly 600 pips! The GBPJPY far dominated though with nearly a 2000 pip trading range.

5. Be Prepared
It also helps a trader to know what is causing the current spate of volatility in the markets in order to be prepared for the unexpected. As such, an investor can accommodate their strategy to the market environment and not just the currency pair being traded. The first of these considerations is accounting for emotions in a market: is fear currently driving the market lower? Or is it buyer's mania that is keeping the bullish tone alive? Traders' overreaction and emotion tend to push markets to overextended targets. This fact alone creates volatility through simple supply and demand.
Volatility can also, and more than likely will, be sparked by economic events. In this instance, market participants may interpret fundamental data differently and not as cut and dry as the more novice trader. A perfect example of this is usually monthly manufacturing reports that are released in pretty much all industrial economies. The classic scenario has the market honed in on a particular number for the month. However, traders young and old will sometimes wonder why the market sold off if manufacturing showed positive growth. The answer is simple. The market had a different interpretation and positions were violently reshaped and shifted. These tend to create great opportunities for some and horrible memories for others. Below is an hourly chart of the EUR/USD during ISM Manufacturing for October 1, 2008. Here we can see the huge price gap that occurred due to market volatility as well as the resulting trend.

Panic and erratic momentum can additionally be found in certain market environments. Not to be confused with fear or greed, panic selling and buying can create very choppy and relatively untradeable markets. These conditions will lead some to flip flop their positions while leaving others gaping at the fact that the position was right, only to be stopped out prematurely. These two common examples will create further panic and volatility as traders abandon their own individual strategy for the possibility of instant profits or stoppage revenge. As a result, a vicious cycle of volatility ensues until a definitive market direction can be established.
The simple rules above, and a task of getting to know the current trading environment, can empower every trader through the ranks. Although some relate volatility with difficult and untouchable markets, opportunities continue to remain abound in these less than attractive conditions to those focused and fortunate.
By following these five simple steps, trading in volatile market conditions should be a little simpler. Don't forget to adjust leverage based on volatility, follow your trading plan, tighten your stops and know why you are getting into a trade before you place it.

