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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. |
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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WHAT
IS ASSET ALLOCATION?
Asset allocation is based on the proven theory
that the type or class of security you own is much
more important than the particular security itself.
Asset allocation is a way to control risk in your
portfolio.
The risk is controlled because the six or seven asset
classes in the well-balanced portfolio will react
differently to changes in market conditions such as
inflation, rising or falling interest rates, market
sectors coming into or falling out of favor, a
recession, etc.
Asset allocation should not be confused with
simple diversification. Suppose you diversify
by owning 100 or even 1,000 different stocks. You
really haven’t done anything to control risk in your
portfolio if those 1,000 stocks all come from only one
or two different asset classes—say, blue chip stocks
(which usually fall into the category known as
large-capitalization, or large-cap, stocks) and
mid-cap stocks. Those classes will often react
to market conditions in a similar way—they will
generally all either go up or down after a given
market event. This is known as
"correlation."
Similarly, many investors make the mistake of building
a portfolio of various top-performing growth funds,
perhaps thinking that even if one goes down, one or
two others will continue to perform well. The problem
here is that growth funds are highly correlated—they
tend to move in the same direction in response to a
given market force. Thus, whether you own two or 20
growth funds, they will tend to react in the same way.
Not only does it lower risk, but asset
allocation maximizes returns over a period of time.
This is because the proper blend of six or seven asset
classes will allow you to benefit from the returns in
all of those classes.
WHAT ARE THE ASSET CLASSES?
The securities that exist in today’s
financial markets can be divided into four main
classes: stocks, bonds, cash, and foreign holdings,
with the first two representing the major part of most
portfolios. These categories can be further
subdivided by "style." Let's take a look at
these classes in the context of mutual fund
investments:
Equity Funds: The style of an equity fund is a
combination of both (1) the fund's particular
investment methodology (growth-oriented,
value-oriented or a blend of the two) and (2) the size
of the companies in which it invests (large, medium
and small). Combining these two variables –
investment methodology and company size — offers a
broad view of a fund's holdings and risk level. Thus,
for equity funds, there are nine possible style
combinations, ranging from large capitalization/value
for the safest funds to small capitalization/growth
for the riskiest.
Fixed Income Funds: The style of a domestic or
international fixed-income fund is to focus on the two
pillars of fixed-income performance — interest-rate
sensitivity (based on maturity) and credit quality. Thus,
fixed-income funds are split into three maturity
groups (short-term, intermediate-term, and long-term)
and three credit-quality groups (high, medium and
low). These groupings display a portfolio's effective
maturity and credit quality to provide an overall
representation of the fund's risk, given the length
and quality of bonds
By Sean Toh
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