Forex Market:Myths and Realities You Should Know


Let me quote from one of the classics in literature for traders – Alexander Elder's "How to Play and Win on the Market":
"If a friend of yours with very little experience in farming comes to you and says that he is planning on feeding himself from what he can grow on a quarter acre plot, you'll know that he is going to be going hungry. We all have a sense of what can be gotten out of a plot of that size. But in the world of trading, full-grown adults allow themselves to harbor such fantasies."
As soon as an amateur gets roughed up a few times and has a few margin calls, he loses his assertiveness, becomes more timid and begins formulating all manner of frightening ideas about financial markets. Losers on the market buy, sell or stay on the sidelines all as result of their fantasies. They are like children who are afraid to walk through a cemetery or peek under the bed for fear that there could be ghosts lurking. The unstructured nature of financial markets is fertile ground for fantasy to take flight.
And our fantasies can affect our behavior even when we don't realize we have them. A successful trader must first recognize his fantasies and then rid himself of them.
Fly-by-night Dealers and Other Myths about How Brokers Actually Work
There are three ways a dealing center can operate.
1. Not a single client position is hedged with an external counteragent. In this case it is in the dealer's interest that the client lose – otherwise, the client is paid out of the dealer's own pocket. In Russia, the prevalence of such dealers in the 1990s let to industry players adopting a pejorative slang word, kukhnya (translated as "kitchen") to describe such low-budget, fledgling dealers. It is true that many dealing companies operate according to this model in the first years of their existence because they don't have enough trading volume to hedge their clients' net positions in the interbank Forex market (a standard lot being 0.5 mln). Less well-established dealers run the risk that one of their clients will win big and the company won't be able to meet its obligations. In order to reduce the risk of this happening, such dealers often take measures to "help" their clients lose, a practice which damages the reputation of the industry at large.
At the end of the 1990s there were very few dealing centers in Russia and most of those that were operating didn't have enough clients to properly hedge client positions on the larger market. As a result, to minimize clients profiting at the expense of the company's bottom line, many dealers began throwing wrenches in their clients' trading. "Slippage", filling orders at a price slightly less profitable for the client, was one of any number of methods dealers used to subtlety sabotage their clients. But time doesn't stand still. Dealers who got their start in the 90s and survived have managed to acquire a large client base. And since larger companies generally aren't willing to risk their reputations to make a quick buck at their clients' expense, shady dealing practices have generally been relegated to the ever-shifting world of low-budget, fly-by night dealing centers.
When a dealer has acquired a critical mass of clients and is able to take the training wheels off, certain things become clear:
·         Over the long run the profit of "fly-by-night" operations (who are trading against their clients) turns out to be essentially the same as if they were just earning based on the spread (due to the fact that the company's winnings and loses against the client will even out over the long haul). In the end a larger client base is the only way to make progress – and that depends largely on the reputation of the company.
·         A good reputation and long-term clients is ultimately more profitable than short-term profit from the losses of clients. Because of this, even those dealers who still process everything internally eventually move beyond unethical practices (poor execution, swooping up stop losses, etc.), that characterize the fly-by-night types.
·         The company has come to be more valuable and management doesn't want to lose it all because of a few lucky clients.
·         Client accounts are getting larger (a sure sign of a good reputation) and even some much larger clients are showing up, most of whom are generally successful due to having more professional experience and better training.
As a dealing center grows, management starts thinking about hedging client position, and as a result, moves to the second business model.
2. Hedge the net client position on the interbank market. This means that the net client position (of a certain previously agreed upon size) is hedged on the main market. This removes any motive for the company to trade against the client. Now, highly successful clients no longer put the company on the verge of ruin.
3. Hedging every client position on the interbank market. From the client's perspective this model carries no advantage compared the one listed above. Among its drawbacks:
·         Large account balance and minimum trade requirements
·         Slower execution
When this article was written, Alpari had more than 7,200 clients, which allows the company to use the second dealing model.
The Myth That It's Impossible to Make Money on Forex
It's often been said that 90% of those who trade with leverage on financial markets end up losing their money. Unfortunately, this is true. Let's see if we can make sense of why that is. If we analyze how the "90%" go about trading, we can come to a few conclusions as to what the unsuccessful trader does wrong:
·         Doesn't have a grasp of the basics of analysis: Unsuccessful traders make poor use of technical and fundamental analysis.
·         Doesn't understand the philosophy behind trading: I'll explain with an example from my own experience. Once when I was a young technical analyst I was analyzing a currency, let's say the Yen. I look at the "week" chart, the indicators are all pointing down, the day chart – same thing, four-hour chart – same thing, 5-minute – same. Great, I think, everything's pointing in one direction. I open a position. The result? Miserable. My faith in technical analysis was shaken to the core. I ran to get a beer and thought a lot about what had just happened. I realized that it isn't technical analysis that's at fault, but me. The week and day charts were showing that the overall trend was down. The shorter timeframes showed that movement in the direction of the trend was already happening and had apparently bottomed out. The ideal moment to sell would have been if the week and day charts were down but the 4-hour was bullish (bouncing off the bottom) and the hour chart is showing that the upwards movement has ended (for example, when the bulls are divided).
·         Doesn't follow the rules of Money Management:
o    Doesn't set stop losses at all.
o    Sets stop losses too close to the entry price. A stop loss order on the Forex market should not be less than 40-50 pips from the entrance price. Stop losses that are placed closer are likely doomed to get triggered due to the fact that you are very unlikely to catch the top or bottom when you enter the market (i.e. even if you are correct in your analysis, there could be some initial price movement against you). This could be 10-15 pips. Plus 5 pips of spread. And if you count market noise (10-15 pips), a stop loss order placed less than 40-50 pips off the entry price has an unacceptably high chance of getting picked up.
o    Doesn't maintain a profit/loss ratio of 2/1.
o    Tries to record a profit of 5 pips but is willing to ride a bad trade down to a 100 or more pip loss. In this case you would need 20 profitable trades just to cancel out the loss sustained in the one bad trade. This would mean a success rate of over 95% -- something that not even Soros could pull off. Professional analysts are right 75-80% of the time.
o    etc.
·         Base their trading on too small fluctuations: I think that the market reflects about 10 pips of noise (a large order is placed to a bank which bumps the price up or down by 5 pips after which the price returns to its previous level. Also, different market-makers show slightly different prices). Let's take this as an axiom (it can't be proven). That means:
o    Analysis of a 1-minute time-frame allows you to catch a movement of 15 pips. 66% of that is market noise (10 pips).
o    Analysis of a 5-minute time-frame allows you to catch a movement of 30 pips. 33% of that is market noise.
o    Analysis of an hour time-frame allows you to catch a movement of 100 pips. 10% of that is market noise.
o    Analysis of a day time-frame allows you to catch a movement of 500 pips. 2% of that is market noise.
·         These numbers are hypothetical. It's the concept that's important. As it works out, a lot of the time we end up just trying to predict market noise when analyzing short periods of time. Market noise is unpredictable. The market, however, is predictable, which is why we should concentrate more on longer periods of time.
·         If you haven't been having success trading on Forex, take a careful look at what I have laid out above and draw your own conclusions about what you need to do better. To be successful on the Forex market, you need certain knowledge but you also need to understand how to follow certain guidelines, notably those related to money management.
Myth: There aren't enough brokers in brokerage firms, otherwise why does it take so long for my trade to be executed during periods of greater price fluctuation?
A delay can be caused the following:
·         Software or network is unable to handle increased traffic during periods of greater price movement.
·         Broker insufficiently staffed.
The question remains, however, why do brokers that don't suffer from either of the above-mentioned shortcomings still sometimes experience delays when processing orders?
The most common business model in larger companies is # 2 (see above) – the company hedges client positions with an external counteragent. When the market is calm the broker is able to process the client's trade almost instantaneously and then worry about hedging it in the larger market (if need be). There's no reason to hurry and the broker might even be able to jump in a couple of pips better than the client had.
But everything is different during a volatile market. The client's position needs to be hedged immediately or else the market could move quickly and the broker could get left with a loss. As a result, client orders are filled at the same time that the company is attempting to hedge the positions on the larger market. Naturally, client orders will take longer to fill. But this should be seen as the price to pay for working with a reputable company that isn't working against the client.
The Myth about Not Having Enough Capital
I will once again quote Elder:
"A lot of unsuccessful traders think that they would be more successful if they had more money at their disposal. Most such traders were thrown out of the game after a particularly bad stretch or perhaps even just one unsuccessful trade. It also happens often that as soon as the amateur has closed all his positions, the market moves in the direction that he had been anticipating. The hapless trader is either furious at himself or at his broker, "If I had been able to hold out for just another week, I would have made a fortune."
Unsuccessful traders interpret this as a confirmation of their methods. So they put their hard-earned (or borrowed) money into opening another account. But the same story happens again. The trader is wiped out and watches from the sidelines as the market again heads in his direction, again proving his analysis, albeit too late. This is about where the fantasy "if I had a bigger account, I would stay alive longer and actually be able to make money" takes flight.
Some traders talk relatives into funding their next venture, showing them the charts as proof that they know what they're doing. But poor traders hardly fare better with well-funded accounts than they had before.
The biggest problem for the losing trader isn't a lack of capital but a lack of understanding of how to trade. A weak trader can run through a large account almost as quickly as a small one. He overplays his hand and his money management fails. Poor traders often take overly risky market positions even with larger accounts. Regardless of how well a trader's overall strategy is, subjecting one's account to excessive risk can be a recipe for disaster – if a couple of big trades go against you, you could be wiped out.
I am often asked how much money you need to get started trading. They want to have enough to survive a down period. They think that they will lose a bunch of money before they start making anything. It's like an engineer who plans on constructing a couple of bridges that will end up collapsing before building his masterpiece. Can a surgeon kill a few patients before becoming an expert at curing appendicitis?
The amateur doesn't think that he will suffer losses and isn't prepared to handle such a situation. The conviction that your failures are due to under-capitalization is a trap that makes it more difficult to notice two unpleasant things: lack of discipline and the lack of a realistic plan for managing one's funds.
One advantage of a larger account is that the start-up costs are smaller relative to your account. If you are managing a fund with a million dollars and spend $10,000 on computers and seminars, you only have to earn 1% to cover those expenses. But if you only have $20,000, those same expenses constitute 50% of your entire account.
The Myth about Autopilot
Let's assume that a stranger comes up to you while you're in your garage and tries to sell you a fully automated driving system, "for just a couple hundred dollars, you can get this computer chip which will drive your car for you." You can just sit and sleep while you are being driven to work. You would probably laugh at such an offer. But would you laugh if someone offered you an automated system for investing in the markets?
Traders who believe in the "autopilot" myth think that making money can be automated. Some try to create automated systems themselves, others try to buy ready-made ones. People who spend years crafting their trades as lawyers, doctors, or business then turn around and try to buy the equivalent of years worth of experience in the form of an automated trading system. These types are generally ruled by greed, laziness and profound misconceptions about mathematics.
In the old days, such systems were written down on scraps of paper; now they are on protected disks. Some are very primitive, others are quite complex with built-in optimizers and rules for money management. Many traders are looking for magic – a way to turn a few lines of code into an endless stream of money. Those who pay for automated trading systems are reminiscent of knights from the middle ages who paid alchemists for the secret of turning simple metals into gold.
Human behavior, with all of its complexity, doesn't allow itself to be automated. Computer programs haven't replaced teachers and computer-based accounting systems hasn't led to mass unemployment among accountants. Most human activities require the ability to make decisions – something computers can help with but can never fully replace humans.
If you had managed to get a hold of an automated system, you could retire to Tahiti and live the rest of your days in luxury, picking up a never-ending stream of checks from your broker. But so far the only people who have made money from automated trading systems are the people who sell them. They have created a small but quite attractive little niche for themselves. If their systems worked, why would they sell them? Instead of hawking their systems, they could have long ago themselves retired to Tahiti. Of course such salesmen have an answer ready. Some say that they like programming more than trading on the market. Others say they are selling their system just to acquire capital for making further investment.
But the market is always changing and what worked yesterday may not work today. A good trader is always correcting his methods when he sees that things are changing. An automated system will be unable to make the necessary adjustment and will inevitably crash and burn.
Take the airlines. Even though they all have autopilot systems in their airplanes, they all nevertheless continue to pay pilots rather large salaries. This is because the pilot, unlike the computer, can deal with an unexpected situation. When a plane flying over the Pacific suffers damage to the fuselage and needs to execute an emergency landing or when a plane flying over Canada unexpectedly runs out of fuel, only a human can deal with such a situation. Trusting your money to an autopilot system is a good way to have your account destroyed by the first unexpected event.
There are good systems out there but they have to be managed and their trades have to be watched. You can't simply turn it on and let it go.

Sunday, April 12, 2015

7 Rules For Building Wealth

11:13 AM Posted by Kos Lo No comments

If you’ve found yourself trapped in debt and unable to get ahead, don’t just give up and accept the situation. Sure, it would be easy to sit on the couch and complain about how unfair life is, but how likely is that to help?

The only way to turn things around is to change your mindset and habits to start doing things that will help you build wealth.  A great article I read on Entrepreneur.com the other day discussed seven strategies the wealthy use to get richer.

I’ve listed their tips below along with some thoughts of my own.  Check them out and leave a comment below to let me know what you think.

Think Long TermWealth

When you’re living paycheck to paycheck it can be hard to think about anything more than a few weeks into the future.  Who has time to think about retirement when they aren’t sure if there will be any dinner on the table?

But it is important to set goals and work toward them, even if it is just a little bit each day. If you don’t have goals you’ll be stuck in the same spot forever.

Understand That Goals Take Time To Achieve

You can’t just set a goal and forget about it and then expect it to come to fruition.  You need to work at it regularly and track your progress.  For example, I recently started a Creative Income Challenge to save up money for a family vacation to Florida.  I’m tracking everything and updating it every month on my blog to hold myself accountable and to keep myself motivated.

Create Long Term Value

Think about adding new streams of income, preferably ones that don’t require much oversight.  Owning a rental property, a small business, or dividend-paying stocks are all examples of income streams that can support you for many years.

Acknowledge Weaknesses and Outsource

None of us know how to do everything and there’s no point in trying to do it all yourself when there are experts out there who can do a good job for a reasonable price.  For example, I think I’m pretty handy around the house and will tackle most small to medium-sized projects, but for bigger stuff I call in the pros.  I know what I can do myself and what is best left to someone else.

If you’re a blogger and need some help with the technical aspects of blogging, consider hiring Grayson. You can worry about writing and he can worry about keeping your site running!

Go All In Where It Counts

Ever hear of the Pareto Principle?  It’s also known as the 80/20 rule and it states that just 20 percent of your efforts will result in 80 percent of rewards.  In other words, things aren’t distributed evenly and you need to focus your energy where you’ll get the most bang for your buck.

Follow Your Passion And Work Your Butt Off

I have a full-time job and a family to take care of so my schedule is always loaded with soccer practice, school concerts and the like.  But I somehow find time to write and build my online business and create new income.  No one ever said getting ahead was easy.

Never Quit And Always Strive To Be Better

So you work hard and achieve your goal, what’s the next step?  Call it quits and relax?  Heck no!

You set a new goal and start working towards it!  Never stop working and trying to improve yourself.

[Source:debtroundup.com]Sourse: Thefinancebucks.com